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Issues:
1. Validity of declaration throwing interest in partnership firm into joint family hotchpot. 2. Justification of Appellate Tribunal's decision regarding share income from partnership firm. Analysis: The case involved two questions raised by the Commissioner of Income-tax under section 256(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The first issue was whether the declaration made by the assessee throwing his interest in the partnership firm into the hotchpot of the joint family was valid in law. The second issue was whether the share income arising from the partnership firm could be considered as the income of the joint family. The facts of the case revealed that the assessee abandoned his rights in the partnership firm and threw them into the Hindu undivided family. The Income-tax Officer initially treated the income as belonging to the Hindu undivided family, but the Commissioner of Income-tax later directed the assessment in the hands of the individual assessee. The Tribunal, however, reversed the Commissioner's order based on legal principles established by previous court decisions. The main contention raised by the counsel was whether the Tribunal erred in considering the income of the partner, who was a member of the joint family, as income of the Hindu undivided family solely because it was blended with the family's properties. The argument emphasized that the assessee cannot burden the joint family with losses and liabilities of the partnership firm by making such a declaration. However, the court delved into the legal aspect of blending separate property or income into the joint family hotchpot. It was established that any member of the joint family could blend their property without requiring an agreement with other family members, as long as the intention to do so was clear. The court referred to previous judgments, including Charandas Haridas v. Commissioner of Income-tax, to highlight that income realized by a karta from a partnership firm before the disruption of the Hindu undivided family is considered an asset of the family. Once a member throws their interest or asset into the joint family hotchpot, it becomes an asset of the Hindu undivided family by operation of Hindu law. Therefore, the Tribunal's decision to uphold that the share income from the partnership firm was not assessable in the hands of the individual assessee was deemed correct based on legal precedents. In conclusion, the court dismissed the applications and declined to provide an opinion on the questions raised, affirming the Tribunal's decision.
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