Full Judgment Text
1
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
| IL ORIGIN | AL JURIS |
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| TITION (C | IVIL) NO |
Soma Suresh Kumar …. Petitioner
Versus
Government of Andhra
Pradesh & Ors. …. Respondents
WITH
WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO.637 OF 2007
J U D G M E N T
JUDGMENT
K.S. RADHAKRISHNAN, J.
1. The petitioners, who were erstwhile Directors of Vasavi
Cooperative Urban Bank Limited, have approached this
Court seeking a declaration that Sections 3, 5, 8 and 9 of the
Andhra Pradesh Protection of Depositors of Financial
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Establishments Act, 1999 (in short “the Andhra Act”) are
unconstitutional and violative of fundamental rights
guaranteed to them under Articles 14 and 21 of the
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2. The petitioners were Directors of the above-mentioned
bank during the period from 1996 to 2002. Large number of
complaints were received from the depositors stating that
the Board of Directors of the bank had swindled away the
money of the depositors by creating false documents,
amounting to crores of rupees. On receipt of the complaints,
enquiry was conducted and, ultimately, Joint Registrar of
Cooperative Societies and Chief Executive Officer of the
bank registered Crime No.8 of 2003 on the file of the CID,
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Police Station under Section 120(b), 420, 409, 468, 477(A),
Indian Penal Code and under Section 5 of the Andhra Act.
Criminal case was later investigated by the Deputy
Superintendent of Police, STD-II, CID Hyderabad and charge-
sheet was filed against several persons, including the
petitioners. The Charge-sheet was registered as C.C. No.4 of
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2003 before the Special Court-cum-Metropolitan Sessions
Judge, Hyderabad. It is at this juncture, the petitioners have
approached this Court seeking the above-mentioned reliefs
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orders passed by the competent authority and by the Special
Court constituted under the Andhra Act. Petitioners have
also sought for a writ of mandamus directing the
respondents not to arrest the petitioners or to attach their
properties for the offences alleged to have been committed
by them under Sections 3 and 5 of Andhra Act.
3. The State of Andhra Pradesh filed a detailed counter-
affidavit explaining the circumstances under which the
petitioners were charge-sheeted. It was stated that, while
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they were in the Board of Directors of bank, they had
entered into a criminal conspiracy with the borrowers of the
bank and created fake proprietary concerns,
firms/companies and swindled away money of the depositors
by accepting defective, fake, forged title deeds and
committed default in making payment of dues to the
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depositors. It was pointed out that the petitioners were
rightly charge-sheeted for the various offences under the
Indian Penal Code as well as Section 5 of the Andhra Act.
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the petitioners were rightly charge-sheeted by the State
Government and, over and above, the provisions under
which they were charge-sheeted, even the provisions of
Sections 11 to 11-D of Chapter IV of the Securities and
Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 (15 of 1992) would also
be applicable as amended by the Amendment Act 2002 (59
of 2002). Further, it was also stated that the Andhra Pradesh
Cooperative Societies Act, 1964 did not fall within the
meaning of the “banking company” as defined by Section
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5(b) of the Banking Regulations Act, 1949. Union of India
has taken up that stand by placing reliance on the Judgment
of this Court in R.C. Cooper Vs. Union of India (1970) 1
SCC 248, wherein this Court held that all activities falling
under Section 5(b) of the Banking Regulations Act, 1949
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would fall under Entry 45 of the List I of the Seventh
Schedule of the Constitution of India.
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the Union of India as a party to Writ Petition (C) No.614 of
2007. In that, it was stated that the provisions of Sections 3,
5, 8 and 9 of the Andhra Act were not opposed to the public
policy or unconstitutional or violative of the fundamental
rights guaranteed to the petitioners. Further, it is also
pointed out that the Banking Regulations Act, enacted by the
Central Government, to regulate the operation of banking
companies or organizations, enables the RBI to give licence
to banking companies to carry out the functions of the bank.
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It was pointed out that it covered different areas which are
not common to the area covered by the Andhra Act. Further,
it was pointed out that both the Acts have applicability to
different aspects of refund to the depositors. The Banking
Regulations Act, it is pointed out, was enacted to regulate
the functioning of the banking companies, including the
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Vasavi Cooperative Urban Bank Limited and that the
petitioners have approached this Court challenging the
validity of the Act so as to wriggle out of the clutches of law.
| erative | Bank |
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cooperative society on 29.05.1982. The bank was issued a
licence to carry on the business on June 16, 1982 and was
accorded the Scheduled Status in the Banking Regulations
Act w.e.f. May 22, 1999. The Bank was placed under the
directive of Section 35A of the Banking Regulations Act,
1949 with effect from the close of business on March 7,
2003. Bank is having 17 branches all over the State of
Andhra Pradesh.
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7. We notice that the State of Andhra Pradesh was
contemplating a legislation similar to one enacted in the
State of Tamil Nadu, for a long time. On many occasions,
the State’s attention was drawn, to the large scale diversion
of money by many financial institutions in the State, by
cheating the depositors of their hard-earned savings,
misappropriating the same and then later vanishing from the
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scene. Several cases were booked against the persons
responsible for the same, but the presence of a
comprehensive legislation to curb such unfair practice was
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Pradesh to enact the Andhra Act. The Statement of Objects
& Reasons of the Act read as under :-
“Instances have come to the notice of the State
Government, wherein a number of unscrupulous
financial establishments in the State are cheating
innocent, gullible depositors by offering very
attractive rates of interest, collecting huge
deposits and then vanishing suddenly. The
depositors are being cheated and are put to grave
hardship by losing their hard earned savings. To
curb these malpractices, the State Government
has decided to bring a law to protect the interests
of depositors of the financial establishment in the
State and for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto. The above issue was also
discussed in a conference of the State Chief
Ministers and Finance Ministers presided by the
Union Finance Minister on 14.9.1998 at Vigyan
Bhavan, New Delhi. The Union Finance Minister
also desired that States should take expeditious
steps for enacting legislation on the lines of
“Tamil Nadu Protection of Depositors (in Financial
Establishments) Act, 1997, “to restore the
confidence amongst the innocent depositors and
also to serve as a deterrent against malpractices
by such establishments during the course of
acceptance of public deposits.
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To achieve the above object, the Government has
decided to make separate law by undertaking
legislation.”
| mentione<br>pril, 199 | d Act<br>9 for con |
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rd
the President and on 23 June, 1999, the same was granted
st
and the Act was published on 1 July, 1999, in the Andhra
Pradesh Gazette for general information.
9. The petitioners have raised an objection that the State
Legislature does not have the competence to enact the
Andhra Act since the subject “banking” is covered under
Entry 45 of List I of Seventh Schedule. Hence, only the
Central Government is entitled to enact the law relating to
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subject “accepting of deposit from the public and repayment
of the same on demand”. Referring to the judgment of this
Court in R.C. Cooper’ s case (supra), it was contended that
the scope, ambit and definition of the term “banking” under
Entry 45 List I of the Seventh Schedule appended to Article
246 would include all activities falling under Section 5(b) of
the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. Consequently, only the
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Parliament alone has the power to frame the law relating to
acceptance of deposits or its return or making the same as
an offence. Further, it was pointed out that the powers
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societies” as falling under Entry 32 List II of the Seventh
Schedule appended to Article 246 of the Constitution can be
confined to incorporation, registration, administration,
amalgamation, winding-up of the cooperative societies.
Further, it was pointed out that the power under that Entry
can be stretched to encompass all the activities of banking
under Entry 45 of List I of the Seventh Schedule. It was
pointed out that under the guise of legislation with respect
to Entry 32 of List I, the State Legislature cannot legislate
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with respect to the matters falling under Entry 45 of List I of
the Seventh Schedule. Consequently, it was submitted that
the Andhra Act is constitutionally invalid. Reference was
also made to the judgment of this Court in Greater
Bombay Cooperative Bank & Ors. Vs. United Yarn Tex
(P) Ltd. & Ors., (2007) 7 SCC 236.
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10. We notice that the question of law raised in this case
had come up for consideration before this Court while
challenging the constitutional validity of the Tamil Nadu
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Establishments) Act, 1997 (for short “the Tamil Nadu Act”),
the Maharashtra Protection of Interests of Depositors (in
Financial Establishments) Act, 1999 (for short “the
Maharashtra Act”) as well as the Pondicherry Protection of
Interests of Depositors in Financial Establishments Act, 2004
(for short “the Pondicherry Act”). This Court in K. K.
Baskaran Vs. State, represented by its Secretary,
Tamil Nadu and Others (2011) 3 SCC 793, while
examining the constitutional validity of the Tamil Nadu Act,
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held that the enactment by the State Legislature is not in
pith and substance referable to the legislative heads
contained in List I of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution though there may be some overlapping. The
Court held that in pith and substance, the Act comes under
the Entries in List II of the Seventh Schedule. In the said
judgment, this Court placed specific reference to the Full
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Bench judgment of the Bombay High Court in Vijay C.
Puljal Vs. State of Maharashtra (2005) 4 CTC 705. After
scanning through the various provisions of the Tamil Nadu
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“15. We have carefully perused the judgment of
the Full Bench of the Bombay High Court in Vijay V.
Puljal v. State of Maharashtra (2005) 4 CTC 705
(Bom) and we respectfully disagree with the view
taken by the Bombay High Court. It may be noted
that though there are some differences between the
Tamil Nadu Act and the Maharashtra Act, they are
minor differences, and hence the view we are taking
herein will also apply in relation to the Maharashtra
Act.
16. The Bombay High Court has taken the view
that the Maharashtra Act transgressed into the field
reserved for Parliament. We do not agree. It is true
that Section 58-A of the Companies Act has been
upheld by this Court in Delhi Cloth and General Mills
Co. Ltd. v. Union of India (1983) 4 SCC 166 and the
provisions of Chapter III-C of the Reserve Bank of
India Act, 1934 were upheld by this Court in T.
Velayudhan Achari v. Union of India (1993) 2 SCC
582 . However, we are not in agreement with the Full
Bench decision of the Bombay High Court that the
subject-matter covered by the said Act falls squarely
within the subject-matter of Sections 58-A and 58-AA
of the Companies Act.
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17. We are of the opinion that the impugned
Tamil Nadu Act enacted by the State Legislature is
not in pith and substance referable to the legislative
heads contained in List I of the Seventh Schedule to
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the Constitution though there may be some
overlapping. In our opinion, in pith and substance the
said Act comes under the entries in List II (the State
List) of the Seventh Schedule.”
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following view:
“ 33 . The State being the custodian of the
welfare of the citizens as parens patriae cannot be
a silent spectator without finding a solution for this
malady. The financial swindlers, who are nothing
but cheats and charlatans having no social
responsibility, but only a lust for easy money by
making false promise of attractive returns for the
gullible investors, had to be dealt with strongly.
The small amounts collected from a substantial
number of individual depositors culminated into
huge amounts of money. These collections were
diverted in the name of third parties and finally
one day the fraudulent financers closed their
financial establishments leaving the innocent
depositors in the lurch.”
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11. Later, the constitutional validity of the Pondicherry Act
came for consideration before this Court in New Horizon
Sugar Mills Ltd. Vs. Government of Pondicherry (2012)
10 SCC 575, wherein this Court has exhaustively considered
the various contentions raised on the constitutional validity
of the Pondicherry Act in the light of the judgment in K.K.
Baskaran ’s case (supra). Contention was raised that the
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State lacked the legislative competence to enact the
Pondicherry Act on the ground that the subject would fall
under the Union jurisdiction. This Court, while deciding the
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follows :-
“ 49 . The entries relating to the State List
referred to above, and in particular Entry 30,
appear to be a more appropriate source of
legislative authority of the State Assembly for
enacting laws in furtherance of such entry. The
power to enact the Pondicherry Act, the Tamil
Nadu Act and the Maharashtra Act is relatable to
Entries 1, 30 and 32 of the State List, which
involves the business of unincorporated trading
and money lending which falls within the ambit of
Entries 1, 30 and 32 of the State List.
50 . In addition to the above, it has also to be
noticed that the objects for which the Tamil Nadu
Act, the Maharashtra Act and the Pondicherry Act
were enacted, are identical, namely, to protect the
interests of small depositors from fraud
perpetrated on unsuspecting investors, who
entrusted their life savings to unscrupulous and
fraudulent persons and who ultimately betrayed
their trust.
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53 . Even if it is to be accepted that the
Pondicherry Act is relatable to List I Entries 43, 44
and 45, it can be equally said that the said
enactment is also relatable to List II Entries 1, 30
and 32 thereby leaving the field of legislation
open, both to the Central Legislature as well as the
State Legislature. In such a situation, unless there
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12. We notice in New Horizon Sugar Mills Ltd. ’s case
(supra), this Court held that the objects of the Tamil Nadu
Act, Maharashtra Act and the Pondicherry Act are the same
and/or of similar nature. In our view, the object and
purpose as well as the provisions of the Andhra Act are pari
materia with that of Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and
Pondicherry Acts, the constitutional validity of those
legislation has already been upheld. We also fully concur
with the views expressed by this Court in those Judgments
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and uphold the constitutional validity of the Andhra Act.
13. Learned counsel for the petitioner raised a further
contention that Vasavi Cooperative Bank Ltd. does not come
within the definition of “financial establishment” under
Section 2(c) of the Andhra Act. We find it difficult to accept
that contention. What has been excluded from that
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definition is a Company registered under the Companies Act
or a Corporation or a Cooperative Society owned and
controlled by any State Government or the Central
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category. Consequently, the Co-operative Bank in question
is also governed by the provisions of the Andhra Act.
14. In the circumstances, we find no merit in these Writ
Petitions and the same are accordingly dismissed.
……………………………..J.
(K. S. Radhakrishnan)
….………………………...J.
(A. K. Sikri)
New Delhi,
September 12, 2013.
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