Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGWANT P. SULAKHE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIGAMBAK GOPAL SULAKH AND OBS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/09/1985
BENCH:
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
BENCH:
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 79 1985 SCR Supl. (3) 169
1986 SCC (1) 366 1985 SCALE (2)819
ACT:
Joint family property, character of - When lt changes
ether by an unilateral act it is open to any member of the
joint family to convert any joint family property into his
personal property - Partnership firm formed out of joint
family funds and managing agency agreement entered into by
such a partnership firm with another company - Commission
received by the co-sharers of the point family in terms of
the managing agency agreement and the remuneration received
by them as the managing director treated as the joint family
property for all purposes - Whether one of the co-sharers by
a simple letter claim the commission remuneration received
by him as his personal property till the joint family is
disrupted - Position of managing director and the managing
agent, explained.
HEADNOTE:
One Pandarinath Martand Sulakhe died leaving behind him
his sons Vishwanath, Gopal, Govind and Bhagwant and
considerable properties. Vishwanath died in 1910 leaving
behind his son Dattatraya, Govind, one of the brothers who
constituted a pint family after the death of their father
Pandarinath Sulakhe, separated from the joint family in 1914
taking his share of the family properties. However, the
other two brothers along with the son of Vishwanath
continued to remain pint and lived as members of the joint
family till 8.12.1941 on which date Bhagwant intimated
Dattatraya son of Vishwanath his intention to cause
severance of the point family status.
Prior to it, in the year 1922, a Public Limited Company
named Lokmanya Mills Ltd. was intended to be floated and
with that in view Dattatraya and Bhagwant entered into a
partnership under the name and style of M/s. Sulakhe and Co.
with four outsiders, as per the Partnership Agreement dated
3rd January, 1923. me said Partnership firm Sulakhe and Co.
entered into a Managing Agency agreement on 5.2.1923 with
the said Lokmanya Mills Company Ltd. The said agreement was
to expire after 35 years. The mill actually went into
production in the year 1938. on the basis of the managing
agency agreement between the company
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and the firm Sulakhe & Co., Dattatraya acted as the managing
agent upto 1935 and thereafter Bhagwant became the managing
agent. After Bhagwant’s appointment as managing agent,
Dattatraya was appointed as the Director of the company.
At the time when the company was incorporated and its
articles were adopted and also at the time when the company
entered into the managing agency agreement with Sulakhe and
Co. and when the deed of partnership of the firm was
executed Bhagwant and Dattatraya being members of the joint
family, all the 325 shares which was initially purchased in
the company - 200 in the name of Dattatraya and 125 in the
name of Bhagwant - plus the 83 further shares - 79 in the
name of Bhagwant and 4 in the name of Gopal - were paid for
by the joint family out of the joint family funds.
Therefore, the entire amount of remuneration which was
received by Dattatraya and Bhagwant not only on account of
their shares of commission under the managing agency
agreement on the basis of the partnership deed but also on
account of the Director’s fees paid to them and also on
account of the salary paid to Dattatraya who acted as the
managing agent of the company till 1935, was treated as
joint family property. Even after Bhagwant took over as the
managing agent in 1935, the position continued to be the
same and the remuneration received by him formed part of the
joint family income till the dispute raised by him by his
letter dated 15th July, 1941. All monies received by
Bhagwant and Dattatraya from the company were not only
treated as joint family property, but also were so entered
in the books of account of joint family and were so shown in
the income tax returns.
However by his letter dated 15th July, 1941 Bhagwant
informed Dattatraya that the remuneration received by him as
the managing agent of the company on the basis of the
managing agency agreement, fees received by him as the
director of the company and his income from his profession
as a lawyer were his personal income and should be treated
as such. He made it clear that he will not in future put any
of these incomes into the hotch pot of the joint family. By
another letter dated 8.12.1941 Bhagwant intimated his
intention to cause severance of the joint family status.
Since Dattatraya did not accept the claim of Bhagwant for
treating the said amount as the personal property. Bhagwant
filed a suit No. 166/43 in the original side of the Bombay
High Court laying claim to the said amounts. In the meantime
Gopal and Dattatraya filed two suits in the Civil Court
against the Company and Bhagwant for the payment of the sum
of money credited to the
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joint family in the books of the parties and as a result
thereof A most of the joint family properties came to be
divided amongst the parties in accordance with their
respective shares, except the dispute raised in the suit in
the original side of the High Court.
During the pendency of the said suit the managing
agency agreement had come to an end by virtue of the
provisions contained in section 87 (A) (2) of the Companies
Act, in as much as though the Board of Directors of the
company had passed a resolution on 28.6.56 for the renewal
of the managing agency agreement, no action was taken by
SuLakhe & Co. to get the Managing Agency Agreement for a
further term after 1957 extended. On the other hand, the
company amended its articles of association and proceeded to
appoint Bhagwant as its managing Director and neither his
appointment nor the validity of the amendment of articles of
association was objected to by either Sulakhe & Co. or any
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of the co-sharers forming part of the partnership firm. The
trial Judge accepted the claims of Bhagwant and decreed the
suit in his favour and made Gopal and Dattatraya accountable
in respect of the joint family business. The High Court in
appeal held that the income received by Bhagwant as managing
agent and managing Director of the company could not be
considered to be the personal property of Bhagwant and
reversed the decision of the trial Judge in this respect and
also on various other claims to cash etc. Hence the appeals
by certificate under Article 133 (1) (a) as it stood before
the Constitution (Thirtieth) Amendment Act, 1972.
Allowing the appeals in part and passing a final decree
in terms clarified, the Court.
^
HELD : 1.1 The character of any joint family property
does not change with the severance of the status of the
joint family and a joint family property continues to retain
its joint family-character so long as the joint family
property is in existence and is not partitioned amongst the
co-sharers. By an unilateral act it is not open to any
member of the joint family to convert any joint family
property into his personal property. [194 B-C]
1.2 The agreement of partnership clearly indicates that
Bhagwant and Dattatraya became members of the firm M/s.
SuLakhe & Co- which Was appointed as the managing agent of
the company, on the basis of the managing agency agreement,
representing the joint family and for the benefit of the
joint family. Their
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interest in the partnership firm and managing agency was a
part of joint family assets and whatever income was earned
by them on the basis of the managing agency agreement
belongs to the joint family and formed part of the joint
family property. The same position must necessarily continue
in the eye of law so long as the partnership agreement and
the managing agency agreement continued. [192 G-H; 193 A-D]
1.3 By seeking to bring about a severance in the status
of the joint family, one of the co-sharers cannot deprive
the joint family of this property and the income derived on
the basis of the managing agency agreement continues to
remain the property of
the joint family so long as the joint family asset is not
partitioned and otherwise continues to remain in existence.
In the facts and circumstances of the case, the entire
income arising out of the managing agency agreement and
accruing to the two members of the family, namely, Bhagwant
and Dattatraya who might have rendered the services had been
earned for and on behalf of the family and as
representatives of the point family. Dattatraya had
continued as the managing agent for a number of years and
there had been no question of apportionment of any income
derived by him as his remunerations for the services
rendered by him as managing agent. Therefore, Bhagwant
cannot lay any claim for retaining any part of the
remuneration received by him from the company for the
services rendered by him. [193 D-E; 194 A]
2.1 In Raj Kumar Singh Hukum Chandji’s case, [1971]
S.C.R. 748, the Supreme Court held that the broader
principle that emerges is whether the remuneration received
by the coparcener in substance though not in form was but
one of the modes of return made to the family because of the
investment of the family funds in the business or whether it
was a compensation made for the services rendered by the
individual coparcener. If it is the former, it is an income
of the Hindu undivided family but if it is the latter then
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it is the income of the individual coparcener. If the income
was essentially earned as a result of the funds invested the
fact that a coparcener has rendered sore service would not
change the character of the receipt. But, if on the other
hand, it is essentially a remuneration for the services
rendered by a coparcener, the circumstance that his services
were availed of because of the reason that he was a member
of the family which had invested funds in that business or
that he had obtained the qualification shares from out of
the family funds would not make the receipt, the income of
the Hindu undivided family. The legal principle enunciated
therein for determining
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the true nature and character of the remuneration received
by any A member of the joint family equally applies in
deciding the nature and character of the remuneration
received by the Managing Director in the instant case. [195
C-D; 196 C-E; 197 A-B]
2.2 The position of the Managing Director is entirely
different from the position of the managing agent on the
basis of the managing agency agreement between the
partnership firm of Sulakhe & Co. and the position of the
Managing Director stands entirely on a different footing. At
the time when Bhagwant was appointed the Managing Director
of the company on 19.10.1957, with effect from 16.1.1957,
there was complete disruption of the joint family and there
was no joint family in existence. Further inspite of the
Board of Director’s resolution dated 28.6.1956 for the
renewal of the managing agency agreement as required by
section 87 A (2) of the Companies Act, no action was taken
by the firm of sulakhe Co. or any partner thereof for
obtaining renewal of the managing agency agreement for a
further term after 1957. On the other hand when the company
had amended its articles of association and had proceeded to
appoint Bhagwant as the Managing Director, there was no
challenge to them either by any partner of the firm of
Sulakhe & Co. which hat been appointed as the managing agent
of the company or by any member of the joint family. Is the
managing agency agreement had ceased to exist at the time
Bhagwant was appointed the Managing Director of the company
and as at that time there was no joint family of Bhagwant
and the other co-sharers in existence, Bhagwant cannot be
said to have been appointed as the Managing Director of the
company either because of the managing agency agreement or
because of his being a member of the joint family. The facts
and circumstances make it clear that the partnership
agreement or the managing agency agreement had no relevance
to the appointment of Bhagwant as the Managing Director of
the Company. In the said circumstances, (i) the remuneration
received by Bhagwant as Managing Director of the company
from the company is his personal property ant cannot be
considered to be the income of the joint family; (ii) the
appointment of Bhagwant as Managing Director, at a time when
there was complete disruption of the joint family and the
members of the family were fighting in Court cannot be
considered to be by way of any return on the investment mate
by the Joint family; aud (iii) Bhagwant was appointed as the
Managing Director by the company for services to be rendered
by him, as the company might have been impressed by his
performance as the managing agent for a number of years.
Though undoubtedly Bhagwant acted as the managing agent for
ant on behalf of the joint family and for
174
benefit of the Joint family, yet what must have weighed with
the company is the kind of services rendered by him to the
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company. The company was concerned with his services and not
with the question whether he was rendering the services for
and on behalf of the family. The remuneration which the
company agreed to pay to Bhagwant for acting as the Managing
Director was for the services to be rendered by him. [194 ;
195 A-B; 196 G]
Raj kumar Singh Hukum Chandji v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Madhya Pradesh [1971] 1 S.C.B. 748 applied.
2.3 From the materials on record, it is clear that
there can also be no question of Bhagwant being a trustee or
acting as the trustee for the benefit of the joint family in
relation to his appointment as the Managing Director of the
company. The managing agency of the company was that of the
partnership firm in which the four outside members with a
majority of shares in the partnership were interested and
the managing agency firm cannot therefore, be considered to
be an asset of the joint family. It was the interest of
Dattatraya and Bhagwant in the managing agency firm on the
basis of their shares in the partnership which belonged to
the joint family and the managing agency was an agreement
between the company and the partnership firm. The effect of
not renewing the agreement was that the interest of the
partnership firm of Sulakhe & Co. in the company as the
managing agent thereof with all the rights and privileges on
the basis of the said agreement came to an end. With the
termination of the managing agency agreement the interest of
the joint family in the managing agency on the footing that
two of the members of the joint family, namely, Dattatraya
and Bhagwant were as partners of the firm associated with
the managing agency and were acting as the managing agent on
the basis of the partnership agreement and the managing
agency agreement also ceased. [197 C-G; 198 G-H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 2622 &
2622A of 1969.
From the Judgment and Decree dated
18/19/20/25/29.9.1967 and 9.10.1967 of the Bombay High Court
in First Appeal Nos. 278 and 279 of 1969.
V.M. Tarkunde, Dr. Y.S. Chitale, Mukul Mudgal, Mrs. M.
Karanjawala and D.N. Mishra for the Appellant.
M.C. Bhandare, D.R. Dhanuka, Mrs. Rani Chhabra K.H.
Kapadia and G.B. Sathe for the Respondents.
175
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
A.N. SEN, J. This is an unfortunate litigation between
near relations and this litigation between the parties is
now going on for over four decades.
These two appeals have been filed with the certificate
granted by the High Court against the judgment of the High
Court by the plaintiff in the suit instituted by him for
partition of joint family properties, for accounts and other
reliefs mentioned in the plaint.
By a common judgment delivered by the High Court in two
separate appeals filed by the defendants in the suit against
the judgment of the Trial Court., the High Court has
substantially reversed the judgment of Trial Court.
The facts of the case have been fully set out in the
judgment of the Trial Court and also in the judgment of the
High Court. We shall briefly indicate the facts material for
the purpose of disposal of these two appeals. As the High
Court disposed of both the appeals by one common judgment
and the two appeals which have been preferred against the
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same judgment have been heard together, this judgment will
dispose of both the appeals.
One Pandarinath Martand Sulakhe died leaving behind him
his sons Viswanath, Gopal, Govind and Bhagwant and
considerable properties. The properties left by him included
agricultural lands, a number of houses in Barshi and three
shops. Of the three shops one was a Sharafi shop at Barshi,
another cloth shop at Barshi and the other a commission
Agency and Sarafi shop at Bombay. Business in all these
three shops was carried on in the name of P.N. Sulakhe. Of
the four sons Vishwanath died in 1910 leaving behind him his
son Dattatraya who happens to be the second defendant in the
suit. Govind, one of the brothers who constituted a joint
family after the death of their father Pandarinath Sulakhe
separated from the joint family in 1914 taking his share of
the family properties. Though Govind separated in 1914, the
other brothers and the son of Vishwanath continued to remain
joint and lived as members of the joint family. Bhagwant who
filed a suit for partition as the plaintiff was the youngest
of the four brothers. He graduated in law in the year 1914
and commenced practice as a lawyer at about that time.
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In 1922, a public limited company named Lokmanya Mills
Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as the Company) was intended
to be floated and with that end in view, the defendant No. 2
Dattatraya and the plaintiff Bhagwant entered into a
partnership under the name and style of M/s. Sulakhe & Co.
with four outsiders. Managing agency agreement between the
company and the partnership firm of Sulakhe & Company was
executed. The mill actually went into production in 1938. On
the basis of the managing agency agreement between the
company and the firm of Sulakhe & Co. the defendant No. 2
Dattatraya acted as the managing agent upto 1935 and
thereafter the plaintiff Bhagwant, became the managing
agent. Sometime after the plaintiff Bhagwant had been
appointed the managing agent, the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya
was appointed as the Director of the Company. It appears
that in the year 1935, a new Adat shop had been started at
Barshi. All the shops were run in the name of P.N. Sulakhe.
It is not in dispute that all the shops were joint family
businesses. It is also not in dispute that the remuneration
paid to the defendant No. 2 and also the plaintiff Bhagwant
as managing agent and also the amount of commission falling
into the shares of defendant No. 2 Dattatraya and the
plaintiff Bhagwant out of the commission earned by the
managing agency firm were treated as joint family properties
and were shown in the point family books so long as disputes
between the parties had not arisen. During the period when
there were no disputes between the parties, the Director’s
fees paid to defendant No. 2 Dattatraya and the plaintiff
Bhagwant were treated as income of the point family and even
the professional h income of the plaintiff Bhagwant earned
by him as a lawyer was also thrown into the joint family
hotch-pot and Was treated as joint family income. In the
income-tax returns filed on behalf of the joint family, all
these amounts were shown as income cf the joint family. It
appears that everything did not go well with the members of
the point family and disputes arose between the parties soon
after the commencement of the second world war. The
plaintiff Bhagwant by his letter dated 15th July, 1941
addressed to the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya informed him
that the remuneration received by him as the managing agent
of the company on the basis of the managing agency
agreement, fees received by him as the director of the
company and his income from his profession as lawyer were
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his personal income and should be treated as such. By this
letter, he made it clear that he was not prepared to throw
any of these incomes into the point family hotch-pot and he
asked the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya that all these amounts
should be shown as his separate income for the purposes of
income tax and should be credited to his personal
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Khata in Sarafi shop account. Disputes and differences
between the parties became more acute and the plaintiff on
8.12.1941 intimated to the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya his
intention to cause severance of the joint family status.
Thereafter attempts were made to divide the properties
amicably between the parties without success. The plaintiff
Bhagwant claimed that the remunerations paid to him by the
company as managing agent, the fees paid to him as director
of the company and his income from his profession as a
lawyer were his personal income and as such his personal
property. The defendants did not accept the claim of the
plaintiff Bhagwant that the remuneration paid to him as
managing agent by the company and the fees paid to him as
the director of the company, could be his personal income
and the defendants claimed that all such amounts received by
him belonged to the joint family and formed part of the
joint family properties. Ultimately Bhagwant filed a suit
being suit No. 166/43 in the original side of the High Court
in Bombay. In this suit Gopal was the first defendant and
Dattatraya was the second defendant and the suit was filed
in the original side of the Bombay High Court on the basis
that the Adat Shop and Sarafi Shop were situated within the
original jurisdiction of the Bombay High Court. In this
suit, Bhagwant the plaintiff did not made any reference to
the managing agency of the company in the plaint and he
claimed partition of the joint family shares and moveable
and immovable properties mentioned in the plaint as
belonging to the joint family, seeking to reserve his right
under 0. 2, rule 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure to file a
suit for partition of the joint family properties situated
at Barshi. The plaintiff Bhagwant in this suit claimed
various other reliefs. He prayed for a direction that the
immovable properties and the business at Bombay should be
ordered to be partitioned under the directions of the Court,
that the joint family firms should be wound up that the sum
of Rs. 6843-36 claimed by him as his personal Income as a
lawyer from his profession from 1940 should be awarded to
him with interest at 12% interest on the same and he also
claimed as consequential relief that the defendants should
be ordered to account for the profits earned by them from
the joint family business from the date of severance and
also of the income derived by them from immoveable
properties belonging to the joint family. In the suit Govind
as defendant No. 1 and Dattatraya as defendant No. 2 were
impleaded and no other members of their branches were made
parties to the suit. On the death of defendant No. 1 Gopal
during the pendency of the suit his five sons were brought
on record as his heirs and legal representatives. The
defendants resisted the suit of the plaintiff on
178
various grounds, mainly however on the ground that the
plaintiff had asked for partition only of some of the joint
family properties without including in the suit various
other joint family properties, particularly the shares and
interest of the joint family in the company. The defendants
contended that the plaintiff was bound to include in the
suit all the joint family properties which also comprised
all the interests of the joint family in the company and
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various other immovable properties in the possession of the
plaintiff. It may be noted that defendant No. l Gopal and
the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya filed two suits in the Court
of Civil Judge against the company and the plaintiff for
payment of the sum of money credited to the joint family in
the books of the company in accordance with the respective
shares of the parties. In the suits various proceedings were
taken and various orders including the appointment of the
Court receiver for all the properties of the joint family
were passed from time to time. It does not become necessary
for us to refer to these proceedings at any length as in the
present appeals these questions are no longer germane. It
appears that as a result of the various proceedings in the
suit most of the joint family properties came to be divided
amongst the parties in accordance with their respective
shares and the disputes between the parties now centre on
the following questions :-
1. Whether the shares in the company standing in
the names of the various members of the family are
joint family properties?
2. Whether the commission received by the two
members of the family namely, defendant No. 2
Dattatraya and plaintiff Bhagwant from the
managing agency firm in respect of their shares in
the firm out of the total commission paid by the
company to the managing agency firm belongs to the
joint family?
3. Whether the remuneration received by the
plaintiff Bhagwant from the company as managing
agent on the basis of the managing agency
agreement with the company is the personal
property of the plaintiff or whether the same
belongs to the joint family?
4. Whether the remunerations paid to the plaintiff
as the managing director of the company is his
personal income or is the property of the joint
family?
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5. Whether there was any amount in cash in
Mahalaxmi room belonging to the family and if so,
how much?
6. Whether there were any ornaments and jewellary
belonging to the joint family? If SO, in whose
possession and custody are such ornaments lying
and what is the value of such ornaments?
It is to be noted that during the pendency of the
proceedings in the Court relating to partition of the joint
family properties the managing agency agreement had come to
an end and it has also become inoperative by virtue of the
provisions of law. The plaintiff Bhagwant was the managing
agent on the basis of the managing agency agreement and
thereafter he had been appointed ac the managing director of
the company. The learned trial Judge on the question of the
remuneration paid to the plaintiff as managing agent on the
basis of the managing agency agreement and the fees paid to
him as the director of the company has held in favour of the
plaintiff that these are the personal incomes of the
plaintiff and do not belong to the joint family. The learned
trial Judge also held in favour of the plaintiff on the
question of cash money belonging to the joint family found
in the Mahalaxmi room and also on the question of
accountability of the defendants in respect of the joint
family business. The High Court in appeal has held that the
income received by the plaintiff as managing agent and as
Managing director of the company could not be considered to
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be the personal property of the plaintiff and they belonged
to the joint family and the High Court has reversed the
decision of the trial Judge on this question. On various
other questions also, the High Court has held in favour of
the defendants reversing the decision of the Trial Court.
The correctness of the High Court judgment is questioned by
the plaintiff in the appeals.
The principal controversy between the parties relates
to the question whether the remuneration paid to the
plaintiff Bhagwant by the company as the Managing Agent and
also as the Managing Director is his personal property or
whether the sane forms as part of the joint family property.
The contention of the plaintiff-appellant Bhagwant is that
the remuneration received by him for acting as Managing
Agent and also as Managing Director of the company is his
personal income and cannot be considered to belong to the
joint family, whereas it is the case of the defendant No. 2
Dattatraya and the heirs of the Defendant No. 1 Gopal and
that all such remuneration received by the plaintiff
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must belong to the joint family and must be held to
constitute part of the joint family properties. They
further contend that the shares in the company subsequently
purchased by the members of the plaintiff’s family must also
be held to belong to the joint family. As this happens to be
the most important question which has been urged at length
before us, we propose to deal with this question in the
first place. In our view it will be appropriate to consider
this question under two separate heads, namely, (1) the
remuneration received by the plaintiff Bhagwant as managing
agent and (2) remunerations received by him as managing
director. We first propose to take up the question whether
the remuneration received by the plaintiff from the company
as managing agent, is his personal income or the same
constitutes a part of the joint family property.
For a proper appreciation of this question it is
necessary to consider some broad facts which are not in
serious dispute.
A partnership agreement was entered into on the 3rd of
January, 1923 between defendant No. 2 Dattatraya, plaintiff
Bhagwant, one Ramchandra Moreshwar Sane, one Moolchand
Jotiram Baldote, one Nemchand Shivram Baldote and one Ganoba
Andoba Gavane to start a mill by the name ’The Lokmanya
Mills Barso Limited’ as promoters and agents of the said
mills on terms and conditions set out in the deed of
partnership dated 3rd January, 1923. This deed of
partnership which is not in dispute and which has been
exhibited in the suit provides :-
"An agreement dated 3rd of the month of January,
1923. We, Dattatraya Vishwanath Sulakhe, Caste
Brahmin, aged 37, profession trader, resident of
Barsi and Bhagwant Pandharinath Sulakhe, caste
Brahmin, age 33, profession pleader, resident of
Barsi, and Ramchandra Moreshwar Sane, caste
Brahmin, age 64 profession pleader, resident of
Barsi and Moolchand Jotiram Baldote, Gaste
Marwari, resident of Barsi age 48, profession
trade, and Nemchand Shivaram Baldote, caste
Marwari, age 39, profession trade, resident of
Barsi, and Ganoba Andoba Gavane, caste Maratha,
age 58 profession agriculturist resident of
Pangaon, Taluka Barsi, Distt. Sholapur, all of us
make an agreement as follows :-
We all of us have agreed and decided between us on
29th November, 1922 to start a mill by name ’The
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181
Lokamanya Mills Barsi Limited’. The following are
the terms of agreement, that we have agreed to,
between us all as the promoters agents of the
Mills.
1. The agency firm should be named as ’Sulakhe &
Co.’ and the agreement of this firm are to be in
force and existence for the period of 35 years
from the date of registration of the said company.
2. Messers. Dattatraya, Vishwanath Sulakhe and
Bhagwant Pandharinath Sulakhe should jointly
contribute towards the purchase of shares of the
value of Rs.40,625 (forty thousand six hundred and
twenty five). Mr. Moolchand Jotiram should
purchase in his name shares of a value of
Rs.25,000 (twenty five thousand), Namchand Shivram
should purchase in his name shares of the value of
Rs.9375 (nine thousand three hundred seventy five)
and Ganoba Andoba Gavane should purchase in his
name shares of the value of Rs.25,000 (twenty five
thousand) and Ramchandra Moreshwar Sane should
purchase in his name share of the value of Rs.3000
(Rupees three thousand). The above named persons,
or in case of their death, or if they become
incapable on account of some illness or if they
have been unable to purchase the said shares or
have been unable to pay further instalments after
purchase of the said shares on account of some
difficulty, their heirs should as stated above
purchase the shares or pay the amount of further
instalments.
3. After the shares are purchased as stated in
the foregoing clause, the agents are to get 10%
commission on the net profit earned by the
Lokamanya Mills Barsi Limited. Out of this 10%
commission 1/1/2% amount is to be paid to a
committee appointed in that behalf for the purpose
of spending that amount over public charitable
purposes and the remaining 8/1/2% commission is
agreed to be distributed as follows:-
1. Messrs D.V.Sulakhe & B.P. Sulakhe to get 3/1/4%
2. Moolchand Jotiram - 2%
3. Ganoba Andoba Gavane - 2%
182
4. Namchand Shivaram -3/4%
5. Ramchandra Moreshwar Sane -1/2%
The total amount of 8/1/2% is to be thus
distributed.
4. The amount of profits is to be distributed as
stated in the foregoing clause, after it has been
received by the Managing Agents from the company.
If any partner or his heirs had not purchased the
shares originally or not paid amount of further
instalments after allotment on account of some
inability stated in the last foregoing clause 2,
he will lose his share in the agency firm and his
share is to be distributed among the remaining
partners in proportion to the capital contributed
by each of them. The partners must keep in tact
their shares for the period of five years from the
date of allotment. The partners have no right to
dispose of or mortgage their share within that
period of five years. If any of the partners fails
to do so, he stands to lose his interest in the
partnership.
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5. The agents firm is entitled to receive 2-1/2%
commission on the amounts of expenditure which the
company may incur towards the construction of
buildings, purchase of machinery and other
necessaries, purchase of lands and other
materials. Out of the amounts so received, an
amount of 1-1/2% is to be paid towards public
charitable purposes and the remaining amount is to
be distributed among the partners in proportion to
their shares described above. This amount is to be
received in the first instance by the managing
agents, and after setting a part the amount of
charity, he has to distribute the balance amongst
the partners in proportion of their respective
shares.
6. All the responsibility of all work of
whatever kind to be performed by the managing
agents firm such as, raising of capital of the
said mill running of the mill, keeping of
accounts, purchase of land, purchase of machinery,
appointing and removing of servants, solicitors,
auditors, banker, agents, brokers, and
underwriters to keep accounts and prepare the
reports
183
of the company and do all such other as the
managing agents are required to do shall be on
the managing agent Mr. D.V. Sulakhe or his family.
His family means the joint family of three persons
viz: D.V. Sulakhe, B.P. Sulakhe and Gopal
Pandharinath Sulakhe. The other partners have
nothing to do with the above work and they have no
right to interfere with the power of the managing
agents. The company will’ hold only the managing
agent responsible for his faults and the other
partners are not to be responsible to the company.
7. The preliminary expenses of the mill will be
about Rs.8000 (eight thousand). This amount is to
be paid to the managing agent Mr. D.V. Sulakhe, by
all the partners except Mr.sane, in proportion to
their respective shares. The managing agent is to
return this amount of expenditure to the partners
form the proceeds of the shares of the company
that may be collected after its registration.
8. Some one person from among the family of
Sulakhe described above shall always be an Ex-
officio Director. some other person from amongst
the agency firm, or some other person from outside
elected by majority, and who is not in the agency
firm shall be a special director, but he shall not
be in office permanently. The term of his office
will be as of the other directors and he shall be
eligible for re-election. Some person from the
firm or some one from outside according to the
opinion of the firm shall always be among the
directors.
9. No partner of the agent’s firm, shall except
with the leave of the directors, enter in any
other agency firm of a mill of the like tenure and
situate within the limits of Barsi Taluka. If any
one of them does so enter he will stand to lose
his share in this partnership firm of this mill.
10. A partner of the agent’s firm shall be
entitled as any other outsider to do business with
the company and enter into private transactions on
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reasonable terms and to take commission from the
company.
184
11. From the date the share, of the value of
Rs.7,00,000 (seven lacs) are sold the managing
agent Mr. Sulakhe shall get a remuneration
(salary) of Rs.600 per month. The other partners
or the charity fund shall have no interest
whatsoever therein. From the time when products
shall be begun to be manufactured in the mill, the
managing agents are to receive a remuneration of
Rs.1000 (salary) every month. Out of that amount
Rs.600 are to be taken by the managing agent every
month and the remaining amount of Rs.400 (Four
hundred) is to be divided among all the partners
of the agency firm including Sulakhe, in
proportion to their respective shares (till the
profits of the company come to 10% by the way of
divident) so that the partners may get an interest
over their amounts at the rate of 5% per annum,
but from and after the date when the dividend of
the company shall be distributed at the rate of
10% on the amount of shares, the other partners
shall have no right over the said sum of Rs.400
(Four hundred) to be received every month, and
this amount is to be taken by the managing agent
Mr. Sulakhe as the increase in his remuneration
(salary). After that period other partners will
have no claim whatever against the said amount of
Rs.400.
12. The rights of the partners in the agency firm
are to pass to their respective lineal descendants
or to their respective assignees after the
expiration of the period of 5 years allotment. The
right of a partner shall go to other persons by
partition among his family or by heirship and if
such persons to whom the rights of a partner in
the agency firm are to pass, are more than one,
they shall unanimously elect some one from among
themselves for the purpose. If there is
disagreement between them the board of directors
shall choose some such person from among them and
the person so chosen shall take interest in the
agency firm. The company or the managing agents
shall not take cognizance of the other sub-
partners.
The terms of agreement between us all are as
above, and for that this agreement (in writing),
is prepared and is signed by us all and a copy of
this agreement i.e. a counter part of it is
delivered to each of us
185
all. This agreement made and signed on the 3rd of
the A month of January in the year of 1923, and it
is in the handwriting of Sarbootam Annaji
Madhekar, a resident of Barshi .
Sd/- Datartraya Vishwanath Sulakhe
d/- Bhagwant Pandharinath Sulakhe
Sd/- Ramchandra Moreshwar Sane
Sd/- Molchand Jotiram Marwadi
Nemchand Shivaram Marwadi
Ganoba Andoba Gavane.
The said partnership firm of M/s. Sulakhe & Co.
consisting of the aforesaid six partners entered
into a managing agency agreement on 5.2.1923 with
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the company. Relevant provisions of the managing
agency agreement dated 5.2.192% may be set out:
1. The Agents will faithfully and with best of
their ability perform the offices of the
Secretaries, Treasurers and Agents of the Company
for purposes of carrying on the best advantage the
business of the company so long as the company and
the agents shall continue to carry on their
respective business (unless prevented from so
doing in manner hereinafter mentioned) at the
remuneration upon the terms and subject to the
conditions hereinafter particularly mentioned and
described.
2. In consideration of the agreement hereinafter
contained on the part of the Agents and in further
consideration of the Agents having advanced the
company - the Company hereby promise and agree
with the Agents that the agent shall be the
Secretaries, Treasurers and Agents of the Company
for the period of 35 years from the date of these
presents unless prevented from so doing in manner
hereinafter mention ed PROVIDED ALWAYS AND IT IS
HEREBY AGREED AND DECLARED that after the lapse of
the said period of 35 years the Agents shall not
be removed from the office as the Secretaries,
Treasurers and Agents but shall carry on their
respective business unless found guilty of fraud
in the management of their duties as Secretaries,
Treasurers and Agents of the Company.
186
Clause 2A. The Managing Agents shall not transfer
or assign or cause to be transferred or assign the
present Managing Agency Agreement of the Company
their right, title and interest therein to any
person or persons firm or Company during the
continuation of the security created by the
Indenture of Mortgage dated the 29th day of
December 1950 without first obtaining the approval
in writing of the corporation to any such transfer
or assignment and the Company shall not cause or
permit or suffer to be transferred or assigned the
present Managing Agency Agreement of the Company
or the right, title and interest of the Managing
Agents therein to any other person or persons or
firm or Company during the continuance of the said
security without first obtaining the approval in
writing of the Corporation to such transfer or
assignment nor shall the Company appoint any other
person or persons or firm or Company to be the
Managing Agents of the company during the
continuance of the said security without first
obtaining the approval in writin of the
Corporation to such appointment.
(Amended as per Special resolution No. 2 in Extra
ordinary general meeting held on 18.3.1951)
2. A Commission at the rate of 10% per annum on
the annual net profits of the said company after
making all allowance and deductions from revenue
for interest on loans and deposits and working
expenses chargeable against profits without making
any deductions for or in respect of interest on
debentures Income Tax, Super Tax or any other tax
based on profits or of any amount carried to
insurance, reserve, depreciation or sinking fund
or to any other special fund or in respect of any
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expenditure on capital amount or on the wages or
remuneration which shall be payable to Bankers
Auditor, Solicitors, Mukadams, Clerks, Brokers,
Under writers or any other officers or employees
who may be employed by the said firm for or on
behalf of the Company or for carrying on and
conducting the business of the Company and for any
rent, cost of postage, telegram printing
stationery or other expenses or travelling
expenses incurred and to be paid by the said
Company.
187
"The Company shall not pay and the Managing Agents
shall not receive any commission during the
pendency of the loan from Industrial Finance
Corporation of India as provided above in Clause 3
without previous consent in writing of the
Corporation unless the interest and instalment of
principal sum due in any year as provided by the
Indenture of mortgage dated the 29th December 1950
have been duly paid by the Company to the
Corporation.
(Amended as per Special Resolution No.2 in Extra
ordinary general meeting held on 18.3.1951.)
Clause 4. The Agents are entitled to two and half
percent commission on all sum or sums expended
towards the purchase of the land, construction of
the mill premises, including outhouses etc., the
cost price of Machinery, appliances and initial
stock in trade necessary in establishing and
starting the mill.
But during the pendency at the said loan,
provisions contained in clause 4 above relating to
payment of commission to the Managing Agents on
the Capital Expenditure shall remain suspended.
(Amended as per special Resolution No. 2, in extra
ordinary general meeting held on 18.3.1951.)
5. Out of the Commission of 10 per cent and out of
the amount of 2-1/2 per cent commission as stated
above Agents will have to set apart for public
charitable purposes 1-1/2 per cent of their gains.
The purpose shall be uplift of the masses in the
Bombay Presidency, without any distinction of
caste, creed or religion in matters social,
educational, economic cr national as the committee
of three persons, two of whom shall be unconnected
with the firm of the Agency and one from the
Agency firm. The first such members shall be N.C.
Kelkar Esqr. B.A. LL.B. Editor of Kesari Poona.
M.R. Jayalkar Esqr. Bar-at-Law, Bombay and R.M.
Sane Esqr. pleader Barsi.
6. On the death or retirement of any of the said
members their place or places shall be filled in
by the remaining members of the Committee, or if
he or
188
they fail or neglect to make the appointment as
aforesaid within a reasonable time, such
appointment is to be made by the Board of
Directors strictly conforming to the condition
stated above that the majority of the committee
should be independent and unconnected with the
firm of the Agency.
7. The commission due to the Agency shall be
payable yearly immediately when the accounts are
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made up.
8. After deducting the amount from the commission
for public purposes as stated above the remaining
amount will be received by Mr. D.V. Sulakhe and
his successors and divided among the members of
the firm as agreed upon between them.
9. The Directors are authorised to increase the
amount of remuneration or the percentage of
commission on profits or to allow any bonus if
they think that the profits of the concern are
encouraging enough to grant an increase.
Clause 9. The said clause shall remain modified to
the extent that "so long as any moneys due to the
Corporation under the Indenture of Mortgage dated
29th day of December 1950 remain unpaid, no
payments what soever under this clause shall be
made to the Managing Agent without first obtaining
the approval in writing of the Corporation to such
payment.
(Amended as per Special Resolution No. 2 in Extra
ordinary general meeting held on 18.3.1951)
10. The remuneration of the Agents’ firm shall be
Rs.600 per month from the date of allotment and
Rs.1000 per month from the date when products are
begun to be manufactured and the said remuneration
is always to be received from the Company by Mr.
D.V. Sulakhe or his successors.
11. If the said firm or any member of the firm
shall at any time hereinafter act as Mucadams or
brokers of the Company or as selling agents of the
Company’s yarn or cloth or for purchase of other
articles such as coal, wool machinery oil-seeds or
other products or
189
other things required for the business of the
Company they shall be paid such commission or
additional remuneration as shall be agreed to
between them and the directors.
The said clause shall remain modified to the
extent that so long as any moneys due to the
Corporation under the Indenture of Mortgage dated
29th day of December 1950 remain unpaid, no
payments whatsoever under the clause shall be made
to the Managing Agent without first obtaining the
approval in writing of the Corporation to such
payment." C
(Amended as per special Resolution No. 2 in
Extraordinary general meeting held on 18.3.1951)
12. Until the Company is registered all expenses
of whatever nature of and incidental to the
promotion thereof shall be defrayed in the first
instance by the firm of Agency as agreed between
them. The sum or sums os expended will be duly
refunded to the aforesaid firm when the first call
in respect of the subscribed shares of the Company
is paid in and realized.
13. All work of whatsoever kind which is usually
attended to or done by the managing agents in
connection with the business of the Company by
virtue of the Articles of Association of the
Company such as raising the necessary capital,
erection of the mill premises employment of staff,
establishment of Agencies buying of raw materials,
disposing of the finished products of the Mill,
keeping regular accounts preparing the statutory
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reports &c. &c. will be attended to and all powers
of the managing Agents shall be vasted in and
exercised by Mr. D.V. Sulakhe alone or in case of
his retirement or death by Mr. B.P. Sulakhe if he
survives him, or by a person of the Sulakhe family
nominated unanimously by all the surviving major
male members of the family of Messrs. D.V.
Sulakhe, B.P. Sulakhe and Gopal P. Sulakhe and in
case of disagreement between these members in
nominating a member from the Sulakhe family, the
board of directors will choose some one from the
said Sulakhe family for acting as a Managing Agent
on behalf of the firm. There will be no inter-
190
ference or obstruction from any other member of
the Agency Firm who will have neither any voice
nor control of any kind over the matters of
management of the business of the company such as
those enumerated above. All the responsibility
with regard to such work lies solely and entirely
on the said D.V. Sulakhe and his successor or
successors as aforesaid.
14. me other partners of the Agency firm who have
no right to take any part in the management of the
Agency business or no right to interfere with such
management will not be liable in any way
whatsoever to the Company for any acts of
commission or omission, misfeasance, malfeasance
fraud, misappropriation or any other act or acts
of the said D.V. Sulakhe and his successors. me
company will look to and hold responsible the said
D.V. Sulakhe and his successors aforesaid in
respect of the management of the Agency business
in all branches and in all its aspects.
15. Either D.V. Sulakhe or B.P. Sulakhe may act as
Ex-officio Director and after them some person
from the Sulakhe family shall be entitled to act
as Ex officio Director and he will not be liable
to retirement or he will not be removed from such
office.
15A. The firm of Agency has always a right of
appointing any one of them or outsider as a
special Director and he will be liable to retire
as other Directors, but he is eligible for re-
election by the firm of Agency.
20. The shares of the profits of the Agency
business to which each partner is entitled
according to their mutual agreement will pass to
their direct lineal descendants by way of an
ancestral and hereditary right unless alienated or
disposed of by such partner during his life time.
If the said share devolves on more than one of
such lineal descendants by way of inheritance or
otherwise they (they said descendants) should
elect one of them to be the member of the firm on
the-r behalf. If they cannot agree among
themselves for the purpose of such election the
Board of
191
Directors has the right to elect one of them to be
their representative in the Agency Firm for
receiving commission; neither the Board of
Directors nor the Agents are bound to recognise
the rights of the other heirs and legal
representatives as aforesaid.
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Two of the relevant Articles namely, Art. 113A and Art.
146 cf the Articles of Association may be noted. Art.113A
reads:-
M/s. D.V. Or B.P. Or Gopal P. Sulakhe or any other
members of the Sulakhe family who may be chosen
for that purpose in terms of the agency agreement
shall be an ex-officio director of the company.
Agents firm have, however, subject to the terms of
the agency agreement to appoint any other person
whether a member of the firm or not, as a special
director. The person appointed as special director
as aforesaid shall after the lapse of one year,
retire but be eligible for re-election.
Art. 146 of the Articles of Association provides as
follows:-
"The firm of M/s. Sulakhe & Co. and the partners
or members for the time being constituting the
said firm and their successors in business
notwithstanding any change in the constitution or
in the name or style of the said firm by the
death, retirement or insolvancy of any member of
the said firm shall be and they are hereby
appointed the managing agency of the company for
the period and upon the terms, provisions and
conditions set out in the agreement referred to in
article hereof. Such agreement may be modified in
such manner as may be mutually agreed between the
firm and the directors and the Board is hereby
authorised to execute the said agreement on behalf
of the company.
It has to be borne in mind that at the time when the
company was incorporated and its articles were adopted and
also at the time when the company entered into the managing
agency agreement with Sulakhe & Co. and when the deed of
partnership of the firm of Sulakhe & Co. was executed, the
plaintiff Bhagwant and the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya were
admittedly the members of the joint family and no disputed
of any kind had arisen amongst the members of the joint
family. It is not in dispute that 325 shares
192
which were Initially purchased in the company - 200 in the
name of the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya and 125 in the name
of the plaintiff Bhagwant were paid for by the joint family
out of the joint family funds. It is also an admitted
position that the entire amount of remuneration which was
received by the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya and plaintiff
Bhagwant not only on account of their shares of commission
under the managing agency agreement on the basis of the
partnership deed but also on account of the Directors’ fees
paid to them and also on account of the salary paid to
defendant No.2 Dattatraya who acted as the managing agent on
behalf of the firm was treated as joint family property.
Defendant No. 2 Dattatraya had continued to be the managing
agent of the company till 1935. It is also not in dispute
that when the plaintiff Bhagwant took over as the managing
agent from defendant No. 2 Dattatraya in 1935, the position
continued to be the same and the remuneration received by
him formed part of the joint family income till the dispute
raised by plaintiff Bhagwant by his letter dated 15th July,
1941 to the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya. The agreement of
partnership clearly indicates that the plaintiff Bhagwant
and the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya became members of the
firm M/s. Sulakhe & Co. which was appointed the managing
agent of the company on the basis of the managing agency
agreement, representing the joint family and for the benefit
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of the joint family. Since the establishment of the
partnership firm of Sulakhe & Co. On the 3rd day of January,
1923 and since this firm’s appointment as the managing agent
of the company under the managing agency agreement dated 5-
2-1923 till the dispute was raised by the plaintiff in July,
1941 this position appears to be accepted by all without any
kind of reservation. All monies received by the plaintiff
Bhagwant and defendant No. 2 Dattatraya from the company,
were treated as joint family income , were entered in the
books of account of joint family and were shown in income
tax returns to be the income of the joint family.
The facts and circumstances of this Case clearly
indicate that in the partnership agreement and the managing
agency agreement in which the plaintiff Bhagwant and
defendant No. 2 Dattatraya were parties, they had become
parties on behalf of the joint family representing the joint
family and the entire remuneration received by them, whether
by way of commission or the directors’ fees or by way of
salary for having acted as the managing agent, was joint
family income. On the materials on record we have no
hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the plaintiff
Bhagwant and the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya became the
partners of Sulakhe & Co. which was appointed as the
managing
193
agent of the company on the basis of the Managing Agency
Agreement for the benefit of the joint family and their
interest in the partnership firm and Managing Agency was a
part of joint family assets and whatever income was earned
either by the plaintiff Bhagwant or by the defendant No. 2
Dattatraya on the basis of the managing agency agreement
belongs to the joint family and formed part of the joint
family property. As the entire income coming in the hands of
the plaintiff Bhagwant or defendant No. 2 Dattatraya on the
basis of the partnership agreement and the managing agency
agreement, whether on account of commission or by way of
directors’ fees or remuneration for acting as the managing
agent, belonged to the joint family and formed part of the
joint family property, the same position must necessarily
continue in the eye of law so long as the partnership
agreement and the managing agency agreement continued. The
plaintiff by seeking to bring about a severance in the
status of the joint family, cannot deprive the joint family
of this property and the income derived on the basis of the
managing agency agreement continues to remain the property
of the joint family, so long as this pint family asset is
not partitioned and otherwise continues to remain in
existence. We have, therefore, no hesitation in holding that
the remuneration received by the plaintiff Bhagwant from the
company for acting as the managing agent on the basis of the
managing agency agreement must necessarily be held to be the
joint family property and the plaintiff Bhagwant cannot
claim the same to be his personal property.
Mr. Tarkunde had addressed a novel and interesting
argument that even if the Income derived by the plaintiff
Bhagwant from the company by way of remuneration for acting
as the managing agent can be considered to be the income of
the joint family, there should be an apportionment of this
income between the plaintiff and the joint family, as the
plaintiff alone had rendered all services on behalf of the
family and he should, therefore, be held entitled to retain
a part thereof for himself for the services rendered by him.
This argument of Mr. Tarkunde sounds attractive and my raise
an interesting question in an appropriate case. But in the
facts and circumstances of this case and taking into
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consideration the true nature of the partnership and the
Managing Agency Agreement and the conduct of the parties, we
are of the opinion that there is no merit in the plaintiff’s
claim for retaining any part of the remuneration received by
him from the company for the services rendered by him. The
entire income arising out of the managing agency agreement
and accruing
194
to the two members of the family, namely, the plaintiff
Bhagwant and the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya who might have
rendered the services, had been earned for and on behalf of
the family and as representatives of the joint family. The
defendant No. 2 Dattatraya had continued as the managing
agent for a number of years and there has been no question
of apportionment of any income derived by him as his
remunerations for the services rendered by him as managing
agent. The character of any joint family property does not
change with the severance of the status of the joint family
and a joint family property continues to retain its joint
family character so long as the joint family property is in
existence and is not partitioned amongst the cosharers. By
an unilateral act it is not open to any member of the Joint
Family to convert any joint family property into his
personal property.
We now proceed to consider whether the remunerations
received by the plaintiff Bhagwant from the company as the
Managing Director of the Company belonged to the joint
family or not. The position of the Managing Director is
entirely different from the position of the Managing Agent
on the basis of the Managing Agency Agreement between the
firm of Sulakhe & Co. and the company and the position of
the Managing Director stands entirely on a different
footing. At the time the plaintiff was appointed the
Managing Director of the company on 19.10.1957 with effect
from 16th January, 1957, there was complete disruption of
the joint family and there was no joint family in existence.
In fact at that point of time litigation between the parties
was going on. By virtue of the incorporation of S. 87A in
the Indian Companies Act by amendment in 1937 the duration
of any Managing Agency Agreement was limited to a period of
20 years only at a time though on the expiry of the period
of 20 years the Managing Agency Agreement could be renewed
by virtue of the provisions contained in Sub-Sec. (2) of S.
87A of the Act. In view of the change brought about with
regard to the duration of the Managing Agency Agreement at a
time the Managing agency Agreement automatically came to an
end on the expiry of the period of 20 years and though there
was the provision with regard to the renewal of the Managing
Agency Agreement it appears that the Managing Agency
Agreement was not renewed. It appears that the Board of
Directors of the Company had passed a resolution on 28.6.56
for the renewal of the Managing Agency Agreement. The
Managing Agency Agreement was not ultimately renewed and it
does not appear that any action was taken by the firm of
Sulakhe & Co. Or any partner thereof for obtaining renewal
of the Managing
195
Agency Agreement for a further term after 1957. On the other
hand it appears that the company had amended its articles
of association and had proceeded tc appoint the plaintiff
Bhagwant as the Managing Director. It is significant to note
that no partner of the firm of Sulakhe & Co. which had been
appointed as the Managing Agent of the Company or no member
of the joint family took any steps for challenging the
validity of the amendment of the articles of association or
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the validity of the appointment of the plaintiff as the
Managing Director of the Company.
Before we proceed to decide whether the remuneration
received by the plaintiff as the Managing Director of the
Company can be considered to be part of the joint family
property, it will be appropriate to refer to a decision of
this Court for proper appreciation of the legal position.
Though a number of decisions had been cited from the Bar, we
do not consider it necessary to refer to all the decisions,
as in our view the legal position has been very lucidly and
clearly discussed in the case of Raj Kumar Singh Hukum
Chandji v. Commissioner of Income-Tax Madhya Pradesh, [1971]
1 S.C.R. 748 by this Court after reviewing the earlier
decisions on this question. After considering various
earlier decisions, this Court at page 758-759 observed:-
At first sight there appears to be conflict
between the two lines of decisions namely Kalu
Babu’s case, Mathura Prasad’s case; two
Dhanwatey’s cases and Krishna Iyer’s case on one
side Palaniappa Chettiar’s case, Dakappa’s case
and D.C. Shah’s case on the other. The line that
demarcates these two lines of decisions is not
very distinct but on a closer examination that
line cane be located. In order to find out whether
a given income is that of the person to whom it
was purported to have been given or that of his
family, several tests have been enumerated in the
aforementioned decisions but none of them
excepting Kalu Babu’s case makes reference to the
observations of Lord Summer in Gokal Chand’s case
that ’in considering whether gains are partible,
there is no (’ valid distinction between the
direct use of the joint family funds and a sue
which qualifies the member to make the gains by
his own efforts.’ We think that that principle is
no more valid. The other tests enumerated are:
(1) Whether the income received by a co-parcener
of a Hindu undivided family as remuneration had
any real
196
connection with the investment of the joint family
funds:
(2) Whether the income received was directly
related to any utilization of family assets;
(3) Whether the family had suffered any detriment
in the process of realization of the income; and
(4) Whether the income was received with the aid
and assistance of the family funds;
In our opinion form these subsidiary principles,
the broader principle that emerges is whether the
remuneration received by the coparcener in
substance though not in form was but one of the
modes of return made to the family because of the
investment of the family funds in the business or
whether it was a compensation made for the
services rendered by the individual coparcener. If
it is the former, it is an income of the Hindu
undivided family but if it is that latter then it
is the income of the individual coparcener. If the
income was essentially earned as a result of the
funds invested the fact that a coparcener has
rendered some service would not change the
character of the receipt. But if on the other hand
it is essentially a remuneration for the services
rendered by a coparcener, the circumstance that
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his services were availed of because of the reason
that he was a member of the family which had
invested funds in that business or that he had
obtained the qualification shares from out of the
family funds would not make the receipts the
income of the Hindu undivided family."
This decision was no doubt given in a case arising out of an
Income-Tax matter. The various cases which have been
referred in the judgment also arise out of Income-tax
matters and they mainly deal with the question of
determination of the nature and character of remuneration
received by a member of the family, whether the remuneration
so received is income of the joint family property or is the
personal income of the individual, - for the prupose of
assessment of income-tax on such income. It is no doubt true
that the observations which we have earlier quoted have been
made on the nature and character of the income received by
way of remuneration by a member of the joint family while
197
considering the question of assessment of Income-tax on such
A income; but, in our opinion, the legal principles
enunciated in this decision for determining the true nature
and character of the remuneration received by any member of
the joint family apply equally in deciding the nature and
character of the remuneration received by the Managing
Director in the instant case. This decision, to our mind,
correctly lays down the tests which have to be considered
for deciding the question whether the income derived by any
member of the joint family by way of remuneration as
managing Director is his personal income or is the income of
the joint family.
In the facts and circumstances of this case, we have no
hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the remuneration
received by the plaintiff Bhagwant as Managing Director of
the company from the company is his personal income and
cannot be considered to be the income of the joint family.
At the time the plaintiff Bhagwant became the Managing
Director of the Company, the joint family had completely
disrupted and it cannot be said that the plaintiff was the
member of any joint family of which the defendants were also
members. In fact, litigation between the parties was going
on. Though the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya was also a member
of the managing agency firm Sulakhe and Co., it does not
appear that he took any steps for reappointment of the said
firm as the managing agent. There were four outside partners
interested in the Managing Agency Agreement and it does not
appear that the defendant Dattatraya or the other outside
partners of the managing agency firm Sulakhe & Co. had taken
any steps against the company for ’not renewing the managing
agency agreement. It is to be borne in mind that it was for
the company to renew the managing agency agreement. For the
purpose of appointing the plaintiff as the managing
director, the articles of association of the company had to
be amended and Art. 146A had been incorporated in the
Articles of Association by amendment. It does not appear
that defendant No. 2 Dattatraya or the other outside
partners of the managing agency firm Sulakhe & Co. Or any
other shareholder of the company sought to prevent the
company from amending the articles of association or
challenged the validity of the amendment of the articles.
The appointment of plaintiff Bhagwant as Managing director
after the amendment of the Articles also does not appear to
have been challenged by the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya or
any of the other partners of the managing agency firm. The
termination of the managing agency agreement with the
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partnership firm Sulakhe & Co. appears to have been accepted
by the members of the said firm including the
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defendant No. 2 Dattatraya who alongwith the plaintiff
Bhagwant were partners of the firm representing the joint
family. It is also to be noted that in the partnership firm
of Sulakhe & Co. which was appointed the managing agent sf
the company on the basis of the managing agency agreement,
the four partners who did not belong to the family held
majority shares in the partnership although by virtue of the
agreement between the parties they had agreed that either
the plaintiff Bhagwant or defendant No. 2 Dattatraya would
act as the managing agent of the company on behalf of the
managing agency firm and should receive the remuneration
which would be paid to the managing agent acting as such on
behalf of the firm. These outside partners who held the
majority shares in the partnership firm of Sulakhe & Co.
which had been appointed and had been acting as the managing
agent of the company on the basis of the managing agency
agreement, raised no protests for not renewing managing
agency for a further term, though under Sub-section (2) of
S. 87A of the amended provision, the managing agency
agreement which stood terminated in 1957, could have been
extended. It appears, therefore, that the majority of the
partners had lost interest in the renewal of the managing
agency agreement. In any event, the undisputed facts remain
that the managing agency agreement was not renewed after
1957 and no action was taken against the company or anybody
else by the firm of Sulakhe & Co. which had been acting as
the managing agent or by any partner thereof either for
renewal of the managing agency agreement or for not renewing
the managing agency agreement. It also does not appear that
the firm Sulakhe & Co. Or any of its partners took any
action to prevent the company from amending its articles and
for appointing Bhagwant as the Managing Director of the
company. The facts and circumstances of the case go to
indicate that the partners of the firm Sulakhe & Co. which
had been acting as the Managing Agent on the basis of the
managing agency agreement with the company accepted the
termination of the managing agency on the expiry of the term
prescribed under the amended law without any protest and did
not seek to enforce the right or renewal of the managing
agency agreement or of any other provision of the agreement.
As the managing agency agreement had ceased to exist at the
time the plaintiff Bhagwant was appointed the Managing
Director of the company and as at that time there was no
joint family of the plaintiff Bhagwant and the defendants in
existences, the plaintiff Bhagwant cannot be said to have
been appointed as the Managing Director of the company
either because of the Managing agency agreement or because
of his being a member of the joint family. The facts and
circumstances make it clear that the partnership agreement
or the managing
199
agency agreement had no relevance to the appointment of the
plaintiff Bhagwant as the Managing Director of the Company.
As we A have earlier indicated the company had initially
contemplated to renew the managing agency on the expiry of
the term prescribed by law and the Board of Directors had
passed a resolution accordingly. Subsequently, for reasons
known to the company, the company decided not to continue
the managing agency agreement and decided to appoint
plaintiff Bhagwant as the Managing Director of the company.
For the purpose of appointing the plaintiff Bhagwant as the
Managing Director, the company had to amend its Articles of
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Association and the company, in fact, duly altered the
Articles of Association and the company. Neither the
partnership firm of Sulakhe & Co. which had been appointed
as the Managing Agent of the company and had been acting as
such till the expiry of the term nor any partner thereof had
taken any effective step for renewal of the managing agency
agreement or had made any effective protest for not
reappointing the firm Sulakhe & Co. as the managing agents
of the firm and for appointing the plaintiff as managing
director of the company after having amended the articles of
association of the company. The facts and circumstances of
the case also do not go to indicate that the appointment of
the plaintiff as managing director of the company was by way
of any return to the family because of the investments of
the family funds in the business of company. As earlier
noticed the joint family had purchased only 325 shares at
the time of the managing agency agreement with the company
and, in fact, other parties have invested a much larger
amount in the purchase of shares. Taking into consideration
the total investment made in the company by various parties
it appears that the contribution of the joint family appears
to be insignificant. It cannot, therefore, be said that the
appointment of the plaintiff as Managing Director, at a time
when there was complete disruption of the joint family and
the members of the family were fighting in Court, was by way
of any return on the investment made by the Joint family. It
Is quite clear that the plaintiff Bhagwant was appointed as
the Managing Director by the company for services to be
rendered by him, as the company might have been impressed by
his performance as the managing agent for a number of years.
Though undoubtedly the plaintiff Bhagwant acted as the
managing agent for and on behalf of the joint family and for
benefit of the joint family, yet what must have weighed with
the company is the kind of services rendered by him to the
company. The company was concerned with his services and not
with the question whether he was rendering the services for
and on behalf of the family. The plaintiff Bhagwant, was
therefore appointed as the managing
200
director for the services rendered by him and for services
to be rendered by him. The remuneration which the company
agreed to pay to the plaintiff Bhagwant for acting as the
managing director was for the services to be rendered by
him. This remuneration must, therefore, be the personal
income of Bhagwant and does not belong to the joint family.
The decisions of this Court and the principles enunciated by
this Court which we have earlier noted clearly support the
view we have taken.
In facts and circumstances of this case there can be no
question of the plaintiff Bhagwant being a trustee or acting
as the trustee for the benefit of the joint family in
relation to his appointment as the managing director of the
company.
It has to be borne in mind that it was the partnership
firm of Sulakhe & Co. which was appointed as the managing
agent of the company and on the basis of the partnership
agreement and the managing agency agreement, the defendant
No. 2 Dattatraya and thereafter the plaintiff Bhagwant acted
as the managing agent of the company and was entitled to
receive the remuneration from the company for acting as such
managing agent. As we have already noticed the partnership
firm consisted of six members, four of whom were outsiders
and did not belong to the family. These four outside members
of the partnership firm had, in fact, held the majority
shares in the partnership. me defendant No. 2 Dattatraya and
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the plaintiff Bhagwant had become members of the partnership
firm for and on behalf of the joint family and representing
the joint family interest. The firm had entered into the
Managing Agency agreement with the company. The managing
agency of the company was that of the partnership firm in
which the four outside members with a majority of shares in
the partnership were interested and the managing agency firm
cannot, therefore, be considered to be an asset of the joint
family. It was the interest of the defendant No. 2 and the
plaintiff Bhagwant in the managing agency firm on the basis
of their shares in the partnership which belonged to the
joint family. Furthermore, the managing agency was an
agreement between the company and the partnership firm. It
would no doubt be open to the partnership firm to ask for
renewal of the managing agency agreement and it would be
equally open to the company to decide what the company
should do. We have earlier observed that on the expiry of
the term of the managing agency by virtue of the changes
introduced in the Companies Act no effective steps appear to
have been taken by the firm Sulakhe & Co. which acted as the
managing agent or any partner thereof for renewal of the
managing
201
agency agreement. The alterations of the articles of
association of the company and the appointment of the
plaintiff as managing director after the amendment of the
articles also went without any effective challenge by the
firm of Sulakhe & Co. or any partner thereof or by any share
holder of the company. The effect of not renewing the
agreement was that the interest of the partnership firm of
Sulakhe & Co. in the company as the managing agent thereof
with all the rights and privileges on the basis of the said
agreement came to an end. With the termination of the
managing agency agreement the interest of the joint family
in the managing agency on the footing that two of the
members of the joint family, namely, defendant No. 2
Dattatraya and plaintiff Bhagwant were as partners of the
firm associated with the managing agency and were acting as
the managing agent on the basis of the partnership agreement
and the managing agency agreement also ceased. As we have
earlier observed, the appointment of the plaintiff Bhagwant
as managing director was not because of any special
investment by the joint family in the company and the
remuneration which was agreed to be paid by the company to
the plaintiff Bhagwant for acting as the managing Director
of the company was not by way of any return on the
investment of the joint family in the company and the
plaintiff Bhagwant became entitled in his individual
capacity as the managing director of the company to the
remuneration offered to him for the services to be rendered
by him as such Managing Director. The plaintiff Bhagwant
earned the remuneration in his personal capacity for
services rendered by him. The argument advanced on behalf of
the defendants that plaintiff Bhagwant was in the position
of a trustee with regard to the remuneration received by him
for acting as managing director of the company and is
accountable to the joint family for all such remunerations
received by him is, therefore, in the facts and
circumstances of this case without any merit.
At the time when the company was incorporated and
admittedly when the family was joint, 325 shares in the
company were purchased, - 200 in the name of the defendant
No. 2 Dattatraya and 125 in the name of the plaintiff
Bhagwant. Admittedly the price for these shares was paid out
of the joint family funds. There can, therefore, be no
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dispute that these shares belong to the joint family in
which each branch of the joint family has an equal share. In
fact, it is so conceded ’before us by the parties concerned.
It appears that 79 further shares in the company in the name
of the plaintiff Bhagwant and four further shares in the
name of defendant No. 1 Gopal were purchased. It further
appears
202
that the purchase price of these 83 shares were also paid
out of the joint family funds. So far as the four shares
purchased in The names of defendant No. 1 it is not disputed
that the said four shares belong to The joint family. Though
the plaintiff claims that the 79 shares belong to him and
not to the joint family on the plea that the price paid by
the joint family for the purchase of the said shares was
paid to the plantiff Bhagwant by way of loan to him, we must
hold taking into consideration the facts and circumstances
of this case and in particular the fact that the story of
the loan by the joint family, has not been accepted, that
these 79 shares also belong to the joint family. Shares
which were subsequently purchased by the parties were
purchased when the status of the joint family has been
completely disrupted and there is no evidence to indicate
that the joint family had paid for the shares subsequently
purchased by the parties. Shares had been purchased by the
plaintiff, his sons and other members of the family.
Plaintiff’s son is a Doctor and has his own income. It is
not established that the plaintiff purchased shares out of
the remunerations earned by him as the Managing Agent or the
managing director of the company. Even if we assume that the
plaintiff has paid for these shares out of the remunerations
paid to him by the company for acting as the Managing Agent
or the managing director, the joint family can have no claim
with regard to any such share. The plaintiff Bhagwant may in
the facts and circumstances of this case be accountable to
the joint family for the remuneration earned by him as
Managing Agent, but he is not a trustee and the shares
purchased by him will not belong to the joint family. We
have already held that the plaintiff was not in the position
of a trustee for the benefit of the joint family in his
capacity as the managing director of the company and the
remuneration which the plaintiff earned belonged to him and
was his personal income. We, therefore, hold that 200 shares
standing in the name of defendant No. 2, 125 shares standing
in the name of the plaintiff Bhagwant, four shares standing
in the name of defendant No. 1 and the 79 shares standing in
the name of the plaintiff or his sons which were purchased
out of the joint family funds belong to the joint family and
each branch has equal 1/3 shares in these shares.
We now proceed to consider the question of cash money
which was found in the Mahalaxmi room. The plaintiff claims
that in the Mahalaxmi room there was about a Lac of Rupees
belonging to the joint family which had been secreted by the
defendants. When the receiver counted the money, it was
found that there was cash
203
money in Mahalaxmi room over twenty-one-thousand rupees.
There is no evidence on record which would justify the claim
of the plaintiff that there was a Lac of Rupees in the
Mahalaxmi room. Materials on record show that there was some
cash money belonging to the joint family in the Mahalaxmi
room. To ascertain exactly how much cash money was there in
the Mahalaxmi room, it becomes necessary to direct that a
proper account should be taken. The litigation between the
parties is going on for decades, and any reference directing
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accounts to be taken on this question would necessarily mean
that the litigation would be prolonged further. Taking an
overall view of the matter we have decided that in the
interest of justice and in the interest of the parties it
will ’be appropriate in The facts and circumstances of this
case that this Court should determine and reasonable amount
on the basis of the materials which are there on the record
and on the basis of the submission made by the counsel and
the counsel for the parties also suggested that in the
interest of the parties concerned it would be desirable that
this Court should fix an amount which the Court will
consider reasonable. We propose to take this aspect into
consideration while passing the decree in these appeals.
The last question which falls for determination is on
the question of ornaments, jewellery and utensils. There is
no proper evidence on record which will justifiable lead to
the conclusion that any ornaments, jewellery or utensils
belonging to the joint family are in the possession of any
particular party. Materials on record, on the other hand,
suggest that these movables have already been partitioned.
We are, therefore, inclined to take the view that whatever
ornaments, jewellery and utensils are in the possession of
any of the parties now belong to them and there is no
question of any party being in possession of any joint
family ornaments, and utensils.
In the result we hold :-
1. That all remunerations received by the
plaintiff Bhagwant from the company by way of
commission director’s fees and remunerations as
the managing agent of the company so long as the
managing agency agreement continued its existence
till 1957, belong to the joint family and the
plaintiff is bound to render true and faithful
accounts of all such amounts received by him and
to pay to the other two branches their share,
namely, 1/3rd to each of the other branches who
happen to be the defendants in the suit.
204
2. The position of the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya
who was the other person in the firm of Sulakhe &
Co. representing the joint family and who also
acted as a managing agent is also the same. There
is no question, however, of the defendant No. 2
Dattatraya rendering any account in respect of
such sums received by him as all such sums
received by him had been treated without any kind
of dispute as joint family income and had been
entered in the books of the joint family. The
question of rendition of any account by the
defendant No. 2 Dattatraya therefore, does not
arise.
3. The remuneration received by the plaintiff as
managing director of the company on his
appointment as managing director of the company in
1957, belongs to the plaintiff personally and does
not belong to the joint family. The entire
remuneration received by the plaintiff after the
termination of the managing agency agreement and
after his appointment as managing director of the
company is the personal income of the plaintiff
and the joint family or any member thereof has no
interest or claim in the amounts so received by
the plaintiff.
4. 200 shares of the company in the name of the
defendant No. 2, 125 shares in the company in the
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name Of the plaintiff which were initially
acquired by the joint family and the subsequent
acquisition of 79 shares by the plaintiff in his
name or in the name of his sons and the
acquisition of four shares in the name of
defendant No. 1 belongs to the joint family and
each branch of the joint family has an equal
interest in the shares. In other words, these 408
shares belong to the joint family and being 408
shares have to be divided equally amongst the
three Branches of the family. All other shares in
the company standing in the names of the parties
or their children do not belong to the joint
family and form no part of the joint family
property.
5. So for as the cash money in the Mahalaxmi room
is concerned there was undoubtedly some cash money
lying in that room belonging to the joint family.
The exact amount of cash money lying in the
Mahalaxmi room is difficult, if not impossible, to
ascertain on the
205
basis of the materials on record. It will be
equally difficult to ascertain the exact amount
even if a reference is directed as on the
materials on record and after hearing the
submissions of the counsel for the parties, we
find that there is no dependable material to come
to any definite conclusion. The plaintiff claims
that there was approximately a Lakh of Rupees
whereas the receiver found only an amount of over
Rs. 21,000. The plaintiff Bhagwant is no doubt
entitled to a reasonable amount in respect of
money lying in Mahalaxmi room and we shall take
this account into account while passing the final
decree herein.
6. So far as the ornaments, jewellery and utensils
are concerned, we hold that there is no material
on record to establish that any party in
possession of any ornaments, jewellery and
utensils belong to the joint family. The
ornaments, jewellery and utensils in the
possession of the respective parties will be
treated as their own properties. There is nothing
further to enquire into or decide on these
questions.
On the basis of the aforesaid findings we now proceed
to consider the nature of the relief that should be granted
and the kind of decree that we should pass in these appeals.
We are of the opinion that taking into consideration that
the litigation between the parties has been going on for
over four decades, it will be in the interest of justice and
in the interest of parties that any kind of decree would not
be passed which may have the effect of prolonging the
litigation. In that view of the matter we are of the opinion
that we should not pass any decree for accounts, as any
reference for taking accounts will result in prolongation of
litigation to the detriment of the interest of the parties.
The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the parties also
submitted before us that we should pass a final decree to
put an end to the litigation. To enable us to pass a final
decree without any directions for taking of accounts between
two parties we directed all the parties to place before us
the relevant facts and the necessary figures in respect of
their claims on each head. On the basis of the directions
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given by us, the parties have furnished the Court with
relevant facts and figures relating to their claims in
respect of every item of claim and have also made their
submissions before US on the basis thereof. We have
carefully considered all the materials which have been
placed before us by the parties and also the
206
submissions made in support thereof by the parties. On a
careful consideration of all the materials placed before us
and also the submissions made on behalf of the parties, we
now proceed to pass the final decree in these appeals in the
following terms :-
(1) The plaintiff Bhagwant who happens to be the
appellant before us will pay a sum of Rupee two
Lacs to the defendants to be divided equally
between the two respective branches of the
defendants. In other words, the plaintiff Bhagwant
will pay a sum of Rupees one lac to the heirs of
defendant No. 1 Gopal and a sum of Rupees one lac
to the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya.
(2) The said sum of Rupees two lacs will be paid
to the defendants in the manner aforesaid, namely,
one lac to the heris of defendant No. 1 Gopal and
Rupees one lac to the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya
within a period of two months from date.
(3) In default of payment of the said sum within
the aforesaid period, the decretal amount of
Rupees 1 lac in favour of each branch of the
defendants will carry interest @ 9% per annum from
the date of default till recovery of the said
amount by the defendants. In other words, the
interest on the said sum of Rupees one lac each
for defendant No. 2 and the heirs of defendant No.
1 Gopal will run from 1st December, 1985, if the
said amount is not paid by the end of November
1985.
(4) If the amount of Rupees one Lac or any part
thereof remains unpaid by the end of November,
1985 to the heirs of defendants No. 1 Gopal or to
the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya, the said
defendants or either of them who would not be paid
the entire sum of Rupees one Lac by the end of
November, 1985 will be entitled to execute the
decree for the said amount of Rupees one Lac or
any part thereof which will remain unpaid with
interest on the said amount, on the basis of the
decree passed herein.
(5) It is declared that 408 shares which we have
held to be the property of the Joint family as
recorded in our finding No. 2 belong to the joint
family and the
207
plaintiff Bhagwant, the defendant No. 2 Dattatraya
and heirs of defendant No. 1 Gopal shall have each
1s/3 share in the said 408 shares in the company.
The said 408 shares shall be divided equally
amongst the three branches and the plaintiff will
get 136 shares, defendant No. 2 Dattatraya 136
shares and the heirs of Defendant No. 1 Gopal will
get 136 shares.
(6) Mr. S.B. Sulakhe son of the plaintiff Bhagwant
who happens to be the present managing director of
the company is hereby appointed Commissioner
without any remuneration to divide the shares
equally in the aforesaid three lots and to. have
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the same transferred and registered in the names
of the parties on the basis of the division of the
said shares to be effect ed in terms of the
decree. The plaintiff will proceed to divide the
said shares in the manner directed above within
two months from date. All the parties will give
necessary co-operation to the plaintiff in the
matter of effecting division of the said 408
shares in the manner aforesaid.
(7) If for any reason, the plaintiff in not able
to divide the said shares within a period of two
months from date of the decree any of the parties
will have the liberty to apply before the Trial
Judge for the appointment of a Commissioner of
partition to divide the said 408 shares in three
equal lots of 136 shares each in the manner
directed by this decree.
(8) It is declared that the amount which would
have been payable to the plaintiff as his share
out of cash money lying in the Mahalaxmi room, has
been taken into consideration while passing the
decree for Rupees two lacs against the plaintiff
and the plaintiff will have no further claim
against the defendants on this account.
(9) It is declared that no party has any claim
against the other on account of any joint family
ornaments, jewellery and utensils. It is further
declared that whatever ornaments jewellery and
utensils are in the possession of any of the
parties are their own properties and no other
party has any claim in respect thereof.
208
(10) It is declared that there are no other joint
family properties in respect of which any of the
parties can make any claim and it is further
declared that apart from what is provided in this
decree, no party has or will have any claim
against any other party on the basis of any
property being a part of the Joint family
property.
(11) Save and except the costs already paid by the
plaintiff to the defendants, the parties will pay
and bear their own costs. It is made clear that
the plain tiff will not be entitled to recover
whatever costs he might have paid to the
defendants and the defendants will be entitled to
retain all sums received on account of costs and
will not be called upon to refund any part of the
amounts received by them by way of costs from the
plaintiff.
(12) Any direction or finding of the High Court
contrary to what we have held must necessarily
stand set aside and appeals to that extent stand
allowed.
S.R. Appeals partly allowed.
209