JUDGEMENT
Pathak, J. -
(1.) THE assessee was registered under Section 26A of the Indian Income-lax Act, 1922, for the assessment year 1958-59. It applied for renewal of registration on June 29, 1959, for the assessment year 1959-60, the relevant previous year being the period September 29, 1957, to September 17, 1958. THE application was rejected by the Income-tax Officer and the assessee was unsuccessful in appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, and, thereafter, in second appeal, before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal.
(2.) THE assessee-firm was constituted under a partnership deed dated December 22, 1956, and consisted of 5 partners, Hargovind, Jawahar Mal, Madan Lal, Murlidhar and Ratan Lal, and one Ram Kishore, a minor, was admitted to the benefits of the partnership. Clause 2 of the partnership deed provided that the partnership commenced on November 4, 1956, and Clause 6 of the partnership deed provided that in the case of death or retirement of a partner the firm would not dissolve. One of the partners, Madan Lal, died on August 22, 1958. THEreafter, a partnership deed dated October 13, 1958, was executed creating a partnership between Hargovind, Jawahar Mal, Murlidhar, Ratan Lal, Jagdish Prasad and Smt. Ayodhya Devi, widow of Madan Lal, and two minors, Ram Kishore, son of Sita Ram, and Lakshmi Narain, son of Madan Lal, were admitted to the benefits of the partnership. Clause 2 of the partnership deed declared that the partnership commenced on September 18, 1958. It will be noticed that this date falls immediately after the close of the account year under consideration. THE application for renewal of registration made on June 26, 1959, for assessment year 1959-60 specified the partners as in the partnership deed of December 28, 1956, and was signed by them except that in place of Madan Lal, who had died, it was signed by his widow, Smt. Ayodhya Devi. THE Tribunal, in dismissing the second appeal filed by the assessee, took the view that, while there was no doubt that a genuine firm was in existence, the requirements of the law relating to renewal of registration had not been satisfied. It expressed the opinion that the certificate in the statutory form prescribed for the application required the assessee to state that the constitution of the firm and the individual shares of the partners remained unaltered on the date of the application, and, as on that date two minors had been admitted to the benefits of the partnership in the place of Madan Lal their names should have been mentioned in the application. As is evident from the observations of the Tribunal, it considered that the constitution mentioned in the application should have been that under the partnership deed of October 13, 1958, and not under the partnership deed of December 28, 1956.
At the instance of the assessee the Tribunal has referred the following two questions :
" 1. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, and having particular reference to Clause 6 of the partnership deed made on December 28, 1956 (annexure " B "). the firm is entitled to mike an application for renewal of registration for the assessment year 1959-60 on the basis of the deed made on December 28, 1956 (annexure " B ") ?
2. If the answer to the above question is in the negative, whether an application under Section 26A should have been made for original registration and should have been signed by the partners of the firm as it was constituted at the time of making of the application under Section 26A ? "
At the outset an objection has been raised on behalf of the revenue. It is urged that the first question referred by the Tribunal does not arise in the case, it not having been disputed anywhere that the firm is entitled to apply for renewal of registration for the assessment year 1959-60. It is said that the real question which arose was that framed by the assessee, the question being whether the Tribunal was right in holding that, on the basis of the application made by the assessee, the assessee was not entitled to renewal of registration for the assessment year 1959-60. Reliance has been placed on the circumstance that the request of the assessee that the question as framed by it should be referred to this court was rejected by the Tribunal, and on this it is argued that the Tribunal did not refer the question suggested by the assessee but an entirely different question which did not arise at all in the case. In our opinion, the objection is misconceived. The substance of the question referred by the Tribunal embodies the controversy whether the assessee was entitled to renewal of registration for the assessment year 1959-60 on the basis of the deed of December 28, 1956. The language in which the question has been framed by the Tribunal is not happy, but we are unable to hold that the Tribunal merely intended thereby to refer the question whether the assessee was entitled to apply for renewal of registration. The question essentially is whether the assessee should have been granted renewal of registration for the assessment year 1959-60 on the basis of the deed of December 28, 1956, and that is what we understand of the first question referred by the Tribunal to be.
(3.) ON the merits of the case, the first point to be considered is whether the firm constituted under the deed of December 28, 1956, came to an end and was followed by a new firm created by the deed of October 13, 1958, or whether the same firm continued throughout and was merely reconstituted by the deed of October 13, 1958. A comparison of the two deeds persuades us to the former conclusion. In the deed of 1956 the partners were Hargovind, Jawahar Mal, Madan Lal, Murlidhar and Ratan Lal, and the minor, Ram Kishore, was admitted to the benefits of the partnership, while under the deed, of 1958, the firm consisted of Hargovind, Jawahar Mal, Murlidhar, Ratan Lal, Jagdish Prasad and Smt. Ayodhya Devi and the minors, Ram Kishore and Lakshmi Narain, were admitted to the benefits of the partnership. While the shares of Hargovind, Murlidhar and Ratan Lal in the profits were the same in the two firms, the share of Jawahar Mal was reduced from l/4th of a rupee to l/8th of a rupee. While the share of Hargovind in the losses continued to be l/4th of a rupee, the shares of Jawahar Mal, Murlidhar and Ratan Lal were altered from l/4th, l/8th and l/8th of a rupee, respectively, to l/6th, I/16th and l/6th, respectively. It will also be noticed that the new firm included Jagdish Prasad and Smt. Ayodhya Devi, widow of Madan Lal, as two new partners, and Lakshmi Narain, the minor son of Madan Lal, was admitted to the benefits of partnership. It is urged on behalf of the revenue that Smt. Ayodhya Devi and Lakshmi Narain were brought into the firm to succeed the deceased Madan Lal. But an analysis of the shares in the profits and losses of the firm will demonstrate that this was strictly not so. While Madan Lal shared in the profits and losses to the extent of l/8th of a rupee, Smt. Ayodhya Devi shared in the profits to the extent of 1/16th of a rupee and in the losses to the extent of 1/12th of a rupee and the minor, Lakshmi Narain, was admitted only to the benefits of the partnership. Then, there is no recital in the deed of 1958 to suggest that the previous firm was being continued. ON the contrary, the deed recites that the parties "shall carry on business in partnership. ....." and that " the partnership commenced on Bhadaut Sudi Six Sambat Do Hazar Pandrah, corresponding to 18th September, 1958. . .." Moreover, while Clause 4 of the deed of 1956 merely provided that the capital of the partnership would be contributed by the partners, Clause 4 of the deed of 1958 also declared that interest would be allowed on such capital at six per cent, per annum. As to the division of profits, there was also a difference. Under Clause 5 of the agreement of 1958, the net profits were divisible between the partners after deducting one anna out of the profits for charity, while under Clause 5 of the agreement of 1958, no provision was made for the deduction of any amount out of the profits on account of charity. Another point of difference lay in this that under the deed of 1956, the liabilities of the minor, Ram Kishore, were limited to the extent of the funds invested by him in the firm, while under the deed of 1958 he was not liable in respect of the losses at all.
It will, therefore, appear that the structure of the two partnerships was essentially different and it cannot be said that the firm under the deed of 1958 was merely a continuation of the earlier firm. In our opinion, the two firms must be considered as separate and distinct from each other.;