Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARANDAS MORARDAS GAZIWALA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. P. AM. PAPAMMAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/03/1966
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 333 1966 SCR 38
ACT:
Principal and Agent-Whether Agent can sue Principal for ren-
dition of accounts.
Indian Evidence Act, 1872, s. 92, Proviso 3--Oral agreement
not to enforce promissory note till certain conditions
precedent fulfilled-Such oral agreement whether can be
proved.
HEADNOTE:
An agent sued his principals for rendition of accounts for
the period of the agency. The principals also filed a suit
claiming enforcement of a promissory note the agent had
executed in their favour. The agent pleaded an oral
agreement by which the principals were not to enforce the
promissory note during the period of the agency and unless
the sum remained due and payable after accounting. The
trial court granted a decree on the promissory note bat
directed that it should be adjusted against any sum found
due after accounting in the agent’s suit. The principals
went to the High Court and failing there appealed to this
Court. It was contended on behalf of the appellants that
(1) an agent was not entitled in law to sue his principal
for accounts and (2) the parole agreement could not be
proved in view of s. 92 of the Indian Evidence Act.
HELD:(i) Though an agent has no statutory right for an ac-
count from his principal nevertheless there may be special
circumstances rendering it equitable that the principal
should account to the agent. Such a case may arise when all
the accounts are in the possession of the Principal and the
agent does not possess accounts to enable him to determine
his claim for commission against his principal. The right
of the agent may also arise in an exceptional case when his
remuneration depends on the extent of dealings which are not
known to him or where he cannot be aware of the extent of
the amount due to him unless the accounts of his principal
are gone into. In the special circumstances of the present
case the agent was entitled to sue his principals for
accounts for the material period. [42 H D-E]
(ii) The parole agreement relied on in the case was a
collateral agreement and was not related to the mode of
discharge of the obligation under the promissory note. It
was a condition precedent to the enforceability of the
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promissory note and therefore evidence of oral agreement
could be adduced under the 3rd proviso to s. 92 of the Evi-
dence Act. [43H--44B]
Case law referred to,
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 177 and
178 of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
December 20, 1960, of the Madras High Court in Appeals Nos.
45 and 202 of 1957.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, B. Datta, J. B.
Dadachanji, for the appellants.
S. T. Desai and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondents.
The, Judgment of The Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. These appeals are brought, by special leave,
from the judgment and decree of the, Madras High Court dated
september 20, 1961 in A.S. Nos. 45 and 202 of 1957.
Narandas Morardas Gaziwala and Lakshmi Chand & Co. were two
firms of partnership carrying on business in lace and silver
thread at Surat in the State of Bombay. They had dealings
with another firm at Kumbakonam-Krishna and Company-who
acted as their agents for selling their goods in the three
districts of Tanjore, Tiruchirapalli and Mathurai in the
State of Madras on commission basis. The two partners of
Krishna & Co. were Murugesa Chettiar and his wife’s sister’s
husband Gopal Chettiar. It appears that Krishna & Co. was
acting as commission agents on behalf of the two firms at
Surat from 1944 till 1951 when the partnership of Krishna &
Co. became dissolved by mutual agreement between the
partners. Murugesa Chettiar, one of the partners of
,Krishna & Co. took over all the assets and liabilities of
the firm on dissolution and the other partner Gopal Chettiar
retired from the firm. In respect of the dealings of the
two firms at Surat (here. inafter to be referred to as the
Surat Firm) with Krishna & Co., the latter became indebted
in 1951. On April 1, 1951 Murugesa Chettiar (hereinafter
referred to as the plaintiff) executed a pro. missory note
in favour of Narandas Morardas Gaziwala for a sum of Rs.
7.500/- the amount ascertained as due and payable by Krishna
& Co. in respect of the dealings of that firm with the Surat
firm on a settlement of account. It is the case of the
plaintiff that on April 1, 1951 the Surat firm constituted
Murugesa Chettiar as the sole agent for selling their goods
bearing the trade mark Napoleon........ Vivekanada" and
other marks for the three districts for a period of 5 years
from April 1, 1951 agreeing to pay commission at a flat rate
of Rs. 2/- per ’mark’ for all sales effected in those
territories either on orders booked, by him or not. The
case of the plaintiff was that the Surat firm circumvented
the terms of this contract of sole agency and privately
effected sales through others or direct to customers in
those territories. The plaintiff’s contention further was
that the Surat fim as part of this agreement of sole agency
agreed to have its indebtedness under the promissory note
adjusted towards the commission that may be earned by him.
The plaintiff therefore instituted O.S. No. 87 of 1954 in
the District Munsif’s Court, Kancheepuram praying for
rendition of accounts from April 1, 1951 till the date of
the suit in order to ascertain the amount due and payable to
him. The Surat
LS5SCI--5
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firm in its turn instituted O.S. no. 21 of 1954 in the court
of Subordinate Judge, Chingleput against the plaintiff
seeking to recover the amount due under the promissory note.
viz., a sum of Rs. 7.500/By an order of the District Court,
Chingleput O.S. no. 87 of 1954 on the file of District
Munsif, Kancheepuram was transferred to the file of the
Subordinate Judge, Chingleput and taken on his file as O.S.
no. 35 of 1955. Both the suits were tried together by con-
sent of parties. On December 12, 1956 the Subordinate Judge
held that the plaintiff was constituted as the sole agent on
commission basis for the three territories, Tanjore,
Tiruchirappalli and Madurai for a period of 5 years as
pleaded and proved by him and the Surat firm was liable to
render an account of their sales in those territories from
April 1, 1951 and accordingly granted a preliminary decree
for rendition of accounts. In O.S. no. 21 of 1954 the
Subordinate Judge granted a decree for the amount covered by
the promissory note but directed that the decretal amount
should be adjusted out of the commission that may be found
due and payable on taking of accounts in O.S. no. 35 of
1955. The Surat firm preferred an appeal against the decree
in O.S. no. 21 of 1954A.S. no. 45 of 1957. They also
preferred an appeal against, the decree in O.S. 35 of 1955
to the District Court of Chingleput and that appeal was
transferred to the High Court and heard along with A.S. no.
45 of 1957. The High Court, by its judgment dated September
20, 1961, dismissed both the appeals.
The first question presented for determination in these
appeals is whether the plaintiff is entitled to sue for
accounts, he being the agent and the defendant-Surat firm
being the principal. Section 213 of the Indian Contract Act
specifically provides that an agent is bound to render
proper accounts to his principal on demand. The principal’s
right to sue an agent for rendition of accounts is, there-
fore, recognised by the statute. But the question is
whether an agent can sue the principal for accounts. There
is no such provision in the Indian Contract Act. In our
opinion, the statute is not exhaustive and the rightof the
agent to sue the principal for accounts is an equitable
rightarising under special circumstances and is not a
statutory right.
In English law an agent has a right to have an account
taken, and where the accounts are of a simple nature they
can be taken in an ordinary action in the Queen’s Bench
Division (Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol, 1, p. 196). In
Bowstead on Agency, 12th Edn., p. 173 it is observed as
follows:
"Where the accounts between a principal and
agent are of so complicated a nature that they
cannot be satisfactorily dealt with in an
action at law, the agent has a right to have
an account taken in equity, but the relation
of principal and agent is not alone sufficient
to entitle. an agent, to an account in equity,
when the matter can be dealt with in an
section at law."
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In the 14th edition of Story’s Equity Jurisprudence the
learned author, after setting out the general law that an
agent is not entitled to sue his principal for accounts.
observes as follows:
"There are usually exceptions to all rules,
and where the principal has kept the accounts
between him and his agent and the matters and
things transacted in the course of the agency
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are within his own peculiar knowledge, the
agent may ask for accounting."
In 1852 it was held in Padwick v. Stanley(1) that merely
because the principal was entitled to have an account taken
in equity as against his agent, it by no means followed that
the agent had a similar right against his principal.
Notwithstanding this ruling a suit by an agent against his
principal for accounts was entertained by the ViceChancellor
in Shepard v. Brown.(1) In that case, the plaintiff aneged
that he was employed by the defendants to obtain orders for
goods manufactured by them and that he was to be allowed re-
muneration in the shape of commission upon the amount of all
goods sold under orders which were obtained through his
efforts. The plaintiff sought an account of all orders
received and executed by the defendants through his
exertions and to have it ascertained how much was payable to
him for commission in respect of the goods so sold. The
Vice-Chancellor overruled the demurrer that the plaintiff
might recover in an action the whole amount of that com-
mission which he was seeking to recover by account in the
Equity Court and observed as follows:
"Where the case of the plaintiff is one in
which he seeks an account of transactions and
dealings with the defendants, the evidence of
which transactions must remain principally, it
not entirely, in the hands of the defendants,
it is extremely difficult to say that, upon a
bill seeking an account of that kind upon a
case so stated, this Court has no jurisdiction
to entertain it."
The very next year the Appeal Court in Chancery ruled that a
bill for an account in equity by an agent against his
principal for his commission on orders obtained by the agent
was demurrable. It was held in Smith v. Leveaux(3) that the
fact that the agent may be ignorant of the orders did not
entitle him to file a bill for an account of what was due to
him for commission, but that his remedy was at law.
According to Lord Justice Turner, in the absence of an
allegation as to complication of accounts, the bill could
not be entertained in equity. The remedy at law was not
however doubted, though that remedy was not as efficacious
as the equitable remedy in matters of account. But the
principle was affirmed by the Vice-Chancellor-
(1) 68 E.R. (2) 66 E.R.
681.
46 E.R. 274.
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again in a later case, Blyth v. Whiffin, (1) that the agent
cart maintain a bill in equity against his principal for an
account in special circumstances. It was observed by the
Vice-Chancellor in that case:
"With regard to that question, whether an
agent can maintain a bill against his
principal for an account, it is not necessary
to go further than to say I entertain no doubt
on the subject............ if there are
complicated accounts it is just as much open
to the suit of the agent against the principal
as on the part of the principal against the
agent; but in neithercase is it to be
permitted unless there be a complicated ac-
count."
The right of an agent to claim an account against the
principal for the commission due to him on orders received
by his principal from the customers introduced by the agent
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was recognised also in Bullen & Leake’s Precedents of
Pleadings, 11th Edn. at pp. 71-72.
In our opinion, the legal position in India is not
different. Though an agent has no statutory right for an
account from his principal nevertheless there may be special
circumstanoes rendering it equitable that the principal
should account to the agent. Such a case may arise where
all the accounts are in the possession of the principal and
the agent does not possess accounts to enable him to
determine his claim for commission against his principal.
The right of the agent may also arise in as exceptional case
where his remuneration depends on the extent of dealings
which are not known to him or where he cannot be aware of
the extent of the amount due to him unless the accounts of
his principal are gone into. This view is borne out by the
decision of the Madras High Court in Ramachandra Madhavadoss
Co. v. Moovakat Moidunkutti Birankutti & Bros. Firm.
Cannanore(1), of the Lahore High Court in Ram Lal Kapur &
Sons v. Asian Commercial Assurance Co. Ltd.(1) and of the
Nagpur High Court in Basant Kumar and others v.
Roshanlal(1). In the present case the High Court has found
that the transactions in respect of which the plaintiff is
entitled to commission are peculiarly within the knowledge
of the principal alone, viz., of the Surat firm. There is
also prima facie evidence adduced on behalf of the plaintiff
in this case in support of his allegation that the Surat
firm had made direct sales to customers in contravention of
the contract of sole agency granted to the plaintiff. The
High Court referred in this connection to the evidence of
the plaintiffExs. A-26 and A-28-which are complaints made
by the plaintiff to the Surat firm with regard to direct
sales made to Mr. M. K. lyengar,The high court has also
observed that to none of the letters or tele grams from the
plaintiff the Surat firm or their accredited representative
Ratilal cared to send any reply. We are, therefore, of the
(1) (172) 27L. T.R. 330. (2) A.I.R. 1938
Mad.707.
(3) A.I.R. 1933 Lah. 483. (4) I.L.R. [1954]
Nagpur 435.
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opinion that, in the special circumstances of this case, the
plaintiff is entitled to sue the Surat firm for accounts for
the material period.
We proceed to consider the next question involved in this
case viz. whether the plaintiff is entitled to set up a
perole agreement to prove the condition precedent as to the
enforceability of the promissory note. The argument of the
Solicitor-General on behalf of the Surat firm is that the
plaintiff is precluded from setting up a parole agreement by
reason of the provisions of s. 92 of the Evidence Act which
states:
"92. When the terms of any such contract,
grant or other disposition of property, or any
matter required by law to be reduced to the
form of a document, have been proved according
to the last section, no evidence of any oral
agreement or statement shall be admitted, as
between the parties to any such instrument or
their representatives in interest, for the
purpose of contradicting, varying, adding to,
or subtracting from, its terms:
Proviso
(1)....................................
Proviso
(2)....................................
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Proviso (3) The existence of any separate oral
agreement, constituting a condition precedent
to the attaching of any obligation under any
such contract, grant or disposition of
property, may be proved.
It was submitted by the Solicitor-General that the High
Court has found that there is an agreement between the
parties that the promissory note should be discharged by
commission payable by the Surat firm. It was contended that
the agreement was with regard to the mode of discharge of
the obligation of promissory note and not a condition
precedent to its enforceability. It was therefore argued
that the bar under s. 92 of the Evidence Act operates and
the plaintiff was not entitled to adduce any evidence with
regard to a parole agreement. The contention was that the
promissory note represented in law an unconditional
undertaking to pay an amount which the plaintiff was already
under a liability to pay and it was not open to him in law
to plead a contemporaneous oral agreement contrary to the
terms of that undertaking. We are unable to accept the
submission of the Solicitor-General as correct. The finding
of the High Court is that there was a collateral oral
agreement that the obligation under the promissory note will
not be enforced for 5 years and unless the amount was due
after accounting for the period of the commission agency.
In our opinion, the agreement was
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not related to the mode of discharge of the obligation under
the promissory note but that it Was a condition precedent to
the enforceability of the promissory note and it is open to
the plaintiff to adduce evidence of oral agreement under the
3rd proviso to S. 92 of the Evidence Act. The view that we
have taken is borne out by the decision of the Judicial
Committee in Rowland Ady and others v. Administrator-General
of Burma(1). In that case it was observed by the Judicial
Committee that it is necessary to distinguish a collateral
agreement which alters the legal effect of the instrument
from. an agreement that the instrument should not be an
effective instrument until some condition is fulfilled, or,
to put it in another form, it is necessary to distinguish an
agreement in defeasance of the contract from an agreement
suspending the coming into force of the contract contained
in the promissory note. It was therefore held by the
Judicial Committee in that case that where the promissory
note is, by its express terms, payable on demand, that is at
once, the obligation under the note attaches immediately. A
collateral oral agreement not to make demand until a certain
specified condition is fufilled has the intention and effect
of suspending the coming into force of that obligation,
which is the contract contained in the promissory note.
Such an oral agreement constitutes a condition precedent to
the attaching of the obligation and is within the terms of
Proviso 3 of s. 92 of the Evidence Act. On the facts of
that case the Judicial Committee held that by terms of the
oral agreement no liability under the note could arise until
the happening of an event and that being so, the case fell
within the 3rd proviso to s. 92 of the Evidence Act. It was
further made clear that unless the agreement had the effect
of making the liability conditional upon the happening of an
event, proof of an oral agreement at variance with the terms
of the note would not be permitted. At page 202 of the Re-
port. Lord Wright observed as follows:
"A case like the present is to be
distinguished from that dealt with in Ramjibun
Serowgy v. Oghore Nath ChatterjeeI.L.R. 25
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Cal. 401.-in which the promissory note, though
absolute in its terms, was said to be subject
to an oral agreement, providing that it was
not to be enforceable by suit until the
happening of a particular event. Sale J., in
rejecting this evidence, expressed his opinion
that the proper meaning of Proviso (3) was
that the contemporaneous oral agreement to be
admissible must be to the effect that a
written contract was to be of no force at all
and was to constitute no obligation until the
happening of a certain event. This
description in their Lordships’ judgment
applies to the present case. To the same
effect Page J., in Walter Mitchell v. A. K.
Tennent-I.L.R. 52 Cal. 677.-held that the
collateral agreement alleged in that case
constituted a condition precedent to the
attachment of any obligation under the cheques
in question so that they remained inoperative
until the condition was fulfilled."
(1) A,I.R, 1958 P.C. 198,
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In that present case also we are of opinion that the oral
agreement found to have been proved by the High Court
constituted a condition precedent to the attaching of the
obligation under the promissory note and falls within the
terms of the 3rd proviso to s. 92 of the evidence Act and it
was, therefore, open to the plaintiff to lead evidence and
to prove such an oral agreement.
For the reasons expressed we hold that the judgment of the
Madras High Court is correct and both these appeals must be
dismissed with costs.
Appeals dismissed.
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