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Issues Involved:
1. Whether section 41 is mandatory or only an alternative available to the Income Tax authorities in certain special cases. 2. Whether the receivers can be said to have been appointed by or under any order of court and received the income on behalf of each of the beneficiaries for the years in question as required by section 41, in the absence of the division of the family by metes and bounds as required by section 25A. 3. Whether the assessment of the family in the hands of the receivers on the income accruing after 6th October, 1948, till 30th June, 1952, in the assessments 1950-51, 1951-52, 1952-53, and 1953-54 are valid. Detailed Analysis: Issue 1: Mandatory Nature of Section 41 The court addressed whether section 41 is mandatory or merely an alternative available to the Income Tax authorities. The judgment clarified that section 41(1) is indeed mandatory. The tax must be levied upon and recoverable from the receivers in the same manner and to the same amount as it would be upon the person on whose behalf the income, profits, or gains are receivable. This interpretation was upheld, confirming that the receivers must be assessed as representatives of the Hindu undivided family (HUF), despite the family's disrupted status. Issue 2: Appointment and Role of Receivers The court examined whether the receivers were appointed by or under any court order and whether they received income on behalf of each beneficiary as required by section 41, in the absence of a division by metes and bounds per section 25A. It was established that the receivers were indeed appointed by the court and managed the properties on behalf of the parties. Despite the division in status, the properties were not divided by metes and bounds, and thus, the family continued to be assessed as an HUF. The court emphasized that the mere declaration of fractional interests in the preliminary decree does not equate to a partition in definite portions as required by section 25A. Issue 3: Validity of Assessments in Receivers' Hands The court assessed the validity of the family's assessment in the hands of the receivers for the years 1950-51, 1951-52, 1952-53, and 1953-54. It concluded that the assessments were valid. The court noted that even though the family's joint status was disrupted by the filing of the partition suit, the properties were not actually divided by metes and bounds. Therefore, the HUF continued to exist for assessment purposes under section 25A(3). The court rejected the argument that the receivers managed the properties on behalf of individual tenants-in-common rather than the HUF. Conclusion The court ruled that section 41 is mandatory, the receivers were correctly appointed and managed the properties on behalf of the HUF, and the assessments made on the HUF in the hands of the receivers for the specified years were valid. The court answered all questions against the assessee and upheld the assessments as per the Income Tax Act provisions. The assessee was directed to pay the costs of the reference, with a counsel fee of Rs. 250.
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