Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAMMU & KASHMIR BANK LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ATTAR-UL-NISSA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/10/1966
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHELAT, J.M.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 540 1967 SCR (1) 792
ACT:
Indian Contract Act (Act 9 of 1872), s. 72- State Government
making excess payments into bank account of a constituent of
bank-Bank whether can change entries to cancel such
overpayment without consent of constituent.
HEADNOTE:
S took a loan from the appellant bank on the strength of an
arrange merit whereby the State Government of Jammu -and
Kashmir would repay it in instalments out of the land
revenue to be collected by it from S’s lands. Such payments
on behalf of the Government were mistakenly made each year
both by the Accountant General and by the Treasury so that
the amount credited by the bank in S’s account -represented
an over payment by the State. When the Accountant General
realised the mistake he asked the bank to reverse the
relevant entries in S’s account so as to cancel the over-
payment, which the bank after initial objection, did.
Thereafter, on the basis of the reversed entries the bank
filed a suit for the recovery of its debt. It was
objected by the respondents (successors-in-interest to S)
that it was not open to the bank to reverse the credit
entries in the account of S after they had been made in the
manner it was done. The trial Court held that the amount
was paid twice over by mistake and therefore the bank was
entitled to reverse the entries at the instance of the Ac-
countant General without reference to S. The High Court
however, in appeal, rejected the argument on behalf of the
bank that s. 72 of the Indian Contract Act allowed it to
reverse the entries. In appeal to this Court,
HELD : Section 72 of the Indian Contract Act will only apply
when it is a case of two persons one paying the money and
the other receiving the money on behalf of the person paying
it. The section has no application where money is paid by a
person to a bank with instructions that it should be
deposited in the account of a third person who is a
constituent of the bank. [795 G]
In the present case, for the purpose of payment, Government
was the agent of S and whatever money was paid to be
credited to the account of S,, even though it was paid
through Government, became his money and it could not be
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paid out of his account which was in substance the effect of
reversing the entries, without his consent. [796 C]
Imperial Bank of Canada v. Bank of Hamilton, L.R. [1903]
A.C. 49, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 702 and 768
of 1964.
Appeals by certificate/special leave from the judgment and
decree dated June 7, 1962 of the Jammu and Kashmir High
Court in Civil First Appeals Nos. I of 1957 and 15 of 1961
respectively.
Naunit Lal, for the appellant (in both appeals).
K. R. Chaudhuri, for the respondent (in C. A. No. 768/64).
793
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo J. These are two connected appeals on certificates
granted by the Jammu and Kashmir High Court and raise a
common question of law. We shall therefore give the facts
of one appeal (No. 702) in order to appreciate the question
of law which calls for decision.
Sultan Mohd. Matawali Khan (hereinafter referred to as
Sultan Mohd.), Ilaqadar of Kathai was the predecessor-in-
interest of the respondents. He had borrowed a sum of Rs.
40,000/- from the apperant-bank on the basis of a
promissory-note on November 5, 1941. Before the bank
advanced the loan, the Government of the then State of Jammu
and Kashmir was approached and it was arranged that the debt
would be liquidated through Government. For that purpose,
an order was issued by the Government that land-revenue of
certain villages from the jagir of Sultan Mohd. amounting to
Rs. 5076/9/6 would be collected by Government and the amount
credited in the treasury to the credit of the bank tin the
sum of Rs. 40,000/- along with interest due thereon was
liquidated. It was in consequence of this arrangement that
the bank advanced the sum of Rs. 40,000/- to Sultan Mohd.
After the loan had been taken and the pro-note executed the
bank opened an account in the name of Sultan Mohd. which
started with a debit of Rs. 40,000 on November 5, 1941.
Thereafter whatever sum became due to the bank as interest
and incidental charges was debited to the account of Sultan
Mohd. and the amount received from Government was credited
to the account. This went on till 1953 when the jagir of
Sultan Mohd. was resumed. The account of Sultan Mohd. with
the bank showed a debit of Rs. 2,995/12/- on June 3, 1953.
On June 4, 1953, the bank filed the suit out of which this
appeal has arisen against the respondents as legal
representatives of Sultan Mohd. for a sum of Rs. 31,025/1
1/-. To "plain the large discrepancy between the amount
shown due in the account and the amount for which the suit
was filed, the bank stated that a sum of Rs. 28,029/15/- had
been erroneously credited to the account of Sultan Mohd.
Consequently the erroneous entries with respect to this
credit were corrected and after such correction the amount
due came to be Rs. 31,025/1 I/-, for which the suit was
filed.
The suit was resisted by the respondents on various grounds,
but in the present appeals we are concerned only with one
ground, namely, that it was not open to the bank to reverse
the credit entries in the account of Sultan Mohd. after they
had been made in the manner in which it was done at the
instance of the Accountant General of the State of Jammu and
Kashmir. Therefore, the bank would be only entitled to
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recover Rs. 2,995/12/-, which was the amount shown as due
from Sultan Mohd. in the account on June 3, 1953.
Sup C.I./66-6
794
The main question that arose in the trial court therefore
was whether the bank was entitled to reverse the entries
with respect to Rs. 28,029/15/- in the manner in which that
was done. The facts with respect to what happened in
connection with this sum are not now in dispute and may be
briefly narrated. The procedure which was followed, after
money was realised by Government from the villages mentioned
in the Council Order of October 28, 1941, was that after
deducting the collection charges, the amount used to be
credited in the State’s accounts and thereafter transferred
by Government to the bank for credit to the account of
Sultan Mohd. The transfer used to be made by hundis or
treasury bills and on receipt of necessary hundis or
treasury bills the bank used to credit the amount shown in
them to the account of Sultan Mohd. It appears however that
for about five years what happened was that hundis or
treasury bills used to be sent to the bank both by the
treasury and by the Accountant General with the result that
for this period double the amount realised by Government was
credited to the account of Sultan Mohd. on the basis of the
hundis or treasury bills sent to the bank. In consequence,
there was an over-payment by Government to the bank to the
tune of Rs. 28,029/15/- and this over-payment was credited
to the account of Sultan Mohd. in the bank. This mistake
was realised by the Accountant General after about five
years and thereupon the Accountant General asked the bank to
reverse the entry and debit this amount to the account of
Sultan Mohd. Apparently, the bank was unwilling to do so
and it appears that the bank was then threatened that if the
bank did not do so the amount would be realised from the
subsidy given to the bank by Government. The bank thereupon
reversed the entries and debited this amount to the account
of Sultan Mohd., with the result that the figure of Rs.
2,995/12/- shown as debit balance against Sultan Mohd. was
increased by this sum.
The trial court held that the amount was paid twice over by
mistake and therefore the bank was entitled to reverse the
entries at the instance of the Accountant General without
reference to Sultan Mohd. It therefore decreed the suit in
full. The respondents then went in appeal to the High Court
and contended that the entries could not be reversed in this
manner by the bank without the consent of Sultan Mohd. The
High Court accepted this contention and rejected the
argument on behalf of the appellant that the bank was
justified under s. 72 of the Indian Contract Act, No. 9 of
1872, to reverse the entries. The High Court therefore
allowed the appeal and disallowed the claim of the bank for
Rs. 28,029/15/- and decreed the suit for the balance
(namely, Rs. 2,995/12/ ). Thereupon the appellant obtained
certificates from the High Court in both cases, and that is
how the matter has come before us.
796
of the third person, who is a constituent of the bank, the
money becomes the money of the constituent, and it is not
open to the bank in such circumstances to reverse the entry
of credit made in the account of the constituent and in
effect pay back the money to the person who had deposited it
even though might if have been deposited by mistake.
As soon as the money is credited into the account of the
constituent, even though the person paying in may have paid
it by mistake, it becomes the money of the constituent, and
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the bank cannot pay it back to the person who paid it to the
account of the constituent on his representation that it was
paid by mistake, without obtaining the consent of the
constituent. As we have already said the legal position is
that for the purpose of payment, Government was the agent of
Sultan Mohd. and whatever money was paid to be credited to
the account of Sultan Mohd even though it was paid through
Government, became his money and it could not be paid out of
his account which is in substance the effect of reversing
the entries without his consent. Section 72 could certainty
have been availed of by Government against Sultan Mohd and
the Government could have sued Sultan Mohd for return of the
money which had been paid by mistake into his account. But
the Government could not ask the bank to reverse the entries
and thus in effect ask it to pay out the money from the
account of Sultan Mohd into which it had been deposited and
the bank could not do so without taking the consent of
Sultan Mohd. Further though Government was the agent of
Sultan Mohd for the purpose of payment of the money for
liquidating the debt, the Government had no further
authority on his behalf to ask the bank to pay back any sum
once it had been credited into his account by Government.
That could only be done on the authority of Sultan Mohd. and
there was no authority in this case for paying back the sum
paid in by mistake to Government, for the reversal of the
entries in substance amounted to this.
It has been urged that on this view the bank would not be
able to correct any mistake in the account of any
constituent. ’Mat is not so. If, for example, a bank
credits a cheque in favour of A by mistake into the account
of B, the bank can always correct that mistake, for it had
received the money on behalf of A. Similarly if the bank
receives (say Rs. 5,000/- on behalf of A from some person,
but by mistake enters Rs. 50,000/- in as account, the bank
can always correct that entry and mention the correct sum
received. But the present case is very different from
corrections of such mistakes. Here the bank had received
certain moneys on behalf of Sultan Mohd. through treasury
bills or hundis. There is no -dispute that money was
received for credit to the account of Sultan Mohd. and was
correctly credited to that account. There was therefore
nothing which the bank could correct, for the bank had
795
The only question in these circumstances is whether the bank
was justified in reversing the entries and debiting the
account of Sultan Mohd with this sum. Now the legal
position so far as this payment is concerned was this. The
bank had advanced the money to Sultan Mohd. and an account
was opened in his name on November 5, 1941 with a debit
entry of Rs. 40,000/-. Into this account the bank went on
debiting interest and incidental charges due to it from
Sultan Mohd. It also credited this account with the amounts
received from Government through hundis or treasury bills.
Clearly therefore though the amounts to be credited to the
account of Sultan Mohd. used to come by treasury-bills or
hundis from Government they were amounts received by the
bank on behalf of Sultan Mohd. to be credited to his
account, and the Government was agent of Sultan Mohd. for
the purpose of depositing the income from villages,
management of which was taken over by Government under the
Council Order, in order to liquidate the loan taken by
Sultan Mohd. from the bank. The bank when it reversed the
entries made no reference to Sultan Mohd. and did not take
his consent thereto. In these circumstances the contention
of the respondents is that it was not open to the bank to
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reverse the entries and thus saddle Sultan Mohd. with the
liability for this sum after it had been credited into his
account on the basis of hundis or treasury bills received by
the bank from Government.
We are of opinion that this contention of the respondents is
correct, and the High Court was right in the view it took of
the legal position. It is true that on the facts shown
there was double payment for a certain period due to mistake
on the part of Government. The question however is whether
it was open to the bank to reverse the entries in the manner
it did without reference to Sultan Mohd. It has not been
and cannot be disputed that it is not open to the bank to
debit the account of a constituent like Sultan Mohd. with
any sum without the, authority of the constituent. What is
however contended on behalf of the appellant is that Govern-
ment paid the sum twice over by mistake and it was entitled
to ask the bank to return the money paid by mistake and
reliance in this connection is placed on s. 72 of the
Contract Act. There is no, doubt that s. 72 of the Contract
Act provides that a person to whom money has been paid or
anything delivered by mistake or under coercion must repay
or return it. That section in our opinion will only apply
when we are dealing with a case of two persons one paying
the money and the other receiving the money on behalf of the
person paying it. In such a case if the payment is made by
mistake the person receiving the money must return it. But
section 72 in our opinion has no application to a case where
money is paid by a person to a bank with instructions that
it should be deposited in the account of a third person who
is a constituent of the bank. ’As soon as the money is so
deposited in the account
797
made no mistake in making the entries. The bank in our
opinion in not concerned with any mistake made by the
Accountant General or the treasury in sending the amounts to
the bank for the credit of the same to the account of Sultan
Mohd. If the Accountant General or the treasury had made
any such mistake it was open to them to recover the amount
paid in by mistake from Sultan Mohd. But the bank could not
reverse the entries and thus pay out money from the account
of Sultan Mohd. without his authority. It is obvious that
the bank hesitated to reverse the entries and only did it on
the threat that the amount would be deducted from the
subsidy paid to the bank by the Government. We have no
doubt that the High Court was right that in such
circumstances where the amount had been paid even though by
mistake into the account of a constituent of the bank it was
not open to the bank to reverse the entries at the instance
of the person paying-in the money into the constituent’s
account on the ground that the payer had made a mistake. We
agree with the High Court that s. 72 has no application to
the facts of this case. Learned counsel ’for the appellant
has referred us to Imperial Bank of Canada v. Bank of
Hamilton (1) in this connection. We are of opinion that
that case has no application to the present cases, for the
facts therein were different. The payment had been made by
one bank to another bank by mistake; there is nothing to
show that the money had been paid into a constituent’s
account and thereafter any entry had been reversed in that
case.
We are therefore of opinion that the appeals must fail.
They are hereby dismissed. As the respondents in C.A. 702
did not appear, we pass no order as to costs in that appeal.
The respondent in C,A. 768 has appeared and will get his
costs from the appleant
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Appeals dismissed
G.C.
(1) LR. (1903) A.C 49.
798