Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHD. NIZAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/10/1979
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 431 1980 SCR (1) 968
1980 SCC (1) 264
ACT:
Indian Post Office Act, 1898, Section 34, Scope of-
Value Payable Article accepted by the Union of India for
onward transmission to a foreign country which in turn
collects the amount from the addressee but fails to send
back due to suspension of the money order service between
the two countries- Whether the post office is an agent of
the sender and the foreign country a subagent.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent filed a suit for the recovery of a sum
of Rs. 1606-8-0 being the value of V.P. article paid by the
addressee in Pakistan to that Government for transmission to
India. Due to the suspension of the money order service
between Pakistan and India after 19-9-49, the amount was not
sent by Pakistan P&T authorities to P&T authorities in
India. Therefore, the appellant, pleaded non-liability by
virtue of proviso to Section 34 of the Indian Post Office
Act, 1898. The Trial Court dismissed the suit on the ground
that the respondent’s claim was barred by limitation under
Rule 102 of the Rules framed under the Act and was also not
maintainable in view of the proviso to S. 34. The first
appellate court reversed the said decision on the view that
Rule 102 was ultra vires the Indian Post Office Act and that
non-payment by the Pakistan Government was not a valid
defence. The High Court on appeal by the appellant affirmed
the appellate decision holding that the post office
established by the Government of India was an agent of the
plaintiff and the Government of Pakistan was acting as the
sub-agent.
Allowing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD : When two sovereign powers enter into an
agreement, as in the instant case "in order to establish an
exchange of value payable articles", neither of them can be
described as an agent of the other. It is plain that under
such an agreement if the Pakistan Administration decided to
suspend the V.P. service temporarily and did not make over
the money realised from the addressee, it cannot be said
that the Union of India had received the money but failed to
pay. [975 C-D]
Had the Pakistan Government been really a sub-agent,
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payment to them would have been as good as payment to the
Union of India, but that is not the case here. Sub-agent is
defined in Section 191 of the Contract Act, 1872, as "a
person employed by and acting under the control of, the
original agent in the business of the agency." Under the
arrangement entered into between the two sovereign powers,
Union of India and Pakistan, neither could be said to be
employed by or acting under the control of the other. In
view of the fact that since 19-9-1949 the money order
service with Pakistan remained suspended, the proviso to
section 34 of the Indian Post Office Act, 1872 is attracted
which absolves the Central Government from "any liability in
respect of the sum
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specified for recovery unless and until that sum has been
received from the addressee". [975 E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 446 of
1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 1-4-66 of the Allahabad High Court in S.A. No.
1133/65.
R. P. Bhatt and Girish Chandra for the Appellant.
Pramod Swarup and R. Sathish for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GUPTA, J. The stakes are not high in this appeal-it is
valued at Rs. 1606-8-0-but it raises two rather interesting
questions. Does the post office when it accepts a postal
article for transmission act as an agent of the sender of
the article ? And where the postal article is sent from
India to an addressee in a foreign country, does the
government of that country act as a sub-agent for
transmission of the article ?
The questions arise on the following facts. The
respondent had instituted a suit in the court of Munsif,
Moradabad, for recovery of a sum of Rs. 1606-8-0 from the
Union of India (Post and Telegraph Department) alleging that
during the period from August 31, 1949 to September 17, 1949
the plaintiff despatched from the Moradabad City Post Office
thirty value-payable parcels to addresses in Lahore and
Rawalpindi in Pakistan, that they received the articles and
paid the entire amount payable, but the defendant Union of
India failed to pay the sum to the plaintiff. The Union of
India in their written statement admitted that the aforesaid
articles were despatched by the plaintiff as claimed and
that their value was recovered in Pakistan but the Union of
India did not receive the sum from the Pakistan Government
as the money order service between India and Pakistan
remained suspended from September 19, 1949 and this was the
reason why the sum could not be paid to the plaintiff.
Reference was made to section 34 of the Indian Post Office
Act, 1898 and it was claimed that the said provision
absolved the Union of India from liability. Section 34 reads
as follows:
"The Central Government may, by notification in
the Official Gazette, direct that, subject to the other
provisions of this Act and to the payment of fees at
such rates as may be fixed by the notification, a sum
of money specified in writing at the time of posting by
the sender of a postal article shall be recoverable on
the delivery thereof from the
970
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addressee, and that the sum, so recovered, shall be
paid to the sender;
Provided that the Central Government shall not
incur any liability in respect of the sum specified for
recovery unless and until that sum has been received
from the addressee.
Explanation:-Postal articles sent in accordance
with the provisions of this section may be described as
"value-payable" postal articles."
It was further contended in the written statement that the
plaintiff’s claim, made for the first time on October 22,
1950 which was beyond one year from the date of the booking
of the value-payable articles, was not admissible under rule
102 of the Rules framed under the Indian Post Office Act
which fixed a time-limit of one year "from the date of the
posting of the articles" for making such claims.
It also appears from the written statement that the
postal authorities had assured the plaintiff that his claim
would be settled on receipt of the money from Pakistan after
the money order service between the two countries was
resumed.
Shri Om Prakash Sharma, Complaint Inspector, deposing
for the defendant Union of India on April 15, 1953 stated
that "since 19-9-1949 the money order system with Pakistan
was stopped on account of devaluation and it still stands
stopped, the V.P. sent by the plaintiff was realised in
Pakistan after 19-9-1949".
The trial court dismissed the suit on the ground that
the plaintiff’s claim was barred under rule 102 and was also
not maintainable in view of the proviso to section 34 of the
Indian Post Office Act. The first appellate court reversed
this decision and decreed the suit on the finding that rule
102 in so far as it fixed a limit of one year for making the
claim was ultra vires the Act; it was also held that the
fact that Union of India had not been able to realise the
sum from the Pakistan Government was a matter which
concerned the two governments and not the plaintiff whose
claim could not be defeated because of nonpayment by the
Pakistan Government.
The High Court on appeal by the Union of India affirmed
the decision of the lower appellate court decreeing the
suit. Rejecting the contention that section 34 of the Indian
Post Office Act barred the suit, the High Court held:
"Section 34 of the Act merely bars a suit in a
case where the amount has not been received from the
addressee. In
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the present case, it is admitted in the written
statement as well as by the defendant’s witness that
the addressees had paid the amount to the Pakistan
Government. That Government was the agent of the Union
of India .... If the agent acting on behalf of the
Union of India fails to do his duty, the plaintiff
cannot be made to suffer. The matter is between the
Union of India and its agent and the Union of India is
responsible for paying the money to the plaintiff."
As regards rule 102 the High Court agreed with the view
expressed by the lower appellate Court that the rule was
ultra vires the Indian Post Office Act.
The High Court proceeded on the footing that the post
office established by the Government of India was an agent
of the plaintiff for transmission of the postal articles to
addressees in Pakistan and the Government of Pakistan was
really acting for the Government of India as a sub-agent,
and that even if the sub-agent failed to pay, the liability
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of Union of India as agent of the plaintiff did not cease.
Agency is founded upon contract, express or implied. The
assumption here is that entrusting a postal article to the
post office for transmission gives rise to a contractual
relationship between the sender of the article and the post
office. What is the warrant for such an assumption ? Before
us Counsel for Union of India contended that the Post
Office discharged a governmental function and acceptance of
postal articles for transmission did not give rise to any
contractual relationship.
The post office was established in India by a statute.
Postage required to avail of the postal services has been
defined in section 2(f) of the Indian Post of Office Act as
"the duty chargeable for the transmission by post of postal
articles". Under section 4 the exclusive privilege of
conveying letters is reserved to the Central Government with
certain exceptions which are not significant. Section 17 of
the Act says that "postage stamps" shall be deemed to be
issued by Government for the purpose of revenue. It appears
from section 23(3) of the Act that under certain
circumstances postal articles sent by post may be opened and
destroyed under the authority of the Post Master General.
These are only some of the provisions of the Act which seem
to indicate that the post office is not a common carrier, it
is not an agent of the sender of the postal article for
reaching it to the addressee. It is really a branch of the
public service providing postal services subject to the
provisions of the Indian Post Office Act and the rules made
thereunder. The law relating to the post office in England
is not
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very much different from that in this country. In Triefus &
Co. Ltd. v. Post Office the court of appeal held that the
post office is a branch of revenue and the Post Master
General does not enter into any contract with a person who
entrusts to the post office a postal packet for transmission
overseas. This decision approves the observations of Lord
Mansfield in Whitfield v. Lord Le Despencer. In the course
of his judgment, Lord Mansfield said: "The Post Master has
no hire, enters into no contract, carries on no merchandise
or commerce. But the post office is a branch of revenue, and
a branch of police, created by Act of Parliament. As a
branch of revenue, there are great receipts; but there is
likewise a great surplus of benefit and advantage to the
public, arising from the fund. As a branch of police it puts
the whole correspondence of the Kingdom (for the exceptions
are very trifling) under government, and entrusts the
management and direction of it to the crown, and officers
appointed by the crown. There is no analogy therefore
between the case of the Post Master and a common carrier."
Counsel for the respondent referred to the decision of
this Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax, Delhi v. Messrs
P.M. Rathod & Co. where it was held that the post office was
an agent of the seller for the recovery of price against
delivery of goods. Kapur, J. speaking for the Court said :
"In the case of delivery of goods by V.P.P., it is
immaterial whether the buyer directs the goods to be sent by
V.P.P. or the seller does so on his own accord because the
goods handed over to the Post Office by the seller can only
be delivered to the buyer against payment and this payment
is received for and on behalf of the seller. The buyer does
not pay till the goods are received by him and once he has
paid the price it is the Post Office that is responsible for
payment of the money received by it to the seller. The buyer
has no longer any responsibility in regard to it. Therefore
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a payment to the Post Office is payment to the seller and at
the place where the goods are delivered and payment is
made..... This shows that whatever be the jural relationship
between the seller and the Post Office in respect of
carriage of goods sent by the seller under the V.P.P. system
it becomes an agent of the seller for the recovery of the
price and if it fails to recover the price and delivers the
goods it is liable for any damage to the seller." Reliance
was also placed on Union of India v. Amar Singh. In this
case the
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respondent booked certain goods in September, 1947 with the
N. W. Railway at Quetta in Pakistan to New Delhi. The wagon
containing the goods was received at the Indian border
station of Khem Karan on November 1, 1947 from where the
E.P. Railway took over. The wagon reached New Delhi on
February 13, 1948. The respondent going to take delivery of
the goods found a major portion of the goods not traceable.
In a suit for compensation for non-delivery of goods against
the Dominion of India, it was held on the facts of the case
that the N.W. Railway had implied authority to appoint the
E.P. Railway to act for the consignor during the journey of
goods by the E.P. Railway and by force of section 194 of the
Indian Contract Act, the E.P. Railway became an agent of the
consignor. It was also held that even if an agency could not
be implied from the facts, a contract of bailment could be
inferred between the E.P. Railway and the respondent.
It is however not necessary to examine the
circumstances and the sense in which the Post Office or the
Railway, in the two aforesaid decisions was held to be an
agent or a bailee, because the case before us can be
disposed of on a short point. Admittedly the Government of
Pakistan did not make over the money realised from the
addressees in Pakistan to the Union of India. The provisions
of the Indian Post Office Act did not apply beyond the
territorial limits of India except to citizens of India
outside India. Postal communication between different
countries is established by postal treaties concluded among
them. In the course of the hearing of this case, counsel for
the appellant produced a copy of the Agreement for the
exchange of value-payable articles between India and
Pakistan which became operative from April 1, 1948 and was
to "continue in force until it shall be modified or
determined by mutual consent of the contracting parties, or
until one year after the date on which one of the
contracting parties shall have notified the other of its
intention to terminate it". The Agreement starts as follows:
"In order to establish an exchange of value-payable articles
between India and Pakistan, the undersigned, duly authorised
for that purpose, have agreed upon the following Articles :"
The copy of the Agreement shows that it was executed in
duplicate and signed for the Director General of Posts and
Telegraphs of the two countries at New Delhi and Karachi
respectively. The relevant Articles of the Agreement are set
out below:
Article 4
Value-payable articles shall be entered in the
registered list, insured letter invoice, or parcel bill
in the same way
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as other registered articles, insured letters and
insured or uninsured parcels, as the case may be, but
with the addition, the column for remarks, of the word
"Value-payable", followed by an entry...of the amount
in Indian rupee currency to be remitted to the sender,
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and also of the sender’s name and full address in clear
characters.
Article 5
Every V.P. article shall be accompanied by a V.P.
money order in conformity with or analogous to the
specimen ’A’ and "AA" annexed to the present Agreement.
This money order shall bear a statement of the amount
to be remitted to the sender and shall show, as a
general rule, the sender of the Article as payee of the
order.....................
Article 6
The amount to be remitted to the sender together
with the commission chargeable thereon (at the rate in
force for ordinary money orders drawn on the country of
origin of the value-payable article), shall be
collected from the addressee. The amount to be remitted
to the sender shall be transmitted to the latter by
postal money order and the commission shall be retained
by the Administration which issues the money order.
Article 9
If the addressee of a value-payable article other
than a value-payable parcel, does not pay the amount of
the charge within the limit of time prescribed by the
internal regulations of the country of delivery, the
article shall be sent back to the office of origin.
Each country shall communicate to the other its
internal regulations in this respect.
Article 10
In the event of the loss of a value-payable
registered article or when a value-payable insured
letter or a value payable insured or uninsured parcel
has been lost or damaged or its contents abstracted,
the responsibility shall be fixed and compensation paid
under the same conditions as in the case of other
registered articles, insured letters or insured or
uninsured parcels, as the case may be. When, however,
such an article, letter or parcel has once been
delivered, the Administration of the country of
destination shall
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be responsible for the sum collected and must, if
necessary, prove that it has remitted it, less the
prescribed commission, to the sender.
Article 12
Each Administration is authorised, in special
circumstances that would justify such a measure,
temporarily to suspend the V.P. service wholly or in
part, on condition that notice of such suspension be
given immediately to the other Administration, and if
deemed necessary, the notices of suspension shall be
communicated by telegraph.
When two sovereign powers enter into an agreement as
above, neither of them can be described as an agent of the
other. The plaintiff was expected to know that without such
an arrangement between the two countries it was not possible
for the Indian postal authorities to reach the postal
articles to addressees in Pakistan. It is plain that under
such an agreement if the Pakistan Administration decided to
suspend the V.P. service temporarily and did not make over
the money realised from the addressees, it cannot be said
that the Union of India had received the money but failed to
pay. Had the Pakistan Government been really a sub-agent,
payment to them would have been as good as payment to the
Union of India, but that is not the case here. Sub-agent is
defined in section 191 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 as
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"a person employed by, and acting under the control of, the
original agent in the business of the agency". Under the
arrangement entered into between the two sovereign powers,
Union of India and Pakistan, neither could be said to be
employed by or acting under the control of the other. We
have already referred to the evidence of Complaint Inspector
Om Parkash Sharma that since September 19, 1949 the money
order service with Pakistan had remained suspended. That
being so, the proviso to section 34 of the Indian Post
Office Act is attracted which absolves the Central
Government from "any liability in respect of the sum
specified for recovery unless and until that sum has been
received from the addressee". The plaintiff’s claim cannot
therefore succeed. In the view we take, it is not necessary
to consider whether rule 102 is ultra vires the Indian Post
Office Act.
The appeal is allowed, the judgment and decree of the
High Court are set aside and the suit is dismissed. In view
of the order made
976
on February 26, 1969 the appellant will pay the costs of the
respondent. We expect the defendant to act up to the
assurance given to the plaintiff as appearing in paragraph 3
of the written statement that the plaintiff’s "claim will be
settled" on receipt of the money from Pakistan after
resumption of the money order service between the two
countries.
V.D.K. Appeal allowed.
977