(1.) THE following two questions have been referred to this court by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Allahabad :
(2.) MESSRS, Hari Om Company, Kanpur (a dissolved firm), is the assessee, 1956-57 is the assessment year. In the first instance, the Income-tax Officer assessed the partners of the firm individually. thereafter, he proceeded to assess the firm as such. The firm raised an objection that the assessment of the firm was not permissible in law after the assessment of the individual partners. Thus contention was overruled by the Income-tax Officer. The firm applied for registration. That claim was rejected. The Income-tax Officer proceeded to make the assessment on the footing that it was an unregistered firm. The firm challenged these decisions by the Income-tax Officer. On the question of registration of the firm succeeded before the Tribunal. The Tribunal permitted registration of the firm. On the question of assessment, the assessees appeal was dismissed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. When the question of assessment went up before the Tribunal upon further appeal, the assessee raised two questions. The first question was that the assessment of the firm was not permissible after separate assessment of the partners in their individual capacity. Secondly, it was urged before the Tribunal that the assessment proceedings for the year 1956-57 could not be validly initiated against the firm after its dissolution. Both these contentions raised by the assessee were rejected by the Tribunal. The assessees appeal was, therefore, dismissed. The assessee applied for reference to this court under section 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Tribunal has, therefore, referred the two questions quoted above to this court.
(3.) THAT observation in the appellate order indicates that, in spite of the decision by the Tribunal directing registration of the firm, the department was for some reason not prepared to proceed on the footing that the firm was entitled to registration. In the first instance, the Income-tax Officer made the assessment on the footing that the firm was unregistered. The assessees appeal was successively dismissed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal. We must, therefore, assume that the Tribunal dealt with the case on the footing that the Tribunal was dealing with the case of assessment of an unregistered firm. we shall, therefore, dispose of the reference on the footing that we are dealing with a situation where an unregistered firm has been assessed after the assessment of the partners in individual capacity.