Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANDHRA PROVINCIAL POTTERIES LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/08/1973
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2429 1974 SCR (1) 410
1973 SCC (2) 786
ACT:
Companies Act (1 of 1956) s. 220 and Companies Act 7 of 1913
s. 134 Prosecution for not sending copies of balance-sheet
etc. to Registrar-No, general body meeting held-Liability.
HEADNOTE:
Section 220 of the Companies Act, 1956, which corresponds to
s. 134 of the 1913-Act, provides that within thirty days
after the balance-sheet and profit and loss account, as the
case may be, have been laid before the company at the
general meeting. three copies thereof shall be filed with
the registrar and that failure to do so is punishable.
The respondent-company and its directors were prosecuted for
failure to file with the Registrar of Companies on or before
30th October 1967, the Balance-sheet and profit and loss
account of the company. By 30th September, 1967,
admittedly, no general body meeting had been held. The High
Court held that since no general body meeting was held,
there could be no question of laying the balance-sheet
before the general body meeting and complying with the
requirements of the section; and that, though the willful
omission to call a general body meeting and of laying the
balance-sheet and profit and loss account before it may
expose the persons responsible to punishment under other
provisions of the Act, it would not make them liable either
under s. 134(4) of the 1913-Act or s. 220 of the 1956-Act.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : On principle and authority it should be held that no
offence was committed under s. 220 of the Companies Act,
1956. [417B]
(a) The principle accepted by this Court in State of Bombay
v. Bandhan Ram Bhandani [1961] 1 S.C.R_ 801, that a company
or its directors in a prosecution under ss. 32 and 133 of
the 1913-Act, could not, in defence to such prosecution,
rely upon their own failure to call the general body meeting
would not apply to a prosecution under s. 134 of the 1913-
Act or s. 220 of the 1956-Act. Unlike ss. 32 and 133, the
responsibility of I sending to the Registrar the copies of
the balance-sheet and profit and loss account arises only
after they have been laid before the company at the general
meeting, the obligation to do so being completely dependent
on its being laid before a general meeting. [414H-415E]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
(b) Where the words in the section are clear it is
unnecessary to consider whether it embodies any principle
and whether that principle is consistent with the principle
as embodied in other sections which are differently worded.
In interpreting a penal provision it is not permissible to
give an extended meaning to the plain words of the section
on the ground of a principle recognised in certain other
provisions. [415F-G]
(c) This is not a case where an accused person relies on
his default and pleads his innocence. In the Companies Act
1956, various stages have to be gone through before we reach
the stage of a copy of the balance-sheet and the profit and
loss account being filed with the Registrar. The failure to
reach any one of the stages within the time prescribed is
made penal by the Act. The respondents may be guilty of any
of those offences but not of the offence with which they
were charged. [416E-G]
(d) Further a daily penalty is provided after the thirtieth
day mentioned in s. 220 (1) of the 1956-Act. When no
general body meeting was held it is not possible to
calculate the period of 30 days and there would be diffi-
culty in working Cut he daily penalty. [416C-D)]
411
Dulal Chandra Bhar v. State of West Bengal, 1962-32 Company
Cases 1143 Gopal Khaitan v. State (1969) 39 Company Cases
150, Ramachandra & Sons (P) v. State, (1967) 11 Coml. J. 92
JUDGMENT:
Ltd., A.I.R. 1963 Rajasthan, 134 India Nutriments Ltd. v.
Registrar of Companies, 1934 34. Companies Cases 160 P. S.
N. SAA. Chettiar & Company v. Registrar of Companies,
A.I.R. 1966 Madras 415, Registrar of Companies v. H. Mishra,
A.I.R. 1969 Orissa 234, State v. Linkers Private Ltd.
A.I.R. 1969 Patna 445 & (1970) 40 C.C. 17, Registrar of
Companies v. Gopala Pillai & Ors. 1951 K.L.J. 490 Debendra
Nath Das Gupta v. Registrar of Joint Stock Companies, I.L.R.
1918 Calcutta 486, Ballev Dass v. Mohan Lal Sadhu, 1934-35
39 Calcutta Weekly Notes 1152 and Bhagirath v. Emperor,
A.I.R. 1948, Calcutta 42 and re Cangipati Appayya, A.I.R.
1952 Madras 800, disapproved.
Imperator v. The Pioneer Clay and Industrial Works Ltd.,
I.L.R. [1948] Bom. 86: A.I.R. 1948 Bombay 357, Vulcan
Industries (P) Ltd. v. Registrar of Companies Orissa, I.L.R.
(1972) Cuttack 373 and re Narasimha Rao, A.I.R. (1937)
Madras 341, approved.
&
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:-Criminal Appeal No. 34 of
1970.
Appeal by certificate under Article 134(1)(c) of the
Constitution of India from the judgment and order dated
18-3-1969 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Criminal
Revision Case No. 360 of 1968.
F. S. Nariman, Additional Solicitor General of India and
A. V. Rangam, for the appellants.
L. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India and A. V. V. Nair,
for the Advocate General Andhra Pradesh.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J.-This is an appeal against the judgment of
the Full Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court reported in
A.I.R. (1970) A.P. 70. It arises out of a complaint filed
against the 1st respondent company and its directors for
failure to Me with the Registrar of Companies on or before
30-10-1967 the balance sheet and profit and loss account of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
the company as required under section 220(1) of the
Companies Act, 1956, which is punishable under sub-section
(3) of that section. Admittedly no general body meeting had
been held and, therefore, the balance sheet and profit and
loss account had not been laid before a general body meeting
nor could it be so laid.
The Full Bench speaking through Jaganmohan Reddy, C.J., as
our learned brother then was, held that if no balance sheet
is laid before a general body, there can be no question of
that balance sheet not being adopted nor of complying with
the requirements of section 220 and though wilful omission
to call a general body meeting and to lay the balance sheet
and profit and loss account before it may expose the person
responsible to punishment under other provisions of the Act,
it certainly does not make him liable under the provisions
of section 134(4) of the Companies Act, 1913 or section 220
of the Companies Act, 1956. In this the Bench was taking a
view contrary to that of most of the High Courts after the
decision of this Court in The State of Bombay v. Bandhan Ram
Bhandani & Ors.(1) In that case this Court
(1) [1961] (1) S.C.R. 801,
412
had taken the. view that a person charged with an offence
cannot rely on his default as an answer to the charge and
so, if he was responsible for not calling the general
meeting, he cannot be heard to say in defence to the charges
brought against him that because the general meeting had not
been called, the balance sheet and profit and loss account
could not be laid before it. In that case the directors of
a company were prosecuted under ss. 32(5) and 133(3) of the
Companies Act, 1913, for breaches of ss. 32 and 131 of that
Act for having knowingly and wilfully authorized the failure
to file the summary of share capital for the year 1953 and
being knowingly and wilfully parties to the failure to lay
before the company in general meeting the balance sheet and
profit and loss account as at March 31, 1953.
The Bombay High Court, however, following its earlier
decision in Imperator v. The Pioneer Clay and Industrial
Works Ltd.(1) had upheld the acquittal of the directors by
the Presidency Magistrate. Referring to the decision of the
Bombay High Court in that case this Court pointed out that
decision turned on s. 134 of the Companies Act, 1913 the
language of which was to a certain extent different from the
language used in ss. 32 and 131 and refrained from going
into the question whether the difference in language in
section 134 on the one hand and ss. 32 and 131 on the other
made any difference to the decision of the case. After
referring to the decisions in Gibson v. Barlon(2) Edmonds v.
Foster(3) and Park v. Lawton(4 )where it was held that a
person charged with an offence could not rely on his own
default as an answer to the charge, and so, if the person
charged was responsible for not calling the general meeting,
he cannot be heard to say, in defence to the charge that the
general meeting had not been called, and that the company
and its officers were bound to perform the condition
precedent if they could do that, in order that they might
perform their duty, this Court considered that as the
correct view to take.
As we have noticed, this Court was not dealing there with
the provisions of section 134 of 1913 Act which corresponds
to section 220 of the 1956 Act. That question now directly
arises for decision in this case. As we said earlier, most
of the High Courts which have considered this question after
the decision of this Court have proceeded on the basis that
the decision necessarily led to the conclusion that even in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
a prosecution under s. 134 of the 1913 Act (corresponding to
section 220 of the 1956 Act) the company and its directors
could not rely upon their failure to call the general body
meeting as a defence to the prosecution. Under this
category fall the decisions in Dulal Chandra Bhar v. Slate
of West Bengal,(5) and Gopal Khaitan v. State (6) of the
Calcutta High Court. Ramachandra & Sons (P) Ltd. v.
State(T) of the Allahabad High Court, State v. T. C.
Printers (P) Ltd. (8) of the Rajasthan
(1) I.L.R. (1948) Bom. 86; A.I.R. 1948 Bombay 357.
(2) [1875] L. R. 10 Q. B. 329. (3) (1875) 45 Law J. Rep.
M. C. 41.
(4) [1911] 1 K. B. 588. (5) (1962) 32 Company
Cases 1143.
(6) [1969] 39 Company Cases 150.
(7) [1967] 11 Com 1, J. 92 & (1966) 36 Company Cases 585.
(8) A.I.R. (1963) Rajasthan 134.
413
High Court, India Nutriments Ltd. v. Registrar of
Companies(1) and P.S.N.S.A. Chettiar & Company v. Registrar
of Companies(2) of the Madras High Court. The Orissa High
Court had taken a similar view in Registrar of Companies v.
Misra (3) but in a latter decision in Vulcan Industries (P)
Ltd. v. Registrar of Companies, Orissa(4) it has taken a
contrary view and followed the decision of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in the judgment under appeal. That
decision is also pending in appeal before this Court. The
Patna High Court in State v. Linkers Private Ltd.(5) and the
Kerala High Court in Registrar of Companies v. Gopala Pillai
& Ors. (6) have also taken a similar view.
We may now refer to some of the earlier decisions on this
Point. The earliest decision is the one in Debendra Nath
Das Gupta v. Registrar of Joint Stock Companies.(?) In that
case the principle laid down in Park v. Lawton(8) was
applied and it was held that it is not open to the
petitioner to plead in answer to a charge under sections 134
his prior default in respect of the calling of the
prescribed general meeting and of placing before the company
at such meeting a duly prepared and audited balance sheet.
The decision in Ballav Dass v. Mohan Lal Sadhu(9) did not
refer to the wording of the section but merely stated that
the provisions of section 134 were not complied with. The
same court in Bhagirath v. Emperor(10) took the same view.
In re Varaszmha Rao(11) a learned Single Judge of the Madras
High Court took the view that the same persons cannot be
charged in respect of the same years with offences
punishable both under ss. 131 and 134, Companies Act because
S. 134 clearly contemplates the sending of a copy of the
balance-sheet only after it has been placed before the
company at a general meeting under s. 131 and that where in
a case there is no such placing of the balance-sheet before
the company at a general meeting, the offence under S. 134
cannot ’,be committed. In re Gangipati Appayya(12) a view
contrary to the one taken earlier by a Judge of that High
Court was taken.
We may now set out the reasoning which weighed with the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in the decision under appeal :
"The reference to Section 210 by the use of
the word aforesaid" and the emphasis indicated
by the words "were so laid" make the filing of
copies of those balance-sheets and the profit
and loss accounts which are laid before the
general body meeting an essential
prerequisite. If no general body meeting is
held, it is obvious that no copies of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
balance sheet
(1) (1964) 34 Company Cases 160.
(3) A.I.R. 1969 Orissa 234.
(5) A.I.R. 1969 Patna 445 & (1970) 40 C.C. 17.
(6) 1961 K.L.J. 490.
(8) [1911] 1 K.B. 588
(10) A.I.R. 1948 Calcutta 42.
(12) A.I.R. 1952 Madras 800.
(2) A.T. R. 1966 Madras 415.
(4) I.L.R. 1972 Cuttack 373.
(7) I.L.R. 1918 Calcutta 486.
(9) [1934-35] 39 Calcutta Weekly Notes 1152.
(11) A.I.R. 1937 Madras 341.
414
and profit and loss account can be filed even
though the default may be wilful. Both under
section 134 of the Old Companies Act and
Section 220 of the Act, the laying of the
balance sheet and the profit and loss account
before an annual general meeting is a
condition precedent to the requirement that
copies of such documents so laid should be
filed before the Registrar. The intention is
made further clear by the provision under sub-
section (2) of the respective sections of both
the Acts that if the balance sheet is not
adopted at the general meeting before which it
is laid, a statement of that fact and of the
reasons therefore have to be annexed to the
balance sheet and to the copies thereof
required to be filed with the Registrar. If
no balance sheet is laid before a general
body, there can be no question of that balance
sheet not being adopted nor of complying with
the requirements of the Sub-section
(2) of
Section 134 of the Old Companies Act or
Section 220 of the Act as the case may be,
while wilful omission to call a general body
meeting and omit to lay the balance sheet and
profit and loss account before it may expose
the person responsible to punishment under
other provisions of the Act, it certainly does
not make him liable udder aforesaid
provisions. The punishment under these
sections is for default in filing copies of
the balance sheet or the profit and loss
account which are laid before a general body
and for not sending a statement of the fact
that the balance sheet was not adopted. It
may be that copies of the balance sheet so
laid before the general body may have been
forwarded under sub-section (1) of Section 134
of the Old Companies Act or sub-section (1) of
section 220 of the Act but nonetheless if the
requirements of sub-section (2) of the
respective sections have not been complied
with even then, the persons concerned would
be liable for punishment for that default.
In our view, these provisions unmistakably
indicate, as we said earlier, that the holding
of the annual general meeting and the laying
before it of the balance sheet and the profit
and loss account is a sine qua non for filing
of the copies thereof before the Registrar.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
If no general body meeting is held, the
persons concerned cannot be said to have
committed a default in complying with those
provisions."
In this state of difference of opinion among the various
High Courts and the absence of a decision of this Court on
section 134 this appeal has been filed. Though the
respondent was not represented before this Court the learned
Addl. Solicitor General who appeared for the State of
Andhra Pradesh and the learned Solicitor General who
appeared for the Advocate General of Andhra Pradesh fairly
placed before this Court all the decisions for and against,
which we have already referred to, and also placed before us
all the relevant considerations. It was urged before us
that the principle accepted by this Court in The State of
Bombay v. Bandhan Ram Bhandani & Ors. (supra) that a company
or its directors in a prosecution under section 32 and
section 133 of the 1913 Act could not in defence to such
prosecution rely upon their own
415
failure to call the general body meeting, applies with equal
force to a prosecution under section 134 of the Act. But it
appears to us that there is a very clear distinction between
ss. 32 and 133 on the one hand and s. 134 on the other.
Section 32 relates to the preparation of a list of members
of the company and of persons who have ceased to be members
as well as a summary, and also provides that it shall be
completed within 21 days after the day of the first or only
ordinary general meeting in the year. It also provides that
the company shall forthwith file with the registrar a copy
of the list and summary, and any default hi complying with
the requirements of the section is made punishable. Under
section 131 the laying of a balance-sheet and profit and
loss account before the company in the general meeting is
made obligatory. Under section 133 the failure to comply
with section 131 is made punishable. But section 134 lays
down that after balance-sheet and profit and loss account or
the income and expenditure account, as the case may be, have
been laid before the company at the general meeting three
copies thereof shall be filed with the registrar, and a
failure to do so is made punishable under sub-section (4) of
that section. The difference in language is very clear and
pointed. The responsibility of sending three copies of the
balance-sheet and profit and loss account or the income and
expenditure account, as the case may be, arises only after
they have been laid before the company at the general
meeting. Without so laying copies could not be sent to the
Registrar and even if they are sent it would not be a
compliance with the provisions of the section. It is
possible to conceive of the law providing that the balance-
sheet and profit and loss account shall be sent to the
registrar even without the necessity of their being laid
before the general body meeting of the company. In that
case any failure to do so would be punishable and the
question whether a general body meeting had been held and
the balance-sheet and profit and loss account have been laid
before it Will not arise. Therefore the condition precedent
or the essential prerequisite of the balance-sheet and the
profit and loss account being laid before the general
meeting of the company not being fulfilled, the requirement
of section 134 cannot be complied with. While the appeal to
a question of principle might be attractive we cannot ignore
the clear words of the section. Where the words of the
section are very clear it is unnecessary to consider whether
it embodies any principle and whether that principle is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
consistent with the principle as embodied a certain other
sections which are differently worded. In interpreting a
penal provision it is not permissible to give an extended
meaning to the plain words of the section on the ground that
a principle recognised in respect of certain other
provisions of law requires that this section should be
interpreted is the same way.
We may also point out that in Park v. Lawton (supra) the
principle laid in which has been adopted in this Court’-,
decision in The State of Bombay v. Bandhan Ram Bhandani &
Ors. (supra) it is realised that there might be
circumstances where the principle laid down in that decision
will not apply. The court there observed :
"If it were the case that everything required
to be inserted in the list was dependent on
the fact of the general meeting having been
held, it might perhaps have been contended
with
416
some force that it is impossible to calculate
a continuing penalty from a day which has
never come into existence; but when one sees
that S. 25 requires a number of most important
matters to be included in the list of members
which are entirely independent of the holding
of a general meeting, this very much weakens
the contention that no list need be compiled
if, owing to the failure to hold a general
meeting, it is impossible to say what day is
the fourteenth day thereafter."
This observation may provide no defence to a prosecution
under section 133 but it might well do so in a prosecution
under section 134. This was what the learned Solicitor
General was fair enough to point out with regard to the
difficulty of working out the daily penalty under s. 162
after the thirtieth day mentioned in section 220(1) of the
1.956 Act. He pointed out that where no meeting has been
held it was not possible to calculate the period of 30 days
specified in that section and it would not be possible to
give effect to the provisions of that section. The Bombay
High Court pointed out in Emperor v. Pioneer Clay & In-
dustrial Works(1) that the decision in Park v. Lawton(2) is
based on S. 36 (it is a mistake for s. 26) of the English
Act, which in its scheme and terms is entirely different
from the section with which they (the Bombay High Court)
were concerned, and that the section in the English Act is a
composite one which lays down various requirements which are
to be complied with by the company under its first four sub-
clauses and sub-cl. (5) is the penal sub-section which
penalises the failure to comply with any of the requirements
contained in any of the four preceding sub-sections. In our
Act various stages have to be gone through before we reach
the stage of a copy of the balance-sheet and the profit and
loss account being filed with the Registrar and the failure
to reach any one of the stages within the time prescribed is
made penal by the ’Act. The court pointed out that this is
not a case where an accused person relies on his default and
pleads his innocence. What he says is, I may have committed
an offence, but the offence that I have committed is not the
one with which I am charged. On the facts proved by the
prosecution an offence is not disclosed under s. 134(4). A
different offence might have been committed either under S.
76(2) or under S. 133(3).
It is interesting to note that it was argued in Park v.
Lawton(2) that the fact that S. 26 makes the offence a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
continuing one also shows that the obligation to file the
list is independent of the holding of a general meeting.
The observations which we have extracted earlier will show
that the submission on behalf of the prosecution that
provisions
(1) I.R.L. [1948] Bom. 86 : A.I.R. 1948 Bom. 357.
(2) [1911] 1 K.E.
417
of S. 26 show that the, obligation to file the list is
independent of the holding of the general meeting was
accepted. But under section 134 of the 1913 Act the
obligation to send a copy of the balance-sheet and profit
and loss account is dependent completely on its being laid
be, fore a general meeting. It is clear, therefore, that on
principle and authority it should be held that no offence
was committed by the directors in this case under section
134. They might have been guilty of offences under ss. 76
and 133 but not under s. 134. We say nothing about s. 32
about which this Court has already laid down the law.
The appeal is dismissed.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
418