Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN BANK
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. NATARAJA PILLAI AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/10/1992
BENCH:
[KULDIP SINGH AND N.M. KASLIWAL, JJ.]
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950-Article 136-Appeal-Execution of
promissory note, equitable mortgage etc. for loans for bank-
Proof-Statutory presumption u/s. 118-Negotiable Instruments
Act, 1881-Liability of defendants to pay the amount claimed
by bank.
Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881-Section 118-Promissory
note-Consideration-Presumption of-Proof of execution of
pronote, equitable mortgage etc. for bank loans-Liability of
defendant to pay the amount claimed by bank.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-Bank filed a suit for the recovery of an
amount of Rs.1,21,006.98 due under an equitable mortgage and
pronote against the defendant No. 1, his wife and his son,
the defendant Nos. 2 and 3 respectively.
Accordingly to the Bank, the defendant Nos. 1 to 3
executed a promissory note for Rs. 1,00,000 on 26.8.1971 in
favour of the Bank and two hypothecation deeds in respect of
‘A’ schedule properties. They also executed and equitable
mortgage on 28.8.1971 for ‘B’ schedule properties.
The consideration for the transaction also included an
amount of Rs. 71,000 granted by the Bank in favour of 37
persons by way of short term loans. The defendant No.1 has
executed a guarantee agreement on 14.6.1971 in favour of the
Bank in respect of the short term loan in favour of 37
persons.
The defendant No.1 denied the execution of guarantee
agreement as well as the promissory note. He also denied the
furnishing of any guarantee with regard to the repayment of
loans amounting to Rs.71,000 to 37 persons. He contended
that the agent of the bank in order to ward off his own
prosecution and arrest for having advanced large amounts as
loans to landless persons in an irregular manner, obtained
the signatures of the defendant on a printed promissory note
without the details having been filled up; and that the
documents were got executed by exercise of fraud, undue
influence, coercion and misrepresentation.
The defendant Nos. 2 and 3 in their separate written
statements took the same stand as taken by the defendant
No.1.
The defendant No. 3 also filed a separate additional
written statement taking the ground that as he was born on
12.11.1953, he being minor on the date of the alleged
execution of the promissory note, the same was void as
against him.
The trial Court decreed the suit in favour of the Bank
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and against the defendant Nos.1 and 2. The suit against
defendant No.3 was dismissed as he was found to be a minor
on 26.8.1971, i.e, on the date of the execution of the
promissory note.
The defendant Nos. 1 and 2 filed an appeal in the High
Court.
The High Court though upheld the finding of the trial
court, that the promissory note was executed with the full
knowledge that it was a promissory note for Rs. 1,00,000,
but the same was void for want of consideration to the
extent of the loan advanced to 37 borrowers. It further held
that the loans amounting to Rs. 71,000 to 37 persons were
advanced from 17.12.1970 to 4.5.1971 and as such there was
no consideration for executing the guarantee agreement nor
for executing the promissory note. It also held that the
promissory note could be taken to have been supported by
consideration only to the extent of Rs. 21,616.25 which
represented the amount due against defendant Nos.1 and 2 on
account of their personal borrowings from the Bank.
The High Court allowed the appeal in part and passed a
decree in favour of the Bank for an amount of Rs. 21,616.25
only with interest at the rate of 10-1/2 percent per annum
from the date of the plaint till the date of the decree of
the trial court and at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from
the date of the decree till the date of the recovery of the
amount.
Against the judgment and decree of the High Court, the
Bank moved this Court, in the persent appeal by special
leave.
Allowed the appeal filed by the Bank, this Court,
HELD : 1.01. All the three defendants had taken loans
from the bank and those were outstanding against them at the
time of execution of the pronote.[115-B]
1.02. The defendants has executed the pronote and also
created equitable mortgage in favour of the Bank and the
pronote itself contained an endorsement of "for value
received".[117-F]
1.03. Section 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,
1881 provides for a statutory presumption of consideration
of every negotiable instrument, which includes a promissory
note.[115-B]
1.04. The pronote, Exhibit A.1. dated 26.8.1971 was
executed with full consideration. The defendants knowingly
and with full knowledge had executed the pronote Exhibit
A.1. In the facts and circumstances of the case, there was
no necessity of going into the question of novation of
contract as contemplated under Section 62 of the Indian
Contract Act. [117-E].
1.05 The High Court was wrong in arriving at the
conclusion that Exhibit A.1 failed for want of consideration
to the extent of Rs.74,190.56 and also for the amount
advanced to the third defendant, the liability in respect of
which came to Rs. 4,193.19. [117-D]
1.06 The High Court has taken a wrong approach of the
entire case and has ignored the important relevant document
which prove beyond any manner of doubt that the promissory
note, Exhibit A.1, the basis of the suit was executed with
consideration and the defendant Nos. 1 and 2 were liable to
pay the entire amount claimed by the Bank. [114-H, 115-A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2945 of
1981.
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From the Judgment and Order dated 25.11.1980 of the
Madras High court in Appeal No.699 of 1976.
S.K. Sastri and S. Srinivasan for the Appellant.
A.T.M. Sampath and Ms. Pushpa Rajan for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KASLIWAL, J. This appeal by grant of special leave is
directed against the judgment of Madras High Court dated
25.11.1980.
The appellant - Indian Bank (in short ‘the Bank’) filed
a suit for the recovery of an amount of Rs.1,21,006.98 due
under a equitable mortgage and pronote against three
defendants namely, K. Nataraja Pillai (defendant No.1), his
wife N. Pappathi Ammal (defendant No.2) and his son N.
Narayanan (defendant No.3). According to the Bank, the
defendant Nos.1 to 3 executed a promissory note for Rs.
1,00,000 on 26.8.1971 in favour of the Bank. They also
executed two hypothecation deeds in respect of ‘A’ schedule
properties and executed and equitable mortgage on 28.8.1971
for ‘B’ schedule properties. The consideration for the
aforesaid transaction also included an amount of Rs. 71,000
granted by the Bank in favour of 37 persons by way of short
term loans. The defendant No.1 had executed a guarantee
agreement on 14.6.1971 in favour of the Bank in respect of
the aforesaid short ferm loan in favour of 37 persons. The
Bank has thus based its claim in the plaint on the
promissory note and guarantee agreement for Rs.1,00,000 as
principal and Rs. 21,006.98 as interest.
The first defendant filed a written statement denying
the execution of guarantee agreement as well as the
promissory note. He pleaded inter alia that the defendant
has not furnished any guarantee on 14.6.1971 with regard to
the repayment of loans amounting to Rs. 71,000 to 37
persons. The defendants has not executed any promissory note
in favour of the Bank for a lakh of rupees nor has executed
any equitable mortgage nor deposited any documents of title
towards any loan of Rs.1,00,000. The defendant No.1 also
pleaded that the agent to the Bank Shri Krishnamurthy lyer
in order to ward of his own prosecution and arrest for
having advanced large amounts as loans to landless persons,
in an irregular manner obtained the signature of the
defendants on a printed promissory note without the details
having been filled up. The documents were got executed by
exercise of fraud, undue influence, coercion and
misrepresentation. The defendant Nos. 2 and 3 filed a
separate written statement and took the same stand as taken
by the defendant No.1. The third defendant subsequently
filed a separate additional written statement taking the
ground that he was born on 12.11.1953 and as such being
minor on the date of the alleged execution of the promissory
note, the same was void as against. The trial court by
judgement dated 29.4.1975 decreed the suit in favour of the
Bank and against the defendant Nos. 1 and 2 only and
dismissed the suit against defendant No.3 as he was found to
be minor on 26.8.1971.
The defendant Nos. 1 and 2 filed an appeal in the High
Court. The High Court though; upheld the finding of the
trial court that the promissory note Exhibit A.1 dated
26.8.1971 was executed with the full knowledge that it was a
promissory note to Rs.1,00,000, but the same was void for
want consideration to the extent of the loan advanced to 37
borrowers. The High Court held that the loans amounting to
Rs. 71,000 to 37 persons were advanced from 17.12.1970 to
4.5.1971 and as such there was no consideration for
executing the guarantee agreement dated 14.6.1971 nor for
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executing the promissory note on 26.8.1971. The High Court
further held that the promissory note Exhibit A.1 can be
taken to have been supported by consideration only to the
extent of Rs. 21,616.25 which represented the amount due
against defendant Nos. 1 and 2 on account of their personal
borrowings from the Bank. The High Court also held that the
trial court itself has found it established that the
defendant No.3 was a minor on 26.81971 and the Bank having
not filed any appeal, no decree would have been passed
against defendant Nos. 1 and 2 for an amount of Rs.4,193.19,
the amount advanced to the third defendant. The High Court
as a result of the above findings allowed the appeal in part
and passed a decree in favour of the Bank for an amount of
Rs.21,616.25 only with interest at the rate of 10-1/2 per
cent per annum from the date of the plaint till the date of
the decree of the trial court and at the rate of 6 per cent
per annum from the date of the decree till the dated of the
recovery of the amount. Aggrieved against the judgment and
decree of the High Court the Bank has come in appeal before
this Court.
We have heard learned counsel for both the parties and
having thoroughly perused the record. So far as the
execution of the promissory note Exhibit A.1 and the
execution of guarantee agreement Exhibit A.8 is concerned,
both the trial court as well as the High court have found in
favour of the Bank and the same being a finding of fact is
not under challenge. The only question which calls for
consideration before us is whether the view taken by the
High Court that the promissory note was void for want of
consideration to the extent of loans of Rs.71,000 advanced
to 37 persons is correct or not. The High Court has taken
the view that so far as the guarantee agreement Exhibit A.8
is concerned, the same was executed on 14.6.1971 long after
the loans amounting to Rs. 71,000 advance from 17.12.1970 to
4.5.1971. None of the 37 borrowers were granted any loan on
or after the execution of Exhibit A.8 by the first
defendant. The High Court took the view that where the
surety bond comes into existence after the original
borrowing by the principal debtor, the creditor must prove,
if he wants to proceed against the surety that he did
something or refrained from doing something in order to be a
valid consideration of the contract of surety or guarantee.
The High Court in the facts and circumstances of the case
observed that neither the amounts advanced to 37 persons has
become due for payment on the date of execution of Exhibit
A.8 on 14.6.1971 nor the Bank had come forward with the case
that the 37 persons were threatened with suits for recovery
of the amounts borrowed by them nor the first defendant
intervened and stood as a guarantee so as to prevent
impending legal proceedings as against 37 borrowers. Thus,
the Bank cannot be taken to have refrained from doing
anything in respect of the said loan of Rs. 71,000 to form
the same as consideration for the guarantee agreement. The
High Court in this regard placed reliance on Nanak Ram v.
Mehin Lal, I.L.R. 1 Allahabad 487, Muthukaruppa Mudali v.
Kathappudayan 27 M.L.J. 249 and on Bank of India v. Matha
Gounder, 1980 T.N.L.J. 117.
The High Court then examined the question of the
liability of the defendant Nos. 1 and 2 on the basis of the
pronote Exhibit A.1 in respect of the sum of Rs.71,000
borrowed by 37 persons on the principle of novation of
contract as contained under Section 62 of the Indian
Contract Act. The High Court observed that section 62
contemplates a new contract superseding or rescinding or
altering the original contract. The new contract should
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extinguish the earlier contract and the liability under the
earlier contract should come to an end otherwise the
novation will fall for want of consideration. The High Court
held that in this case there was subsisting debt between the
Bank and the 37 debtors and as such the liability arising
out of the debt could only be transferred to the first
defendant, a third party to the original agreement only by a
tripartite contract which will amount to novation. In this
case, it has neither been alleged nor proved that all the 37
borrowers from the Bank were parties to the arrangement
under which the first defendant is said to have taken over
their liability. Even after the execution of the promissory
not Exhibit A.1 the existing debt due by the 37 borrowers to
the Bank was not extinguished and the Bank was entitled to
claim the amount from the 37 borrowers in spite of the
pronote having been executed by the defendants.
The High Court in our view has taken a wrong approach
of the entire case and has ignored the important relevant
documents which prove beyond any manner of doubt that the
promissory note Exhibit A.1, the basis of the suit was
executed with consideration and the defendant Nos. 1 and 2
were liable to pay the entire amount claimed by the Bank.
Exhibit A.1 dated 26.8.1971 is the promissory note executed
by the defendants in favour of the Bank for a sum of Rs. one
lakh which itself recites that it was executed for value
received. Section 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,
1881 provides for a statutory presumption of consideration
of every negotiable Instrument which includes a promissory
note. It has been established on record that all the three
defendant had taken loans from the Bank and those were
outstanding against them at the time of execution of the
pronote. The Bank had come forward with the case in the
plaint that the first defendant had obtained a medium term
loan of Rs.10,000 on 11.9.1970 for the purpose of installing
a pump set and an engine and digging a well and for which an
equitable mortgage in respect of 7.86 acres of land was made
in favour of the Bank. The defendant No.1 further secured a
short term loan of Rs.2,000 on 18.12.1970 on the security of
the crops raised in his lands. The second defendant who was
wife of the first defendant had obtained a short term loan
of Rs. 2000 on 26.3.1970. The third defendant who was the
son of the first defendant had also obtained a short term
production loan of Rs. 2,000 on 25.5.1971 and a further sum
of Rs. 2,000 on 15.12.1971. The defendant No. 1 has also
executed a guarantee agreement on 14.6.1971 in respect of
short term production loan granted to 37 persons amounting
to Rs.71,000. The total of the above outstandings came to
Rs.93,239.03. The defendants sought a sanction of loan for
Rs.1,00,000 and the head office of the Bank sanctioned the
said loan to the defendants on 18.8.1971 in order to cover
up the earlier loans. A sum of Rs.6,760.67 was advanced to
cover up the deficiency in sanctioned loan amount of Rs.
1,00,000. On 26.8.1971 the defendants executed the
promissory note for the sanctioned loan amount of
Rs.1,00,000 and to repay the amount with interest as
mentioned in the pronote. On the same day the defendants
executed a hypothecation of their movable properties viz,
pump set and engine, set out in schedule ‘A’ to the plaint
by way of security for repayment of the loan. They also
executed another hypothecation bond in respect of the crop
on the same day. On the same day, the defendants agreed to
execute an equitable mortgage deed in respect of 27.02 acres
of land set out in schedule ‘B’ of the plaint towards the
loan of Rs.1,00,000 and deposited the title deeds relating
to the properties with the branch of the Bank at Madurai on
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28.8.1971. The defendants has come forward with a plea that
they did not execute the aforesaid documents Exhibit A.1 and
A.8 and Shri Krishnamurthy Iyer, agent of the Bank had
perpetrated a fraud and that the transaction was vitiated on
the ground of fraud, undue influence, coercion and
misrepresentation. Both the trial court as well as the High
Court found it established as a fact that the aforesaid
documents were executed by the defendants knowing fully well
the details of the transaction regarding the liability of
Rs. 1,00,000. The present suit is based on the promissory
note Exhibit A.1 and the equitable mortgage deeds Exhibits
A.4 and A.37. Thus, so far as the question of any
consideration of the guarantee agreement Exhibit A.8 is
concerned, the same is of no consequence in view of the
subsequent execution of the promissory note Exhibit A.1. The
law enunciated in the ruling referred to above in order to
hole that the guarantee agreement Exhibit A.8 dated 14.6.171
was without consideration as the loan to 37 persons has been
advanced much earlier to the execution of Exhibit A.8, will
not render the promissory note to be without consideration.
Now, so far as the consideration of the promissory note
Exhibit A.1 is concerned, the defendants has applied for
sanctioning a loan of Rs.1,00,000 from the Bank. The head
office of the Indian Bank at Madras vide Exhibit A.127
issued a sanction order to the Indian Bank Sivaganga Branch
granting a medium term loan of Rs. 1,00,000 to the first
defendant on 18.8.1971. The loan was sanctioned on the
condition of obtaining joint and several demand promissory
notes and an equitable mortgage deed in respect of 27.02
acres of land and hypothecation bond of 2 electric pump sets
from the defendants. It further stated that the liability of
a sum of Rs. 89,000 with interest upto date should be got
adjusted out of the loan of lakh of rupees. The agent of the
Indian Bank Sivaganga Branch sent a communication to the
first defendant on 21.8.1971 informing him of the sanction
of the loan. Exhibit A.36 was the office copy of the letter
whereby the first defendant had been informed of the
sanction of the medium term loan of Rs. 1,00,000 subject to
the execution promissory note and other documents as
directed by the head office. Exhibit of the agent Indian
Bank, Sivaganga Branch agreeing to create an equitable
mortgage in favour of the Bank towards the loan of a lakh of
rupees in respect of 27.02 acres of land. Exhibit A.38 is
the registered letter sent by the first defendant to the
custodian of the Indian Bank, head office, Madras intimating
that the balance amount that will be paid to him after
adjustment of all his liabilities, as disclosed by him under
the letter marked Exhibit A.37 may not be sufficient for him
to carry on his agricultural operations and as such
requesting to sanction a medium short term loan of not less
than Rs.20,000 and also requested to direct the agent Indian
Bank, Sivaganga Branch to return the promissory notes and
other connected documents to enable him to collect the
amounts from the concerned parties. Apart from the aforesaid
documents, Exhibits A.39 is the office copy of the letter
sent by the agent Indian Bank, Sivaganga Branch to the first
defendant asking him to take delivery of the promissory
notes relating to 37 persons after passing a receipt for the
same on 13.9.1971. It may be further noted that out of the
amount of Rs. 6,760.97 credited in the account of
defendants, a sum of Rs.6,200 was withdrawn by the first
defendant on 7.10.1971 through Exhibit A.52, a cheque drawn
in favour of self. This proved beyond any manner of doubt
that the defendants has accepted the sanctioning of loan of
Rs.1,00,000 on the terms and conditions laid down by the
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head office of the Bank and as such sanctioning of loan
clearly contained the adjustment of the liability of the 37
persons. Exhibit A.126 is a true copy of the loan amount of
the defendants as per ledger folio 4/168 of the Indian Bank,
Sivaganga Branch, which view a liability of Rs. 1,21,006.98.
The trial court had relied on all the aforesaid documents
and had recorded a finding that the suit promissory note was
fully supported by consideration and the equitable mortgage
deed created by the defendants were also true and valid
documents. The High Court, in our view was wrong in arriving
at the conclusion that Exhibit A.1 failed for want of
consideration to the extent of Rs.74,190.56 and also for the
amount advanced to the third defendant, the liability in
respect of which came to Rs.4,193.19.
We agree with the finding of the trial court that the
pronote Exhibit A.1 dated 26.8.1971 was executed with full
consideration. The defendants knowingly ad with full
knowledge had executed the pronote Exhibit A.1. In the facts
and circumstances of the case, there was no necessity of
going into the question of novation of contract as
contemplated under Section 62 of the Indian Contract Act.
The defendants has executed the pronote and also created
equitable mortgage in favour of the Bank and the pronote
itself contained an endorsement of "for value received". As
already mentioned above, there is also a statutory
presumption of consideration in respect of the promissory
note under Section 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,
1881. In these circumstance, we allow this appeal, set aside
the judgment and decree passed by the High Court and restore
the judgment and decree of the trial court with cost.
Appeal allowed.