Society under income tax act

Society Act

Effect of Registration / Non-Registration of A Society

The Societies Registration Act, 1860 lays down procedure for registration of societies for various bonafide purposes.

The registration gives the society a legal status and is essential

When the society is registered, it and its members become bound to the same extent, as if each member had signed the memorandum.

A society, registered under this Act, must confine its activities to the sphere embraced by its objects.

A tax imposed on a society is one imposed on the society and not on its members.

A society registered under the Act enjoys the status of a legal entity apart from the members constituting it. A society so registered is a legal person just as an individual but with no physical existence. As such it can acquire and hold property and can sue and be sued.

The society should be registered under the Act to acquire the status of juridical person.

In the absence of registration, all the trustees in charge of the fund have alone a legal status and the society has no legal status, and, therefore, it cannot sue and be sued. A non-registered society may exist in fact but not in law. It is immaterial under the Act whether the society is registered but where the benefit is claimed, the registration of society under the Act us required. An unregistered society cannot claim benefits under the Income-tax act.

Accounts and Audits

The societies are in possession of funds and properties provided to them by the members or by other persons (by way of donation etc.). The funds and properties are interested for the attainment of objects for which the society has been formed. The members of the governing body are the trustees who apply the funds. It becomes necessary, that the societies maintain regular account books and get them audited and present them to the members at the general meeting and file them with the Registrar for scrutiny. Every society should get its accounts audited once a year by duly qualified auditor and have balance sheet prepared by him. The auditor should submit the report showing the exact date of financial affairs of the society.

As every society is a legal entity separate from its members it is capable of filing suits against any person or any member. Similarly, the suits can also be brought against the society.

The registered society can file a suit anywhere in India and in any state although it is not registered in that particular state.