Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SITA RAM JHUNJHUNAWALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BOMBAY BULLION ASSOCIATION LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/11/1964
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SARKAR, A.K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1628 1965 SCR (2) 249
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1579 (7)
ACT:
Banking practice-- Cheque--"Certified as good for payment",
Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The members of the Bombay Bullion Association, respondent
herein, were permitted under the Forward Contracts Control
Act (Bom. Act 64 of 1947) to carry on forward dealings in
bullion subject to the bye-laws framed by the Association.
The appellant who was a member of the Association and was
carrying on business as bullion merchant, defaulted in
performing his obligation to tender silver of which he was
the forward seller, on the settlement day, and so the
Association, purporting to act under its bye-laws, purchased
a quantity of silver at the risk of the appellant and
claimed from him the difference in price. The appellant
paid the amount and challenging the legality of his being
treated as in default filed a suit for its refund. The suit
was dismissed by the High Court. In appeal to the Supreme
Court it was contended that the Association should not have
made the purchase because the purchasers had not fulfilled
the terms of their obligations under the bye-laws in making
their payments to the Association. The contentions were
that : (i) certain of the purchasers who had made payments
into the Clearing House of the Association by cheques, drawn
on their account in the Clearing House, had not had the
cheques certified as good for payment as required by bye-law
137-B, and (ii) one payment was made by a purchaser, by a
cheque drawn, not on the Clearing House but on a branch of
the Clearing House in the city, and which besides was not
certified good for payment as required by the bye-law.
HELD : (i) Where a payment was made by a cheque drawn on in
account with the Clearing House and the amount represented
by that cheque was transferred to the Clearing House Account
of the Association, it is virtually a payment in cash,
though in form a payment by cheque. Since payment in cash
is one of the modes of payment recognised by the byelaw it
satisfied the requirement of a valid payment. [255 E-F; 262
G-H]
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Arsene A. Larocque v. Hyacinthia Beauckemin, (1897) A.C.
358, referred? to.
(ii)Where the Clearing House had accepted the cheque and
credited it to the Association after ascertaining from the
branch on which it was drawn, that the drawer of the cheque
had enough funds at that branch for meeting of the cheque,
the cheque need not be certified as good for payment. The
position with respect to such a cheque is the same as when
the cheque is drawn on an account in the same branch,
because the certificate of the banker that is referred to in
the bye-law is the certificate of a bank different from that
into which the cheque is being paid. In any event, when the
staff of the Clearing 1-louse ascertained from the branch
that the cheque was backed by sufficient funds to the credit
of the customer in the branch on which it was drawn, it
satisfied the requirements of a cheque certified as good for
payment within the bye-law. [260 B; 262 A-C; 263 G-H]
up./ 65-17
250
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE‘ JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 56 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 3, 4, 1958 of the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 27
of 1957.
Purshattam Tricumdas, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and
Ravinder Narain, for the appellant.
H.N. Sanyal, Solicitor-General, N. P. Nathwani, AtiqurRehman
and K. L. Hathi, for respondents Nos. 1-3, 5, 6, 8-17, 19
and 20.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ayyangar, J. This appeal, by special leave, raises for con-
sideration a very short point regarding the proper
construction of bye-law 137-B of the Bombay Bullion
Association Ltd., which will hereafter be referred to as the
’Association’ and in particular whether on the facts
established in this case the requirements of the said bye-
law has been satisfied.
The appellant is a member of the first respondent-the
Association and carries on business as a bullion merchant.
By a notification dated March 14, 1949, the Government of
Bombay in exercise of the powers conferred by s. 6 of the
Bombay Forward Contracts Control Act, 1947 (Bombay Act LXIV
of 1947) sanctioned by the bye-laws framed by the
Association. Under the said Act the members of the
Association were permitted to carry on forward dealings in
bullion subject to the said bye-laws. The appeal is
concerned with the regularity of a purchase effected by the
Association purporting to act under its bye-laws, of a
quantity of silver at the risk of the appellant, on the
footing that he had defaulted in performing his contract as
a seller on February 3, 1953 which was a settlement day.
The Association made this purchase treating the appellant as
a defaulter and claimed from him the difference which
amounted to Rs. 1,37,880-12-0. The appellant paid this sum
when demanded on the 5th February under protest but on the
next day he filed the suit out of which the present appeal
arises against the Association and its Directors for its
refund on the ground that the purchase at his risk by the
Association was invalid as contrary to the bye-laws and was,
therefore, not binding on him. The appellant did not
dispute that he defaulted in performing his obligation to
tender the bullion of which he was the forward seller on the
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settlement day as he was bound to do under the relevant bye-
laws but the point on which he attacked the purchase was
that no purchase could be made unless the forward purchasers
for that settlement had fulfilled the terms of their
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obligations under the bye-laws and that as they had failed
to do so, the Association had no right to effect a purchase
on behalf and for the benefit of such defaulting purchasers.
The suit was tried before Coyajee J. on the Original Side of
the Bombay High Court. The learned Judge recorded a finding
that there had been no default on the part of the purchasers
and he, therefore, dismissed the suit. An appeal preferred
by the appellant to a Division Bench also failed and it is
the correctness of this decision of the High Court that is
challenged in this appeal.
Though the evidence went into minute details as to the
things that happened on the Vaida day-February 3, 1953 and
in particular whether the several parties who figured as
purchasers on the Vaida day had or had not paid in their
cheques into the Clearing House of the Association on
February 3, 1953 as they were bound to do under the bye-
laws, it is not necessary for us to go into this matter
because there is a concurrent finding of fact of both the
Courts that each one of the cheques of the several
purchasers was, paid into the Clearing House on February 3,
1953, though it is now clear from the evidence that entries
in regard to some of these transactions which took place on
February 3, 1953 were made by the receiving bank or by the
Clearing House only on the 4th. It is on the basis of this
finding which could not be and was not challenged before us
that we propose to deal with the points urged before us in
this appeal.
There is also one other matter which is referred to in the
pleadings as well as in the judgments of the High Court
which also we are putting aside. This relates to a plea by
the appellant that the Director-, of the Association had
acted mala fide in permitting certain infractions of bye-
laws on the 3rd February by purchasers who would otherwise
be in default and treating them is if they had fulfilled
their obligations. The suggestion was that some of the
members of Board of Directors had, in their individual capa-
city, figured as purchasers at the said settlement and that
it was this personal interest of theirs that led to their
favouring the group of purchasers as against the sellers at
this Vaida. There was nothing in the evidence in support of
this plea and Coyajee, J. having negatived it, the same does
not appear to have been pressed before the Division Bench.
Mr. Purshotam-learned Counsel for the appellant did not seek
to reagitate this matter, as indeed he could not, and hence
this aspect also might be excluded from consideration.
This leads us to the main question which it would be
apparent from the above narrative is whether those who made
forward
252
purchases for this Vaida had fulfilled their obligations
under the bye-laws. Now, the first matter that requires to
be noticed is that the settlement for the Maha Vaida was
originally fixed to February 2, 1953. Bye-law 32 of the
Association empowers the Board to fix the days of
settlement in these terms :
"32. (1) The settlement days shall be fixed by
the Board or the Sub-Committee appointed by it
keeping in mind the provisions or these Rules
and bye-laws."
but el. (3) of the same bye-law empowers the Board :
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"if of opinion that circumstances exist which
require an alteration of days so fixed [by cl.
(1)] the Board -may postpone such settlement
day for a period not exceeding 5 days."
It was in exercise of this power that the Vaida day was
postponed from February 2, 1953 to February 3, 1953. No
dispute was raised by the appellant regarding the competence
of the Board to effect this change of date or to the
validity of the change effected thereby.
Bye-law 120 makes provision for the establishment of a
Clearing House for effecting a settlement on the Vaida days.
This bye-law reads :
" 120. Clearing House :-A Clearing House
shall be established under the jurisdiction of
the Board to act as an ordinary agent of the
members for settling forward transactions
effected between members in gold, silver and
sovereigns by exchanging delivery orders as
also for making payment of the amounts of
difference through the Clearing House."
Under the powers thus conferred the Bank of Baroda which
opened a branch at the premises of the Association were
appointed as the Clearing House. Bye-law 125 provides for
the appointment of a Clearing House Committee by the Board
of Directors of the Association. Bye-law 127 specifies the
powers and duties of the Clearing House Committee and this
runs :
"127. Powers and duties of the Clearing House
Committee :-
(1) The Clearing House Committee shall
settle forms of clearing sheets, delivery
forms, "Kaplis" (slips) relating to payment of
differences and delivery of goods and other
necessary documents for being used for the
work relating to the Clearing House and every
member shall have to use the said forms or
other forms of the same size and with
253
similar writing. The said Committee shall from time to time
fix charges for the said forms.
(2) It shall issue instructions with regard to the work of
the Clearing House and every member shall act according to
the same.
(3) If any member does not act according to any such
instructions or commits any error or mistake in filing in
any form or other document or writes so illegibly that it
cannot be deciphered or makes delay in submitting, any such
form or document to the Clearing House, then in every such
case, the Clearing House Committee can impose on any member
a penalty not exceeding Rs. 500. Sub-Committee can be
appointed for attending to the work relating to this sub-
clause.
(4) It shall fix Havala rates in respect of outstanding
transactions (transactions, which are not squared up)
between two members and all members shall enter Havalas in
respect of such outstanding transactions (which are not
squared up) at these rates and also prepare statement of
differences at those rates. Delivery orders also shall be
issued at these very rates. The Havala rates in respect of
transactions are given to facilitate the settlement. That
does not in any way reduce the liability in respect of
transactions.
(5) The Clearing House Committee may declare any member as
a defaulter and for that purpose, it shall have power to
pass such resolutions and orders as it deems proper and
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necessary.
(6) If, in connection with any forward settlement, the
Clearing House-- finds, it difficult to make settlement on
the days fixed for settlement, then the Clearing House
Committee shall have power to make a change‘ of 48 hours at
the maximum in all or any settlement days relating to that
forward settlement."
Bye-law 134(1) reads
"134. (1) The member who wants to have his transactions
settled through the Clearing House shall have to send to the
Clearing House a clearing sheet in the settled form (form
No. 1) on the days fixed for that purpose (which day will
hereafter be known as he Clearance Day).
254
Bye-law 137 specifies the obligations of members of the
Association who give delivery and it reads:
"137. The member who has to give delivery
shall have to submit to the clearing house as
many delivery orders signed by him as there
would be, upon a calculation on the basis of
every delivery order being either for five
bars of silver or for 1,000 tolas of gold bar,
or for 1,000 sovereigns. If any member has
sent delivery orders without signing he shall
attend the Clearing House at 10 A.M. in the
morning on the date fixed for giving delivery
orders by the Clearing House and shall sign
the delivery orders. If the Clearing House
finds it necessary it can call for further
delivery orders from any member, and the
member shall have to furnish the same
forthwith but if the goods are with a bank he
shall have to give delivery orders on the bank
directly as mentioned above."
Bye-law 137-A(1) deals with theobligations of a member
whose clearance sheet shows outstanding sales and it reads :
"137-A(1). A member whose Clearance Sheet
shows outstanding sales shall submit to the
Clearing Housewith hisdelivery orders a
complete list of bars(gold or silver) in
his possession or in the possession of his
Banker inBombay with their number and marks,
to bedelivered against such delivery orders."
As stated earlier, it is now common ground that the
appellant did not carry out his obligations under this bye-
law. Bye-law 137-B whose proper construction is raised by
this appeal deals with the obligations of members whose
Clearance Sheet shows outstanding purchases. It reads :
"137-B. A member whose Clearance Sheet shows
outstanding purchases will submit to the
Clearing House with his Clearance Sheet a
cheque certified "good for payment" or a
demand draft on a Bank or a Bank’s payslip or
cash for an amount sufficient to pay for all
his outstanding purchases at the rate fixed by
the Association. Failing payment as aforesaid
the purchases outstanding in the Clearance
Sheet or a part thereof will be auctioned at
the purchaser’s risk on the same day.
The cheques, demand drafts etc., so received
by the Clearing House will be paid into the
Clearing House Account in the Bank of Baroda
Ltd., Bullion Hall Subbranch, and crossed
cheques payable to bearer or payslips
255
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of the said Bank in favour of the sellers
whose delivery orders are given by the
Clearing House to the purchasers will be
handed over by the Clearing House to the said
purchasers. The sellers shall give delivery
of the goods covered by the delivery order to
the said purchasers against such cheques or
payslip issued by the said bank. Refusal by a
seller to give delivery of goods covered by
his delivery order to the purchaser against
such a cheque or payslip during the time fixed
for giving delivery, will amount to failure to
give delivery and consequences in Bye-law 147
will ensue."
It was not contested that if by the transactions to which we
shall refer presently, members whose Clearance Sheets showed
outstanding purchases had fulfilled their obligations under
Bye-law 137-B, the Association was entitled to effect the
purchases at the risk and cost of the appellant under the
succeeding bye-laws which confer upon the Association this
power to effect purchases or sales to square the
transactions of defaulting members.
An analysis of the bye-law 137-B would show that a member
whose Clearance Sheet showed outstanding purchases had, on
the Vaida day, to file his Clearance Sheet and to make a
payment into the Clearing House of an amount sufficient to
pay for all his outstanding purchases at the rate fixed by
the Association. This payment had to be made along with the
Clearance Sheets and had to be in one of four forms: (a) a
cheque certified good for payment, or (b) a Demand Draft on
a bank, or (c) a bank’s pay-in-slip, or (d) cash. The
question raised in this appeal, relates to whether certain
of the purchasers had made payments into the Clearing House
of the amounts payable by them in any of the permitted
modes. Before proceeding further we might add that the Bank
of Baroda which was the Clearing House admitted that the
amounts required to be paid by the several purchaser-members
had been received by it on the 3rd and the total amounts
represented by these payments were credited to the
Association.
Before setting out the matters in controversy as regards the
form of payment adopted by certain purchasers under bye-law
137-B, it is necessary to premise the narrative by a few
facts. As already stated, the Bank of Baroda Ltd. had been
appointed as the Clearing House of the Association under
bye-law 120 in or about 1949 and had been functioning as
such ever since. To facilitate payments by and between
members the Bank had opened a special branch called the
’Bullion Hall Sub-branch’ in the premises of the
256
Association itself. Bye-law 174(3) required every member to
open an account in the Bank, so that it might be convenient
to pay or draw cheques for effecting clearance. All the
members had, in pursuance of and in obedience to this bye-
law, opened such accounts.
The Bank issued special pay-in-slips for doing its business
as a Clearing House. These slips were in triple foil, all
of which had to be filled in by the member making the
payment. When a member made a payment into the Bullion
Exchange Branch of the Bank the extreme right of the three
parts which recited the payment to the credit of the
Clearing House of the Association by the member named and of
the amount, also specifying the particulars of the payment
would be signed or initialled by the Cashier and Ledger
Keeper and be retained with the Bank. The paying-in-slip
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consisting of the other two parts in which similar entries
were made and bearing the signature or initials of the Bank
authorities was handed over to the member making the
payment. He had thereafter to present this slip to the
Clearing House along with the Valan or the Clearance Sheet,
and thereupon the Clearing House department would endorse
receipt on the part to the extreme left which would be
returned to the member-the other part being retained by the
Clearing House.
The settlement for the Vaida on February 3, 1963 appears. to
have been an exceptionally heavy one on account of the very
large volume of sales and purchases for that settlement and
there was a total outstanding sale of 1897 bars of silver
with, of course, corresponding purchases of the same number.
Sellers of 1,004 bars gave delivery orders as required by
bye-laws 137 and 137-A but the appellant who had an
outstanding sale of 853 bars failed to submit to the
Clearing House the necessary delivery orders. The
purchasers of the 1,897 bars had, under the bye-laws, to
submit their Clearance Sheets and make payments into the
Clearing House in the manner provided by bye-law 137-B of a
total sum of Rs. 88,31,050 by February 3, 1953. By reason
of the extraordinary situation created by the heavy payments
having to be made coupled with a strike of the Clerks of the
members on the previous day, the Directors of the
Association passed a resolution extending the time for
payment and delivery of Clearance Sheets beyond the usual
banking hours to 7 P.m. on the 3rd February.
The point in controversy in the appeal is whether this
amount had been paid into the Bank on the 3rd February to
the credit of the Clearing House in the manner provided by
bye-law 137-B. Out of the Rs. 88,31,050, some amount was
paid in cash,
257
Rs. 42,99,400 by cheques drawn by members on their
respective accounts with the Bullion Hall Sub-branch of the
Bank of Baroda Ltd. in favour of the Association’s Clearing
House account, Rs. 24,64,050 by four pay slips of other
banks in favour of the Bank of Baroda Ltd., Rs. 15,30,150 by
transfers by two members from their accounts with the
Jhaveri Bazar branch of the Bank of Baroda Ltd., to the
Bullion Hall Sub-branch for payment to the Association, Rs.
4,65,000 was by a cheque drawn by a member on his account
with the Fort Branch of the Bank of Baroda Ltd., in favour
of the Association, Clearing House Account. Of these, the
submission of the appellant was that only the cash payment
was a proper one and that the rest were not made in
accordance with bye-law 137-B. Before dealing with it,
however, it might be stated that the Bank of Baroda Ltd.
Clearing House submitted a statement on February 4, 1953
stating that all the payments totalling Rs. 88,31,050 had
been received by it as a Clearing House and had been
credited to the Association.
Now, taking first the amounts paid by cheques drawn by mem-
bers on their accounts in the Bullion Hall Sub-branch,
several points were urged in support of the contention. The
first was this : On February 3, 1953 the banking hours ended
at 2.30 P.m. and several of the payments into the Clearing
House Account by cheques drawn on the Banking account at
this branch were made after that hour. It was, therefore,
contended that even if there was enough money in the
accounts of the several members to meet the cheques drawn by
them, still their cheques could not be treated as cash as
the banking hours had passed. This was answered by the
Division Bench by pointing out that there was nothing
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illegal in the bank functioning for the purpose, of the
members of the Clearing House after 2.30 P.m. that day.
There was evidence before the Court that the ledgers and
other books of account in the bank were available for being
looked into to ascertain whether a member’s account had
sufficient funds to meet the cheques which had been drawn.
There was also evidence that the state of the member’s
account was ascertained before the triplicate form was
accepted by the bank and the two left side foils passed on
to the depositing member for being handed over to the
Clearing House and, as we stated earlier, on the next day
the bank submitted a statement acknowledging receipt of the
amount of the several cheques and showed their amounts to
the credit of the Association. In these circumstances, the
learned Judges of the High Court came to the conclusion that
there had been a payment as required by the bye law 137-B on
February 3, 1953.
L3Sup./65
258
We entirely agree with the High Court as regards the alleged
illegality said to have been caused by the Bank accepting
cheques after the close of the usual Banking hours. It
would be noticed that the extension of the banking hours
from 2.30 P.m. to 7 p.m. that day was not in contravention
of any statute and whatever the position might have been, if
such extension acted to the detriment of a constituent of
the bank, in the case on hand it was really for the benefit
of the customer. In those circumstances, there was nothing
illegal and, of course, nothing improper in the banking
business having continued so long as the work of the bank as
a Clearing House continued.
There were also other objections raised to support the
argument that these payments were contrary to bye-law 137-B.
To appreciate them it would be necessary to state a few more
facts. From the analysis that we have made of payments that
were made into the Clearing House by the purchasers in
satisfaction of the amounts due by them for the settlement,
Rs. 42,99,400 were by way of cheques drawn on the Bullion
Hall Sub-branch of the bank. We have also stated that the
staff of the bank to whom the cheques were presented had
endorsed on the slips that there were sufficient funds in
the account to enable the cheque to be cleared and that it
was after this process that the pay-in-slips were presented
to the Clearing House with the Clearance Sheets in
fulfilment of their obligations under the bye-law. In
regard to these payments by transfer entries to the credit
of the Association it was urged
(1) That several of the members numbering
about 17 or so, did not, in fact, have enough
funds in their accounts before 7 P.m. that day
to enable the cheques which they drew in
favour of the Clearing House to be honoured
and that in consequence notwithstanding the
acceptance of the cheques by the bank, such a
payment could not be deemed within bye-law
137-B.
It was common ground that at 2.30 P.m. on the 3rd of
February the amount to the credit of several of these
members was not sufficient to enable the cheques which they
issued later in the day to be cleared. But before the
cheques were actually presented the purchaser-members paid
into their accounts (a) refunds which they obtained of
margin moneys which they had deposited with the Association
and to which they were entitled under the bye-laws and (b)
other cheques in favour of the Bank of Baroda. Taking up
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first the margin money refunds, purchasers had, under the
bye-laws, to pay margin moneys on their purchases and these
had to be refunded to them on fulfilment of certain
conditions. ’Me amounts
259
originally paid as margin by the purchasers had been
credited to the Association and when the amount had to be
refunded payment orders were made out by the Association on
the 3rd of February of the amounts due to be refunded and
these refund orders were paid by the respective purchasers
to the credit of their accounts and their accounts were so
credited with the Bullion Hall Subbranch. It was not the
case of the appellant that the members were not entitled to
the refund granted by the Association but what was objected
to was that the refunds were really not due that day and had
been improperly paid over by the Association in advance of
the time when it was due Bye-law 33-C(2) deals with the
refund of margin money and it reads:
"Where the conditions described in clause (a)
or (b) as the case may be, cease to exist, the
Association shall return the margin amount to
the members concerned on the day following the
next clearance day after making the necessary
adjustment."
On this the appellant’s case was that the margin money could
have been returned only on the 4th and that the Association
acted improperly in refunding the amounts to the purchasers
on the 3rd itself to enable them to utilise that money for
the purpose of making their payments towards the settlement.
We do not see any sub. stance in this complaint, nor do we
see any relevance of this to the point now in controversy,
viz., whether there had been a compliance with bye-law 137-
B. As already pointed out, the Vaida was originally fixed
for the 2nd of February and if that had stood the amount
would have been refundable on the 3rd. It was, however,
owing to a strike of the Gumashtas of the members that a
situation had arisen by reason of which the Vaida had to be
postponed by a day. Whether as urged by Mr. Purshottam,
that upon the proper construction of bye-law 33-C that when
a Vaida day is shifted the day fixed for the refund of the
margin money also gets shifted or whether it would be
payable on the day originally fixed, would, in our opinion,
make no difference to the result. The bye-law imposes an
obligation on the Association to refund the margin money on
the day next after the Vaida. On its terms, however, if the
conditions of cls. (a) & (b) cease to exist, and obviously
they ceased to exist in the present case even on the 2nd,
there is nothing in the bye-law to preclude the Association
from refunding the margin money. Again, even if the margin
money were returned before such refund could be legally
enforced, the propriety or impropriety of the refund would
have no bearing on the only point for consideration relevant
to the question whether bye-law 137-B was
260
complied with or not viz., whether the accounts of the
members were in credit at the time the cheques were
presented.
(2) The next category of objection under this head was in
relation to the bank having given credit to one of the
members for the amount of a cheque of Rs. 2,00,000/- which
was drawn on the Bank of India, Australia and China. Now,
the evidence in the case was that this constituent-Khimji
Poonja & Co. had to pay Rs. 4,65,000/- as a purchaser. He
had a credit balance at 2.30 P.m. on the 3rd of Rs.
1,93,215/13/5. To enable him to meet the cheque for Rs.
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4,65,000/- which he drew on the Bullion Hall Sub-Branch he
paid into his account Rs. 1,05,500/- as refund of margin
money. Besides, he drew a cheque for Rs. 2,00,000/on his
account with the Bank of India, Australia & China in favour
of the Bank of Baroda and paid this cheque to the credit of
his account with the Head Office of the Bank of Baroda. The
Head Office intimated this credit to the Bullion Exchange
Branch and when he presented his cheque for Rs. 4,65,000/-
to the Bullion Exchange Branch the same was honoured and the
amount credited to the Association. The learned Judges
accepted this evidence and the explanation and held that
this constituent had enough funds with the Bank to meet the
cheque of Rs. 4,65,000/- which he drew. Mr. Purshottam
challenged the credibility of this evidence. We do not,
however, propose to go into it for the reason that if, as a
matter of fact, the Bank of Baroda as a Banking Institution
gave Khimji Poonja & Co. credit for Rs. 2 lakhs that was a
matter between those two parties and is not a matter which
bears upon the validity of the payment for Rs. 4,65,000/-
which Khimji made. It is not disputed, or rather it cannot
be disputed that the Head Office of the bank credited Khimji
Poonja & Co. with the sum of Rs. 2,00,000/- and there is
evidence as to the intimation of this credit by the Head
Office. Of course, the cheque by Khimji on the Chartered
Bank was not certified "good for payment" but that was not a
payment under bye-law 137-B. The Head Office accepted it
and therefore nothing follows from their not having insisted
on that cheque being certified. The fact remains that the
Head Office accepted that cheque; we shall take it in
anticipation of being cleared, and as a fact it was cleared
the next day. With the propriety of the Head Office of the
Bank crediting the constituent with the amount of that
cheque before actual realisation neither the Bullion
Exchange Branch nor the Association to whose account the sum
of Rs. 4,65,000/- represented by the cheque drawn in their
favour was credited, nor the appellant are concerned. When
once the Bank credited that sum into the account there was
enough
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credit for meeting the cheque of Rs. 4,65,000/- which is the
only point we are concerned with.
(3) The third head of objection that was raised, and this
was the one which was the subject of strenuous contest in
the High Court and before us, was whether the cheques on the
Bullion Exchange Sub-branch which were paid in with the
Clearance Sheets were "certified good for payment" within
bye-law 137-B. It was urged that only four modes of payment
were recognised and that a cheque even on the customer’s
account in the same bank was still a cheque and that unless
’It was certified good for payment it did not satisfy the
requirement of a valid payment within bye-law 137-B. In
this connection it was stressed that having regard to the
consequences flowing from a payment or non-payment on the
terms of the bye-laws a strict and literal construction of
the bye-law was called for and that the Courts should so
construe the bye-law and hold that a literal and not merely
a substantial compliance with it in the sense of the
Clearing House having received payment would satisfy the
rule. In connection with the submission that cheques drawn
against the customer’s account in the same branch of the
bank could not be "cheques certified good for payment" even
though there were enough funds to meet the cheques, learned
Counsel drew our attention to the fact that certification of
a. cheque was a well known form of commercial procedure
which bankers adopted for the purpose of clearance by which
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the certifying and the Clearing bank became bound to each
other. Reliance was, in this connection, placed on the
observations of the Privy Council in Gaden v.The Newfoundland
Savings Bank(1) where it is stated :
"The only effect of the certifying is to give
the cheque additional currency by showing on
the face that it is drawn in good faith on
funds sufficient to meet its payment, and by
adding to the credit of the drawer that of the
bank on which it is drawn."
Reference was also made to the judgment of Lord Wright in
Bank of Baroda v. Punjab National Bank(2) where the histroy
of certification or marking of cheques in India is dealt
with. We do not, however, derive any assistance from these
decisions on the point now in controversy. The first thing
to be noticed about this objection as to certification is
that there is no question of certification where a cheque
drawn on an account in a branch of a bank is paid into the
same branch to the credit of another party who has an
account in that branch. Certification is a method adopted
when a
(1) [18991 A.C. 281 at p. 285.
(2) 71 I.A. 124.
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bank on which a cheque is drawn verifies the customer’s
account on which it is drawn and indicates on the cheque
that there are enough funds in his account to meet that
cheque. It is obvious that there could be no question of
such -a certification by a bank of a cheque ,drawn on an
account in a branch when the drawer pays it to the credit of
a different account in the same branch. The verification of
the account of the constituent for the purpose of
ascertaining whether there is enough credit to meet the
cheque which precedes a certification takes place at the
very moment when the cheque is cleared. There is therefore
no question then of two banks-a certifying bank on which the
cheque is drawn and a clearing bank into which that cheque
is paid. In such circumstances, we should consider- that
the proper view to take of the payment would be that it is
really a payment in cash. The Privy Council had, in Arsene
A. Larocque v. Hyacin the Beauchmin,(1) to consider whether
the payment a company by receipts given by it on account of
the purchase price of the property which they sold was a
payment in cash. In dealing with this question Lord
Macnaghten quoted with approval the following from the
judgment of James L. J. in Spargo’s(2) case :
"It was said by the Lord Chancellor, and we
entirely concurred with him, that it could not
be right to put any construction upon that
section (s. 25 of the Companies Act, 1867)
which would lead to such an absurd and un-
justifiable result as this, than in exchange
of cheques would not be payment in cash, or
that an order upon a banker to transfer money
from the account of a company would not be a
payment in cash."
and another passage from the judgment of Mellish, L.J.
"It is a general rule of law that in every
case where a transaction resolves itself into
paying money by A to B and then handing it
back again by B to A, if the parties meet
together and agree to set one demand against
the other, they need not go through the form
and ceremony of handing the money backwards
and forwards."
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We consider these observations apposite and hold that where
a payment was made by a cheque drawn on an account with the
Bullion Exchange Sub-branch and the amount represented by
that cheque was transferred to the Clearing House Account of
the Association it is virtually a payment in cash, though in
form a payment by cheque.
(1) [1897] A.C. 358.
(2) L.R. 8 Ch. 407.
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The next transaction to which objection was taken was a
payment into the Bullion Hall Sub-branch of a sum of Rs.
4,65,000/- by one Sri Bansilal & Sons. The evidence was
that the cheque was drawn not on his account on the Bullion
Hall Sub-branch of the Bank of Baroda but with the branch of
the Bank at the Fort, Bombay. The evidence which the Court
accepted was that on the presentation of the cheque the
staff ascertained that the constituent had enough funds in
the bank for the cheque to be cleared and accepted it and
credited the same to the account of the Bullion Exchange
Association. The objection raised to the receipt of this
payment was also founded on the cheque not being certified
as good for payment. It will be noticed that the only point
of difference between this cheque and the cheques which were
drawn on accounts of members with the Bullion Hall branch
which we have dealt with just now is, that the cheque for
Rs. 4,65,000/was not drawn on the drawer’s account with the
Bullion Hall Subbranch but on an account in the same bank at
the Fort branch. For the purpose of considering this point
it is not necessary to enter on any examination of the
question as to what extent the two branches of the same bank
are separate entities. There is no doubt that a customer
cannot claim to draw cheques except on the branch where his
moneys are deposited and on the account in respect of which
the cheque is issued. But that is not what is in
controversy in the present case. Here a cheque drawn on the
Fort Branch is paid into the Bullion Hall Sub-branch to the
credit of the Association. The Bullion Hall Sub-branch of
the bank accepts that cheque and credits it to the
Association after ascertaining that the drawer of the cheque
has enough funds at the Fort branch for meeting that cheque.
The only question is whether the payment could be treated as
by a cheque which is certified as good for payment. We
consider that what we have stated earlier as to the position
in regard to a cheque drawn on an account in the same branch
would also apply to the present case and that a certificate
of the banker that is referred to in the bye-law is a
certificate of a bank different from that into which the
cheque is being paid. Even if there be any doubt in this
matter we are satisfied that when once the staff at the
Bullion Hall Sub-branch ascertained that the cheque was
backed by sufficient funds to the credit of the customer in
the account on which it is drawn, it satisfies the
requirements of a cheque certified as good for payment
within bye-law 137-B. The learned Judges of the High Court,
therefore,, rightly held that this payment was not outside
the payments permitted by the said bye-law.
The last of the cases concerns a payment by one Jethalal
Sangji Shah of a cheque for Rs. 1.16,250/-. The cheque was
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made in favour of the Bank of India Ltd. not certified good
for payment and was paid into the Bullion Hall Sub-branch.
The Clearing House received this cheque from Jethalal Sanagi
Shah after obtaining a declaration from him that he had
enough credit in his account with the Bank of India for
meeting that cheque. It was stated that the Directors of
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the Association were approached by the Bank as to whether
this cheque could be received in payment and that it was on
their advice that a declaration in the form specified was
taken from the member and it was only thereafter that the
payment was accepted as conforming to bye-law 137-B. Mr.
Purshottam submitted that this payment could certainly not
be within bye-law 137-B. and we consider that learned
Counsel is right. This, however, does not help him because
it concerns the price for 25 bars and, having regard to the
quantity of silver with which we are concerned, Mr.
Purshottam could not but concede that even if the payment by
this constituent was irregular it would not affect the
validity of the purchase at the risk of the appellant. We
thus reach the conclusion that except the last payment which
was not quite regular but whose irregularity is not
material, all the other payments were substantially, if not
literally, in accordance with the requirements of bye-law
137-B and in consequence the purchase made by the Directors
at the risk of the appellant was legal and justified under
the bye-laws.
Before concluding it is necessary to advert to the fact that
both before the learned trial Judge as well as before the
Division Bench a detailed analysis was made of the several
payments made by about 17 members of the Association with a
view to establish that those payments were not, even if they
were made on the 3rd. in accordance with bye-law 137-B. The
learned Judges considered the several objections which were
formulated to the validity of these payments and after
discussing some of the details of the individual cases which
were placed before the Court, recorded their finding that
the payments satisfied the requirements of the relevant bye-
law. In view of the arguments addressed to us we have not
examined in detail each one of the objections but have dealt
only with those specifically urged before us and the
tenability in general of the principles on which these
objections were based.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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