Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAVESH D. PARISH & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/05/2000
BENCH:
M.B.Shah, B.N.Kirpal
JUDGMENT:
KIRPAL,J.
The appellants who carry on the business of shroffs
are impugning the validity of Section 9 of the Reserve Bank
of India Act as amended by the Amendment Act, 1997
(hereinafter referred to as the Act) on the ground that
the said provision is violative of Articles 14 and 19(1)(g)
of the Constitution of India.
The trade of business of shroffs in India has been in
existence for a long time. This trade is carried on not
only in cities but also in small towns and villages in parts
of India.
The appellants are shroffs engaged in the business of
providing credit to the members of the public. The
traditional mode of organising the business of shroffs over
the past several decades had been by way of partnership
firms. The nature of the services practised by the
appellants generally involved maintaining a mutual current
account where the customer may either place deposit on call
or withdraw money on call, without security. The financing
activity of the shroff firms was through capital
contributions of the partners/proprietor and deposits made
by members of the public. Some of the other activities of
the shroffs include cheque discounting, the issuance of
hundis, the collection of cheques from different centres and
providing other similar facilities to customers. The
services extended by the appellants are availed of by small
and medium sized traders, professionals, salaried workers,
agriculturists and individuals.
The Reserve Bank of India (hereinafter referred to as
the RBI) is a statutory corporation constituted as the
Central Banking Authority for the country by the Reserve
Bank of India Act, 1934. The RBI is constituted, inter
alia, to regulate the issue of bank notes and keeping of
reserves with a view to securing monetary stability in India
and generally to operate the currency and credit system of
the country to its advantage. The RBI is also vested with
various powers to regulate the currency and credit system of
the country. The powers so vested in RBI include the power
to issue directions to non-banking institutions receiving
deposits and to financial institutions. By amendment in
1963 a new Chapter III-B was inserted in the said Act. This
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chapter inserted Sections 45-H to 45-Q which were provisions
relating to non-banking institutions receiving deposits and
financial institutions. In the Statement of Objects and
Reasons it was provided that the existing enactments
relating to banks did not provide for any control over
companies or institutions, which, although were not treated
as banks, accept deposits from the general public or carry
on other business which was allied to banking. For ensuring
more effective supervision and management of the monetary
and credit system by the RBI, it was observed that the RBI
should be enabled to regulate the conditions on which
deposits may be accepted by these non- banking companies or
institutions. The provisions of the said chapter III-B did
not apply to individuals or firms like the appellants who
are not incorporated but still do business which is akin to
that of banking.
In order to place some restrictions on the acceptance
of deposits by unincorporated bodies, by the Banking Laws
(Amendment) Act, 1983 (Act 1 of 1984), Chapter III-C and
Section 58-B(5A) were inserted into the Act. The relevant
portion of principal restrictions in Chapter III-C which
were contained in Section 45-S, read as under: Deposits
not to be accepted in certain cases. 1) No person being an
individual or a firm or an unincorporated association of
individuals shall at any time, have deposits from more than
the number of deposits specified against each, in the table
below:
TABLE (i) Individual Not more than twenty-five
depositors excluding depositors who are rel ativ es of the
individual.
ii) Firm
Not more than twenty-five depositors per partner and
not more than two hundred and fifty depositors in all,
excluding, in either case, depositors who are relatives of
any of the partners.
iii) Unincorporated Association of individuals. Not
more than twenty five depositors per individual and not more
than two hundred and fifty depositors in all, excluding, in
either case, depositors who are relatives of any of the
individuals constituting the association.
2. Where at the commencement of Section 10 of the
Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 1983, the deposits held by any
such person are not in accordance with sub-section (1), he
shall, before the expiry of a period of two years from the
date of such commencement, repay such of the deposits as are
necessary for bringing the number of deposits within the
relative limits specified in that sub-section.
The constitutional validity of Section 45-S of the Act
was upheld by the Delhi High Court in Kanta Mehta VS. Union
of India and others 1987 (62) Company Cases 769. The main
challenge was on the ground that it infringed the
appellants right under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution
of India and was violative of Articles 14 & 19 of the
Constitution. While upholding the validity of Section 45-S,
the High Court noted that expert reports by study groups had
recommended that it would not be in the interest of all,
especially the depositors, if unincorporated bodies such as
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partnerships were to work as companies without any control
or supervision of the RBI. This decision of the High Court
was affirmed by this Court in T. Velayudhan Achari and
Another Vs. Union of India and others (1993) 2 SCC 582.
While upholding the validity of Section 45-S, this Court at
page 591 observed as follows:
No doubt, the impugned legislation places restrictions
on the right of the appellants to carry on business, but
what is essential is to safeguard the rights of various
depositors and to see that they are not preyed upon. From
the earlier narration, it would be clear that the Reserve
Bank of India, right from 1966, has been monitoring and
following the functioning of non-banking financial
institutions which invite deposits and then utilise those
deposits either for trade or for other various industries.
A ceiling for acceptance of deposits and to require
maintenance of certain liquidity of funds as well as not to
exceed borrowings beyond a particular percentage of the
net-owned funds have been provided in the corporate sector.
But for these requirements, the depositors would be left
high and dry without any remedy.
It appears that Section 45-S of the Act, as originally
incorporated, did not have the desired effect. The
non-corporate sector was virtually free from all disciplines
even though its activities were same or similar to the
corporate sector, the difference only being in the magnitude
and that too only in some cases. According to the
respondents it was to rectify this imbalance that first an
ordinance was issued which sought to completely prohibit any
receipt of deposits by unincorporated associations in the
non- corporate sector. When certain hardships were pointed
out by those who did not carry on the business comparable to
the companies which were under Chapter III-B i.e. who did
not borrow money or receive advances to carry on business in
the financial sector but borrow money for their own trade or
manufacture, the Act, which replaced the ordinance, watered
down the rigour to some extent.
The newly incorporated Section 45-S, which is impugned
in this writ petition, is as follows:
45-S (1) No person, being an individual or a firm or
an unincorporated association of individuals shall, accept
any deposit:
(i) If his or its business wholly or partly includes
any of the activities specified in clause © of Section 45-I;
or
(ii) If his or its principal business is that of
receiving of deposits under any scheme or arrangement or in
any other manner, or lending in any manner.
Provided that nothing contained in this sub-section
shall apply to the receipt of money by an individual by way
of loan from any of his relatives.
(2) Where any person referred to in sub-section (1)
other than a body corporate holds any deposit on the Ist day
of April, 1997 which is not in accordance with sub- section
(1), such deposit shall be repaid by that person immediately
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after such deposit becomes due for repayment or within two
years from the date of such commencement, whichever is
earlier.
(3) On and from the date of Ist day of April, 1997, no
person referred to in sub-section (1) shall issue or cause
to be issued any advertisement in any form for soliciting
deposit.
Explanation For the purpose of this section:
(a) A person shall be deemed to be a relative of
another if, and only if :
(i) they are members of a Hindu undivided family; or
(ii) they are husband and wife; or (iii) the one is related
to the other in the manner indicated in the list of
relatives below:-
List of relatives
1. Father 2. Mother (including step-mother) 3. Son
(including step-son), 4. Sons wife, 5. Daughter
(including step-daughter), 6. Fathers father, 7. Fathers
mother, 8. Mothers mother, 9. Mothers father, 10. Sons
son, 11. Sons sons wife, 12. Sons daughter, 13. Sons
daughters husband, 14. Daughters husband, 15. Daughters
son, 16. Daughters sons wife 17 Daughters daughter 18.
Daughters daughters husband 19. Brother (including step-
brother), 20. Brothers wife, 21 Sister (including
step-sister), 22. Sisters husband.
The principal features of the amended Section 45-S in
so far as they relate to the appellants are:
(a) From 1.4.1997, no individual or firm may accept
any deposit: (i) if his or its business wholly or partly
includes financing activities, whether by way of making
loans or advances or otherwise; or (ii) If his or its
principal business is that of receiving deposits under any
scheme or arrangement or lending in any manner. (b) The
prohibition on the acceptance of deposits does not apply to
loans from relatives. (c) A company may continue to accept
deposits for financing activities or lending subject to the
regulations in respect of Non-Banking Financial Companies.
(d) Individuals and firms holding deposits on 1.4.1997 must
repay such deposits immediately after such deposits become
due for repayment or within two years (before 31.3.1999),
whichever is earlier. (e) On and from 1.4.1997 no
individual or firm may issue advertisement in any form for
soliciting deposits. (f) All non-banking financial
companies must have a minimum of Rs. 25,00,000 of net owned
funds (NOF) and withdraw the deposits and/or take loans
before the agricultural operations commence. The
agriculturists and small traders who earn valuable interest
on net deposits will no longer be able to do so.
The impugned Section 45-S does not in any way prohibit
or restrict any unincorporated body or individual from
carrying on the business that it likes. It is open to
unincorporated bodies to carry on their financial business
either from their own funds or the funds borrowed from their
relatives or from financial institutions. The restriction,
which is placed by Section 45-S, is on the carrying on of
such business by utilising public deposits.
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The grievance of the appellants is that the firms of
or individual shroffs, as a result of amendment to Section
45-S, will not be allowed to accept any deposit from the
public for the purposes of their business activities. There
is a complete prohibition on sharafi transactions (mutual
current account transactions) which had formed the bedrock
of the financing activities of the shroffs. This is because
individuals and firms will no longer be entitled to accept
deposits on current account and the minimum period for which
a non-banking financial company may accept deposit is now
one year. The shroffs will now be compelled to convert from
partnership firms into limited companies.
Challenging the virus of Section 45-S, it was
submitted by the learned counsel for the appellants that
shroffs provided the facility of deposit and loan
transactions 24 hours a day and this facility was
traditionally extended to customers like agriculturists,
such as cotton farmers, tobacco farmers, vegetable producers
etc. who had a seasonal need for finance and a periodic
surplus of investible funds. The flexibility of deposit and
withdrawal of the funds available to this sector which was
provided by the shroff community will now cease. It was
submitted that the impugned provisions are violative of the
appellants right to carry on their trade and business
guaranteed under Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution.
Elaborating this contention it was urged that though it is
open to the Government to impose reasonable restriction in
the public interest under Article 19(6) of the Constitution
but impugned provisions neither met the test of
reasonableness nor public interest . It was also submitted
that the impugned provisions were violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution being artbitrary, discriminatory and
un-reasonable.
This Court in Papnasam Labour Union VS. Madura Coats
limited and another (1995) 1 SCC 501 while considering
challenge to Section 25-M of the Industrial Disputes Act,
1947 of being violative of Article 19 of the Constitution
referred to earlier decisions of this Court and at page 511
set out the following principles and guidelines which should
be kept in mind for considering the constitutionality of
statutory provision upon a challenge on the alleged vice of
unreasonableness of the restriction imposed by it:
a) The restriction sought be imposed on the
Fundamental Rights guaranteed by Article 19 of the
Constitution must not be arbitrary or of an excessive nature
so as to go beyond the requirement of felt need of the
society and object sought to be achieved.
b) There must be a direct and proximate nexus or a
reasonable connection between the restriction imposed and
the object sought to be achieved.
c) No abstract or fixed principle can be laid down
which may have universal application in all cases. Such
consideration on the question of quality of reasonableness,
therefore, is expected to vary from case to case.
d) In interpreting constitutional provisions, courts
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should be alive to the felt need of the society and complex
issues facing the people which the Legislature intends to
solve through effective legislation.
e) In appreciating such problems and felt need of the
society the judicial approach must necessarily be dynamic,
pragmatic and elastic.
f) It is imperative that for consideration of
reasonableness of restriction imposed by a statute, the
Court should examine whether the social control as envisaged
in Article 19 is being effectuated by the restriction
imposed on the Fundamental Rights.
g) Although Article 19 guarantees all the seven
freedoms to the citizen, such guarantee does not confer any
absolute or unconditional right but is subject to reasonable
restriction, which the Legislature may impose in public
interest. It is therefore necessary to examine whether such
restriction is meant to protect social welfare satisfying
the need of prevailing social values.
h) The reasonableness has got to be tested both from
the procedural and substantive aspects. It should not be
bound by processual perniciousness or jurisprudence of
remedies.
j) Restriction imposed on the Fundamental Rights
guaranteed under Article 19 of the Constitution must not be
arbitrary, unbridled, uncanalised and excessive and also not
unreasonably discriminatory. Ex hypothesi, therefore, a
restriction to be reasonable must also be consistent with
Article 14 of the Constitution.
k) In judging the reasonableness of the restriction
imposed by clause (6) of Article 19, the Court has to bear
in mind Directive Principles of State Policy.
l) Ordinarily, any restriction so imposed, which has
the effect of promoting or effectuating a directive
principle, can be presumed to be a reasonable restriction in
public interest.
Keeping the aforesaid principles in mind let us now
examine the reasons for enacting Section 45-S.
In the affidavit filed by the respondent it has been,
inter alia, stated that the growing volume of deposits with
unorganised financial sector affected the operation of
monetary and credit policy to the extent that it involved a
loss of control by the central monetary authority on the use
of these funds. Further, the unincorporated bodies were
susceptible to default as the costs of funds and returns
could not be matched in a viable way leading to adverse
selection i.e. the funds being directed to risky illiquid
investments. Whereas incorporated bodies were subject to
regulatory controls, it was impossible to regulate
unincorporated bodies at all. It is also stated in the
affidavit that over the years, the functioning of various
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unincorporated bodies was under observation and in 1984 when
Chapter III-C was added to the Act, the prohibition to
accept deposits was partial in the sense that unincorporated
bodies were allowed to accept deposits from a limited number
of depositors with no ceiling on the amount of deposit. The
working of the provisions of Chapter III-C did not result in
healthy development but there was a proliferation of such
unincorporated bodies engaged in financial intermediation.
As pointed out in para-3 of the Statement of Objects and
Reasons the existing provisions were flouted by unscrupulous
entities by floating different partnership firms when a firm
reached the level of 250 depositors. This multiplication of
firms took place with a view to circumvent the rigour of the
law.
It appears that after the introduction of Section 45-S
in 1984, several complaints were received by the RBI from
various parts of the country regarding rampant mal-practices
being adopted by several persons/firms especially in the
State of Kerala. Sample studies, which were conducted,
revealed several astonishing features and the menace of such
unincorporated associations accepting public deposits and
the mushroom growth of such intermediaries. These business
firms were commonly known in Kerala as blade companies so
called because of their usurious lending rates. The study
showed that these blade companies drew sustenance from
human greed. These blade companies were offering interest
of 36% and in turn were charging excessive interest from the
borrowers. By the time the study was conducted, it showed
that the private financing scenario in Kerala pointed out to
near desolation. Where as in 1987 the daily newspapers and
periodicals were filled with flashy advertisements for
attracting business subsequently most of the firms had
dis-appeared. Public confidence had been shattered beyond
description and the fate of several depositors stood sealed
with the tragedy which had over- taken on them having lost
their hard earned money. Similarly complaints were also
received by the RBI of individuals/firms and unincorporated
bodies accepting deposits in Tamil Nadu. The report
received from that State recommended that the RBI should
over-see the functioning of such financial firms and it
ought to consider banning the activities in public interest.
It is the case of the RBI that the flexibility,
convenience and facilities etc. provided by the appellants
were turning out to be mirages for the gullible public who
ultimately had to bear the burnt of the callous ways in
which the unincorporated bodies extended credit under the
guise of flexibility and convenience. Unquestionably high
interest rates were charged by such firms from the
borrowers, but when the time came for the return of money
borrowed by such firms, a number of such firms had folded up
resulting in great loss to the depositors. The RBI, being a
statutory expert body entrusted with monetary management,
came to the conclusion that these unincorporated bodies
which were functioning as financial intermediaries in an
informal and unorganised manner be restrained from having
access to deposits from public. The spread of formal
financial agencies such as, commercial banks, regional rural
banks, cooperative banks, development financial institutions
and non-banking financial companies etc. had taken care of
the need to mobilise the domestic savings of the nation and
to deploy the same in a proper manner.
As regards availability of banking facilities in small
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towns and villages is concerned, the number of rural
branches of commercial banks, which were 1833 in June, 1969,
increased to 33069 as on June, 1996. The average population
per branch has increased manifold. The regional rural banks
had been established in 1975 with a view to serve the
people. Several State Governments had promoted cooperative
banking culture amongst the rural masses for effectively
taping the resources so as to meet their credit
requirements. It appears that the institutional finance is
available far more easily now than before. With these
facilities now being available and in view of the inherent
risks to the general public at the hands of the
unincorporated bodies engaged in financial activities and
accepting public deposits, we agree that the restrictions
now imposed by the amended Section 45-S cannot be considered
as being un-reasonable.
As has already been observed, there is no total
prohibition or ban from accepting deposits by incorporated
bodies. It is only such incorporated bodies as are carrying
on business referred to in Clauses I and II of sub-section
(1) of Section 45-S of the Act which cannot accept deposits
from the public. They can however receive loans from
relatives. The appellants cannot claim a fundamental right
to carry on the business of financing with other peoples
money. In other words, there can be no unrestricted
fundamental right to accept deposits from the public. This
Honble Court has observed in Peerless General Finance and
Investment Co. Limited and Another Vs. Reserve Bank of
India and others [ 1992(2) SCC 343] that there is no
fundamental right to do any unregulated business with
subscribers/depositors money. This Honble Court in that
case upheld the directions issued by RBI requiring residuary
non-banking companies to invest the amount collected by them
as deposits in a particular way. This Honble Court further
held that such companies should invest their own working
capital and find such resources elsewhere with which the
Reserve Bank has no concern. Since the deposit acceptance
by unincorporated bodies is incapable of being regulated by
virtue of the large number of such bodies, the provisions in
the nature of the amended Section 45-S are necessary and
unincorporated bodies should do their business with their
own money or institutional finance or money borrowed from
relatives.
The amended Section 45-S further expands the
provisions of Chapter III-B by making it necessary for all
those, who mobilize public funds for deployment in the
financial sector, to follow the norms of prudential
management which is the internationally accepted practice in
relation to those handling public funds. In view of Chapter
IIIB, particularly in its revised form after the amendment,
it would have been highly incongruous to permit people to
side step the discipline of Chapter IIIB by refusing to
incorproate themselves. In view of this anomaly which has
come about it was decided by the legislature not to permit
such activities in the non- corporate sector. Nothing
prevented the appellants who alleged to be the partners of
different firms from incorporating themselves as a company.
The real grievance was that the appellants did not want to
comply with the norms of prudential management and,
therefore, sought to paint a picture as though their trade
had been prohibited. There was no impediment in the trade
as long as it was carried on within the norms of Chapter
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IIIB. In fact, they would have greater latitude to do trade
as a corporate body, in that the present restriction on the
amount of money to be deposited would stand increased. In
this context, it may be emphasised that there is absolutely
no restriction on any person to utilise his own funds
(including the funds received from his relatives) for any
purpose he likes including para banking or financial
activity.
Historically, only banks have been allowed to accept
deposits repayable on demand because they were subjected to
maintenance of cash reserve requirement which would enable
them to meet liabilities as and when they are called upon or
when any demand is made for repayment. Since non-banking
financial companies were not subjected to such cash reserve
requirement, it was not desirable to allow non-banking
financial companies to accept demand deposits. In any case,
such bodies were nothing but para banking institutions and
either they had to be regulated on the lines of the
financial institutions and if that was not feasible, they
should have appropriately been prohibited from accepting
deposits from public. After all, the right to raise public
deposit could not be construed as a fundamental right. The
restrictions imposed cannot be considered unreasonable or
arbitrary.
The RBI has not acted hastily. Before amending
Section 45-S of the Act in 1997, it had the benefit of
having with it the reports of number of committees, all of
whom had recommended that the unincorporated business
firms/individuals be brought under certain discipline and,
if possible, non-banking financial business was not to be
permitted to be carried on by the unincorporated bodies. It
will be useful in this regard to refer to the report of the
study group on non-banking financial intermediaries
appointed by the Banking Commission in 1971. The study
group after making a detailed study of the then existing
non-banking financial intermediaries stated in respect of
unincorporated bodies in para 8.25 of its report as under:
8.25 We, therefore, suggest that the Reserve Banks
control may be extended to finance corporations and
necessary enabling legislation be passed to that effect. We
recognise that the administrative task of watching and
regulating the operations of a large number of small firms
will be difficult. We, therefore, suggest that if the law
permits, only companies may be allowed to do the banking
business in the sense of accepting deposits from the public
for the purpose of lending or investment. IN that case, the
Banking Regulation Act would govern the operations of the
Bangalore type finance corporations. If, however, the law
does not permit it, any scheme of regulation may have as one
of its objections the reduction in the number of finance
corporations besides, of course, the safeguarding of
depositors interest.
It was further submitted that the amendments were
introduced after taking into account the recommendations of
successive committees, appointed by the Bank and Government
of India, which had studied the functioning of these bodies.
The question of restricting such financial activity by
unincorporated bodies, is a question of economic policy as
it involves regulation of economic activities by different
constituents. In such matters of economic policy, this
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Honble Court does not interfere with the decision of the
expert bodies which have examined the matter. The following
observations of this Honble Court made in R.K. Garg Vs,.
Union of India, 1982 (1) SCR 947 at 969 are appropriate:
Another rule of equal importance is that laws
relating to economic activities should be viewed with
greater latitude than laws touching civil rights such as
freedom of speech, religion etc. It has been said by no
less a person than Holmes,J. that the legislature should be
allowed some play in the joints, because it has to deal with
complex problems which do not admit of solution through any
doctrinaire or straight jacket formula and this is
particularly true in case of legislation dealing with
economic matters, where, having regard to the nature of the
problems required to be dealt with, greater play in the
joints has to be allowed to the legislature. The court
should feel more inclined to give judicial deference to
legislature judgment in the field of economic regulation
than in other areas where fundamental human rights are
involved. Nowhere has this admonition been more
felicitously expressed than in Morey V. Dond (354 US 457)
where Frankfurther J. said in his inimitable style:
In the utilities, tax and economic regulation cases,
there are good reasons for judicial self-restraint if not
judicial deference to legislative judgment. The legislature
after all has the affirmative responsibility. The courts
have only the power to destroy, not to reconstruct. When
these are added to the complexity of economic regulation,
the uncertainty, the liability to error, the bewildering
conflict of the experts, and the number of times the judges
have been overruled by events self limitation can be
seen to be the path to judicial wisdom and institutional
prestige and stability.
The court must always remember that legislation is
directed to practical problems, that the economic mechanism
is highly sensitive and complex, that many problems are
singular and contingent, that laws are not abstract
propositions and do not relate to obstract units and are not
to be measured by abstract symmetry that exact wisdom and
nice adaptation of remedy are not always possible and that
judgement is largely a prophecy based on meager and
uninterrupted experience. Every legislation particularly
in economic matters is essentially empiric and it is based
on experimentation or what one may call trial and error
method and therefore it cannot provide for all possible
situations or anticipate all possible abuses. There may be
crudities and inequities in complicated experimental
economic legislation but on that account alone it cannot be
struck down as invalid.
At page 988 it is further held:
That would depend upon diverse fiscal and economic
considerations based on practical necessity and
administrative expediency and would also involve a certain
amount of experimentation on which the court would be last
fitted to pronounce. The court would not have the necessary
competence and expertise to adjudicate upon such an economic
issue. The court cannot possibly assess or evaluate what
would be the impact of a particular immunity or exemption
and whether it would sere the purpose in view or not.
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Even if these restrictions incorporated in the Act
amount to a total prohibition, such action was necessary in
the public interest as the mushroom growth of unincorporated
bodies accepting deposits had gone beyond control calling
for restriction of the nature imposed by the amended Section
45-S. In the case of Reserve Bank of India Vs. Peerless
General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd. and others (1987)
61 Company Cases 663, this Honble Court took judicial
notice of and expressed concern about the mushroom growth of
such bodies by referring to the advertisements issued by
various such bodies in the press. While upholding the
constitutional validity of the Prize Chits and Money
Circulation Schemes (Banning) Act, 1978 (Srinivasa
Enterprises Vs. Union of India, 1980 (4) SCC 507) this
Honble Court pointed out that for saving the poor and
unwary public from the unscrupulous racketeers who
glamourise and prey upon the gambling instinct to get rich
through prizes, banning was necessary. The court observed
how can you save moth from the fire except by putting out
the fatal fire ? On the same analogy for safeguarding or
protecting the public from the loss which was likely to be
caused to them by the failure of unincorporated bodies
promising high returns, it was necessary to prohibit
unincorporated bodies from accepting deposits from the
public. Further, as observed by this Court in Srinivas
Enterprises case (supra) it is a constitutional truism that
restrictions in extreme cases should be pushed to the point
of prohibition, if any lesser strategy will not achieve the
purpose.
It cannot be denied that shroffs have played an
important roll in providing finance in the rural sector and
in small towns. But, despite the services which they may
have rendered, it is difficult to accept the contention that
the RBI was not justified in imposing ban on unincorporated
bodies accepting deposits from public while carrying on
financing business. The inherent danger to the public
specially in small towns and villages in permitting such
business to be carried on un-checked and un-regulatory was
ample justification for the impugned legislation, keeping in
mind the experience of the public which had been dealing
with such unincorporated bodies in Kerala and Tamil Nadu.
It is open to the appellants to organise their business
within the permissible legal set up by forming non- banking
financial corporations and functioning in accordance with
Chapter III-B of the Act and the directives issued by the
Bank from time to time. The prohibition on partnership
firms to carry on their business like that of shroffs cannot
be regarded as being an unreasonable restriction on the
fundamental right of the appellants to carry on their trade.
They can continue lending money as long as they do not
borrow from the public.
The services rendered by certain informal sectors of
the Indian economy could not be belittled. However, in the
path of economic progress, if the informal system was sought
to be replaced by a more organised system, capable of better
regulation and discipline, then this was an economic
philosophy reflected by the legislation in question. Such a
philosophy might have its merits and demerits. But these
were matters of economic policy. They are best left to the
wisdom of the legislature and in policy matters the accepted
principle is that the courts should not interfere. Moreover
in the context of the changed economic scenario the
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expertise of people dealing with the subject should not be
lightly interfered with. The consequences of such
interdiction can have large-scale ramifications and can put
the clock back for a number of years. The process of
rationalisation of the infirmities in the economy can be put
in serious jeopardy and, therefore, it is necessary that
while dealing with economic legislations, this Court, while
not jettisoning its jurisdiction to curb arbitrary action or
unconstitutional legislation, should interfere only in those
few cases where the view reflected in the legislation is not
possible to be taken at all.
Examining the validity of the amended Section 45-S of
the Act by applying the principles enunciated over the years
by this Court, and as encapsuled in the passage quoted in
the earlier part of this judgment from this Courts decision
in Papnasan Labour Unions Case (supra) we find that the said
Section is in no way illegal or bad in law. Section 45-S no
doubt prohibits the conduct of banking business by an
unincorporated non-banking entity like a shroff, but this
prohibition has come about, inter alia, in the interest of
unwary depositors and borrowers (from shroffs) and with a
view to prevent them from committing financial suicide.
Earlier attempts to adequately regulate the non-banking
institutions not having achieved the desired result of
protecting large number of depositors from unincorporated
financial institutions which would suddenly mushroom
overnight and then vanish without a trace, but taking with
it depositors money, left the RBI with no alternative but to
prohibit such unincorporated entities from conducting
financial business which was more than akin to banking.
The restrictions imposed against acceptance of
deposits by unincorporated bodies carrying on financial
activity or the business of deposit acceptance or lending in
any manner are in the larger interest of general public vis
a vis few persons accepting such deposits. The need for
such restrictions had become acute and imperative in view of
large scale mis-management of public funds by such
unincorporated bodies.
Accordingly, we hold that the provisions of Section
45-S of the Act are valid.
Before we conclude there is another matter to which we
must advert to. It has been brought to our notice that
Section 45- S of the Act has been challenged in various High
Courts and few of them have granted the stay of provisions
of Section 45-S. When considering an application for
staying the operation of a piece of legislation, and that
too pertaining to economic reform or change then the courts
must bear in mind that unless the provision is manifestly
unjust or glaringly unconstitutional, the courts must show
judicial restrain in staying the applicability of the same.
Merely because a statute comes up for examination and some
arguable point is raised, which persuades the courts to
consider the controversy, the legislative will should not
normally be put under suspension pending such consideration.
It is now well- settled that there is always a presumption
in favour of the constitutional validity of any legislation,
unless the same is set- aside after final hearing and,
therefore, the tendency to grant stay of legislation
relating to economic reform, at the interim stage, cannot be
understood. The system of checks and balances has to be
utilised in a balanced manner with the primary objective of
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accelerating economic growth rather than suspending its
growth by doubting its constitutional efficacy at the
threshold itself.
While the courts should not abrogate its duty of
granting interim injunctions where necessary, equally
important is the need to ensure that the judicial discretion
does not abrogate from the function of weighing the
overwhelming public interest in favour of the continuing
operation of a fiscal statute or a piece of economic reform
legislation, till on a mature consideration at the final
hearing, it is found to be unconstitutional. It is,
therefore, necessary to sound a word of caution against
intervening at the interlocutory stage in matters of
economic reforms and fiscal statutes.
A number of petitions had been filed in this Court
seeking transfer of writ petitions pending in different High
Courts. By order dated 17.2.2000, those Transfer Petitions
were dismissed as not pressed. Besides the writ petitions,
in respect of which, those transfer petitions had been
filed, a number of other petitions are pending disposal in
various High Courts. In quite a few of them the High Courts
have granted an interim injunction staying the operation of
the implementation of the amended Section 45-S of the Act.
For the view we have taken now, it is imperative that these
petitions, pending in the different High Courts, are
formally disposed off at an early date. We, therefore,
request all the High Courts, in which the petitions are
pending challenging the provisions of Section 45-S, to
dispose them of within a period of three months. Needless
to say inasmuch as the validity of Section 45-S has been
upheld by us, the said provision shall be liable to be
enforced notwithstanding any interim orders to the contrary
which may have been passed by any High Court, which interim
order must necessarily now loose all its significance.
For the aforesaid reasons, this writ petition is
dismissed. The respondents will be entitled to costs.