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Shaik Hassan Vs. Assistant Controller of Estate Duty

Shaik Hassan vs Assistant Controller of Estate Duty

Type Court Judgment Court Karnataka Decided Sep 12, 1968
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/370548

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Citation
Court
Karnataka High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Writ Petition No. 1899 of 1966
Subject
Direct Taxation

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

- MOTOR VEHICLES ACT (59 OF 1988)Section 168: [Huluvadi G. Ramesh,J] Compensation - Deceased aged about 49 years employed as Head Constable in Government department - Earning monthly income of Rs. 9000/- - Held, No deduction towards tax component is required. As 12 years of service has been left, multiplier of 12 ...

Key legal issue
Direct Taxation
Acts & sections
Estate Duty Act, 1953 - Sections 53(3) and 57

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Shaik Hassan

Advocate K. Srinivasan, Adv.

Respondent

Assistant Controller of Estate Duty

Advocate S.R. Rajasekhara Murthy, Adv.

Legal References

Acts
Estate Duty Act, 1953 - Sections 53(3) and 57
Reported In
[1969]71ITR344(KAR); [1969]71ITR344(Karn); (1968)2MysLJ433

Excerpt

- motor vehicles act (59 of 1988)section 168: [huluvadi g. ramesh,j] compensation - deceased aged about 49 years employed as head constable in government department - earning monthly income of rs. 9000/- - held, no deduction towards tax component is required. as 12 years of service has been left, multiplier of 12 has been applied instead of 13 as prescribed in schedule ii. since the date of superannuation falls within period of multiplier, 1/3rd of income towards personal expenses deducted. compensation of rs. 8,89,000/- with 6% interest was awarded. no interference. section 173: [huluvadi g. ramesh,j] appeal by insurance company challenging quantum of compensation held, unless tribunal permit insurer to avail grounds which are available to insured or person against whom claim has been made, appeal filed by insurer is not maintainable. .....deliver an account in the prescribed form of all the properties in respect of which estate duty is payable. 5. we have seen the account delivered by the petitioner, and, according to that account, the value of the property which according to the petitioner bears estate duty was only rs. 26,000. so, according to that account, no estate duty was at all payable. 6. it is true, as pointed out by mr. rajasekhara murthy appearing for the assistant controller of estate duty, that in the account delivered under section 53(3), the petitioner did refer to some gifts made by his farther and that subsequently he stated the values of the property so gifted. but the account to which section 57 refers and which is required to be delivered under section 53(3) is the account which reflects the value of the property in respect of which estate duty is admittedly payable, and so the enumeration of other properties which, according to the account delivered, the deceased no longer owned when he died, could not form the foundation of a provisional assessment under section 57 of the act. 7. so, we set aside the impugned provisional assessment made by the assistant controller. 8. no costs.

Full Judgment

Somnath Iyer, J.

1. A certain Shaik Abdul Kadar, who was a resident of Goa, died on April 2, 1963, and his son, who is the petitioner, produced an account under section 53(3) of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, in which he stated that the value of the estate in respect of which estate duty was payable was Rs. 26,000. In a covering letter with which that account was delivered, he enumerated the gifts which had been made according to him by the deceased, Shaik Abdul Kadar, before the extension of the Indian laws to the Goa territory.

2. The assistant Controller of Estate Duty then made a provisional assessment under section 57. In the course of the order which he made, he stated that the petitioner had admitted that the value of the estate of the deceased, in respect of which estate duty was payable, was Rs. 14,42,509 and that, therefore, the tax which could be provisionally determined as payable by the petitioner was Rs. 1,83,196.83.

3. It is this provisional assessment which is challenged in this writ petition, and it is contended that the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty was not right in thinking that the petitioner had made any admission that the property of the deceased in respect of which estate duty was payable was of the value of Rs. 14,42,509.

4. Under section 57 of the Estate Duty Act, a provisional assessment should be founded on the account delivered under section 53(3), which provides that every person accountable for estate duty shall deliver an account in the prescribed form of all the properties in respect of which estate duty is payable.

5. We have seen the account delivered by the petitioner, and, according to that account, the value of the property which according to the petitioner bears estate duty was only Rs. 26,000. So, according to that account, no estate duty was at all payable.

6. It is true, as pointed out by Mr. Rajasekhara Murthy appearing for the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty, that in the account delivered under section 53(3), the petitioner did refer to some gifts made by his farther and that subsequently he stated the values of the property so gifted. But the account to which section 57 refers and which is required to be delivered under section 53(3) is the account which reflects the value of the property in respect of which estate duty is admittedly payable, and so the enumeration of other properties which, according to the account delivered, the deceased no longer owned when he died, could not form the foundation of a provisional assessment under section 57 of the Act.

7. So, we set aside the impugned provisional assessment made by the Assistant Controller.

8. No costs.

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