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Issues Involved:
1. Applicability of Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, to the gifts made by the assessee and his brother. 2. Validity of the addition of Rs. 7,195 to the assessee's income under Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: Issue 1: Applicability of Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, to the gifts made by the assessee and his brother The primary question was whether the gift of a one-third share of land by the assessee's brother to the assessee's wife falls under the mischief of Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The Tribunal initially held that the gift did not attract Section 64 since the assessee had made gifts to his major nephews, and his brother had independently gifted land to the assessee's wife. However, the High Court referenced a previous decision involving the same parties (CIT v. Mohmadmiya A. Topiwala [1994] 207 ITR 711) where it was determined that the transfer by the assessee's brother was indirectly a transfer by the assessee. The court concluded that the gift to the assessee's wife was a strategic move to circumvent legal liabilities, thus falling under Section 64(1)(iii). The court reiterated that the Tribunal's finding of no intimate connection between the transfers was incorrect and that the transfers were indeed interconnected. The court dismissed the assessee's argument that the previous judgment lacked jurisdiction, affirming that the High Court could not reappraise the Tribunal's factual findings unless specifically challenged as perverse. The court upheld that the Tribunal's inference was a mixed question of law and fact, thereby justifying the High Court's interference. Issue 2: Validity of the addition of Rs. 7,195 to the assessee's income under Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 The second question pertained to the inclusion of Rs. 7,195, paid as interest to the assessee's wife, in the assessee's income under Section 64. The Tribunal had confirmed the Appellate Assistant Commissioner's order deleting this addition, based on the reasoning that the income did not arise directly or indirectly from the assets transferred by the assessee to his wife. The High Court disagreed, emphasizing that the interest income had a proximate connection with the transfer of assets. The court distinguished the present case from CIT v. Prem Bhai Parekh [1970] 77 ITR 27 (SC) and CIT v. Prahladrai Agarwala [1989] 177 ITR 398 (SC), where the Supreme Court had ruled that income must have a proximate connection with the transfer of assets to be included under Section 64. The court noted that in the current case, the assessee's wife invested the sale proceeds from the gifted land with the assessee, who paid her interest, thus establishing a direct connection. The court held that all conditions under Section 64(1)(iii) were satisfied: (i) There was a transfer of assets by the assessee to his wife. (ii) The transfer was without adequate consideration. (iii) The income (interest) arose directly from the transferred assets. Therefore, the High Court concluded that the Tribunal erred in confirming the deletion of Rs. 7,195 from the assessee's income. The court answered the second question in favor of the Revenue, affirming the inclusion of the interest amount in the assessee's income under Section 64. Conclusion: Both questions referred to the High Court were answered in favor of the Revenue. The court held that the gifts made by the assessee and his brother fell within the scope of Section 64 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, and that the interest income of Rs. 7,195 should be included in the assessee's income. The reference was disposed of with no order as to costs.
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