JUDGEMENT
Mukerjee, J. -
(1.) THIS is a reference made by the Central Board of Revenue, New Delhi, under Section 64 (1) of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 (as it stood prior to the amendment by the Estate Duty (Amendment) Act of 1958), hereinafter referred to as the Act. The question referred by the Board for the opinion of this Court is as follows:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the inclusion of the following house properties in the estate of the deceased as property passing or deemed to pass on the death of the deceased under the Estate Duty Act, 1953, is justified in law:--
(i) Afzal Manzil;
(ii) Khiliaganj;
(iii) Golaganj ?"
(2.) THE material facts are as follows. THE three properties mentioned in the question referred to above, originally, formed a part of the estate of the deceased the late Shri Ishaque Ali Meerza (hereinafter referred to as the deceased) who died on December 2, 1954. THE applicant, Shri Abbas Ali Meerza, is the son of the deceased and an accountable person under the Act. THE accountable person submitted a return before the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty, Lucknow, for the purpose of assessment of estate duty under the Act THE Assistant Controller completed the assessment determining the principal value of the dutiable estate at Rs. 2,11,558. THE estate duty payable on the estate was computed at Rs. 10,194.75. THE accountable person eventually took the assessment to the Central Board of Revenue in second appeal and contended that the following three properties were not liable to be included in the dutiable estate:
(i) THE house named Afzal Manzil:
(ii) the house at Khialiganj;
(iii) the house at Gopalganj;
With regard to the first property, namely, the house named Afzal Manzil, the accountable person contended that it had been gifted by the deceased to his wife Smt. Umatul Kubra by means of an oral Hiba on the 9th August, 1952. more than two years before his death and therefore, it was not liable to be included in the principal value of the estate of the deceased. It was found by the Assistant Controller as a fact that the deceased continued to reside in the house until he died on December 2, 1954 and this was admitted before the Central Board of Revenue. THE Board held that as the deceased resided in the gifted property till the date of his death it could not be said that the donee retained the bona fide possession and enjoyment of the gifted property to the entire exclusion of the donor and, therefore, the case fell within the mischief of Section 10 of the Estate Duty Act and the gifted property must be deemed to have passed on the death of the deceased under that Section.
As regards the second property, namely, the house at Khialiganj, the case of the accountable person was that the house had been purchased by Smt. Wazirunnissa Begum, daughter of the deceased, in 1942, out of her own fund. It was alleged that subsequently she migrated to Pakistan and at the time of migration she gifted the house to her minor sister Smt. Nazneen Begum, another daughter of the deceased. The Assistant Controller found that the property had been purchased on the 22nd October. 1942, in the name of Smt. Wazirunnissa when she was a minor and after the purchase there was mutation of the name of the deceased in the first instance and thereafter of the name of Smt. Nazneen Begum. It was also found that in the income-tax returns the deceased continued to return the income from the house as his own income. On these facts, the Assistant Controller held that the property was in fact, purchased by the deceased in the name of Smt. Wazirunnissa who was merely a name-lender. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner further found that there was no evidence of the alleged gift of the property in favour of Smt. Nazneen Begum, the minor daughter of the deceased. The Assistant Controller, therefore, included this property also in the principal value of the estate of the deceased. The Central Board of Revenue upheld the finding of the Assistant Controller in point but granted some reduction in the value of the property as assessed by the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty.
With regard to the third property at Golaganj, Lucknow, the case of the accountable person was that he acquired it under an oral gift from the deceased in October 1952. The Assistant Controller, however, disbelieved the plea of the alleged oral gift and held that, the property continued to belong to the deceased till his death. He further held that even on the assumption that the property had been given to the applicant it was liable to be included in the estate of the deceased, for the purpose of estate duty, in view of the provisions of Section 10 of the Act. The Central Board of Revenue maintained the findings of the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty.
(3.) AT the instance of the accountable person the Board has referred the question, quoted above for the opinion of this Court.
Section 5 of the Act is the charging section which authorises the levy of estate duty in the case of every person dying after the commencement of the Act on the 6th October, 1953. Sub-section (1) of Section 5 runs as follows:
"Levy of estate duty:-- (1) In the case of every person dying after the commencement of this Act, there shall, save as hereinafter expressly provided be levied and paid upon the principal value ascertained as hereinafter provided of all property, settled or not settled, including agricultural land situate in the States specified in the First Schedule to this Act, which passes on the death of such person, a duty called 'estate duty' at the rates fixed in accordance with Section 35."
This section imposed the liability to pay estate duty on property "which passes on the death" of the deceased. Section 6 says that the property which the deceased was, at the time of his death, competent to dispose of shall be deemed to pass on his death. Section 9 of the Act was enacted to include property gifted by the deceased within a certain period before his death, in the principal value of his estate for the purpose of assessment to estate duty. Originally, this period was one year but, subsequently, the period was enlarged to two years by an amendment of the section. Section 10 of the Act may be treated as a continuation of Section 9 and it relates to gifts made by the deceased of property in respect of which he, as donor, was not entirely excluded. The section as it stood at the material time was worded as follows:
"Gifts whenever made where donor not entirely excluded:-- Property taken under any Rift, whenever made, shall be deemed to pass on the donor's death to the extent that bona fide possession and enjoyment of it was not immediately assumed by the donee and henceforward retained to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him by contract or otherwise;
Provided that the property shall not be deemed to pass by reason only that it was, not, as from the date of the gift, exclusively retained as aforesaid, if, by means of the surrender of the reserved benefit or otherwise it is subsequently enjoyed to the entire exclusion of the donor or of any benefit to him for at least two years before the death." By the Finance Act of 1965 a second proviso to Section 10 was added and it runs as follows:
"Provided further that a house or part thereof taken under any gift made to the spouse, son, daughter, brother or sister, shall not be deemed to pass on the donor's death by reason only of the residence therein of the donor except where a right of residence therein is reserved or secured directly or indirectly to the donor under the relevant disposition or under any collateral disposition."
It may be stated here that the Supreme Court has held in the case of George Da Costa v. Controller of Estate Duty, AIR 1967 SC 849 that the second proviso to Section 10 added by the Finance Act of 1965 is effective from April 1, 1965 and has no retrospective operation. This second proviso to Section 10 is not, therefore, attracted in the present case. It may also be mentioned at the stage that the learned counsel for the accountable person did not argue his case in respect of the house at Golaganj and, therefore, we need not return an answer to the question in so far as this property is concerned. We have now to consider the question as regards the first two properties, namely, the property named Afzal Manzil, Lucknow and the house at Khialiganj Lucknow.
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