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1962 (6) TMI 57 - HC - Income Tax

Issues:
1. Assessment of property income in the hands of the petitioner as a Hindu undivided family based on the Hindu Women's Right to Property Act, 1937, and the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.

Analysis:
The judgment revolves around the assessment of property income in the hands of the petitioner, who, along with his mother, jointly owned certain immoveable properties. The Income-tax Officer proposed to assess the income as that of a Hindu undivided family, citing the Hindu Women's Right to Property Act, 1937, and the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. The petitioner objected to this proposal, leading to the legal challenge. The key question was whether the income could be assessed on the basis of a Hindu undivided family or as individual shares.

The court analyzed Section 9(3) of the Income-tax Act, which states that where property is owned by multiple persons with definite and ascertainable shares, they should not be assessed as an association of persons. In this case, the petitioner and his mother, governed by the Dayabhaga school of Hindu law, had defined shares in the joint property. The court highlighted that under Dayabhaga law, each coparcener has a specific share in joint property, even without physical partition. Thus, the income should be assessed based on individual shares, not as a Hindu undivided family.

The judgment discussed precedents, including a case before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, where a similar issue arose for a Dayabhaga family, and it was held that definite shares preclude assessment as a Hindu undivided family. The court distinguished a Madras High Court case involving a joint Hindu family under different law principles, emphasizing that Section 9(3) applies to cases with ascertainable shares. Another case from the Allahabad High Court was referenced to highlight that once income is taxed in one entity's hands, it cannot be taxed again in another's. The court affirmed the petitioner's right to challenge improper taxation and clarified the legal position, directing the Income-tax Officer to assess the income based on individual shares, not as a Hindu undivided family.

In conclusion, the court made the rule absolute, issuing a writ to prevent the assessment of income in the petitioner's hands as that of a Hindu undivided family, emphasizing the need for assessment in accordance with the law. No costs were awarded in the judgment.

 

 

 

 

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