Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VASUDEV RAMCHANDRA SHELAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRANLAL JAYANAND THAKAR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/07/1974
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1728 1975 SCR (1) 534
1974 SCC (2) 323
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1370 (69,77,80)
RF 1988 SC 782 (65)
RF 1988 SC1353 (3)
ACT:
Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (4 of 1882) ss. 6, 122 and
123--Gift of shares in companies by registered gift
deed--Transfers not effected before donor’s death--No
question of competing equities--Whether rights of ownership
can be split into right to corpus and usufruct.
Indian Companies Act, 1913--S. 28--Reg. 18 of Table A "title
to get on the register" and "the full property in the
shares in a company"--Distinction.
Interpretation--Harmonious interpretation.
HEADNOTE:
By a registered deed, a donor gifted to the appellant shares
in various limited companies. Before her death the donor
had signed several blank transfer forms to enable the done
to obtain transfer of the shares in the register of
companies and share certificates in his name. She had
signed at the correct places showing that she meant to sign
transfer of shares but the transfer could not be effected
before the donor’s death. The respondent claiming the
shares filed an administration suit. A single Judge of the
High Court held that the appellant was entitled to shares
covered by the gift deed to which blank transfer forms could
be related. A division bench of the High Court reversed the
decision of the Single Judge on the ground that the gift was
incomplete for failure to comply with the formalities
prescribed by the Indian Companies Act, 1913 for transfer of
shares. It further held that there was no equity in favour
of the appellant so that he may claim the right to complete
what was left incomplete by the donor in her life-time. On
appeal it was contended in this Court (1) that since the
donor had signed the blank transfer forms and handed them
over to the done, the gift deed and the signed blank forms
had to be read together and (2) that the transfer was
complete with the registration of the gift deed and even
delivery of share certificates to the done was not necessary
in view of s. 122 of the Transfer of Property Act.
Allowing the appeal,
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HELD:(1) The respondent has not made out a case for
defeating the clearly expressed intentions of the donor,
coupled with the authority with which the donor was armed by
reason of the signed blank transfer forms. On a correct
interpretation of the gift deed and other material the right
to obtain a transfer of shares was clearly and completely
obtained by the donee appellant. There was no question of
competing.equities because the donee appellant was shown to
have obtained a complete legal right to obtain shares under
the gift deed and an implied authority to take steps to get
his name registered. [549B-D]
The fact that the relevant provisions of the Transfer of
Property Act and the Companies Act must be interpreted
harmoniously does not mean that a provision of one Act could
be nullified by any provision of the other Act. It means
that the provision of the two Acts should be read
consistently with each other so far as it is reasonably
possible to do so. This end can be best achieved by
examining the objects and the subject-matter of each
enactment and by viewing each relevant provision as a limb
of an integrated whole meant to serve the underlying
purposes. In this way their separable spheres of operation
will be clarified so as to avoid possibilities of conflict
between them or any unnecessary overflow of what really
appertains to one field into another. [539H-540B]
(2) The Transfer of Property Act is an enactment meant for
defining certain basic types of transfers and lays down the
requirement both of substance and of form for their legal
recognition and effectiveness. Section 5 of the Act gives a
wide connotation to "transfer of property". Section 6 of
the Act lays down that "property of any kind may be
transferred" subject to certain exceptions. Shares in a
company are certainly a form of property. Section 28 of the
Companies
535
Act, 1913 says that they "shall be movable property,
transferable in the manner provided by articles of the
Company". A wide definition of "property" in s. 6 of the
Transfer of Property Act includes not merely shares as
transferable, movable property. but would cover as a
separate form of property a right to obtain shares which may
be antecedent to the accrual of rights of a shareholder upon
the grant of a share certificate in accordance with the
articles of association of a company. [540B-E]
There is a distinction between "the title to get on the
register" and "the full property in the shares in a
company". The first is acquired by mere delivery, with the
required intention of the share certificate and a blank form
signed by the transfer. The second is only obtained when
the transferee, in exercise of his right to become a
shareholder, gets his name on the register in place of the
transferor. This antecedent right in the person to whom the
share certificate is given with a signed blank transfer form
under a transaction meant to confer right or title upon him
to become a shareholder is enforceable so long as no
obstacle to it is shown to exist in any of the articles of
association of a company or a person with a superior right
or title, legal or equitable, does not appear to be there.
Section 6 of the T.P. Act justifies such a splitting up of
rights constituting property in shares just as it is well
recognised that rights of ownership of property may be split
up into a right to the "Corpus" and another to the
"usufruct" of the property and then separately dealt with.
[541C-E]
M.P. Barucha & Anr. V. V. Sarabhai & Co. & Ors. 53 Indian
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Appeals P. 92 @ 97-98, relied on.
Section 122 of the Transfer of Property Act defines a
"gift". Section 123 of the T. P. Act prescribes the mode of
transfer by gift. No special mode of delivery is specified
in the section. On the other hand it is indicated that the
delivery "may be made in such a way as the goods sold are
delivered". [541E-G]
In the instant case the registered document was signed both
by the donor and donee and is attested by witnesses. The
donor specified and gave particulars of the shares meant to
be gifted. The donor delivered the registered gift deed
together with the share certificates to the donee. On these
facts the donation of the right to get share certificates
made out in the name of the donee became irrevocable by
registration as well as by delivery. The actual transfers
in the registers of the companies concerned were to
constitute mere enforcement of this right. They were
necessary to enable the donee to exercise the rights of the
shareholder. The mere fact that such transfers had to be
recorded in accordance with the Company Law did not detract
from the completeness of what was donated. [541G-542B]
The broadly indicated requirements of regulation 18 of Table
A of 1st Schedule to the Companies Act, 1913 were also
complied with by the contents of the gift deed. It is
immaterial that the gift deed deals with a number of items
so long as the requirements of Regulation 18 are fulfilled.
The observance of a form whether found in the Transfer of
Property Act or in the Companies Act is meant to serve the
needs of the substance of the transaction which were
undoubtedly shown to have been completely fulfilled here.
There is nothing in Regulation 18 to indicate that without
strict compliance with some rigidly prescribed form, the
transaction must fail to achieve its purpose. The
subservience of substance of a transaction to some rigidly
prescribed form required to be meticulously observed,
savors of archaic and outmoded jurisprudence. [543G-544A]
Re Nose, Midland Bank Executer & Trustee Co. Ltd. v. Rose.
1949 Ch. D. 78, Re Rose, Rose v. Inland Renvenue
Commissioners, 1932 (1) Ch.D. 499, M/s. Howrah Trading Co.
Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, Calcutta, [1959]
Supp. (2) SCR 448 @ 453 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2515 of 1973,
(From the judgment and Decree dated the 11th/12th July, 1972
of the Gujarat High Court in L.P. A. No. 40 of 1969.)
S. T, Desai and H.S. Parihar for the appellant.
M.C. Bhandare, P. H. Parekh and Manju Jetley for
respondent No. 1.
536
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J. This appeal, after certification by the Gujarat High
Court of fitness of the case for it, I rises in the
following circumstances:
Uttamram Mayaram Thakar, a flourishing lawyer, made a will,
on 10-6-1945 and died childless on 20-8-1946. His widow,
Bai Ruxmani, obtained, under the will, inter alia, certain
shares the right and title to which are disputed before us.
On 6-3-1948, Bai Ruxmani executed a registered gift deed
purporting to donate the disputed shares in various limited
companies, of which details were given in the gift deed, to
her brother, Vasudev Ranichandra Shelat, the appellant
before us (hereinafter referred to as "Shelat"). On 18-4-
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1948, Bai Ruxmani also expired. But, before she died, she
had signed several blank transfer forms,apparently intended
to be filled in by donee so as to enable him. to obtain the
transfer of the donated shares in the registers of the
various companies and share certificates in his own name.
She had put her signatures in the correct places showing
that she meant sign as the transferor of the shares. The
shares could not, however, be transferred in the registers
of the various companies, in accordance with the relevant
provisions of Company law, before the lady’s death.
Therefore, the respondent before us, Pranlal Jayanand
Thakar, a nephew of the late Uttamram Mayaram Thakar,
disputed the claim of the appellant Vasudev Ramchandra
Shelat to these shares in an administration suit which came
up before a learned Judge of the Gujarat High Court in
second appeal together with other matters. The learned
Single Judge held that Shelat was entitled to the shares
covered by the registered gift deed to which the blank
transfer forms could be related but not to others said to
have been orally gifted with which we are not concerned
here. The learned Judge having granted leave to file a
Letter’s Patent Appeal, a Division Bench of the Gujarat High
Court, which considered the rival claims, reversed the
decision of the learned Single Judge even with regard to the
shares covered by the registered gift deed on the ground
that the gift was incomplete for failure to comply with the
formalities prescribed by the Companies’ Act for "transfer"
of shares. It held-that there was no equity in favour of
Shelat so that he may claim a right to complete what was
left incomplete by the donor in her lifetime even though
there could be no doubt that Bai Ruxmani had intended to
donate the shares to Shelat.
We think Mr. S.T. Desai, learned Counsel for the appellant
Shelat, rightly pointed out that every material finding on
questions of fact, given in favour of the appellant, was
upheld by the Division Bench. After indicating the terms of
the gift deed, the Division Bench held:
"Thus, it is undoubtedly true that the deed of
gift discloses a clear and unequivocal
intention on the part of Bai Ruxmani that
Vasudev should become the owner of these
shares and he should for all future time enjoy
the fruits thereof. it is a well settled
position in law that unless the gift it
completed as required by law, mere intention
to make a gift cannot pass any title to the
donee and does not make the
537
donee the owner of the property gifted by the
donor. The registered gift deed itself cannot
create any transfer and so it was not
competent to the donor to divest the title in
her merely by the execution of the gift deed.
She was required to execute the regular
transfer deeds or instruments of transfer in
favour of Vasudev Shelat and hand them over to
the donee, Vasudev Shelat, together with the
share certificates."
It went on to say:
"The circumstances as they clearly emerge and
the facts as found by the Courts below, go to
show that the deed of gift was executed on
March 6, 1948, and, at the same time, the re-
levant share-certificates were handed over by
the donor to the donee; and, sometime between
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March 6, 1948, when the gift deed was
executed, and April 18, 1948, when Bai Ruxmani
died blank transfer forms signed by Bai
Ruxmani were handed over by Bai Ruxmani to
vasudev Shelat, the donee."
The appellant’s submissions, on facts found, may be
summarised as follows:
(1) As between the donor and the donee the transfer was
complete with the registration of the gift deed; and, as
there was a registered document, even delivery of share
certificates to the donee was not necessary in view of
Section 122 Transfer of Property Act.
(2) Assuming, without conceding that the donor had to do
something more than to execute a registered document, this
too was done when the shares certificates and the signed
"blank transfer" forms were handed over to the donee by the
donor. It did not matter if the name of the donee and other
particulars are wanting in these blank forms. All necessary
particulars of shares involved were expressly mentioned in
the gift deed which specifies and identifies each individual
share meant to be donated. The gift deed and the signed
blank forms had to be read together. The donor had done all
that reasonably lay with- in her power to complete the
donation.
(3)The conduct of the donor, in handing over the share
certificates to the donee and the blank transfer forms, read
in the context of the expressly laid down intentions of the
donor in the gift deed, raised the presumption of an implied
authority to fill in the details and to submit to the
companies concerned the forms given by the donor to Shelat
before her death.
(4) There was no evidence whatsoever in the case to repel
the irresistible inference of an implied authority given to
the donee to fill in and submit the transfer forms so as to
obtain the necessary entries in the registers of the various
companies concerned.
(5) The Division Bench had, after giving all the necessary
findings of fact in favour of the appellant, misdirected
itself by resorting to the doctrine that there is no equity
to complete an incomplete transaction, as there is when a
bonafide purchaser for value comes before the Court.
538
There was no question of any equity involved here. The
simple question was one of fact. Did the inference of an
implied authority of the donee to fill in the forms and take
other steps necessary to get his name entered in the
registers of shareholders arise or not? Instead of
considering and deciding whether such an inference arose,
the Division Bench had failed to decide the real issue on
the erroneous view that equity debars it from inferring an
implied authority because the donee, unlike a bona fide
purchaser for value, had paid nothing for the rights he
could get from the donor.
All that could be urged on behalf of the respondent may be
summed up as follows :
(1) The facts found make out, at best, an intention of Bai
Ruxmani to donate but not the completion of a donation
required by law for divesting the donor of interest in the
property under consideration which consisted of shares.
(2) Although shares are goods, as defined by the Sale of
Goods Act, yet, they are ’goods’ of a special kind. Their
transfer is not completed merely by the execution of a
registered document or by delivery but the correct mode of
transfer is determined by the character of these "goods"
Sec. 123 of the Transfer of Property Act lays down only a
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general mode of transfer by gift for goods in ’general but
not for the transfer by gift of shares which are a special
type of ’goods’ capable of transfer only in accordance with
a special mode prescribed by the Companies Act of 1913,
which was applicable at the relevant time. In other words,
an adoption of the prescribed form of transfer is of the
essence of a transfer for all purposes and not merely as
between the shareholder and the company concerned.
(3) Sections 122 & 123 of the Transfer of Property Act had
to be read harmoniously with Sections 28 and 34 of the
Companies Act, 1913.
(4) Since material portions of the transfer form given in
regulation 19 of Table A of the first Schedule of the
Companies Act of 1913 were never filled in, the doctrine of
"substantial compliance" with the required form could not
come to the aid of the appellant.
(5) The gift deed itself does not empower the donee to take
any of those steps which remained to be taken to complete
the ’transfer’, so that the doctrine of implied authority
would be excluded by the ex. press terms of the gift deed
which not only do not confer any such authority Upon the
donee but indicated that the donor was to take the necessary
steps herself.
(6) Inasmuch as acceptance of the gift "during the life-
time of the donor" is a condition precedent to the validity
of the gift as a transaction, and the appellant Shelat did
not apply for the transfer of shares, so as to indicate his
acceptance of the gift before the dono died, the purported
donation was frustrated by reason of Sec. 122 of of the
Transfer of Property Act.
539
(7) Even if we were to assume that the facts proved
disclosed that the appellant donee was armed with an implied
authority to obtain a transfer, yet that authority not
having been acted upon during the life-time of the donor,
lapsed with the donor’s death. The result was that the
donation, even if intended, was imperfect or infructuous in
the eye of law and could not be perfected or completed.
Equity does not aid a merely purported donee who has given
no consideration to obtain any right. In other words,
equitable considerations would not be irrelevant in deciding
the question before us.
(8)Even apart from equity, under the law of agency, found
in sec. 201 of our Contract Act, the Principal’s death
terminates the agency, so that the doctrine of implied
authority does not help the
appellant.
(9) Section 202 of the Contract Act could not apply to a
case where the subject-matter of the alleged agency is the
taking of steps to complete a transfer and not the rights
which could only accrue after the necessary steps are taken.
Hence, the appellant donee could not be said to have an
interest in the "subject-matter of the agency" which is
distinct from rights which could have arisen if the object
of the agency had been fulfilled.
(10) Section 202 of the Contract Act could apply to a case
where an agent has an actual or existing interest in the
subject-matter of the agency. Even if the subject-matter of
the agency could be said to be "Property", consisting of
shares, there could be no question of applying Section 202
of the Contract Act before an "’merest" in the shares arose.
Such "interest" could only arise after a completed transfer.
(11) Section 202 of the Contract Act contemplated cases of
termination of agency in ways other than death. It meant
that, so long as a Principal is alive, he could not
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terminate an agency so as to injure the interests of the
agent in "the subject matter of the agency". But, in the
case of the death of the Principal, the relationship
terminated ipso facto or automatically by death.
(12) A resort to the very concept of agency in this case
presupposes that some interest of the Principal or the donor
in the property said to be donated continued,-or, in other
words, the assumption behind it was that the donation of
shares was not complete in the eye of law. Its completion
was not possible after the death of the donor.
We think that questions to be really decided in the case
before us have tended to become needlessly clouded by
references to statutory provisions and to doctrines or
concepts which really operate in separate and distinct
fields of their own. It is true that the relevant
provisions of the Transfer of Property Act and the Companies
Act must be interpreted harmoniously. But, this certainly
does not mean that a provision of one Act could be nullified
by any provisions of the other Act. It means that the
provisions of the two Acts should be- read consistently with
each other so far as it is reasonably possible I to do SO.
540
We think that this end can be best achieved here by
examining the objects and the subject-matter, of each
enactment and by viewing each relevant provision as a limb
of an integrated whole meant to serve the underlying
purposes. In this way, their separable spheres of operation
will be clarified so as to avoid possibilities of conflict
between them or any unnecessary overflow of what really
appertains to one field into another.
No doubt the Transfer of Property Act is not exhaustive. It
does not deal with every kind of transfer of property which
the law permits. Nor does it prescribe the mode for every
legally recognised transfer. Nevertheless, it is an
enactment meant for defining certain basic types of transfer
and it lays down the requirements both of substance and of
form for their legal recognition and effectiveness. Section
5 of this Act gives a wide connotation to "transfer of pro-
perty". All that it requires is that the transferor must be
living at the time of the transfer recognised by the Act.
Section 6 of the Act lays down that "property of any kind
may be transferred" subject to certain exceptions. Shares
in a company are certainly a form of property. Section 28
of the Companies Act, 1913, says that they "shall be movable
property, transferable in the manner provided by the
articles of the company". Both sides accept as correct the
view of the Division Bench of the High Court-that the shares
are "goods" within the meaning of the Sale of Goods Act.
The point which, however, deserves to be noted here is that
wide definition of "property" in Section 6 of the Transfer.
of Property Act includes not merely shares as transferable,
movable property, but would cover, as a separable form of
property, a right to obtain shares which may be antecedent
to the accrual of rights- of a shareholder upon the grant of
a share certificate in accordance with the articles of
association of company.
In M.P. Barucha & Anr. v. V. Sarabhai & Co.’& Ors.(1) which
was a case of handing over share certificates together with
blank signed transfer forms, the Privy Council said (at p.
97-98):
"But" further, there seems to their Lordships
a good deal of confusion arising from the
prominence given to the fact that the full
property, in shares in a company is only in
the registered holder. That is quite true.
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It is ture that what Barucha had was not the
perfect right of property, which he would have
had if he had been the registered holder of
the shares which he was selling. The company
is entitled to deal with the shareholder who
Is on the register, and only a person who is
on the register is in the full sense of the
the word owner of the share. But the title to
get on the register consists in the possession
of a certificate, together with a transfer
signed by the registered holder. This is what
Barucha had. He had the certificates and
blank transfers, signed by the registered
holders. It would be an upset of all Stock
Exchange transactions if it were suggested
that a broker who sold shares by general
description
(1) 53 Indian Appeals P. 92 @ P. 97-98.
541
did not implement his bargain by supplying the
buyer with certificates and blank transfers,
signed by the registered holders of the shares
described. Barucha sold what he had got. He
could sell no more. He sold what in England
would have been chooses in action, and he
delivered chooses in action. But in India, by
the terms of the Indian Contract Act, these
chooses in action are goods. By the
definition of goods as every kind of movable
property it is clear that not only registered
shares, but also this class of chooses in
action, are goods. Hence, equitable
considerations not applicable to goods do not
apply to shares in India."
Thus, we find that, in Barucha’s case (supra), a distinction
was made between "the title to get on the register" and "the
full property in the shares in a Company.,’ The first was
held to have been acquired by mere delivery, with the
required intention, of the share certificate and a blank
form signed by the transferor. The second is only obtained
when the transferee, in exercise of his right to become a
shareholder, gets his name on the register in place of the
transferor. This antecedent right in the person to whom the
share certificate is given with a signed blank transfer form
under a transaction meant to confer right or title upon him
to become a shareholder, is enforceable so long as no
obstacle to it is shown to exist in any of the articles of
association of a company or a person with a superior right
or title, legal or equitable does not appear to be there.
We think that Section 6 of the Transfer of Property Act
Justifies such a splitting up of rights constituting "
property" in shares just as it is well recognised that
rights of ownership of a property may be split up into a
right to the "corpus" and another to the "usufruct" of the
property and then separately dealt with.
Sec. 122 of the Transfer of Property Act defines a ",gift".
its substantial requirements are : (1) the donor must
transfer "property", which is the subject-matter of the
gift, voluntarily and without consideration; (2) and, the
donee must accept it during the life-time of the donor or
while the donor’s competence to give exists. Section 123 of
the Transfer of Property Act prescribes the mode of transfer
by gift. It lays down that "the transfer may be effected
either by registered instrument signed by the donor and
attested by at least two witnesses or by delivery". No
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special mode of delivery is specified. On the other hand,
it is indicated that the delivery "may be made in such a way
as the goods sold are delivered".
In the case before us, the registered document was signed by
the donor as "the giver" as well as by the donee as "the
acceptor" of the gift, and it is attested by six witnesses.
In it, the donor specified and gave particulars of the
shares meant to be gifted and undertook to get the name of
the donee put on to the registers of the companies
concerned. The donor even said that she was, thenceforth, a
trustee for the benefit of the donee with regard to the
income she may get due to the fact that her name was still
entered in the registers of the companies concerned as a
shareholder. The donor delivered the registered gift deed
together with the share certificates to the donee. We
542
think that, on these facts, the donation of the right to get
share certificates made out in the name of the donee became
irrevocable by registration as well as by delivery. The
donation of such a right, as a form of property, was shown
to be complete so that nothing was left to be done so far as
the vesting of such a right in the donee is concerned. The
actual transfers in the registers of the companies concerned
were to constitute mere enforcements of this right. They
were necessary to enable the donee to exercise the rights of
the shareholder. The mere fact that such transfers had to
be recorded in accordance with the company law did not
detract from the completeness of what was donated.
We think the learned Counsel for the appellant rightly
contended that, even in the absence of registration of the
gift deed, the delivery of the documents mentioned above to
the donee with the clear intention to donate, would be
enough to confer upon the donee a complete and irrevocable
right, of the kind indicated above, in what is movable
property. He relied upon : Kalyanasundaram Pillai v.
Keruppa Mooppanar & Ors.(1); Venkatsubba Shrinivas Hegde v.
Subba Rama Hegde;(2) Firm Sawan Mat Gopi Chand v. Shiv
Charan Das(3).
The requirements of form or mode of transfer are really
intended to ensure that the substantial requirements of the
transfer have been satisfied. They subserve an object. In
the case before us, the requirements of both Section 122 and
Section 123 of the Transfer of Property Act were completely
met so as to vest the right in the donee to obtain the share
certificates in accordance with the provisions of the
Company law. We think that such a right is in itself
"property" and separable from the technical legal ownership
of the shares. The subsequent or "full rights of ownership"
of shares would follow as a matter of course by compliance
with the provisions of Company law. In other words, a
transfer of " ’property" rights in shares, recognised by the
Transfer of Property Act, may be antecedent to the actual
vesting of all or the full rights of ownership of shares and
exercise of the rights of shareholders in accordance with
the provisions of the Company law.
The Companies Act of 1913 was meant "to consolidate and
amend the law relating to trading companies and other
associations". It is concerned with the acts and
proceedings relating to the formation, running, and
extinction of companies, with rights, duties, and
liabilities of those who are either members or officers of
such companies, and of those who deal with companies in
other capacities. Its subject-matter is not transfer of
property in general. It deals with transfers of shares only
because they give certain rights to the legally recognised
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shareholders and imposes some obligations upon them with
regard to the companies in which they hold shares. A share
certificate not merely entitles the shareholder whose name
is found on it to interest on the share held but also to
participate in certain proceedings relating to the company
(1) 54 I. A. 89.
(2) ILR 52 Bom. 313.
(3) AIR 1924 Lab. 173.
543
concerned. It is for this purpose that Section 34 of the
Companies Act, 1913 enables the making of "an application
for the registration of the transfer of shares in a
Co......... either by the transferor or the transferee". A
share certificate is a prima facie evidence, under Sec. 29
of the Act, of the title to a share. ’Sec. 34 of the Act
does not really prescribe the mode of transfer but lays down
the provisions for "registration" of a transfer. In other
words, it presupposes that a transfer has already taken
place. The manner of transfer of shares, for the purposes
of Company law, has to be provided, as indicated by Sec. 28,
by the articles of the Company, and, in the absence of such
specific provisions on the subject, regulations contained in
Table ’A’ of the 1st Schedule of the Companies Act apply.
Table ’A’ of the 1st Schedule to the Companies
Act of 1913 gives regulation 19 as follows
"19. Shares in the company shall be
transferred in the following form, or in any
usual or common form which the directors shall
approve :
1, A. B. of in consideration of the sum of
rupees paid to me by C. D. of (hereinafter
called "the said transferee"), do hereby
transfer to the said transferee the share (or
shares) numbered in the undertaking called the
Company, Limited, to hold unto the said
transferee, his executors, administrators and
assigns, subject to the several conditions on
which I held the same at the time of the
execution thereof, and I (the said transferee)
do hereby agree to take the said share (or
shares) subject to the conditions aforesaid.
As witness our hands the day of Witness to the
signatures of, etc."
Apparently, the form given here is only for
sales. In the case of a gift the more general
provisions of regulation 18 would apply. This
regulation says :
"The instrument of transfer of any share in
the company shall be executed both by the
transferor and transferee, and the transferor
shall be deemed to remain holder of the share
until the name of the transferee is entered in
the register of members in respect thereof."
We find from the gift deed that both the donor and the.
donee have signed the document, under two headings
respectively : "giver of the gift" and "acceptor of the
gift". Hence, we think that the broadly indicated
requirements of regulation 18 were also complied with by the
contents ’of the gift deed.- It is immaterial that the gift
deed deals with a number of items so long as the
requirements of regulation 18 are fulfilled. After all, the
observance of a form, whether found in the Transfer of
Property Act or in the Companies Act, is meant to serve the
need of the substance of the transaction which were undoub-
tedly shown to have been completely fulfilled here. There
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is nothing in regulation 18 or anywhere else in our Company
law to indicate that,
544
without strict compliance with some rigidly prescribed form
the transaction must fail to achieve its purpose. The
subservience of substance of a transaction to some rigidly
prescribed form required to be meticulously observed savors
of archaic and outmoded jurisprudence.
Buckley on the Companies Acts (XIII-Edn. p. 813) was cited
before us for the proposition-that "non registration of a
transfer of shares made by a donor does not render the gift
imperfect". Considerable argument was advanced by both
sides on the correct interpretation of the leading English
case mentioned there : Re Nose, Midland Bank Executor &
Trustee Co. Ltd. v. Rose,(1) where Jenkins J., after an
exhaustive discussion of the English case law on the
subject, held that when a testator had done everything that
lay in his power to divest himself of his Fights in
preference shares "completion of the legal title by
registration could only be the act of a third party which
did not affect the efficacy of the gift of shares inter-
vivos". The Court of Appeal upheld this decision in : In Be
Rose V. Inland Revenue Commissioners.(2) It held that "the
deceased was in the position of. a trustee of the legal
title in the shares for the transferees", pending the entry
of the names of the donees in a company’s register and the
issue of share certificates to them. In the case before us,
we find that Bai Ruxmani had actually stated in the gift-
deed that her position, vis-a-vis the donee, who had
accepted the gift, was that of a trustee for the benefits
received by her from the gifted shares until the completion
of the legal formalities so that appropriate entries are
made in’ the registers of companies concerned and fresh
share certificates are issued to the donee. We, therefore,
think that this case helps the appellant.
In M/s.Howrali Trading Co. Ltd. v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Calcutta(3), considering a case of blank
transfers, Hidayatullah J., speaking for this Court, said
(at p. 453) :
"In such blank transfers, the name of the
transferor is entered, and the transfer deed
signed by the transferee, who, if he so
chooses, completes the transfer by entering
his name and then applying to the company to
register his name in place of the previous
holder of the share. The company recognises
no person except one whose name is on the
register of members, upon whom alone calls for
unpaid capital can be made and to whom only
the dividend declared by the company is
legally payable. of course, between the
transferor and the transferee, certain
equities arise even on the execution and
handing over of a blank transfer’, and among
these equities is the right of the transferee
to claim the dividend declared and paid to the
transferor who is treated as a trustee on
behalf of the transferee. These equities,
however, do not touch the company, and no
claim by the transferee whose name is not in
the register of
(1) [1949] Ch. D. 78. (2) [1932] (1) Ch.
D. 499.
(3) [1959] Supp. (2) SCR 448 @ 453.
545
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members can be made against the company, if
the transferor retains the money in his own
hands and fails to pay to it to him."
This case also makes a distinction between an antecedent
right and title of the transferee under a blank transfer and
the fully blossomed rights and title of such a transferee
after the due registration of a transfer.
Another case cited before us was : R. Subba Naidu v. Commis-
sioner of Gift Tax, Madras,(1) where a distinction was made
between a transfer of the antecedent right to the shares
which operated with full force between a donor and the
donee, "notwithstanding that, vis-a-vis the company, the
donor continued to be holder of the shares in the absence of
transfer of shares". In other words, the fields of
operation of the provisions of Sections 122 and 123 of the
Transfer of Property Act and the provisions of the Companies
Act 1913 were different. Each had different objects and
legal consequences. The Companies Act did not prevent the
completion of a gift of the right to obtain the shares which
could, in common parlance or loosely speaking, be spoken of
as a gift of shares themselves even before the gift is acted
upon so that the donee obtains share certificates in his own
name. The Transfer of Property Act could not enable the
donee to exercise the rights of a shareholder, vis-a-vis the
company, until a transfer of shares is made in accordance
with the Company law.
other cases cited on behalf of the appellant, which we will
only mention without discussion, were
1. Colonial Bank v. Hepworth(2);
2. In Re. Tahiti Cotton Company ex-parte Sargent(3);
3. In Re. Letheby & Christopher, Limited(4);
4. In the matter of Bengal Silk Mills Co. Ltd.(5);
5. The Bank of Hindustan Ltd. & Ors. v. Kowtha Suryanara-
yana Rao & Ors.(6);
6. Arjun Prasad &.Ors. v. Central Bank of India Ltd. (7);
7. Benode Kishore Goswani v. Ausutosh Mukhopadhya &
Anr.(8).
Learned Counsel for the respondent cited the following
passage from the Palmer’s Company Law (21st edition-1968, p.
334).
A transfer is incomplete until registered. Pending
registration, the transferee has only an equitable right to
the shares transferred to him. He does not become the legal
owner until his name is entered on the, register in respect
of these shares."
(1) [1969] (Vol. 73) I.T.R. 794.
(2) [1887] (36) Ch. D. 36.
(3) [1873] (17) Equity Cases 273@ 279.
(4) [1904] (1) Ch. D. 815,
(5) AYR 1942 Cal. 461 @ 464.
(6) RR [1957] Mad 1958 @ 1072.
(7) AIR 1956 Pat. 32.
(8) 16 C.W.N. 666.
546
This statement of the law in England is correct. The
transferee, under a gift of shares, cannot function as a
shareholder recognised by company law until his name is
formally brought upon the register of a company and he
obtains a share certificate as already indicated above.
indeed, there may be restrictions on transfers of shares
either by gift or by sale in the articles of association.
Thus" we find in Palmer’s Company Law (at p. 336) :
"There is nothing to limit the restrictions
which a company’s articles may place on the
right of transfer. The articles may give the
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directiors power to refuse to register a
transfer in any specified cases, for instance,
where calls are in arrear, or where the
company has a lien on the shares-and some such
provisions are usually inserted. Thus article
24 provides that the directors may decline to
register any transfer of a share (not being a
fully paid share) to a person of whom they do
not approve, and may also decline to register
any transfer of shares on which the company
has a lien. But the articles in many cases go
far beyond this. They may prohibit, for
example, the transfer of a share to any person
who is not a member of a specified class, or
provide, as they often do in private com-
panies, that before transferring to an
outsider the intending transferor must first
offer the shares to the other members, and
give them a right of pre-emption. Such
provisions, though permanent, do not
contravene the rule against perpetuities."
In the type of cases contemplated above, where there are
special restrictions on the transfer of shares imposed by
the articles of association, the difficulty or defect is
inherent in the character of such shares. In such cases,
the donee or purchaser cannot get more than what the
transferor possesses. Therefore, in such cases, it is
possible to hold that even the right and title to obtain
shares, which we have viewed as separable from the legal
right and title to function as a shareholder, is incomplete
because of a defect in the nature of shares held due to some
special restrictions on their transferability under the
articles of association of the company concerned. But, such
is not shown to be the case at all with any of the shares
which formed the subject-matter of the gift in favour of
Shelat. Hence, in our opinion, cases which deal with
inchoate rights to shares do not assist the respondent
because at least a gift of the right to obtain the transfer
of shares in the books of the companies concerned was shown
to be complete on the terms of the gift deed of Bai Ruxmani
coupled with the handing over of the share certificates and
the subsequent signing of the blank transfer forms. It was
not a ease of a bare expression of an intention to donate.
The donor had done everything which she could reasonably be
expected to do to divest herself of her rights in the shares
donated.
Ireland v.. Hart’(1) relied upon by the respondent, was a
case in which a prior equitable title of a wife, for whom
the husband was a
(1) [1902] (1) C.D. p. 522 @ 529.
547
trustee, took precedence over the claim of a subsequent
mortgagee. This case was cited in Palmer’s Company Law as
an instance of how delay in registration may endanger the
claims of a transferee when some already existing prior
equity comes to light In upholding the wife’s claim of a
prior equitable right the Court said (at p. 529) :
"It is established by Societe Generale de
Paris v. Walker (11 App. Case 20), Roots v.
Williamson (38 Ch. D. 485); and Moore v.
North Western Bank [1891(2) Ch. 599] that,
where the articles are in the form in which
they are in the present case, a legal title is
not acquired as against an equitable owner
before registration, or at all events until
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the date when the person seeking to register
has a present absolute and unconditional right
to have the transfer registered. I am not
called upon to define the meaning of a present
absolute and unconditional right, but, as it
appears to me, I am not sure that anything
short of registration would do except under
very special circumstances. At all events, I
am of opinion that in this case, prior
to the
date of the injunction, the defendant Hart had
not a ’present absolute and unconditional
right’ to the registration of the transfer of
these shares, and that the prior equitable
right of the plaintiff, Mrs. Ireland, must
prevail."
Thus, what was disputed there was the right to
obtain registration of a transfer of shares.
The husband’s power to mortgage was itself
circumscribed by his position as a trustee.
It was also pointed out in Palmer’s Company
Law (at p. 334)
"It has never been clearly decided in what
circumstances the ‘present, absolute,
unconditional right to have the transfer
registered’ to which Lord Selborne refers
arises. It is thought that in many instances
the test is that indicated by Jenkins J. in
Re. Rose.
’I was referred on that to the well known case
of Milroy v. Lord and also the recent case of
Re. Fry, Chase National Executors & Trustees
Corpn. v. Fry. Those cases, as I understand
them, turn on the fact that the deceased donor
had not done all in his power, according to
the nature of the property given, to vest the
legal interest in the property in the donee.
In such circumstances it is of course, well
settled that there-is no equity to complete
the imperfect gift. If any act remained to be
done by the donor to complete the gift at the
date of the donor’s death the court will not
compel his personal representatives to do that
act and the gift remains incomplete and fails.
In Milroy V. Lord the imperfection was due to
the fact that the wrong form of transfer was
used for the purpose of transferring certain
bank shares, The document was not the
appropriate document to pass any interest in
the property at all. In Re Fry the flaw in
the transaction, Which was a transfer or
transfers of shares in a certain company,
548
was failure to obtain the consent of the
Treasury which in the circumstances
surrounding the transfers in question was
necessary under the Defence (Finance
Regulations) Act 1939, and, as appears from
the head-note, what was held was that the
donor’s executors ought not to execute confir-
matory transfers. In this case,
as I
understand it, the testator had done
everything in his power to divest himself of
the shares in question to Mr. Hook. He had
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executed a transfer. It is not suggested that
the transfer was not in accordance with the
company regulations. He had handed that
transfer together with the certificates to Mr.
Hook. There was nothing else the testator
could do.... Therefore it seems to me that the
present case is not in pari materia with the
two cases to which I have been referred. The
real position, in my judgment, is that the
question here is one of construction of the
will. The testator says "if such preference
shares have not been transferred to him
previously to my death." The position was
that, so far as the testator was concerned,
they had been so transferred."
Respondent’s learned Counsel also relied on Re Fry, Chase
National Executors & Trustees Corpn. Ltd. v. Fry & Ors.(1)
which has been referred to by Jenkins J. in the passage
quoted above. In that case, apart from other distinguishing
features, the flaw in the purported transfer was that it
contravened the Defence (Finance Regulation) Act, 1939,
which prohibited an acquisition of interest in the shares
without a licence from the Treasury. Hence, the purported
transfer was really illegal. No such illegality is shown to
exist in the case before us.
Respondent’s learned Counsel cited Amarendra Krishna Dutt v.
Monimunjary Debi, (2) where, after a husband had executed a
document in favour of his wife, the parties had done nothing
to get the transfer registered for nearly 2 years during
which the dividend was received sometimes by the wife and
sometimes retained by the husband with the permission or
implied consent of the wife. The Court held that the
purported gift being an intended "transfer" only could not
operate as a "declaration of trust". Another ground for the
decision was that "the disposition of the shares failed as
being imperfect voluntary gift". Here, the Calcutta High
Court purported to follow Milroy v. Lord, (3) and, Richards
v. Delbridge(4). No such facts are present in the case
before us. Moreover, we seriously doubt the correctness of
this decision of the Calcutta High Court. It seems to
conflict with the law declared in the cases cited by the
appellant which we approve.
Another case relied upon by the respondent was: The Bank of
Hindustan Ltd. V. Kowtha Suryanarayana Rao & Ors. (supra),
where the Court refused,. to direct rectification of a
register of member s
(1) 1946 (2) All. E.R. 106.
(2) ILR [1921] Cal. 986.
(3) 1862 (4) DEG. F. & J. 264.
(4) 1874 LR. 18 Eq. II.
549
because the articles of association vested an absolute
discretion in the company to recognise or refuse to
recognise a transfer. The Company’s consent to a transfer
had been refused because the company did not accept the
correctness of the form of transfer deeds. In other words,
this was a case in which the provisions of articles of
association stood in the way of rectification of the
register. Such is not the case before us.
The result is that We do not think that the respondent has
made out a case for defeating the clearly expressed
intentions of the donor coupled with the authority with
which the donee was armed by reason of the signed blank
transfer forms. We think that the implied authority was
given with regard to a subject matter in which Shelat had
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acquired an interest. On a correct interpretation of the
gift deed and the other facts mentioned above, we are of
opinion that the right to obtain a transfer of shares was
clearly and completely obtained by the donee appellant.
There was no question here of competing equities because the
donee appellant was shown to have obtained a complete legal
right to obtain shares under the gift deed and an implied
authority to take steps to get his name registered. This
right could only be defeated by showing some obstacle which
prevented it from arising or which could defeat its
exercise. No such obstacle having been shown to us to
exist, the rights of the donee appellant would prevail as
against any legal rights which could have accrued to others
if the donee had not already acquired the legal right which,
as held by us above, had become vested in him.
We, therefore, allow this appeal with costs and set aside
the judgment and decree of the Division Bench of the High
Court and restore that of the learned Single Judge.
Appeal allowed
P. B. R.
3-MI85 Sup. CI/75
550