Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CORPORATION BANK & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAVIN J. SHAH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/01/2000
BENCH:
S.Saghir Ahmad, S.Rajendra Babu
JUDGMENT:
RAJENDRA BABU, J. :
The respondent before us filed a petition before the
National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission [hereinafter
referred to as the Commission] to claim that the
respondent has been exporting tea to Sudan from 1970 till
1982. The respondent had effected exports of 13
consignments of tea to M/s Sudan Tea Company, Khartoum,
Sudan during the period between December 11, 1980 and March
2, 1981. The respondent who had credit facilities with the
appellants entrusted the documents relating to export of tea
for the purpose of realising the proceeds thereof from the
consignee. The appellants issued advice of purchase of
bills to the respondent in respect of the goods covered by
several invoices. The appellants negotiated the documents
relating to the exports effected by the respondent through
M/s EL Nilein Bank, Khartoum, Sudan [hereinafter referred to
as the foreign bank]. The respondent claimed that he did
not ask the appellants to negotiate the export documents
through any particular bank in Sudan but the appellants on
their own appointed the foreign bank for realising the
export proceeds from the consignee; that the appellants had
not at any time consulted or even obtained the respondents
opinion in the matter of appointing the foreign bank; that
the appellants had to release the export documents to the
consignee only on payment of the export value in U.S.Dollars
and the instructions to release the shipping documents to
the consignee to enable him to take delivery of the
consignment as denoted by the expression cash against
documents. It is further claimed that the appellants
should not have realised the export documents without
receiving the export value from the consignee in
U.S.Dollars. It is contended that the invoices were
realised in U.S.Dollars and the appellants could not have
realised the export documents before ensuring that the
export proceeds could be repatriated to India in
U.S.Dollars. In accordance with the directions of the
Reserve Bank of India in the matter of exports, the proceeds
had to be realised and repatriated to India only in
U.S.Dollars and not in any other currency. The appellants
did not inform the respondent of any difficulties
experienced by them in the matter of negotiations of the
aforesaid export documents at any time prior to the
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completion of the exports covered by the invoices in
question. Moreover, the appellants did not approach the
respondent in effecting any changes in the authority given
by it in the matter of negotiating the said documents. The
respondent had taken insurance coverage for the exports
effected by them from the Export Credit Guarantee
Corporation of India Limited [hereinafter referred to as
the Corporation] to cover the risks involved in the export
business. After the respondent was advised by the
appellants that they could not realise the export proceeds
in U.S.Dollars due to certain restrictions imposed by the
Sudan Government and requested the respondent to approach
the Corporation to settle the claim using the insurance
policy taken by the respondent in respect of the goods
covered by the documents in question. The Corporation
finally paid ninety per cent of the export proceeds covered
by the documents. The appellants illegally recovered the
balance from the respondent by adopting the balance of ten
per cent of the export value to the account of the
respondent with them. The respondent also claimed a sum of
Rs.52,816.76p towards interest for the period until the
insurance claim was settled by the Corporation. These
amounts were debited to the account of the respondent. The
appellants also recovered a sum of Rs.97,482.19p towards
foreign exchange fluctuations charges from the respondent.
It was claimed by the respondent that the appellants had
totally failed to execute the specific instructions of the
respondent to realise the export documents to the consignee
only after accepting in cash in U.S.Dollars but were
negligent in handling the consignment given to them as a
result whereof the goods released to the consignee without
realising the export proceeds for and on behalf of the
respondent. It was contended that the appellants had
originally purchased the export documents and, therefore,
the respondent could not have been held to be responsible
for the delay in settling the insurance claim as also the
fluctuation charges of foreign exchange from the respondent.
The delay in the matter of repatriation of export proceeds
are attributable to the appellants but the Reserve Bank of
India had been pressurising the respondent for repatriation
of the export proceeds. Therefore, it was claimed that an
amount of Rs.2,25,377.04p U.S.Dollars was due to the
respondent towards the export proceeds from Sudan which were
covered by the documents negotiated through the appellants.
It was claimed that the respondent is a consumer under the
Consumer Protection Act, 1986 and had hired the services of
the appellants for consideration and there has been a total
deficiency or absolute breach of agreement in the
performance of the duty or otherwise in relation to the
service rendered by the appellants. The appellants
contended that the claim had become stale as it related to
the years 1979 to 1982; that the matter did not fall under
the provisions of the Consumer Protection Act and
accordingly, the Commission had no jurisdiction; that there
was no transaction with the respondent and the banks
customer was a firm carrying on business in partnership by
name M/s Javerilal & Sons and thus the respondent had no
locus standi at all; that there was no deficiency of
service on the part of the appellant bank because it carried
out its obligations by sending the documents including the
bill of exchange to the named bank in Khartoum, Sudan and as
a collecting bank, it was not its responsibility to ensure
that payments are collected. If and when the named bank in
Sudan sent the amount, the same will be to the benefit of
the exporter; that in any case the exporter had received
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90% of the value of the export from the Corporation and,
therefore, the claim made in the petition was in excess of
the actual loss suffered; that the appellant bank had
already filed a suit against the export company including
the respondent before the Sub-Court, Cochin in O.S.No.48/92
on February 20, 1992 for recovery of about Rs.18 lakhs due
under various credit facilities.
The Commission, however, rejected the point relating
to the limitation or that the claim being stale on the
ground that the Reserve Bank of India has been pressurising
the complainant before them for the repatriation of the
export proceeds in U.S.Dollars and it is incumbent on the
respondent to do so and the respondent has been obtaining
the extensions from the Reserve Bank of India for realising
the foreign exchange. Therefore, the amount due by way of
foreign exchange is still outstanding and its recovery is
not barred by limitation. On the other objection that the
claim made in these proceeding was a subject-matter of a
suit it was stated that the suit pertains to the recovery of
the amounts due to the appellants under cash credit and
packing credit loans given to the respondent. The cash
credit loan was granted in 1989 while packing credit loan
was granted in 1990 and 1991 whereas the transactions with
which we are concerned in the present case were export of
tea are in the year 1980-81. Thus the two matters had no
connection.
On the merits of the matter, the Commission stated :
1. That the invoices were drawn in U.S.Dollars; 2.
That the bill amount in the Advice of Bill Purchased the
value recoverable from the drawee is shown in U.S.Dollars;
3. That the Reserve Bank of India directions required
repatriation to India of the export proceeds in U.S.Dollars
and not in any other currency; 4. That the advices issued
by the appellant bank reharding having negotiated the
documentary bills clearly specify that the proceeds are to
be remitted to the American Express International Banking
Corporation, New York with instructions to make payment to
the Banks Central Foreign Exchange Department, Bombay.
The Commission further adverted to the Export Control
Manual, 1978 issued by the Reserve Bank of India and held
that the appellants being an authorised dealer was enjoined
to receive the remittances from foreign countries or to
obtain the reimbursement from their correspondent in those
countries against payments due for exports from India either
in rupees from the account of a bank situate in Group A
countries or receive payment in any permitted currency.
According to the Commission, those instructions were clear
to fix the responsibility of the bank who was also an
authorised dealer under the Export Control Manual and thus
the Commission concluded that there was a lapse on the part
of the appellant bank in realising the consignments against
local currency and without ensuring realisation and
repatriation of the export value in U.S.Dollars.
The respondent modified the claim in the light of the
appellants response and limited the claim for damages as
follows :
a. Rupee equivalent of U.S.$ 22,538 [10% of the total
amount receivable]; b. Rs.52,816.76p deducted as interest
from the petitioner complainants account; c. Rs.97,482.19
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deducted from the petitioner complainants account on
account of fluctuating exchange rates; d. Interest on the
amounts (a), (b) and (c) above.
On the question of exchange rate fluctuation charge it
was held that the appellants could not realise the same from
the respondent inasmuch as delay has been caused due to the
lapse on the part of the appellant bank in delivering the
consignments without realising their value in U.S.Dollars.
As regards the interest, the Commission allowed the same at
the same rate at which foreign exchange value upto April 19,
1983 and at the same rate as the appellant bank had charged
from the date of the purchase of the bills. On that basis
the matter was disposed of. The Commission, although the
respondent had limited its claim, had given a much larger
relief as had been claimed in the original petition. The
appellant bank is in appeal before us.
The contentions put forth before us are as follows :
1. The respondent is not a consumer within the meaning of
the expression in Section 2(d) of the Consumer Protection
Act. The appellant bank had no dealing whatsoever with the
respondent. The banks customer was a firm by name M/s
Javerilal & Sons which was carrying on business in
partnership. There was no averment in the petition before
the Commission to the effect that he was acting on behalf of
the firm M/s Javerilal & Sons. 2. The role of the
appellant as a collecting bank was restricted to sending the
bills of exchange and other documents to the named foreign
bank and to receive the proceeds as and when the same is
sent by the foreign bank. There was no complaint that the
appellant bank failed to perform any of its duties; in fact
the undisputed facts are that the appellant bank sent the
documents within time to the named bank in Sudan. Thus the
appellant bank had fully performed its duty as expected and,
therefore, there was no deficiency in its service. 3. The
claim before the Commission was wholly time barred inasmuch
as the complaint relating to the transaction of 1981- 82 was
filed in the year 1992. Even though no specific period of
limitation applicable to the consumer protection rights in
the year 1992, (w.e.f. 1993 periods of limitation are
specified by Section 24A), the Commission was not to look
into stale claims. 4. In a transaction like this dealing
with documentary credits, banks deal only with the documents
and not with the underlying transaction. Accordingly, the
bank has not failed to provide the service that it was
expected to. 5. The Commission seriously erred in granting
the relief and that too in excess of the prayer. The
respondent was not entitled to any relief whatsoever.
On behalf of the respondent the contentions raised
before the Forum to which we adverted to in detail are
reiterated.
The agreement between M/s Javerilal & Sons and Sudan
Tea Company dated March 19, 1979 provided for sale of tea.
Clause (5) thereof provided the mode of payment. It states
that the payment of the seller shall be made on the basis of
cash against documents on the arrival of the carrier at Port
Sudan through EL NILEIN BANK, KHARTOUM and subject to the
presentation of following documents:
1. Complete set of clean on board bill of lading
marked foreign pre-paid in three negotiable copies. 2.
Suppliers invoice in ten copies showing C&F Port Sudan in
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Dollars. Details to include number of chests gross and nett
weights and marks. Invoice to be certified true and correct
and signed. 3. Certificate of Origin. 4. Preshipment
inspection certificate covering weight, packing and quality
issued by Messrs. General Superintendence Co., Inspection
fees and expenses being at sellers account.
The documents in question were furnished to the
appellant bank with the bills of exchange to negotiate the
same through the foreign bank on arrival of the goods at
Port Sudan in exchange for a sum mentioned therein in
U.S.Dollars in cash against documents at site of the bills
of exchange and pay to the order of the Corporation Bank
fort the value against the tea shipped from Cochin to Port
Sudan. These bills stood purchased by the Corporation Bank
with advice thereof with several conditions and the most
important thereto being the following : We shall exercise
due diligence in the selection of our agents. However, in
the event you designate a correspondent other than the one
of our own selection, we shall follow your instructions upon
the explicit understanding that you assume and confirm all
the acts of such correspondent of your own choosing and
agree to hold us harmless from all consequences thereof.
When a bank, after purchasing or discounting an
instrument from a customer, credits the customer with the
amount of the instrument and allows the customer to draw
against the amount as credited before the bill or instrument
is cleared, then the bank would be collecting the money not
for the customer but chiefly for itself. If the bills and
the relevant documents presented by its drawer are accepted
by a banker with endorsement in its favour and the same are
immediately discounted by the banker without waiting for its
collection, by giving full credit for the entire amount of
the document, so presented, the banker itself becomes a
purchaser and the holder thereof for full value. A banker
discounts a bill as opposed to taking it for collection or
as security for advances, when he takes it definitely and at
once as transferee for value and that it does not matter
that the amount of the bill, less discount, is carried to
current account as in the case of a customer that is the
usual course and where the transaction is really one of
discounting, the banker is of course at liberty to deal with
the bill as he pleases rediscounting or transferring it.
In the claim form filed with the Corporation, it was
stated that the respondent had suffered a loss under the
policy owing to a delay in transfer of the payment in
respect of shipments in question. The said form was signed
both by the consignor and the appellant bank. It has been
declared therein that the amount shall be deposited by the
buyer in the local currency with a correspondent bank in the
buyers country on the date indicated against that column
and proceeds are awaiting transfer to India. The claim was
to the extent of 90% of the value of exports. While it is
the contention of the appellants that the exporter had
entrusted the bank to negotiate certain documents through a
certain bank mentioned therein when in fact that bank had
failed to collect the money in foreign exchange but
collected only in local currency in the foreign country and
not in the currency indicated in the documents and thus
there was no liability at all on the part of the appellants,
the respondent would submit that the appellants having
purchased the documents in question were in fact collecting
the monies for their own benefit and not for the benefit of
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the respondent when the documents had clearly indicated the
manner in which the consignee get the goods except after
payment of cash no delivery could have been made, the
appellant bank had acted with negligence and, therefore, is
liable to make good the loss suffered by it. We have
adverted to the agreement between the parties. The
consignee and the consignor have clearly indicated that the
documents had to be negotiated through the foreign bank and
the mode of payment was through the foreign bank. If that
is so, the appellants were acting for and on behalf of the
respondent when they sent the documents to the named bank
for negotiations and collection of the money due under the
agreement the appellants could not have sent the documents
to any other agent inasmuch as payments had to be made only
through that foreign bank and that foreign bank as was the
usual practice realise the documents against payment in
local currency which was hitherto convertible in foreign
exchange in U.S.Dollars could not be done on account of
policy of the Sudan Government. If that is so, it is very
difficult to perceive of a situation regarding the
deficiency in the service rendered by the appellant bank.
The appellant bank negotiated the documents as provided
under the agreement; so did the foreign bank but the
conversion of the local currency to U.S.Dollars became
difficult on account of policy of the Sudan Government.
When the realisation of the money in U.S.Dollars was
frustrated by reason of the governmental action, we fail to
understand as to how the appellants could be held to be
responsible for the same. The Commission totally failed to
appreciate this aspect. Whatever may be the position with
regard to the collection procedure that by discount or
purchase of the bills or otherwise, one thing is clear that
all that was required to be done under the terms of the
agreement and under the contract had been done by the two
banks. Therefore, we do not think that the Commission was
justified in having reached the conclusion the appellants
services were deficient so as to attract the provisions of
the Consumer Protection Act.
We may further notice that there is another strong
reason as to why the claim made by the respondent should not
have been granted. The transactions in question took place
in the years 1979 and 1981. The difficulties in realisation
of the amounts due from the consignee also became clear at
the time when the claim was made before the Corporation and
the claim had been made as early as on December 19, 1982.
The petition before the Commission was filed on September
25, 1992 that is clearly a decade after a claim had been
made before the Corporation. A claim could not have been
filed by the respondent at this instance of time. Indeed at
the relevant time there was no period of limitation under
the Consumer Protection Act to prefer a claim before the
Commission but that does not mean that the claim could be
made even after unreasonably long delay. The Commission has
rejected this contention by a wholly wrong approach in
taking into consideration that foreign exchange payable to
Reserve Bank of India was still due and, therefore, the
claim is alive. The claim of the respondent is from the
bank. At any rate, as stated earlier, when the claim was
made for indemnifying the losses suffered from the
Corporation, it was clear to the parties about the futility
of awaiting any longer for collecting such amounts from the
foreign bank. In those circumstances, the claim, if at all
was to be made, ought to have been made within a reasonable
time thereafter. What is reasonable time to lay a claim
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depends upon facts of each case. In the legislative wisdom,
three years period has been prescribed as the reasonable
time under the Limitation Act to lay a claim for money. We
think, that period should be the appropriate standard
adopted for computing reasonable time to raise a claim in a
matter of this nature. For this reason also we find the
claim made by the respondent ought to have been rejected by
the Commission.
Further we also find that the contention raised by the
appellants as to the locus standi of the respondent in
laying the claim has not been dealt with by the Commission
at all. In the cause title, the respondent is shown to be
an individual whereas in the statement of facts, the
respondent is described as a company which is registered as
a partnership firm engaged in business of exports and in the
petition reference is made to the firm or the company and
not to the individual. As to how a single individual person
could have laid a claim on behalf of a firm is not clear to
us at all. Whether he was a partner of the firm or he had
the authority of the firm to lay the claim is not clear to
us as these facts have not been pleaded.
In these circumstances, the Commission had not duly
applied its mind to the relevant aspects. Any one of the
reasons given above is enough to reject the claim made by
the respondent. We, therefore, allow this appeal, set aside
the order made by the Commission and dismiss the complaint
filed by the respondent. No costs.