Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 28
PETITIONER:
MAHARASHTRA STATE FINANCIAL CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAYCEE DRUGS AND PHARMACEUTICALS PVT. LTD.AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/02/1991
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
BENCH:
OJHA, N.D. (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (1) 480 1991 SCC (2) 637
JT 1991 (1) 524 1991 SCALE (1)276
ACT:
State Financial Corporation Act, 1951: Sections 31 and
32 Scope of-Presidency town-jurisdiction to entertain-
Whether a petition under sections 31 and 32 is to be made
before a City Civil Court or the High Court. Liability of a
surety -Enforcement of-Whether in such a petition a money
decree for repayment of loan can be passed against a party
who stood surety personally without any security. Held if
the claim is upto Rs. 50, 000 the application would lie to
City Civil Court and if it is more than to the High Court-
Amending Act 43 of 1985. By majority held that after the
amendment introduced by Act 43 o.f 1985 such an application
shall lie for enforcing the liability of a surety who has
given only personal guarantee.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 1 a Private Limited Company, was
sanctioned a loan of Rs.30 lakh by the Appellant-Corporation
for the setting up of a factory. To secure this loan a
mortgage deed of certain properties was executed by the
Company and Respondents 2 to 4 as its directors had executed
a personal Surety Bond without any security for its
repayment. After obtaining a part of the sanctioned loan,
which was to be given in phases, the Company became
disinterested in availing of the balance amount.
Consequently the Corporation demanded back the amount ahead
taken together with interest and on the company’s failure to
do so, it took over the Industrial Concern under section
29 of the Act and initiated steps to realise its dues by
putting the property to sale. Having failed to recover the
amount as no adequate offer was forthcoming despite repeated
advertisements, it filed a petition before the Bombay High
Court under sections 31 and 32 of the Act both against the
Company as well as its directors-sureties praying for a
decree in the sum of Rs. 15,87,391.20 to be passed against
them jointly and severally.
The respondents contested the petition contending (a)
that a petition under sections 31 and 32 of the Act could be
filed only before the City Civil Court and the High Court
had no jurisdiction to entertain it, (b) that no money
decree can be passed under sections 31 and 32 of the Act,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 28
and (c) that the provision in the Act relating to
enforcement of the
481
liablity of surety were ultra vires of Article 149 of the
Constitution. The learned single judge relying on an
earlier decision of the Bombay High Court reported in 1987
Mah. L.J- 243 held that the High Court had to entertain the
petition but on merits took the view that no money decree
could be passed under sections 31 and 32 even against the
sureties and since in the instant case the sureties had not
given any security except their personal guarantee, the same
could be enforced only in the ordinary course and not
under the special machinery provided under the Act.
In view of his findings on the first two pleas no
arguments were entertained on the last plea and
accordingly the petition was dismissed. The Division
Bench while dismissing the appeal not only upheld the
finding of the single Judge on merits but also overruled the
decision reported in 1987 Mah. L.J. 243 and held that the
High Court had no jurisdiction to entertain a petition
under sections 31 and 32 of the Act. The Corporation came
up in appeal before this court by special leave against this
decision of the High Court of Bombay.
The impugned judgement was assailed by the Appellant
Corporation both on merites and on the plea of
juridiction.The respondents in reply asserted that the
findings of the High Court on both pleas were unassailable.
Allowing the appeal, by a majority decision,
HELD: A. By the Full Court
(i)The extent of the liability stated in the
application as contemplated by sub-section (2) of section 31
of the Act would represent the value of the claim of the
Corporation and if since value is upto Rupees Fifty
Thousand, the application would lie in the City City Court
and if it is more than that amount it would lie in the High
Court. This interpretation would give meaning and
relevance to the words "having jurisdiction" used in sub-
section (11) of section 32. A different interpretation would
render superfluous or otiose not only the words "having
jurisdiction" but also the words and in the absence such
court, by the High Court, occurring in the said sub-section
(11) inasmuch as in a Presidency-town, in terms of
territorial jurisdiction, the jurisdiction of the City Civil
Court and of the High Court is co-terminus- [495D-F]
(ii) In the instant case the extent of liability of the
surety being more than Rupees fifty thousand, the
application could only have been filed and was rightly
filed in the High Court and the finding in the
482
judgment under appeal to the contrary for holding
that the High Court had no jurisdiction to entertain the
application cannot be sustained. [497A]
B. Per N. D. Ojha, J. for himself and Ranganathan, J.
(iii) There can be no doubt that the term, "any surety"
used in clause (aa) in sub-section (1) of section 31 of the
Act, will include not only a surety who has given some
security but also one who has given only a personal
guarantee. In our opinion, in a case where the relief
claimed in the application under section 31(1) of the Act is
for enforcing the liability of a surety who has given only a
personal guarantee, sub section 4(A) of section 32 where no
cause is shown and clause (da) of sub-section (7) where
cause is shown, contemplate cutting across and dispensing
with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure from the
stage of filing a suit to the stage of obtaining a decree
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 28
against the surety, the passing of an order which can
straightaway be executed as if it were a decree against the
surety which may be passed in the event of suit being filed.
[498F, 499E]
(iv) In the absence of any provision such as sub-
section (8) of section 32 of the Act applying the manner
provided in the Code for the execution of a decree
against a surety only "as far as practicable" the
entire provision contained in this behalf in the Code shall
be applicable. This would be so in view of the use of the
expression "any other law for the time being applicable
to an industrial concern" used in section 46B of the
Act. That the Code is applicable to an industrial
concern also is not in dispute and cannot be doubted.
[50OH-501A]
(v) Even in the absence of section 46B of the Act the
provisions of the Code would have been attracted in
the matter of enforcing the liability of a surety in
view of the decision of this Court in National Sewing
Thread Co. Ltd. v. James Chadwick & Bros. Ltd.,
[1953] SCR 1028 inasmuch as the District Judge while
exercising jurisdiction under sections 31 and 32 of the
Act is not a persona designate but a court of ordinary
civil jurisdiction. [501B-D]
(Per S. C. Agrawal, J. Dissenting.)
It cannot be comprehended that while making
provision which would enable passing of an order in
the nature of a money decree against a surety on an
application under section 31 of the Act, Parliament
would have refrained from making a corresponding
provision prescribing the procedure for carrying into
effect such an order. It
483
appears to be more in consonance with the scheme of the Act
and the object underlying sections 31 and 32 that by
introducing the amendments in sections 31 and 32 of the Act
the Parliament intended to place the surety on the same
footing as the principal debtor so as to enable the
Financial Corporation to obtain relief against the
properties of the principal debtor as well as the surety-
[515E-G]
If considered in this perspective, the expression
"enforcing the liability of any surety" in clause (aa) of
section 31(1) would mean enforcing the liability of a surety
in the same manner as the liability of principal debtor is
enforced, by attachment and sale of property keeping in view
that the proceedings under sections 31 and 32 of the Act are
akin to an application for attachment of property in
execution of a decree at a stage posterior to the passing of
the decree. The relief of a money decree sought against the
sureties-respondents 2 to 4 was not maintainable and the
said relief could not be granted to the appellant in
proceedings under section 31 of the Act. As a result, the
petition filed by the appellant must be dismissed and for
the same reason this appeal must fail. [515G-516A, 516D-E]
Munnalal Gupta v. Uttar Pradesh Financial
Corporation & Anr.,A.I.R. 1975 Allahabad 416; Thressiamma
Varghese v. K. S. F. Corporation, A.I.R. 1986 Kerala 222;
Maharashtra State Financial Corporation v. Hindtex Engineers
Pvt. Ltd., [1987] M.L.J. 243; Kayastha Training & Banking
Corporation Ltd- v. Sat Narain Singh, [1921] I.L.R. 43
All. 433; M. K. Ranganathan & Anr. v. Government of
Madras & Ors.,[1955] 2 S.C.R. 374; The Central
Talkies Ltd., Kanpur v. Dwarka Prasad, [1961] 3
S.C.R. 495, referred to.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 28
Maganlal V. MIS. Jaiswal Industries, Neemach &
Ors., [1989] 4 S.C.C. 344; M/s. Everest Industrial
Corporation & Ors. v. Gujarat State
Financial Corporation, [1987] 3S.C.C. 597; Parkash
Playing Cards Manufacturing Co. v. Delhi Financial
Corporation, A.I.R. 1980 Delhi 48; Gujarat State
Financial Corporation V. Natson Manufacturing Co.
Pvt. Ltd. & Ors., [1979] 1 S.C.C. 193, distinguished.
West Bengal Financial Corporation v. Gluco Series
Pvt. Ltd.,A.I.R. 1973 Cal. 268, approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:Civil Appeal No. 782 of
1991.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10.7.1990 of
the Bombay
484
High Court in Appeal No. 423 of 1987.
Ashok H. Desai, Vinay Tulzapurkar, Raghu Kothare and
Rajiv Dutta for the Appeallant.
Soli J. Sorabjee, D.R. Poddar, Ms. Purnima, Atul
Sharma, A.V.Palli, E.C.Agrawala and V.B.Joshi for the
Respondents.
The Judgments of the Court was delivered by
OJHA, J. Special leave granted.
This appeal by special leave has been preferred against
the judgment dated 10th July, 1990 of the Bombay High
Court in Appeal No. 423 of 1987. Respondent No. I
is a private limited company whereas Respondents 2 to
4 are its Directors. Respondent No. 1, for setting up
a factory, sought financial assistance from the appellant
and the appellant sanctioned a loan of Rupees thirty
lakhs. In order to secure the loan Respondent No. 1
executed a deed of mortgage of certain properties on
29th June, 1979 and Respondents 2 to 4 on the same
date by executing a deed of guarantee stood surety
for repayment of the said loan. It was a case of personal
guarantee only as no property was given in security. For
the sake of brevity the appellant, Respondent No. I and
Respondents 2 to 4 shall hereinafter be referred to as
the Corporation, the Company and the sureties
respectively. The amount of loan was to be advanced in
phases and after the Corporation had advanced a part of
the total sanctioned loan, the Company did not want to
avail of the balance of the amount as it seems to have
lost interest in setting up the factory for reasons with
which we are not concerned. The Corporation
consequently called upon the Company to repay the
amount already advanced together with interest and on
its failure to do so took possession under Section 29 of
the State Financial Corporations Act, 1951 (for short the
Act) over the industrial concern, a term defined under
Section 2(c) of the Act and took steps to realise its
outstanding dues by transfer of property in the
manner provided therein. However, notwithstanding
advertisement for sale thereof having been made on
several occasions the Corporation could not get an
offer of more than about Rupees five lakhs.
Having failed to recover the amount due to it in the
manner stated above, the Corporation proceeded to recover
the same from the sureties whose liability was coextensive
and for this purpose it filed a petition in the High Court
under Sections 31 and 32 of the Act arraying
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 28
485
the Company as Respondent No. I and the sureties as
Resondents 2 to 4, with the prayer that "the respondents
be jointly and severally ordered and decreed to pay the
petitioners the sum of Rs- 15,87,391.20 as per particulars
hereto annexed and marked Ex. H. with further interest at
the rates of 14-1/2% per annum till payment and may further
"be ordered to pay to the petitioners costs of the
petition". Thus, according to the relief claimed in the
petition the liability of the respondents with regard to
the amount payable to the Corporation on the date of
making of the petition was for a sum which was more than
Rupees fifty thousand which, as will be presently
shown, represents maximum amount over which the
Bombay City Civil Court has pecuniary jurisdiction.
The respondents contested the petition and raised
three pleas in defence: (1) A petition under Sections 31
and 32 of the Act could be filed only in the Bombay City
Civil Court and the High Court had no jurisdiction to
entertain it, (2) the relief claimed in the petition could
not be granted under Sections 31 and 32 of the Act
inasmuch as these sections did not contemplate passing
of a money decree not only against the principal
debtor but also against the sureties; and (3) the
provisions in the Act relating to enforcement of the
liability of a surety were ultra vires Article 14 of the
Constitution.
The learned Single Judge of the High Court
before whom the petition came up for hearing did not, in
view of his finding on the first two pleas, entertain any
argument on the last plea nor has the said plea been
raised before us and as such the same does not need to
be gone into. As regards the second plea it was
conceded before the learned Single Judge on behalf of the
Corporation by its learned counsel that no such money
decree could be passed against the Company as was
claimed in the petition. It was, however, asserted that
such a decree could be passed as against the sureties. In
this view of the matter the petition was treated and
decided as being confined against the sureties only. In
regard to the plea of jurisdiction the learned Single Judge
took the view that since an appeal was pending before a
Division Bench of the High Court against the judgment of
a Single Judge in Misc- Petition No. 357 of 1985,
Maharashtra State Financial Corporation v. Hindtex
Engineers Pvt. Ltd., decided on 3rd December, 1986
(since reported in 1987 Maharashtra Law Journal 243), in
which it had been held that such a petition was
maintainable in the High Court, he would proceed to
decide- the petition on merits on the assumption that he
had jurisdiction to entertain it. On merits, he took the
view that no money decree could be passed in a petition
under Sections 31 and 32 of the Act
486
even against the sureties and since in the instant case
sureties had admittedly not given any security except their
personal guarantee the said surety could be enforced only in
the ordinary course and not under the special machinery
provided under the Act. The petition was accordingly
dismissed.
Aggrieved by the judgment of the learned Single Judge
the Corporation preferred an appeal before a Division Bench
which has been dismissed by the judgment under appeal. The
Division Bench not only upheld the finding of the Single
Judge on merits but also over ruled the decision reported in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 28
1987 Maharashtra Law Journal 243 and held that the High
Court had no jurisdiction to entertain a petition under
Sections 31 and 32 of the Act.
Shri Ashok Desai, Senior Advocate appearing for the
Appellant Corporation has assailed the findings of the High
Court in the judgment under appeal both on merits and on the
plea about jurisdiction. Shri Soli J. Sorabjee, Senior
Advocate appearing for the respondents has in reply asserted
that the findings of the High Court on both the pleas were
unassailable. An application for intervention being I.A.
No. 3 of 1990 has been made on behalf of Nav Bharat Udyog, a
partnernship firm having its office at Mehta Building, 2nd
Floor, 47, Nagindas Marg, Bombay, confined to the plea with
regard to jurisdiction and it has been urged by learned
counsel for the intervenor also, in line with the submission
made by learned counsel for the respondents, that it is only
the Bombay City Civil Court and not the High Court which has
jurisdiction to entertain a petition under sections 31 and
32 of the Act.
For the sake of facility in considering the respective
submissions made by learned counsel for the parties we find
it useful to refer to the statutory provisions relevant in
this behalf. Section 2 of the Bombay City Civil Court Act,
1948 contains definitions and inter alia provides:
"2. In this Act unless there is anything
repugnant in the subject or context,-
(1) "City Court" means the Court
established under Section 3;
(2) "High Court" means the High Court
of Judicature at Bombay"
487
Section 3 in its turn provides:
"3. The State Government may by notification in
the Official Gazette, establish for the Greater
Bombay a court, to be called the Bombay city Civil
Court. Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law, such court shall have jurisdiction to
receive, try and dispose of all suits and other
proceedings of a civil nature not exceeding fifty
thousand rupees in value, and arising within the
Greater Bombay, except suits or proceedings which
are cognizable-
(a) by the High Court as a Court of
Admiralty or Vice-Admiralty or as a Colonial Court
of Admiralty, or as a Court having testamentary,
intestate or matrimonial jurisdiction, or
(b) by the High Court for the relief of
insolvent debtors, or
(c) by the High Court under any special law
other than the Letters Patent; or
(d) by the Small Cause Court:
Provided that the State Government may, from
time to time, after consultation with the High Court, by a
like notification extend the jurisdiction of the City Court
to any suits or proceedings which are cognizable by the High
Court as a court having testamentary or intestate
jurisdiction or for the relief of insolvent debtor."
The other Section which is relevant is Section 12 which
reads:
"12. Notwithstanding anything contained in any law,
the High Court shall not have jurisdiction to try
suits and proceedings cognizable by the City
Court;
Provided that the High Court may, for
any special reason, and at any stage remove for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 28
trial by itself any suit or proceeding from the
City Court."
As regards Sections 31 and 32 of the State
Financial Corporations Act, 1951, since the submissions
made by learned counsel for the
488
parties referred to most of the provisions contained therein
these two Sections may be quoted in their entirety. They
read:
"31. (1) Where an industrial concern, in breach of
any agreement makes any default in repayment of
any loan or advance or any instalment thereof or
in meeting its obligations in relation to any
guarantee given by the Corporation or otherwise
fails to comply with the terms of its agreement
with the Financial Corporation or where the
Financial Corporation requires an industrial
concern to make immediate repayment of any loan
or advance under section 30 and the industrial
concern fails to make such repayment, then,
without prejudice to the provisions of section 29
of this Act and of section 69 of the Transfer of
Property Act, 1882 any officer of the Financial
Corporation, generally or specifically authorised
by the Board in this behalf, may apply to the
district judge within the limits of whose
jurisdiction the industrial concern carries on the
whole or a substantial part of its business for
one or more of the following reliefs, namely:-
(a) for an order for the sale of the
property pledged, mortgaged, hypothecated or
assigned to the Financial Corporation as security
for the loan or advance; or
(aa) for enforcing the liability of any
surety; or
(b) for transferring the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation;
or
(c) for an ad interim injunction restraining
the industrial concern from transferring or
removing its machinery or plant or equipment from
the premises of the industrial concern without the
permission of the Board, where such removal is
apprehended.
(2) An application under sub-section (1)
shall state the nature and extent of the
liability of the industrial concern to the
Financial Corporation, the ground on which it is
made and such other particulars as may be
prescribed.
32. (1) When the application is for the reliefs
mentioned in clauses (a) and (c) of sub-section
(1) of section 31, the
489
district judge shall pass an ad interim order
attaching the security, or so much of the
property of the industrial concern as would
on being sold realise in his estimate an
amount equivalent in value to the outstanding
liability of the industrial concern to
the Financial Corporation, together with the
costs of the proceedings taken under
section 31, with or without an ad interim
injunction restraining the industrial concern
from transferring or removing its machinery,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 28
plant or equipment.
(IA) When the application is for the
relief mentioned in clause (aa) of sub-section
(1) of section 31, the district judge shall
issue a notice calling upon the surety to show
cause on a date to be specified in the notice
why his liability should not be enforced.
(2) When the application is for the
relief mentioned in clause (b) of sub-section (1)
of section 31, the district judge shall grant
an ad interim injunction restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or
removing its machinery, plant or equipment
and issue a notice calling upon the industrial
concern to show cause, on a date to be
specified in the notice, why the management of
the industrial concern should not be
transferred to the Financial Corporation.
(3) Before passing any order under sub-
section I) or sub-section (2) or issuing a
notice under sub-section (IA), the district
judge may, if he thinks fit, examine the
officer making the application.
(4) At the same time as he passes an
order under sub-section (1), the district judge
shall issue to the industrial concern or to
the owner of the security attached a notice
accompanied by copies of the order, the
application and the evidence, if any, recorded by
him calling upon it or him to show cause on a
date to be specified in the notice why the
ad interim order of attachment should not be
made absolute or the injunction confirmed.
(4A) If no cause is shown on or before the
date specified in the notice under sub-section
(IA), the district judge shall forthwith order the
enforcement of the liability of the surety.
490
(5) If no cause is shown on or before the
date specified in the notice under sub-sections
(2) and (4), the district judge shall
forthwith make the ad interim order
absolute and direct the sale of the attached
property or transfer the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial
Corporation or confirm the injunction.
(6) If cause is shown, the district judge
shall proceed to investigate the claim of the
Financial Corporation in accordance with the
provisions contained in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, in so far as such
provisions may be applied thereto.
(7) After making an investigation
under sub-section (6), the district judge may-
(a) confirm the order of attachment and
direct the sale of the attached property;
(b) vary the order of attachment so as
to release a portion of the property from
attachment and direct the sale of the
remainder of the attached property;
(c) release the property from attachment;
(d) confirm or dissolve the injunction;
(da) direct the enforcement of the liability
of the surety or reject the claim made in this
behalf, or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 28
(e) transfer the management of the industrial
concern to the Financial Corporation or reject
the claim made in this behalf;
Provided that when making an order under
clause (c) or making an order rejecting the
claim to enforce the liability of the surety
under clause (da) or making an order
rejecting the claim to transfer the
management of the industrial concern to
the Financial Corporation under clause (e),
the district judge may make such further
orders as he thinks necessary to protect the
interests of the Financial Corporation and may
apportion the-costs of the proceedings in such
manner as he thinks fit:
491
Provided further that unless the
Financial Corporation intimates to the district
judge that it will not appeal against any order
releasing any property from attachment or
rejecting the claim to enforce the liability of
the surety or rejecting the claim to transfer the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation,
such order shall not be given effect to, until the
expiry of the period fixed under sub-section
(9) within which an appeal may be preferred or, if
an appeal is preferred, unless the High Court
otherwise directs until the appeal is disposed of.
(8) An order of attachment or sale of
property under this section shall be carried into
effect as far as practicable in the manner
provided in the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 for the attachment or sale of property
in execution of a decree as if the
Financial Corporation were the decree holder.
(8A) An order under this section
transferring the management of an
industrial concern to the Financial
Corporation shall be carried into effect, as
far as may be practicable, in the manner
provided in the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, for the possession of immovable
property or the delivery of immovable
property in execution of a decree, as if
the Financial Corporation were the decree-
holder.
(9) Any party aggrieved by an order
under sub-section (4A), sub-section (5) or
sub-section (7) may, within thirty days from,
the date of the order, appeal to the High
Court, and upon such appeal the High
Court may, after hearing the parties, pass
such orders thereon as it thinks proper.
(10) Where proceedings for liquidation
in respect of an industrial concern have
commenced before an application is made
under sub-section (1) of section 31, nothing
in this section shall be construed as giving
to the Financial Corporation any preference
over the other creditors of the industrial
concern not conferred on it by any other law.
(11) The functions of a district judge
under this section shall be exercisable-
492
(a) in a presidency town, where there is a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 28
City Civil Court having jurisdiction, by a judge
of that court and in the absence of such court, by
the High Court; and
b) elsewhere, also by an additional district
judge or by any judge of the principal court
of civil jurisdiction.
(12) For the removal of doubts it is
hereby declared that any court competent to grant
an ad interim injunction under this section
shall also have the power to appoint a Receiver
and to exercise all the court powers
incidental thereto.
At this place it may be pointed out that with regard to
the enforcement of the liability of a surety it was held by
a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Munnalal
Gupta v. Uttar Pradesh Financial Corporation and
Another, A.I.R. 1975 Allahabad 416 that from the
scheme of the Act it is clear that the speedy remedy
contained in Section 31 is available not against the surety
but against the borrower only. In arriving at this
conclusion reference was made inter alia to the reliefs
(a), (b) and (c) contained in sub-section (1) of Section 31
and to sub-section (4) of Section 32 of the Act as it then
stood. It was pointed out that this sub-section (4)
contemplated a notice to the borrower industrial
concern after an interim order had been passed to
show cause why the ad interim injunction should not be
made absolute but did not contemplate a notice to
the surety and that it would be unthinkable that the
Legislature intended that the property of the surety
may be attached and put to sale without even a notice to
him.
It appears that in order to meet the difficulty in
enforcing the liability of a surety as pointed out in
the case of Munnalal Gupta (supra) Parliament found it
necessary to make specific provisions in this behalf
and passed the State Financial Corporations
(Amendment) Act, 1985 (hereinafter referred to as Act
43 of 1985). Among other amendments made by Act 43 of
1985 were the following:
(i) In sub-section (1) of Section 31 clause
(aa) was inserted.
(ii) In Section 32 a new sub-section (lA) and in
sub-section (3) thereof the words "or issuing a
notice under sub-section (lA)" were inserted.
493
(iii) Sub-section (4) of Section 32 was
substituted with an inclusion of sub-section (4A).
(iv) The word "or" occurring at the end of
clause (d) of sub-section (7) was omitted and a new
clause (da) was inserted.
(v) In the first proviso after sub-section (7)
the words "or making an order rejecting the claim to
enforce the liability of the surety under clause (da)
or making an order rejecting the claim to
transfer the management of the industrial concern
to the Financial Corporation under clause (e)" and
in the second provis1on the words "or rejecting the
claim to enforce the liability of the surety or
rejecting the claim to transfer the industrial concern
to the Financial Corporation" were inserted and
in sub-section (9) the words "under sub-section
(4A), sub-section (5)" were substituted for "under
sub-section (5)"
By the same Act 43 of 1985 a new Section 32G
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 28
was inserted which reads:
"32G. Where any amount is due to the
Financial Corporation in respect of any
accommodation granted by it to any industrial
concern, the Financial Corporation or
any person authorised by it in writing in this
behalf, may, without prejudice to any other
mode of recovery, make an application to
the State Government for the recovery of the
amount due to it, and if the State
Government or such authority, as that Government
may specify in this behalf, is satisfied, after
following such procedure as may be
prescribed, that any amount is so due, it may
issue a certificate for that amount to the
Collector, and the Collector shall proceed to
recover that amount in the same manner as
an arrear of land revenue."
Having extracted the relevant statutory provisions we
now take up the question of jurisdiction. Sub-section (1)
of Section 31 of the Act contemplates making of the
petition thereunder "to the district judge within the limits
of whose jurisdiction the industrial concern carries on the
whole or a substantial part of its business". A petition so
made is to be decided in the manner provided by Section 32
of the Act, subsection (11) whereof inter alia provides that
the functions of a district judge under the said Section
shall be exercisable, in a Presidency town, where there is a
City Civil Court having jurisdiction, by a judge
494
of the court and in the absence of such court, by the High
Court.
It has been urged by learned counsel for the appellant
that in a case to which the provisions contained in sub-
section (1) of Section 32 of the Act and of the Bombay City
Civil Court apply, if the extent of the liability sought to
be enforced against a surety is upto Rupees fifty thousand a
petition under Section 31 read with Section 32 of the Act
would lie before the Bombay City Civil Court and if the
liability is more than the said amount it would lie before
the High Court. This, according to him is apparent from
the use of the words "having jurisdiction" in sub-section
(11) of Section 32 of the Act and the extent of the
pecuniary jurisdiction of the Bombay City Civil Court as
contained in Section 3 of the Bombay City Civil Court Act.
According to him since in the instant case the liability
sought to be enforced against the sureties was for a sum of
more than Rupees fifty thousand the petition made by the
appellant was maintainable in the High Court alone and not
in the Bombay City Civil Court. On the other hand, it has
been urged on behalf of the respondents and the intervenor
by their learned counsel that word "jurisdiction" used in
sub-section (1) of Section 31 and sub-section (11) of
Section 32 of the Act connotes territorial jurisdiction
alone and that the concept of pecuniary jurisdiction is
beyond the scope of Sections 31 and 32 in view of the
decision of this Court in Gujarat State Financial
Corporation v. Natson Manufacturing Co. Pvt. Ltd. and
Ors., [1979] 1 SCC 193 relied on in M/s. Everest Industrial
Corporation and Ors. v. Gujarat State Financial Corporation,
[ 1987] 3 SCC 597 and Maganlal v. M/s. Jaiswal Industries,
Neemach and Ors., [ 1989] 4 SCC 344 which lays down that an
application under Section 31(1) of the Act is neither a
plaint as contemplated by Article I of Schedule I nor an
application in the nature of a plaint as contemplated by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 28
Article 7 of the Court Fees Act, 1870, that the special
procedure contained in Section 3 1(1) was not even something
akin to a suit of a mortgagee to recover mortgage money by
sale of mortgaged property, that even if the Corporation-
applicant so chooses it cannot pray for a preliminary decree
for accounts or final decree for payment of money nor can it
seek any personal liability, that the Corporation cannot
pray for a decree of its outstanding dues, that the reliefs
contemplated by Section 31(1) on being granted do not
result in a money decree or decree for recovery of
outstanding loans or advance, that a substantive relief in
an application under Section 31(1) is something akin to an
application for attachment of property in execution of a
decree at a stage posterior to the passing of the decree and
that such relief cannot be valued in terms of the monetary
gain or prevention of monetary loss.
495
Having given our anxious consideration to the
question we are inclined to agree with the submission
made by learned counsel for the appellant. The three
decisions of this Court referred to above and relied
on by learned counsel for the respondents were not cases
relating to the enforcement of a liability of a surety
made possible by the amendments by Act 43 of 1985.
In our opinion, what has been laid down therein does
not in any way militate against ascertaining in
monetary terms value or the extent of the liability of a
surety, which is sought to be enforced and there is
intrinsic evidence in Sections 31 and 32 themselves to
support this view. Sub-section (2) of Section 31
makes it obligatory to state the "extent of -the liability
(1) of Section 32 refers to "an amount equivalent in
value to the outstanding liability". Sub-section (lA)
of Section 32 contemplates notice to the surety to show
cause "why his liability" should not be enforced.
Sub-section (6) of Section 32 contemplates investigation
and determination of "the claim" of the Financial
Corporation which is to be recovered. If the application
under Section 3 1(1) is made before the district judge,
there is no difficulty because he has unlimited pecuniary
jurisdiction. The difficulty arises, as in the instant
case, when such application is to be made either before
the city Civil Court or the High Court as contemplated
by sub-section (11) of Section 32. In our opinion,
the extent of the liability stated in the application as
contemplated by sub-section (2) of Section 31 of the Act
would represent the value of the claim of the Corporation
and if such value is upto Rupees fifty thousand the
application would lie in the City Civil Court and if it is
more than that amount it would lie in the High Court.
This interpretation would give meaning and relevance to the
words "having jurisdiction" used in sub-section (11) of
Section 32. A different interpretation would render
superfluous or otiose not only the words "having
jurisdiction" but also the words"and in the absence of
such court, by the High Court" occurring in the said sub-
section (11) inasmuch as in a Presidency-town, in terms
of territorial jurisdiction, the jurisdiction of the City
Civil Court and of the High Court is co-terminus. That it
is so is clear from Section 3 of the Bombay city Civil
Court Act and the definition of the term "Presidency-
town" contained in Section 3(44) of the General
Clauses Act, 1897 according to which "Presidency-
town" shall mean the local limits for the time being of
the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the High Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 28
of Judicature at Calcutta, Madras or Bombay, as the
case may be.
It is a settled rule of interpretation of statutes that
if the language and words used are plain and unambiguous,
full effect must be given to them as they stand and in
the garb of finding out the intention of the
496
Legislature no words should be added thereto or
subtracted there from. Likewise, it is again a settled
rule of interpretation that statutory provisions should be
construed in a manner which subserves the purpose of the
enactment and does not defeat it and that no part thereof
is rendered surplus or otiose. The aforesaid interpretation
of sub-section (II) of Section 32 of the Act is not only in
conformity with the rule of interpretation referred to
above, it also does not militate in any way with the concept
of an application under Section 31(1) of the Act, not being
a plaint in a suit for recovery of money.
Reliance in this behalf has been placed by learned counsel
for the intervenor on a decision of the Delhi High Court in
Parkash Playing Cards Manufacturing Company v. Delhi
Financial Corporation, AIR 1980 Delhi 48. In our opinion,
however, the said decision is of little assistance in
resolving the plea of jurisdiction raised in the instant
case, namely, whether in a Presidency-town an application
under Section 31(1) of the Act is to be made before a City
Civil Court or High Court. In the case of Parkash Cards
Manufacturing Company (supra), the provision which came up
for consideration in the forefront was Section 5 of the
Delhi High Court Act, 1966 and the question of jurisdiction
was largely considered on that basis. Sub-section (11) of
Section 32 with pointed reference to the jurisdiction
exercisable by a City Civil Court in a Presidency-town and
the High Court did not fall for consideration in that case.
The case which throws some light on the point is a
decision of the Calcutta Court Court in West Bengal
Financial Corporation v. Gluco Series Private Limited, AIR
1973 Cal 268) where it was held:
"Section 32 sub-section (1 1) does not say that the
City Civil Court will have exclusive jurisdiction
but states "in the Presidency Town where there is
City Civil Court having jurisdiction, by a Judge of
that Court and in the absence of such Court by the
High Court." The words "in the absence of such
Court" mean in the absence of such Court having
jurisdiction in the matter. The City Civil Court
has no jurisdiction to entertain and try suits and
proceedings of Civil nature exceeding Rs.50,000 in
value. Here the value of the claims in the
proceedings exceeds much more than Rs.50,000 and,
therefore, under Section 32, sub-section (11) this
proceeding has been duly instituted in the High
Court.
497
In the instant case the extent of the liability of the
surety being more than Rupees fifty thousand, the
application could only have been filed and was rightly
filed in the High Court and the finding in the judgment
under appeal to the contrary for holding that the High Court
had no jurisdiction to entertain the application cannot be
sustained.
Now we come to the second plea raised on behalf of the
respondents, namely, that the relief claimed in the
petition could not be granted under Sections 31 and 32
of the Act inasmuch as these sections did not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 28
contemplate passing of a money decree not only against the
principal debtor but also against the sureties.
In so far as the special machinery provided
under Sections 31 and 32 of the Act being applied to
a surety who has given some property in security, it
has been pointed out by learned counsel for the appellant
that even before the amendment introduced in these
sections by Act 43 of 1985 a Division Bench of the
Kerala High Court had, in Thressiamma Varghese v.
K. S. F. Corporation, AIR 1986 Kerala 222, taken the view
that the provisions contained in these sections would be
applicable. According to teamed counsel, in any view of the
matter, after the amendment of these sections by Act
43 of 1985 introducing specific provisions for
enforcement of the liability of a surety, the matter is now
beyond doubt that the procedure contained in these
sections shall be applicable for the enforcement of
the liability of such surety who has given some
property in security. According to him even in the judgment
under appeal the High Court has accepted this proposition
and has expressed its reservation with regard to enforcement
of the liability of a surety who has not given any
property in security and has given only a
personal guarantee. Reference in this connection
has been made to the following observations in
the judgment under appeal:
"Even if the Corporation s now entitled to
obtain relief also against any property which might
have been given a security by the surety, the
further question would remain whether the
Corporation is entitled under Section 31(l)(aa) to
obtain any relief personally against such a
surety."
Indeed, the submission even before us which
was made by learned counsel for the appellant has been
that the only effect of the 1985 amendment is that
it enables proceedings to be taken for the
realisation of the security given by the surety in
respect of his own
498
liability whereas such proceedings could not be taken before
the amendment. He, however, asserted that the Act even after
the amendment does not enable a monetary decree to be passed
against the surety any more than a decree can be passed
against the principal debtor. According to him, in this view
of the matter, in the instant case, the liability of the
sureties could not be enforced under Sections 31 and 32 of
the Act in as much as they had given only personal guarantee
and had not given any property in security.
In the background of the rules of interpretation of
statutes adverted to earlier and the specific provisions
with regard to enforcement of the liability of a surety
introduced in Sections 31 and 32 of the Act by Act 43 of
1985 we find it difficult to agree with the submission made
by learned counsel for the respondents. It is true, as has
been indicated above, that this Court has in the case of
Gujarat State Financial Corporation (supra) taken the view
that Sections 31 and 32 of the Act do not contemplate the
passing of a money decree and the principle laid down in
that case has been relied on in two later decisions referred
to above. The said principle would, in our opinion, not come
in the way of enforcing the liability under Sections 31 and
32 of the Act even against the surety who has given only a
personal guarantee. As indicated earlier those were not
cases dealing with the question of enforcement of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 28
liability of such a surety and naturally, therefore, the
provisions in this behalf specifically introduced in
Sections 31 and 32 of the Act by Act 43 of 1985 were not
considered in those cases. However, in this connection what
is of significance is that clause (aa) inserted in sub-
section (1) of Section 31 of the Act by Act 43 of 1985 uses
the words "any surety". On its plain grammatical meaning
there can be no doubt that the term "any surety" will
include not only a surety who has given some security but
also one who has given only a personal guarantee. If the
submission made by learned counsel for the respondents is
accepted the words "who has given property by way of
security" will have to be added after the words "any
surety". Such a course not only militates against the normal
rule of interpretation but also tends to defeat the very
purpose of the amendment introduced by Act 43 of 1985
enabling the Financial Corporation to make an application
under Section 31(1) of the Act "for enforcing the liability
of any surety", inasmuch as it would have the effect of
restricting or qualifying the amplitude of the term "any
surety" which the Legislature has in its wisdom thought it
fit to use in its widest sense. The procedure, in our
opinion, for enforcing the liability of a surety who has
given only a personal guarantee would, after the amendment
introduced by Act 43 of 1985, be that an application under
Section 31(1) shall lie for enforc-
499
ing the liability of such surety as contemplated by clause
(aa) of the said section. On such an application being made
notice shall be issued to the surety as contemplated by sub-
section (1A) of Section 32. This may, in view of sub-section
(3), be done after examining the officer making the
application. If no cause is shown in pursuance of the notice
served on him by the surety sub-section (4A) of Section 32
contemplates passing of an order forthwith for the
enforcement of the liability of surety. If, on the other
hand, cause is shown the claim of the Financial Corporation
shall be determined as contemplated by sub-section (6) of
Section 32 and thereafter a direction as contemplated by
clause (da) of sub-section (7) shall be issued for the
enforcement of the liability of the surety or rejecting the
claim made in this behalf. In the case of Maganlal (supra)
which related to the relief contemplated by clause (a) of
Section 31(1) of the Act it was pointed out that the purpose
of enacting Sections 31 and 32 of the Act was apparently to
provide for a speedy remedy for recovery of the dues of the
Financial Corporation and that these sections had the effect
of cutting across and dispensing with the provisions of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (hereinafter referred to as
the Code) from the stage of filing a suit to the stage of
obtaining a decree in execution whereof such properties as
are referred to in clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section
31 could be sold. In our opinion, on the same principle,
even in a case where the relief claimed in the application
under Section 31(1) of the Act is for enforcing the
liability of a surety who has given only a personal
guarantee, sub-section (4A) of Section 32 where no cause is
shown and clause (da) of sub-section (7) where cause is
shown contemplate cutting across and dispensing with the
provisions of the Code from the stage of filing a suit to
the stage of obtaining a decree against the surety, the
passing of an order which can straightaway be executed as if
it were a decree against the surety which may be passed in
the event of a suit being filed. As seen above, sub-section
(2) of Section 31 enjoins upon the Financial Corporation to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 28
state the "extent of the liability of the industrial
concern" in the application to be made under sub-section (1)
thereof. Since the liability of the surety is co-extensive
the same shall, in the absence of anything contrary in the
surety bond, be the liability of the surety also. In a case
where there is any provision confining the liability of the
surety, the extent of the liability to be shown in the
application shall be such as is in conformity with the
surety bond. When no cause is shown by the surety on being
served with the show cause notice the order which will be
passed under sub-section (4A) of Section 32 would be for the
enforcement against the surety of that liability which is
stated in the application. Where, however, cause has been
shown by the surety the extent of his liability shall be
determined
500
as contemplated in sub-section (6) of Section 32 and it is
the liability so determined which shall be enforced under
clause (da) of sub-section (7) of Section 32. It does not
require any elucidation that the extent of the liability
referred to above will necessarily have to be in the very
nature of things in terms of monetary value even though it
may not be possible to call it a decree stricto sensu
defined in Section 2(2) of the Code for recovery of money.
Here, Section 46B of the Act may be usefully extracted:
"46B. The provision of this Act and of any rule or
orders made thereunder shall have effect
notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith
contained in any other law for the time being in
force or in the memorandum or articles of
association of industrial concern or in any other
instrument having effect by virtue of any law
other than this Act, but save as aforesaid, the
provisions of this Act shall be in addition to,
and not in derogation of, any other law for the
time being applicable to an industrial concern.
On its plain language, in the absence of anything
inconsistent in the Act, the provisions of the Code shall
obviously be applicable for the enforcement of the liability
of the surety directed to be enforced as aforesaid in the
same manner as a decree is enforced in a suit instituted in
this behalf. It is true, as has been emphasised by learned
counsel for the respondents, that there is no provision
corresponding to sub-section (8) of Section 32 for the
enforcement of the liability of a surety who has given only
personal guarantee but, in our opinion, keeping in view the
amendments introduced by Act 43 of 1985, it is not very
significant. To us it appears that in view of Section 46B of
the Act and for the reasons to be stated shortly even if
Section 46B was not there, in the absence of any provision
to the contrary in the Act, that order also, which was
passed in a case where relief contemplated by clause (a) of
Section 31(1) of the Act was claimed, could have been
enforced in the manner provided in the Code. The purpose
of yet inserting sub-section (8) in Section 32 seems to be
that it was not intended to apply the provisions of
execution of a decree for attachment or sale of property as
contained in the Code in its entirety and to achieve this
purpose the words "as far as practicable" were used in
that sub-section. To us it appears that in the absence of
any provision such as sub-section (8) of Section 32 applying
the manner provided in the Code for the execution of a
decree against a surety only "as far as practicable" the
entire provision contained in this behalf in the Code
501
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 28
shall be applicable. this would be so in view of the use of
the expression "any other law for the time being applicable
to an industrial concern". That the Code is applicable to
an industrial concern also is not in dispute and cannot be
doubted.
We may now state our reasons for holding that even if
Section 46B of the Act was not there the provisions of the
Code for the execution of a decree against a surety who
had given only personal guarantee would, in the absence
of any provision to the contrary in the Act, be applicable.
In view of the decision of this Court in The Central Taikies
Ltd. Kanpur v. Dwarka Prasad, [1961] 3 SCR 495, where it
was held that a persona designata is a person selected as
an individual in his private capacity, and not in his
capacity as filling a particular character or office, since
the term used in Section 31(1) of the Act is "district
judge" it cannot be doubted that the district judge is not a
persona designata but a court of ordinary civil jurisdiction
while exercising jurisdiction under Sections 31 and 32 of
the Act. In National Sewing Thread Co. Ltd. v. James
Chadwick & Bros. Ltd., [1953] SCR 1028 while repelling the
objection that an appeal under the Letters Patent against
the judgment of a Single Judge passed in an appeal
against the decision of the Registrar under Section 76(1) of
the Trade Marks Act, 1940 was not maintainable it was held
at pages 1033-34 of the Report:
"Obviously after the appeal had reached the High
Court it has to be determined according to the
rules of practice and procedure of that Court and
in accordance with the provisions of the charter
under which that court is constituted and which
confers on it power in respect to the method and
manner of exercising that jurisdiction. The rule
is well settled that when a statute directs that
an appeal shall lie to a Court already
established, then that appeal must be regulated by
the practice and procedure of that Court. This
rule was very succinctly stated by Viscount
Haldane L.C. in National Telephone Co. Ltd. v.
Postmaster-General, in these terms:
"When a question is stated to referred to an
established Court without more, it, in my opinion,
imports that the ordinary incidents of the
procedure of that Court are to attach, and also
that any general right of appeal from its decision
likewise attaches."
502
The same view was expressed by their
Lordships of the Privy Council in R.M.A.R.A.
Adaikappa Chettiar v. Ra. Chandrasekhara Thevar,
wherein it was said:
"Where a legal right is in dispute and the
ordinary Courts of the country are seized of such
dispute the Courts are governed by the ordinary
rules of procedure applicable thereto and an
appeal lies if authorised by such rules,
notwithstanding that the legal right claimed
arises under a special statute which does not, in
terms confer a right of appeal."
Again in Secretary of State for India v.
Chellikani Rama Rao, when dealing with the case
under the Madras Forest Act their Lordships
observed as follows:
"It was contended on behalf of the appellant
that all further proceedings in Courts in India or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 28
by way of appeal were incompetent, these being
excluded by the terms of the statute just quoted.
In their Lordships’ opinion this objection is not
well-founded. Their view is that when proceedings
of this character reach the District Court, that
Court is appealed to as one of the ordinary Courts
of the country, with regard to whose procedure,
orders, and decrees the ordinary rules of the
Civil Procedure Code apply."
Though the facts of the cases laying down the
above rule were not exactly similar to the facts
of the present case, the principle enunciated
therein is one of general application and has an
apposite application to the facts and
circumstances of the present case. Section 76 of
the Trade Marks Act confers a right of appeal to
the High Court and says nothing more about it.
That being so, the High Court being seized as such
of the appellate jurisdiction conferred by section
76 it has to exercise that jurisdiction in the
same manner as it exercises its other appellate
jurisdiction and when such jurisdiction is
exercised by a single Judge, his judgment becomes
subject to appeal under clause 15 of the Letters
Patent there being nothing to the contrary in the
Trade Marks Act.
And it is in view of this decision that we are of the
opinion that the provisions of the Code would have, even in
the absence of Section
503
46B of the Act, been attracted in the matter of enforcing
the liability of a surety. In view of the foregoing
discussion, the finding of the High Court even on this point
cannot be sustained. Since, however, the High Court has not
made a determination of the liability of the sureties as
contemplated by sub-section (6) of Section 32 of the Act,
the matter has to be sent back to it for doing so and
thereafter to pass an order as contemplated by clause (da)
of sub-section (7) of Section 32 of the Act and to proceed
to enforce the liability so determined an against the
sureties.
In the result, this appeal succeeds and is allowed
with costs and the judgment of the Division Bench and also
of the Single Judge of the High Court are set aside. The
High Court shall now decide the application made by the
appellant in accordance with law and in the light of the
observations made above.
S.C. AGRAWAL, J. Special leave granted.
In this appeal two questions arise for consideration:
1) whether a petition under sections 31 and 32 of the State
Financial Corporations Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’) can be filed only in the Bombay Civil City Court
and the Bombay High Court, on its original side, has no
jurisdiction to entertain it? and 2) whether in such a
petition, a decree/order can be passed directing payment
of money by respondents nos. 2 to 4 who stood surety for
repayment of the loan advanced by the appellant, Financial
Corporation to respondent no. 1? The Division Bench of the
Bombay High Court has answered both these questions against
the appellant. My learned brother Ojha, J. has disagreed
with this view of the Bombay High Court on both the
questions. He has held that as the extent of the liability
of the surety is more than Rupees fifty thousand the
application could only have been filed and was rightly filed
in the High Court which had the jurisdiction to entertain
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 28
it. He has also held that in view of the amendments
introduced in the Act by the Amending Act 43 of 1985, an
order for payment of money can be passed against the surety
who has given only a personal guarantee. While I am fully in
agreement with the decision of my learned brother on the
first question with regard to the jurisdiction of the Bombay
High Court to entertain the petition filed by the appellant,
I have not been able to persuade myself to agree with the
view taken by him on the second question.
Section 31 of the Act has been described in the
marginal note as special provisions for enforcement of
claims by the Financial Corpora-
504
tion. It deals with a situation where an industrial concern,
in breach of any agreement, makes any default in
repayment of any loan or advance or any instalment thereof
or in meeting its obligations in relation to any guarantee
given by the Corporation or otherwise fails to comply with
the terms of its agreement with the Financial Corporation or
where the Financial Corporation requires an industrial
concern to make immediate repayment of any loan or advance
under section 30 of the Act and the industrial concern fails
to make such repayment. It enables an officer of the
Financial Corporation, generally or specially authorised by
the Board in this behalf, to apply to the District Judge
within the limits of whose jurisdiction the Industrial
concern carries on the whole or a substantial part of its
business for one or more of the following reliefs:
(a) for an order for the sale of the property
pledged, mortgaged, hypothecated or assigned to the
Financial Corporation as security for the loan or
advance; or
(aa) for enforcing the liability of any surety; or
(b) for transferring the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation; or
(c) for an ad interim injunction restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or removing its
machinery or plant or equipment from the premises of
the industrial concern without the permission of the
Board, where such removal is apprehended.
Clause (aa) was inserted in sub-section (1) of section
31 by section 19 of Act 43 of 1985.
Section 32 of the Act prescribes the procedure to be
followed by the District Judge in respect of applications
under section 31 of the Act. Prior to the amendments
introduced in it by Act 43 of 1985, the said section read as
under:
"32. Procedure of district judge in respect of
applications under Section 31. (1) When the
application is for the reliefs mentioned in
clauses (a) and (c) of sub-section (1) of section
31, the district judge shall pass an ad interim
order attaching the security, or so much of the
property of the industrial concern as would on
being sold realise in his estimate an amount
equivalent in value to the outstanding
505
liability of the industrial concern to the
Financial Corporation, together with the costs of
the poceedings taken under section 31, with or
without an ad interim injunction restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or removing
its machinery, plant or equipment.
(2) When the application is for the relief
mentioned in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 28
section 31, the district judge shall grant an ad
interim injunction restraining the industrial
concern from transferring or removing its
machinery, plant or equipment and issue a notice
calling upon the industrial concern to show cause,
on a date to be specified in the notice, why the
management of the industrial concern should not be
transferred to the Financial Corporation.
(3) Before passing any order under sub-section (1)
or sub-section (2) the district judge may, if he
thinks fit, examine the officer making the
application.
(4) At the same time as he passes an order under
sub-section (1), the district judge shall issue to
the industrial concern a notice accompanied by
copies of the order, the application and the
evidence, if any, recorded by him calling upon it
to show cause on a date to be specified in the
notice why the ad interim order of attachment
should not be made absolute or the injunction
confirmed.
(5) If no cause is shown on or before the date
specified in the notice under sub-sections (2) and
(4), the district judge shall forthwith make the
ad interim order absolute and direct the sale of
the attached property or transfer the management
of the industrial concern to the Financial
Corporation or confirm the injunction.
(6) If cause is shown, the district judge shall
proceed to investigate the claim of the Financial
Corporation in accordance with the provisions
contained in the Code of Civil procedure, 1908, in
so far as such provisions may be applied thereto.
(7) After making an investigation under sub-
section (6), the district judge may-
506
(a) confirm the order of attachment and direct the
sale of the attached property:
(b) Vary the order of attachment so as to release
a portion of the property from attachment and
direct the sale of the remainder of the attached
property;
(c) release the property from attachment;
(d) confirm or dissolve the injunction; or
(e) transfer the management of the industrial
concern to the Financial Corporation or reject the
claim made in this behalf:
Provided that when making an order under clause
(c) the district judge may make such further
orders as he thinks necessary to protect the
interests of the Financial Corporation and may
apportion the costs of the proceedings in such
manner as he thinks fit:
Provided further that unless the Financial
Corporation intimates to the district judge that
it will not appeal against any order releasing any
property from attachment, such order shall not be
given effect to, untill the expiry of the period
fixed under sub-section (9) within which an appeal
may be preferred or, if an appeal is preferred,
unless the High Court otherwise directs until the
appeal is disposed of.
(8) An order of attachment or sale of property
under this section shall be carried into effect as
far as practicable in the manner provided in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 28
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 for the attachment
or sale of property in execution of a decree, as
if the Financial Corporation were the decree-
holder.
(8A) An order under this section transferring the
management of an industrial concern to the
Financial Corporation shall be carried into
effect, as far as may be practicable, in the
manner provided in the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, for the possession of immovable property of
the delivery of movable property in execution of a
decree, as if the Financial Corporation were the
decree-holder.
507
(9) Any party aggrieved by an order under sub-
section (5) or sub-section (7) may, within thirty
days from the date of the order, appeal to the
High Court, and upon such appeal the High Court
may, after hearing the parties, pass such orders
thereon as it thinks proper.
(10) Where proceedings for liquidation in respect
of an industrial concern have commenced before
an application is made under sub-section (1) of
section 31, nothing in this section shall be
construed as giving to the Financial Corporation
any preference over the other creditors of the
industrial concern not conferred on it by any
other law.
(11) The functions of a district judge under this
section shall be exercisable-
(a) in a presidency town, where there is a city
civil court having jurisdiction, by a judge of
that court and in the absence of such court, by
the High Court; and
(b) elsewhere, also by an additional district
judge or by any judge of the principal court of
civil jurisdiction.
(12) For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that any court competent to grant an ad
interim injunction under this section shall also
have the power to appoint a Receiver and to
exercise all the other powers incidental thereto."
By Act 43 of 1985, the following amendments have been
introduced in section 32 of the Act:
(1) Sub-section (1A) which reads as under was
inserted:
"(1A) When the application is for the relief
mentioned in clause (aa) of sub-section (1) of
section 31, the district judge shall issue a
notice calling upon the surety to show cause on a
date to be specified in the notice why his
liability should not be enforced."
(2) In sub-section (3), the words, or issuing a notice
under sub-section (1A) "were inserted after the words" "or
sub-section (2)".
508
(3) Subsection (4) was substituted by sub-sections (4)
and (4A), which read as under:
"(4) At the same time as he passes an order under
subsection (1), the district judge shall issue to
the industrial concern or to the owner of the
security attached a notice accompanied by copies
of the order, the application and the evidence, if
any, recorded by him calling upon it or him to
show cause on a date to be specified in the notice
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 28
why the ad interim order of attachment should not
be made absolute or the injunction confirmed.
(4A) If no cause is shown on or before the date
specified in the notice under sub-section (1A),
the district judge shall forthwith order the
enforcement of the liability of the surety.
(4) In sub-section (7), clause (da) was inserted which
provides as under:
"(da) direct the enforcement of the liability of
the surety or reject the claim made in this
behalf; or"
(5) In the first proviso to sub-section (7), the words
"or making an order rejecting the claim to enforce the
liability of the surety under clause (da) or making an order
rejecting the claim to transfer the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation under clause
(e)" were inserted after the words "order under clause (c)".
(6) In the second proviso to sub-section (7), the
following words were inserted after words "any property from
attachment":
or rejecting the claim to enforce the liability of
the surety or rejecting the claim to transfer the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation."
(7) In sub-section (9), for the words "sub-section
(5)", the words "under sub-section (4A), sub-section (5)"
were substituted.
In order to find an answer to the second question, it
is necessary to construe the words "for enforcing the
liability of any surety" which were introduced by way of
clause (aa) in sub-section (1) of section 31
509
by the Act 43 of 1985, and also find mention in sub-sections
(IA), (4A) and (7) of section 32. The learned counsel for
the appellant has urged that the said words are wide in
their amplitude and would cover a case where the surety has
given a personal guarantee only and his liability is
purely monetary. The learned counsel for the sureties, viz.,
respondents Nos. 2, 3 and 4, has, on the other hand,
submitted that the said words must be construed in a more
limited sense to cover only those cases where surety has
given security of property to guarantee the repayment of
loan and in such an event the remedy provided by sections
31 and 32 of the Act can be invoked against the surety and
that the said provisions do not enable passing of an order
for payment of a monetary sum against the surety who has
given personal guarantee only. In order to deal with these
rival contentions, it would be of relevance to take note of
the state of law existing on the date of the enactment of
Act 43 of 1985 whereby amendments were introduced in
sections 31 and 32 of the Act.
The provisions contained in sections 31 and 32 of the
Act came up for consideration before this Court in Gujarat
State Financial Corporation v. M/s Natson Manufacturing Co.
(P) Ltd. & Ors., [1979] 1 SCR 372. That case related to
payment of court fee on an application submitted under
section 31(1) of the Act and the question for consideration
was whether such an application should be treated on par
with a suit by a mortgagee to enforce the mortgage debt by
sale of the mortgaged property which is being treated as a
money suit failing within the purview of Article 1 of
Schedule I to the Bombay Court Fees Act, 1959 or it should
bear a fixed court fee under the residuary Article 1(c) to
Schedule II of the said Act. This Court disagreeing withthe
view of the Gujarat High Court, held that an application
under section 31(1) of the Act would be covered by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 28
residuary Article 1(c) of Schedule II to the said Act and it
should bear a fixed court fee. In this context, this Court
has examined the nature of the proceedings contemplated by
section 31(1) of the Act. After referring to the provisions
of the Act, this Court has held that "it would be
inappropriate to say that an application under section 31(1)
is something akin to a suit by a mortgagee to recover
mortgage money by sale of mortgaged property" and that "in
an application under section 31(1), the Corporation does not
and cannot pray for a decree for its outstanding dues" and
that none of the three reliefs mentioned in sub-section (1)
of section 31, if granted, "results in a money decree or
decree for recovery of outstanding loans or advance" (pages
378-379). After referring to the provisions contained in
sub-section (6) of section 32, which provides for
investigation of the claim of the Financial Corporation in
510
accordance with the provisions contained in the code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, this Court has laid down:
"The claim of the Corporation is not the monetary
claim to be investigated though it may become
necessary to specify the figure for the purpose of
determining how much of the security should be
sold. But the investigation of the claim does not
involve all the contentions that can be raised in
a suit. The claim of the Corporation is that there
is a breach of agreement or default in making
repayment of loan or advance or instalment thereof
and, therefore, the mortgaged property should be
sold. It is not a money claim. The contest can be
that the jurisdictional fact which enables the
Corporation to seek the relief of sale of property
is not available to it or no case is made out for
transfer of management of the industrial concern."
(p.381)
This Court has further emphasised that sub-
section (7) of section 32 "prescribes what reliefs
can be given after investigation under subsection
(6) is made, and it clearly gives a clue to the
nature of contest under sub-section (6)" and
further that sub-section (8) of section 32 .’only
prescribes the mode and method of executing the
order of attachment or sale of property as provided
in the Code of Civil Procedure". According to this
Court, "the provision contained in sub-section (6)
does not expand the contest in the application
under s. 31(1) as to render the application to be a
suit between a mortgagee and the mortgagor for sale
of mortgaged property" (p.381). This Court has held
that "the substantive relief in an application
under s. 31(1) is something akin to an application
for attachment of property in execution of a decree
at a stage posterior to the passing of the decree"
(p.382).
In Everest Industrial Corporation & Ors. v. Gujarat
State Financial Corporation, [1987] 3 SCR 507 this Court was
examining the question whether the rate of interest on the
amount payable under an order passed under s. 32 of the Act
from the date said order is governed by s. 34 of the- Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 or whether it is payable at the
contractual rate. This Court held that s. 34 CPC was not
applicable to these proceedings. After referring to the
earlier decision in Gujarat State Financial Corporation v.
M/s Natson Manufacturing Co. (P) Ltd. & Ors. case (supra),
this Court has reiterated that the proceedings instituted
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 28
under s. 31(1) of the Act is something akin to an
application for attachment of property in execution of a
decree at a stage posterior
511
to the passing of the decree and, therefore, no question of
passing any order under s. 34 CPC would arise since s. 34
CPC would be applicable only at the stage of the passing of
the decree and not to a stage posterior to the passing of
the decree.
In Maganlal etc. v. Jaiswal Industries Neemach & Ors.,
[1989] 3 SCR 697, after referring to the decisions mentioned
above, this Court has observed:
"In view of these two decisions, the law seems to
be settled that an application under section 31(1)
of the Act cannot be put on par to a suit for
enforcement of a mortgage nor the order passed
thereon under section 32 of the Act be put on par
as if it was an order in a suit between a
mortgagee and the mortgagor for sale of mortgaged
property. On the other hand the substantive relief
in an application section 31(1) is something akin
to an application for attachment of property
in execution of a decree at a stage posterior to
the passing of the decree." (p.710)
The question whether the provisions of ss. 31 and
32 of the Act could be invoked against the property
of the surety came up for consideration before a
full bench of the Allahabad High Court in Munnalal
Gupta v. Uttar Pradesh Financial Corporation &
Anr., AIR 1975 ALL 416. In that case, the surety
had mortgaged his house by way of collateral
security for the loan granted to the borrower
industrial concern and the Financial Corporation
had moved an application under s. 31 of the Act for
sale of the property of the surety which had been
mortgaged as well as the property of the principal
debtor which had been mortgaged and the question
was whether an order for sale of the property
of the surety could be passed on an application
under s. 31( 1) of the Act. It was held that the
relief which can be granted by a District Judge
under s. 32 of the Act must be confined against
the borrower industrial concern and its property
and that the District Judge can pass an ad-interim
order attaching the security or so much of the
property of the industrial concern as would be
sufficient in his opinion to satisfy the
outstanding liability. It was laid down that the
order of attachment is restricted to the property
of industrial concern given to the Corporation by
way of surety and he is not empowered to attach the
property of a person other than an industrial
concern. According to the said decision, a surety,
who is not a partner or otherwise interested in the
industrial concern, cannot be proceeded against
under s. 31 so that his property, even if mortgaged
with the Corporation, cannot be attached
512
by the District Judge. In this context, the teamed Judges
pointed out the sub-section (4) of s. 32 contemplates a
notice to the borrower industrial concern after an interim
order has been passed to show cause why the ad interim
injunction should not be made absolute and the said
provision does not contemplate a notice to the surety and
that it would be unthinkable that the legislature intended
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 28
that the property of the surety may be attached and put to
sale without even a notice to him.
The amendments introduced in ss. 31 and 32 by Act 43 of
1985 seek to remove the lacunae in those provisions as
pointed out in the aforesaid judgment of the Allahabad High
Court and with that end in view clause (aa) has been
inserted in sub-section (1) of section 31 whereby a
Financial Corporation can move an application under s. 31(1)
for enforcing the liability of any surety and amendments
have been made in s. 32 to prescribe the procedure for grant
of the said relief on such application. Express provision
has been made in sub-section (1A) of s. 32 for issuing a
notice to the surety requiring him to show cause why his
liability should not be enforced.
It is argued on behalf of the appellant that the words
"for enforcing the liability of any surety" are wide in
their amplitude to cover the monetary liability of a surety
who has given personal guarantee only and has not given his
property as security for repayment of the loan by the
borrower industrial concern, though it is not disputed that
in so far as the borrower industrial concern is
concerned, the amendments introduced in ss. 31 and 32 by
Act 43 of 1985 do not alter the existing law and no order in
the nature of a money decree can be passed against him in
these proceedings. It is, however, urged that in so far as
the surety is concerned the position is different and in
view of the amendments introduced in ss. 31 and 32, an order
in the nature of a money decree can be passed against the
surety who has given personal guarantee only and has not
given security of his property for repayment of the loan.
This argument implies that as a result of the amendments
introduced in sections 31 and 32 by Act 43 of 1985 while the
nature of the proceedings as against the borrower industrial
concern remains unchanged and the said proceedings continue
to be proceedings akin to an application for attachment of
property in execution of a decree at a stage posterior to
the passing of the decree, the nature of these poceedings
has been changed in so far as the surety is concerned and
they have become proceedings in which an order in the nature
of a money decree can be passed. In other words, in a case
where the borrower industrial concern has obtained a loan
from the Financial Corporation without furnishing the
security of property on the basis of
513
a personal guarantee given by the surety, the Financial
Corporation will have to proceed against the borrower
industrial concern by instituting a regular suit for
recovery of the dues whereas it can proceed against the
surety under sections 31 and 32 of the Act. It means that as
compared to the principal debtor the Financial Corporation
vis-a-vis the surety has been placed on a more advantageous
Position. It may, however, be mentioned that under the
common law, which finds re-enactment in section 128 of
the Indian Contract Act, 1872, the liability of the surety
is coextensive with that of the principal debtor unless it
is otherwise provided by the contract. It means that the
liability must be proved against the surety in the same way
as against the principal debtor. Thus under the general law
the surety stands on the same footing as the principal
debtor. These submissions raise the question: can the
legislature be attributed the intention to alter the
existing law so as to bring about a change in the nature of
proceedings under sections 31 and 32 of the Act and also to
alter the general law relating to the enforcement of the
liability of the surety? I find it difficult to answer this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 28
question in the affirmative.
In the matter of interpretation of statutes, a
principle which is well-recognised in England is: "it is
thought to be in the highest degree improbable that
Parliament would depart from the general system of law
without expressing its intention with irresistible
clearness, and to give any such effect to general words
merely because this would be their widest, usual, natural
or literal meaning would be to place on them a construction
other than that which Parliament must be supposed to have
intended." (See: Mexwell on The Interpretation of Statutes,
12th Edition, p. 116). In Minet v. Leman, [1955] (20) Eeav.
269. Sir John Romilly, M.R. stated as a principle of
construction, which could not be disputed, that "the general
words of the Act are not to be so construed as to alter the
previous policy of the law, unless no sense or meaning can
be applied to those words consistently with the intention of
preserving the existing policy untouched". In this context,
it would be of relevance to take note of the decision of
this court in M.K.Ranganathan & Anr. v. Government of Madras
& Ors., [1955] 2 SCR 374. In that case this Court was
required to construe the words "or any sale held without
leave of the Court of any of the properties of the Company"
which were added in s. 232 (1) of the Indian Companies
Act, 1913 by Act 22 of 1936. the said amendment was
introduced with a view to get over the decision of the
Allahabad High Court in Kayastha Training and Banking
Corporation Ltd v. Sat Narain Singh, [1921] ILR 43 All.
433. The question was whether the words which had been added
refer only to sales held through the intervention of the
514
court or whether they included the sales effected by the
secured creditors outside the winding up and without the
intervention of the court. This Court held that the said
words referred only to sales held through the intervention
of the Court and that the amendments whereby these
words were introduced were not intended to bring within
the sweep of the general words "sales effected by the
secured creditors outside the winding up". In order to
arrive at this conclusion, this Court placed reliance on the
principle of interpretation referred to above and it was
observed:
"If the construction sought to be put upon the
words "or any sale held without leave of the Court
of any of the properties" by the Appellants were
accepted it would effect a fundamental
alteration in the law as it stood before the
amendment was inserted in section 232 by Act XXII
of 1936. Whereas before the amendment the secured
creditor stood outside the winding up and could if
the mortgage deed so provided, realise his
security without the intervention of the Court by
effecting a sale either by private treaty or by
public auction, no such sale could be effected by
him after the amendment and that was certainly a
fundamental alteration in the law which could not
be effected unless one found words used which
pointed unmistakably to that conclusion or unless
such intention was expressed with irresistible
clearness. Having regard to the circumstances
under which the amendment was inserted in section
232 by Act XXII of 1936 and also having regard to
the context we are not prepared to hold that the
Legislature in inserting that amendment intended
to effect a fundamental alteration in law with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 28
irresistible clearness. Such a great and sudden
change of policy could not be attributed to the
Legislature and it would be legitimate therefore
to adopt the narrower interpretation of those
words of the amendment rather than an
interpretation which would have the contrary
effect." (p. 388)
In my opinion, regard must be had of this principle of
interpretation while construing the expression "for
enforcing the liability of any surety" which has been
inserted by way of clause (aa) in sub-section (1) of section
31 by Act 43 of 1985. Considering the amendments
introduced in sections 31 and 32 of the Act by Act 43 of
1985 and having regard to the principle of interpretation
referred to above I do not find any provision in the said
amendments which may indicate that
515
Parliament has evinced an intention to effect a fundamental
alteration in the law with irresistible clearness. In this
context, it would be of relevance to note that while
introducing the said amendments Parliament has chosen not to
make any alteration in relation to the following matters:
(1) In the marginal note, section 31 is described as
‘special provisions for enforcement of claims by Financial
Corporation’. No alteration has been made therein by Act 43
of 1985 and section 31 continues to be a special provision
for enforcement of claims by Financial Corporation.
(2) Parliament has not expressly indicated that an
order for payment of money only may be passed against the
surety.
(3) Although in sub-sections (8) and (8A) of section
32, express provision has been made prescribing the
procedure for carrying into effect an order of attachment
and sale of property and an order transferring the
management of an industrial concern to the Financial
Corporation passed under sub-section (7) of section 32, no
specific provision was made prescribing the procedure for
carrying into effect of an order passed under clause (da) of
sub-section (7) of section 32 directing the enforcement of
the liability of the surety. It cannot be comprehended that
while making a provision which would enable passing of
an order in the nature of a money decree against a surety on
an application under section 31 of the Act, Parliament would
have refrained from making a corresponding provision
prescribing the procedure for carrying into effect of such
an order.
Having regard to the features referred to above, it
appears to be more in consonance with the scheme of the Act
and the object underlying sections 31 and 32 that by
introducing the amendments in sections 31 and 32 of the
Act, Parliament intended to place the surety on the same
footing as the principal debtor in the matter of enforcement
of the claims of the Financial Corporation so as to enable
the Financial Corporation to obtain relief against the
properties of the principal debtor as well as the surety. If
considered in this perspective, the expression "enforcing
the liability of any surety" in clause (aa) of section 31(1)
would mean enforcing the liability of a surety in the same
manner as the liability of principal debtor is enforced,
i.e., by attachment and sale of property keeping in view
that the proceedings under sections 31 and 32 of the Act are
akin to an application for attachment of property in
execution of a decree at a stage posterior to the passing
516
of the decree. This construction would obviate the need for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 28
a procedure for carrying into effect of the order passed
under clause (da) of sub-section (7) of section 32 of the
Act because such an order would be an order for attachment
and sale of the property of the surety and it can be carried
into effect in accordance with sub-section (8) of section 32
which prescribes the procedure for carrying into effect an
order for attachment and sale of property. This construction
will also preserve the special nature of the proceedings
under section 31 and would not result in bringing about a
fundamental alteration in the law laid down by this Court
with regard to the nature of these proceedings as well as
the general law whereunder a surety is to be treated on par
with the principal debtor.
For the reasons aforesaid, I am in agreement with the
view of the Division Bench of the High Court on this
question and I am unable to concur with the decision of my
learned brother Ojha, J.
I would, therefore, uphold the decision of the Division
Bench of the High Court that the petition whereby the
appellant had sought the relief of a money decree for
payment of Rs. 15,87,391.20 paise against respondents 2 to 4
was not maintainable and the said relief could not be
granted to the appellant in proceedings under section 31 of
the Act. As a result, the petition filed by the appellant
must be dismissed and for the same reason this appeal also
must fail.
R. N. J. Appeal allowed.
517