Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
M..C. CHACKO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE BANK OF TRAVANCORE, TRIVANDRUM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/07/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 500 1970 SCR (1) 658
1969 SCC (2) 343
ACT:
Charge--Guarantee--Father guaranteeing payment of overdraft
account of Bank of which son was manager--Deed by lather
giving his properties to son and family members--Recital in
deed that father’s liability if any to be satisfied by the
son and the properties allotted to him--If sufficient to
create charge--Right if can be enforced by person not
party to contract.
HEADNOTE:
A bank, of which the appellant was the Manager, had an
overdraft -account with another bank which later merged with
the respondent. The appellant’s father had executed from
time to time letters of guarantee holding himself liable for
the amount under the overdraft arrangements. The appellant’s
father executed a deed giving away his properties to the
appellant, and other members of the family. The deed
recited that he had executed the letters of guarantee at
the request of the appellant, and that the amount due to the
Bank was to be paid by the appellant; but if any amount had
to be, paid by him (father) as per the letter of guarantee,
the appellant and the properties allotted to him were to be
answerable for that amount. The creditor bank filed a suit
against the debtor bank and also against the appellant and
his father’s other heirs and legal representatives for the
amount due under the overdraft arrangement; and claimed that
a charge was created on the properties to which the deed
executed by the father of the appellant related. The trial
court decreed the suit against the debtor bank and also
’against the appellant limited to the property received by
him fro.m his father under the deed but held that the claim
to enforce the personal liability of the father against his
legal representatives was barred by the law of limitation.
The High Court confirmed the decree. On the questions (i)
whether under the deed a charge was created in favour of the
creditor bank to satisfy the debt arising under the letter
of guarantee, and (ii) whether the charge, assuming that a
charge arose, was enforceable by the creditor bank when, it
was not a party to the deed,
HELD: (i) In order that a charge may be created, there
must be evidence of intention disclosed by the deed that a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
specified property or fund belonging to a person was
intended to be made liable to satisfy the deed,
In the present ease the recitals in the deed did not
evidence any intention of the donor to create a charge in
favour of the creditor bank; they merely set out an
arrangement between the donor and the members of his family
that the liability under the letter of guarantee if and when
it arose, will be satisfied by the appellant out of the
property allotted to him under the deed. The letter of
guarantee Created merely a personal obligation and an
intention tO convert a personal debt into a secured debt in
favour of the Bank, a third person, could not be inferred
from the recitals in the deed.
Akalla Suryanarayana Rao & Ors. v. Dwarapudi Basivireddi
JUDGMENT:
659
(ii) Even if it be granted that there was an intention
to create a charge the creditor-bank, not being a party to
the deed could not enforce its covenants. It must be taken
as well settled that except in the case of a beneficiary
under a trust created by a contract or in the case of a
family arrangement to right may be enforced by a person who
is not a party to a contract. [662 H]
Krishna Lal Sadhu v. Pramila Bain Dasi, I.L.R. 55
Cal. 1315, referred to.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 652 of
1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated November 23, 1964 of the Kerala High Court in A.S. No.
502 of 1961.
S.V. Gupte, Anantha Krishna lyer, S. Balakrishnan and
R. Thiagarajan, for the appellant.
H.R. Gokhale, J.S. Arora and K. Baldev Mehta, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, Ag. C.J. The High Land Bank Kottayam of which
the. appellant M.C. Chacko was the Manager, had an
overdraft account with the Kottayam Bank. K.C. Chacko,
father of the appellant, had executed from time to time
letters of guarantee in favour of the Kottayam Bank agreeing
to pay the amounts due by the High Land Bank under the
overdraft arrangement. By the last letter of guarantee dated
22nd January 1953 K.C. Chacko agreed to hold himself liable
for the amounts due by the High Land Bank to the Kottayam
Bank on the overdraft arrangement subject to a limit of Rs.
20,000.
The Kottayam Bank Ltd. filed a suit in the court of the
Subordinate Judge of Kottayam against the High Land Bank for
a decree for the amount due in the account. To this suit
were also impleaded K.C. Chacko the guarantor, M.C. Chacko
Manager of the High Land Bank, and M.C. Joseph, Kuriakose
Annamma and Chinnamma, the last three being the son,
daughter and wife respectively of K.C. Chacko. Against the
High Land Bank the claim was made on the footing of the
overdraft account: against K.C. Chacko on the letter of
guarantee and against M. C. Chacko, his brother, his sister
and his mother as universal donees of the property of K..C.
Chacko under a deed dated June 21, 1951 under which, it was
claimed, a charge was created on the properties to which
the deed related and against M.C. Chacko, also on the claim
that he had personally agreed to pay the amount due by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
High Land Bank. During the pendency of the suit, K.C. Chacko
died and the suit was prosecuted against his widow,.
660
daughter and sons who were described also as his legal
representatives.
The trial court decreed the suit against the High Land
Bank and also against M.C. Chacko, limited to the property
received by him from his father under the deed dated June
21, 1951. The claim of the Kottayam Bank to enforce the
liability under the letter of guarantee personally against
K.C. Chacko was held barred by the law of limitation and
on that account not enforceable against his heirs and legal
representatives. The Court also rejected the claim that
M.C. Chacko had personally agreed to pay the amount due
under the overdraft arrangement.
In appeal to the High Court by M.C. Chacko the decree
C passed by the trial court was confirmed and the cross-
objections filed by the State Bank of Travancore with which
the Kottayam Bank was merged claiming that M.C. Chacko was
personally liable were dismissed. This appeal with special
leave is preferred by M.C. Chacko against the decree of the
High Court.
Two questions ’arise in this appeal: (1) whether under
Ex. D-1 a charge is created in favour of the Kottayam Bank
to satisfy the debt arising under the letter of guarantee
and (2) whether the charge assuming that a charge arises-is
enfforceable by the Bank when it was not a party to the deed
Ex.D-1.
Ex.D-1 is called a deed of partition: in truth it is a
deed. whereby K.C. Chacko gave the properties described in
the Schedule A to M.C. Chacko and other properties described
in Schs. B to F to M. C. Chacko: M.C. Joseph, Annamma
and Chinnamma. In paragraph 17 it is recited:
"I have no debts whatsoever. If in
pursuance of the’ letter given by me to the
Kottayam Bank at the request of my eldest son,
Chacko, for the purpose of the High Land Bank
Ltd., Kottayam, of which he is the Managing
Director, any amount is due and payable to the
Kottayam Bank, that amount is to be paid from
the High Land Bank by my son, Chacko. If the
same is not so done and any amount becomes
payable (by me) as per my letter, for that my
eldest son, Chacko and the properties in
Schedule A alone will be answerable for that
amount."
The other paragraphs which deal with the properties in
Schedule A may also be referred to. Paragraph 10 of the deed
recited:
"The donees of the properties included in A,
B and C schedules are, as from this. date, to
be in possession of their respective
properties and to get mutation of
661
registry in their names, pay land revenue and
enjoy the income save that from cocoanut
trees."
By paragraph 12 it was declared that notwithstanding the
deed of partition, K.C. Chacko will take the income from the
cocoanut trees standing on the properties included in
Schedules A, B, C and F till his death and that the donees
of the properties will take and enjoy the income from the
cocoanut trees in their respective properties after his
death. In paragraph 13 it was recited that:
"As it is decided that Chinnamma.......
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
should receive and have for her maintenance
the rent of the building in item 7 in the A
schedule, as well as the rent of the building
in item 18 of the B schedule, she is to be in
possession of these buildings as from this
date and is to let them out and enjoy the
rent. The respective donees will have
possession and enjoyment after her death.
Chinnamma is to have full rights and liberty
to reside in any of the houses included in A,
B or C schedule and so long as she so resides
in any of the houses, the donees of the
respective houses is to meet all her expenses.
The rent collected by Chinnamma from the
buildings given possession of to her is to be
utilised by her for her private expenses as
she pleases."
In our judgment the various covenants in the deed. were
intended to incorporate an arrangement binding between the
members of the family for’ satisfaction of the debt, if
any, arising under the letter of guarantee.
We are unable to agree with the High Court that by cl.
17 of the deed it was intended to create a charge in favour
of the Kottayam Bank for the amount which may fall due
under the letter of guarantee. The letter of guarantee
created merely a personal obligation. The deed Ex. D-1 was
executed before the last letter of guarantee dated January
22, 1953. By cl. 17 of Ex. D-1 it is merely directed that
the liability if any arising under the letter of
guarantee, shall be satisfied by M.C. Chacko and not by the
donor, his son M. C. Joseph, his daughter Annamma and
his wife Chinnamma. The reason for the provision in the deed
is clear. M.C. Chacko was the Managing Director of the High
Land Bank Ltd. and it was at the instance of M. C. Chacko
that the letters of guarantee were executed by the donor.
For creating a charge on immovable property no particular
form of words is needed: by adequate words-intention may be
expressed to make property or a fund belonging to a person
charged for payment of a debt mentioned in the deed. But in
order that a charge may be created, there must be evidence
of intention disclosed by the .deed that a specified
property or fund belonging to
662
a person was intended to be made liable to satisfy the debt
due by him. The recitals in cl. 17 of the deed do not
evidence any intention of the donor to create a charge in
favour of the Kottayam Bank: they merely set out an
arrangement between the donor and the members of his family
that the liability under the letter of guarantee, if and
when it arises, will be satisfied by M.C. Chacko out of the
property allotted to him under the deed.
The debt which M.C. Chacko was directed by the deed to
satisfy was not in any sense a "family debt". It was a debt
of K.C. Chacko; and K.C. Chacko was personally liable to
pay that debt. After his death his sons, his daughter and
his widow would be liable to satisfy the debt out of his
estate in their hands. From the recitals in the deed Ext. D-
1 an intention to convert a personal debt into a secured
debt in favour of the Bank, a third person, cannot be
inferred. In Akalla Suryanarayana Rao & Others v. Dwarapudi
Basivireddi & Others(1) the Madras High Court in construing
a deed of partition of joint family property pursuant to a
compromise decree, held that properties allotted to certain
branches to which were also "allotted certain debts" with a
stipulation that until the debts were fully discharged the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
properties allotted to the shares of the respective persons
shall be liable in the first instance, were not subject to a
charge in favour of the creditors. The Court held that the
covenant in the partition deed resulted in a contract of
indemnity, and not a charge. In the present case also the
covenant that M.C. Chacko will either personally or out of
the properties given to him satisfy the debt is intended to
confer a right of indemnity upon other members of the
family, if the Kottayam Bank enforced the liability against
them. and created no charge in favour of the Bank. Clauses
12 ’and 13 of the deed support that view. By el. 12 the
right to the coconut trees standing in the properties
included in Schs. A, B, C and F is reserved to K.C. Chacko.
Similarly Chinnamma, wife of K.C. Chacko, is permitted
during her lifetime to occupy the houses in the properties
described in the three schedules and to recover the income
and to utilise the same for herself. It is clear that K.C.
Chacko had no intention to create a charge or to encumber
any of the properties for the debt which may become due to
the Bank.
The Kottayam Bank not being a party to the deal was not
bound by the covenants in the deed, nor could it enforce
the covenants. It is settled law that a person not a party
to a contract cannot subject to certain well recognised
exceptions, enforce the terms of the contract: the
recognised exceptions are that beneficiaries under the
terms of the contract or where the contract is a part of the
family arrangement may enforce the covenant. In
(1) I.L.R. 55 Med. 436.
663
Krishna Lal Sadhu v. Primila Bala Dasi(1) Rankin, C.J
observed:
"Clause (d) of section 2 of the Contract
Act widens the definition of ’consideration’
so as to enable a party to a contract to
enforce the same in india in certain cases in
which the English Law would regard the party
as the recipient of a purely voluntary
promise and would refuse to him a right of
action on the ground of nudum pactum. Not
only, however, is there nothing in s. 2 to
encourage the idea that contracts can be
enforced by a person who is not a party to the
contract, but this notion is rightly excluded
by the definition of ’promisor’ and
’promisee’."
Under the English Common Law only a person who is a party to
a contract can sue on it and that the law knows nothing of a
right gained by a third party arising out of a contract:
Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. v. Selfridge & Co. (2). It has
however been recognised that where a trust is created by a
contract, a beneficiary "may enforce the rights which the
trust so created has given him The basis of that rule is
that though he is not a party to the contract his rights are
equitable and not contractual. The Judicial Committee
applied that rule to an Indian case Khwaja Muhammad Khan v.
Husaini Begam(3). In a later case Jaman Das v. Ram Autar(4)
the Judicial Committee pointed out that the purchaser’s
contract to pay off a mortgage debt could not be enforced by
the mortgagee who was not a party to the contract. It must
therefore be taken as well settled that except in the case
of a beneficiary under a trust created by a contract or in
the case of a family arrangement, no right may be enforced
by a person who is not a party to the contract.
Even if it be granted that there was an intention to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
create a charge, the Kottayam Bank not being a party to the
deed could enforce the charge only if it was a beneficiary
under the terms of the contract, and it is not claimed that
the Bank was a beneficiary under the deed Ex. D-1. The suit
against M.C. Chacko must therefore be dismised.
The decree passed by the High Court is modified and it
is declared that M.C. Chacko is not personally liable for
the debt due under the letter of guarantee executed by K.C.
Chacko, nor are the properties in schedule A allotted to
M.C. Chacko under the deed dated June 21, 1951 liable to
satisfy the debt due to the Kottayam Bank under the letter
of guarantee.
(1) I.L.R. 55 Cal. 1315. (2) [1915] A.C. 847.
(3) (1910) 37 I.A. 152. (4) [1911] 39 I.A. 7.
14 Sup CI/69--13
664
Having regard to the circumstances of the case and
specially that a concession that persons not parties to a
contract may enforce the benefit reserved to them under the
contract was made before the High Court, we direct that
the parties to this appeal will bear their respective
costs throughout.
Y.P’ Decree modified.
665