Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4191-4193 of 1991
PETITIONER:
ALLAHABAD BANK ETC. ETC.
RESPONDENT:
BENGAL PAPER MILLS CO. LTD. AND ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/10/2004
BENCH:
C.J.I. R.C. LAHOTI, G.P. MATHUR & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
IA Nos. 9-11
IN
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.4191-4193 OF 1991
WITH
I.A. NOs.13, 14 AND 15
IN
CIVIL APPEAL NO.4191 OF 1991
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
I.A. NOs.9-11 in CIVIL APPEAL NOs.4191-4193 OF 1991
These are applications by Respondent No.2 in the above
mentioned appeals, C.A. Nos.4191-4193 of 1991. The prayer therein
is for a clarification of the Judgment in the appeals rendered by this
Court on 20.4.1999 by providing that the applicant was also entitled to
the amount of Rs.1,56,21,839.25 being the interest that has accrued on
the purchase price of Rs.2 crores paid by it for the assets of the Bengal
Paper Mills Co. Ltd., a company in liquidation. The applications are
opposed by the creditors, some of whom were the appellants in the
appeals.
The Bengal Paper Mills Co. Ltd. was ordered to be wound
up in a winding up petition filed by its creditors. The order was passed
on 24.4.1987. Even before the order for winding up, the assets were
put in possession of two joint receivers appointed in a suit by one of the
creditors. On the Official Liquidator being appointed in liquidation,
the joint receivers were directed to put the Official Liquidator in
possession of the assets of the debtor company. They put him in
possession. The possession was thus obtained by the Official
Liquidator. After getting the assets valued, the Company Court on
29.6.1989 granted leave to the Official Liquidator to sell the assets and
properties of the company in liquidation. Pursuant thereto, the
Official Liquidator issued a sale notice on 14.9.1989. Respondent
No.2 in the appeal, the applicant, made an offer on 14.9.1989. The
offer was accepted and the sale was ordered on 15.9.1989. It is seen
that the sale was confirmed the same day and possession was given to
the purchaser, the applicant on 16.9.1989. But, it may be noticed that
the purchase price of Rs.2 crores was not collected at once and the
purchaser was permitted to pay the price in four quarterly instalments.
The sale was confirmed on the terms quoted in the Judgment of this
Court. The sale and its confirmation by the Company Judge was
challenged in appeals before the Division Bench of the Calcutta High
Court. The Division Bench of the High Court in spite of noticing
various irregularities and infirmities in the sale and the inadequacy of
the price in the light of the valuation of the assets, proceeded to dismiss
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the appeals. The creditors challenged that decision in the above appeals
before this Court. This Court by its Judgment dated 20.04.1999,
allowed the appeals and set aside the sale on the grounds set out
therein. It is seen that the applicant herein prayed before this Court
that the amount of Rs.2 crores paid by it in instalments by way of
purchase price, may be refunded to it and that it may also be repaid the
sums which it had allegedly expended for the revival of the company.
This Court, in the Judgment, dealt with the claim of the applicant as
follows:
"Learned counsel for the second respondent submitted that
the second respondent would be entitled to recover the sale price
as also all expenditure that it had incurred consequent upon the
order of sale. We are in no doubt that the Official Liquidator
must refund to the second respondent the sum of Rs.2 crores.
As to any other expenditure, the second respondent must apply to
the High Court and satisfy it, first, that it was incurred and,
secondly, that in law, the second respondent is entitled to recover
it.
The appeals are allowed. The judgment and order under
appeal is set aside as also the order of sale dated 15th September,
1989 in favour of the second respondent. The Official
Liquidator shall forthwith recover possession, from whoever is in
possession, of the assets and properties covered by the said order
of sale. The same shall be resold after a fresh valuation report
thereof has been obtained, a reserve bid fixed and due
advertisements published. The second respondent shall be
repaid the purchase price of Rs.2 crores by the Official
Liquidator subsequent to recovery of possession as aforesaid."
On 4.6.1999, the applicant requested the Official
Liquidator to refund the amount of Rs.2 crores deposited by it towards
the purchase price as directed in the Judgment. The Official
Liquidator promptly refunded a sum of Rs.2 crores to the applicant on
6.7.1999. It is the case of the applicant that it had claimed that it was
also entitled to the interest earned by the Official Liquidator on
investment of the sum of Rs.2 crores, but that the Official Liquidator
refused to pay any interest. It is in that context that the present
applications have been filed by the applicant seeking what it calls a
clarification of the Judgment rendered by this Court.
According to the applicant, its claim for interest was for
the period from15.9.1989 to 20.4.1999 on the sum of Rs.2 crores. This
Court had passed an order on 20.1.2000 calling upon the Official
Liquidator to furnish information on the investment of the sum of Rs.2
crores and the interest that had been earned and the Official Liquidator
had filed a statement which indicated that the interest that was earned
for the period in question was Rs.1,56,21,839.25.
It is also seen that pursuant to the liberty given by this
Court the applicant has filed an application before the Company Court
claiming payment out of a sum of Rs.21 crores as the amount expended
by it for the revival of the company. It is said that the said application
was allowed in spite of being opposed but that an appeal has been filed
against it and the recovery thereunder stood stayed and the appeal was
still pending.
The application does not disclose under what provision the
same was being filed. Nor does it set out any legal basis for claiming
interest on the purchase price deposited by the applicant. The two
aspects put forward are that during the 10 years the applicant was in
possession of the assets pursuant to the sale, the company had made
losses except for two years and that the Official Liquidator had invested
the purchase price and had earned interest and the interest earned was
an accretion to the purchase price which would belong the applicant
since the sale in its favour had been set aside.
The applications are opposed. It is submitted that the
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applications were not maintainable as what the applications really
sought was not a clarification of the Judgment but an additional relief
or a relief which was not granted by this Court and which, in fact, has
been denied or which should be deemed to have been denied. It is
pointed out that the shockingly low purchase price was not even paid in
a lump on 15.9.1989 from which date the interest was being claimed,
but the same was paid only in four quarterly instalments and the claim
for interest was untenable. It was further submitted that the applicant
had the enjoyment of the assets valued at more than Rs.16 crores for a
period of 10 years and the applicant had not accounted for the profits
for that period. It was pointed out that the claim that the company had
made losses during the said 10 years other than for two years, was
being seriously disputed. As a matter of fact, the applicant was liable
to account for the profits earned from the properties during the period
of 10 years it had been in possession. The applications were
misconceived and were liable to be dismissed.
Learned senior counsel appearing for the applicant
submitted that the amount of Rs.2 crores paid into the hands of the
Official Liquidator by the company had earned interest amounting to
Rs.1,56,21,839.25 and that the said interest was really an accretion to
the purchase price paid by the applicant and once the purchase price
was directed to be refunded to the applicant by setting aside the sale,
the applicant was also entitled to the interest accrued, as an accretion to
the asset. He, therefore, submitted that the Judgment of this Court
required a clarification in that regard and really no review of the
Judgment was necessary and relief could be granted to the applicant on
these applications. Counsel appearing for the creditors, on the other
hand, submitted that the relief now being claimed must be deemed to
have been refused by this Court while it ordered the refund of the
purchase price of Rs.2 crores and also allowed the applicant to make an
application before the Company Court claiming payment out of the
amounts allegedly expended by it for the revival of the company.
The prayer made was beyond the scope of a petition for clarification of
the Judgment and it was really a claim for further relief and such a
relief cannot be granted on these applications. The applicant had
enjoyment of the properties and its profits for a period of 10 years and
really it was a case where the applicant had to account for those profits
and, there could be no unilateral direction for making over the interest
to the applicant without imposing a corresponding obligation on the
applicant to account for the profits of the properties. The ordering of
such a mutual accounting was beyond the scope of the present
applications.
Certain salient facts may be noticed. This Court has
found that the purchase price paid by the applicant was a shockingly
low considering the value of the assets that were sold by the Official
Liquidator. Even this low price of Rs.2 crores, as can be seen from the
affidavit of the official liquidator dated 29.3.2000, was paid not in a
lump by the applicant-the purchaser and the amount was allowed to be
paid in four quarterly installments but even before payment of the
entire purchase price, the properties were put in the possession of the
applicant on 16.9.1989, the day next to the sale. The possession was
returned only on 5.5.1999 about ten years after the applicant was put in
possession. Until then, the applicant had the enjoyment of the
properties.
The Official Liquidator, in winding up proceedings by
court, has the power to sell the immovable properties of the company
wound up, under Section 457(1)[c] of the Companies Act, 1956. Rule
272 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 provides that an Official
Liquidator can sell the property belonging to the company only with the
previous sanction of the court and that every sale shall be subject to
confirmation by the court. Rule 273 lays down the procedure for sale
and Rule 274 deals with the meeting of the expenses of the sale.
Order XXI Rule 93 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for short ’the
Code’) provides that where a sale of immovable property is set aside
under Rule 92 of Order XXI, the purchaser shall be entitled to an order
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for repayment of his purchase money with or without interest as the
court may direct, against any person to whom it has been paid. It has
been held that even though Order XXI Rule 93 of the Code may not
ipso facto apply to a sale otherwise other than under the Code, the
principle embodied therein can be applied to other sales to order refund
of the purchase price with interest while setting aside a sale. But it has
to be seen that Rule 93 of Order XXI of the Code gives a discretion to
the court setting aside a sale, either to award interest or not to award
interest. Considered in the context of that discretion, it is clear from the
Judgment rendered by this Court that this Court refused to direct the
payment of interest to the applicant even while directing the refund of
the purchase price paid by the applicant to the Official Liquidator. In
such a situation it is not possible to accede to the prayer of the applicant
to order the payment of interest on the purchase price paid by it, based
on the principle embodied in Order XXI Rule 93 of the Code on this
application for a clarification of the Judgment. In the circumstances of
the present applications, we have to proceed on the basis that this Court
has exercised its discretion not to award interest on the purchase price
in the light of the directions issued by it in that behalf.
Learned counsel for the applicant relied on the decision in
Motors & Investment Ltd. vs. New Bank of India and others (1997
(11) SCC 271 ) and submitted that in that case the Court ordered
payment of interest to the purchaser on the sale being set aside. On an
examination of paragraph 6 of the said decision, it is seen that the
question was not discussed as such. But the Court did order the
interest earned by the purchase price to be refunded to the purchaser or
in the alternative to pay interest on the amount at 18 per cent per
annum. In the case of Central Bank of India vs. Ravindra and others
(2002 (1) SCC 367 ) this Court discussed the concept of interest to
point out that it was the payment fixed by agreement or allowed by law
for use or detention of money. In other words, what was indicated
was that interest was really compensation for the use of the money
which the purchaser was deprived of. Going by the principle of
compensation indicated in the said Judgment, the question would arise
whether the applicant, in the circumstances of this case, when it had
enjoyed the assets for about ten years on deposit of the purchase price,
would be entitled to any compensation at all, or to compensation with
an obligation to account for the profits, an issue, that has to be
adjudicated in an appropriate manner and not certainly while
considering an application for clarification. We find that the obtaining
of possession by the purchaser on deposit of the purchase price has
considerable relevance, in deciding whether the purchaser would be
entitled to interest on the purchase price as indicated by the decision of
this Court in Union of India vs. Official Liquidator H.C. of Calcutta
and others (2000 (5) SCC 274 ). Therein, after referring to the
decision in Motors & Investment Ltd. vs. New Bank of India and others
( supra) relied on by counsel for the applicant and the direction for
payment of interest made therein, this Court declined the award of
interest on the distinction that, in that case, possession had passed to the
purchaser. The Court stated that the Judgment in Motors & Investment
Ltd. vs. New Bank of India and others (supra) had no bearing mainly
because as soon as the amount was deposited by the purchaser,
possession of the property was handed over to him. No doubt the
learned Judges thereafter, also referred to the decision in the present
case and the non award of interest therein. But, in our view, that
makes no difference, since the distinguishing feature relied on by the
said decision, was the non-passing of possession to the purchaser. In
this case, as we have noticed, the applicant, the purchaser, obtained
possession even before he had paid the entire purchase price and had
paid only 25 per cent or so of the purchase price and kept that
possession for 10 years.
Even on the principle of restitution, the claim of the
applicant may not succeed. This is not a case where the applicant was
deprived of both his money and the property purchased by him. There
was, therefore, no failure of consideration. By the subsequent order of
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Court, the sale was set aside; but during the interregnum, the applicant
had the benefit of the assets he had purchased. The other contracting
party, the company in liquidation was deprived of the use of its assets.
The creditors who held the properties as security were deprived of their
right to deal with the security or to enjoy the benefits of the security
during the interregnum. In fact, the securities available to the creditors
were utilized by the auction purchaser-the applicant. In that situation,
the applicant might have the obligation to account for the profits.
Certainly, while rendering the main Judgment, this Court was
conscious of all these aspects while ordering refund only of the
purchase price deposited without providing for payment of interest to
the purchaser but at the same time leaving it open to the purchaser to
work out its claim for the expenses incurred by it before the Company
Court.
As stated in Goff and Jones The Law of Restitution (sixth
edition) the law of restitution is the law relating to all claims quasi
contractual or otherwise, which are founded upon the principle of
unjust enrichment. It will, therefore, be necessary to investigate that
aspect even if we invoke Sections 70 and 72 of the Indian Contract
Act. Even if we invoke Section 65 of the Contract Act, the
advantages derived by each of the parties will have to be determined
and quantified in terms of money and any order in favour of the
applicant can be made only after undertaking that exercise. This result
cannot be achieved by seeking a clarification of the Judgment as now
done.
It also appears to us that there was a change of position of
the parties including the creditors, pursuant to the sale and the applicant
being put in possession. In that context, the adequacy of consideration
paid by the applicant will be a relevant consideration. As observed in
Goff and Jones in paragraph 42-004, "neither common law nor equity
normally inquires into the adequacy of the consideration which the
purchaser provides. But such an enquiry would be central to any
defence solely based on a defence of change of possession, for, it is a
defence which operates to discharge, wholly or in part, a defendant’s
duty to make restitution". Be it noted that the sale in favour of the
applicant was set aside by this Court mainly on the ground that the
consideration paid was grossly inadequate.
The upshot of the above discussion is that the prayer for
clarification as made cannot be granted. The applications are liable to
be dismissed. Hence, they are dismissed.
I.A. Nos.13, 14 and 15 in C.A. No.4191 of 1991
I.A. No.13/2004 is an application filed by the Bengal Paper
Mill Mazdoor Union, the Labour Union of the wound up industry, for
a clarification of the Judgment dated 20.4.1999 by directing that the
company in liquidation may be sold as a going concern. I.A. No.14 of
2004 is by the same Union seeking permission to file a supplementary
affidavit in support of its above prayer. I.A. No.15 of 2004 is by the
company which had made an offer for purchase of the assets of the
company in liquidation "as is where is" praying for permission to
intervene in I.A. No.13 of 2004 filed by the said Union. According to
the Union, before the company court an offer had been made by M/s
Madhuri Traders Ltd. for purchase of the assets of the company in
liquidation as a going concern for a price of Rs.10 crores. But a
counter offer was received from M/s Zoom Traders and Reality Ltd.,
the applicant in I.A. No.15 of 2004, for Rs.17.75 crores for the entire
assets of the company in liquidation on "as is where is" basis. In this
situation, the company court has directed the parties to get a
clarification from this Court as to the mode in which the assets should
be sold, whether as a going concern or as property "as is where is",
meaning thereby that the purchaser will be free to dispose of the land,
machinery and other equipments as he pleased. It is the submission of
the Union that the workers of the Union will be benefited if the
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property is sold as a unit and a going concern and it is in that context
that they have filed I.A. No.13 of 2004 for clarification. It is in that
application that M/s Zoom Traders & Realty Ltd. wants to intervene, to
press its claim for purchase of the assets "as is where is" but not with a
view to run the industry or revive the industry.
We find that these applications are misconceived. The
learned company judge was also in error in directing the parties to seek
a clarification from this Court. In liquidation, the assets had been sold
by the liquidator and the sale was confirmed by the company court.
But the same was set aside by this Court. This Court while setting
aside the sale and issuing certain other directions, has very clearly
directed that "the same shall be resold after a fresh valuation report
thereof has been obtained, the reserved bid fixed and due advertisement
published". Obviously, this Court intended that a proper price should
be fetched for the assets of the company in liquidation. It has left the
question to the company court. It is for the company court to take a
decision on the fresh sale to be conducted by it. There is no question
of any clarification of the directions of this Court. No need for such a
clarification arises. The decision, at least in the first instance, has
necessarily to be that of the company court as to the mode and manner
of sale and the price at which it is to be sold. In this situation, we are
satisfied that these applications filed in this Court are misconceived and
they are liable to be dismissed.
We, therefore, dismiss these applications leaving it to the
company court to take a proper decision on the matters forming subject
matter of these applications.