Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOVERNOR GENERAL IN COUNCIL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUSADDI LAL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/01/1961
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 725 1961 SCR (3) 647
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1962 SC1879 (7)
R 1965 SC1755 (5)
R 1969 SC 23 (9)
E&D 1974 SC 923 (51)
ACT:
Railway---Non-delivery of goods--Suit for compensation for
non-delivery, if distinct from compensation for loss,
destruction’ or deterioration--Notice of claim for
compensation, if condition precedent--Limitation from when
to run--Indian Railways Act, 189o (IX of 1890), ss. 72 and
77--Indian Limitation Act, 1908, Arts. 30, 31.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent served on the Railway Administration a
composite notice under s- 77 of the Indian Railways Act and
under s. So of the Code of Civil Procedure and sued for
price of goods and for loss on account of nondelivery. The
claim was resisted by the Railway Administration on pleas
amongst others that the suit was not maintainable without an
effective notice under S. 77 of the Railway Act and that the
suit was barred because at the date of the suit the period
of limitation prescribed by Art. 31 of the Indian Limitation
Act had expired.
A full bench of the Allahabad High Court upheld the decree
of the trial court in favour of the respondent holding that
a claim for compensation for non-delivery of goods was a
claim distinct from the claim for compensation for loss,
destruction or deterioration of the goods, and to the
enforcement of a claim of the former variety by action in a
court of law under S. 77 was not a condition precedent.
Held, that s. 77 of the Indian Railways Act imposes a
restriction on the enforcement of liability declared by S.
72 of the Act and prescribes a condition precedent to the
maintainability of a claim for compensation for goods lost,
destroyed or deteriorated while in the custody of the
railway Administration who are bailers and not insurer of
goods. The section is enacted with a view to enable the
railway administration to make enquiries and if possible to
recover the goods and deliver them to the consignee and to
prevent stale claims. Failure to deliver goods is the con-
sequence of loss or destruction and the cause of action for
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it is not distinct from the cause of action for loss or
destruction,
83
648
Held, further, that merely because Arts. 30 and 3r of the
Indian Limitation Act prescribe different points of time
from which the limitation is to run for suits against
carriers it cannot be inferred that the claim covered by
either article is not for compensation for loss, destruction
or deterioration of the goods; and the said Arts. 30 and 31
cannot be projected upon ss. 72 and 77 of the Indian
Railways Act for holding that suit for compensation for non-
delivery of goods does not fall within s. 77.
The Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway Co. Ltd. v.
Haridoss Banmalidoss, (1918) I.L.R. 41 Mad. 871, Hill
Sawyers and Co. v. Secretary of State,, (1921) I.L.R. 2 Lah.
133, Martab Ali v. Union of India, [1954] 56 Bom. L.R. 150,
Union of India v. Mitayagiri Pullappa, I.L.R. [1958] A.P.
323, Assam Bengal Railway Co. Ltd. v. Radhika Mohan Nath and
Others, A.I.R. (1923) Cal. 397 and Bengal Nagpur Railway Co.
Ltd. v. Hamir Mull Chhagan Mull and Another (1926) I.L.R. 5
Pat. 106, approved. Governor-General in Council and Others
v. Mahabir Ram and Another, (1953) I.L.R. I All. 64 and Jais
Ram Ramrekha Das V. G.I.P. Railway and Another (1929) I.L.R.
8 Pat. 545, overruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 313/1956.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated July 25,1952, of
the Allahabad High Court in Second Appeal No. 2547 of 1946.
B. Ganapathy Iyer and T. M. Sen for the appellant
K. P. Gupta, for the respondent.
1961. January 31. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-On January 30, 1943, Bhola Nath Sambhu Ram as agent
of the respondent L. Musaddilal delivered a bale of cloth to
the railway administration E. 1. Rly. at Agra railway
station for carriage by railway to the Chola Station in the
E. I. Rly. The consignment was accepted by the railway
administration and a railway receipt was issued in the name
of the consignor Bhola Nath Sambhu Ram. Bhola Nath Sambhu
Ram endorsed the railway receipt in favour of the respondent
and sent it by post to the respondent. The bale of cloth
did not reach Chola, and the railway administration was
unable despite efforts to trace it. There was
correspondence between the railway administration and the
respondent about the consignment. Failing to obtain
satisfaction
649
for the loss suffered by him, the respondent served a
composite notice under s. 77 of the Indian Railways Act and
s. 80 of the Civil Procedure Code on December 7, 1943, and
thereafter on May 18, 1944, filed suit No. 283 of 1944 in
the court of the 11 Munsif, Bulandshahr, for a decree for
Rs. 782-3-6 being the " price of the bale " and Rs. 200 "
for loss on account of nondelivery." The railway
administration resisted the claim on the pleas among others
that the suit was not maintainable without an effective
notice under a. 77 of the Railways Act and that the suit was
barred because at the date of the institution of the suit,
the period of limitation prescribed by Art. 31 of the
Limitation Act had expired. The trial court decreed the
suit. In appeal, the Additional Civil Judge, Bulandshahr,
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reversed, the decree passed by the trial court and dismissed
the suit. A Full Bench of the High Court of Allahabad
reversed the decree passed by the first appellate court and
restored the decree of the trial court. With certificate of
fitness under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution, this
appeal has been preferred by the Union of India.
Section 77 of the Railways Act in so far as it is material
provides:
"A person shall not be entitled to
compensation for the loss, destruction or
deterioration of goods delivered to be
carried, unless his claim to compensation has
been preferred in writing by him or on his
behalf to the railway administration within
six months from the date of the delivery of
the goods for carriage by railway."
Section 77 manifestly prescribes a condition precedent to
the maintainability of a claim for compensation for goods
lost, destroyed or deteriorated while in the custody of the
railway administration. The notice prescribed was not
served by the respondent upon the railway administration
within six months from the date on which the goods were
delivered for carriage, and prima facie the suit would be
barred for non-compliance of a statutory condition
precedent. But the respondent pleaded and the plea has
found favour with the High Court that the suit filed by him
650
was for compensation not for loss, destruction or it
deterioration of the goods, but " for non-delivery of the
goods." In the view of the High Court, a claim for
compensation for non-delivery of goods is a claim distinct
from a claim for compensation for loss, destruction or
deterioration of goods and to the enforcement of a claim of
the former variety by action in a court of law s. 77 is not
a condition precedent.
The railway administration in India is not an insurer of
goods: it is merely a bailee of goods entrusted to it for
carriage. Section 72 of the Railways Act, prescribes the
measure of the general responsibility of a railway
administration as a carrier of goods. By that section, the
responsibility of a railway administration for loss,
destruction or deterioration of goods delivered to be
carried by railway is subject to other provisions of the Act
to be that of a bailee under s. 152 and s. 161 of the Indian
Contract Act, 1872. Sections 151 and 152 of the Indian
Contract Act deal with the duties of a bailee. If a bailee
takes as much care of the goods bailed to him as a person of
ordinary prudence would under similar circumstances of his
own goods of the same bulk, quality and value as the goods
bailed to him, in the absence of a special contract, he is
not responsible for loss, destruction or deterioration of
the goods bailed. By ss. 160 and 161 of the Indian Contract
Act, the bailee is under an obligation to return or deliver
according to the bailor’s direction the goods bailed as soon
as the time for which the good were bailed has expired or
the purpose for which the goods were bailed has been
accomplished and if on account of default of the bailee the
goods are not returned, delivered or tendered at the proper
time, he is responsible to the bailor for any loss,
destruction or deterioration of the goods, The railway
administration being a bailee of the goods delivered for
carriage to it is therefore a bailee during the period when
the goods remain in its custody for the purpose and in the
course of carriage and for the purpose of delivery after the
goods are carried to the destination.
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651
But the quantum of care which the railway administration is
required to take is that care which it would take having
regard to the bulk, quality and value of its own similar
goods.
Section 77 of the Railways Act is enacted with a view to
enable the railway administration to make enquiries and if
possible to recover the goods and to deliver them to the
consignee and to prevent stale claims. It imposes a
restriction on the enforcement of liability declared by s.
72. The liability declared by a. 72 is for loss,
destruction or deterioration. Failure to deliver is the
consequence of loss or destruction of goods; it does not
furnish a cause of action on which a suit may, lie against
the railway administration, distinct from a cause of action
for loss or destruction. By the use of the expression,
"loss, destruction or deterioration," what is contemplated
is loss or destruction or deterioration of the goods and the
consequent loss to the owner tbereof. If because of
negligence or inadvertence or even wrongful act on the part
of the employees of the railway administration, goods
entrusted for carriage are lost, destroyed or deteriorated,
the railway administration is guilty of failing to take the
degree of care which is prescribed by s. 72 of the Railways
Act.
There are undoubtedly two distinct articles, Arts. 30 and 31
in the first schedule of the Indian Limitation Act dealing
with limitation for suits for compensation against carriers.
Article 30 prescribes the period of limitation for suits
against a carrier for compensation against loss or injury to
goods and Art. 31 prescribes the period of limitation for
suits for compensation against a carrier for non-delivery or
delay in delivering the goods. The period of limitation
under each of these articles is one year but the points of
time from which that period is to be reckoned are different.
But because the Indian Limitation Act provides different
points of time from which the period of limitation is to
run, it is not possible to infer that the claim covered by
either article is not for compensation for loss, destruction
or deterioration of the goods. We are unable to project the
provisions of Art, 30 and 31
652
of the Limitation Act upon ss. 72 and 77 of the Railways Act
and to hold that a suit for compensation for loss because of
non-delivery of goods does not fall within s. 77. The view
we have expressed is supported by a large volume of
authority in the courts in India for instance The Madras and
Southern Mahratta Railway Co., Ltd. v. Haridoss Banmalidoss
(1), Hill Sawyers and Co. v. Secretary of State (2), Martab
Ali v. Union of India (s), Union of India v. Mitayagiri
Pullappa (4), Assam Bengal Railway Co., Ltd. v. Radhika
Mohan Nath (5) and Bengal Nagpur Railway Co. Ltd. v. Hamir
Mull Chhagan Mull (6).
The view expressed to the contrary in the Allahabad High
Court in Governor-General in Council v. Mahabir Ram (7) and
;by the Patna High Court in Jais Ram Ramrekha Das v. G. 1.
P. Railway (8), is in our judgment erroneous.
This appeal will therefore be allowed and the respondent’s
suit will stand dismissed. As the Union of India was
permitted to appeal for obtaining the decision of this Court
which may settle the conflict of views even though the
amount involved is small, we think that it is just and
proper that there should be no order as to costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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