Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PEERLESS GENERAL FINANCE AND INVESTMENTCO. LTD. AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RESERVE BANK OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/01/1992
BENCH:
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
BENCH:
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1033 1992 SCR (1) 406
1992 SCC (2) 343 JT 1992 (1) 405
1992 SCALE (1)216
ACT:
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934:
Sections 45K (3), 45J, 45I & 45L: Residuary Non-Banking
Companies-Receiving deposits under the saving schemes-
Directions issued by Reserve Bank-Such companies to deposit
with public sector Banks or invest in unencumbered
securities the aggregate amounts of liabilities to
depositors-To disclose the same as liabilites in order to
secure return of the money to depositors-Such directions
whether statutory in nature-Whether ultra vires of Section
45K (3)-Whether violative of Articles 14 and 19 (1) (g) of
the Constitution of India.
Constitution of India, 1950:
Articles 14, 19 (1) (g), 19 (6): Directions issued by
Reserve Bank of India to Residuary Non-Banking Companies
under Sections 45 J and 45 K of the Reserve Bank of India
Act, 1934 safeguarding the interest of the depositor-Vires
of-Whether directions on the nature of reasonable
restrictions.
Articles 13 (1) and (2) : Constitutionality of a
statute-Real effect of the statute to be seen by lifting the
veil of form and appearance of legislation-Degree of
encroachment on fundametal rights-Consideration of-Test of
fairness and reasonableness-Applicability of-
Constitutionalty of the statute-Presumption of-Balance
between public interest and individual interest-Maintaining
of.
Practice & Procedure:
Function of Courts-Matters relating to financial and
economic policies-Bodies like Reserve Bank of India fully
competent-Court not to advise on such matters.
HEADNOTE:
While pronouncing its Judgment in Reserve Bank of India
v. Peerless General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd., [1987]
1 SCC 424, this Court observed that it would be open to the
Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to take such steps as were open
to it in law to regulate
407
the savings schemes run by Residuary Non-Banking Companies
(RNBCs) to prevent exploitation of ignorant investors while
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at the same time taking care to protect the thousands of
employees working in such companies. This Court also
expressed grave concern at the mushroom growth of financial
investment companies offering staggering rates of interests
to depositors leading to suspicion whether these companies
were speculative ventures floated to attract unwary and
credulous investors and capture their hard-earned savings.
Pursuant to the said observations of this Court and
keeping in mind the public interest, the RBI in exercise of
its powers under sections 45J and 45K of the Reserve Bank of
India Act, 1934, and of all powers enabling it in that
behalf, issued certain directions by way of Notification No.
DFC-55/DG (O)-87 dated 15.5.1987.
A Writ Petition was filed before the High Court
challenging the constitutional validity of the said
directions issued by the RBI. A Single Judge of the High
Court passed certain interim orders. Being aggrieved
against the interim orders, the RBI preferred an appeal
before the Division Bench. The Division Bench disposed of
the appeal as well as the Writ Petition. It held that the
RBI was empowered to issue directions to the Residuary Non-
Banking Companies in the interest of depositors; but to the
extent such directions were found to be prohibitory or
unworkable and as such unreasonable, would be beyond the
powers of RBI.
Peerless which became a party-respondent, filed an
application for clarification of the judgment, as regards
payment against discontinued certificates. The High Court
clarified that in such cases the depositors be allowed to
take loan against payments made till discontinuance on such
terms and conditions as the company may stipulate.
The present appeals were filed by RBI against the
orders of the High Court. A Writ Petition has been filed
directly before this Court, challenging the directions as
being ultra vires of sections 45J and 45K of the Reserve
Bank of India Act, 1934 as also violative of the provisions
of the constitution.
On behalf of the Writ Petitioners it was contended that
since the 1987 directions issued by RBI were in the nature
of subordinate legislation, it was clear that RBI
overstepped the bounds of the
408
parent statute; that the source of power for issuing the
directions as being derived from section 45L was only an
after-thought; that from the working results it appeared
impossible to carry on the traditional business for any
longer period without incurring huge losses; that from in
the business carried on by Peerless and other similar RNBCs
that the working capital is generated out of the
subscriptions received from the certificate holders either
in lump sum or in instalments and such deposits are paid
back with the guaranteed accretions, bonus, interest etc. in
terms of contract at the end of the stipulated term; that
the interest of the depositors has not been impaired in any
manner whatsoever by the method of accountancy followed by
Peerless and all similar companies, namely, appropriation of
a part of the subscription to the profit and loss account
and meeting the working capital requirements out of the
same.
On behalf of the appellant-RBI, it was contended that
it had the power to issue the said directions, that the said
directions were issued in pursuance to this Court’s
observations, and in public interest; that the said
directions had not imposed any restriction on the right to
carry on business but only placed a restriction with respect
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to one of the modes of raising reserves i.e. through public
deposits; that the directions cannot be condemned as being
violative of Article 19(1) (g); and that formula laid down
by the High Court was self-defeating and deprived altogether
the benefits of security provisions given to depositors
under the 1987 directions.
On behalf of the Peerless Field Officers Association,
it was contended that if the directions of 1987 were to be
upheld, the undertakings of Peerless would face inevitable
closure and almost 14 lac field officers would lose their
only source of livelihood.
Allowing the appeals filed by RBI and dismissing the
Writ Petition filed by the Finance Companies, this Court,
HELD: Per Kasliwal, J
1.1 The Reserve Bank was competent and authorised to
issue the impugned directions of 1987, in exercise of powers
conferred under Section 45K(3) of the Act. [431 C]
1.2 A combined reading of Section 45J, 45K and 45L of
the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 unmistakably goes to
show that the Reserve Bank if it considers necessary in the
public interest so to do, can specify the conditions
subject to which any prospectus or advertisement soliciting
deposits of money from the public may be
409
issued. It can also give directions to non-banking
institutions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits, including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits, and the periods for
which deposits may be received. This latter power flows
from sub-section (3) of Section 45K of the Act. The Bank
under this provision can give directions in respect of any
matters relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits. Thus a very wide power is given to the RBI to
issue dirctions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits. It cannot be
considered as a power restricted or limited to receipt of
deposits only. Such an interpretation would be violating
the language of section 45K (3) which furnishes a wide power
to the Reserve Bank to give any directions in respect of any
matters relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits. The Reserve Bank under this provision is entitled
to give directions with regard to the manner in which the
deposits are to be invested and also the manner in which
such deposits are to be disclosed in the balance-sheet or
books of accounts of the company. The word ‘any’
qualifying matters relating to or connected with the receipt
of deposits in the above provision is of great significance
and directions of 1987 are fully covered under Section 45K
(3) of the Act, which gives power to the Reserve Bank to
issue such directions. [430 D-H; 431 A]
1.3 When an authority takes action which is within its
competence, it cannot be said to be invalid merely because
it purports to be made under a wrong provision, if it can be
shown to be within its power under any other provision. [431
B]
Indian Aluminium Company etc. v. Kerala State
Electricity Board, [1976] 1 SCR 70, relied on.
2.1 The function of the Court is to see that lawful
authority is not abused but not to attain itself the task
entrusted to that authority. It is well settled that a
public body invested with statutory powers must take care
not to exceed or abuse its power. It must keep within the
limits of the authority committed to it. It must act in
good faith and it must act reasonably. Courts are not to
interfere with economic policy which is the function of
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experts. It is not the function of the Courts to sit in
Judgment over matters of economic policy and it must
necessarily be left to the expert bodies. The function of
the Court is not to advice in matters relating to financial
and economic policies for which bodies like Reserve Bank are
fully competent. It would be hazardous and risky for the
Courts to tread an
410
unknown path and should leave such task to the expert
bodies. [442 C-D]
2.2 Reserve Bank of India which is banker’s bank is a
creature of Statue. It has large contingent of expert
advice relating to matters affecting the economy of the
entire country and nobody can doubt the bonafides of the
Reserve Bank in issuing the impugned directions of 1987.
The Reserve Bank plays an important role in the economy and
financial affairs of India and one of its important
functions is to regulate the banking system in the country.
It is the duty of the Reserve Bank to safeguard the economy
and financial stability of the country. In fact the
directions of 1987 were issued by RBI after mature
consideration with the help and advice of experts. [441 B-D,
443 D-E]
Delhi Cloth and General Mills etc. v. Union of India
etc., [1983] 3 SCR 438; M/s Prag Ice & Oil Mills and Anr. v.
Union of India, [1978] 3 SCC 459; Shri Sitaram Sugar Company
Limited and Anr. v. Union of India & Ors., [1990] 3 SCC 223;
R.K. Garg v. Union of India & Ors. etc., [1981] 4 SCC 675,
relied on.
3. The Reserve Bank was right in taking the stand that
if the companies want to do their business, they should
invest their own working capital and find such resources
elsewhere with which the Reserve Bank has no concern. [445-
C]
4. It is not the concern of this Court to find out as
to whether actuaial method of accounting or any other method
would be feasible or possible for the companies to adopt
while carrying out the conditions contained in paragraphs 6
and 12 of the directions of 1987. The companies are free to
adopt any mode of accounting permissible under the law but
it is certain that they will have to follow the entire terms
and conditions contained in the directions of 1987 including
those contained in paragraphs 6 and 12. [445 E-F]
5.1 It is not possible for the Court to determine as to
how much percentage of deposit of first instalment should be
allowed towards expenses which may consist of commission to
agents, office expenses etc. It would depend from company
to company based on various factors such as paid-up capital,
percentage of commission paid to the agents, rate of
interest paid to the depositors, period of maturity for
repayment, office expenses and various other factors
necessary to mop up working capital out of the depositors
money.
411
One cannot ignore the possibility of persons having no stake
of their own starting such business and after collecting
huge deposits from the investors belonging to the poor and
weaker sections of the society residing in rural areas, and
to stop such business after a few years thus devouring the
hard earned money of the small investors. In such kind of
business, the agents always take interest in finding new
depositors because they get a high rate of commission out of
the first instalment, but they do not have same enthusiasm
in respect of deposit of subsequent instalments. In these
circumstances if the Reserve Bank has issued the directions
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of 1987 to safeguard the larger interest of the public and
small depositors it cannot be said that the directions are
so unreasonable as to be declared constitutionally invalid.
[447 E-H, 448-A]
5.2 It cannot be said that the directions of 1987
amount to prohibition of the business in a commercial sense
and without reasonable basis. Nor are the directions
violative of Article 19(1) (g) of the Constitution of India.
[442 G-H, 443 A-B]
Mohammad Yasin v. The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad
and Anr., [1952] SCR 572; Premier Automobiles Ltd. and Anr
v. Union of India, AIR 1972 SC 1690; Shree Meenakshi Mills
Ltd. v. Union of India, AIR 1974 SC 366, referred to.
6. So far as Peerless is concerned there is no
possibility of its closing down such business. It has
already large accumulated funds collected by making profits
in the past serveral years. Thus it has enough working
capital in order to meet the expenses. It cannot be said
that after some years Peerless will have to close down its
business if the directions contained in paragraphs 6 and 12
are to be followed. The working capital is not needed every
year as it can be rotated after having invested once. If
the entire amount of the subscriptions is deposited or
invested in the proportion of 10% in public sector banks,
70% in approved securities and 20% in other investments,
such amounts will also start earning interest which can be
added and adjusted while depositing or investing the
subsequent years’ deposits of the subscribers. In any case
it lies with the new entrepreneurs while entering such field
of business to make arrangement of their own resources for
working capital and for meeting the expenses and they cannot
insist in utilising the money of the depositors for this
purpose. So far as the companies already in this field they
must have earned profits in the past years which can be
utilised as their working capital. It is important to note
that the direc-
412
tions of 1987 have been made applicable from 15th May, 1987
prospectively and not retrospectively. [447 H; 448 C-F]
7. The directions of 1987 as well as any other
directions issued from time to time by the Reserve Bank
relating to economic or financial policy are never so
sacrosanct that the same cannot be changed. Even the
financial budget for every year depends on the economic and
financial policy of the Government existing at the relevant
time. So far as the impugned directions are concerned if it
is found in future that the same are not workable or working
against the public interest, the Reserve Bank is always free
to change its policy and scrap or amend the directions as
and when necessary. If at any time, the Reserve Bank feels
that the business of the kind run at present by the Peerless
and other companies in terms of the directions of 1987 are
not yielding the result as envisaged by the Reserve Bank, it
will always be prepared to consider any new proposals which
may be conductive both in the interest of the large
multitude of the investors as well as the employees of such
companies. [448 G-H, 449 A-B]
Per Ramaswamy, J. (Concurring) :
1. The directions of 1987 issued by RBI are within the
power of the RBI to provide tardy, stable, identifiable and
monitorable method of operations by each RNBC and its
compliance of the directions. This will ensure security to
the depositors at all times and also make the accounts of
the company accurate, accountable and easy to monitor the
working system of the company itself and continuance of its
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workmen. The directions in paragraphs 6 and 12 are just,
fair and reasonable not only to the depositors, but in the
long run to the every existence of the company and its
continued business itself. Therefore, they are legal, valid
and constitutionally permissible. [464 G-H, 465-A]
2. Section 45K of the Reserve Bank of India Act
empowers the RBI to collect information from non-banking
institutions as to deposit and to give directions that every
non-banking institution shall furnish to the Bank, in such
form, at such intervals and within such time, such
statements, information or particulars relating to or
connected with deposits received by the non-banking
institution, as may be specified by RBI by general or
special order including the rates of interest and other
terms and conditions on which they are received. Under sub-
section (3) thereof the RBI is entitled to issue
413
in the public interest directions to non-banking
institutions in respect of any matter relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits and the periods for
which deposits may be received. The use of the adjective
‘any’ matter relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits is wide and comprehensive to empower the RBI to
issue directions in connection therewith or relating to the
receipt of deposits. But exercise of the power is hedged
with and should be ‘in the public interest’. [450 C-F]
3.1 The State can regulate the exercise of the
fundamental right to save the public from a substantive
evil. The existence of the evil as well as the means
adopted to check it are the matters for the legislative
judgment. But the court is entitled to consider whether the
degree and mode of the regulation is in excess of the
requirement or is imposed in an arbitrary manner. The Court
has to see whether the measure adopted is relevant or
appropriate to the power exercised by the authority or
whether it over stepped the limits of social legislation.
Smaller inroads may lead to larger inroads and ultimately
result in total prohibition by indirect method. If if
directly transgresses or substantially and inevitably
affects the fundametal right, it becomes unconstitutional,
but not where the impact is only remotely possible or
incidental. The Court must life the veil of the form and
appearance to discover the true character and the nature of
the legislation, and every endeavour should be made to have
the efficacy of fundamental right maintained and the
legislature is not invested with unbounded power. The Court
has, therefore, always to guard against the gradual
encroachments and strike down a restriction as soon as it
reaches that magnitude of total annihilation of the right.
[453 F-H, 454 A]
3.2 In the interest of the general public, the law may
impose restrictions on the freedom of the citizen to start
or carry on his business. Whether an impugned provision
imposing a fetter on the exercise of the fundamental right
guaranteed by Article 19(1) (g) amounts to a reasonable
restriction imposed in the interest of general public, must
be adjudged not in the background of any theoretical
standard or pre-determinate patterns, but in the light of
the nature and the incidence of the right, the interest of
the general public sought to be secured by imposing
restrictions and the reasonableness of the quality and the
extent of the fetters imposed by the directions. The credit
worthiness of RNBCs undoubtedly would
414
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be sensitive. It thrives upon the confidence of the public,
on the honesty of its management and its reputation of
solvency. The directions intended to promote ‘freedom’ and
facility which are required to be regulated in the interest
of all concerned. [457 E-F]
Hatisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of India &
Ors., [1960] 3 SCR 528; Latafat Ali Khan & Ors. v. State of
U.P., [1971] Supp. SCR 719, relied on.
4. There is presumption of constitutionality of every
statute and its validity is not to be determined by
artificial standards. The court has to examine with some
strictness the substance of the legislation to find what
actually and really the legislature has done. The court
would not be over persuaded by the mere presence of the
legislation. In adjudging the reasonableness of the law,
the court will necessarily ask the question whether the
measure or scheme is just, fair, reasonable and appropriate
or unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrarily interferes with
the exercise of the right guaranteed in Part III of the
Constitution. The Court has to maintain a delicate balance
between the public interest envisaged in the challenged
provision and the individual’s right taking into account the
nature of his right said to be infringed, the underlying
purpose of the restriction, the extent and urgency of the
evil sought to be remedied thereby, the disproportion of
the restriction imposed, the prevailing condition at the
time, the surrounding circumstances, the larger public
interest which the law seeks to achieve and all other
relevant factors germane for the purpose. All these factors
should enter into the zone of consideration to find the
reasonableness of the impugned restriction. The Court
weighs in each case which of the two conflicting public or
private interest demands greater protection and if it finds
that the restriction imposed is appropriate, fair and
reasonable, it would uphold the restriction. The court
would not uphold a restriction which is not germane to
achieve the purpose of the statute or is arbitrary or out of
its limits. [454 B-C, E-G]
5. The directions are incorporated and became part of
the Act itself. They must be governed by the same
principles as the statute itself. The statutory presumption
that the legislature inserted every part thereof for a
purpose and the legislative intention should be given affect
to, would be applicable to the directions of 1987 as well.
[445-E]
6.1 The RBI issued the directions to regulate the
operations
415
of the RNBCs, to safeguard the interest of the depositors.
Payment of interest, bonus, premium or other advantage, in
whatever name it may be called is reward for waiting or
parting with liquidity. It is paid because of positive time
preference (one rupee today is preferred to one rupee
tomorrow) on the part of the depositor. Therefore, the
directions avowed to preserve the right of the depositors to
receive back the amount deposited with the contracted rate
of interest; it aims to prevent depletion of the deposits
collected from the weaker segments of the society and also
tends to affect free flow of the business of the RNBCs who
would desire to operate in their own way. [455 F-H]
6.2 Mushroom growth of non-banking agencies put afloat
diverse schemes with alluring offers of staggering high rate
of interest and other catchy advantages which would generate
suspicion of the bona fides of the offer. But gullible
depositors are lured to make deposits. It is not uncommon
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that after collecting fabulous deposits, some unscrupulous
people surreptiously close the company and decamp with the
collections keeping the depositors at bay. Therefore, the
need to regulate the deposits/subscriptions, in particular
in private sector became imperative to prevent exploitation
or mismanagement as a social justice strategem. [457 A-B]
6.3 RBI occupies place of ‘pre-eminence’ to ensure
monetary discipline and to regulate the economy or the
credit system of the country as an expert body. It also
advises the Government in public finance and monetary
regulations. The banks or non-banking institutions shall
have to regulate their operations in accordance with not
only as per the provisions of the Act but also the rules and
directions or instuctions issued by the RBI in exercise of
the power thereunder. Chapter 3B of the Reserve Bank of
India Act expressly deals with regulations of deposit and
finance received by the RNBCs. The directions, therefore,
are statutory regulations. [455 B-D]
Joseph Kuruvilla Vellukunnel v. Reserve Bank of India &
Ors., [1962] Suppl. 3 SCR 632; State of U.P. v. Babu Ram,
[1961] 2 SCR 679; D.V.K. Prasada Rao v. Govt. of A.P., AIR
1984 A.P. 75, relied on.
7. The objects of the direction are to preserve the
ability of the RNBC to pay back to subscribers/depostitors
at any given
416
time; safety of the subscribers’ money and his right to
unencumbered repayment are thus of paramount public interest
and the directions aimed to protect them. The directions
cannot and would not be adjudged to be ultra vires or
arbitrary by reasons of successful financial management of
an individual company. An overall view of the working
system of the scheme is relevant and germane. [460 C-D]
8. The obligation in paragraph 12 of periodical
disclosure in the accounts of a company of the deposits
together with the interest securd thereon, whether or not
payable, but admittedly due as a liability, is to monitor
the discipline of the operation of the schemes and any
infraction, would be dealt with as per law. The certificate
by a qualified Chartered Accountant is to vouchsafe the
correctness and authenticity of accounts and would and
should adhere to the statutory compliance. [460 D-E]
9. The settled accounting practice is that a loan or
deposit received from a creditor has to be shown as a
liability together with accrued interest whether due or
deferred. The actuarial accounting applies to revenues and
costs to which the concept of the ‘going concern’ can be
adopted. Therefore, in providing the costs of the company
it can set apart its costs on the basis that liability is
created for interest, bonus etc. payable in foreseeable
future. Undoubtedly the actuarial principle applied by the
LIC or the gratuity schemes are linked with life of the
assured or the premature death before retirement of an
employee, but RNBC in its contract does not undertake any
such risk. The deposit or loan is a capital receipt but not
a revenue receipt and its full value shall be shown in the
account books or balance-sheet as liability of the company.
It cannot be credited to the profit and loss account. Part
II of Schedule I of the Companies Act, 1956 requires that
the amount shown in the profit and loss account should be
confined to the income and expenditure of the company. Para
12 of the directions is, thus, in consonance with the
Companies Act. Paragraph 6 only elongates the contract in
the public interest to safeguard the interest of the
vulnerable sections of the depositors. The RBI cannot be
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expected to constantly monitor the working of the RNBC in
its day-to-day function. The actuarial basis cannot be
adopted by the RNBCs. and the liability must always be
reflected in its balance-sheet at its full value.
Compliance of the direction in para 12, dehors any method of
accountancy adopted by a company, intended to discipline its
operations. [460 E-H, 461 A-C]
417
10. Regulation includes total prohibition in a given
case where the mischief to be remedied warrants total
prohibition. The directions of 1987 are neither palpably
arbitrary nor unjust nor unfair. The mechanism evolved in
the directions is fool-proof, to secure the interest of the
depositors, as well as capable of monitoring the business
management of every RNBC. It also protects the interest of
the employees/field staff/commission agents etc. on
permanent basis over-coming initial convulsion. It was
included, in the best possible manner, to subserve the
interest of all without putting any prohibition in the
ability of a company to raise the deposit, even the absence
of any adequate paid up capital or reserve fund or such pre-
commitment of the owner, to secure such deposits. [462 E-G]
Narendra Kumar v. Union of India, [1960] 2 SCR 375,
relied on.
Reserve Bank of India etc. v. Peerless General Finance
and Investment Co. Ltd. & Ors. etc., [1987] 2 SCR 1,
referred to.
11. So long as the power is traceable to the statute,
mere omission to recite the provision does not denude the
power of the legislature or rule making authority to make
the regulations, nor consiered without authority of law.
The asbsence of reiteration of objective satisfaction in the
preamble as of one under Section 45L does not denude the
powers; the RBI admittedly has the power under Section 45L,
to justify the actions. Though Section 45L was neither
expressly stated nor mentioned in the Preamble of the
directions of the required recitation or satisfaction of
objective facts to issue the directions, from the facts and
circumstances it is demonstrated that the RBI, had such
satisfaction in its consideration the power under Section
45L, when the directions were issued. Even otherwise
Section 45K (3) itself is sufficient to uphold the
directions. [464 F-H]
1.2. The court has to see whether the scheme, measure
or regulation adopted is relevant or appropriate to the
power exercised by the authority. Prejudice to the interest
of depositors is a relevant factor. Mismanagement or
inability to pay the accrued liabilities are evils sought to
be remedied. The directions of 1987 designed to preserve
the right of the depositors and the ability of RNBC to pay
back the contractual liability. It also intended to prevent
mismanagement of the deposits collected from vulnerable
social segments who have no knowledge of banking operations
or credit system and repose unfounded blind faith on the
company with fond hope of its ability to pay back the
contracted amount. Thus the directions maintain
418
the thrift for saving and streamline and strengthen the
monetary operations of RNBCs. [463 E-G]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 677 of
1991.
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(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
WITH
Civil Appeal Nos.400-403 of 1992.
Shanti Bhushan, Somnath Chatterjee, Biswarup Gupta,
Bhaskar Gupta, G.L. Sanghi, Arun Jaitley, Dr. Debi Pal, Anil
Diwan A.K. Sen, Harish N. Salve, H.S. Prihar, Kuldip S.
Parihar, Gopal Subramanium, Abhijit Chatterjee, B. Lahiri,
J.B. Dadachanji, S.Sukumaran, R.F. Nariman, G.S. Chatterjee,
Ms. Sumita Chatterjee, Ms. Mridula Ray, Arun Madan, Ms.
Priya Hingorani, Ms. Radha Rangaswamy, C.N. Sreekumar,
Rathin Das, Ranjit Ghose, Sushil Kumar Jain, Sudhanshu
Atreya and Dr. A.M. Singhvi for the appearing parties.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KASLIWAL, J. Special Leave granted in all the
petitions.
This litigation is an upshot of the earlier case
Reserve Bank of India v. Peerless General Finance and
Investment Company Ltd. and Others, [1987] 1 S.C.C. 424
decided on January 22,1987. In 1978 th Prize Chits and Money
Circulation Scheme (Banning) Act, 1978 (in short ‘the
Banning Act, was enacted ‘to ban the promotion or conduct of
prize chits or money circulation schemes and for matters
connected therewith or incidental ‘hereto.’ The question
which arose in the above case was whether the Endowment
Scheme piloted by the Peerless General Finance and
Investment Company Ltd., (hereinafter in short ‘the
Peerless’) fell within the definition of ‘Prize Chits’
within’ the meaning of Sec. 2(e) of the above Banning Act.
By a letter dated July 23, 1979, the Reserve Bank of India
pointed out to the Peerless that the schemes conducted by it
were covered by the provisions of the Banning Act which had
come into force w.e.f. December 12, 1978. On September 3,
1979 the Peerless filed a writ petition in the Calcutta High
Court for a declaration that the Prize Chits Banning Act did
not apply to the business carried on by the Peerless. A
similar writ petition was filed questioning a notice issued
by the Madhya Pradesh Government on the same lines as that
issued by the West Bengal
419
Government. A learned Single Judge of the High Court
dismissed both the writ petitions but appeals preferred by
the Peerless under the Letters Patent were allowed by a
Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court.
It was declared that the business carried on by the
Peerless did not come within the mischief of the Prize Chits
Banning Act. Against the judgment of the Division Bench of
the Calcutta High Court, the Reserve Bank of India, the
Union of India and the State of West Bengal preferred
appeals before this court. The question considered in the
above case was ‘‘Is the endowment scheme of the Peerless
Company a Prize Chit within the meaning of Section 2(e) of
the Prize Chits and Money Circulation Schemes (Banning)
Act?’’ This court held that section 2(e) does not
contemplate a scheme without a prize and, therefore, the
Endowment Certificate Scheme of the Peerless Company was
outside the Prize Chits Banning Act. Appeals filed by the
Reserve Bank of India, the Union of India and the State of
West Bengal were accordingly dismissed. Chinnappa Reddy,J.
observed:
‘‘It is open to them to take such steps as are open
to them in law to regulate schemes such as those
run by the Peerless Company to prevent exploitation
of ignorant subscribers. Care must also be taken to
protect the thousand of employees. We must also
record our dissatisfaction with some of the schemes
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of the Life Insurance Corporation which appear to
us to be even less advantageous to the subscribers
than the Peerless Scheme. We suggest that there
should be a complete ban on forfeiture clauses in
all savings schemes, including Life Insurance
Policies, since these clauses hit hardest the
classes of people who need security and protection
most. We have explained this earlier and we do
wonder whether the weaker sections of the people
are not being made to pay the more affluent
sections! Robbing Peter to pay Paul? It was further
observed ‘‘We would also like to query what action
the Reserve Bank of India and the Union of India
are taking or proposing to take against the
mushroom growth of finance and investment
companies’’ offering staggeringly high rates of
interest to depositors leading us to suspect
whether these companies are not speculative
ventures floated to attract unwary and credulous
investors and capture their savings. One has only
to look at the morning’s newspaper to be greeted by
advertisements inviting deposits and offering
interest at astronomic rates. On January 1, 1987
one of the national newspapers published from
Hyderabad, where one of us happened to be spend-
420
ing the vacation, carried as many as ten
advertisements with ‘banner headlines’ covering the
whole of the last page, a quarter of the first page
and conspicuous spaces in other pages offering
fabulous rates of interest. At least two of the
advertisers offered to double the deposit in 30
months, 2000 for 1000, 10,000 for 5,000, they said.
Another advertiser offered interest ranging between
30 per cent to 38 per cent for periods ranging
between six months to five years. Almost all the
advertisers offered extra interest ranging between
3 per cent to 6 per cent if deposits were made
during the Christmas-Pongal season. Several of
them offered gifts and prizes. If the Reserve Bank
of India considers the Peerless Company with eight
hundred crores invested in government securities,
fixed deposits with National Banks etc. unsafe for
depositors, one wonders what they have to say about
the mushroom non-banking campanies which are
accepting deposits, promising most unlikely return
and what action is proposed to be taken to protect
the investors. It does not require much imagination
to realise the adventurous and precarious character
of these business. Urgent action appears to be
called for to protect the public. While on the one
hand these schemes encourage two vices affecting
public economy, the desire to make quick and easy
money and the habit of excessive and wasteful
consumer spending, on the other hand the investors
who generally belong to the gullible and less
affluent classes have no security whatsover. Action
appears imperative.’’
Khalid, J., another learned Judge aggreeing with the
judgment of Chinnappa Reddy, J., further added his short but
important concluding paragraph as under :
‘‘I share my brother’s concern about the mushroom
growth of financial companies all over the country.
Such companies have proliferated. The victims of
the schemes, that are attractively put forward in
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public media, are mostly middle class and lower
middle class people. Instances are legion where
such needy people have been reduced penniless
because of the fraud played by such financial
vultures. It is necessary for the authorities to
evlove fool-proof schemes to see that fraud is not
allowed to be played upon persons who are not
conversant with the practice of such financial
enterprises who pose themselves as benefactors of
people.’’
Taking note of the weighty observations made by this
Court, the
421
Reserve Bank of India in exercise of the powers conferred by
Section 45 (J) and 45 (K) of the Reserve Bank of India Act,
1934 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) and of all the
powers enabling it in this behalf and considering it
necessary in the public interest issued certain directions
by notification No. DFC.55/DG(O)-87 dated the 15th May, 1987
(hereinafter referred to as the ‘directions of 1987’). The
constitutional validity of these directions of 1987 was
challenged by Timex Finance and Investment Company Ltd.
(hereinafter referred to as ‘Timex Company’) by filing a
writ petition in the Calcutta High Court before the learned
Single Judge. The learned Single Judge granted an interim
order in terms of prayers (g) and (h) of the writ petition.
The Reserve Bank of India aggrieved against the interim
order filed an appeal before the Division Bench. A stay
petition was also moved on behalf of the Reserve Bank of
India for staying the operation of the order dated 7th
October, 1988 passed by the learned Single Judge. After
hearing the stay petition for sometime, the Division Bench
of the High Court listed the appeal as well as the stay
petition for final disposal. The Division Bench of the High
Court disposed of the appeal as well as the writ petition by
an order dated March 23, 1990 and arrived to the following
and conclusions.
"(a) Reserve Bank of India is empowered to issue
directions to the residuary non-banking companies
under the provisions of Section 45J and 45K of the
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 for the interest of
thousands of depositors.
(b) However, to the extent such directions are found to
be prohibitory or not workable and as such
unreasonable must be held to be beyond the powers
of the Reserve Bank of India.
(c) The impugned directions providing that they
represent irreducible minimum for safeguarding the
interest of and for preventing exploitation of
small and unwary depositors cannot be implemented
without suitable modification. It is not reasonably
practicable to comply strictly with the directions
as they stand by the writ petitioners and the
similarly situated companies. The Supreme Court in
Peerless case (Supra).....reserved the liberty to
the Reserve Bank of India to take such steps as are
open to them in law to regulate the schemes such as
those granted by the Peerless to prevent
exploitation of subscribers and to protect
thousands of employees. The impugned directions
without modifications will run counter to the
aforesaid directions of the Supreme Court.
(d) The business of savings and investments carried on
by the company and similarly situated companies
having not been declared unlawful or banned, power
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of the Reserve Bank of India to regu-
422
late such business cannot be permitted to be
prohibitory resulting in the ultimate closure of
the business carried on by the writ petitioner
company and other similarly situated companies. If
the modifications as suggested by us are not
implemented and if ultimately the business is
closed down and the company goes into liquidation,
the hard earned money of thousands of depositors
will be lost and the employees would also lose
their job. If even after modifications are made to
the impugned directions in terms of this order, any
company fails to comply with such directions, the
Government may take such steps as are open to them
to protect the interests of the thousands of small
depositors and numerous employees.
(e) The reasons why the impugned directions cannot be
complied with and held to be unworkable and
unreasonable are mainly because of the definition
of liability assigned in the impugned directions.
The impugned directions, as they stand now, cannot
be implemented by the residuary non-banking
companies without incurring loss irrespective of
their net-worth. According to the impugned
directions, the liability is the amount of money
deposited by the depositions plus the amount of
interest whether or not due to them according to
the terms of the respective contracts at the given
point of time. In other words, the entire
collection with the interest, Bonus, etc. whether
payable or not would be the liability of the
Company. This leaves no fund for working. If the
definition of liability is amended as suggested by
us, it will be possible for the companies to
generate working capital. In our view, liability in
clause 6 and in other clauses of the impugned
directions should be construed to mean total amount
of contractual dues of the depositors including
interest, premium, bonus or other advantages by
whatever name called, accrued on the amount
according to the terms of contract. Section 45J
and 45K of the Act do not authorise the Reserve
Bank of India to introduce a concept of liability
which is contrary to the accepted commercial
practice and trading principles. The impugned
directions have failed to make distinction between
the actual liability in presenti and a liability de
futuro. Liberty must be reserved to the companies
to adopt normal accountancy practice recognised and
accepted in the trading circles so long as such
accounting practice provides for payment of the
liability to the depositors in accordance with the
contractual obligations. However, the Reserve Bank
of India may, having regard to the facts and
circumstances of each case issue directions
regulating the administrative and management
expenses and expenditure on com-
423
mission and publicity. In the impugned directions
no restriction has been imposed on the expenditure
by a residuary non-banking company on any of these
heads.
In our view, the impugned directions without
modifications, instead of suppressing the mischief,
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will only lead to adverse unworkable and/or
impracticable results inasmuch as if the residuary
non-banking companies cannot comply with such
directions in toto, such companies have to go out
of existence. This cannot be the object of the
impugned directions. If the liability in terms of
the contractual obligations is provided not only in
the accounts but also by suitable investment in
terms of Clause 6 of the directions, in our view,
all the residuary non-banking companies,
irrespective of their net worth, will be able to
carry on the business.
(f) Every residuary non-banking company shall disclose
its Books of Accounts and balance sheet the
aggregate amount of liability accrued and payable
to the depositors in accordance with the terms of
the contract.
(g) The directions contained in clause 6 for deposit or
investment and the liability shall be read subject
to the modification of the designation of the
liability as aforesaid.
(h) The directions are prospective. The period of
deposit and the date of return with respect to all
certificates issued prior to 15th May 1987 have
been excluded from the purview of the directions as
per clause 18 (1). This exemption should include
all contractual obligations on those certificates.
(i) All funds prior to the issue of the directions
should be allowed to be kept in the manner as was
being done by the respective residuary non-banking
company. The direction with regard to the
investment shall be applicable from the money
collected and/or received on and after 15th May
1987. The companies shall be allowed reasonable
time to make good the deficiency in the investment
required to be made in terms of the directions
after 15th May 1987.
(j) We are not unmindful of the fact that exercise of
power by legislature and executive is subject to
judicial restraint. The only check on judicial
exercise of power is the self-imposed dicipline of
judicial restraint. But although the courts in
exercise of judicial power are not competent to
direct the enactment of a particular provision of
law, if the statutory directions suffer from
arbitrariness, the court is competent to issue
necessary direction so that the statutory
directions may be brought in conformity
424
with law. As we have held that the Reserve Bank of
India has transgressed the statutory power to the
extent indicated elsewhere in the judgment, we are
of the view that the Reserve Bank of India shall
modify the directions and make them reasonable and
workable to safeguard the interest of depositors
and protect the employees.’’
The Division Bench also considered an application filed
by Favourite Small Investment Company and by order dated
20th December, 1990 directed that the Reserve Bank of India
should revoke the prohibitory order and permit Favourite
Small Investment Company to accept fresh deposits and carry
on new business.
It may be noted that the Peerless filed a petition
before the High Court for becoming a party-respondent. The
High Court by order dated 31st August, 1990 allowed the said
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application and further ordered that the cause title and the
records proceedings of appeal, memorandum of appeal and the
paper book filed be amended accordingly. The Peerless also
moved an application for clarification of the judgment and
order dated 23rd March, 1990. It prayed that suitable
provision should be made for a depositor who wants back the
money before maturity. If the depositor intends to get
refund of the money invested before the expiry of actual
contract period, he should be required to keep the funds for
a minimum period in accordance with the contract. Before
maturity he can only take loan but not the principle amount
with interest. The amounts of returns should also be less
than 5 per cent to provide for the collection and other
expenses of the non-banking companies. The Division Bench of
the High Court took the view that the order dated 23rd
March, 1990 required clarification as it was not made clear
as to whether non-residuary banking companies are under an
obligation to pay discontinued certificates before the
stipulated period in the contract, if so what would be the
rate of interest. The Division Bench by order dated
December 24, 1990 clarified its earlier order dated 23rd
March, 1990 as under :
‘‘(a) If the contract by and between the company and the
depositor provides that no payment on discontinued
certificate will be made before the expiry of the
term stipulated in the contract, in such cases, if
the certificate is discontinued any time before
such stipulated term and payment is made to the
depositors according to the terms and conditions of
the contract, in other words, on the expiry of the
term stipulated in the contract, such depositor
shall be paid interest at the rate of 8% compound
per annum, but in such a case the company will be
at liberty to deduct an amount not exceeding 5%
from the total return in or to provide for
collection and other expenses incurred in
connection with these
425
discontinued certificates
(b) In cases where certificates are discontinued
before or after the stipulated term but the
depositors obtain refund only upon maturity of the
certificates such refund shall be made to
depositors with compound interest at the rate 8 %
per annum without any deduction whatsoever.
(c) Since no payment will be made against the
discontinued certificates to the depositors in such
cases shall be permitted to take loan, if they so
intend, against the payment made till
discontinuance of such terms and conditions as the
company may stipulate."
The Reserve bank of India aggrieved against all the
above orders of the Calcutta High Court has filed appeals
against the orders dated 23 rd March, 1990. 31st August,
1990, 20th December, 1990 and 24th December, 1990. The
Peerless General Finance and Investment Company Ltd., has
also filed a writ petition No. 677 of 1991 directly before
this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
In view of the fact that the questions raised in the
appeals filed by the Reserve Bank of India against the
orders of the High Court and in the civil writ petition
filed by the Peerless Company are common, the same were
heard together and are disposed of by a single order.
Interlocutory applications were also filed on behalf of the
employees of the Peerless Company, agents of Peerless
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Company working in the field, and some of the depositors in
the Peerless company. We have heard them also.
The main controversy centers round paragraphs (6) and
(12) of the directions of 1987 and as such the same are
reproduced in full.
Paragraph (6) Security for depositors
On and from 15th May 1987-
(1) Every residuary non-banking company shall
deposit and keep deposited in fixed deposits with
public sector banks or invest and keep invested in
unencumbered approved securities (Such securities
being valued at their marked value for the time
being), or in other investments, which in the
opinion of the company are safe, a sum which shall
not, at the close of business on 31st December 1987
and thereafter at the end of each half year that
is, 30th June and 31st December be less than the
aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the
depositors whether or not such amounts have become
payable:
426
Provided that of the sum so deposited or invested
(a) not less than ten percent shall be in fixed
deposits with any of the public sector banks.
(b) not less than 70 percent shall be in unapproved
securities;
(c) not more than 20 percent or ten times the net
owned funds of the company, whichever amount is
less, shall be in other investments, provided that
such investments shall be with the approval of the
Board of Directors of the Company.
Explanation :
"Net owned funds" shall mean the aggregate of the
paid-up capital and free reserves as appearing in
the latest audited balance sheet of the company as
reduced by the amount of accumulated balance of
loss, deferred revenue expenditure and other
intangible assets, if any, as disclosed in the said
balance sheet.
(2) Every residuary non-banking company shall
entrust to one of the public sector banks
designated in that behalf, deposits and securities
referred to in clauses (a) and (b) of the proviso
to subparagraph (1) to be held by such designated
bank for the benefit of the depositors. Such
securities and deposits shall not be withdrawn by
the residuary non-banking company, or otherwise
dealt with, except for repayment to the depositors.
(3) Every residuary non-banking company shall
furnish to the Reserve Bank within thirty days from
the close of business on 31st December 1987 and
thereafter at the end of each half year that is as
on 30th June and 31st December, a certificate from
its auditiors, being members of Institute of
Chartered Accountants, to the effect that the
amounts deposited in fixed deposits and the
investments made are not less than the aggregate
amounts of liabilities to the depositors as on
30th June and 31st December of that year.
Explanation :
For the purpose of this paragraph,
(a) "Aggregate amounts of liabilities" shall mean
total amount of deposits received together with
interest, premium, bo-
427
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nus or other advantage by whatever name called
accrued on the amount of deposits according to the
terms of contract.
(b) "approved securities" means; the securities in
which the Trustee is authorised to invest trust
money by any law for the time being in force in
India and bonds or fixed deposits issued by any
corporation established or constitued under any
Central or State enactments.
(c) "public sector banks" means, the State Bank of
India, the Subsidiary Banks and the corresponding
new banks referred to in Section 45(1) of the
Reserve Bank of India Act. 1934 (2 of 1934).
(d) "unencumbered approved securities" shall
include the approved securities lodged by the
company with another institution for advances or
any other credit arrangements to the extent to
which such securities have not been drawn against
or availed of.
Paragraph (12) Every residuary non-banking company
shall disclose as liabilities in its books of accounts and
balance sheets the total amount of deposits received
together with interest, bonus, premium or other advantage,
accrued or payable to the depositors.
We would first deal with the legal objections raised on
behalf of the Peerless and other companies. It has been
submitted on behalf of the Peerless and other companies that
the directions of 1987 are ultra vires of Section 45J and
45K of the Reseve Bank of India Act, 1934. None of the said
sections authorises the Reserve Bank to frame any directions
prescribing the manner of investment of deposits received or
the method of accountancy to be followed or the manner in
which its balance-sheet and books of accounts are to be
drawn up. It has been contended that Section 45J has no
manner of application in the present case. Section 45K (3)
of the Act on which reliance has been placed on behalf of
the Reserve Bank, merely provides that the Reserve Bank may,
if it considers necessary in the public interest so to do,
give directions to non-banking institutions either generally
or to any non-banking institutions in particular, in respect
of any matters relating to or connected with receipts of
deposits, including the rate of interest payable on such
deposits and the purpose for which deposits will be
received. According so Sec. 45K (4) if any non-banking
institution fails to comply with any direction given by the
bank under sub-
428
s. (3) the Reserve Bank may prohibit the acceptance of
deposits by that non-banking institution. It is thus
submitted that on a plain reading of Sec. 45K (3) the
Reserve Bank is only competent to frame the directions
regarding receipt of deposits and such power of direction
does not extend to providing the manner in which deposits
can be invested or the manner in which the liabilities are
to be disclosed in the balance-sheet or books of accounts of
the company. It is further submitted that the power under
subs. (4) is to prohibit acceptance of deposits and as such
the permissible field of direction making is limited to
receipt of deposits and nothing more. The Reserve Bank of
India in framing the directions of 1987 which is a
subordinate piece of legislation has clearly over-stepped
the bounds of the parent statue of Sec. 45K (3) of the Act.
It is further argued that the Reserve bank cannot
contend that paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions of 1987
are covered within the powers conferred on the Reserve Bank
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under Sec. 45L (1) (b) of the Act. It is submitted that the
Reserve Bank had at no point of time expressed its
intention to invoke its powers under Sec. 45L. Even before
the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court the Reserve
Bank did not rely on Sec. 45L as alleged source of its
power to issue the impugned directions nor the Reserve Bank
referred to Sec. 45L in its pleadings before the High Court.
Wherever the Reserve Bank of India wanted to invoke its
power under Sec 45L of the Act, it has expressly mentioned
that it was exercising its powers under Sec. 45L. In the
case of non-banking financial companies (Reserve Bank)
directions 1977, or the miscellaneous non-banking companies
(Reserve Bank) Directions, 1977 it has expressly said that
it was invoking its powers under sec. 45L of the Act,
whereas in the case of the impugned directions, the Reserve
Bank has only referred to sections 45J and 45K of the Act.
The Reserve Bank of India itself in the affidavit filed
before the High Court had stated that the directions of 1987
were framed after careful deliberations at the highest level
and now it cannot take the stand that the source of its
power in framing the impugned directions was exercised under
sec 45L of the Act. It is further contended that in order
to invoke the powers under sec 45L of the Act it has to
state that the Reserve Bank was satisfied for the purpose of
enabling it to regulate the credit system of the country to
its advantage and it was necessary to give such institutions
directions relating to the conduct of business by financial
institution or institutions. In order to exercise its
powers under sec. 45L of the Act, it has to apply its mind
for the purpose of arriving at the statutorily required
satisfaction. In fact, such recital is necessary since such
satisfaction is a pre-conditions for the Reserve Bank to
exercise its powers under section 45L of the Act.
On the other hand it has been contended on behalf of
the Reserve
429
Bank that the power of the Reserve Bank to regulate deposit
acceptance activities of non-banking and financial
institutions under Chapter IIIB of the Act cannot be
disputed. The Reserve Bank has power to issue the impugned
directions under Section 45J, 45K and 45L of the Act. The
pith and substance of Para 6 of the directions of 1987 is to
ensure that deposits received from the public are invested
in a manner to secure the repayment of the deposits. A
deposit is, by definition, a sum of money received with a
corresponding obligation to repay the same. Thus, the
repayment of the deposit is an integral part of the
transaction of a receipt of deposit. It is contended that
the expression "receipt of deposit" must be construed
liberally, in the light of the nature of the provisions as
well as in the light of the wide language used in the
provision. It is also argued that even if the impugned
directions of 1987 are not covered under the powers
conferred under Sections 45J and 45K of the Act, those are
squarely covered by Section 45L of the Act. It is submitted
that various provisions under the Act are enabling in nature
and confer overlapping powers. Even if there is no recital
of Sec. 45L, it would not be of much consequence, if such
exercise of power can be related to Sec. 45L of the Act.
We have considered the arguments advanced by learned
counsel for the parties. Chapter IIIB laying down
provisions relating to non-banking institutions receiving
deposits and financial institutions was inserted in the
Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, by virtue of Act 55 of 1963
w.e.f. 1.2.1964. Section 45J, 45K (3) & (4) and 45L 1 (b)
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relevant for our purpose are given as under :
Sec. 45J
"The Bank may, if it considers necessary in the
public interest so to do, by general or special
order, -
(a) regulate or prohibit the issue by any non-
banking institution of any prospectus or
advertisement soliciting deposits of money from the
public; and
(b) specify the conditions subject to which any
such prospectus or advertisement, if not
prohibited, may be issued.
Section 45K
(1) ..........
(2) ..........
(3) The Bank may, if it considers necessary in the
public interest so to do, give direction to non-banking
institutions either generally or to any
430
non-banking institution or group of non-banking institutions
in particular, in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits, including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits, and the periods for
which deposits may be received.
(4) If any non-banking institution fails to comply with
any direction given by the Bank under sub-section (3), the
Bank may prohibit the acceptance of deposits by that non-
banking institution.
Section 45L (1) If the bank is satisfied that for the
purpose of enabling it to regulate the credit system of the
country to its advantage it is necessary so to do; it may-
(a) ..........
(b) give to such institutions either generally or
to any such institution in particular, directions
relating to the conduct of business by them or by
it as financial institutions or institution.
A combined reading of the above provisions unmistakably
goes to show that the Reserve Bank if considers necessary in
the public interest so to do can specify the conditions
subject to which any prospectus or advertisement soliciting
deposits of money from the public may be issued. It can
also give directions to non-banking institutions in respect
of any matters relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits, including the rates of interest payable on such
deposits, and the periods for which deposits may be
received. This latter power flows from sub-s. (3) of Sec.
45K of the Act. The Bank under this provision can give
directions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits (emphasis added). In
our view a very wide power is given to the Reserve Bank of
India to issue directions in respect of any matters relating
to or connected with the receipt of deposits. It cannot be
considered as a power restricted or limited to receipt of
deposits as sought to be argued on behalf of the companies
that under this power the Reserve Bank would only be
competent to stipulate that deposits cannot be received
beyond a certain limit or that the receipt of deposits may
be linked with the capital of the company. Such
interpretation would be violating the language of Sec. 45K
(3) which furnishes a wide power to the Reserve Bank to give
any directions in respect of any matters relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits. The Reserve Bank
under this provision is entitled to give directions with
regard to the manner in which the deposits are to be
invested and also the manner in which such deposits are to
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be disclosed in the balance-sheet or books of accounts of
the company. The word ‘any’ quali-
431
fying matters relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits in the above provision is of great significance and
in our view the impugned directions of 1987 are fully
covered under Sec. 45K (3) of the Act, which gives power to
the Reserve Bank to issue such directions. As a proposition
of law we agree with the contention of the learned counsel
for the Reserve Bank that when an authority takes action
which is within its competence, it cannot be held to be
invalid merely because it purports to to be made under a
wrong provision, if it can be shown to be within its power
under any other provision. Learned counsel in this regard
has placed reliance on Indian Aluminium Company etc. v.
Kerala State Electricity Board, [1976] 1 S.C.R. 70.
In our view as already held above, the Reserve Bank was
competent and authorised to issue the impugned directions of
1987, in exercise of powers conferred under Section 45K (3)
of the Act.
Having cleared the ground of ultra vires we must now
turn to the main challenge posed on behalf on the Peerless
and other companies and employees.
Mr. Harish Salve made the leading arguments on behalf
of the Reserve Bank of India. His main thrust of the
argument was that the Reserve Bank of India had issued these
directions of 1987 in order to carry out observations made
by this Court in Peerless case (supra) and in the public
interest of safeguarding the money of the depositors in such
companies. The Reserve Bank considered it necessary that
the interest of millions of small depositors of rural areas
should be made safe and may not be devoured by a mushroom of
companies with no stake. According to Mr. Salve it was not
the intention of the Reserve Bank to put any restrictions
in the manner or conduct of business to be done by such
companies. But the most important factor weighing in the
mind of the Reserve Bank was to safeguard the money of the
depositors. It was not the concern of the Reserve Bank as
to how and in what manner these companies would regulate
their expenses or would be able to conduct such business for
earning more profits. According to the Reserve Bank of
India these companies cannot be allowed to spend a mighty of
deposits for meeting their own expenses. They should find
out their own resources for meeting the expenses. According
to the Reserve Bank the rate of interest to be paid by these
companies to the depositors has been fixed as 10 per cent
per annum. They could easily invest such amount in bonds
issued by public sector corporation and earn interest at the
rate of 14 per cent per annum or more and thereby earn a
profit of 4 per cent and regulate their expenses within the
limits of such profits. It was submitted that the
propensity of the
432
problem has increased manifold in view of the fact that the
amount of deposits and investments has gone to staggering
heights worth several thousand crores of lower middle class
persons living mostly in the rural areas. A bogey of
employment hazards of several thousand regular employees and
still a large number of agents working in the field cannot
deter the Reserve Bank to lay down some directions which may
act harshly and resulting in lessening of profits of such
companies. It was also submitted that according to the
affidavit submitted before this Hon’ble Court on behalf of
the Reserve Bank of India it has been stated that prior to
1987 directions, there were 747 such companies which were
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conducting deposit scheme. At present they could classify
only 392 such companies as required information for
classifying of the remaining companies had not been
received. Most of such companies have not designated their
banks as it required under paragraph (6) of the directions
and in most of such cases amounts invested in bank deposits
and approved securities fall much short of deposit
liabilities. The companies operating in these areas also at
times become untraceable in that a number of show cause
notices issued have been returned as "addressee not known"
etc. In some cases those who have chosen to reply have
given evasive replies. It has been further stated in the
affidavit that most of these companies did not comply with
the financial discipline sought to be imposed upon them and
have avoided and abhorred any scrutiny into their accounts.
It has thus been submitted that to get over these
difficulties, the directions of 1987 attempt to provide a
steady, stable identificable and monitorable method by which
the companies will be able to disclose all their true
liabilities and also utilise the money raised from the
depositors for investment in safe indentifiable and
quantifiable securities instead of investing them in other
ventures. This will ensure complete security to the
depositors at all times and will also make the accounts of
the companies comprehensible and easy to monitor. As regards
the formula laid down by the High Court it has been
submitted that if a variable as against a fixed and definite
percentage of investment with respect to amounts collected
by way of each instalment is permitted it would be
impossible to find out and verify whether the amounts
invested are in accordance with the directions at any given
point of time when there are thousands of certificates with
different and varying maturity periods. In the
circumstances, the formula laid down by the High Court is
self-defeating and also deprives the depositor of the
security envisaged under the directions.
It was also submitted on behalf of the Reserve Bank
that it is an admitted position that the business of RNBCs
is to collect funds from the public and invest the same in
Government securities and bank deposits. In
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the application forms and in the advertisement’s issued by
these companies it is expressly held out to the public that
their moneys are safe with the banks and in Government
securities. It is the very nature of their business which
makes it non-viable if they are to give fair return to the
depositors and private security for the repayment of their
money. The scheme of control as provided in the directions
of 1987 might be harsh but the same is in conformity with
the assertions held out by these companies to the public at
large. These directions subject the companies to proper
discipline by monitoring their actions and such directions
cannot be considered as unreasonable. The reasonableness of
the directions when looked at from the point of view of the
depositors for whose safeguard they have been issued, is
beyond question. Return provided and the security to be
given through proper investment cannot be faulted on any
ground. Thus what seems to be an impossible situation for
these companies is not due to the impugned directions but
because of the nature of business itself. The funds are
collected at exhorbitant costs and on that account it
becomes difficult for the companies to give a fair return to
the depositors. These companies are not genuine investment
companies. If they want to do genuine investment business
they can do so by choosing freely their investment, but in
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that case Reserve Bank of India directions applicable to
such companies would permit them to accept deposits not
exceeding 25 per cent of paid up capital and reserve. The
directions of 1987 had not imposed any restriction on the
right to carry on business but those directions only place a
restriction with respect to one of the modes of raising
reserves i.e. through public deposits.
It has been further argued that the reasonableness of
the directions has not to be looked into from the point of
view of the company to whom any such restrictions will be
irksome and may therefore be regarded as unreasonable. The
framing of the directions are only regulatory in nature
keeping in view the interest of the depositors without
unduly jeopardising the interest of the employees. Keeping
this in mind it has been provided that the minimum return
would be at 10 per cent, though there are govt. and public
sector bonds which pay interest at a much higher rate. Even
presently bank deposits and other company deposits give
return varying between 13 to 15 per cent. There is no
limitation on the quantum of deposits with reference to the
overall capital as shown in the case of companies governed
by the Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules 1975, Non
Banking Financial Companies (Reserve Bank) Directions, 1977.
The linking of deposits with capital as in the case of other
regulations is a measure to secure the interest of the
depositors namely e.g. Companies (Acceptance of Deposit)
Rules, 1975, ensure that the assets
434
are at least three times the deposits received. In view of
the low or total non-existent capital of the RNBCs, it was
not possible to secure the deposits in this manner.
Instead, it has been provided that the entire liability
towards the depositors should be invested and no part of the
deposits be utilised for payment of commission etc. or
incurring other expense. In any event, even if, the
directions do not prescribe existence of owners capital as
security, it does not imply that it is permissible to use
the deposits received to bridge the time gap between income
and expenditure. Merely because the directions do not fix a
ceiling on the rate of commissions it does not imply that
the Reserve Bank has granted its permission to payment of
high commission or incurring of large expenses on management
etc. The RNBCs are free to incur such expenses and organize
their business as they desire as long as the depositors are
fully secured at all times. The contention that the
business of the RNBCs will close down if the directions of
1987 are to be adhered to is not based on facts and
misconceived in law. A perusal of Directors’ Report of
Peerless for the years 1988, 1989 and 1990 clearly go to
show that they did not consider the company in any financial
difficulty and in fact paid larger dividends even after
complying with the impugned directions of 1987.
It has thus been submitted that given a wide latitude
in judging the validity of economic legislation on the touch
stone of reasonableness, in the absence of patent
arbitrariness but having nexus with the public objective
sought to be attained, the durations cannot be condemned as
being violative of Article 19(1) (g). The result of the
contentions put forward on behalf of RNBCs would be that in
the case of endowments repayable after, say 10 years, there
will be nothing due and payable in the first nine years and
as such there would be no need of investing any sums for the
first nine years. The interpretation placed by the
respondent companies upon the judgment of the High Court is
that it is now open to them to determine as per their own
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peculiar estimate, what would be sufficient to meet the
liabilities towards the deposits and accordingly such amount
would be their "aggregate liability". According to the
Peerless Company if it deposits 75 per cent of the first
year’s subscription, it is adequate to cover its liabilities
to the depositors. On the other hand as per Timex Company
a deposit of only 50 per cent of the first year’s
subscription would be adequate to cover its liabilities to
the depositors. Whereas the Favourite Company contends that
investment of 40 per cent of the first year’s subscription
will be adequate to cover the liabilities to the depositors.
It has been submitted that according to well accepted
accounting practice where any sum is received as a loan or
as a deposit it has to be shown as a liability together with
accrued interest irrespective of when it is due. The amount
contributed by the depositors being a capital receipt and
not a revenue receipt cannot under any circumstances be
shown in the
435
balance sheet otherwise then at its full value. Moreover,
being a capital receipt, it cannot be credited to the profit
and loss accounts since Part II of Schedule VI to the
Companies Act, 1956 requires that the amounts to be shown in
the profit and loss accounts should be confined to the
income and expenditure of the company. Thus, crediting a
part of the first and subsequent year’s deposit instalments
to the profit and loss account and not showing them fully as
a liability in the balance sheet would be a contravention
of the provisions of the Companies Act.
It has been further submitted on behalf of the Reserve
Bank that the question which arises for consideration is
whether liability to the depositors can be calculated on an
actuarial basis. It may be noted that actuarial basis is
normally adopted (a) in respect of items of income and
expenditure, (b) where there is a significant element of
uncertainty. Thus, in so far as the liability arising out
of the repayment to the depositors of the amount capitalised
by him is considered, the actuarial basis cannot be adopted
and this liability must always be stated at its full value.
The principle of actuarial valuation is in opposite for the
business of RNBCs. It has also been submitted that the
formula laid down by the High Court about the quantum of
investments to be made by RNBCs is incapable of effectively
monitoring and hence the provisions made in the directions
of 1987 regarding security to depositors would be rendered
wholly illusory. Such impossibility in the monitoring has
been demonstrated as follows:
(A) These companies do not fix a definite but
variable percentage of investment with respect to
amounts collected by way of each instalment under
the certificates of deposits; e.g. Peerless would
invest 75 % of the collections made out of 1st
instalment (retaining and taking to P & L A/c, 25
%) and 82 % out of 2nd instalment and so on. At
any given point of time, there will be thousands of
deposit certificates with varying maturity and the
amounts collected would be an impossibility to find
out and verify whether the amounts invested are in
accordance, with the proportion fixed by the
companies with respect to each instalment.
Regulatory authority would have to depend entirely
on these companies for doing its monitoring
exercise.
(B) Each company fixes its own proportion of
investment with respect to each instalment based on
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the projected yield from its investment; e.g.
Favourite Finance Company claims that it needed to
invest only 40 % of the amounts collected by way of
1st instalment claiming that the projected yield
from its investment would be 14.8 %. This would
compound the impossibility of monitoring further.
436
It has thus been argued that the formula laid down by
the High court is self-defeating and depriving altogether
benefits of security provisions given to depositors under
the directions of 1987.
Mr. Somnat Chatterjee, learned senior counsel appearing
on behalf of Peerless Company contended that the Peerless
being the largest RNBC in india having an impeccable record
of public service decided to give effect to the directions
of 1987 as it wanted to avoid any confrontation with Reserve
Bank and further not to give an impression of seeking to
avoid "regulatory control", tried its best to comply with
the said directions w.e.f. 15th May, 1987 till 31st March,
1989. However, from its working results it appeared
bonafide to the Board of Directors of Peerless that it was
impossible to carry on its traditional business for any
longer period without incurring huge losses. The company as
such decided to approach the High Court for obtaining the
benefit of judgment delivered in the Timex case. The
Peerless has only challenged a part of Paragraph 6 of the
directions of 1987 and the consequential direction contained
in para 12 which shows that Peerless does not wish to remain
outside of the regulatory controls of Reserve Bank but
challenges only those directions which make the business
totally unworkable. There has been no attempt on the part
of Peerless to carry on its business in a manner which may
jeopardize the interest of any depositor or which will not
protect fully every paisa deposited with Peerless at all
points of time. No real complaint was made by or on behalf
of Reserve Bank as to any depositor of Peerless running a
risk of loss of any amount or that it has carried on or is
carrying on the business in an undesirable manner. It has
been submitted that Peerless should not be made to suffer
for the illegality or improprieties, if any committed by any
other RNBC and neither Peerless nor its 14 lac field agents,
3 thousand field officers and 4 thousand direct employees
should be made to suffer. The result of following
directions of 1987 would be that all the above agents,
officers and employees of the Peerless could loose their
jobs and their family members will be thrown on the streets.
The Peerless had abolished the provision of forfeiture in
all its schemes as early as in 1986 that is even prior to
coming into force of the directions of 1987. The Peerless
has been compelled to challenge paragraphs 6 and 12 of the
directions of 1987 since enforcement of these provisions
would result in complete annihilation of the undertaking of
Peerless in the near future.
It was further contended that it is inherent in the
business carried on by Peerless and other similar RNBCs that
the working capital is generated out of the subscriptions
received from the certificate holders. Such business
comprises in collecting subscriptions from depositors either
in lumpsum
437
or in instalments and such deposits are paid back with the
guaranteed accretions, bonus, interest etc. in terms of the
contract at the end of the stipulated term. Through this
business such companies have rendered great and commendable
service to the nation in mobilizing small savings and giving
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a boost to the movement of capital formation in the country.
Such companies have placed at the disposal of Governmental
institutions including public sector banks and other
financial institutions huge deposits which could not be
collected by the said financial institutions themselves or
by anybody in the organised sector. The method followed by
the companies in carrying on the aforesaid business is that
a certain portion of the subscriptions received by it is
transferred to the profit and loss account shown as income,
and the same is used to defray inevitable working capital
requirements of the company, namely, payment of agent’s
commission, management expenses, staff salaries and other
overheads. However, the balance of the subscriptions
(excluding the appropriated part) is transferred to a fund
each year and the corpus of the fund is invested in turn in
interest bearing investment. The Peerless company initially
used to transfer approximately 95 % of the first year’s
subscriptions to the profit and loss account and used to
invest the subscriptions received from the second year
onwards. However, at present, Peerless is appropriating 25
% of the first year’s subscription to the profit and loss
account and investing the balance 75 % in the manner and
mode prescribed by paragraph 6 of the directions of 1987.
It has been contended that the investment is planned in such
a manner that at the end of the contractually stipulated
maturity period or at any other point of time when any sum
of money may become contractually payable to a depositor, an
RNBC is always in a position to pay all its conractual dues
to the certificate holder. There is thus no threat to the
safety of the depositors money inspite of the aforesaid
transfer of a portion of the subscription received to the
profit and loss account showing it as income and utilising
it for meeting the working capital requirements. It was
pointed out that Peerless had been assessed to income on the
basis of above method of accounting and no objection has
ever been taken by the revenue authorities or by the
auditors of Peerless or even by R.B.I. before the issuance
of the directions of 1987. It was submitted that the
Peerless was incorporated in the year 1932 when it used to
carry on life insurance business. It changed over to the
present form of business from 1956 and since then it has
been carrying on such business with the full knowledge of
R.B.I. as well as other concerned authorities. The R.B.I.
never objected to the accounting system followed by the
Peerless. In view of the abolition of the forfeiture clause
the alleged risk to the depositors has become totally non-
existent. It was further argued that the R.B.I. framed
regulatory measures in 1973 such miscellaneous non-banking
companies (Reserve Bank) Directions, 1973.
438
The Reserve Bank granted exception to Peerless from the
provisions of the said Directions of 1973, by an order dated
3rd December, 1973. The Favourite Small Investments Limited
filed a writ petition challenging the refusal of Reserve
Bank to grant exemption to them from the provisions of the
said 1973 Directions to granting such exemption to
Peerless. In the said writ petition the R.B.I. filed an
affidavit justifying the denial of exemption to Favourite
Small Investments Ltd. and in the aforesaid affidavit
submitted in detail the accounting procedure of Peerless
including the fact that Peerless was transferring a portion
of the subscriptions to the profit and loss account as
income and it also certified that the said method was a
permissible business method and by following the said method
Peerless would be in a position to pay all contractual dues
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of the certificate holders at the end of the maturity
period. Thus the said system of accounting which is called
an actuarial system of accounting was found satisfactory by
the R.B.I. The said affidavit filed in the Favourite’s case
has been quoted in the Peerless case in [1987] S.C.C. 424,
and the said actuarial system of accounting was not held as
impermissible or against any recognized method of
accounting.
It was also contended on behalf of the Peerless that
the interest of depositors is certainly an important
consideration but the interest of the depositors is not
impaired in any manner whatsoever by the method of
accountancy now being followed by Peerless and in fact by
all similar companies, namely, appropriation of a part of
the subscription to the profit and loss account and meeting
the working capital requirements out of the same. In
respect of the above contention certain charts were also
produced during the course of arguments and from such charts
it was sought to establish that except for the first two
years the principal amount paid by a subscriber is always
covered by matching investment. Further, on the date on
which a deposit becomes contractually repayable, there is
full coverage of such liability.
It was submitted on behalf of All India Peerless Field
Officers Association that the said association represents
about 14 lac field workers. These 14 lac persons are
engaged by Peerless on the basis of individual contracts of
engagements and earn their livelihood solely by collecting
business for Peerless. For collecting such business
Peerless pays to them commission at a contractual agreed
percentage on the value of business collected. The said
field officers have to meet all expenses for procuring such
business such as travelling expenses, boarding, lodging,
office and administrative expenses etc. out of such
commission. Field officers have to undertake long tours and
have to travel into remote villages to reach the small
depositors. It has been submitted that if the directions
of 1987 are upheld, the undertaking of Peerless will face
inevitable closure and almost
439
14 lac field officers will lose their only source of
livelihood and will be virtually thrown on the streets. The
field officers and their families will face starvation and
extreme penury in case the validity of such directions is
upheld. Thus any restriction which would be prohibitive or
which would result in closure of the undertaking of Peerless
would be against public interest.
We have heard the arguments of learned counsel for the
parties. It may be made clear at the outset that questions
raised in these cases regarding the validity of paragraphs
6 and 12 of the directions of 1987 cannot be determined
merely by taking into consideration the working of the
financial soundness of the one company alone like Peerles
but the matter has to be examined in a broader perspective
of all RNBCs. We have to keep in mind, while deciding the
controversies raised in the arguments, such RNBCs which are
doing the same kind of business of taking deposits and
returning the same to the certificate holders after a gap of
7 to 10 years along with interest, bonus etc. In the
affidavit submitted before this Court on behalf of Reserve
Bank of India it has been stated that prior to 1987
directions, there were 747 such companies which were
conducting this business under various deposit schemes. At
present they could classify 392 such companies spread over
across the entire country. According to the above
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affidavit, as on 31st March, 1990 in the eastern zone out of
185 companies, only 35 have filed the annual returns and out
of which only 30 have filed the balance sheet. Similarly,
out of 140 companies in the northern zone only 28 have filed
annual returns and 32 have filed balance sheet. A perusal
of the returns given by 51 of these companies discloses that
35 companies have a negative net worth (i.e. their losses
far exceed their share capital and reserves) which
necessarily means that they have not only wiped out the
share capital and reserves but their liabilities are far in
excess. Only 16 companies have a positive net worth
including Peerless. It has been further pointed out in the
affidavit that apart from Peerless the aggregate capital
investment by 15 companies is Rs. 158 lacs only. As against
this, the negative net worth of the 35 companies aggregated
to Rs. 3.6 crores. Despite large accumulated losses (in
some cases with meager or nominal capital) these companies
apart from Peerless, have realised deposits to the tune of
Rs. 86 crores. Apart from the financial parameters most of
these small companies are family concerns. Most of such
companies have not designated their banks as is required
under Paragraph 6 of the directions and in most of such
cases amounts deposited in banks and approved securities
fall much short of deposit liabilities. It has also been
pointed out in the affidavit that the companies operating in
these areas also at times become untraceable in that a
number of show cause notices issued have been returned as
"ad-
440
dressee not known" etc. Thus we have to keep in mind the
above mushroom of companies also which have set foot in this
sort of business.
It would also be important to note that most of the
depositors in such companies belong to the rural areas and
who are persons belonging to lower middle class, small
agriculturists and small traders, pensioners etc. These
companies advertise their schemes widely in beguiling
terms. Through such advertisements they lure the small
savings of the poor ignorant villagers through a special
structure of agents, special agents, different kinds of
organisers and so on. The agents commission for the first
years subscription is very high and which offers incentive
to the agents on securing a fresh business and a
disincentive to collect subscriptions of subsequent years.
It is a matter of common experience and knowledge that most
rural folk particularly those belonging to the lower strata
of society will not pay their subscriptions regularly unless
somebody takes the trouble of collecting their subscription
with the same enthusiasm as may be shown in enrolling the
subscribers in the beginning. It is no doubt correct that
these companies do tap and collect the deposits from such
areas where the agents of public sector banks or public
sector companies or instrumentalities of the state are
unable to reach. Thus these companies mop up a large amount
of money for ultimately investing in the nationalised bank
or other Govt. owned corporations or companies. However,
the Reserve Bank considered the safety of the money of the
depositors as the paramount consideration in issuing the
direction of 1987. It cannot be disputed that the interest
of the employees as well as the field officers and agents
have also to be taken into consideration while deciding the
reasonableness of the impugned directions. It may be
further noted that in the Reserve Bank of India v. Peerless
Company case (supra) this Court though came to the
conclusion that the Endowment Certificate Scheme of the
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Peerless company was outside the Prize Chit and Money
Circulation Schemes (Banning) Act, still it was observed
that it would be open to the Reserve Bank to take such steps
as are open to them in law to regulate schemes such as those
run by the Peerless company to prevent exploitation of
ignorant subscribers though care must also be taken to
protect the thousands of employees. The Court expressed
grave concern with regard to the mushroom growth of
‘financial investment companies’ offering staggeringly high
rates of interests to depositors leading to the suspicion
whether these companies are not speculative ventures floated
to attract unwary and credulous investors and capture their
savings. It was clearly pointed out that if the Reserve Bank
of India considers the Peerless company with 800 crores
invested in Govt. securities, fixed deposits with national
banks etc. unsafe for depositors one wonders what they have
to say about the mushroom of non-banking companies which are
accepting
441
deposits promising most unlikely returns and as such what
action was proposed to be taken by the R.B.I. to protect the
investors. In the above background the Reserve Bank came
forward with the impugned directions of 1987.
Before examining the scope and effect of the impugned
paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions of 1987, it is also
important to note that Reserve Bank of India which is
bankers bank is a creature of Statute. It had large
contingent of expert advice relating to matters affecting
the economy of the entire country and nobody can doubt the
bonafides of the Reserve Bank in issuing the impunged
directions of 1987. The Reserve Bank plays an important
role in the economy and financial affairs of India and one
of its important functions is to regulate the banking system
in the country. It is the duty of the Reserve bank to
safeguard the economy and financial stability of the
country. While examining the power conferred by Sec. 58A of
the Companies Act, 1956 on the Central Govt. to prescribe
the limits upto which, the manner in which and the
conditions subject to which deposits may be invited or
accepted by non banking companies, this Court in Delhi Cloth
and General Mills, etc. v. Union of India, etc., [1983] 3
S.C.R, 438 observed as under:
"Mischief was known and the regulatory measure was
introduced to remedy the mischief. The conditions
which can be prescribed to effectuate this purpose
must a fortiori, to be valid, fairly and
reasonably, relate to checkmate the abuse of
juggling with the depositors/investors’ hard earned
money by the corporate sector and to confer upon
them a measure of protection namely availability of
liquid assets to meet the obligation of repayment
of deposit which is implicit in acceptance of
deposit. Can it be said that the conditions
prescribed by the Deposit Rules are so irrelevant
or have no reasonable nexus to the objects sought
to be achieved as to be arbitrary? The answer is
emphatically in the negative. Even at the cost of
repetition, it can be stated with confidence that
the rules which prescribed conditions subject to
which deposits can be invited and accepted do
operate to extend a measure of protection against
the notorious abuses of economic power by the
corporate sector to the detriment of
depositors/investors, a segment of the society
which can be appropriately described as weaker in
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relation to the mighty corporation. One need not
go so far with Ralph Nadar in ‘America
Incorporated’ to establish that political
institutions may fail to arrest the control this
everwidening power of corporations. And can one
wish away the
442
degree of sickness in private sector companies? To
the extent companies develop sickness, in direct
proportion the controllers of such companies become
healthy. In a welfare state, it is the
constitutional obligation of the state to protect
socially and economically weaker segments of the
society against the exploitation by corporations.
We therefore, see no merit in the submission that
the conditions prescribed bear no relevance to the
object or the purpose for which the power was
conferred under Sec. 58A on the Central
Government."
The function of the Court is to see that lawful
authority is not abused but not to appropriate to itself the
task entrusted to that authority. It is well settled that a
public body invested with statutory powers must take care
not to exceed or abuse its power. It must keep within the
limits of the authority committed to it. It must act in
good faith and it must act reasonably. Courts are not to
interfere with economic policy which is the function of
experts. It is not the function of the Courts to sit in
Judgment over matters of economic policy and it must
necessarily be left to the expert bodies. In such matters
even experts can seriously and doubtlessly differ. Courts
cannot be expected to decide them without even the aid of
experts.
The main grievance raised on behalf of respondent
companies is that if the provisions of paragraphs 6 and 12
of the directions of 1987 are complied with, the companies
will be left without any fund to meet their working capital.
It would be impossible to run the business without a working
capital and to meet even reasonable expenses incurred for
payment of agents commission, management expenses and other
overhead expenses. During the course of hearing the counsel
for the companies had relied on some charts to show the
unworkability and unreasonableness of the impugned
paragraphs 6 and 12 of the directions. It was also pointed
out that the arguments made on behalf of the Reserve Bank
overlooked the fact that in case of investments in long term
schemes such as Indira Vikas Patra and Kisan Vikas Patra the
companies will not be able to utilise its return from such
investment before the end of the minimum period for which
these schemes operate. The respondent companies will thus
be left without any income during the period of operation of
such schemes and cannot meet its working capital
requirements. It has been submitted that the directions of
1987 really amount to prohibition of the business in a
commercial sense without reasonable basis and are thus
violative of Art. 19(1) (g) of the Constitution. In support
of the above contention reliance has been placed on Mohammad
Yasin v. The Town Area Committee, Jalalabad and another,
[1952] SCR 572; Premier Auto-
443
mobiles Ltd. and anothers v. Union of India, AIR 1972 SC
1690 and on Shree Meenakshi Mills Ltd. v. Union of India AIR
1974 SC 366. It has also been contended that it is now well
settled by plethora of judicial pronouncements that the
restrictions on any business caused by regulations should
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not be more than what would be necessary in the interest of
the general public and such restrictions should not
overreach the scope of the objects achieved by the
regulations.
The contention on behalf of the Reserve Bank is that
the directions have been made in public interest of
safeguarding the interest of millions of depositors and the
Reserve Bank is not concerned and while doing so it was
rightly thought necessary by the Reserve Bank that the
companies cannot be permitted to incur the expenses out of
the corpus of the depositors money. The business carried on
by the companies to restructure their organization by
curtailing its expenses. If such middlemen or brokers are
not able to earn a large profit as was done before the
enforcement of the impugned directions, it lies with the
companies to continue or not such business when the margin
of profit is curtailed. These companies want to do the
business without having any stake of their own. The
companies doing such business cannot be subjected to the
scheme of control applied to other financial and non-
financial companies for the simple reason that they have no
capital and their schemes are for a period much longer than
three years. After the decision of the Supreme Court in
Peerless case these directions of 1987 were issued after
mature consideration with the help and advice of experts.
Paragraph 6 of the impugned directions according to the
Reserve Bank lays down provisions for security of
depositors. it prescribes the mode of investment of funds
collected by the companies. It cannot be disputed that
while collecting deposits the companies clearly hold out to
the members of the public that the moneys so collected by
them shall be invested in Government securities or kept
deposited with the banks and they also assure the depositors
that their moneys are safe and secure. On the basis of such
representations and on the strength of exaggerated and
misleading advertisements these companies collect huge
amounts of deposits from a large number of small, poor and
uninformed depositors and that too in such investment spread
over a long period. The contention on behalf of the Reserve
Bank of India is that in the above context these companies
carry on their activities wholly with the funds provided by
the public by way of deposits and hardly have any capital of
their own. In these circumstances it has been urged on
behalf of the Reserve Bank that the provisions made in
paragraph 6 of, the impugned directions are abso-
444
lutely reasonable and are for ensuring repayment of
deposits. It has been submitted that it is common knowledge
that small depositors cannot have recourse to courts for
recovering their amounts if the companies do not repay the
deposits. The direction in paragraph 6 enjoins on these
companies to deposit in fixed deposits with public sector
banks or unencumbered approved securities or in other
investments, a sum which shall not, at the close of business
on 31st December, 1987 and thereafter at the end of each
half year i.e. 30th June and 31st December not less than the
aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the depositors
whether or not such amounts have become payable. Thus
according to the above provision whole of the aggregate
amounts of the liabilities to the depositors whether or not
such amounts have become repayable, is required to be
deposited or invested. 10 % of such amount is required to
be deposited in public sector banks and 70 % in approved
securities and 20 % has been allowed to be invested by the
company according to its own choice.
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In order to understand the rigour of the directions
laid down in paragraph ‘6’, it would be necessary to
understand the scope of other directions as well. Paragraph
4 of the directions lays down that the deposit shall not be
accepted for a period of less than 12 months or more than
120 months i.e. one years from the date of receipt of such
deposits. The normal standard applied to non financial and
financial companies is that they cannot accept deposits for
a period of more than 36 months (except housing finance
company). Thus the companies before us have been permitted
to conduct their schemes extending over to a long period
upto 120 months. This is a special kind of concession
provided to the companies of the kind before us.
Paragraph 5 of the directions relates to the minimum
rate of return fixed at 10 % per annum for a deposit with a
maturity of 10 years. It is a matter of common knowledge
that in the present times even the public sector
corporations and banks and other financial and non-financial
companies pay interest at much more higher rates ranging
from 14 to 18 %. Thus according to the above scheme the
respondent companies and the others doing such business can
easily earn a profit of 4 to 5 % on their investments. In
case of a request of the depositors for repayment of the
deposit before maturity then the amount payable by the
company by way of interest etc., shall be 2 % less than what
could have been ordinarily paid by the company by way of
interest if the deposit had run the full contractual period.
However, the question of repayment before maturity or after
how many years will depend entirely on the terms and
conditions of the contract of such deposit. Paragraph 12 of
the directions of 1987 enjoins upon the company to disclose
as liabilities in its books of accounts and
445
balance sheets the total amount of deposits received
together with interest, bonus, premium or other advantage,
accrued or payable to the depositors. Under Clause (a) to
the explanation to clause 3 of paragraph ‘6’ "Aggregate
Amounts of Liabilities" shall mean total amount of deposits
received together with interest, premium, bonus or other
advantage by whatever name called, accrued on the amount of
deposits according to the terms of contract. Thus the
company is required to deposit or invest the aggregate
amounts of its liabilities having accrued on the amount of
deposits according to the terms of contract. Without going
into the figures shown in the various charts, it is clear
that if the directions contained in paragraphs 6 and 12 of
the directions of 1987 are to be carried out, the companies
are not left to utilise any amount out of the deposits as
working capital to meet the expenses. In our view the
Reserve Bank is right in taking the stand that if these
companies want to do their business, they should invest
their own working capital and find such resources elsewhere
with which the Reserve Bank has no concern. If we look at
the Annual Report and Accounts of Peerles for the years
1988, 1989 and 1990 it is clear that it had conducted its
business following the impugned directions of 1987 and still
had earned substantial profits in these years. It is clear
that Peerless is a company having established as back as in
1932 and had substantial funds to invest the entire amount
of deposits and had met the expenses out of its accumulated
profits of the past years. This shows that the business can
be run and profit can be earned even after complying with
the impugned directions of 1987 issued by the Reserve Bank.
It is not the concern of this court to find out as to
whether actuarial method of accounting or any other method
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would be feasible or possible to adopt by the companies
while carrying out the conditions contained in paragraphs 6
and 12 of the directions of 1987. The companies are free to
adopt any mode of accounting permissible under the law but
it is certain that they will have to follow the entire terms
and conditions contained in the impugned directions of 1987
including those contained in paragraphs 6 and 12. It is not
the function of the Court to amend and lay down some other
directions and the High Court was totally wrong in doing so.
The function of the Court is not to advise in matters
relating to financial and economic policies for which bodies
like Reserve Bank are fully competent. The Court can only
strike down some or entire directions issued by the Reserve
Bank in case the Court is satisfied that the directions were
wholly unreasonable or violative of any provisions of the
Constitution or any Statute. It would be hazardous and
risky for the courts to tread an unknown path and should
leave such task to the expert bodies. This court has
repeatedly said that matters of economic policy ought to be
left to the Government. While dealing with the validity of
an order passed on September 30, 1977 fixing a retail price
of mustard oil not
446
exceeding Rs. 10 per kilogram in exercise of powers
conferred by Section 3 of the Essential Commodities Act, a
bench of 7 Judges of this Court in M/s Prag Ice & Oil Mills
and another v. Union of India and Nav Bharat Oil Mills and
another v. Union of India [1978] 3 SCC 459 observed as
under:
"We have listened to long arguments directed at
showing us that producers and sellers of oil in
various parts of the country will suffer so that
they would give up producing or dealing in mustard
oil. It was urged that this would, quite
naturally, have its repercussions on consumers for
whom mustard oil will become even more scarce than
ever ultimately. We do not think that it is the
function of this Court or of any Court to sit in
judgment over such matters of economic policy as
must necessarily be left to the Government of the
day to decide. Many of them, as a measure of price
fixation must necessarily be, are matters of
prediction of ultimate results on which even
experits can seriously err and doubtlessly be
differ. Courts can certainly not be expected to
decide them without even the aid of experts".
In Shri Sitaram Sugar Company Limited and another v.
Union of India & others with U.P. State Sugar Corporation
Ltd., and another v. Union of India & Others, [1990] 3 SCC
223 this Court observed as under:
"Judicial review is not concerned with matters of
economic policy. The Court does not substitute its
judgment for that of the legislature or its agents
as to matters within the province of either. The
Court does not supplant the "feel of expert" by its
own views. When the legislature acts within the
sphere of its authority and delegates power to an
agent, it may empower the agent to make findings of
fact which are conclusive provided such findings
satisfy the test of reasonableness. In all such
cases, judicial inquiry is confined to the question
whether the findings of fact are reasonably on
evidence and whether such findings are consistent
with the laws of the land.
In R.K. Garg v. Union of India & others, etc. etc.,
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[1981] 4 SCC 675 at p. 690 a Constitution Bench of this
Court observed as under:
"Another rule of equal importance is that laws
relating to economic activities should be viewed
with greater latitude than laws touching civil
rights such as freedom of speech, religion etc. It
has been said by no less a person than Holmes, J.
that the legislature should be allowed some play in
the joints, be-
447
cause it has to deal with complex problems which do
not admit of solution through any doctrinaire or
strait-jacket formula and this is particularly true
in case of legislation dealing with economic
matters, where, having regard to the nature of the
problems required to be dealt with, greater play in
the joints has to be allowed to the legislature.
The Court should feel more inclined to give
judicial defence to legislative judgment in the
field of economic regulation than in other areas
where fundamental human rights are involved.
Nowhere has this admonition been more felicitously
expressed than in Morey v. Doud where Frankfurter,
J. said in his Inimitable style:
"In the utilities, tax and economic regulation
cases, there are good reasons for judicial self-
restraint if not judicial deference to legislative
Judgment. The legislature after all has the
affirmative responsibility. The courts have only
the power to destroy, not to reconstruct. When
these are added to the complexity of economic
regulation, the uncertainty, the liability to error
the bewildering conflict of the experts, and the
number of times the judges have been overruled by
events-self limitation can be seen to be the path
to judicial wisdom and institutional prestige and
stability".
It may also be noted that it is not possible for the
Court to determine as to how much percentage of deposit of
first instalment should be allowed towards expenses which
may consist of commission to agents, office expenses etc.
Even amongst the three companies-viz. Peerless, Timex and
Favourite, there is a difference in this regard. According
to the Peerless 25 %, Timex 50 % and Favorite 60 % of the
deposits of the first instalment would be necessary for
generating the working capital for meeting the genuine
expenses. Thus it would depend from company to company
based on various factors such as paid-up-capital, percentage
of commission paid to the agents, rate of interest paid to
the depositors, period of maturity for repayment, office
expenses and various other factors necessary to mop up
working capital out of the depositors money. We cannot
ignore the possibility of persons having no stake of their
own starting such business and after collecting huge
deposits from the investors belonging to the poor and weaker
section of the society residing in rural areas, and to stop
such business after a few years and thus devouring the hard
earned money of the small investors. It cannot be lot sight
that in such kind of business, the agents always take
interest in finding new depositors because they get a high
rate of commission out of the first instalment, but they do
not have same enthusiasm in respect of deposit of subsequent
instalments. In these circumstances, if the Reserve Bank
has issued the
448
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directions of 1987 to safeguard the larger interest of the
public and small depositors it cannot be said that the
directions are so unreasonable as to be declared
constitutionally invalid.
It has been vehemently contended before us on behalf of
the Peerless employees and field agents that in case the
impugned directions are not struck down, the Peerless will
have to close down its business and several thousands of
employees and their family and several lakhs of field agents
would be thrown on the street and left with no employment.
We do not find any force in the above contention. So far as
Peerless is concerned there is no possibility of its closing
down such business. It has already large accumulated funds
collected by making profits in the past several years. Thus
it has enough working capital in order to meet the expenses.
We are not impressed with the argument of Mr. Somnath
Chatterjee, Learned Senior Advocate for the Peerless that
after some years the Peerless will have to close down its
business if directions contained in paragraphs 6 and 12 are
to be followed. The working capital is not needed every
year as it can be rotated after having invested once. If
the entire amount of the subscribers is deposited or
invested in the proportion of 10 % in public sector banks,
70 % in approved securities and 20 % in other investments,
such amounts will also start earning interest which can be
added and adjusted while depositing or investing the
subsequent years of deposits of the subscribers. In any
case it lies with the new entrepreneurs while entering such
field of business to make arrangement of their own resources
for working capital and for meeting the expenses and they
cannot insist in utilising the money of the depositors for
this purpose. So far as the companies already in this field
they must have earned profits in the past years which can be
utilised as their working capital. It is important to note
that the impugned directions of 1987 have been made
applicable from 15th May, 1987 prospectively and not
retrospectively. Thus under these directions the question
of depositing the entire amount of subscriptions would only
apply to the deposits made after 15th May, 1987.
We may also observe that the impugned directions of
1987 as well as any other directions issued from time to
time by the Reserve Bank relating to economic or financial
policy are never so sacrosanct that the same cannot be
changed. Even the financial budget for every year depends
on the economic and financial policy of the Government
existing at the relevant time. So far as the impugned
directions are concerned if it is found in future that the
same are not workable or working against the public
interest, the Reserve Bank is always free to change its
policy and scrap or amend the directions as and when
necessary. We have no doubt
449
that if in times to come the Reserve Bank feels that
business of the kind run at present by Peerless and other
companies, in terms of the directions of 1987 are not
yielding the result as envisaged by the Reserve Bank, it
will always be prepared to consider any new proposals which
may be conducive both in the interest of the large multitude
of the investors as well as the employees of such companies.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan, learned Senior Counsel appearing on
behalf of the Reserve Bank made a candid statement on behalf
of the Reserve Bank that the Reserve Bank would always be
prepared to consider any new proposal which would observe
the public interest.
In the result I set aside the orders of the High Court
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and allow the appeals arising out SLP Nos. 6930-30 A of
1991, 7140 of 1991 and 3676 of 1991 filed by the Reserve
Bank of India and dismiss the wirt petition No. 677 of 1991.
No order as to costs.
K.RAMASWAMY, J. While respectfully agreeing with my
learned brother since the issues bear far reaching seminal
importance, I propose to express my views as well.
This Court in Reserve Bank of India etc. v. Peerless
General Finance and Investment Co. Ltd. & Ors. etc., [1987]
2 SCR 1 for short ‘first Peerless case’ while holding that
Prize Chits and Money Circulation Schemes (Banning) Act,
1978 does not attract "Recurring Deposits Schemes", pointed
out that the schemes harshly operate against the poor
sections of the society who require security and protection;
urgent action appeared to be called for and was imperative
to protect the public and emphasized to evolve fool proof
scheme to prevent fraud being played upon persons not
conversant with practices of the financial enterprises who
pose themselves as benefactors of the people. In pursuance
thereof the appellant, Reserve Bank of India, for short
‘RBI’ issued Residuary Non-Banking Companies (Reserve Bank)
Directions, 1987 for short ‘the Directions’. The short
shift with avid eye into the relevant provisions of the
Reserve Bank of India Act 2 of 1934 for short ‘the Act’ and
"the directions" would enable us to come to grips with the
scope of the scheme of the directions, its purpose and
operation. Chapter III(B) of the Act deals with the power
of RBI to regulate non-banking institutions receiving
deposits. Section 45 (1) (bb) defines deposit includes and
shall be deemed always to have included "any receipt or
money by way of deposit or loan or in any other form but
does not include..." exceptions are not relevant and hence
are omitted. Section 45(1) (c) defines ‘financial
institution’ to mean any non-banking institution which
carries on its business, or part of its business, in any of
the following activities; clauses (i) to (v) are omitted,
clause (vi) collect-
450
ing for any purpose of any scheme or arrangement by whatever
name called, monies in lump-sum or otherwise by way of
subscription...or in any other manner by awarding prizes or
gifts..., whether in cash or kind or disbursing monies in
any other way to persons from whom monies are collected or
to any other persons but does not include...the exclusions
are not relevant and hence omitted. Section 45J empowers
that RBI may, if it considers necessary in the public
interest so to do, by general or special order, (a) regulate
or prohibit the issue by any non-banking institution of any
prospectus or advertisement soliciting deposits of money
from the public; and (b) specify the conditions, subject to
which any such prospectus or advertisement, if not
prohibited, may be issued. Section 45K empowers the RBI to
collect information from non-banking institution as to
deposit and to give directions that every non-banking
institution shall furnish to the Bank, in such form, at such
intervals and within such time, such statements, information
or particulars relating to or connected with deposits
received by the non-banking institution, as may be specified
by RBI by general or special order including the rates of
interest and other terms and conditions on which they are
received. Under sub-section (3) thereof the RBI is entitled
to issue in the public interest directions to non-banking
institution in respect of any matter relating to or
connected with the receipt of deposits including the rates
of interest payable on such deposits and the periods for
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which deposits may be received. The use of the adjective
‘any’ matter relating to or connected with the receipt of
deposits is wide and comprehensive to empower the RBI to
issue directions in connection therewith or relating to the
receipt of deposits. But exercise of power is hedged with
and should be "in the public interest."
Section 45L provides that if the RBI is satisfied that
for the purpose of enabling it "to regulate the credit
system of the country to its advantage it is necessary so to
do"; it may give to such institutions either generally or to
any such institution, in particular, "directions relating to
the conduct of business" by them or by it as financial
institution or institutions including furnishing of
information of particulars "relating to paid up capital,
reserves or other liabilities", the "investments" whether
"in the Government securities" or "otherwise", the persons
to whom, and the purposes and periods for which; finance is
provided "the terms and conditions", including "the rates
of interest", on which it is provided. Section 45Q
provides that the provisions of this chapter shall have
effect "notwithstanding anything inconsistent therewith
contained in any other law" for the time being in force or
any instrument having effect by virtue of any such law.
The directions became operative from May 15, 1987.
They would apply to every Residuary Non-Banking Company for
short ‘R.N.B.C’
451
which receive any deposit scheme in lump-sum or in
instalment by way of contribution or subscription or by sale
of units of certificates or other instruments or "in any
other manner" vide Clause II of the definition. Clause
III(A) defines deposits as defined in s.45(1) (bb) of the
Act. Paragraph 4 regulates receipt of deposits for a period
not less than 12 months and not more than 120 months from
the first day of the receipt of the deposit. Paragraph 5
prescribes minimum rate of return of 10 per cent per annum
(to be compounded annually) on the amount deposited. The
proviso empowers R.N.B.C. at the request of the depositor to
make repayment of the deposit, after the expiry of a period
of one year from the date of the deposit but before the
expiry of the period the deposit with two per cent reduced
rate of interest from 10 % interest. Paragraph 6, the heart
of the directions consists of three sub-paragraphs with
explanations. The marginal note expresses "security for
depositors". Sub-paragraph (1) thereof provides that on and
from May 15, 1987 every R.N.B.C. shall deposit and keep
deposited in fixed deposits with public sector banks or
invest and keep invested in unencumbered approved securities
(such securities being valued at their market value for the
time being), or in other investments, which in the opinion
of the company are safe, a sum which shall not, at the close
of business on 31 st December, 1987 and thereafter at the
end of each half year that is, 30th June and 31st December
be less than the aggregate amounts of the liabilities to the
depositors whether or not such amounts have become payable.
The proviso specifies that the sum so deposited or invested
(a) not less than 10 per cent shall be in fixed deposits
with any of the public sector banks (b) not less than 70 per
cent shall be in approved securities; and (c) not more than
20 per cent or 10 times the net owned funds of the company,
whichever amount is less, shall be in other investments.
Provided that such investments shall be with the approval of
the Board of Directors of the company, the explanation "Net
Owned funds" shall mean the aggregate of the paid-up capital
and free reserves as appearing in the latest audited balance
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sheet of the company as reduced by the amount of accumulated
balance of loss, deferred revenue expenditure and other
intangible assets, if any, as disclosed in the said balance
sheet. Sub-paragraph (2) enjoins toe R.N.B.C to entrust to
one of the public sector banks designated in that behalf.
Deposits and securities referred to in clauses (a) and (b)
of the proviso to sub-paragraph (1) to be held by such
designated bank is for the benefit of the depositors. Such
securities and deposits shall not be withdrawn by the
R.N.B.C. or otherwise dealt with, except for repayment to
the depositors. Sub-paragraph (3) obligates it to furnish
to the R.B.I. within 30 days from the close of business on
31st December, 1987 and thereafter at the end of each half
year i.e., as on 30th June and 31st December, a certificate
from its auditors, being member of institute of Chartered
Accountants, to the effect
452
that the amounts deposited in fixed deposits and the
investment made are not less than "the aggregate amounts of
liabilities to the depositors" as on 30th June and 31st
December of that year. Explanation thereto makes explicit
what the "aggregate amount of liabilities"; "approved
securities"; and "public sector banks" and "unencumbered
approved securities" are meant to be the details of which
are not necessary for the purpose of this case. Paragraph 7
abolishes the power of the R.N.B.C. of forfeiture of
deposits; paragraph 8 prescribes particulars to be mentioned
in the form soliciting deposits; paragraph 9 enjoins
issuance of the receipts to the depositors and paragraph 10
obligates to maintain the register with particulars of
depositors mentioned therein. Paragraph II enjoins its
Board of Directors to furnish the information in their
report as envisaged therein. Paragraph 12 which is also
material for the purpose of this case provides that every
R.N.B.C. shall disclose as liabilities in its books of
accounts and balance sheets, the total amount of deposits
received together with interest, bonus, premium or other
advantage, accrued or payable to the depositors. Paragraph
13 enjoins to supply to R.B.I. copies of the balance sheets
and accounts together with Directors report. Paragraph 14
obligates the company to submit returns to the R.B.I. in the
manner envisaged thereunder. R.N.B.C. has to submit balance
sheet, returns etc. to the department of the Financial
Companies as per paragraph 15. Paragraph 16 obligates
R.N.B.C. to comply with the requirement of the non-banking
financial companies and miscellaneous non-banking companies
(Advertisement) Rules, 1977 etc. and actual rate of interest
etc. to the depositor. Paragraph 17 applies to the
prospective R.N.B.C. to furnish information in Schedule C.
Paragraph 18 accords transitory power and paragraph 19
empowers the R.B.I., if it considers necessary to avoid any
hardship or for any other just and sufficient reasons, to
grant extensions of time to comply with or exempt, any
company or class of companies, from all or any of the
provisions of the directions either generally or for any
specified period, subject to such conditions as the RBI may
impose and paragraph 20 excludes the applicability of
paragraph 19 of the Non-Banking Financial Companies (Reserve
Bank) Directions, 1977.
The High Court declared paragraphs 6 and 12 to be ultra
vires of Art. 19(1)(g) and 14 of the Constitution holding
that though the directions do not expressly prohibit the
business of receiving any deposit under any scheme or
arrangement in lump-sum or in instalment by way of
contribution or subscription by R.N.B.C. in effect the
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operation of the directions inhibit the existing business
and prohibits the future companies to come into being. As
seen the public purpose of the directions is to secure for
the depositors, return of the amounts payable at maturity
together with interest, bonus, premium or any other
advantage accrued or payable to the
453
depositors. To achieve that object every R.N.B.C. is
enjoined to deposit and keep deposited in fixed deposit and
invest and keep invested in unencumbered approved
securities a sum which shall not, at the close of each half
year, be less than the aggregate amount of the liability to
the depositors whether or not such amount has become
payable. The object, thereby, is to prohibit deployment of
funds by R.N.B.C. in any other manner which would work
detrimental to the interest of the depositors.
The question emerges whether paragraph 6 and 12 are
ultra vires of Articles 19(1)(g) and 14 of the Constitution.
Article 19(1)(g) provides fundamental rights to all citizens
to carry on any occupation, trade or business. Cl. 6 thereof
empowers the State to make any law imposing, in the interest
of the general public, reasonable restrictions on the
exercise of the said rights. Wherever a statute is
challenged as violative of the fundamental rights, its real
effect or operation on the fundamental rights is of primary
importance. It is the duty of the court to be watchful to
protect the constitutional rights of a citizen as against
any encroachment gradually or stealthily thereon. When a law
has imposed restrictions on the fundamental rights, what the
court has to examine is the substance of the legislation
without being beguiled by the mere appearance of the
legislation. The Legislature cannot disobey the
constitutional mandate by employing an indirect method. The
court must consider not merely the purpose of the law but
also the means how it is sought to be secured or how it is
to be administered. The object of the legislation is not
conclusive as to the validity of the legislation. This does
not mean the constitutionality of the law shall be
determined with reference to the manner in which it has
actually been administered or operated or probably been
administered or operated by those who are charged with its
implementation. The court cannot question the wisdom, the
need or desirability of the regulation. The state can
regulate the exercise of the fundamental right to save the
public from a substantive evil. The existence of the evil as
well as the means adopted to check it are the matters for
the legislative judgment. But the court is entitled to
consider whether the degree and mode of the regulation
whether is in excess of the requirement or is imposed in any
arbitrary manner. The court has to see whether the measure
adopted is relevant or appropriate to the power exercised by
the authority or whether over stepped the limits of social
legislation. Smaller inroads may lead to larger inroads and
ultimately result in total prohibition by indirect method.
If it directly transgresses or substantially and inevitably
effects the fundamental right, it becomes unconstitutional,
but not where the impact is only remotely possibly or
incidental. The court must lift the veil of the form and
appearance to discover the true character and the nature of
the legislation, and every endeavor should be made to have
the efficacy of fundamental right maintained and the
legislature is
454
not invested with unbounded power. The court has,
therefore, always to guard against the gradual encroachments
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and strike down a restriction as soon as it reaches that
magnitude of total annihilation of the right.
However, there is presumption of constitutionality of
every statute and its validity is not to be determined by
artificial standards. The court has to examine with some
strictness the substance of the legislation to find what
actually and really the legislature has done. The court
would not be over persuaded by the mere presence of the
legislation. In adjudging the reasonableness of the law, the
court will necessarily ask the question whether the measure
or scheme is just, fair, reasonable and appropriate or is it
unreasonable, unnecessary and arbitrary interferes with the
exercise of the right guaranteed in Part III of the
Constitution.
Once it is established that the statute is prima facie
unconstitutional, the state has to establish that the
restrictions imposed are reasonable and the objective test
which the court to employ is whether the restriction bears
reasonable relation to the authorized purpose or an
arbitrary encroachment under the garb of any of the
exceptions envisaged in Part III. The reasonableness is to
the necessity to impose restriction; the means adopted to
secure that end as well as the procedure to be adopted to
that end.
The court has to maintain delicate balance between the
public interest envisaged in the impugned provision and the
individual’s right; taking into account, the nature of his
right said to be infringed; the underlying purpose of the
impugned restriction; the extent and urgency of the evil
sought to be remedied thereby; the disproportion of the
restriction imposed, the prevailing conditions at the time,
the surrounding circumstances; the larger public interest
which the law seeks to achieve and all other relevant
factors germane for the purpose. All these factors should
enter into the zone of consideration to find the
reasonableness of the impugned restriction. The court weighs
in each case which of the two conflicting public or private
interest demands greater protection and if it finds that the
restriction imposed is appropriate, fair and reasonable, it
would uphold the restriction. The court would not uphold a
restriction which is not germane to achieve the purpose of
the statute or is arbitrary or out of its limits.
This Court in Joseph Kuruvilla Vellukunnel v. Reserve
Bank of India & Ors.,[1962] Suppl. 3 SCR 632, held that the
RBI is ‘‘a bankers’ bank and lender of the last resort.’’
Its objective is to ensure monetary stability in India and
to operate regulate the credit system of the country. It
455
has, therefore, to perform a delicate balance between the
need to preserve and maintain the credit structure of the
country by strengthening the rule as well as apparent credit
worthiness of the banks operating in the country and the
interest of the depositors. In under developed country like
ours, where majority population are illiterate and poor and
are not conversant with banking operations and in under-
developed money and capital market with mixed economy, the
constitution charges the state to prevent exploitation and
so the RBI would play both promotional and regulatory roles.
Thus the R.B.I. occupies place of ‘‘pre-eminence’’ to ensure
monetary discipline and to regulate the economy or the
credit system of the country as an expert body. It also
advices the Government in public finance and monetary
regulations. The banks or non-banking institutions shall
have to regulate their operations in accordance with, not
only as per the provisions of the Act but also the rules and
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directions or instructions issued by the RBI in exercise of
the power thereunder. Chapter 3B expressly deals with
regulations of deposit and finance received by the R.N.B.Cs.
The directions, therefore, are statutory regulations.
In State of U.P. v. Babu Ram, [1961] 2 SCR 679, this
Court held that rules made under a statute must be treated,
for all purposes of construction or obligations, exactly as
if they were in that Act and are to the same effect as if
they contained in the Act and are to be judicially noticed
for all purposes of construction or obligations. The
statutory rules cannot be described or equated with
administrative directions. In D.V.K. Prasada Rao v. Govt.
of A.P., AIR 1984 AP 75, the same view was laid.
Therefore, the directions are incorporated and become part
of the Act itself. They must be governed by the same
principles as the statute itself. The statutory presumption
that the legislature inserted every part thereof for a
purpose to and the legislative intention should be given
effect to, would be applicable to the impugned directions.
The R.B.I. issued the directions to regulate the
operations of the R.N.B.Cs., to safeguard the interest of
the depositors. Payment of interest, bonus, premium or other
advantage, in whatever name it may be called is reward for
waiting or parting with liquidity. It is paid because of
positive time preference (one rupee today is preferred to
one rupee tomorrow)on the part of the depositor. Therefore,
the directions avowed to preserve the right of the
depositors to receive back the amount deposited with the
contracted rate of interest; it aims to prevent depletion of
the deposits collected from the weaker segments of the
society and also tends to effect free flow of the business
of the R.N.B.Cs. who would desire to operate in their own
way. The question, therefore, emerges whether the directions
in paras 5 and 12 violate Arts. 14 and 19(1)(g) of the
Constitution.
456
The solidarity of political freedom hinges upon socio-
economic democracy. The right to development is one of the
most important facets of basic human rights. The right to
self interest is inherent in right to life. Mahatma
Gandhiji, the Father of the Nation, said that ‘‘Every human
being has a right to live and therefore to find the
wherewithal to feed himself, and where necessary, to clothe
and house himself’’. Article 25 of the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights provides that ‘‘everyone has a right to a
standard of living adequate for the health and well being of
himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing
and medical care.’’ Right to life includes the right to
live with basic human dignity with necessities of life such
as nutrition, clothing, food, shelter over the head,
facilities for cultural and socio-economic well being of
every individual. Art. 21 protects right to life. It
guarantees and derives therefrom the minimum of the needs of
existence including better tomorrow.
Poverty is not always an economic problem alone. Very
often it is a social as well as human problem. An
agriculturist, an industrial worker, the daily wage earner,
rickshaw puller and small self-employed teacher, artisan,
etc. may have an earning but may be prone to spend his/her
entire earnings, apart from on daily necessities of life, on
socio-religious occasions, fairs, festivals etc. The urge
for better tomorrow and prosperous future; the clamour for
freedom from want of any kind and social security, make the
vulnerable segments of the society to sacrifice today’s
comforts to save for better tomorrow. The habit of saving
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has an educative value for thrift. It endeavors to bring an
attitudinal change in life. It enables individuals to assess
future specific needs and to build up a financial provision
for the purpose. The habit of saving becomes a way of life
and harnesses the meagre resources to build up better
future. During the days of rising prices, small savings
serve as instrument to mop up the extra purchasing power. In
addition to wage a war against poverty, waste, unwise
spending, hoarding and other activities, habit of saving
also enables family budgeting and postponing expenditure
which can be deffered in favour of better utilisation in
future. To strengthen the urge for thrift and streamline the
social security, the disadvantaged need freedom from
exploitation and Art.46 of the constitution enjoins the
State to protect the poor from all forms of exploitation and
social injustice.
Investment agencies or commercial banks are
intermediaries between savers and investors. They embark
upon deposit mobilisation campaign to mop up the limited
resources. Commercial banks or financial investment
agencies, be it public sector or private sector, are vying
with one another to scale new heights in deposit growth each
year, devising
457
different deposit schemes to suit the individual needs of
the depositors or savers. Mushroom growth of non-banking
agencies put afloat diverse schemes with alluring offers of
staggering high rate of interest and other catchy advantages
which would generate suspicion of the bona fides of the
offer. But gullible depositors are lured to make deposits.
It is not uncommon that after collecting fabulous deposits,
some unscrupulous people surreptitiously close the company
and decamp with the collections keeping the depositors at
bay. Therefore, the need to regulate the
deposits/subscriptions, in particular, in private sector
became imperative to prevent exploitation or mismanagement
as social justice stratagem.
The directions are, therefore, a social control measure
over the R.N.B.Cs., in matters connected with the operation
of the schemes or incidental thereto. The direction to
investment in the channelised schemes at the given
percentage in clauses (a) and (b) of proviso to para 6(1)
was intended to deposit or keep deposited the collections in
fixed deposit in the public sector banks or invest or keep
invested in unencumbered approved securities so as to ensure
safety, steady growth and due payment to the subscribers at
maturity of the principal amount and the interest, bonus,
premium or other advantage accrued thereon. The amounts
deposited shall not be less than the total aggregate amounts
of liabilities to the subscribers. The deposits or
securities shall not be withdrawn or otherwise be dealt with
except for a repayment to the subscribers. It should always
be shown to be a liability till date of the repayment.
This court in Hatisingh Mfg. Co. Ltd. & Anr. v. Union of
India & Ors. [1960] 3 SCR 528, held that freedom to carry on
trade or business is not an absolute one. In the interest of
the general public, the law may impose restrictions on the
freedom of the citizen to start or carry on his business,
whether an impugned provision imposing a fetter on the
exercise of the fundamental right guaranteed by Art.
19(1)(g) amounts to a reasonable restriction imposed in
the interest of general public, must be adjudged not in the
background of any theoretical standard or pre-determinate
patterns, but in the light of the nature and the incidence
of the right, the interest of the general public sought to
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be secured by imposing restrictions and the reasonableness
of the quality and the extent of the fetters imposed by the
directions. The credit worthiness of R.N.B.Cs. undoubtedly
would be sensitive. It thrives upon the confidence of the
public, on the honesty of its management and its reputation
of solvency. The directions intended to promote ‘‘freedom’’
and ‘‘facility’’ which are required to be regulated in the
interest of all concerned. The directions as a part of the
scheme of the Act would be protected from the attack. Vide
Latafat Ali Khan & Ors. v. State of U.P., [1971] Suppl. SCR
719.
458
The R.N.B.C. is required to conduct its business
activities in the interest of the depositors or subscribers
who are unorganised, ignorant, gullible and ignorant of the
banking operations. If, however, the acts of R.N.B.C. is
detrimental to the interest of the depositors, etc. the
R.B.I. has power in Chapter 3B to issue directions and the
R.N.B.C. is bound to comply with the directions and non-
compliance thereof visits with penal action.
Admittedly except Peerless General Insurance, the other
companies do not have either paid-up capital or reserve fund
worth the name. Peerless was established in the year 1932
and over the years it built up reserve fund. R.N.B.Cs. are
carrying their business by crediting the entire first year’s
collections as a capital receipt under actuarial accounting
method. In the affidavit of Sri S.S. Karmic, the Chief
Officer of the RBI filed on August 13, 1991, it was stated
that prior to the directions, 747 R.N.B.Cs. were doing the
business. As on that date only 392 R.N.B.Cs. were notified
to be existing. Out of them 178 are in West Bengal, 15 in
Assam, 26 in Orissa, 6 in Manipur and Meghalaya, 26 in
Punjab, 64 in U.P., 22 in Delhi, etc. As on March 31, 1990
out of 185, 35 R.N.B.Cs. alone submitted annual returns, and
out of them only 30 have filed their balance-sheets. 28
R.N.B.Cs. in the northern region filed their annual returns
and 23 filed their balance-sheets with incomplete date. 35
of them have negative net-worth (loss for exceeding their
share capital and reserve). Apart from Peerless, the
aggregate capital investment of 15 companies accounted to
Rs. 158 lacs. The negative net-worth of the 35 companies
referred to above would aggregate to Rs.3.6 crores. They
raised, apart from Peerless, deposits to the tune of Rs. 86
crores. Many of them have not even designated their banks as
required under para 6 of the direction. The amount invested
in bank deposits and approved securities fell much short of
their deposit liabilities. Verona Commercial Credit and
Investment Company, one of the respondents, have accumulated
losses to the tune of Rs. 3.8 crores. As per balance-sheet
their assets are inadequate to meet the liability. Favourite
Small Scale Investment, one of the respondents as on
December 12, 1989, even their provisional balance-sheet
shows that total liability towards depositors is Rs. 44.62
crores while its investment in banks and Government security
is only Rs. 13 crores. The cash on hand was Rs. 1.74 crores.
Rs.8 crores were shown to be loans and advances. The
accumulated losses are Rs.22.19 crores as against total
share capital and reserve of Rs. 20.73 lacs. It is, thus,
clear on its face that while total liabilities are Rs. 49.09
crores, the assets including doubtful loans and advances
aggregate to Rs. 26 crores. An inspection into the affairs
of the said company conducted in February, 1990 disclosed
that upto the end of 1989 the deposit liabilities including
interest would be in the region of
459
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over Rs. 132 crores. The difference between the inspection
and the balance-sheet would be due to actuarial principle.
It had committed default to pay to its depositors to the
tune of Rs. 5.4 crores, which is a gross under-estimate.
Sri Somnath Chatterjee, the learned Senior Counsel for
the Peerless and adopted by other counsel, contended that
paragraphs 6 and 12 are totally unworkable. Its compliance
would jeopardise not only the existing companies but also
the very interest of the depositors and large workmen. No
new company would be set up. The direction given in the
first Peerless case was to keep in view the interest of the
workmen as well; in effect it was given a go-bye. At least
25% of collections would be left over as working capital of
the company, to carry on its business in a manner indicated
by the impugned judgment, so that no depositor would lose
his money and no workmen would lose his livelihood and it
will be in consonance with public interest. Shri G.L.
Sanghi, the learned Senior Counsel for Timex, contended that
50% of collection would be necessary to comply with the
impugned directions and another company pleaded for 40%.
Further contention of Shri Chatterji was that the actuarial
accounting neither violates any law, nor objected to by the
Income-tax Department. Crediting the first year’s
subscription in the accounts as capital receipt would
generate company’s working capital for its successful
business by meeting the expenditure towards establishment,
the commission and a part of profits. Forfeiture clause was
already dated before the directions were issued. Interest at
10% with annual compounding would be reasonable return to
the subscribers which is being ensured to the depositors.
The directions issued by the High Court, subject to the
above modifications, would subverse the above purpose. Paras
6 and 12, otherwise, are arbitrary and prohibitive violating
their fundamental right to do business assured by Arts.
19(1)(g) and 14. Sri Harish Salve resisted the contentions
with ability.
Para 12 is myocardium and para 6’ is the heart of the
directions without which the directions would be purified
corpse. On the respondents own showing, for the first two
years, by actuarial accounting, the liabilities, as against
deposits, are inadequate. The regulation intends to preserve
the corpus of the deposits and the interest payable thereon
as on date to be a tangible and unencumbered asset at all
times, though not repayable. Indisputably the
depositors/subscribers stand as unsecured creditors.
Undoubtedly every measure cannot be viewed or interpreted in
the event of catastrophe overtaking the company. The catchy
and alluring but beguiled terms of offer attract the
vulnerable segments of the society to subscribe and keep
subscribing the small savings for better tomorrow.
460
But many a time, by the date of maturity, their hopes are
belied and aspirations are frustrated or dashed to ground.
They remain to be helpless spectators with all disabilities
to recover the amounts. Pathetic financial position of some
of the companies enumerated herein before would amply
demonstrate the agony to which the poor subscribers would be
subjected to. The fixed deposits and unencumbered securities
as per Clauses (a) and (b) of the proviso to paragraph 6(1)
would be 80% of the collections of the year of subscription
and Shri Chatterji contends to reduce it to 75% and to allow
free play to use the residue in their own way. The
difference is only 5% and others at vagary. The objects of
the direction are to preserve the ability of the R.N.B.C. to
pay back to the subscribers/depositors at any given time;
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safety of the subscribers’ money and his right to
unencumbered repayment are thus of paramount public interest
and the directions aimed to protect them. The directions
cannot and would not be adjudged to be ultra vires of
arbitrary by reason of successful financial management of an
individual company. An over all view of the working system
of the scheme is relevant and germane.
The obligation in paragraph 12 of periodical disclosure
in the accounts of a company of the deposits together with
the interest accrued thereon, whether or not payable but
admittedly due as a liability, is to monitor the discipline
of the operation of the schemes and any infraction, would be
dealt with as per law. The certificate by a qualified
Chartered Accountant is to vouchsafe the correctness and
authenticity of accounts and would and should adhere to the
statutory compliance.
The settled accounting practice is that a loan or
deposit received from a creditor has to be shown as a
liability together with accrued interest whether due or
deferred. The actuarial accounting applies to revenues and
costs to which the concept of the ‘‘going concern’’ can be
adopted. Therefore, in providing the costs of the company it
can set apart its costs on the basis that liability is
created for interest, bonus etc. payable in foreseeable
future. Undoubtedly the actuarial principle applied by the
L.I.C. or the gratuity schemes are linked with life of the
assured or the premature death before retirement of an
employee, but R.N.B.C. in its contract does not undertake
any such risk. The deposit is a capital receipt but not a
revenue receipt and its full value shall be shown in the
account books of balance-sheet as liability of the company.
It cannot be credited to the profit and loss account. Para
II of Schedule VI of the Companies Act, 1956 requires that
the amount shown in the profit and loss account should be
confined to the income and expenditure of the company. Para
12 of the directions is, thus, in consonance with the
Companies Act. Moreover, in its advertisement and the
application forms,
461
the R.N.B.C. expressly hold out to the public that
their monies are safe with the bank and in the Government
securities. Paragraph 6(1) of the directions only mandates
compliance of the promise held out by an R.N.B.C. for
repayment at maturity. Sub-para (3) of para 6 keeps the
deposits unencumbered and to be utilised by the company
only for repayment. In other words, paragraph 6 only
elongates the contract in the public interest to safeguard
the interest of the vulnerable sections of the depositors.
The R.B.I. cannot be expected to constantly monitor the
working of the R.N.B.C. in its day-to-day function. The
actuarial basis cannot be adopted by the R.N.B.Cs. and the
liability must always be reflected in its balance-sheet at
its full value. Compliance of the direction in para 12,
dehors any method of accountancy adopted by a company,
intended to discipline its operations.
No-one can have fundamental right to do any unregulated
business with the subscribers/depositors’ money. Even the
banks or the financial companies are regulated by ceiling on
public deposits fixing nexus between deposits and net-worth
of the company at the ratio of 3:1, i.e. 25% of the capital
net-worth. No one would legitimately be expected to get
immediate profits or dividend without capital investment.
The effect of the clause (a) and (b) of the provision to
paragraph 6(1) of the direction, no doubt, freezes the right
to profit for a short time, and fastens an incidental and
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consequential obligation to mop up paid up capital or
investment towards establishment and commission charges to
tide over teething trouble. But that is no ground to say
that it is impossible for compliance, nor could it be said
that the directions are palpably arbitrary or unreasonable.
Anyone may venture to do business without any stake of his
own but is subject to the regulations. A new company
without any paid up capital, no doubt,cannot be expected to
come into existence nor would operate its business at
initial existence with profits. Clause (c) of the provision
to paragraph 6(1) of the directions gives freedom on leeway
to invest or rotate, not more than 20 per cent of
collections etc. in any profitable manner at its choice as a
prudent businessman to generate its resources to tide over
the teething troubles till it is put on rail to receive
succor to its existence, without inhibiting the company’s
capacity to mop up small savings, and the directions do not
control its operation. The only rider is the approval of
the Board of Directors which is inherent. Absence of
imposition of any limit on quantum of deposit with reference
to paid up capital or reserve fund like non-banking
financial companies, etc. is a pointer in this regard. Thus
there is a reasonable nexus between the regulation and the
public purpose, namely, security to the depositors’ money
and the right to repayment without any impediment, which
undoubtedly is in the public interest.
462
Looking from operational pragmatism, the restrictions
though apparently appears to be harsh in form, in its
systematic working, it would inculcate discipline in the
business management, subserve public confidence in the
ability of the company to honour the contractual liability
and assure due repayment at maturity of the amount deposited
together with interest, etc, without any impediment. In
other words, the restrictions in paragraph 6 of the
directions intended to elongate the twin purposes, viz.habit
of thrift among the needy without unduly jeopardising the
interest of the employees of the companies and the R.N.B.Cs
working system itself in addition to safety and due payment
of depositors’ money. True, as contended by Shri Chatterji
that there arises corresponding obligation to pay higher
amount of commission to its agents and the commitment should
by kept performed and the confidence enthused in the agents.
But it is the look out of the businessman. The absence of
ceiling on the rate of commission would give choice between
the company and its agents to a contract in this regard and
has freedom to manage its business. The R.N.B.Cs. are free
to incur such expenses and organize their business as they
desire including payment of commission as they think
expedient. But the subscribers/depositors’liability, under
no circumstances would be in jeopardy and the directions
were designed to ensure that the interest of the
subscribers/depositors is secured at all times, prescribing
investment of an equal sum to the total liability to the
subscribers/depositors. Paragraph 12 is only a bridge
between the depositors and the promise held out and the
contract executed in furtherance thereof as a monitoring
myocardium to keep the heart in paragraph 6 functioning
without any hiatus. It is settled law that regulation
includes total prohibition in a given case where the
mischief to be remedied warrants total prohibition. Vide
Narendra Kumar v. Union of India, [1960] 2 SCR 375. But the
directions do not do that but act as a siphon between the
subscriber/depositor and the business itself. Therefore,
they are neither palpably arbitrary nor unjust not unfair.
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The mechanism evolved in the directions is fool-proof, as
directed by this court in first Peerles case, to secure the
interest of the depositors, as well is capable to monitor
the business management of every R.N.B.C. It also, thereby,
protects interest of the employees/field staff/commission
agent etc. as on permanent basis overcoming initial
convulsions. It was intended, in the best possible manner,
to subserve the interest of all without putting any
prohibition in the ability of a company to raise the
deposit, even the absence of any adequate paid up capital or
reserve fund or such pre-commitment of the owner, to secure
such deposits.
Thus the directions impose only partial control in the
public interest of the depositors. The deposits invested or
keep invested qua the com-
463
pany always remained its fund till date of payment at
maturity or premature withdrawal in terms of the contract.
The effect of the impugned judgment of the Calcutta High
Court namely redefinition of the aggregate liabilities as
contractual liabilities due and payable would have the
effect of requiring the R.N.B.Cs. to deposit an amount equal
to the sum payable only in the year of maturity allowing
free play to the R.N.B.Cs. to use the subscriptions/deposits
in its own manner during the entire earlier period,
jeopardise the security of the subscribers/depositors and
are self-defeating. The sagging mismanagement prefaced
hereinabove would be perpetrated and the depositor was
always at the mercy of the company with all disabilities,
killing the very goose namely the thrust to save for
prosperous future or to tide over future needs.
It is well settled that the court is not a Tribunal
from the crudities and inequities of complicated
experimental economic legislation. The discretion in
evolving an economic measures, rests with the policy makers
and not with the judiciary. Indian social order is beset
with social and economic inequalities and of status, and in
our socialist secular democratic Republic, inequality is an
anathema to social and economic justice. The constitution
of India charges the state to reduce inequalities and ensure
decent standard of life and economic equality. The Act
assigns the power to the RBI to regulate monitory system and
the experimentation of the economic legislation, can best be
left to the executive unless it is found to be unrealistic
or manifestly arbitrary. Even if a law is found wanting on
trial, it is better that its defects should be demonstrated
and removed than that the law should be aborted by judicial
fiat. Such an assertion of judicial power deflects
responsibilities from those on whom a democratic society
ultimately rests. The court has to see whether the scheme,
measure or regulation adopted is relevant or appropriate to
the power exercised by the authority. Prejudice to the
interest of depositors is a relevant factor. Mismanagement
or inability to pay the accrued liabilities are evils sought
to be remedied. The directions designed to preserve the
right of the depositors and the ability of R.N.B.C. to pay
back the contracted liability. It also intended to prevent
mismanagement of the deposits collected from vulnerable
social segments who have no knowledge of banking operations
or credit system and repose unfounded blind faith on the
company with fond hope of its ability to pay back the
contracted amount. Thus the directions maintain the thrift
for saving and streamline and strengthen the monetary
operations of R.N.B.Cs.
The problems of Government are practical and do require
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rough accommodation. Illogical it may be and unscientific
it may seem to be, left to its working and if need be, can
be remedied by the R.B.I. by
464
pragmatic adjustment that may be called for by particular
circumstances. The impugned directions may at first blush
seem unjust or arbitrary but when broached in pragmatic
perspective the mist is cleared and that the experimental
economic measure is manifested to be free from the taints of
unconstitutionality.
Para 19 of the directions empowers the RBI to extend
time for compliance or to exempt a particular company or a
class thereof from all or any of the provisions, either
generally or for a specified period subject to such
conditions as may be imposed. Power to exempt would include
the power to be exercised from time to time as exigencies
warrant. An individual company or the class thereof has to
place necessary and relevant material facts before the
R.B.I. of the hardship and the need for relief. A criticism
of arbitrariness or unreasonableness may not be ground to
undo what was conceived best in the public interest. What
is best is not always discernible. The wisdom of any choice
may be disputed or condemned. Mere errors of Government are
not subject to judicial review. The legislative remedy may
be ineffective to mitigate the evil or fail to achieve its
purpose, but it is the price to be paid for the trial and
error inherent in the economic legislative efforts to
grapple with obstinate social issues. It is proper for
interference in judicial review, only, when the directions,
regulations or restrictions are palpably arbitrary,
demonstrably irrelevant or disriminatory. Exercise of
power then can be declared to be void under Art. 13 of the
Constitution. So long as the exercise of power is broadly
within the zone of reasonableness, the court would not
substitute its judgment for that of legislature or its agent
as to matters within their prudence and power. The court
does not supplement the feel of the experts by its own
values.
It is settled law that so long as the power is
traceable to the statute mere omission to recite the
provision does not denude the power of the legislature or
rule making authority to make the regulations, nor
considered without authority of law. Section 114 (h) of the
Evidence Act draws a statutory presumption that official
acts are regularly performed and reached satisfactorily on
consideration of relevant facts. The absence of reiteration
of objective satisfaction in the preamble as of one under
s.45L does not denude the powers, the R.B.I. admittedly has
under s.45L to justify the actions. Though s.45L was
neither expressly stated nor mentioned in the Preamble of
the directions of the required recitation of satisfaction of
objective facts to issue the directions from the facts and
circumstances it is demonstrated that the R.B.I. had such
satisfaction in its consideration of its power under s.45L
when the directions were issued . Even otherwise s.45K (3)
itself is sufficient to uphold the directions.
465
The impugned directions are thus within the power of
the R.B.I. to provide tardy, stable, identifiable and
monitorable method of operations by each R.N.B.C. and its
compliance of the directions. This will ensure security to
the depositors at all times and also make the accounts of
the company accurate, accountable and easy to monitor the
working system of the company itself and continuance of its
workmen. The directions in paragraphs 6 and 12 are just,
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fair and reasonable not only to the depositors, but in the
long run to the very existence of the company and its
continued business itself. Therefore, they are legal, valid
and constitutionally permissible.
The Writ Petition is dismissed and the appeals are
allowed. The Writ Petitions filed in the High Court stand
dismissed. No costs in this Court.
G.N. Petition dismissed
Appeals allowed.
466