Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE RECOVERY OFFICER,LAKHIMPUR & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. RAVINDRA KAUR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/12/1996
BENCH:
N.P. SINGH, S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
In these appeals Recovery Officer functioning under the
U.P. Co-operative Societies Act, 1965 and others have
brought in challenge the judgment and order of the High
Court of Judicature at Allahabad, Lucknow Bench in different
writ petitions moved by the contesting respondents. The High
Court allowed the writ petitions of the contesting
respondents concerned and quashed the recovery proceedings
initiated against them in so far as they related to the
execution order under Section 91 of the Uttar Pradesh
Co-Pradesh Co-operative Societies Act, 1965 (hereinafter
referred to as ‘the Act’) by attachment and sale of the
lands of the contesting respondents. It is not in dispute
between the parties that the original writ petitioners being
members of the co-operative societies concerned had taken
loans for seeds and manure etc. From these societies
functioning under the Act. When the contesting respondents
did not repay the loans, the co-operative societies which
advanced the loans sought to enforce the statutory charge on
the properties of the writ petitioners as created by Section
39(a) of the Act. Recovery proceedings for enforcing the
said charge were initiated under Section 91 read with
Section 39(a) by the appellant Recovery Officer. The
contesting respondent writ petitioners moved the High Court
challenging these recoveries. It was contended before the
High Court by the contesting writ petitioner-lonees that as
the loans were taken for procuring seeds and manure etc.
charge under Section 39(a) attached to the crops produced in
the lands of the contesting respondents by utilising seeds
and manure procured out of the loan amounts but the said
charge did not fasten on the other properties and lands of
the writ petitioners and, therefore, proceedings under
Section 91 against the lands of the writ petitioners were
illegal and liable to be queshed.
The High Court accepted the said contention and allowed
the writ petitions by holding, on construction of Section 39
read with Section 91 of the Act that for realisation of
loans advanced for the objects mentioned in Section 39 (a)
of the Act, sale of the lands belonging to the writ
petitioners could not be effected unless the concerned
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societies obtained decrees of court of competent
jurisdiction as required by the provision to Section 39.
Writ Petitions were accordingly allowed.
The aforesaid decision of the High Court is challenged
by the appellant on the ground that the High Court had erred
in not properly construing the provision in Section 39 (a)
read with Section 91 of the Act. In order to appreciate the
aforesaid contention, it is necessary to have look at the
relevant provision. Section 39 reads as under :-
"S.39.- First charge of co-
operative society on certain
assets. - Notwithstanding anything
contained in the Provincial
Insolvency Act, 1920 (Act V of
1920), or in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), or
in any other enactment resisting to
land tenure for the time being in
force, any debt or outstanding
demand due to a co-operative
society by any member, past or
present, or standing against the
estate of any deceased member,
shall subject to any claim of the
Central Government or the State
Government arising from a loan
granted by it before, but not
after, the grant of the loan by the
society, or in respect of land
revenue or any sum recoverable as
arrears of land revenue, be a first
charge -
(a) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of the supply of, or any
loan to provide the means for,
seed, menure, labour subsistence,
fodder for cattle or any other
thing incidental to the conduct of
agricultural operations, upon the
crops and agricultural produce of
such members;
(b) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of any loans to provide
the means for paying the rent or
revenue of the land or for
irrigation facilities, upon the
land whose rent or revenue has been
so paid or, as the case may be, on
which the irrigation facilities
have been provided;
(c) if such debt or demand in due
in respect of supply of, or any
loans to provide the means for the
purchase of cattle, or other
livestock, or for the purchase,
repair or maintenance of
agricultural implements, transport
equipments or equipment for dairy
or for other activities relating to
animal husbandry, or for making,
replacing or purchasing of
farmhouse or shed for cattle or for
other livestock or for making,
repairing or purchasing of
warehouse for storage of
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agricultural produce, then upon the
farm-produce of such members and
also upon the cattle, livestock so
purchased, or upon the equipments,
warehouse, farm-house or shed so
purchased, repaired, maintained or
made wholly or partially out of any
such loan, and if the borrower is a
land-holder, then upon his land
also, at any time within three
years from the date on which the
last installment of such loan
becomes repayable;
(d) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of the supply of, or any
loan for the purchase of raw
material, industrial implements,
plant and machinery, workshops,
warehouse or business premises,
upon the raw material or other
things so supplied or purchased by
such member ad in the case of a
debt or demand in respect of the
supply, or for the purchase of raw
materials also upon the articles
manufactured from such raw
material;
(e) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of any loan for the
purchase or redemption of land,
upon the land so purchased or
redeemed;
(f) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of any loan for the
purchase or construction of any
house or building or any portion
thereof, or in respect of the
supply of materials for such
constructions upon the house or
building or materials so purchased
or constructed or supplied; and
(g) if such debt or demand is due
in respect of any loan of Rs.500 or
more for reclaiming or protecting
land or for effecting improvement
on land or for preparation of land
for orchard or plantation or for
purchase of cattle, agricultural
implements, machinery, upon the
land so sought to be reclaimed,
protected, improved or prepared, or
upon the land for the use of which
the implements or machinery are
sought to be purchased and in case
of purchase of cattle, upon any
land of the borrower :
Provided that along with the charge
created under this section all
other property of the indebted
member including any amount payable
to him by a society shall be
liable to attachment and sale in
execution of a decree in favour of
the society irrespective of the
object of the loan."
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The next relevant section is Section 91 which reads as
under :-
"S.91.- Enforcement of charge :-
Notwithstanding anything contained
in Chapter IX, or any other law for
the time being in force, but
without prejudice to any other mode
of recovery provided in this Act,
the Registrar or any other gazetted
officer subordinate to him and
authorised by him in this behalf
may, on the application of a co-
operative society and on being
satisfied of existence of the debt
or outstanding demand make an order
directing the payment of such debt
or outstanding demands due to the
society by any member or past or
deceased member, by sale of the
property or any interest therein,
which is subject to a charge under
Section 39 :
Provided that no order shall be
made under this section, unless the
member, past member or the nominee,
heir or legal representative of the
deceased member, has been served
with a notice of the application
and has failed to pay the debt or
outstanding demand within one month
from the date of service".
A conjoint reading of the aforesaid two provisions
clearly shows that before a charge can be enforced under
Section 91 by way of recovery proceedings, it has to be
shown that the concerned property of the debtor was
subjected to a statutory charge under Section 39 and it is
such a charged property which can be sold in the summary
manner as laid down by Section 91 for realising the payment
of debt of the members due to the outstanding demand of the
society against such members. Consequently, it has to be
found out whether the proposed sale of the property is
referable to any charge which is settled on such property
under Section 39. Section 91 lays down the procedure for
enforcement of the charge which is referable to Section 39.
All that Section 91 does is to provide a mode for enforcing
the said charge. Once a charge is found to have been created
on the concerned property as per Section 39, then it would
create an eveoutable right in favour of the society and a
corresponding obligation on the part of the lonee to satisfy
his dues from the sale of the charged property. When we turn
to Section 39, we find that only clause (a) of the said
section would get attracted on the facts of the present
case. Clause (a) creates a statutory charge on the crops or
produce of the land which result out of the utilisation of
the seeds or manure loan which is said to have been taken by
the concerned member. Therefore, the charge attaches to the
produce of the land and not on the land itself out of which
the said produce is realised. In this connection, we may
usefully refer to clauses (b), (c), (e) and (g) of Section
39 which create charge on land of the debtor member under
circumstances contemplated by theses clauses. It is not the
case of the appellants that any such charge on writ
petitioners’ lands was created under these clauses. Learned
counsel for the appellants fairly stated that clause (a) of
Section 39 cannot be effectively pressed in service because
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charge was not created on the land on account of the fact
that the loan was taken by the concerned member for
purchasing seeds or manure. However, his submission was that
charge on all other properties of the debtor was created in
favour of the society by the proviso to Section 39. A mere
look at the proviso shows that it would encompass in its
fold all other properties of the indebted member provided
there is a decree in favour of the society. Then
irrespective of the object of the loan such a decree-holder
society can proceed against any other property of the
judgment-debtor by attachment and sale on execution of the
decree. The proviso does not contemplate creation of any
charge on these properties, it contemplates execution of the
decree for a given sum of money and such a decree could be
executed by attachment and sale of any of the properties of
the judgment-debtor even though not subjected to any charge
under Section 39. Proviso has nothing to do with creation of
charge. Statutory charge is contemplated by clauses (a) to
(g) of Section 39 only. The very opening words of the
proviso show that along with the charge created under this
section meaning thereby under Section 39 clauses (a) to (g)
respectively any other property i.e. not subjected to charge
also can be proceeded against if the society has an
executable decree against the debtor. All other properties
mentioned in the proviso mean those which are not the
subject-matter of the charge. It cannot, therefore, be said
that proviso enlarges the scope of Section 39 (a) to (g) and
creates a further statutory charge. It must, therefore, be
held that the High Court was justified in taking the view
that under the proviso no further charge is created on other
property of the lonee. Once that conclusion is reached.
Section 91 dealing with enforcement of the charge goes out
of picture. As the lands of the writ-petitioners were not
the subject-matter of any charge under Section 39, there was
no occasion for Recovery Officer to proceed under Section 91
for enforcement of such non-existing charge on the lands.
Till the society obtained executable decrees on the basis of
the loan amounts there would arise no occasion for the
society to get attachment and sale of other uncharged
property of the judgment-debtor by resort to the proviso to
Section 39. It is also pertinent to note that execution of
decree is contemplated by Section 92 and not by Section 91.
Section 92 reads as under :-
"S.92. -Execution of certain orders
and awards. - Every award made
under Section 91, and capable of
execution in the manner provided
below, and every order so capable
of execution made by the Registrar
under Section 67 or sub-section (2)
of Section 68 or under Section 91,
or by the liquidator under Section
74 or by an appellate authority on
appeal under Section 97 or 98 or on
review under Section 99 or as an
interlocutory order under Section
100 or a certificate for recovery
issued under Section 95-A shall, if
not carried out, be executed -
(a) in the manner provided by law
for the time being in force for the
recovery of arrears of land
revenue:
Provided that an application for
the recovery of any such sum is
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made to the Collector and
accompanied by a certificate signed
by the Registrar or any person
authorised by him in this behalf :
Provided further that such
application is made within 12 years
from the date fixed for payment in
the order or award and if no such
date is fixed, from the date of the
order or award, as the case may be;
or
(b) by the Registrar or any other
person subordinate to him and
empowered by him in this behalf, by
attachment and sale or sale without
attachment of any property of the
person or the co-operative society
against who the order or award has
been made; or
(c) by the civil court having
jurisdiction over the matter
as if the order or award were the decree
of that court."
For all these reasons, therefore, it must be held that
the High Court was justified in quashing the steps taken by
the appellants for sale of the lands belonging to the
respondents. We make it clear that our aforesaid conclusion
is reached in the context of the loans advanced under
Section 39(a) of the Act. It would be open to the appellants
to pursue other remedies available for realisation of the
loan amounts advanced to the respondents writ-petitioners in
accordance with law. These appeals fail and are dismissed
with no order as to costs.