1963 INSC 0258 Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay Vs James Anderson Civil Appeal No. 128 of 1963 (A. K. Sarkar, M. Hidayatullah, J. C. Shah JJ) 02.12.1963 JUDGMENT SHAH J. ­ Henry Gannon who was a registered holder of 2,674 shares of Gannon Dunkerley and Company - a private limited company with its registered office in Bombay - died on May 13, 1945, having made and published a will disposing of extensive estate in the United Kingdom and in British India. The National Bank of India Ltd. obtained probate of Gannon's will in the United Kingdom and appointed the respondent, James Anderson, its attorney to administer the estate in British India. Anderson applied for and obtained in India on August 14, 1946, letters of administration durante absentia to the estate of Gannon in British India. 450 out of the shares were specifically bequeathed by Gannon to certain legatees, and in the course of administration, share certificates with transfer forms duly executed were delivered to the legatees in respect of those shares and no question arises in this appeal in regard to those shares. By agreement dated August 14, 1946, between the executor to the estate, the company and one Morarka, the executor agreed to sell the remaining 2,224 shares of the company to Morarka and pursuant thereto the relevant share certificates with transfer deeds were handed over to Morarka on October 12, 1946, against payment of the price at the rate of Rs. 140 per share. Morarka, for some reason which is not clear from the record, failed to present the transfer deeds and the share certificates for registration at the office of the company and the name of Gannon remained at all material times on the register of shareholders in respect of those 2,224 shares. In the assessment of the company for the assessment years 1946-47 and 1947-48, the Income-tax Officer, Bombay, made an order on March 26, 1953, under section 23A of the Income-tax Act, 1922 (as it then stood), that certain undistributed parts of the assessable income of the company shall be deemed to have been distributed as dividends amongst the shareholders as at the dates, viz., May 26, 1947, and December 22, 1947, of the general meetings of the company. The net dividends so deemed to be distributed in respect of the shares were Rs. 61,051 and Rs. 3,73,099. The Income-tax Officer then issued on March 28, 1953, a notice under section 34 (1) (b) of the Income-tax Act addressed to "James Anderson, Administrator to the estate of late Mr. Henry Gannon" reciting that he had reason to believe that Anderson's "income assessable to income-tax for the year ending 31st of March, 1949" had escaped assessment and that the proposed to reassess the escaped income and for that purpose called upon Anderson to make a retur At the instance of Anderson the following questions were referred by the Tribunal to the High Court of Bombay under section 66 (1) of the Income-tax Act : "(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the assessment made on Mr. James Anderson, Administrator to the estate in India of Mr. Henry Gannon (deceased), is valid in law ? If the above question is answered in the affirmative, (2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the dividends of Rs. 61,051 and Rs. 3,73,099 deemed to have been distributed on May 26, 1947, and December 22, 1947, respectively under section 23A of the Income-tax Act were assessable in the hands of the applicant ?" The High Court answered the first question in the negative and declined to answer the second question. With special leave, the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay, has appealed to this court. The estate of Gannon to which the letters of administration relate, vested by virtue of section 211 of the Indian Succession Act, in Anderson, but he did not take steps to get his name entered in the register of shareholders maintained by the company, and the Income-tax Officer sought to tax the dividends deemed to have been distributed in the hands of Anderson as administrator of the estate of Gannon. The order made by the Income-tax Officer under section 23A gives rise to a notional income : it merely creates a fiction about distribution and consequential receipt of dividend. The order by its own force however does not charge the income to tax : it had to be followed by an order of assessment to make tax on such income exigible. The sole question in this appeal is whether the Acts contains machinery for assessing dividends deemed to have been distributed by virtues of an order under section 23A in respect of the shares held by a shareholder, when before the date on which the fiction of distribution becomes effective - viz., the date of the relevant general meeting of the company - the registered shareholder has died and his representative have not been substituted in the register of the company. It was held by this court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Shakuntala, following Howrah Trading Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, that the expression "shareholder" in section 23A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, means a shareholder registered in the books of the company, and such shareholder alone is liable to be taxed in respect of the dividend deemed to be distributed. Counsel for the Commissioner submits that the principle of those cases applies only when the registered shareholder is alive and the beneficial ownership in the shares is vested is vested as a result of some transaction, inter vivos, in a person in whose name the shares do not stand in the company's register, but not where by the grant of representation to the estate of a registered shareholder who has died, the representative is invested, without his name being entered in the register, with the rights of the shareholder. Whether on the death of a shareholder his executor or administrator may enforce the rights of the shareholder or incur liability in respect of the shares to the company, depends upon the nature of the right and the obligation, and terms of the statute and the articles of the company which create those rights and obligations. The legal representative of a deceased person cannot vote on behalf of the shareholder and may not become a director of the company on the strength of the representation alone. Again by the express provision contained in section 35 of the Indian Companies Act, 1913, a transfer of the share or other interest of a deceased member by his legal representative although he is himself not a member is as valid as if he were a member at the time of the execution of the transfer. This implies that the legal representative does not acquire in all cases the rights of a shareholder of a company in respect of shares of which the name of the deceased was registered as holder. But if the estate of a sha Under an order made by the Income-tax Officer under section 23A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, dividend is deemed to be distributed among the shareholders, and by the express provision contained in the statute the proportionate share of the dividend of each shareholder has to be included in the total income of such shareholder for the purpose of assessing his total income. The statute therefore in terms applies to the shareholder and makes the dividend taxable as his income. The obligation to pay the tax on the dividend so deemed to be distributed is of the shareholder, and may be enforced against him or his legal representative in the manner and to the extent the statute permits. There is no special machinery devised by the Income-tax Act enabling assessment and levy of tax in respect of such deemed income from the estate of the shareholder in the hands of his legal representative when the order of the Income-tax Officer pursuant to which the income was to be deemed to be distributed becomes effective In Commissioner of Income-tax v. Ellis C. Reid, it was observed by the Bombay High Court in rejecting the claim made by the income-tax department to assess a deceased person's estate in the hands of his legal representative to tax, that the definition of "assessee" in section 2 (2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (as it stood at the material date), in terms only applied to a living person, the words being "a person by whom income-tax is payable" and not "a person by whom or by whose estate income-tax is payable" and in the absence of appropriate provisions for collecting tax from the estate of a deceased person in the Act, the claim of the Income-tax Officer to make an assessment under section 23 (4) must fail. The court also observed that throughout the Income-tax Act there is no reference to the decease of a person on whom the tax had been originally charged, and it was difficult to suppose that the omission was unintentional. In Reid's case the taxpayer had died after the commencement of the financial To rectify the lacuna in the machinery of assessment the Legislature enacted section 24B, by the Indian Income-tax (Second Amendment) Act (18 of 1933). The first sub-section of section 24B provided : "Where a person dies, his executor, administrator or other legal representative shall be liable to pay out of the estate of the deceased person to the extend to which the estate is capable of meeting the charge the tax assessed as payable by such person, or any tax which would have been payable by him under this Act if he had not died." In interpreting that enactment this court in a recent case, Commissioner of Income-tax v. Amarchand N. Shroff that by the incorporation of section 24B the Legislature has extended the legal personality of a deceased person for the duration of the previous year in the course of which he died, and therefore the income either received by him before his death or by his heirs and representatives after his death in that previous year becomes assessable to tax in the relevant assessment year, but not the income received in the year subsequent to the previous or account year. In Amarchand Shroff's case "A" who was a partner in a firm of solicitors which maintained accounts "on cash basis" died on July 7, 1949. Outstandings of the firm in respect of professional services rendered prior to the death of "A" were realized during five years subsequent to "A's" death and were divided between the partners of the firm and certain sums were paid to the heirs and legal representatives of "A" as his share. The income-tax depar In the case before us Gannon died in May, 1945, and the dividend in respect of which orders under section 23A were passed was deemed to be distributed in the year of account ending March 31, 1949. The legal personality of Gannon as held in Amarchand Shroff's case came to an end for the purpose of section 24B at the account year in which Gannon died and no tax could be levied under section 24B on the dividends deemed to have been received by him or his legal representatives after the end of that year. Counsel for the Commissioner sought to rely on the following observations made by Kapur J., who spoke for the court, in Amarchand Shroff's case : "In the present case the amounts which are sought to be taxed and which have been held not to be liable to tax are those which were not received in the previous year and are therefore no liable to tax in the several years of assessment. It cannot be said that they were income which may be deemed by fiction to have been received by the dead person and therefore they are not liable to be taxed as income of the deceased, Amarchand, and are not liable to be taxed in the hands of the heirs and legal representatives who cannot be deemed to be assessees for the purpose of assessment in regard to those years", and on the latter part of the opinion sought to raise two arguments : (1) that even if after the expiry of the year of account receipts which if the person earning had not died would have been treated as his income, ceased to be liable to assessment as income of the deceased, they could still be taxed as his income in the hands of the legal representatives, and (2) that where the income was notional as under section 23A the legal personality of the deceased must be regarded as extended to the end of year in which such notional income must be deemed to have been received by the legal representatives of the deceased. The first argument is plainly inconsistent with what was decided in Amarchand Shroff's case. In that case the court held that the receipts by the heir or legal representative for professional services rendered by the deceased solicitor were liable to be brought to tax in the hands of the legal representatives only to the limited extent permitted by section 24B. The second argument involves the imp of two different interpretations in the matter of extension of the legal personality of the deceased according as the income is actual or notional. Section 24B in terms refers to the liability of the legal representative to pay tax assessed as payable by such deceased person, or any tax which would have been payable by him under the Act if he had not died, and if the expression "tax which would have been payable under this Act, if he had not died" is intended to impose liability for tax on income received in the year of account in the course of which the taxpayer died, a different interpretation of the same expression in the context of notional income would be impermissible. The Legislature not having made any provision generally for assessment of income received by the estate of the deceased person, the expression "any tax which would have been payable by him under this Act if he had not died" cannot be deemed to have supplied the machinery or taxation of income received by a legal representative to the est It was then urged that apart from section 24B, the legal representatives of a deceased person also represent his estate in the matter of taxation of income and it is competent to the taxing authorities to assess them on income received on behalf of the estate. Counsel did not rely any specific provision of the Act in support of the contention, and merely asserted that the Act seeks to tax all assessable incomes, and income received by a legal representative of the estate of a deceased person should not be permitted to escape tax to the detriment of public revenue. But if the Legislature has failed to set up the procedure to assess such income, the courts cannot supply it. The expression "assessee" in section 2 (2) as substituted by the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act (25 of 1953) with effect from April 1, 1952, means a person by whom income-tax or any other sum of money is payable under the Act, and includes every person in respect of whom any proceeding under this Act has been taken for the assessment of We, therefore, agree with the High Court, though for somewhat different reasons. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.