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Issues:
1. Interpretation of provisions under the Income-tax Act, 1961 regarding separate assessments for a partnership firm after a partner's death. Analysis: The High Court of Madhya Pradesh was tasked with providing an opinion on whether the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was correct in holding that two separate assessments should be made on an assessee-firm, one for the period up to April 9, 1974, and another for the period from April 10, 1974, to November 13, 1974. The case involved a partnership with three partners, one of whom died on April 9, 1974. Following the death, a new deed of partnership was executed, replacing the deceased partner with his widow. The Tribunal's order was based on the legal position that in the absence of a clause stating otherwise, the death of a partner results in dissolution under the Partnership Act. Consequently, the assessee filed two returns for the respective periods, leading to the question of separate assessments. The court considered the proviso added to section 187(2) of the Income-tax Act by the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1984, with retrospective effect from April 1, 1975. The proviso stated that the dissolution of a firm due to the death of a partner would not fall under clause (a) of the section. With this addition, section 188 of the Act became applicable to the case at hand. Section 188 mandates separate assessments for a predecessor firm and a successor firm when one firm succeeds another. The Tribunal's decision to order separate assessments for the periods before and after the partner's death aligned with the revised legal framework. Consequently, the High Court concurred with the Tribunal's decision, affirming that two separate assessments were warranted in this scenario. The judgment was delivered by N. D. Ojha, Chief Justice, and C. P. Sen.
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