Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DOYPACK SYSTEMS PVT. LTD. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS., ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/02/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 782 1988 SCR (2) 962
1988 SCC (2) 299 JT 1988 (1) 304
1988 SCALE (1)273
CITATOR INFO :
F 1988 SC1353 (17)
E&D 1991 SC 772 (18)
R 1991 SC1806 (6)
ACT:
Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Limited (Acquisition and
Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1986-Whether under section 3
thereof equity shares in Swadeshi Polytex Limited and
Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company vest in the
Central Govt. and whether the immovable properties have also
vested in the Govt. under the said section.
HEADNOTE:
%
What fell for consideration in all these matters, viz.,
(i) SLPs. (civil) Nos. 4826 and 7045 of 1987, (ii) SLP
(civil) No. 5240 of 1987, (iii) C.M.Ps. Nos. 12029-31/87 (in
CAs Nos. 577-79 of 1987), (iv) C.M.Ps. Nos. 16635 and
16918/87 (in S.L.P. (c) No. 4826/87) and (v) Transferred
Cases Nos. 13 and 14 of 1987 (with CMPs. Nos. 16887-89 and
17018/87), was a common question of law-whether equity
shares in two companies, i.e. 10,00,000 shares in Swadeshi
Polytex Ltd. and 17,18,344 shares in Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing Company Ltd., held by the Swadeshi Cotton
Mills, vested in the Central Government under section 3 of
the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Ltd. (Acquisition and
Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1986. The other subsidiary
question was whether the immovable properties, namely,
bungalow No. 1 and Administrative Block, Civil Lines,
Kanpur, had also vested in the government.
There were six original proceedings initiated by
various parties which gave rise to these civil appeals,
special leave petitions and transferred cases before this
Court. These were:
On 18th February, 1987, a suit was filed before the
Delhi High Court by one Naresh Kumar Barti against Dr. Raja
Ram Jaipuria, Swadeshi Polytex and others, for an injunction
restraining the company from holding the 17th annual general
meeting on the ground that 34% shares in the Swadeshi
Polytex vested in the National Textile Corporation (N.T.C.)
in view of sections 3 and 4 of the Act. In the suit, an
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application was also filed praying that in the event of the
annual general meeting of the company being allowed to be
held, an independent Chairman should be appointed to conduct
the meeting. The High Court
963
refused to pass any order (in view of an order already
passed by the Allahabad High Court). Against this order of
the Delhi High Court, two special leave petitions were filed
in this Court one by Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd. (defendant
No. 10 in the Delhi Suit), which came to registered as Civil
Appeal No. 577 of 1987 after the grant of special leave, and
the other, by Naresh Kumar Barti, the plaintiff in the Delhi
Suit, which came to be registered as Civil Appeal No. 578 of
1987 after the grant of special leave.
On 24th February, 1987, one Bari Prasad Aggarwal filed
a suit in the court of the Third Additional Civil Judge,
Kanpur praying inter alia that Shri Raja Ram Jaipuria should
not preside over the 17th annual general meeting of the
company. The application for an interim injunction filed in
the suit was dismissed. In the appeal preferred by the
plaintiff before the Allahabad High Court, an order was
passed by the High Court on 2nd March, 1987, appointing Shri
M.P. Wadhawan as the Chairman of the said annual general
meeting. Against this order dated 2nd March, 1987, passed by
the Allahabad High Court M/s. Doypack System Pvt. Ltd.,
preferred a special leave petition in this Court, which
after the grant of leave, was registered as Civil Appeal No.
577 of 1987. The three special leave petitions were heard
together as Civil Appeals Nos. 577, 578 and 579 of 1987 and
disposed of by this Court by a common order on 6th March,
1987, appointing Shri Jaswant Singh as the Chairman of the
said annual general meeting.
On 26th February, 1987, another suit-Suit No. 506 of
1987-was filed in the Delhi High Court by Mukesh Bhasin for
a declaration that Swadeshi Cotton and Swadeshi Mining had
no right in respect of 34% of the share-holdings in Swadeshi
Polytex and that the said shares were vested in the N.T.C.
by virtue of the said Act. By order dated 9th March, 1987,
the High Court disposed of that application and granted
injunction restraining defendants Nos. 3 and 4 in that suit
from exercising any right whatsoever attached to the 34%
shares of defendant No. 2 held by them and particularly any
voting right in the annual general meeting scheduled to be
held on the 9th March, 1987, till the decision of the suit.
This order was brought to the notice of this Court by C.M.P.
forming part of the Civil Appeals Nos. 577-579 of 1987. On
9th March, 1987, on that C.M.P. this Court passed an order
directing that NTC, Swadeshi Cotton and Swadeshi Mining, all
shall be entitled to vote at the annual general meeting and
the question as to who were the rightful voters would be
decided by the Chairman of the meeting, etc. This was the
Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987.
964
One Mukesh Jasmani, a shareholder in Swadeshi Polytex
filed a writ petition in the Allahabad High Court. The High
Court by its order dt. 7th March, 1987, dismissed that writ
petition, observing that Swadeshi Cotton and Swadeshi Mining
would be entitled to vote at the 17th annual general meeting
in respect of their shares which, according to N.T.C., had
vested in them. Against this order, Doypack Systems
preferred the Special Leave Petition (civil) No. 3112 of
1987. This Court passed orders on this petition, directing
that the meeting would be held under the chairmanship of
Shri Jaswant Singh notwithstanding any order made by any
Court. This Court also vacated the operative portion of the
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directions contained in the order dated 7th March, 1987 of
the Allahabad High Court.
On 6th April, 1987, M/s. Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing Company filed a civil writ petition-Writ
Petition No. 2214 of 1987-in the Allahabad High Court
(Lucknow Bench) for stay of the operation of the letters
dated 24/30 March, 1987, addressed by NTC to Swadeshi Mining
and Manufacturing Company and Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company
Limited, calling for an Extraordinary General Meeting of the
Shareholders for removal of the Directors of Swadeshi Mining
and Manufacturing Company Ltd. The High Court passed an
order on the 6th April, 1987, staying the operation of the
said letters. Against that order, M/s. Doypack Systems Pvt.
Ltd. filed Special Leave Petition No. 4826 of 1987 and NTC
also filed a Special Leave Petition No. 5240 of 1987 in this
Court. By an order dated 5th May, 1987, this Court directed
that Suit No. 506 of 1987 in the Delhi High Court and the
Writ Petition No. 2214 of 1987 in the Allahabad High Court
be transferred to this Court, which were registered in this
Court as Transferred cases Nos. 14 and 13 of 1987
respectively.
NTC filed a civil suit in the District Court Kanpur
seeking declaration of its title in respect of the shrubbery
property in Kanpur. The court refused any interlocutory
injunction in the suit against which an appeal was preferred
before the High Court of Allahabad and the same was
dismissed. Consequently, NTC filed a Special Leave Petition
No. 7045 of 1987 in this Court.
Disposing of the matters, the Court,
^
HELD: Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. and
Others submitted that the shares in question did not vest in
the Central Government. [976B]
965
By the Act-Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Ltd.
(Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1986-on the
appointed day "every textile undertaking" and the "right,
title and interest of the company in relation to every
textile mill of such textile undertakings" were transferred
to and vested in the Central Government and such textile
undertakings would be deemed to include "all assets". In the
context of this provision, the reliance on the decision of
this Court in Balkrishnan Gupta and Others v. Swadeshi
Polytex Ltd. and Others, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 854, was not
appropriate. [978D-E]
It appears from the written statement filed by NTC on
8th February, 1987, in the suit filed by one G.G. Bakshi in
Ghaziabad Court, it was claimed that NTC was entitled to
take over company’s shares and investments. On 24/30th
March, 1987, NTC issued notice to the petitioners 1 and 2
stating that they were entitled to shares. It was urged by
Shri Nariman, counsel for Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Co. Ltd. & Ors., that this belated assertion indicated that
the shares were not intended to be taken over. The Court was
unable to accept this suggestion or to draw that inference.
It did not logically follow. [979G-H; 980A]
Before dealing with the main question, the Court
considered an application made by Shri Nariman for the
production of certain documents. The petitioner in
Transferred Case No. 13 of 1987 had sought production of the
documents. It was contended inter alia that the production
of those documents was necessary to establish that the
shares were never intended to be taken over and these were
never considered as part of the textile undertaking, and
that the documents were definitely relevant as they would
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throw light on the merits of the case. The production of the
documents was resisted by the Attorney-General on behalf of
the Union of India on the ground that the documents were not
relevant and in any event most of them were privileged being
part of the documents leading to the tendering of the advice
by the Cabinet to the President, as contemplated by Article
74(2) of the Constitution. [989B, C; 990A]
Having considered the facts and circumstances of the
case as well as the decisions of this Court in a number of
cases, the Court was of the opinion that the documents in
question were not relevant, and also that the Cabinet papers
are protected from disclosure not by reason of their
contents but because of the class to which they belong; the
Cabinet papers also include papers brought into existence
for the purpose of preparing submission to the Cabinet, and
it is the duty of this Court to
966
prevent disclosure where Article 74(2) is applicable. The
Court was unable to accept the prayer of the petitioner to
direct disclosures and production of the documents sought
for. [993F-G; 994H]
Coming to the main question involved, reading the
provisions of section 3(1), section 4(1) and section 2(k) of
the Act, each throwing light on the other, it follows that-
(a) under the first limb of section 3(1) of the Act, every
textile undertaking; (b) under the second limb of section
3(2), every right, title and interest of the company in
relation to every such undertaking, is transferred and
vested, (c) the deeming provision of section 4(1) amplifies
and enlarges both the limbs of the vesting section, being
section 3(1), (d) the definition of the section is read into
these provisions, to give a wider meaning and scope to the
vesting provision and to what is transferred or vested.
[997G-H; 998A]
Sections 7 and 8 of the Act relied upon by the
petitioners, being provisions for payment of amounts and for
the issue of shares by NTC respectively, will have no
bearing on the scope of the vesting provision. As to what
properties have vested cannot proceed on the hypothesis that
there is a clear numerical or mathematical link between the
quantum of compensation and the items of property vested.
This correlation with regard to such legislation is not
available. [998B]
Section 8 refers to the payments of the amounts by
Union of India to the company. It has no bearing either on
the vesting section or on section 7 except that the figure
of Rs.24 crores 32 lakhs was introduced into section 7.
[998C-D]
In this case, a nationalisation statute is concerned.
Even with other independent management statutes, in respect
of textile undertakings a series of decisions have upheld
the view that the shares vest in the Government. See
National Textile Corporation Ltd. v. Sitaram Mills, [1986]
Supp. S.C.C. 117, Minerva Mills v. Union of India, [1986] 4
S.C.C. 222, Goverdhan Das Narasingh Das Daga v. Union of
India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 276, Vidharba Mills Berar Ltd. v.
Union of India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 248 and Fine Knitting Co.
Ltd. v. Union of India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 276. The above
provide the informed basis on which the Court makes
construction of sections 3 and 4 of the Act. [998G-H; 999A-
B]
The expressions "and all other rights and interest in
or arising out of such property, as were immediately before
the appointed day, in the ownership, possession, power or
control of the company in relation to the said
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undertakings", appearing in sub-section (1) of section 4 of
the
967
Act indicates that the shares which have been purchased out
of the funds of the textile undertakings and which have been
held for the benefit of the said textile undertakings, would
come within the scope of section 4 of the Act and thus would
also vest in the Central Government under section 3. The
origin of these shares and their connection with the textile
undertakings had been fully corroborated. The textile
business was the only business of the Swadeshi Cotton Mills.
There was inter-connection and inter-relation between all
the six undertakings. Investments in Swadeshi Polytex
Limited from the funds of Kanpur undertaking were always
made. Investments in Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Company Ltd. were always made from the funds of the Kanpur
undertaking. Assets/investments held and used for the
benefit of the textile business of SCM were carried on in
its textile undertakings. [999B-E]
The words in the statute must Prima facie be given
their ordinary meaning. Where the grammatical construction
is clear and manifest and without doubt, that construction
ought to prevail unless there are some strong and obvious
reasons to the contrary. Nothing was shown to warrant that
literal construction should not be given effect to. See
Chandavarkar S.R. Rao v. Asha Lata, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 447 at
476, approving 44 Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed.
paragraph 856, p. 552, Nokes v. Doncaster Amalgamated
Colliery Ltd., [1940] Appeal Cases 1014 at 1022. It must be
emphasised that interpretation must be in consonance with
the Directive Principles of the State Policy in Articles
39(b) and (c) of the Constitution.[999E-G]
The object of interpretation of a statute is to
discover the intention of the Parliament as expressed in the
Act. The dominant purpose in constructing a statute is to
ascertain the intention of the legislature as expressed in
the statute, considering it as a whole and in its context.
That intention and, therefore the meaning of the statute are
particularly to be sought in the words used in the statute
itself, which must, if they are plain and unambiguous, be
applied as they stand. In the present case, the words used
represented the real intention of the Parliament as the
Court found not only from the clear words used but also from
the very purpose of the vesting of the shares. If the fact
is borne in mind that these shares were acquired from out of
the investments made by these two companies and furthermore
that the assets of the company as such minus the shares were
negative and further the Act in question was passed to give
effect to the principles enunciated in clauses (b) and (c)
of Article 39 of the Constitution, no doubt was left that
the shares vested in the Central Government by operation of
sections 3 and 4 of the
968
Act. See in this connection, the observations of Halsbury’s
Laws of England, 4th Edition, Volume 44, paragraph 856, p.
522 and the cases noted therein. [999G-H; 1000A-C]
There is no exact correlation between the figure of
capital reserve and the figure of investments. That could
not be. These could never be equal. The submission of the
petitioners failed to take into account the fact the
undertakings, other than the Kanpur undertaking, also had
capital reserve, even though there was no obligation that
these were excluded assets in respect of other undertakings
and there were no figures of investments therein. [1000D-E]
Contemporanea Expositio is a well-settled principle or
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doctrine which applies only to the construction of ambiguous
language in old statutes. Reliance might be placed in this
connection on Maxwell, 13th Ed. page 269. It is not
applicable to modern statutes. Reference may be made to G.P.
Singh, Principles of Statutory Interpretation, 3rd Ed. pages
238,239. The leading case on Contemporanea expositio is
Comppell College Belfast v. Commissioner of Valuation for
Northern Ireland, [1964] 1 W.L.R. 912, in which House of
Lords made it clear that the doctrine is to be applied only
to the construction of ambiguous language in the very old
statutes. Lord Watson said in Clyde Navigation Trustees v.
Laird, [1983] 8 A.C. 658 that Contemporanea expositio could
have no application to a modern Act. The Court, therefore,
rejected the attempt of the petitioners to lead the Court to
this forbidden track by referring to various extraneous
matters. Furthermore, those external aids sought before the
Court did not support the petitioners’ approach to this
question at all. [1000F-H; 1001A]
Sections 3 and 4 of the Act evolve a legislative policy
and set out the parameters within which it has to be
implemented. The Court could not find that there was any
special intention to exclude the shares in this case, as
seen from the existence of at least four other Acquisition
Acts which used identical phraseology in sections 3 and 4
and the other sections as well-Aluminium Corporation of
India Ltd. (Acquisition and Transfer of Aluminium
Undertakings) Act, 1984, Amritsar Oil Works (Acquisition and
Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1982, Britannia Engineering
Company (Mohmeh Unit) and the Arthur Butler and Company
(Muzaffarpore) Ltd. (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertakings) Act, 1978, and the Ganesh Flour Mills Company
Limited (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act,
1984. [1001E-F]
969
It appeared to the Court that the expression "forming
part of" appearing in section 27 could not be so read with
section 4(1) as would have the effect of restricting or
cutting down the scope and ambit of the vesting provisions
in section 3(1). The expression "pertaining to" did not mean
"forming part of". Even assuming that the expression
"pertaining to" appearing in the first limb of section 4(1)
means "forming part of", it would mean that only such assets
as had a direct nexus with the textile mills, would fall
under the first limb of section 4(1). The shares in question
would still vest in the Central Government under the second
limb of section 4(1) of the Act since the shares were bought
out of the income of the textile mills and were held by the
company in relation to such mills. The shares would also
fall in the second limb of section 3(1) being right and
title of the company in relation to the textile
mills.[1002C-E]
On the construction of sections 3 and 4, the Court came
to the conclusion that the shares vested in the Central
Government even if sections 3 and 4 were read in conjunction
with sections 7 and 8 of the Act on the well-settled
principles. The expression ’in relation to’ has been
interpreted to be words of the widest amplitude. See
National Textile Corporation Ltd. and Ors. v. Sitaram Mills
Ltd. (supra). Section 4 appears to be an expanding section.
It introduces a deeming provision, which is intended to
enlarge the meaning of a particular word or include matters
which otherwise may or may not fall within the main
provisions. It is well-settled that the word ’includes’ is
an inclusive definition and expands the meaning. [1002F-G]
To leave a company, the net wealth of which was
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negative at the time of take-over of the management, with
the shares held by it as investment in the other company,
was, in the Court’s opinion, not only to defeat the
principles of Articles 39(b) and (c) of the Constitution,
but it would permit the company to reap the fruits of its
mismanagement. That would be an absurd situation. It had to
be borne in mind that the net wealth of the company at the
time of take-over was negative; hence sections 3 and 4 could
be meaningfully read if all the assets including the shares
were considered to be taken over by the acquisition. That
was the only irresistible conclusion that followed from the
construction of the documents and the history of the Act,
which expressly recites that it was to ensure the principles
enunciated in clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the
Constitution. The Act must be so read that it further
ensures such meaning and secures the ownership and control
of the material resources to the community to subserve the
common good to see that the operation of the economic system
does not result in injustice. [1003F-H; 1004A]
970
The shares vested in the Central Government.
Accordingly, the shares in question were vested in the
N.T.C. and it had right over the said 34 per cent of the
share-holdings. [1004B]
The 10,00,000 shares in the Swadeshi Polytex Ltd. and
17,18,344 in the Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company
Ltd. held by the Swadeshi Cotton Mills vested in the Central
Government under sections 3 and 4 of the Act. [1004B-C]
In view of the amplitude of the language used, the
immovable properties, namely, the Bungalow No. 1 and the
Administrative Block, Civil Lines, Kanpur, also vested in
the NTC. [1004C-D]
In that view of the matter, in Transferred Case No. 13
of 1987, the Writ Petition No. 2214 of 1987 was dismissed.
All interim orders were vacated. This would dispose of the
various other SLPs and CMPs connected with the Lucknow writ
petition, being SLP (Civil) No. 4826 of 1987 filed by
Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd., SLP (Civil) No. 5240 of 1987
filed by NTC. CMPs 16918 and 16919 of 1987 in SLP No. 4826
of 1987 would stand disposed of in the above light. [1004D-
F]
In the Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987 (in Suit No. 506
of 1987), the Court held that 10 lakhs and 17 lakhs equity
shares and the Swadeshi House at Kanpur and all the rights,
title and interest attached therewith, related to the
textile undertaking of defendant No. 3 and they vested in
NTC with effect from 1st April, 1985, and defendants Nos. 3
and 4 were restrained by a decree of permanent injunction
from dealing with them in any manner whatsoever. Defendant
No. 2 was restrained by permanent injunction from
recognising defendants Nos. 3 and 4 as owners of the
aforesaid shares and the Swadeshi House. [1004F-G]
Defendant No. 2 was directed to enter the name of
defendant No. 1, namely, NTC in its register of members and
to treat the said defendant No. 1 as its share-holder
instead of defendants Nos. 3 and 4 in respect of the shares
of defendant No. 2 held by them. In view of the provisions
of law under section 108 of the Companies Act, as there was
transmission of shares by operation of law, rectification
was not necessary.[1004H; 1005A-B]
Civil Appeals Nos. 577 to 579 of 1987 were disposed of
in the above terms and it was directed that the 17th annual
general meeting be held in accordance with law after giving
proper notice under the
971
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Chairmanship of Shri Jaswant Singh. [1005C]
CMPs Nos. 12760 of 1987 in Civil Appeal No. 577 of 1987
would stand disposed of in terms of the orders in the
Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987 and it was directed that the
Chairman should act in accordance with the aforesaid
decision and NTC should be considered to be entitled to
vote. CMP 16887 of 1987 was rejected. [1005D]
CMP 16888 of 1987 was an application by Doypack Systems
Ltd. to be impleaded as a party-respondent in the
Transferred Case No. 13 of 1987. Doypack Systems was
permitted to argue and was heard as a party. No further
order was necessary. [1005E]
CMPs Nos. 16889 and 17018 of 1987 were allowed. CMP No.
18268 of 1987 was disposed of with the direction that no
further documents needed to be inspected. In view of the
orders, the other CMPs were no longer necessary to be
disposed of. [1005F]
Irrespective of any order passed by any court, the 17th
annual general meeting should be held in accordance with
law, to be presided over by Shri Jaswant Singh, recognising
NTC as the rightful owner of the disputed shares. [1005G]
Balkrishan Gupta & Ors. v. Swadeshi Polytex Ltd. and
Ors., [1985] 2 SCR 854; Swadeshi Cotton Mills v. Union of
India, [1981] 2 SCR 533; National Textile Corporation v.
Sita Ram Mills, [1986] Suppl. SCC 117; Minerva Mills. v.
Union of India, [1986] 4 SCC 222; Goverdhan Das Narasingh
Das Daga v. Union of India, [1986] 2 SCC 249; Vidharba Mills
Berar Ltd. v. Union of India, [1986] 4 SCC 248; Kumari
Sunita Ramachandra v. State of Maharashtra and another,
[1986] 1 SCR 697 at 704, c to e; Doctor (Mrs.) Sushma Sharma
v. State of Rajasthan, [1985] 3 SCR 243 at 263; Fine
Knitting Co. Ltd. v. Union of India, [1986] 4 SCC 276; State
of West Bengal v. Union of India, [1964] 1 SCR 371 at 379,
380, 381 and 382; The Central Bank of India v. Their
Workmen, [1960] 1 SCR 200 at 217; Babaji Kondaji Garad v.
Nasik Merchants Co_operative Bank Ltd., Nasik and Others,
[1984] 2 SCC 50, Paragraphs 14 and 15; Sanjeev Coke
Manufacturing Company v. Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. & another,
[1983] 1 SCR 1000 at 1029; K.P. Verghese v. The Income-tax
Officer, Ernakulam and another, [1982] 1 SCR 629; Chern
Taong Shang & Another, etc. etc. v. Commander S.D. Baijal &
Ors., J.T. 1988 1 S.C. 202; Auckland Jute Co. Ltd. v. Tulsi
Chandra Goswami, [1949] F.C.R. 201 at 244; RM AR.AR.R.M.AR.
Umayhal Achi v. Lakshmi Achi and Others, [1945]
972
F.C.R. 1; Black_Clawson International Ltd. v. Papierwerke
Waldhof Achaffenburg A.G.,[1975] A.C. 591 at 613; S.P. Gupta
v. Union of India and others, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 365 at 594;
State of U.P. v. Raj Narain, [1975] 3 SCR 333; The
Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving Mills Company Ltd. v. Union
of India and others, writ petition No. 2401 of 1983; State
of Bihar v. Kripalu Shankar, A.I.R. 1987 SC 1554 at 1559;
Bachittar Singh v. State of Punjab, [1962] Suppl. 3 SCR 713;
Air Canada and others v. Secretary of State and another,
[1983] 1 All E.R. 161 at 180; State Wakf Board v. Abdul
Aziz, A.I.R. 1968 Madras 79, 81; Nitai Charan Bagchi v.
Suresh Chandra Paul, 66 C.W.N. 767; Shyam Lal v. M. Shyamlal
A.I.R. 1933 All. 649, 76 Corpus Juris Secundum 621; R.C.
Cooper v. Union of India, [1970] 3 SCR 530 at 567, 568, 635;
Khajamian Wakf Estates, etc. v. State of Madras & another,
[1971] 2 SCR 790, at 796 B-E; Harakchand Ratanchand Banthia
and others, etc. v. Union of India and others, [1970] 1 SCR
479 at 496 P & G; Chandavarkar S.R. Rao v. Asha Lata, [1986]
4 SCC 447, 476; 44 Halsbury’s Laws of England 4th Ed.
paragraph 856 at page 552; Nokes v. Doncaster Amalgamated
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Colliery Limited, [1940] Appeal Cases 1014, 1022; Campbell
College Belfast v. Commissioner of Valuation for Northern
Ireland, [1964] 1 W.L.R. 912; Clyde Navigation Trustees v.
Laird, [1933] 8 A.C. 658; The Corporation of the City of
Nagpur v. Its Employees, [1960] 2 SCR 942; Vasudev
Ramchandra Shelat v. Pranlal Javanand Thakar and others,
[1975] 1 SCR 534, Palmer’s Company Law 24th Ed. (1987) Page
608; Mahadeo Lal Agarwala and another v. The New Darjeeling
Union Tea Co. Ltd. and others, A.I.R. 1952 Cal. 58 and Unity
Company Pvt. Ltd. v. Diamond Sugar Mills and others A.I.R.
1971 Cal. 18.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 4826 of 1987 etc.
From the Judgment and order dated 6.4.1987 of the
Allahabad High Court in C.M.A. No. 4555 (W) of 1987 in W.P.
No. 2214 of 1987.
K. Parasaran, Attorney General, Milon K. Banerjee,
Solicitor General, F.S. Nariman, Dr. Y.S. Chitale, H.L.
Anand, K.K. Venugopal, A.K. Ganguli, S.N. Kacker, Anil B.
Diwan, A.K. Sharma, Harish N. Salve, K.J. John, S. Swarup,
T.V.S.N. Chari, Vrinda Grover, Miss A. Subhashini, A. Subba
Rao, R.B. Mehrotra, B.B. Sawhney, N.K. Sharma, P.V. Kapur,
P.P. Malhotra, Miss Annoradha Dutt, P. Parmeshwaran, Navin
Prakash and Naresh K. Sharma for the appearing parties.
973
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. What falls for consideration in
all these matters is a common question of law, namely,
whether equity shares in the two companies i.e. 10,00,000
shares in Swadeshi Polytex Limited and 17,18,344 shares in
Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company Limited, held by
the Swadeshi Cotton Mills, vest in the Central Government
under Section 3 of the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Limited
(Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1986
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). The other subsidiary
question is whether the immovable properties, namely, the
bungalow No. 1 and the Administrative Block, Civil Lines,
Kanpur have also vested in the Government. The question as
to one more property known as Shrubbery property whether it
has been taken over or not is still to be argued and is not
covered by this judgment.
In order to appreciate the question in these matters it
has to be borne in mind that there were six original
proceedings initiated by various parties which gave rise to
these civil appeals, special leave petitions and the
transferred cases to this Court. These six original
proceedings are as follows:
(1) On 18th of February, 1987 Suit No. 418 of 1987 was
filed before the Delhi High Court by one Naresh Kumar Parti
against Dr. Raja Ram Jaipuria, Swadeshi Polytex and others,
praying for an order of injunction restraining the company
from holding the 17th annual general meeting on the ground
that 34% shares in Swadeshi Polytex have vested in National
Textile Corporation (briefly referred to as NTC) in view of
sections 3 and 4 of the said Act. In this suit an
application for grant of interim injunction was also filed
praying that in the event the annual general meeting of the
company is allowed to be held, an independent Chairman
should be appointed to conduct the meeting. Notice in
respect of the said application was served upon the
respondents on 20th of February, 1987. On 4th March, 1987
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the Delhi High Court refused to pass any order in view of
the order already passed by the Allahabad High Court
mentioned hereinafter. Against this order of the Delhi High
Court, two special leave petitions were filed in this Court
one by Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd., which was defendant No. 10
in the Delhi suit. (Consequent upon grant of leave, the
special leave petition came to be registered as Civil Appeal
No. 577 of 1987). The other special leave petition was filed
by the plaintiff in the Delhi suit, Naresh Kumar Parti.
(Consequent upon grant of leave, the special leave petition
came to be registered as Civil Appeal
974
No. 578 of 1987). On 24th of February, 1987 one Hari Prasad
Aggarwal, filed a suit being Case No. 183 of 1987 in the
Court of Third Additional Civil Judge, Kanpur praying, inter
alia, that Shri Raja Ram Jaipuria should not preside over
the 17th annual general meeting of the Company. On 27th of
February, 1987, the application for interim injunction filed
in the said suit was dismissed by the learned trial Judge.
In appeal which is not yet numbered preferred by the
plaintiff before the Allahabad High Court an order was
passed by the Court on 2nd March, 1987 appointing Shri M.P.
Wadhawan as the Chairman of the said annual general meeting.
The consenting parties to the said proceedings before the
Allahabad High Court were Shri Raja Ram Jaipuria and
Swadeshi Polytex Limited. Against this order of 2nd March,
1987 passed by the Allahabad High Court M/s. Doypack Systems
Private Limited preferred a special leave petition in this
Court. Leave was granted and as mentioned hereinbefore it
was registered as Civil Appeal No. 577 of 1987. The three
special leave petitions were heard together as Civil Appeals
Nos. 577, 578 and 579 of 1987 and were disposed of by a
common order on 6th March, 1987 by this Court appointing
Shri Jaswant Singh as the Chairman of the said annual
general meeting.
On 26th of February, 1987 another suit being Suit No.
506 of 1987, was filed in the Delhi High Court by one Mukesh
Bhasin praying, inter alia, for a declaration that Swadeshi
Cotton and Swadeshi Mining had no right in respect of 34% of
the shareholdings in Swadeshi Polytex and that the said
shares were vested in NTC by virtue of the said Act. By an
order dated 9th March, 1987 the Delhi High Court disposed of
that application. The learned Judge in that case was prima
facie satisfied that the plaintiff in that case was entitled
to an injunction claimed by him in the meeting to be
presided over by Shri Jaswant Singh. He granted injunction
restraining the defendants Nos.3 and 4 in that suit from
exercising any right whatsoever attached to 34% shares of
defendant No.2 held by them and particularly any voting
rights in the annual general meeting which was scheduled to
be held on 9th of March, 1987 till decision of that suit.
This order was brought to the notice of this Court by CMP
forming part of Civil Appeal Nos. 577-79 of 1987. On 9th of
March, 1987 on that CMP this Court passed an order directing
that NTC, Swadeshi Cotton and Swadeshi Mining, all shall be
entitled to vote at the annual general meeting and the
question as to who were the rightful voters would be decided
by the Chairman of the meeting. It was further directed that
the Chairman would keep these votes separately. This is the
Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987 herein. On 7th of March,
1987 one Mukesh Jasnani a shareholder in Swadeshi
975
Polytex filed a writ petition in the Allahabad High Court
(Lucknow Bench). The High Court by its order dated 7th of
March, 1987 dismissed that writ petition. The High Court in
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the said order observed that Swadeshi Cotton and Swadeshi
Mining would be entitled to vote at the 17th annual general
meeting in respect of their shares which, according to NTC
had vested in them. Against this order dated 7th March,
1987, Doypack Systems preferred a special leave petition
being SLP (Civil) No. 3112 of 1987. On 9th March, 1987 this
Court passed orders in this special leave petition directing
that the meeting would be held under the Chairmanship of
Shri Jaswant Singh notwithstanding any order made by any
court, including the order dated 3rd March, 1987 passed by
the Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court. This Court
also vacated the operative portion of the directions
contained in the order dated 7th March, 1987 passed by the
Allahabad High Court.
On 6th of April, 1987 M/s. Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing Company filed a civil writ petition No. 2214
of 1987 in the Allahabad High Court (Lucknow Bench) praying,
inter alia, for stay of the operation of the letters dated
24/30th March, 1987 addressed by NTC to Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing and Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Limited,
calling for an Extraordinary General Meeting of the
shareholders for removal of the Directors of Swadeshi Mining
and Manufacturing Company Limited. The Division Bench of the
High Court (Lucknow Bench) passed an order on 6th of April,
1987, staying the operation of the said letters addressed by
NTC to the companies. Against that order, M/s. Doypack
Systems Pvt. Ltd. filed a Special Leave Petition No. 4826 of
1987. NTC also filed a special leave petition against the
said order, being SLP No. 5240 of 1987 in this Court. Both
these petitions were heard by this Court on 5th May, 1987.
By an order passed on 5th May, 1987 this Court directed that
Suit No. 506 of 1987 filed in the Delhi High Court and Writ
Petition No. 2214 of 1987 pending in the Allahabad High
Court (Lucknow Bench) be transferred to this Court,
(subsequently, registered as Transferred Cases Nos. 14 and
13 of 1987 respectively). Consequent upon leave granted by
this Court by the order dated 21st of January, 1987 NTC
filed a civil suit in the District Court at Kanpur.seeking a
declaration of its title in respect of Shrubbery property in
Kanpur. The learned Trial Judge refused any interlocutory
injunction in the said suit against which an appeal was
preferred before the High Court of Allahabad which was also
declined and, consequently, NTC filed Special Leave Petition
No. 7045 of 1987 in this Court. This application is still
pending and is awaiting disposal. In this background these
matters will have to be disposed of.
976
Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. and others
submitted that these shares did not vest in the Central
Government. The main thrust of Shri Nariman’s contention,
who appeared on their behalf, was that section 3 of the Act
provided that every textile undertaking and right, title and
interest of the company, i.e. Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company
Limited vested in the Central Government. The "textile
undertakings" mentioned in section 3 included all assets
’pertaining’ to the textile undertaking as per section 4 of
the Act. It is common ground that whether a particular asset
is part of the textile undertaking and vests under section 3
or not, has to be considered in the context of the Act with
reference to the language used in section 4 of the Act. Shri
Nariman submitted that there are different modes by which
Parliament can resort to nationalisation. These modes,
according to him, are:
(a) acquisition of 100% shares of the Company;
(b) all assets under the ownership, possession or
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control of the company being vested in the Government;
(c) only those assets in the ownership, possession or
control of the company in relation to the undertakings
which are taken over or "all properties pertaining to
the undertaking" vest in the Government. According to
him, the expressions "pertaining to" or "in relation
to" are expressions of limitation and restriction, in
the absence of which each and every asset of the
company would have vested in the Government. The
background and sequence of events leading to the
enactment of this Act through which Shri Nariman took
us in detail and it is useless to set them up in
extenso, he submitted that the shares in question were
all along being considered and treated as not
comprising part of the textile undertaking.
He referred to the order dated 13th of April, 1978
issued by the Central Government under section 18AA of the
Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951
(hereinafter referred to as ’the IDR Act’). This order did
not purport to take over those shares held in the two
companies by the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Limited. He
also drew our attention to Volume III pages 53 and 54 of the
present volumes before us, which is the reply of the
Minister of Law, Justice and Company Affairs. It was
clarified to the Parliament that the shares were distinct
from the undertakings of the company whose management was
taken over. On 27th of March, 1979 in answer to a question
977
the Minister stated that apart from the six undertakings
taken over and presently run by the National Textile
Corporation Limited, the business of the company comprised
of:
(i) Investments in Swadeshi Polytex Limited, Ghaziabad.
(ii) Investments in Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Company Limited, a subsidiary company.
(iii) Land development business.
He drew our attention to the letter dated 9th of April,
1979 from the Chairman, Cotton Mills Ltd. in answer to a
letter by the Director, Department of Company Affairs,
stating that the shares in question and the voting rights in
respect thereof continued to vest in the company, i.e.
Swadeshi Cotton Mills Limited in spite of the taken over of
the management.
Before we proceed further we must deal with the
decision of this Court in Balkrishan Gupta and others v.
Swadeshi Polytex Ltd. and others, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 854. There
it was observed that the fact that 3,50,000 shares had been
pledged in favour of the Government of Uttar Pradesh would
not make any difference. The contention that was urged on
behalf of the appellant therein, namely Balkrishan Gupta
related to the effect of an order made by the Central
Government on 13th of April, 1978 under section 18AA(1)(a)
of the IDR Act taking over the management of Swadeshi Cotton
Mills along with five other industrial units belonging to
the Company which was the subject matter of dispute in
Swadeshi Cotton Mills v. Union of India, [1981] 2 S.C.R. 533
and the order of extension passed by the Central Government
on 26th November, 1983 which was the subject matter of
dispute in that case before this Court It was urged in
Balkrishan v. Swadeshi Polytex (supra) on behalf of the
appellants therein that on the passing of the above orders
under Section 18AA(1)(a), the Cotton Mills Company lost its
voting rights in respect of the shares in question. This
Court held that was not so. This Court emphasised that what
was taken over was the management of the six industrial
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units referred to therein and not all the rights of the
Cotton Mills Company. The shares belonged, it was observed,
to the company and the orders referred to above could not
have any effect on these. In that context, it was observed
that the Department of Company Affairs, Government of India
rightly expressed its view in the letter written by the
Director in the Department of Company Affairs on 9th of
April, 1979 to the
978
Chairman of the Cotton Mills Company that the voting rights
in respect of these shares continued to vest with the Cotton
Mills Company and the manner in which those voting rights
were to be exercised was to be determined by the Board of
Directors of the Cotton Mills Company. Hence the passing of
the orders under section 18AA(1)(a) of the IDR Act had no
effect on the voting rights of the Cotton Mills Company. It
was further observed that the Polytex Company had in that
case rightly treated the registered holder i.e. the Cotton
Mills Company as the owner of the shares in question and to
call the meeting in accordance with the notice issued under
section 169 of the Companies Act, 1956. Therefore, a
challenge to the validity of the meeting was negatived. As
good deal of reliance was placed on behalf of the
petitioners on this decision, it must be emphasised that the
decision must, however, be understood in the context of the
facts and the language used in the order passed under
section 18AA of the IDR Act whereby only the management had
been taken over and not the rights of the company therein.
But by the present Act in question on the appointed day
"every textile undertaking" and "the right, title and
interest of the company in relation to every textile mill of
such textile undertakings" were transferred to and vested in
the Central Government and such textile undertakings would
be deemed to include "all assets" and so in the context of
this provision the reference and the reliance on the
decision of the Balkrishan Gupta & others v. Swadeshi
Polytex Ltd. and others (supra) is not, in our opinion,
appropriate. It is true by the IDR Act only management was
taken over, but a further point was sought to be built up on
behalf of the petitioners that the Act in question was
passed to regularise what was taken over. So because of this
decision shares were not taken over by the Act. In view of
the significant difference between the objects of taking
over of the assets and the taking over of the management
this submission has to be stated to be rejected.
Reliance was also placed before us on the decision of
the Delhi High Court in Writ Petition No. 408 of 1978. The
Delhi High Court held that the shares did not vest in the
Government under the order dated 13th of April, 1978 issued
under section 18AA of the IDR Act. This judgment of the
Delhi High Court was challenged in appeal before this Court.
This Court in its judgment in Swadeshi Cotton Mills v. Union
of India (supra) set aside the order of take-over dated 13th
April, 1978 for violation of the principles of natural
justice. But this Court did not give any finding or order
with regard to the finding of the High Court that the shares
were not included in the take-over order.
979
It was further urged before us that this Act was
preceded by an ordinance namely, Swadeshi Cotton Mills
Company Limited (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings)
Ordinance, 1986 which was promulgated on 19th of April,
1986. Section 10 of the ordinance entitled, it was
submitted, NTC to exercise control over the business of the
undertakings taken over. the NTC passed an order to this
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effect on 25th April, 1986, but did not purport to take over
the shares, according to Shri Nariman. We cannot attach much
significance to that fact as Shri Nariman sought us to do.
Shri Nariman referred us to the Statement of Objects
and Reasons appended to the Bill and urged that it was not
intended that the shares were included in the undertaking.
He submitted that the Statement of Objects and Reasons
showed that the acquisition of the undertaking had to be
resorted to since the order of taking over the management of
the company issued under section 18AA of the IDR Act could
not be continued any further.
The preamble to the Act, however, reiterated that the
Act provided for the acquisition and transfer of textile
undertakings and reiterated only the historical facts that
the management of the textile undertakings had been taken
over by the Central Government under section 18AA of the IDR
Act and further that large sums of money had been invested
with a view to making the textile undertakings viable and it
was necessary to make further investments and also to
acquire the said undertakings in order to ensure that
interests of general public are served by the continuance of
the undertakings. The Act was passed to give effect to the
principles specified in clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of
the Constitution. In our opinion, this was indicative of the
fact that shares were intended to be taken over.
Shri Nariman, however, contended that NTC on 17th June,
1986 had issued an order under section 6 of the Ordinance
transferring four of the textile undertakings to its
subsidiary, the NTC, U.P. Limited. According to him, the
shares were not purported to be transferred under this
Order. This, however, in our opinion, is non sequitur.
It appears from the written statement filed by NTC on
8th of February, 1987 in the suit filed by one G.G. Bakshi
in Ghaziabad Court, it was claimed that NTC was entitled to
take over company’s shares and investments. On 24/30th
March, 1987 NTC issued notice to the petitioners 1 and 2
stating that they were entitled to shares. It was urged by
Shri Nariman that this belated assertion indicated that the
980
shares were not intended to be taken over. We are unable to
accept this suggestion or to draw that inference. It does
not logically follow.
On the date of the take-over of the undertakings,
according to Shri Nariman, 10,00,000 shares in Swadeshi
Polytex Limited were attached for recovery of electricity
dues of Swadeshi Cotton Mills and 3,50,000 shares were
already pledged with the State Government of U.P. for
securing the loans and advances made by the State Government
for payment of wages. These dues fall in Part II of the
Schedule to the Act and are not payable under section 25 of
the Act by the Government. Shri Nariman submitted that
compensation payable under the Act was not enough to pay all
the dues falling in Part I. He drew our attention to the
Financial Memorandum of the Bill which showed that the
Government would have to pay a further sum of Rs. 15 crores
over and above the compensation amount. It could not have
been the intention of the Act to discharge these
encumbrances, according to him, if they were to vest in the
Central Government under section 3 of the Act and the result
of which would be that the State of U.P. and the Electricity
Board would not get anything towards their large dues. We
are unable to accept this submission. This, in our opinion,
is not the proper approach to the construction of the Act on
the question whether the shares were taken over or not.
Shri Nariman submitted that while applying the rules of
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construction of contemporanea expositio, it must be held
that the shares in question did not vest in the Central
Government under section 3 of the Act. This contention was
to be supported from the external aids, namely, the
background and history of the legislation. There were
internal aids in the Act itself to support this contention.
The internal aids, according to Shri Nariman, were-(a) long
title of the Act which used the expression "certain textile
undertakings" and "ensuring contiuned manufacture,
production and distribution of different varieties of cloth
and yarn"; (b) the Preamble to the Act also emphasises,
according to Shri Nariman, that the textile undertakings
which were taken over under section 18AA should be continued
for purposes of manufacture, production and distribution of
cloth and yarn; (c) He further submitted that the Objects
and Reasons appended to the Bill also supported that view;
(d) section 2(k) of the Act enumerated only six textile
undertakings which alone were taken over by the order issued
under section 18AA; (e) sections 7 and 8 also provided an
intrinsic aid to the construction of section 4, according to
him. Section 7 provided that an amount equal to the value of
the assets which will vest in the NTC, would be deemed to be
the Central Government’s
981
contribution to the equity capital of NTC and NTC shall
issue shares to the Government having a face value equal to
the amount specified in section 8. The amount equal to the
value of the assets was Rs.24.32 crores, which was the share
capital of the Government in NTC. This figure of Rs.24.32
crores does not take into account the value of the shares
and hence the shares did not vest under sections 3 and 4 of
the Act, according to him. (f) the expression "pertaining
to" appearing in section 4(1) means "forming part of".
Therefore, only those assets which formed part of the
textile undertakings could vest in the Central Government,
it was submitted by Shri Nariman. It was for this reason
that section 25 of the Act, while dealing with penalties,
used the expression "assets forming part of" the textile
undertakings.
Shri Nariman further submitted that Swadeshi Polytex
Limited and Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company
Limited were two separate undertakings distinct from the six
textile undertakings belonging to Swadeshi Cotton Mills
Company Limited. Acquisition of these shares having
controlling interests in the said two companies was never
intended and could never be said to be within the scope of
the Act. The expression "in relation to the six textile
undertakings" appearing in sections 3 and 4 of the Act, was
an expression of limitation, according to him, indicative of
the intention of acquiring of only the textile undertakings
and no other. There existed no public purpose, according to
Shri Nariman, for acquiring these shares. The public
purposes mentioned in the Act with reference to Article
39(b) and (c) related to the acquisition of only the textile
undertakings of Swadeshi Cotton Mills and not acquisition of
the synthetic fibre undertakings of Swadeshi Polytex or
sugar undertakings of Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Company Limited.
Dr. Chitale appearing on behalf of Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing Company Limited (as respondent in SLP (Civil)
No. 5240 of 1987 in which NTC is the petitioner) supported
Shri Nariman and advanced certain arguments. His main
arguments were:
(1) Swadeshi Polytex Limited and Swadeshi Mining and
Manufacturing Company Limited were two distinct
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undertakings different from the six textile
undertakings belonging to Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company
Limited. Section 3 of the Act, therefore, according to
him, could not be so construed as to enable the
Government to indirectly acquire altogether different
undertakings belonging to a different company.
982
(2) Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company Limited
had also coal-mines. When Coal-mines (Nationalisation)
Act, 1973 was passed with reference to sections 3 and 6
thereof, it were the coal-mines belonging to the said
company along with the right, title and interest of the
owners in relation to the coal-mines which vested in
the Central Government by operation of the Act, we were
reminded.
(3) Dr. Chitale submitted that the Act with which we
are concerned uses the expression "pertaining to" in
section 4, which according to him is narrower than the
expression "in relation to" used in section 3 of the
Coal-mines (Nationalisation) Act, 1973. When the coal-
mines were nationalised, the sugar undertakings of
Swadeshi Mining were not taken over since these
constituted separate undertakings distinct from the
coal-mines. He referred to Entries 655, 656 and 657 of
the Schedule to the Coal-mines (Nationalisation) Act,
1973.
(4) Dr. Chitale submitted that the expression
"investment" may belong to a fund which may be created,
the interests of which may be used for payment of
gratuity or provident fund to the employees. The
expression "investment" cannot be applied in the
context of the shareholdings of a separate undertaking,
according to him.
Shri S.B. Mukerjee, appearing on behalf of Swadeshi
Cotton Mills had relied on the decision of the Delhi High
Court, See Volume III pages 64 to 169, which according to
him, clearly held that the shares in question were not part
of the textile undertakings and, in fact, the said shares
were not taken over along with the six textile undertakings
belonging to Swadeshi Cotton Mills Limited, which we have
discussed. Shri Mukerjee further relied on the clarification
given by the Company Law Board which showed that the voting
rights in respect of the shares continued to vest in
Swadeshi Cotton Mills and not in NTC. He referred to the
decision in Balkrishan Gupta and others v. Swadeshi Polytex
Ltd. and another (supra), which has also been discussed. The
expression "relating to" and "pertaining to" are words of
limitation and they cannot be so construed as to take within
their fold shares held by Swadeshi Cotton Mills, an
independent company doing its business, according to him.
Learned Solicitor General of India appearing on behalf
of the National Textile Corporation in all these cases
submitted that the facts
983
stated by way of background and the sequence of events up to
the date of enactment of the Act were not relevant to the
decision as to the scope, ambit and effect of the vesting
provisions contained in sections 3 and 4 of the Act. The
sequence of events narrated by the petitioners prior to the
enactment of the Act all related to the order of take-over
of the undertakings of Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company issued
on 13th April, 1978 by the Central Government in exercise of
its powers under section 18AA of the IDR Act. The object and
purpose of the said order of take-over of management of the
textile undertakings was completely different from the
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object and purpose of the Act which related to acquisition
and transfer of the undertakings. We agree. The scope of the
vesting provisions contained in section 3 of the Act would
have to be determined per force of its own language employed
by Parliament and not with reference to what transpired
either before or after the order of take-over of the
management dated 13th April, 1978 passed under section 18AA
of the IDR Act. Section 3 of the Act, according to Solicitor
General, contained the vesting provisions as was evident
from its own language and also from the marginal note
appended thereto.
For determining the question involved in these matters,
it is necessary to bear in mind the relevant provisions of
law. The preamble to the Act in question provided as
indicated before that this was an Act for the acquisition
and transfer of certain textile undertakings of the Swadeshi
Cotton Mills Company Limited with a view to securing the
proper management of such undertakings so as to subserve the
interests of the general public by ensuring the continued
manufacture, production and distribution of different
varieties of cloth and yarn. The preamble further reiterated
that it was to give effect to the policy of the State
towards securing the principles specified in clauses (b) and
(c) of Article 39 of the Constitution. It reiterated that
large sums of money had been invested with a view to making
the said textile undertakings viable. It further reiterated
that large sums of money were necessary for the purpose of
securing the optimum utilisation of the available
facilities.
Section 3 of the said Act provides for transfer and
vesting of the textile undertakings. The material portions
of sections 3 and 4 are as follows:
"3(1) On the appointed day, every textile
undertaking and the right, tilte and interest of
the Company in relation to every such textile
undertaking shall, by virtue of this Act,
984
stand transferred to, and shall vest in the
Central Government.
(2) Every such textile undertaking which stands
vested in the Central Government by virtue of sub-
section (1) shall, immediately after it has so
vested, stand transferred to, and vested in the
National Textile Corporation.
4.(1) The textile undertakings referred to in
section 3 shall be deemed to include all assets,
rights, lease-holds, powers, authorities and
privileges and all property, movable and
immovable, including lands, buildings, workshops,
stores, instruments, machinery and equipment, cash
balances, cash on hand, reserve funds, investments
and book debts pertaining to the textile
undertakings and all other rights and interests
in, or arising out of such property as were
immediately before the appointed day in the
ownership, possession, power or control of the
Company in relation to the said undertakings,
whether within or outside India, and all books of
account, registers and all other documents of
whatever nature relating thereto.
(2)All property as aforesaid which have vested in
the Central Government under sub-section (1) of
section 3 shall, by force of such vesting, be
freed and discharged from any trust, obligation
mortgage, charge, lien and all other encumbrances
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affecting it, and any attachment, injunction or
decree or order of any court or other authority
restricting the use of such property in any manner
shall be deemed to have been withdrawn.
(3)...............
(4)...............
(5)...............
(6)...............
Section 7 deals with the shares to be issued by the
National Textile Corporation for the value of the assets
transferred to it by the Central Government. It reads as
follows:
985
"7. An amount equal to the value of the assets of
the textile undertakings transferred to and vested
in the National Textile Corporation under sub-
section (2) of section 3 shall be deemed to be the
contribution made by the Central Government to the
equity capital of the National Textile
Corporation; and for the contribution so made, the
National Textile Corporation shall issue (if
necessary after amending its memorandum and
articles of association) to the Central Government
paid up shares, in its equity capital having a
face value equal to the amount specified in
section 8."
Section 8 which is material provides as follows:
"8. For the transfer to, and vesting in, the
Central Government, under section 3, of the
textile undertakings of the Company, and the
right, title and interest of the Company in
relation to such undertakings, there shall be
given by the Central Government to the Company in
cash and in the manner specified in Chapter VI, an
amount of rupees twenty-four crores and thirty-two
lakhs."
Section 10 of the Act deals with the management etc. of
the textile undertakings. Section 12 of the Act deals with
the provisions relating to the employees of the textile
undertakings. Section 24 of the Act provides that the
provisions of this Act shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law
for the time being in force or in any instrument having
effect by virtue of any law, other than this Act, or in any
decree or order of any court, tribunal or other authority.
Section 25 provides for the assumption of liability. It is
the true effect and purport of these sections that requires
consideration and adjudication.
It appears to us that section 27 of the Act where the
expression "forming part of" is used, would have no bearing
on the vesting provisions and its wide language. The
expression "forming part of" according to the learned
Solicitor General is merely descriptive of what is actually
vested under the vesting provision. The properties which, on
the appointed day, i.e. with effect from 1.4.1985, became
part of the taken over properties which might not be dealt
with in any manner contrary to the provisions of the Act.
Shri K.K. Venugopal, appearing on behalf of Doypack
Systems
986
Private Limited in Transferred Case No. 13 of 1987 submitted
that the present case is directly covered by several
decisions of this Court. He referred to the following
decisions National Textile Corporation v. Sita Ram Mills,
[1986] Suppl. S.C.C. 117; Minerva Mills v. Union of India,
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[1986] 4 S.C.C. 222; Goverdhan Das Narasingh Das Daga v.
Union of India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 249; Vidharba Mills Berar
Ltd. v. Union of India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 248 and Fine
Knitting Co. Ltd. v. Union of India, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 276.
It was emphasised that section 3 of the Act provided
that in addition to the textile undertaking "the right,
title and interest of the company in relation to every such
textile undertaking is to vest". Therefore, it was urged by
Shri Venugopal that so applying the five decisions cited
earlier, if the shares were held for the benefit of and/or
utilised for the textile undertakings they would vest in the
Government under the provisions of section 3 of the Act
itself. He emphasised like others that "pertaining to" would
mean "in relation to" in the species of properties mentioned
in section 4(1) of the Act. He further submitted that if the
amount of compensation declared to be payable to the
erstwhile owners of the undertakings acquired, was a test
for deciding whether a particular piece of property also
stood acquired or not, then it was submitted that it may be
open to the erstwhile owners to contend that even what is
expressly stated to have been vested in the Government,
would not vest in the absence of compensation paid. That was
untenable.
In any event as against the clear words, according to
Shri Venugopal, of section 3 and section 4 read with section
2(k), the failure to provide for compensation for three out
of the six undertakings would not result in three out of six
undertakings being not vested in the Government. Shri
Venugopal submitted that the antecedent computation of value
by the executive is wholly irrelevant for determining the
intention of Parliament. Reference was made to Kumari Sunita
Ramachandra v. State of Maharashtra and another, [1986] 1
S.C.R. 697 at 704, c to e and Doctor (Mrs.) Sushma Sharma v.
State of Rajasthan, [1985] 3 S.C.R. 243 at 263.
Shri Anil B. Diwan on behalf of Mukesh Bhasin, in Suit
No. 506 of 1987 (Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987) submitted
that the Objects and Reasons of the mover of the Bill are
not admissible as aids to construction since it is
impossible to contend that the Objects and Reasons in the
minds of some officials of the Government before the matter
is discussed by the Cabinet, would at all be relevant.
Reference
987
may be made to State of West Bengal v. Union of India,
[1964] 1 S.C.R. 371 at 379, 380, 381, 382; The Central Bank
of India v. Their Workmen, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 200 at 217. It
was further submitted that subsequent documents and/or views
of the officers of the Government are not admissible as
legitimate aids to the construction of a statute. Reliance
placed by the petitioners on the documents at pages 452-456
of Volume II as an aid to the interpretation or construction
of sections 3 and 4 of the Act was totally misconceived. See
the observations in Babaji Kondaji Garad v. Nasik Merchants
Cooperative Bank Ltd., Nasik and others, [1984] 2 S.C.C. 50
paragraphs 14 and 15 and Dr.(Mrs.) Sushma Sharma and others
v. State of Rajasthan and others (supra). It was, therefore,
urged that the material not availed by the Parliament could
never affect or influence the collective intention of the
Parliament. The authentic voice is only that of the
Parliament. Reference may be made to the observations in
Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing Company v. Bharat Coking Coal
Ltd. and another, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 1000 at 1029. It was
submitted that the documents which were prepared for the
submission to the Cabinet and which related to the inner
working of the Government were not admissible and/or
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legitimate aids to the construction of statute and therefore
not relevant in deciding which assets of SCM vested in the
Central Government under sections 3 and 4 of the Act. It was
further submitted that etymological and plain meaning of the
word "relation" is relation by birth or relation by
sacrament like marriage or relation in the form of business
connection or dealings. It was further submitted that an
asset or investment which is created from the earnings of
the undertakings is clearly related to the undertakings by
its inception or birth. An asset or investment, according to
Shri Anil B. Diwan, which is utilised to preserve and/or
give vitality to an undertaking is equally related or
pertained to the same.
Shri A.K. Ganguli, counsel appearing on behalf of M/s.
Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd. in SLP (Civil) Nos. 4826 and 7045
of 1987 submitted that even assuming (though not admitting)
that the expressions "pertaining to" and "in relation to"
appearing in sub-section (1) of section 4 of the Act have
limited or restricted meaning, by the plain language of
section 3, which is the vesting provision read with sections
2(k) and 4(1), the shares in question would also vest in the
Central Government. Under section 3 of the Act what vests in
the Central Government on the appointed day are: (i) every
textile undertaking; and (ii) the right, title and interest
of the company in relation to every such textile
undertaking. The meaning, scope and effect of the expression
"textile undertaking" appearing in section 3(1) of the Act
would
988
have to be understood by a combined reading of sections 2(k)
and 4(1) of the Act. Section 2(k) while defining the
expression "textile undertaking", identifies the textile
mills concerned while section 4(1), by adoption of deeming
provisions, spells out the properties which vest along with
the concerned textile mills by reason of their direct nexus
with the mills.
The expression "forming part of" appearing in section
27, according to Shri Ganguly, is merely descriptive of the
properties already vested in the Central Government under
section 3. Section 1(2) of the Act provided that the
provisions of the Act including sections 3 and 4 shall be
deemed to have come into force retrospectively with effect
from 1.4.1985 and sections 27 and 28 shall come into force
at once. Thus the properties which stood vested in the
Central Government with effect from 1.4.1985 already "formed
part of" the textile undertakings on the date of the Act
when section 27 came into force (i.e. w.e.f. 30.5.1986). The
properties which already stood vested and formed part of the
textile undertakings could not be dealt with in any manner
other than those permissible under the Act. Section 27
containing the penalty provisions could, therefore, validly
and justifiably be given effect to after it came into force
on 30.5.1986 when the Act was enacted. The meaning of the
expression "pertaining to" appearing in the first limb of
section 4(1), therefore, cannot be gathered from the
language employed in section 27.
Shri Ganguli further submitted that the first part of
section 7 provided that the amount equal to the value of the
assets of the textile undertakings which is vested under
section 3 would be the contribution of Central Government
made to the equity capital of the National Textile
Corporation. The second part of section 7 provided that for
the contribution so made by the Central Government, National
Textile Corporation shall issue to the Government paid-up
shares in its equity capital having a face value equal to
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the amount specified in section 8.
If the legislative intention, it was urged by Shri
Ganguli, was that the National Textile Corporation shall
issue paid-up shares (in its equity capital) to the Central
Government of the value equal to the value of the assets,
which was deemed to be the contribution of the Central
Government, then the language of the second part of this
section would have been the same as used in the opening
words of section 7 itself.
Shri S.N. Kacker elaborated the submissions of the
petitioner
989
mentioned hereinbefore and submitted that the shares could
not have been intended in view of the facts and
circumstances of the case, the language used and the data
available to take over by sections 3 and 4 of the Act.
Before we deal with the main question we have to
consider the application made by Shri Nariman for production
of certain documents. The production of the documents has
been resisted by the learned Attorney General on the ground
that these are not relevant and in any event most of these
documents are privileged being part of the documents leading
to the tendering of the advice by the Cabinet to the
President as contemplated by Article 74(2) of the
Constitution. The petitioner in Transferred Case No. 13 of
1987, has sought production of certain documents enumerated
at page 82, para 85 of Vol. IV, which are as follows:
(1) Proposal of the Textile Ministry in respect of
Nationalisation of the six textile undertakings
including the notes and memorandum specially in respect
of calculation and determination of assets and
liabilities in respect of six textile undertakings of
Petitioner No. 2 in the year 1983-84 and the opinion of
the Law Department then obtained.
(2) Proposal of the Textile Ministry in respect of
nationalisation of the six textile undertakings in the
year 1985-86 including all notes and memorandum in
respect thereof.
(3) Opinion of Law Department as rendered to the
Textile Ministry.
(4) Proposal of the Textile Ministry in respect of the
drafting of the Ordinance and the Act by the
Legislative Ministry.
(5) Details of properties taken into consideration for
the determination of amount under section 8 of the
Ordinance/Act.
(6) Proposal of the Textile Ministry in the form of
Cabinet Notes for the approval of the Cabinet in the
matter of promulgation of Ordinance/framing of the Act,
and
(7) Notes and Memorandum prepared by the Ministry of
Textile/Ministry of law at or before framing of the
Ordinance/Act and subsequent thereto relating to the
acquisition of the textile undertakings.
990
It was contended that production of these was necessary
to establish that the shares were never intended to be taken
over and these were never considered as part of the textile
undertaking. It was urged that the shares were not taken
into account in computing the figure of compensation
amounting to Rs.24.32 crores referred to in section 8 of the
Act. It was submitted that these documents are definitely
relevant as they would throw light on the merits of the
case. They would advance the case of the petitioners and
destroy, according to the petitioners, the case of the
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respondent. It was submitted that sections 7 and 8 of the
said Act, were intrinsic aids to construe section 4. The
factual foundation necessary for the argument based on
sections 7 and 8 of the said Act, was that the shares etc.,
were excluded in computing the figures of 24.32 crores. It
was submitted that these documents were required to
establish this factual foundation. The petitioner alleged
that shares had been excluded in the computation of
compensation and the petitioner had been so informed by the
Hon’ble Minister. In reply the Central Government asserted
that compensation has been computed lumpsum and not
itemwise. According to the petitioner, the stand of the
Government that the compensation was computed lumpsum, was
not borne out by the documents. It was, therefore, necessary
to seek production of those documents. It was submitted by
Shri Nariman that the submissions of the Solicitor General
in so far as these dealt with the balance-sheet made it even
more important that the Government should be directed to
produce these documents. The calculations made by the
petitioner had merely been denied by NTC which had in its
possession the books of account as also all balance-sheets
prior to the balance-sheet as on April 1, 1985. It is
wrongly suggested that the calculations are hypothetical. It
was urged by the petitioner that the calculations made by
the petitioners were not hypothetical. The correctness or
otherwise of the said figure, according to the petitioners,
would be demonstrated from the said documents.
On behalf of the Union of India, the learned Attorney
General submitted that records and documents whose
production was sought for, were not relevant for deciding
the matters of controversy in the instant case.
In our opinion Sections 3 and 4 of the Act interpreted
either on their own language or along with sections 7 and 8,
are not ambiguous; so documents are not relevant. It was
further urged, that even if to consture the language is not
clear and there is need to resort to aids of construction,
it is clear that such aids can be either internal or
external.
991
Internal aids of construction are definitions, exceptions,
explanations, fictions, deeming provisions, headings,
marginal notes, preamble, provisos, punctuations, saving
clauses, non-obstante clauses etc. The notings in the files
of various officials do not fall in the category of internal
aids for consideration. Dictionaries, earlier acts, history
of legislation, Parliamentary history, parliamentary
proceedings, state of law as it existed when the Act was
passed, the mischief sought to be suppressed and the remedy
sought to be advanced by the Act are external aids.
Documents which have been required to be produced do not, in
our view fall within the category of external aids as
indicated. Having considered the facts and circumstances of
the case, we are unable to accept the prayer of the
petitioner to direct disclosure and production of the
documents sought for. In our opinion, the language used in
section 4 of the Act, is clear enough read with section 3 of
the Act. We have set out the provisions of the said two
sections. Section 3 states that "on the appointed day every
textile undertaking and the right, title and interest of the
Company in relation to every textile undertaking shall stand
transferred to and shall vest in the Central Government".
Section 4 says that "section 3 shall be deemed to include
all assets, leaseholds, powers, authorities, privileges and
all properties, movable and immovable ... pertaining to the
textile undertakings and all other rights and interests in
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or arising out of such property".
Francis Bennion in "Statutory Interpretation 1984
Edition page 526 para 238 states that Hansard reports, and
other reports of parliamentary proceedings on the Bill which
became the Act in question, are of obvious relevance to its
meaning. They are often of doubtful reliability however.
(emphasis supplied) The documents in question which are
sought for do not relate to the enacting history or any past
enactment or the present enactment. The notings made in
various Departments at various levels by the officers
namely, the Under Secretary, Deputy Secretary, Joint
Secretary; Secretary etc., whatever their view might be, is
not the view of the Cabinet. The ultimate decision is taken
by the Cabinet. So the notings cannot and are not guides as
to what decision the Cabinet took. See for example the Task
Force report referred to in National Textile Corporation
Ltd. v. Sitaram Mills Ltd. & others (supra). This Task Force
Report demonstrated the irrelevancy of the documents
summoned to be produced. The Task Force Report manifested
that certain mills were viable. But from the circumstance
under which managements of these mills were taken over, it
was clear that the Cabinet had taken the decision contrary
to what was contained in the Task Force Report. But it
appears
992
that the decision of the Cabinet was different from the
views of the Officers at various levels. As Bennion has
stated at para 261 (page 560 of the same book) that in
interpreting an enactment a two stage approach is necessary.
Here there is no real doubt on an informed basis as we shall
indicate hereafter about the real meaning of the enactment.
There is therefore no question of resolving the doubt. The
second stage does not arise here.
This Court in Sanjeev Coke Manufacturing Company v.
Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. and another (supra) held that no one
may speak for the Parliament and Parliament is never before
the Court. After the Parliament has said what it intends to
say, only the Court may say what the Parliament meant to
say. None else. See also in this connection Dr. (Mrs.)
Sushma Sharma and others v. State of Rajasthan and others
(supra). The objects and purposes of the person who
initiated the Bill are not admissible as aids to
construction since it is impossible to contend that such
purposes in the minds of some officials of the Government
before the matter is discussed by the Cabinet, would at all
be relevant. See in this connection State of West Bengal v.
Union of India (supra) where this Court reiterated that the
Statement of Objects and Reasons, accompanying when
introduced in the Parliament cannot be used to determine the
true meaning and effect of the substantive provisions of the
statute. Such statement cannot be used to show that the
legislature did not intend to take over any particular
property. See also The Central Bank of India v. Their
Workmen (supra).
It has to be reiterated, however that the objects and
reasons of the Act should be taken into consideration in
interpreting the provisions of the statute in case of doubt.
This is the effect of the decision of this Court in K.P.
Verghese v. The Income tax Officer, Ernakulam and another,
[1982] 1 S.C.R. 629, where this Court reiterated that the
speech made by the Mover of the Bill explaining the reason
for the introduction of the Bill could certainly be referred
to for the purpose of ascertaining the mischief sought to be
remedied by the legislation and the object and purpose for
which the legislation was enacted. It has been reiterated
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that interpretation of a statute being an exercise in the
ascertainment of meaning, everything which is logically
relevant should be admissible. See in this connection the
observations of this Court in Chern Taong Shang & anr. etc.
etc. v. Commander S.D. Baijal & Ors., J.T. 1988 1 S.C. 202.
The documents now sought for by the petitioner do not fall
within this category. It is neither the object and scheme of
the enactment nor the language used therein, that is
993
sought for in the instant case. It is certainly relevant to
know the mischief that was intended to be remedied. But in
the documents in question which the petitioner is seeking no
such correlation has been established. These are, therefore,
not relevant. We reiterate that no officer of the Department
can speak for the Parliament even after the Act has been
passed. This Court has to interpret the Act on the basis of
informed basis by applying external and internal aids if the
language is ambiguous. In the words of Lord Scarman "We are
to be governed not by Parliament’s intentions but by
Parliament’s enactments". See Cross "Statutory
Interpretation" 2nd Edition page 22. Blackstone in his
"Commentaries on the Laws of England" (Facsimile of 1st edn.
1765, University of Chicago Press 1979) Vol. 1 at 59
suggests "The fairest and most rational method to interpret
the will of the legislator is by exploring his intention at
the time when the law was made, by signs most natural and
probable. And these signs are the words, the context, the
subject matter, the effect and consequence, or the spirit
and reason of the law." The documents whose production is
sought for are none of these. So in our opinion these are
not relevant. We must further reiterate that the Members of
Parliament had before them only the Bill. The notings of the
various officials in the files were not before the
Parliament. Therefore members could not be attributed with
the knowledge of the notings in the files. Therefore, the
notings made by the officials are not relevant. In this
connection reliance may be placed on the principles of
interpretation as enunciated by the Federal Court in
Auckland Jute Co. Ltd. v. Tulsi Chandra Goswami, [1949]
F.C.R. 201 at 244. It is trite saying that the interpreter
of the statute must take note of the well known historical
facts. In conventional language the interpreter must put
himself in the arm chair of those who were passing the Act
i.e. the Members of the Parliament. It is the collective
will of the Parliament with which we are concerned. See in
this connection the observations of the Federal Court in
RM.AR.AR.R.M.AR. Umayhal Achi v. Lakshmi Achi and others,
[1945] F.C.R. 1. We are therefore, of the opinion that the
documents sought for are not relevant for the purpose for
which they were sought for. In this case we are concerned
only with the construction of the statute to determine
whether the shares vested in the Government or not. As Lord
Reid has said in Black-Clawson International Ltd. v.
Papierwerke Waldhof Achaffenburg A G, [1975] A.C. 591 at 613
"We often say that we are looking for the intention of
Parliament, but that is not quite accurate. We are seeking
the meaning of the words which Parliament used. We are
seeking not what Parliament meant but the true meaning of
what they said." See in this connection the discussion in
Cross Statutory Interpretation-2nd Edition, pages 20-30.
994
The next question for consideration is that by assuming
that these documents are relevant, whether the Union of
India is liable to disclose these documents. Privilege in
respect of these documents has been sought for under Article
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74(2) of the Constitution on behalf of the Government by
learned Attorney General.
Shri Nariman however, submitted on the authority of the
decision of this Court in S.P. Gupta v. Union of India and
others, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 365 at page 594 that the documents
sought for herein were not privileged. The context and the
nature of the documents sought for in S.P. Gupta’s case
(supra) were entirely different. In this case these
documents as we see are part of the preparation of the
documents leading to the formation of the advice tendered to
the President of India and as such these are privileged
under Article 74(2) of the Constitution which provides that
the question whether any, and if so what, advice was
tendered by Ministers to the President shall not be enquired
into in any court. This Court is precluded from asking for
production of these documents. In S.P. Gupta’s case (supra)
the question was not actually what advice was tendered to
the President on the appointment of Judges. The question was
whether there was the factum of effective consultation
between the relevant constitutional authorities. In our
opinion that is not the problem here. We are conscious that
there is no sacrosanct rule about the immunity from
production of documents and the privilege should not be
allowed in respect of each and every document. We reiterate
that the claim of immunity and privilege has to be based on
public interest. Learned Attorney General relied on the
decision of this Court in the case of State of U.P. v. Raj
Narain, [1975] 3 S.C.R. 333. The principle or ratio of the
same is applicable here. We may however, reiterate that the
real damage with which we are concerned would be caused by
the publication of the actual documents of the Cabinet for
consideration and the minutes recorded in its discussions
and its conclusions. It is well settled that the privilege
cannot be waived. In this connection, learned Attorney
General drew our attention to an unreported decision in The
Elphinstone Spinning and Weaving Mills Company Ltd. v. Union
of India and others, Writ Petition No. 2401 of 1983. This
resulted ultimately in Sitaram Mills’s case (supra). The
Bombay High Court held that the Task Force Report was
withheld deliberately as it would support the petitioner’s
case. It is well to remember that in Sitaram Mills’s (supra)
this Court reversed the judgment of the Bombay High Court
and upheld the take over. Learned Attorney General submitted
that the documents there were not tendered voluntarily. It
is well to remember that it is duty of this Court to prevent
disclosure where Article 74(2) is applicable. We are
995
convinced that the notings of the officials which lead to
the Cabinet note leading to the Cabinet decision formed part
of the advice tendered to the President as the Act was
preceded by an ordinance promulgated by the President.
We respectfully follow the observations in S.P. Gupta
and others v. Union of India and others (supra) at pages
607, 608 and 609. We may refer to the following observations
at page 608 of the report:
"It is settled law and it was so clearly
recognised in Raj Narain’s case (supra) that there
may be classes of documents which public interest
requires should not be disclosed, no matter what
the individual documents in those classes may
contain or in other words, the law recognises that
there may be classes of documents which in the
public interest should be immune from disclosure.
There is one such class of documents which for
years has been recognised by the law as entitled
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in the public interest to be protected against
disclosure and that class consists of documents
which it is really necessary for the proper
functioning of the public service to withhold from
disclosure. The documents falling within this
class are granted immunity from disclosure not
because of their contents but because of the class
to which they belong. This class includes cabinet
minutes, minutes of discussions between heads of
departments, high level inter-departmental
communications and despatches from ambassadors
abroad (vide Conway v. Rimmer, [1969] Appeal Cases
910 at pp. 952, 973, 979, 987 and 993 and Reg v.
Lewes J.K. Ex parte Home Secretary, [1973] A.C.
388 at 412. Papers brought into existence for the
purpose of preparing a submission to cabinet vide
Lanyon Property Ltd. v. Commonwealth, 129
Commonwealth Law Reports 650 and indeed any
documents which relate to the framing of
government policy at a high level (vide re.
Grosvenor Hotel, London [1964] 3 All E.R. 354
(CA)".
Cabinet papers are, therefore, protected from
disclosure not by reason of their contents but because of
the class to which they belong. It appears to us that
Cabinet papers also include papers brought into existence
for the purpose of preparing submission to the Cabinet. See
Geoffrey Wilson cases and Materials on Constitutional and
Administrative Law, 2nd Edition pages 462 to 464. At page
463 para 187, it was observed:
996
"The real damage with which we are concerned would
be caused by the publication of the actual
documents of the Cabinet for consideration and the
minutes recording its discussions and its
conclusions. Criminal sanctions should apply to
the unauthorised communication of these papers."
See in this Connection State of Bihar v. Kripalu Shankar,
A.I.R. 1987 S.C. 1554 at page 1559 and also the decision of
Bachittar Singh v. State of Punjab [1962] Suppl. 3 S.C.R.
713. Reference may also be made to the observations of Lord
Denning in Air Canada and others v. Secretary of State and
another, [1983] 1 All E.R. 161 at 180.
We therefore, reject the claim for production of these
documents.
In view of the language used in the relevant
provisions, it appears to us that section 3 has two limbs:
(i) textile undertakings; and (ii) right, title and interest
of the company in relation to every such textile
undertaking. The expression "textile undertaking" has been
defined in section 2(k) to mean the six textile undertakings
of the company specified therein. The definition of the said
expression in section 2(k) is, however, subject to the
opening words of the section which provide, "In this Act,
unless the context otherwise requires". In the context of
the expression "textile undertakings" employed in section
3(1) of the Act, section 4(1) provides that the textile
undertakings referred to in section 3 shall be deemed to
include all assets, rights, leaseholds, powers, authorities
and privileges and all property, movable and immovable,
including lands, buildings, workshops, stores ....
investments and book debts pertaining to the textile
undertakings and all rights and interests in or arising out
of such property as are, immediately before the appointed
day, in the ownership, possession, power or control of the
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company in relation to all six undertakings. The expressions
"pertaining to", "in relation to" and "arising out of", used
in the deeming provision, are used in the expansive sense,
as per decisions of courts, meanings found in standard
’dictionaries, and the principles of broad and liberal
interpretation in consonance with Article 39(b) and (c) of
the Constitution.
The words "arising out of" have been used in the sense
that it comprises purchase of shares and lands from income
arising out of the Kanpur undertaking. We are of the opinion
that the words "pertaining to" and "in relation to" have the
same wide meaning and have been used interchangeably for
among other reasons, which may include
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avoidance of repetition of the same phrase in the same
clause or sentence, a method followed in good drafting. The
word "pertain" is synonymous with the word "relate", see
Corpus Juris Secundum, Volume 17, page 693.
The expression "in relation to" (so also "pertaining
to"), is very broad expression which pre-supposes another
subject matter. These are words of comprehensiveness which
might have both a direct significance as well as an indirect
significance depending on the context, see State Wakf Board
v. Abdul Aziz, A.I.R. 1968 Madras 79, 81 paragraphs 8 and
10, following and approving Nitai Charan Bagchi v. Suresh
Chandra Paul, 66 C.W.N. 767, Shyam Lal v. M. Shayamlal,
A.I.R. 1933 All 649 and 76 Corpus Juris Secundum 621.
Assuming that the investments in shares and in lands do not
form part of the undertakings but are different subject
matters, even then these would be brought within the purview
of the vesting by reason of the above expressions. In this
connection reference may be made to 76 Corpus Juris Secundum
at pages 620 and 621 where it is stated that the term
"relate" is also defined as meaning to bring into
association or connection with. It has been clearly
mentioned that "relating to" has been held to be equivalent
to or synonymous with as to "concerning with" and
"pertaining to". The expression "pertaining to" is an
expression of expansion and not of contraction.
As to what an undertaking means, has been clarified in
R.C. Cooper v. Union of India, [1970] 3 S.C.R. 530 at pages
567, 568, 635, where the Act of 1969 was challenged. It was
held that the meaning of the expression "undertaking" is a
going concern as distinct from its assets and liabilities.
It was also observed that it covered every corner of
property, right, title and interest therein. This Court
rejected one of the grounds of challenge as there was no
evidence that the named banks held any assets for any
distinct non-banking business, which finding gives an idea
as to what could have been excluded from the acquisition of
the undertaking.
Reading the provisions of section 3(1), section 4(1)
and section 2(k) of the Act, each throwing light on the
other, it follows that-(a) under the first limb of section
3(1) of the Act every textile undertaking; (b) under the
second limb of section 3(2) every right, title and interest
of the company in relation to every such undertaking, is
transferred and vested. (c) The deeming provision of section
4(1) amplifies and enlarges both the limbs of the vesting
section, being section 3(1). (d) The definition of section
is read into these provisions, to give a
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wider meaning and scope to the vesting provision and to what
is transferred or vested.
Sections 7 and 8 of the Act relied upon by the
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petitioners, being provisions for payment of amounts and for
the issue of shares by NTC respectively, will have no
bearing on the scope of the vesting provision. As to what
properties have vested cannot proceed on the hypothesis that
there is a clear numerical or mathematical link between the
quantum of compensation and the items of property vested.
This correlation with regard to such legislation is not
available. In this connection reference may be made to the
decision of this Court in Khajamian Wakf Estates etc. v.
State of Madras & another, [1971] 2 S.C.R. 790 at page 796
B-E.
Section 8 refers to payments of amounts by the Union of
India to the company. It has no bearing either on the
vesting section or on section 7 except that the figure of
Rs.24 crores 32 lakhs mentioned therein was introduced into
section 7. The provisions of this section are no different
from the provisions of the similar sections in the earlier
Act of 1974. For example, under section 8 of the Sick
Textile Undertakings Nationalisation Act, 1974 (page 59 of
Vol. X), the amount mentioned is specified in the first
schedule as there are a number of companies involved. This
provision cannot be the starting point for investigation as
to which amount relates to which property or as a guide to
construction.
It appears to us from the Delhi High Court decision
(supra) and the decision of this Court in Balkrishan Gupta’s
case (supra) as well as the statement of the Minister in
December, 1985 that there were legal difficulties, in
respect of taking over, under the 1951 IDR Act. The IDR Act
was-(a) concerned with the management of scheduled
industries in, inter alia, running of factories, where there
was no deeming provision in such wide terms; (b) it was
concerned with setting up of machinery for imposing controls
on industrial undertakings, see Harakchand Ratanchand
Banthia and others etc. v. Union of India and others, [1970]
1 S.C.R. 479 at page 496 F and G.
We are further of the opinion that the decision in
Harakchand Ratanchand (supra) would not be applicable. In
this case, the Court is concerned with a nationalisation
statute. Even with other independent management statutes, in
respect of textile undertakings a series of decisions have
upheld the view that the shares vest in the Government. See
National Textile Corporation Ltd. v. Sitaram Mills (supra);
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Minerva Mills Ltd. and others etc. etc. v. Union of India
and others (supra); Govardhandas Narasinghdas Daga and
others v. Union of India and others (supra); Fine Knitting
Mills Ltd. & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors. (supra) and
Vidharbha Mills Berar Ltd. v. Union of India (supra). The
above provide the informed basis on which we make the
construction of sections 3 and 4 of the Act.
The expression "and all other rights and interests in
or arising out of such property, as were immediately before
the appointed day, in the ownership, possession, power or
control of the company in relation to the said
undertakings", appearing in sub-section (1) of section 4 of
the Act indicates that the shares which have been purchased
from out of the funds of the textile undertakings and which
have been held for the benefit of the said textile
undertakings, would come within the scope of section 4 of
the Act and thus would also vest in the Central Government
under section 3. The origin of these shares and their
connection with the textile undertakings have been fully
corroborated. The textile business is the only business of
Swadeshi Cotton Mills. There is inter-connection and inter-
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relation between all the six undertakings. Investments in
Swadeshi Polytex Limited from the funds of Kanpur
undertaking have always been made. Investments in Swadeshi
Mining and Manufacturing Company Ltd. were always made from
the funds of the kanpur undertaking. Assets/investments held
and used for the benefit of the textile business of SCM,
were carried on in its textile undertakings.
The words in the statute must, prima facie, be given
their ordinary meaning. Where the grammatical construction
is clear and manifest and without doubt, that construction
ought to prevail unless there are some strong and obvious
reasons to the contrary. Nothing has been shown to warrant
that literal construction should not be given effect to. See
Chandavarkar S.R. Rao v. Asha Lata, [1986] 4 S.C.C. 447 at
page 476, approving 44 Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Ed.
paragraph 856 at page 552, Nokes v. Doncaster Amalgamated
Colliery Limited, [1940] Appeal Cases 1014 at 1022. It must
be emphasised that interpretation must be in consonance with
the Directive Principles of State Policy in Article 39 (b)
and (c) of the Constitution.
It has to be reiterated that the object of
interpretation of a statute is to discover the intention of
the Parliament as expressed in the Act. The dominant purpose
in construing a statute is to ascertain the intention of the
legislature as expressed in the statute, considering it as a
whole and in its context. That intention, and therefore the
meaning
1000
of the statute, is primarily to be sought in the words used
in the statute itself, which must, if they are plain and
unambiguous, be applied as they stand. In the present case,
the words used represent the real intention of the
Parliament as we have found not only from the clear words
used but also from the very purpose of the vesting of the
shares. If we bear in mind the fact that these shares were
acquired from out of the investments made by these two
companies and furthermore that the assets of the company as
such minus the shares were negative and further the Act in
question was passed to give effect to the principles
enunciated in clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the
Constitution, we are left with no doubt that the shares
vested in the Central Government by operation of sections 3
and 4 the Act. See in this connection the observations of
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edition, Volume 44,
paragraph 856 at page 522 and the cases noted therein.
There is no exact correlation between the figure of
capital reserve and the figure of investments. That, in our
opinion cannot be. These can never be exactly equal. The
submission of the petitioner fails to take into account the
fact that the undertakings other than the kanpur
undertaking, also have capital reserve, even though there is
no allegation that these were excluded assets in respect of
other undertakings and there were no figures of investments
therein. The covering letter for these documents, page 408
of Volume II, itself stated that the provisional balance-
sheet shows investments which included these shares as part
of assets. With regard to the figure of Rs. 11 lakhs taken
in the calculation filed by the petitioner, we find that the
calculations filed by the petitioner were not supportable.
Contemporanea Expositio, is a well-settled principle or
doctrine which applies only to the construction of ambiguous
language in old statutes. Reliance may be placed in this
connection on Maxwell 13th Ed. page 269. It is not
applicable to modern statutes. Reference may be made to G.P.
Singh, Principles of Statutory Interpretation, 3rd Edn.
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pages 238 and 239. As noted in Maxwell on The Interpretation
of Statutes, 12th Edition at page 269 that the leading
modern case on contemporanea expositio is the case of
Campbell College, Belfast v. Commissioner of Valuation for
Northern Ireland, [1964] 1 W.L.R. 912 in which House of
Lords has made it clear that the doctrine is to be applied
only to the construction of ambiguous language in the very
old statutes. It is therefore well to remember what Lord
Watson said in Clyde Navigation Trustees v. Laird, [1983] 8
A.C. 658 that contemporanea expositio could have no
application to a modern Act. We, therefore, reject the
attempt on the part of the petitioners to lead us to
1001
this forbidden track by referring to various extraneous
matters which we have indicated before. Furthermore those
external aids sought before us do not support the
petitioners’ approach to this question at all.
It appears that the shares held in SPL themselves were
the subject matter of both pledge and attachment to secure
loans from the U.P. State Government of about Rs.66 lacs for
payment of wages to workers of the Kanpur undertaking and
Rs.95 lacs being electricity dues of the Kanpur undertaking
owing to the U.P. State Electricity Board. From all these,
the acceptance of the petitioner’s case, would mean that the
State would pump in Rs.15 crores of public money to release
the shares from its liabilities and thereafter hand over the
shares free from such liability back to the company when the
net worth of the company at the time of take over of
management was negative and in the teeth of the present
financial liabilities built up by the company the shares
would inevitably have sold in discharge of its liabilities
and in any event the shares stood charged with the very
liabilities which related to the undertakings of the company
which were taken over by the Government.
It appears to us that sections 3 and 4 of the Act
evolve a legislative policy and set out the parameters
within which it has to be implemented. We cannot find that
there was any special intention to exclude the shares in
this case as seen from the existence of at least four other
Acquisition Acts which used identical phraseology in
sections 3 and 4 and in the other sections as well.
Reference was made to the Aluminium Corporation of India
Limited (Acquisition and Transfer of Aluminium Undertakings)
Act, 1984, the Amritsar Oil Works (Acquisition and Transfer
of Undertakings) Act, 1982, the Britannia Engineering
Company Limited (Mohameh Unit) and the Arthur Butler and
Company (Muzaffarpore) Limited (Acquisition and Transfer of
Undertakings) Act, 1978 and the Ganesh Flour Mills Company
Limited (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act,
1984.
In the present case we are satisfied that the shares in
question were held and utilised for the benefit of the
undertakings for the reasons that (a) the shares in Swadeshi
Polytex Limited were acquired from the income of the kanpur
Unit. Reference may be made to page 23 of Compilation D-III,
(b) the shares held in Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing
Company were acquired in 1955. Originally there were four
companies and their acquisition has been explained fully in
the Compilation D-III with index, (c) the shares held in SPL
were pledged
1002
or attached for running the Kanpur undertaking, for payment
of ESI and Provident Fund dues for the workers of the Kanpur
undertaking, for wages and for payment of electricity dues
of the Kanpur undertaking, (d) the shares held in SMMC were
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pledged for raising monies and loans of Rs. 150 lakhs from
the Punjab National Bank for running the Kanpur undertaking.
These loans fall in category II of Part I of the Schedule
which liabilities have been taken over by the Government,
(e) the shares held in SPL were offered for sale by SCM from
time to time and to utilise the sale proceeds thereof by
ploughing them back into the textile business for reviving
the textile undertakings acquired under the Act.
It appears to us that the expression "forming part of"
appearing in section 27 cannot be so read with section 4(1)
as would have the effect of restricting or cutting down the
scope and ambit of the vesting provisions in section 3(1).
The expression "pertaining to" does not mean "forming part
of". Even assuming that the expression "pertaining to"
appearing in the first limb of section 4(1) means "forming
part of", it would mean that only such assets which have a
direct nexus with the textile mills as would fall under the
first limb of section 4(1). The shares in question would
still vest in the Central Government under the second limb
of section 4(1) of the Act since the shares were bought out
of the income of the textile mills and were held by the
company in relation to such mills. The shares would also
fall in the second limb of section 3(1) being right and
title of the company in relation to the textile mills.
On the construction of sections 3 and 4 we have come to
the conclusion that the shares vest in the Central
Government even if we read sections 3 and 4 in conjunction
with sections 7 and 8 of the Act on the well settled
principles which we have reiterated before. The expression
’in relation to’ has been interpreted to be the words of
widest amplitude. See National Textile Corporation Ltd. and
others v. Sitaram Mills Ltd. (supra). Section 4 appears to
us to be an expanding section. It introduces a deeming
provision. Deeming provision is intended to enlarge the
meaning of a particular word or to include matters which
otherwise may or may not fall within the main provisions. It
is well settled that the word ’includes’ is an inclusive
definition and expands the meaning. See The Corporation of
the City of Nagpur v. Its Employees, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 942 and
Vasudev Ramchandra Shelat v. Pranlal Javanand Thakarand
others, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 534. The words ’all other rights and
interests’ are words of widest amplitude. Section 4 also
uses the words "ownership, possession, power or control of
the Company
1003
in relation to the said undertakings". The words ’pertaining
to’ are not restrictive as mentioned hereinbefore.
Section 8 provides for payment of compensation in
lumpsum and the transfer and vesting of whatever is
comprised in section 3. As section 4 expands the scope of
section 3, the compensation mentioned in section 8 is for
the property mentioned in section 3 read with section 4. The
compensation provided in section 8 is not calculated as a
total of the value of various individual assets in the Act.
It is a lumpsum compensation. See in this connection the
principles enunciated by this Court in Khajamian Wakf
Estates etc. v. State of Madras and another (supra). There,
it was held that even if it was assumed that no compensation
was provided for particular item, the acquisition of the
’inam’ is valid. In the instant case section 8 provides for
compensation to be paid to the undertakings as a whole and
not separately for each of the interests of the company.
Therefore, it cannot be said that no compensation was
provided for the acquisition of the undertaking as a whole.
Section 7 of the Act, in our opinion, neither controls
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sections 3 and 4 of the Act nor creates any ambiguity. It
was highlighted before us and in our opinion rightly that
this sum of Rs.24.32 crores paid by way of compensation
comes out of the public exchequer. The paid-up shares in its
equity capital can necessarily have a face value only of the
amounts so paid, irrespective of whatever may be contended
to be the value of the assets and irrespective of whether
any asset or property in relation to the undertakings, was
taken into account. After providing for compensation of
Rs.24.32 crores to be paid to the Commissioner for payments
to discharge part I liabilities, Government has to undertake
an additional 15 crores at least for discharging those
liabilities. To leave a company, the net wealth of which is
negative at the time of take-over of the management, with
the shares held by it as investment in other company, in our
opinion, is not only to defeat the principles of Articles
39(b) and (c) of the Constitution but it will permit the
company to reap the fruits of its mismanagement. That would
be an absurd situation. It has to be borne in mind that the
net wealth of the company at the time of take-over, was
negative, hence sections 3 and 4 can be meaningfully read if
all the assets including the shares are considered to be
taken over by the acquisition. That is the only irresistible
conclusion that follows from the construction of the
documents and the history of this Act. We have to bear in
mind the Preamble of the Act which expressly recites that it
was to ensure the principles enunciated in clauses (b) and
(c) of Article 39 of the Constitution. The Act must be so
read that it further ensures such meaning and
1004
secures the ownership and control of the material resources
to the community to subserve the common good to see that the
operation of economic system does not result in injustice.
We therefore, reiterate that the shares vested in the
Central Government. Accordingly the shares in question are
vested in NTC and it has right over the said 34 per cent of
the shareholdings.
In the aforesaid view of the matter we hold that the
10,00,000 shares in Swadeshi Polytex Limited and 17,18,344
shares in Swadeshi Mining and Manufacturing Company Limited
held by the Swadeshi Cotton Mills vested in the Central
Government under sections 3 and 4 of the Act.
We are further of the opinion that in view of the
amplitude of the language used, the immovable properties,
namely, the Bungalow No. 1 and the Administrative Block,
Civil Lines, Kanpur have also vested in NTC.
In that view of the matter in Transferred Case No. 13
of 1987, we dismiss the Writ Petition No. 2214 of 1987. All
interim orders in the said Writ Petition will stand vacated.
This will dispose of the various other SLPs and CMPs
connected with the Lucknow Writ Petition being SLP (Civil)
No. 4826 of 1987 filed by Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd., against
the order dated 6th April, 1987, SLP(Civil) No. 5240 of 1987
filed by NTC against the same order of 6th April, 1987 in
the Lucknow Bench and the order dated 6th April, 1987 in CMP
No. 4555(W) of 1987 in the Lucknow Bench of the Allahabad
High Court. CMPs Nos. 16918 and 16919 of 1987 being CMPs in
SLP No. 4826 of 1987 will stand disposed of in the above
light.
In Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987 in Suit No. 506 of
1987, we hold that 10 lakhs and 17 lakhs equity shares
mentioned hereinbefore and the Swadeshi House at Kanpur and
all the rights, title and interest attached therewith relate
to the textile undertaking of defendant No. 3 and they vest
in NTC with effect from 1st of April, 1985 and defendant
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Nos. 3 and 4 are restrained by a decree of permanent
injunction from dealing with them in any manner whatsoever.
Defendant No.2 is restrained by permanent injunction from
recognising defendant Nos. 3 and 4 as owners of the
aforesaid shares and the Swadeshi House.
Defendant No.2’is directed to enter the name of
defendant No. 1 namely, NTC in its register of members and
to treat the said
1005
defendant No. 1 as its shareholder instead of defendant Nos.
3 and 4 in respect of the shares of defendant No. 2 held by
them. In view of the provisions of law under Section 108 of
the Companies Act as there was transmission of shares by
operation of law, rectification is not necessary. See in
this connection Palmer’s Company Law, 24th Ed. (1987) page
608. See also in this connection Sahadeo Lal Agarwala and
another v. The New Darjeeling Union Tea Co. Ltd. and others,
A.I.R. 1952 Cal. 58 and Unity Company Pvt. Ltd. v. Diamond
Sugar Mills and others, A.I.R. 1971 Cal. 18.
Civil Appeals Nos. 577 to 579 of 1987 stand disposed of
in the above terms and we direct that the 17th annual
general meeting be held in accordance with law after giving
proper notice under the Chairmanship of Shri Jaswant Singh.
CMP No. 12760 of 1987 in Civil Appeal No. 577 of 1987,
shall stand disposed of in terms of the orders in
Transferred Case No. 14 of 1987 and it is directed that the
Chairman should act in accordance with the aforesaid
decision and NTC should be considered to be entitled to
vote. CMP No. 16887 of 1987 is rejected, on the grounds
indicated in the judgment.
CMP No. 16888 of 1987 is an application by Doypack
Systems Ltd. to be impleaded as a party-respondent in
Transferred Case No. 13 of 1987. Doypack Systems has already
been permitted to argue and has been heard as a party. No
further order is necessary.
CMP No. 16889 of 1987 is allowed and delay condoned.
CMP No. 17018 of 1987 is allowed. CMP No. 18268 of 1987 is
disposed of by directing that no further documents need be
inspected. In view of the orders, the other CMPs are no
longer necessary to be disposed of.
We direct that irrespective of any order passed by any
court the 17th annual general meeting should be held in
accordance with law to be presided over by Shri Jaswant
Singh recognising NTC as the rightful owner of the disputed
shares.
In all these proceedings National Textile Corporation
as well as Union of India wherever they are parties herein
will be entitled to their costs from their respective
opposite parties. The other parties will pay and bear their
own costs in these matters.
S.L.
1006