Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

Paras Kumar JaIn Vs. Cit

Paras Kumar Jain vs Cit

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Oct 10, 2002
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/492586

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Allahabad High Court
Decided On
Case Number
IT Ref. No. 250 of 1983 10 October 2002
Subject
Direct Taxation

Case Summary

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

Counsels: Piyush Agrawal, for the Assessee q Prakash Krishna, for the Revenue In the Allahabad High Court S.K. Sen, C.J. & Ashok Bhushan, J. - LAND ACQUISITION ACT, 1894 [C.A. No. 1/1894]. Section 4; [Sushil Harkauli, S.K. Singh & Krishna Murari, JJ] Acquisition of land Held, Court cannot issue a Writ of Mandam...

Key legal issue
Direct Taxation

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Paras Kumar Jain

Advocate Piyush Agrawal, <i>for the Assessee</i> <font face="Wingdings" size="2">q</font> Prakash Krishna, <i>for the Revenue</i>

Respondent

Cit

Legal References

Reported In
[2003]126TAXMAN179(All)

Excerpt

.....the provisions of land acquisition act, 1894. it would, however, be open to the court in exercise of that power to invite the attention of the executive to any public purpose and the need for land for meeting that public purpose and to require the executive to take a decision, even a reasoned decision, with regard to the same in accordance with the statutory provisions, perhaps even within a reasonable time frame. however, the power of the court under article 226 must necessarily stop at that. thereafter, if the decision taken by the executive is capable of challenge and, there exist appropriate legal grounds for such challenge, it may also be open to the court to quash the decision and to require reconsideration. but no direction in the nature of mandamus whether interim or final can be issued by the court under article 226 to the executive to necessarily acquire a particular area of a particular piece of land for a particular public purpose. section 4; compulsory acquisition of land powers of state government held, renewal of lease in favour of petitioners would not take away power of state government of compulsory acquisition of land. renewal of lease would at best be taken into consideration for determining quantum of compensation. orderat the instance of assessee the income tax appellate tribunal has referred the following questions of law to this court for its opinion :'1. whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the appellate tribunal was right in law in holding that the share income of the assessee's wife and minor children from the firm in which assessee was also a partner not as an individual but as karta of the family, could be clubbed with the assessee's income under section 64(1)(iii) of the income tax act, 1961 ?2. whether on the facts and in the circumstances, the appellate tribunal was right to hold that the assessee was duty bound to disclose share income of wife and minor children in his return of income or during the course of assessment and since it was not done, initiation of proceedings under section 147(a) was according to law ?'we have heard sri piyush agrawal, learned advocate for the assessee and sri prakash krishna, learned advocate appearing for the revenue and have perused the records of the case.in view of the judgment and decision of the supreme court in the case of cit v. shri om prakash : [1996]217itr785(sc) , we answer the question no. 1 referred to, in negative and decide the reference in favour of the assessee and against the revenue. since question no. 1 has been decided, question no. 2 does not survive.the reference is, accordingly, disposed of.

Full Judgment

ORDER

At the instance of assessee the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal has referred the following questions of law to this court for its opinion :

'1. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Appellate Tribunal was right in law in holding that the share income of the assessee's wife and minor children from the firm in which assessee was also a partner not as an individual but as karta of the family, could be clubbed with the assessee's income under section 64(1)(iii) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 ?

2. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances, the Appellate Tribunal was right to hold that the assessee was duty bound to disclose share income of wife and minor children in his return of income or during the course of assessment and since it was not done, initiation of proceedings under section 147(a) was according to law ?'

We have heard Sri Piyush Agrawal, learned Advocate for the assessee and Sri Prakash Krishna, learned Advocate appearing for the revenue and have perused the records of the case.

In view of the judgment and decision of the Supreme Court in the case of CIT v. Shri Om Prakash : [1996]217ITR785(SC) , we answer the question No. 1 referred to, in negative and decide the reference in favour of the assessee and against the revenue. Since question No. 1 has been decided, question No. 2 does not survive.

The reference is, accordingly, disposed of.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial