Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2509 of 1997
PETITIONER:
Union of India
RESPONDENT:
Karam Chand Thapar & Brs. (Coal Sales) Ltd. & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/03/2004
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & ASHOK BHAN.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Just bare essential facts, as ascertainable on retrieval from a
jumble of facts, are set out hereinafter, as those would suffice, in our
opinion, to appreciate the crux of controversy arising for decision in
this appeal. The controversy and the consequent litigation have
spread over nearly four decades. In between, the parties have
changed their identities by succession, amalgamation or supersession.
The Coal Board, a statutory body has been dissolved and taken over
by Union of India. What was M/s.Bhulanbaree Coal Co. Ltd. has taken
shape as Oriental Coal Co. Ltd., and then the respondent No.1
hereinafter. We would refer to the present parties only and that
reference would include their respective predecessor legal entities.
The Oriental Coal Co. Ltd. shall be referred to as ’Coal Company’ for
short.
The Coal Company owns and possesses certain coal mines in the
State of Bihar. The Coal Board was constituted under the provisions of
the Coal Mines (Conservation and Development) Act, 1974, hereinafter
’the Act’ for short. However, the said Coal Board was dissolved with
effect from April 1, 1975 and all rights, privileges, liabilities and
obligations of the Board have come to vest in the Central Government.
There are cross-demands between the parties. It is not
necessary to set out the details and particulars of the demands. It
would suffice for our purpose to notice that the Coal Company is liable
to pay royalty on account of sand extracted by it for the purpose of
carrying out stowing operations in the coalfields. We would not enter
into yet another controversy which we will briefly set out hereinafter at
an appropriate place as to whether it is the Central Government as
successor of the Coal Board or the State of Bihar which is entitled to
recover the royalty. For the purpose of the present appeal we proceed
on an assumption that the amount of royalty on the sand extracted by
the Coal Company is due and payable by it to the Central Government.
The fact remains that such obligation to pay the amount of royalty is
contractual inasmuch as there is a contract i.e. a mining lease entered
into by the Coal Company whereby it has earned the privilege of
extracting sand from Damodar River-bed and an obligation to pay
royalty on account of sand extracted, calculated at the rate appointed
by the mining contract. So far as the quantified amount of royalty on
sand is concerned the Coal Company is a debtor and the Union of India
is creditor.
The Coal Mines (Conservation & Development) Act, 1974 came
into force on and from April 1, 1975. Clause (j) of Section 3 defines
"stowing" to mean as the operation of filling, with sand or any other
material, or with both, spaces left underground in a coal mine by the
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extraction of coal. Sub-section (2) of Section 4 specifically empowers
the Central Government to make order in writing addressed to the
owner, agent or manager of a coal mine, requiring him to take such
measures as it may think necessary for the purpose of conservation of
coal or for development of coal mines including in any coal mine,
stowing for safety. Sub-section (2) of Section 5 specifically obliges the
owner of a coal mine to:- (i) execute such stowing and other
operations as may be necessary to be taken in furtherance of the
objects of this Act in so far as such objects relate to the conservation
of coal or development of the coal mine or the utilization of coal
obtained from the coal mine; (ii) acquire such stowing and other
materials as may be necessary for ensuring the conservation of coal,
and safety in, the coal mine; (iii) undertake such other activity as the
Central Government may, for the furtherance of the objects of this Act,
direct; and so on.
Out of the net proceeds of excise and customs duties on coal,
the Central Government is obliged to disburse a certain amount inter
alia for the purpose of grant of stowing materials and other assistance
for stowing operations and execution of stowing and other operations
for the safety of coal mines or conservation of coal. The amount
released by the Central Government under Section 9 of the Act to the
owner of every coal mine, is required to be credited into the Coal Mine
Conservation and Development Account under Section 10 of the Act.
The money standing to the credit of the Account shall be applied by
the owner of the coal mine only for the purposes specified in sub-
section (2) of Section 10 of the Act including, inter alia, the acquisition
of stowing and other materials needed for stowing operations in coal
mines and the execution of stowing and other operations in
furtherance of the objects of the Act amongst others. Under Section
18 the Central Government is empowered to make rules.
In exercise of the power, conferred by the Coal Mines
(Conservation and Safety) Act, 1952 on the Central Government, the
Central Government has framed the Coal Mines (Conservations and
Safety) Rules 1954. Rule 49 provides as under:
"49. Purposes for which assistance may be granted \026
(1) The Board may grant assistance from the Fund to
any owner, agent or manager of coal mine \026
(a) for stowing or other protective measures
which are required to be undertaken by an
order issued under sub-section (3) of Section
13 or sub-rule (2) of Rule 35 or sub-rule (3)
of Rule 40;
(b) for any measures which in the opinion of the
Board are essential for the effective
prevention of the spread of fire to or the
inundation by water of any coal mine from
an area adjacent to it;
(c) for stowing for conservation of coal or
washing coal which is required to be
undertaken by an order under Rule 36 or 37;
(d) for the following measures voluntarily
undertaken by the owner agent, or manager
of the coal mine : \026
(i) stowing operations in the interests of
safety or conservation of coal,
(ii) any process of washing or cleaning
coal which reduces its ash content and
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also improves its qualities or,
(iii) any other measures for safety in coal
mines or for conservation of coal;
(e) for any other measures undertaken by the
owner, agent or manager of a coal mine
under the order of the Board to ensure
conservation of coal.
(2) The Board may grant assistance to owner of any
steel work, blast furnace or coke plant for blending
of coal undertaken under the orders of the Board.
(3) The Board may grant assistance to the owner,
agent, or manager of a coal mine which is specially
handicapped by adverse factors rendering its
working uneconomic, but which, in the opinion of
the Central Government, should be maintained in
production for the purpose of ensuring the
conservation of coal. In such cases assistance shall
be granted by the Board \026
(i) with due regard to the circumstances of each
case;
(ii) only in respect of such adverse factors as
may, from time to time, be specified by the
Central Government as entitling a coal mine
to receive assistance, and published by the
Board in the Official Gazette for general
information; and
(iii) in accordance with such procedure as may be
determined, and not exceeding such rates as
may be fixed, by the central Government,
from time to time :
Provided that the existence or otherwise of
adverse factors in any coal mine, the extent to which
such adverse factors render the working of the coal mine
uneconomic, and the amount of assistance, if any, to be
granted to the coal mine, shall be determined by the
central Government."
Coal Board Manual is a compilation of the rules and instructions
issued by the Coal Board/Central Government from time to time.
Some of them are statutory and some are executive. However, it is
not disputed that whatever is contained in the Coal Board Manual is
binding on the Coal Board/Central Government and the coal
companies. Vide para 34 of the Manual it is provided that the stowing
assistance granted by the Central Government to the Coal Company
includes amongst other items, the actual amount of royalty paid for
stowing material excavated and transported. Other charges included
in the amount of stowing assistance are wages of labour employed in
and associated with stowing charges, certain charges related to sand
pumps and so on, as stated in the Rules. Thus, it appears that while
the Coal Company has to pay royalty on the amount of sand extracted
by it for the purpose of carrying out stowing operations, the amount of
royalty actually paid is reimbursed by the Central Government to the
Coal Company as one of the constituents of the stowing assistance.
So far as the current amount of royalty is concerned there
cannot possibly be any dispute as to adjustment or set off inasmuch as
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the amount of royalty on the quantum of sand extracted by the Coal
Company for carrying out stowing operations, shall be actually paid by
the Coal Company to the Central Government or anyone else entitled
and it is only on such actual payment that the Coal Company would be
entitled to be reimbursed for the amount as a constituent of the
stowing assistance. So long as the Coal Company does not actually
pay the amount or royalty, the question of its being reimbursed would
not arise. If the amount of royalty is payable by the Coal Company to
the Central Government by way of any arrangement arrived at with
the State Government or otherwise the adjustment or reimbursement
would pose no problem; for the Coal Company has first to pay the
amount of royalty and then seek reimbursement of the amount of
royalty included by way of an ingredient in the amount of stowing
assistance released by the Central Government to it.
The controversy, however, arose because there were certain
arrears of the amount of royalty payable by the Coal Company to the
Central Government and the Central Government sought to enforce
recovery of the amount of royalty due and payable on account of sand
already extracted and utilized in its stowing operations by the Coal
Company by making an adjustment from out of the amount payable by
the Central Government to the Coal Company as stowing assistance
consisting of wages and transportation charges etc. incurred by the
Coal Company for carrying out the stowing operations. The Central
Government sent a few communications to the Coal Company whereby
the Central Government made it clear that the payment of stowing
assistance was being withheld and the amount appropriated by the
Central Government towards satisfying its demand outstanding against
the Coal Company on account of royalty due and payable by the Coal
Company to the Central Government on the sand extracted from the
river-bed and utilized by it in stowing.
The Coal Company filed a civil writ petition in the High Court of
Calcutta. A learned Single Judge held that it was not open for the
Central Government to make an adjustment of cross demands and
satisfy its contractual demand by making an adjustment out of the
amount due and payable on account of its statutory obligation. The
learned Single Judge directed the communications to the contrary
made by the Central Government to be quashed. The Union of India
preferred an intra-court appeal which has been dismissed by the
Division Bench. The Division Bench has not only upheld the view
taken by the learned Single Judge but it has also proceeded further to
opine that under the law it was the State Government which was
entitled to recover the amount of royalty on sand, and therefore, there
was no question of Central Government raising a demand on account
of royalty and withholding the release of stowing assistance pursuant
to its statutory obligation.
The question which arises for decision is: whether the Central
Government can withhold the release of stowing assistance, which is
its statutory obligation to do, for the purpose of satisfying its demand
of money arising under the contractual obligation (i.e. in mining lease)
incurred by the Coal Company qua it?
Though Shri N.N. Goswami, the learned Senior Counsel for
Union of India, has urged that the Coal Company had entered into a
contract by correspondence with the Central Government, supported
by company resolutions, whereby the Coal Company had agreed for
such satisfaction of cross demands but we are not satisfied if such a
plea can be successfully urged by the Union of India from the
documents and materials available on record. We cannot hold that the
Coal Company had agreed to its demand of stowing assistance being
set-off against the demand by the Central Government on account of
royalty.
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No statutory provision has been brought to our notice at the Bar
to sustain the claim of the Central Government for such adjustment
and satisfaction of cross-demands. We are called upon to decide if
such an adjustment is permissible in equity. Shri Goswami, the
learned Senior Counsel, has vehemently urged that the right of the
creditor to withhold money due and payable by it to its debtor for the
purpose of satisfying by appropriation the demand which the creditor
legitimately has outstanding against the debtor, ought to be
recognized and upheld as a principle of equity emanating from what is
just, fair and convenient. The learned Senior Counsel submitted that it
would be unfair and iniquitous if the Central Government was
compelled to part with the money already available in its hands and
left free or compelled to enforce its right of recovery wherein it may
fail and consequently left high and dry.
On general principles supported by rationality and reasonability,
it appears to be a sound proposition that a person who is obliged to
pay a sum of money to another person and also has in his hands an
amount of money which that another person is entitled to claim from
him then instead of physically entering into two transactions by
exchanging money twice that person may utilize the money available
in his hands to satisfy the claim due and legally recoverable from such
other person to him. However, this equitable principle is not one of
universal application and has its own limitations.
"Set-off" is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary (7th Edn., 1999)
inter alia as a debtor’s right to reduce the amount of a debtor by any
sum the creditor owes the debtor; the counterbalancing sum owed by
the creditor. The dictionary quotes Thomas W. Waterman from ’A
Treatise on the Law of Set-Off, Recoupment, and Counter Claim’ as
stating, "Set-off signifies the subtraction or taking away of one
demand from another opposite or cross demand, so as to distinguish
the smaller demand and reduce the greater by the amount of the less;
or, if the opposite demands are equal, to extinguish both. It was also,
formerly, sometimes called stoppage, because the amount to be set-
off was stopped or deducted from the cross-demand."
The writ petition filed by the respondent-Coal Company sought
for quashing of the communication made by the appellant-Union of
India informing it of its action to withhold the amount of stowing
assistance against its claim for arrears of royalty. In effect, the Coal
Company was seeking a relief for release of stowing allowance by
compelling the Central Government to discharge its such statutory
obligation. A debtor making an adjustment or set-off, may have done
so in its own volition, nevertheless, the validity of such action shall be
called in question and decided by a Court of law wherein the creditor
would seek enforcement of his claim while the debtor would raise in
defence the plea of adjustment or set-off. Though there is no specific
provision of law or settled rule of procedure governing decision of such
dispute arising for adjudication in exercise of writ jurisdiction, yet
being a money-claim, there is nothing wrong in borrowing the
principles underlying Order 8 Rule 6 of the Code of Civil Procedure
and applying the same as governing the discretion of the writ Court.
Sub-rule (1) of Rule 6 of Order 8 of the CPC provides as under :
"6. Particulars of set-off to be
given in written statement. \026 (1) Where
in a suit for the recovery of money the
defendant claims to set-off against the
plaintiff’s demand any ascertained sum of
money legally recoverable by him from the
plaintiff, not exceeding the pecuniary limits
of the jurisdiction of the Court, and both
parties fill the same character as they fill in
the plaintiff’s suit, the defendant may, at the
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first hearing of the suit, but not afterwards
unless permitted by the Court, present a
written statement containing the particulars
of the debt sought to be set-off."
What the rule deals with is legal set-off. The claim sought to be
set-off must be for an ascertained sum of money and legally
recoverable by the claimant. What is more significant is that both the
parties must fill the same character in respect of the two claims sought
to be set-off or adjusted. Apart from the rule enacted in Rule 6
abovesaid there exists a right to set-off, called equitable,
independently of the provisions of the Code. Such mutual debts and
credits or cross-demands, to be available for extinction by way of
equitable set-off, must have arisen out of the same transaction or
ought to be so connected in their nature and circumstances as to make
it inequitable for the Court to allow the claim before it and leave the
defendant high and dry for the present unless he files a cross-suit of
his own. When a plea in the nature of equitable set-off is raised it is
not done as of right and the discretion lies with the Court to entertain
and allow such plea or not to do so.
In Bhupendra Narain Singha Bahadur Vs. Bahadur Singh
and Ors. \026 AIR 1952 SC 201, this Court ruled that a plea in the nature
of equitable set-off is not available when the cross-demands do not
arise out of the same transaction. A wrong-doer who has wrongfully
withheld monies belonging to another cannot invoke any principle of
equity in his favour and seek to deduct therefrom the amounts which
may have fallen due to him. There would be nothing improper or
unjust in telling the wrong-doer to undo his wrong and not to take
advantage of it.
In the present case, what the Coal Company has sought to
enforce is a statutory obligation of the appellant-Union of India. The
Coal Mines (Conservation and Development) Act, 1974 has a public
purpose and a beneficial object to achieve. The stowing assistance is
released to the Coal Company in the interest of securing safety at the
coal mines and the development thereof. In the absence of stowing,
there may be accidents, casualties and difficulties of operation. Non-
payment of stowing allowance may discourage the coal mines from
carrying out the stowing operations which would be detrimental to the
interest of the workers. It would not be sound exercise of discretion
on the part of the Court to permit set-off or recognize an adjustment
made out-of-Court which would have the effect of withholding the
release of stowing assistance and appropriating the amount thereof
for the recovery of dues not arising out of the same transaction.
Shri Jaideep Gupta, the learned senior counsel for the Coal
Company, has rightly relied on the decision of Calcutta High Court in
Coal Products Pvt. Ltd. and Anr. Vs. Income-Tax Officer, "M"
Ward, Companies District II, Calcutta, and Ors. \026 (1972) 85 ITR
347, wherein a garnishee order was quashed. It was held that the
money which is payable by the Coal Board to a Coal Company as and
by way of stowing assistance was not available to be paid by the Coal
Board to Income-tax Department for recovery of income-tax dues as
that would result in breach of statutory obligation of the Board with
regard to the utilization of its fund as laid down in Section 12 of the
Act as also in breach of statutory obligation of the Coal Company
attaching to the grant of assistance from the Coal Board. Rule 49
referred to hereinabove came up for the consideration of this Court in
Industrial Supplies Pvt. Ltd. and Anr. Vs. Union of India and
Ors. \026 (1980) 4 SCC 341, in some other context. Vide para 32, this
Court observed that if the subsidy receivable from the Coal Board
(succeeded by the Central Government) was by way of assistance, the
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grant being conditional, the recipient thereof would be bound to apply
the same for the purposes for which it was granted viz. for the
purpose of stowing or other safety operations and conservation of coal
mines. In our opinion, in the facts and circumstances of the present
case it would not make any difference whether the amount withheld by
the Central Government is on account of assistance or reimbursement;
in either case the Could would not hold in favour of adjustment being
made by the Central Government by setting off the outstanding credit
referable to stowing assistance as against the outstanding demand of
arrears of royalty.
In our opinion, the High Court has not erred in allowing the writ
petition filed by the respondent-Coal Company.
So far as the finding recorded in its appellate judgment by the
Division Bench that the Central Government is not entitled to recover
the royalty and it is the State of Bihar which only is entitled to demand
and recover the royalty from the respondent-Coal Company is
concerned, we set-aside that finding but without recording any opinion
of ours on that aspect for the short reason that such issue is not
required to be adjudicated upon in the present case in view of the
finding arrived at hereinabove. We hasten to add that requisite
pleadings and necessary material are also not available on record to
arrive at a definite finding in that regard.
Before parting we make it clear that the appellant or the State
of Bihar, as the case may be, is free to recover arrears of royalty by
adopting such other method as may be available under the law.
The appeal is dismissed. No order as to the costs.