Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HUKUMCHAND GULABCHAND JAIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FULCHAND LAKHMICHAND JAIN AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1965
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SUBBARAO, K.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1692 1965 SCR (3) 91
ACT:
Public Trusts--Trustee--Liability to pay interest on
trust funds--Rule of damdupat--Applicability.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents who were interested in a public temple filed
a suit against the appellant who was looking after the
affairs of the temple. They prayed for his removal from
possession of the trust properties, for the rendering by him
of true and faithful accounts and for the framing of a
scheme. The trial court held that the appellant was liable
to render accounts. Having ascertained the amount of
principal, it determined the interest payable at an amount
equal to that of the principal on the basis of the rule of
damdupat. The respondents appealed to the High Court and
urged that the rule of damdupat should not have been applied
and that compound interest should have been charged against
the appellant. The High Court held that the appellant had
used the trust moneys in his business and therefore agreed
with the contention of the respondents and remanded the case
to the trial court for ascertaining the amount due to the
temple.
In the appeal to the Supreme Court, it was contended
that, (i) there were no grounds for making the appellant
liable to pay compound interest, and (ii) even if there was
liability to pay any interest, it was only for paying simple
interest and that the rule of damdupat should be applied.
HELD: (i) It had not been proved that the trust funds
had been used in the appellant’s business and therefore the
appellant was not liable to pay compound interest on the
balance of the trust funds with him. [96 G]
(ii) In the absence of statutes during the period of
suit dealing with public charitable trusts making a trustee
liable to pay interest, interest could be charged only on
equitable grounds. One such circumstance is, when the Court
considers that the trustee ought to have received interest,
as when he retains trust money in his hands uninvested.
Since the accounts, in the instant case, show that the
appellant had retained the principal amount uninvested for
over twenty years he would be liable to pay simple interest
at the rate of 4 per cent per annum. Even though the
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interest calculated at that rate exceeded the principal,
that entire interest would have to be paid, because, the
rule of damdupat would not apply. The principle of damdupat
was evolved both as an inducement to the debtors to pay the
entire principal and interest at one and the same time in
order to save interest in excess of the principal, and as a
warning to the creditor to take effective steps for
realising the debt from the borrower within a reasonable
time, so that, there may not be accumulation of interest in
excess of the principal amount. But that rule applies only
to cases where a loan is advanced. Though a trustee who had
custody of trust funds, has a pecuniary liability to make
good those funds if he has used them and may, on the basis
of such a liability, be said to be a debtor of the trust,
yet he, as an individual, is not a borrower of the funds
from the trust and cannot be said to have taken a loan from
himself as a trustee in charge of the trust funds. [96 H; 97
E-H; 99 D; E; 101 E-F, H]
92
Sharp v. Jackson, (1899) A.C.419 and Lake, in re Dyer Ex
Parte, (1901)1 K.B. 710, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 216 of 1952.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 15,
1959 of the Bombay High Court in First Appeal No. 600 of
1955 from Original Decree.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, Rameshwar Nath, S.N. Andley and P.k.
Vohra, for the appellant.
S.N. Pershad, M.H. Chhatrapati, 1. B. Dadachanji, O.C.
Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2.
K.L. Hathi and R.H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Raghubar Dayal, J. There is a temple known as Shri
Chandraprabhu Khandelwal Jain Temple at Dhulia. Gulabchand
Hiralal, father of appellant Hukumchand Gulabchand Jain, a
leading member of the Khandelwal Jain Community at Dhulia,
looked after the temple for over 40 years till his death
sometime in 1950.The appellant looked after it after his
father’s death. Two members of the community interested in
the temple, held to be a public temple, instituted the suit
against the appellant and the Charity Commissioner, Bombay,
praying for the removal of the appellant from possession of
the trust properties, for the rendering of true and faithful
accounts of all the assets and income of the trust property
and for the framing of the scheme for the administration of
the trust. It was alleged in the plaint that the appellant’s
father was maintaining all accounts of income and
expenditure concerning the temple and that the funds of the
temple were many times advanced at interest and that the
temple had come to hold large properties, movable and
immovable. It was further alleged that the temple had a
large income from offerings, house-rent etc., but the
appellant and his deceased father had not been maintaining
the accounts properly and that the. funds of the temple were
being advanced at interest, though no such income was shown
as received recently by the appellant.
The appellant, in his written statement, denied that the
amount was so advanced at interest as alleged by the
plaintiffs and stated that his father had been keeping a
ledger in the name of the temple in the accounts in which
its income and expenditure had been duly entered since over
40 years and that the appellant himself had kept separate
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account books for the temple since October 30, 1951. He
denied that any income recently received had not been shown
in the accounts.
The trial Court held that the appellant had committed
minor irregularities in the maintenance of the accounts,
that he was liable to render accounts and that the
Commissioner was to ascertain the
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amount due from the appellant on taking the accounts. It
definitely held it not established that income, if any,
derived by way of interest on loans advanced out of the
funds of the temple had not been credited to the account of
the temple and that no instance of fraudulent or dishonest
misappropriation of temple funds on the part of defendant
No. 1 or his father had been established. It found that the
meeting of the community had passed a resolution on August
22, 1958, by an overwhelming majority, sanctioning the
accounts submitted by the appellant and that only two
persons who opposed against the resolution were the two
plaintiffs of the suit.
The Commissioner found that on the date of the
institution of the suit, i.e. on February 17, 1954, Rs.
10.088-10-3 were due for principal and Rs. 16,853-6-0 were
due for interest, from the appellant. The plaintiffs
admitted the report to be correct but the appellant
contended that under the rule of damdupat interest exceeding
the amount of principal could not be allowed. The appellants
contention was accepted and the trial Court passed a decree
on April 23, 1955, for Rs. 20,177-4-6 against the appellant,
with future interest at 6 per cent per annum. We are not now
concerned with the other items of the decree and therefore
we make no reference to them.
The appellant deposited the amount due under the decree
on July 18, 1955. The plaintiffs appealed and claimed a
larger amount on various grounds, including the one that the
principle of damdupat should not have been applied and that
interest on the balance of the trust fund should have been
calculated and compound interest allowed in place of simple
interest on the amount of the trust fund in the hands of the
defendant or his father.
The appellant filed a cross-objection against the
allowing of interest on the balance of the trust funds with
his father and himself.
The High Court agreed with the plaintiffs that the
principle of damdupat could not be applied in the
circumstances of the case and that compound interest should
have been charged against the appellant. It therefore set
aside the decree passed by the trial Court in so far as it
determined the amount due to the temple and referred the
case back to the trial Court for reassessment of the
amount due to the temple having due regard to the
observations made in its judgment. On an application by the
appellant, certificate under Art. 133(1) of the
Constitution was granted.
The appellant has then filed this appeal and questioned
the correctness of the order of the High Court holding him
liable to pay compound interest and holding that the
principle of damdupat was not applicable in this case.
The High Court said in its judgment that it was the
contention of the plaintiffs that the appellant’s father and
the appellant
3(D)2SCI--8
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used the funds of the temple in their business and that they
were therefore liable to account on that footing. There was
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no such allegation in the plaint or in the memorandum of
appeal to the High Court. The High Court referred to the
khulasa submitted to the Commissioner by the plaintiffs and
stated that it was specifically alleged therein that the
amount was being used by the defendant and his father in
business. Support for such an allegation was found in the
statement Exhibit 24 of the appellant’s father in 1931.
Reference was also made to the fact that the appellant had
nowhere denied the fact of the moneys of the temple being
used for the purpose of the business and to the non-
production of certain books of account by the appellant. His
statement that they were not available was not accepted. The
High Court recorded the finding in this form (at p. 43 of
the appeal record):
"Under these circumstances it would not
be an unreasonable inference to draw that the
amounts belonging to the temple were being
utilised by Defendant No. 1 (the appellant)
and before him by his father in their
business."
Having come to this conclusion and to the view that the
position of the appellant’s father and the appellant vis-a-
vis the temple funds was that of a trustee, the High Court
considered whether the plaintiffs could claim interest on
equitable grounds and held that they could claim compound
interest with yearly rests, as the money had been used in
the business or had been so mixed up with their own funds
that it was impossible to say that they had not so used it.
The High Court did not apply the rule of damdupat as the
liability of the appellant was not rounded on loans or on
any contract.
It is contended for the appellant that there was neither
an allegation nor evidence to the effect that the trust
funds had been used in his business by the appellant’s
father or the appellant and that therefore the appellant was
not liable to pay compound interest on the trust funds in
his hands or in the hands of his father. It was further
urged that if interest was payable by the appellant’s father
or the appellant on the balance of trust funds, it should be
simple interest and the amount of interest could not be more
than the amount of principal due on the date of the
institution of the suit on the principle of damdupat.
It has not been established in this case that the trust
funds with the appellant or his father were used in their
trade or business. We have already referred to the finding
Of the High Court in this respect. It is a very halting
finding. The High Court has not definitely held it proved
that the funds were used in the business. We say so, as the
High Court has said (at p. 46 of the appeal record):
"Since we are of the view that the
defendant No. 1 and his father have used the
monies of the temple in their business or have
so mixed it up with their own funds that it is
impossible to say that they have not so used
it .... "
95
This is not a clear-cut definite finding that the funds had
been used in business or trade. The earlier finding noted at
p. 43 of the appeal record and quoted by us earlier, loses
its force in view of what has been said later. There is no
evidence about such use of the money. There was no such
allegation in the plaint.
It was said in the khulasa dated December 22, 4954 and
included in the Additional Report of the Commissioner of
even date:
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"Because the amount that was received by
the defendant in respect of the temple could
be utilised by the defendant in his business
he used to pay interest thereon at the rate of
annas 8."
This too, is not, as stated by the High Court, a specific
allegation that the amount was being used in business.
The plaint did not even say that the amount had been
always advanced on loan. What it said in para l is that the
funds of the temple were many times advanced at interest and
that no income from interest recently received had been
shown in the accounts. No evidence has been led about the
regular advance of the trust funds as loans. On the other
hand, the accounts show only a few entries about the receipt
of interest on the trust funds.
The statement, Exhibit 24, made by the appellant’s
father on October 26, 1931, in Regular Suit No. 377 of 1931,
was in a suit instituted by the appellant’s father for the
recovery of money advanced on a mortgage at compound rate of
interest. Gulabchand, father of the appellant, stated in
examination-in-chief, that the funds lent were of the
temple, the transactions of the temple were in his name and
that interest at compound rate had been agreed upon. In
cross-examination he stated that he had with him funds of
the temple and that he paid for them compound interest at 8
annas. This statement does not necessarily mean that the
appellant’s father had been crediting the temple accounts
with compound interest, at the rate of 8 annas, on the
temple funds in his hands.
Gulabchand made another statement on January 12, 1950.
It is exhibit 23. This statement was made in proceedings on
Miscellaneous Application No. 110 of 1949. He stated:
"Suit No. 377 of 1931 had been filed. In
the same my deposition has been recorded. I
have made a statement that the amount was of
the temple. But I gave a statement to that
effect as that amount has been set apart for
the temple. I have given a statement that
after the mortgage deed was executed and
before the suit was filed, I set apart this
amount for the temple and that the transaction
of the temple was in my name. That statement
is correct,
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If it is the amount of the Mandir, I
credit it to the Khata of the Mandir. I do not
pay interest for the amount of the Mandir. As
there was interest in the mortgage deed, I
have taken interest at eight annas from
Mangilal. I have made a statement that I have
with me the amount of the temple and that I
pay interest for it at eight annas."
These statements, taken together, lead to the inference that
Gulabchand was not crediting interest on the temple funds in
the accounts except when he received interest on the amounts
lent and that this statement made in 1931 was in
connection with the amount lent on a mortgage deed. He
charged compound interest from the mortgagor and therefore
credited that interest in the accounts. It is significant to
note that the four entries about interest were for the years
1927 to 1931 when Suit No. 377 of 1931 was filed. The fact
that no interest appears to have been credited after 1931
bears out the inference we derive from the statements of
Gulabchand.
There is another matter which throws light on this
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question and tends to support our conclusion. The report
submitted’ by the Commissioner on November 29, 1954 shows
that the balance at the beginning of samvat year 1996,
corresponding to 1939-40, was Rs. 7,649-14-3. The amount
credited during the year was Rs. 573-12-0 and the amount
debited was Rs. 769-3-6. If the opening balance be ignored,
there would be a deficit of Rs. 195-7-0 and the accounts for
the samvat year 1997 opened with a debit balance of Rs. 195-
7-0. This shows that the opening balance of samvat year
1996, i.e. Rs. 7,649-14-3, had been taken out of the
accounts. It appears that this amount was taken over to some
Bhandara account and was credited again in the temple
accounts for samvat year 2009, i.e., 1952-53, after being
brought out from Bhandara account. Such dealing with this
amount does not appear to be consistent with its being used
in business.
In view of the shaky finding of the High Court about the
funds being used in business by the appellant’s father or
the appellant and in view of what we have said above, we
hold that it has not been proved that these funds had been
used in business and that therefore the appellant is not
liable to pay compound interest on the balance of the trust
funds with his father or himself.
We may now consider whether the appellant is liable to
pay simple interest on the balance of trust money with his
father or himself.
Two questions arise for consideration and they are
whether the trustee is liable to pay simple interest on the
trust capital in his hands and if he is so liable what rate
of interest be charged from him in the present case.
Interest can be allowed on equitable grounds only as no
statutes in force during the period in suit and dealing with
public charitable trusts made the trustee liable to pay
97
interest. The Indian Trusts Act does not apply to public or
private religious or charitable endowments and therefore the
provisions of s. 23 thereof cannot be used for charging
interest from the appellant trustee. The Charitable and
Religious Trusts Act has no provision which provides for
charging the trustee with interest.
Reference may therefore be made in this connection to
what is stated in para 1691 of Halsbury’s Laws of England,
III Edition. Vol. 38:
"Subject to this, or unless a trustee is
expressly otherwise authorised or required
under the terms of his trust. he must duly and
promptly invest all capital trust money coming
to his hands, and all income which cannot be
immediately applied for the purposes of the
trust; and he is liable for any loss which may
result from its being improperly invested or
being left uninvested for an unreasonable
length of time, and for interest during the
period of its being so left."
This is so because the trustee has to conduct the affairs of
the trust in the same manner as an ordinary prudent man of
business would conduct his own affairs. In para 1812 are set
out the circumstances in which a trustee, besides being
required to account for the principal trust money, can also
be charged with interest on it and one of the circumstances
is when the Court considers that the trustee ought to have
received interest. Such could be the case when the trustee,
in breach of his duty, retains the trust money in his own
hands uninvested or mixes it with his own money or property.
It appears from the Commissioner’s report that the
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trustee in this case had over Rs. 10,000 in his hands from
samvat year 1988 commencing from November 10, 1931, upto
February 17, 1954, when this suit was instituted. The
trustee kept such a large sum uninvested for a long time
extending over 22 years. The accounts show that reasonably
he could not have expected to require this amount for any
current purpose of the trust during these years. He should
have invested the amount. His failure to do so makes him
liable to pay interest.
It appears from what is said in para 1814 of Halsbury’s
Volume 38 that where a trustee simply fails to invest trust
money which he ought to have invested or there are no other
special circumstances in the case, he is in general charged
simple interest at the rate of 4 per cent per annum. We
consider it reasonable to charge interest at 4 per cent per
annum in this case.
We have now therefore to decide what had been the amount
of trust funds in the hands of the appellant’s father at
different times and what would be the amount due from the
appellant on the date of the institution of the suit, both
for principal amount of trust money and for accumulated
interest with him. We do not
98
consider it desirable that the case be sent back to the
trial Court for these calculations, in the light of our
finding, as this litigation has been pending for over 10
years and as the accounting is to be done for a period
commencing from November 10, 1931, from which date the
accounts are available to the Court.
The Additional Report of the Commissioner, dated
December 22, 1954, shows that the amount of principal on
February 17, 1954, the date on which the suit was filed, was
Rs. 10,088-10-3 and that the accumulated amount of interest
due on that date was Rs. 16,853-6-0 at the rate of 6 per
cent per annum. The plaintiffs-respondents admitted this
report to be correct. The defendant also admitted the
correctness of the principal amount found due by the
Commissioner. He, in fact, did not even dispute that the
amount of interest at 6 per cent per annum would be what has
been found by the Commissioner. What he contended was that
he was not liable to pay interest in excess of the amount of
principal found due, in view of the rule of damdupat. In
these circumstances, these figures can be accepted as
correct.
When the Commissioner had submitted his first report on
November 29, 1954. both the parties objected to the
accounts prepared by him. The defendant had objected to the
Commissioner’s including a sum of Rs. 7,648-14-3 twice over
in his accounts. This sum represents the balance at the
close of samvat year 1995 corresponding to 1938-39. It was
not taken over in the accounts for the samvat year 1996. The
Commissioner, in preparing the account, took this amount
into consideration without making up the accounts for the
samvat year 1996. He found and noted in his accounts that
the amount credited to the temple during the samvat year
2009 corresponding to 1952-53 was Rs. 9,978-5-3 and that
this amount included a sum of Rs. 7,648-14-3 which had been
brought from the Bhandara account. He however did not
consider this sum to be the sum which had been not included
in the accounts of the temple from the samvat year 1996.
The learned District Judge agreed with the objection of
the defendant and held that this amount had been included
twice in the Commissioner’s accounts.
The respondents did not dispute the correctness of this
finding in the High Court and therefore we do not consider
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it a sound contention that this sum of Rs. 7,648-14-3 be
further added to the balance found due by the Commissioner.
The appellant stated that the statement of the balance
in hand submitted by him to the meeting on August 22, 1953
was arrived at by adding an amount of Rs. 7,000 to the
balance shown in the accounts as he had found a sum of Rs.
7,000 in a bag marked ’Dharmadya’ inside a safe. The High
Court has not considered the statement of the defendant
about so finding a sum of Rs. 7,000 reliable. It was not
urged before the High Court, as has been urged
99
before us, that this sum of Rs. 7,000 be included in the
amount of trust money in the hands of the appellant on the
date of the institution of the suit. The High Court merely
dealt with the complaint for the respondents that the
Commissioner had not taken this sum into account for the
purpose of computation of interest on funds in possession of
the defendant. The High Court considered this complaint to
be justified. We therefore do not accept the respondent’s
contention that Rs. 7,000 be added to the balance found due
by the Commissioner and hold that the High Court was in
error in ordering interest to be calculated on this amount
as well.
According to the report of the Commissioner, the amount
of interest on the principal amount of trust money in the
hands of the trustee worked out to Rs. 16,853-6-0 up to
February 17, 1954 at 6 per cent annum. We have held that the
interest be calculated at 4 per cent per annum. If follows
that at this rate the amount of interest found due by the
Commissioner would be reduced to Rs. 1 I,235-9-4. The
principal due on that date was Rs. 10,088-10-3. The question
now arises whether the amount of interest be limited 10 the
amount of principal, on the basis of the principle of
Damdupat, or not. The High Court has held that the principle
of Damdupat will not apply in this case. We agree with that
opinion.
The rule of Damdupat applies to cases where a loan is
advanced. This is clear from Colebrooke’s Digest on Hindu
Law.
Part I, Vol. I, of the Digest deals with Contracts. Book
I of this Part deals with Loans and Payment. Section I of
Chapter I of Book I deals with Loans in General and
describes what may or may not be loaned by whom, to whom and
in what form, with the rules for delivery and receipt. These
matters are comprised under the title ’loans delivered
(rinadana)’, which means the complete delivery of a loan or
debt by whom, where and to whom made. Chapter II deals with
Interest and states at the commencement of Section I:
"Such interest, as may be taken without
a breach of duty on the part of the creditor,
is a rule (dherma) for delivery by the
creditor. Or ... for it is the nature of a
loan, that it should produce to the lender the
principal sum advanced, and interest in
addition thereto."
The various Articles in this Section use the expressions
’creditor’. ’render’. ’Joan’, ’principal’, ’lent’,
’borrowers’ and thus make it amply clear that it deals with
interest on the amounts advanced by a creditor to a debtor.
Section I deals with the rates of interest to be charged.
Section 1I deals with Special Forms of Interest. Paragraph
53 thereof states:
"Interest on money, received at once,
not year by year, month by month, or day by
day, as it ought, must never be more than
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enough to double the debt, that is, more than
the amount of the principal paid at the same
time."
100
This is what is known by the rule of Damdupat and has
been rightly construed, as long ago as 1863, by the Bombay
High Court in Dhondu Jagannath v. Narayan Ramchandra(1).
Section III deals with Interest Specially Authorized and
Specially Prohibited. Article II of this Section deals with
Limits of Interest. Paragraph 59 thereof states:
"The principal can only be doubled by length of time,
after which interest ceases." The limit of interest is
different under other paragraphs for loans advanced in
different circumstances. Paragraph 61 repeats what has been
stated in paragraph 53 of Section II and adds a special rule
to the effect:
"On grain, on fruit, on wool or hair, on
beasts of burden, lent to be paid in the same
kind of equal value, it must not be more than
enough to make the debt quintuple."
It is therefore clear, as stated earlier, that the rule of
Damdupat applies in respect of interest due on amounts lent
by a creditor to the borrower, the debtor. The question then
is whether the funds in the hands of a trustee can be said
to be such loans nationally advanced by the trustee to
himself as an individual. If their character can be deemed
to be such, there may be a case for applying the rule of
Damdupat to the interest on such funds and that if it is not
so, this rule of Damdupat will not apply to the interest
ordered to be paid on such funds.
It has been urged for the appellant that the trustee is
a debtor with respect to the trust money in his hands.
Reference has been made to Halsbury’s Laws of England, III
Edition, Vol. 38, 1044 where it is stated at para 1801:
"A breach of trust is, in equity, regarded as giving
rise to a simple contract debt."
In the foot-note is stated:
"Strictly speaking, the relation of debtor
and creditor does not subsist between a
trustee and his cestui que trust (per Lindley,
L.J. in (1886) 18 Q.B.D. 295)."
Lewin on ’Trusts’, 15th Edition, states at p.
745:
"The debt constituted by a breach of
trust is, even after it has been established
by a decree, an equitable debt only, and until
the Bankruptcy Act, 1869, would not have
supported a petition in bankruptcy."
It was said by the Earl of Halsbury, L.C.,
in Sharp v. Jackson(2):
"It has been suggested that there was a
proposition which could be maintained, as to
which I confess I entertain grave doubts
whether any decision goes to that extent,
namely, that the relation between a cestui que
trust
101
and a trustee who has misappropriated the
trust fund is not that of debtor and creditor.
That it may be something more than that is
true, but that it is that of debtor and
creditor. 1 can entertain no doubt. As that
question has been mooted and brought before
your Lordships’ House as one question for
decision here, I certainly have no hesitation
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in saying that in my opinion no such
proposition can properly be maintained, and
that although there are other and peculiar
elements in the relation between a cestui que
trust and a trustee, undoubtedly the relation
of debtor and creditor can and does exist."
No other Lord expressed an opinion on this
point.
The correctness of this expression of the Earl
of Halsbury has been doubted in Lake, in re.
Dyer, Ex Parte(’) by Rigby L.J., who remarked
at the hearing:
"How is a trustee a debtor’? Can he be
sued at common law’? I do not see how he can
be a ’debtor’, for the money he is
fraudulently dealing with is, at law, his own
money. No doubt he can be called upon to
replace the money, but that must be by a suit
in equity, not at law. Notwithstanding the
high authority of the statement that has been
referred to, I confess I do not understand
it."
We are of opinion that though a trustee., who has
custody of trust funds, has a pecuniary liability to make
good those funds if he has used them and may, on the basis
of such a liability, be said to be a debtor of the trust,
yet he, as an individual, is not a borrower of the funds
from the trust and cannot be said to have taken a loan from
himself as a trustee in charge of the trust funds. His
liability to pay interest, when ordered by the Court on
equitable grounds, does not come within the provisions
dealing with interest in Hindu Law, as mentioned in
Colebrooke’s Digest.
There is no fixed rate of interest which a trustee be
liable to pay as there is no contract between him as a
trustee and as an individual to pay interest. He simply uses
the money in his custody. It is only when the Court
determines his liability to pay interest that interest is to
be calculated on the principal amount due from him. It is
not the case of a creditor letting interest accumulate and
thus make the debtor pay interest much more than what he had
borrowed as principal.
The principle of Damdupat was evolved both as an
inducement to the debtor to pay the entire principal and
interest thereon at one and the same time in order to save
interest in excess of the principal and as a warning to the
creditor to take effective steps for realising the debt from
the borrower within reasonable time so that there be not
such accumulation of interest as would be in excess of the
principal amount due, as in that case he would have to
forego the excess amount. There may be justification for the
(1) [1901] 1 K.B. 710,715.
102
principle of Damdupat applying in the case of an ordinary
creditor and a debtor, but there seems no justification for
extending that principle to the case of a trustee who has to
pay interest on the funds in his hand with respect to which
on certain grounds he is held liable to pay interest. We
therefore hold that the rule of Damdupat will not apply with
respect to the interest adjudged payable by a trustee on his
committing breach of trust with respect to the trust funds
in his hands .
The result then is that the appellant is liable to pay
Rs. 10,088-10-3 for principal and Rs. 11,235-9-4 as
interest, upto the date of the institution of the suit, i.e.
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upto February 17, 1954.
We therefore allow the appeal, set aside the decree of
the High Court and modify the decree of the trial Court
accordingly. The result will be that the suit temple will be
entitled to get from defendant No. 1 a sum of Rs. 21,324-3-7
upto the date of the suit, together with future interest at
4 per cent per annum on Rs. 10,088-10-3 from the date of the
suit till the date of payment. The appellant will bear his
costs throughout. The costs of the respondents will come out
of the estate.
Appeal allowed.
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