Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL BANK OF LAHORE LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SOHANLAL SEHGAL AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/03/1965
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1663 1965 SCR (3) 293
ACT:
Limitation Act, 1908, First Schedule, Articles 36 and
115--Scope of
HEADNOTE:
The respondents hired lockers in the safe deposit vaults
from the appellant bank at Jullundur through its manager
under different agreements on various dates during 1950. In
April 1951, the lockers were tampered with and the valuables
of the respondents kept in them were removed by the Manager.
In due course the Manager was prosecuted and convicted for
theft. The respondents filed three suits against the bank
for the recovery of different sums being the value of the
contents of the lockers which had been removed. The bank
denied its liability on various grounds and also contended
that the suits were, barred by limitation.
The trial court held that the Bank was liable to bear
the loss incurred by the respondents and that the suits were
not barred by limitation. On appeal, the High Court accepted
the findings of the trial court on both the questions and
dismissed the appeals.
In the appeal before the Supreme Court, only the
question of limitation was raised. It was contended of
behalf of the appellants on the facts found that the suit
was barred by limitation as the theft of the valuables by
the Manager was a tort committed by him dehors the contracts
entered into by the appellant with the respondents and,
therefore, Article 36 of the Limitation Act which required
that a suit must be instituted within two years applied, and
not Art. 115, which provided for a period of limitation of
three years; that the suits were, not based on a breach of
contract committed by the bank but only the theft committed
by its agent dehors the terms of the contract.
HELD: The suit claims, being ex contractu, were clearly
governed by Article 115 of the First Schedule to the
Limitation Act and by Article 36. [298F]
There were clear allegations in the plaint that the
appellant committed breach of contract in not complying with
some of the contitions thereof and that the appellant
understood those allegations in that light and traversed
them. [298 E]
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Even ii the respondents’ claim was solely based on the
fraud committed by the manager during the course of his
employment, such a claim could not fall under Art. 36. To
attract Art. 36, the misfeasance must be independent of
contract. The fraud of the manager committed in the course
of his employment must be deemed to be a fraud of the
principal, i.e. the Bank must be deemed to have permitted
manager to commit theft in violation of the terms of the
contracts. While under the contracts the bank was under an
obligation to provide good lockers and not to permit access
to the safe except to persons mentioned in the contracts, in
violation of these terms the bank gave defective lockers and
gave access to the manager, thus facilitating the theft. In
either case the wrong committed was not independent of the
contract but directly arose out of the breach of contract.
[298 G, H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 929.
930 and 931 of 1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and decree
dated October 11, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Regular
First Appeals Nos. 136, 137 and 138 of 1959.
Hans Raj Sawhney and B.C. Misra, for the appellant (in
all the appeals).
B.R.L. lyengar, S.K. Mehta and K.L. Mehta for the
respondents (In C.A. No. 229 of 1963).
V.D. Mahajan, for the respondent. (In C.A. No. 930 of 1963).
Kanwar Rajendra Singh and Vidya Sagar Nayyar, for the
respondent (In C.A. No. 931 of 1963).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. These appeals by special leave raise a
question, of limitation.
The National Bank of Lahore Limited, hereinafter called
the Bank, is a banking concern registered under the Indian
Companies Act and having its registered office in Delhi and
branches at different places in India. Though its main
business is banking, it carries on the incidental business
of hiring out lockers out of cabinets in safe deposit vaults
to constituents for safe custody of their jewels and other
valuables. It has one such safe deposit vault at its branch
in Jullundur. The respondents herein hired lockers on rental
basis from the Bank at Jullundur through its Manager under
different agreements on different dates during the year
1950. in April 1951 the said lockers were tampered with and
the valuables of the respondents kept therein were removed
by the Manager of the Jullundur branch of the Bank. In due
course the said Manager was prosecuted before the Additional
District Magistrate, Jullundur, and was convicted under ss.
380 and 409 of the Indian Penal Code. The respondents filed
3 suits in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Jullundur,
against the Bank for the recovery of different sums on
account of the loss of the valuable contents of the lockers
hired by them. The Bank denied its liability on various
grounds and also contended that the suits were barred by
Iimitation.
The learned Subordinate Judge held that the Bank was
liable to bear the loss incurred by the plaintiffs and that
the suits were not barred by limitation. On appeal, the High
Court of Punjab accepted the findings of the learned
Subordinate Judge on both the questions and dismissed the
appeals. The present appeals arise out of the said judgment
of the High Court.
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The only question raised in these appeals is one of
limitation. Before considering the question of limitation
it is necessary
295
notice briefly the findings of fact arrived at by the High
Court. The High Court summarized its findings thus:
(1) The whole object of a safe deposit
vault in which customers of a Bank can rent
lockers for placing their valuables is to
ensure their safe custody. The appellant-Bank
had issued instructions and laid down a
detailed procedure for ensuring that safety
but in actual practice the Manager alone had
been made the custodian with full control over
the keys of the strong room and a great deal
of laxity had been observed in having no check
whatsoever on him.
(2) The lockers had been rented out to the
plaintiffs by the Manager Baldev Chand, who
was entrusted with the duty of doing so. It
was he who had intentionally rented OUt such
lockers to the plaintiffs which had been
tampered with by him. This constituted a fraud
on his part there being an implied
representation to the plaintiffs that the
lockers were in a good and sound condition.
(3) Although the Bank authorities were not
aware of what Baldev Chand was doing. but the
fraud, which he perpetrated, was facilitated
and was the result of the gross laxity and
negligence on the part of the Bank
authorities.
(4) The lockers were indisputably being
let out by the Manager to secure rent for the
Bank.
Having found the said facts, the High Court held that the
fraud was committed by the Manager acting within the scope
of his authority and therefore, the Bank was liable for
the loss incurred by the respondents. Then it proceeded to
consider the question of limitation from three aspects,
namely. (i) the loss was caused to the respondents. as the
Manager of the Bank committed fraud in the course of his
employment; (ii) there was a breach of the implied condition
of the contract. namely, that only such lockers would be
rented out which were safe and sound and which were capable
of being operated in the manner set out in the contract; and
(iii) there was a relationship of bailor and bailee
between the respondents and the Bank, and therefore the Bank
would be liable on the basis of the contract of bailment. It
held that from whatever aspect the question was approached
Art. 36 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act would be
out of place and the respondents’ claims would be governed
by either Art. 95 or some other article of the Limitation
Act.
Learned counsel for the appellant accepted the findings
of fact, but contended that on the facts found the suits
were barred by limitation. Elaborating the argument the
learned counsel pointed out that the theft of the valuables
by the Manager was a tort committed by him dehors the
contracts entered into by the appellant with the respondents
and. therefore, Art. 36 of the First Schedule
296
to the Limitation Act was immediately attracted to the
respondents’ claims.
The scope of Art. 36 of the First Schedule to the
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Limitation Act is fairly well settled. The said article says
that the period of limitation "for compensation for any
malfeasance, misfeasance or nonfeasance independent of
contract and not herein specifically provided for" is two
years from the time when the malfeasance, misfeasance or
nonfeasance takes place. If this article applied, the suits
having been filed more than 2 years after the loss of the
articles deposited with the Bank, they would be dearly out
of time. Article 36 applied to acts or omissions commonly
known as torts by English lawyers. They are wrongs
independent of contract. Article. e 36 applies to actions
"ex delicto" whereas Art. 115 applies to actions "ex
contractu". "These torts are often considered as of three
kinds, viz. non-feasance or the omission of some act which a
man is by law bound to do, misfeasance, being the improper
performance of some lawful act, or malfeasance, being the
commission of some act which is in itself unlawful". But to
attract Art. 36 these wrongs shall be independent of
contract. The meaning of the words "independent of contract"
has been felicitously brought out by Greer, L.J. in Jarvis
v. Moy, Davies, Smith, Vanderveil and Co.(1) thus:
"The distinction in the modern view, for this
purpose, between contract and tort may be put
thus. Where the breach of duty alleged arises
out of a liability independently of the
personal obligation undertaken by contract it
is tort and it may be tort even though there
may happen to be a contract between the
parties, if the duty’ in fact arises
independently of that contract. Breach of
contract occurs where that which is complained
of is a breach of duty arising out of the
obligations undertaken by the contract."
If the suit claims are for compensation for breach of the
terms of the contracts, this article has no application and
the appropriate article is Art. 115, which provides a period
of 3 years for compensation for the breach of any contract,
express or implied, from the date when the contract is
broken. If the suit claims are based on a wrong committed by
the Bank or its agent dehors the contract, Art. 36 will be
attracted.
Let us now apply this legal position to the claims in
question. One of the contracts that was entered into between
the plaintiffs and the Bank is dated February 5, 1951. It is
not disputed that the other two contracts, with which we are
concerned, also are of the same pattern. Under that contract
the Bank, the appellant herein, and Sohanlal Sehgal, one of
the respondents herein, agreed "to hire, subject to the
conditions endorsed, the company’s safe No. 1651/
[1936] 1 K.B. 399. 405.
297
2203 Class lower for one year from this day at a rent of Rs.
40". The relevant conditions read as follows:
It is agreed that the connection of the renter
of the safe and the Bank (and it has no
connection) is that of a lessor and lessee for
the within mentioned safe and not that of a
banker and customer.
15. The liability of the company in
respect of property deposited in the said safe
is limited to ordinary care in the performance
by employees and officers of company of their
duties and shall consist only of (a) keeping
the safe in vault where located when this
rental contract is entered into or in one of
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equal specifications, the door to which safe
shall be locked at all time except when an
officer or an employee is present, (b)
allowing no person access to said safe. except
hirer or authorised deputy, or attorney in
fact having special power to act
identification by signature being sufficient
or his/her legal representative in the case of
death, insolvency or other disability of
Hirer, except as herein expressly stipulated.
An unauthorised opening shall be presumed or
inferred from proof of partial or total loss
of contents.
16. The company shall not be liable for any
delay caused by the failure of the vault doors
or locks to operate.
17. The company shall not be liable for any
loss etc.
The only purpose of the contract was to ensure the safety of
the articles deposited in the safe deposit vault. It was
implicit in the contract that the lockers supplied must
necessarily be in a good condition to achieve that purpose
and, therefore, that they should be in a reasonably perfect
condition. It was an implied term of such a contract.
Condition 15 imposed another obligation on the Bank to
achieve the same purpose, namely, that the Bank should not
allow access to any person to the safe except the hirer or
his authorised agent or attorney. If the articles deposited
were lost because one or other of these two conditions was
broken by the Bank, the renter would certainly be entitled
to recover damages for the said breach. Such a claim would
be ex contractu and not ex delicto and for such a claim Art.
115 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act applied and
not Art. 36 thereof.
Learned counsel for the appellant contended that the
suits were not based upon the breach of a contract committed
by the Bank but only the theft committed by its agent dehors
the terms of the contract. This leads us to the
consideration of the scope of the plaints presented by the
respondents. It would be enough if we take one of the
plaints as an example, for others also run on the same
lines. Let us take the plaint in Civil Suit No. 141 of 1954,
i.e., the suit flied by Sohanlal Sehgal and others against
the Bank for the recovery of d sum of Rs. 26,500. We have
carefully gone through
298
the plaint, particularly paragraphs 8, 9 and 10 thereof. It
will be seen from the plaint that though it was not
artistically drafted the relief was claimed mainly on two
grounds, namely, (i) that it was an implied term of the
contract that the locker rented was in a good condition,
and (ii) the valuables were lost because the Manager, on
account of the negligence of the Bank in not taking all the
necessary precautions, committed theft of the articles in
the course of his employment. In the written-statement the
defendant denied its liability both under the terms of the
contract and also on the basis that it was not liable for
the agent’s fraud. The High Court found that at the time
when the lockers were rented out they were in a defective
condition and that the Bank, in actual practice, made the
Manager the sole custodian with full control over the keys
of the strong,room and permitted a great deal of laxity in
not having any check whatsoever on him. In this state of the
pleadings and the findings it is not possible to accept the
contention of the learned counsel’ for the appellant that
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the plaintiffs did not base their claims on the branch of
the conditions of the contracts. This argument is in the
teeth of the allegations made in the plaint, evidence
adduced and the arguments advanced in the Courts below and
the findings arrived at by them. While we concede that the
plaint could have been better drafted and couched in a
clearer language, we cannot accede to the contention that
the plaints were solely based upon the fraud of the Manager
in the course of his employment. We, therefore. hold that
there were clear allegations in the plaints that the defen-
dant committed breach of the contracts in not complying with
some of the conditions thereof and that the defendant
understood those allegations in that light and traversed
them. The suit claims, being ex contractu were clearly
governed by Art. 115 of the First Schedule to the Limitation
Act and not by Art. 36 thereof.
If Art. 115 applied, it is not disputed that the suits were
within time.
Even if the claim was solely based on the fraud
committed by the Manager during the course of his
employment. we do not see how such a claim fell under Art.
36 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act. To attract
Art. 36. the misfeasance shall be independent of contract.
The fraud of the Manager committed in the course of his
employment is deemed to be a fraud of the principal, that is
to say the Bank must be deemed to have permitted its manager
to commit theft in violation of the terms of the contracts.
While under the contracts the Bank was under an obligation
to give to the respondents good lockers ensuring safety and
protection against theft, it .gave defective ones
facilitating theft; while under the contracts it should not
permit access to the safe to persons other than those
mentioned in the contracts. in violation of the terms
thereof it gave access to its Manager and enabled him to
commit theft. In either case the wrong committed was not
independent of the contract. but it directly arose out of
the breach of the contract.
299
1n such circumstances Art. 36 is out of place. The
competition between Arts. 115 and 120 to take its place need
not be considered. for neither of those Articles hits the
claim, as the suits are within 3 years. which is the shorter
of the two periods of limitation prescribed under the said
two Articles.
In this view it is not necessary to express our view on
the question whether the contracts in question were of
bailment.
In the result, the appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs one hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.
300