Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUBHRA MUKHERJEE & ANR. C
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHARAT COKING COAL LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/03/2000
BENCH:
S.Rajendra Babu, S.S.M.Quadri
JUDGMENT:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, J.
This appeal is directed against the judgment and
decree of the High Court of Judicature at Patna (Ranchi
Bench), in Appeal from Appellate Decree No.21 of 1979 (R)
passed on November 11, 1997. The appellants-plaintiffs
filed Title Suit No.28(A) of 1976 in the court of the
Subordinate Judge, Ist Court, Dhanbad, praying for a
declaration of title in respect of a bungalow and a piece of
land measuring 1.38 acres consisting of survey plot Nos. 91
to 94 appertaining to Khatian No.2 of mouza Nichitpur
(hereinafter referred to as the suit property) and for
permanent injunction restraining the respondents from
interfering with their possession. The suit property was
owned by M/s.Nichitpur Coal Company Private Limited
(hereinafter referred to as the Company), which is
registered under the Indian Companies Act. By a resolution
of the board of directors of the Company dated September 21,
1970, it was resolved to sell the suit property to the
appellants for a consideration of Rs.5,000/-. However, the
appellants paid Rs.7,000/- to one of the directors under
receipt dated December 30, 1970 (Ext.10). An agreement to
sell the suit property to the appellants for Rs.7000/-
(Rs.5000/- as consideration of the Bungalow and Rs.2000/- as
price of the land) was executed by the Company on January 3,
1971 (Ext.8). The Company executed the sale deed in their
favour on March 20, 1972 (Ext.9). The Coal Mines
(Nationalisation) Act, 1973 (for short the Act of 1973)
came into force on May 1, 1973 and from that date the right,
title and interest of the owners in relation to the coal
mines specified in the Schedule appended to the Act of 1973
(the said Company is mentioned at serial No.133 of the
Schedule) vested in the Central Government (they will
hereinafter be referred to as the vested properties).
Thereafter under the order of the Central Government, the
vested properties stood transferred to and vested in the
Government Company named M/s. Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. (for
short BCCL). As the appellants did not hand over the
possession of the suit property to BCCL, it initiated
proceedings under the Public Premises (Eviction of
Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1971 (for short the P.P.
Act) for their eviction from the suit property on October
15, 1976. Being faced with eviction proceedings under the
P.P.Act, the appellants filed the said suit against BCCL for
declaration of their rights in, title to and interest over
the suit property. The suit was resisted by BCCL, inter
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alia, on the ground that with effect from the appointed date
the suit property vested in it and that the alleged sale
transaction in favour of appellants was sham, collusive,
without any consideration and was brought into existence to
avoid the effect of vesting of the suit property under the
Act of 1973. It was also stated that the appellants are
wives of the directors of the Company, who are real
brothers. On appreciation of the evidence placed before it,
the trial court held that the appellants got no title to the
suit property and were, therefore, not entitled to any
relief and thus dismissed the suit on September 22, 1977.
Aggrieved by the judgment and decree of the trial court, the
appellants filed Title Appeal No.147 of 1977 before the
learned District Judge, Dhanbad. On reappraisal of the
evidence on record, the learned District Judge allowed the
appeal and set aside the judgment and decree of the trial
court and decreed the suit of the appellants, as prayed for
on October 6, 1978. The BCCL then unsuccessfully carried
the matter, in second appeal, before the High Court of
Judicature at Patna (Ranchi Bench). The judgment and decree
of the High Court dismissing the second appeal on October 7,
1985, was challenged by BCCL in Civil Appeal No.838 of 1986
in this Court. On August 17, 1993, this Court set aside the
impugned judgment and decree of the High Court and remitted
the matter to the High Court to decide the following two
points:- (1) Whether transaction in question is a bona fide
and genuine one or is a sham, bogus and fictitious
transaction as held by the trial court; and
(2) Whether in view of Section 3(1) read with Section
2(h) (xi) and the entry at serial No.133, in the Schedule to
the Act, the property in question stood transferred to and
vested in the Central Government free of all encumbrances,
on the appointed day under the Coal Mines (Nationalisation)
Act.
It was observed that the result of the second point
would depend on the decision of point No.1. However, after
remand, in view of the submission made by the learned
counsel for BCCL that point No.2 was covered by the judgment
of this Court in Bharat Coking Coal Ltd. Vs. Madanlal
Agrawal [1997 (1) SCC 177], the High Court decided it first.
On point No.1 the High Court restored the judgment of the
trial Court holding that the transaction of sale between the
appellants and the Company was sham and bogus and was
entered into to avoid the vesting of the suit property in
Central Government under Section 3(1) of the Act of 1973 and
thus allowed the second appeal filed by the BCCL on November
11, 1997. That judgment and decree are under challenge in
this appeal. Mr.A.K.Srivastava, learned senior counsel
appearing for the appellants, pointed out that contrary to
the observation of this Court, the High Court has proceeded
to decide point No.2 first and that resulted in prejudice to
the appellants. He argued that the High Court found that
the appellants had proved three facts, namely, (i) the board
of directors of the Company passed a resolution on September
21, 1970 (Ext.12) to sell the suit property in favour of the
appellants; (ii) the appellants paid Rs.7000/- to one of
the directors of the Company under receipt dated December
30, 1970 (Ext.10) and (iii) sale deed was executed by the
company on March 20, 1972 (Ext.9). He invited our attention
to the evidence of P.W.8, the accountant of the Company, to
prove passing of the resolution, to substantiate payment of
Rs.7000/- and its entry in the books of accounts of the
Company and the execution of the sale deed dated March 20,
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1972 (Ext.9) by the Company. In view of these proved facts
and in the absence of any rebuttal evidence, it was
contended, the High Court ought to have held that the sale
of the suit property under Ext.8 was genuine and valid. Mr.
Anip Sachthey, learned counsel appearing for the
respondents, has contended that the suit property is in the
midst of the colliery and that the directors of the Company
and the appellants are no other than husbands and wives and
that the transaction was entered into to save the suit
property from vesting in the Central Government under
Section 3 of the Act of 1973. We have perused the
deposition of P.W.8 accountant - and the impugned
judgment. There can be no doubt that the High Court in para
13 of its judgment mentioned that the resolution of the
company dated September 21, 1970 (Ext.12), receipt
evidencing payment of Rs.7000/- on December 30, 1970
(Ext.10) under which one of the directors, husband of
appellant No.1, received the said amount and the sale deed
executed on March 20, 1972 (Ext.9), had been proved by the
appellants. But, then the High Court also noted with
approval the following circumstances, pointed out by the
first Appellate Court: firstly, the resolution dated
September 21, 1970 (Ext.12) was an antedated document.
Mr.Srivastava submitted that the government authorities were
in possession of all the records of the Company and they
should have produced the original record to substantiate the
allegation that the resolution was antedated and in the
absence of such record the High Court was not justified in
confirming the finding of the First Appellate Court. The
fact remains that the appellants themselves took no steps to
summon the record from the custody of the concerned
authority. That apart there is no mention of the resolution
dated September 21, 1970 (Ext.12) either in the receipt
(Ext.10) signed by one of the directors or in the agreement
for sale of January 3, 1971 (Ext.8) or in the sale deed
dated March 20, 1972, (Ext.9). On the basis of the
intrinsic evidence, pointed out above, the conclusion that
the resolution was an antedated document, appears to be
irresistible. Secondly, it is pointed out by the High Court
that though the resolution mentions the sale consideration
as Rs.5000/-, there is no explanation as to why it was
enhanced to Rs.7000/- for which receipt was signed by one of
the directors of the Company. Thirdly, a more telling
aspect is that the appellants did not exercise their rights
as purchasers over the suit property till the date of the
filing of the suit; the water and electricity connections
were obtained during the pendency of the suit by them;
further till the date of vesting of the suit property under
the Act of 1973, it was maintained by the Company for the
use of the directors. It is rightly commented by the High
Court that the agreement for sale (Ext.8) of the suit
property is not a registered document; it recites the suit
property will be sold for Rs.7000/- even though the
consideration of Rs.7000/- was paid on December 30, 1970
(Ext.10) itself and neither the agreement nor the sale deed
is in terms of the resolution. Two other aspects which have
weighed with the High Court are : the transaction of sale
was between the husbands and the wives and that they had no
independent source of their income, which cannot be ignored
altogether as irrelevant. Mr Srivastava submitted that
undue emphasis was given to the fact that the directors of
the Company were brothers and the appellants are their
wives. He argued that the Company is a separate legal
entity which is independent of its directors and
shareholders and repeatedly referred to the oft-quoted
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decision in Salomon Vs. Salomon. The principle laid down
in Salomons case more than a century ago in 1897 by the
House of Lords that the company is at law a different person
altogether from the subscribers who have limited liability,
is the foundation of joint stock company and a basic
incidence of incorporation both under English law and Indian
law. Lifting the veil of incorporation under statutes and
decisions of the courts is equally settled position of law.
This is more readily done under American law. To look at
the realities of the situation and to know the real state of
affairs behind the facade of the principle of the corporate
personality, the courts have pierced the veil of
incorporation. Where a transaction of sale of its immovable
property by a Company in favour of the wives of the
directors is alleged to be sham and collusive, as in the
instant case, the Court will be justified in piercing the
veil of incorporation to ascertain the true nature of the
transaction as to who were the real parties to the sale and
whether it was genuine and bona fide or whether it was
between the husbands and the wives behind the facade of
separate entity of the Company. That is what was done by
the High Court in this case. There can be no dispute that a
person who attacks a transaction as sham, bogus and
fictitious must prove the same. But a plain reading of
question No.1 discloses that it is in two parts; the first
part says, whether the transaction, in question, is bona
fide and genuine one which has to be proved by the
appellants. It is only when this has been done that the
respondent has to dislodge it by proving that it is a sham
and fictitious transaction. When circumstances of the case
and the intrinsic evidence on record clearly point out that
the transaction is not bona fide and genuine, it is
unnecessary for the court to find out whether the respondent
has led any evidence to show that the transaction is sham,
bogus or fictitious. For the afore-mentioned reasons, we
are unable to say that the High Court erred in taking the
view that the sale, in favour of the appellants, is neither
bona fide nor genuine and confers no right on them. In view
of the finding on point No.1, the suit property remained the
property of the Company and, therefore, it vested in the
Central Government under Section 3(1) of the Act of 1973.
This is what the High Court held on point No.2. which is
supported by the judgment of this Court in Bharat Coking
Coal Ltd. Vs. Madanlal Agrawal [1997 (1) SCC 177]. In the
result, we find no merit in the appeal. It is accordingly
dismissed with costs.