Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KUJU COLLIERIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JHARKHAND MINES LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/08/1974
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1892 1975 SCR (1) 703
1974 SCC (2) 533
ACT:
Contract Act. s. 65--Scope of--Payment not made under
coercion or ignorance of law--Whether recoverable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant paid to the first respondent a large sum of
money in respect of mining lease granted to it. the
appellant (plaintiff) instituted a suit for recovery, of
possession of the leased property or in the alternative for
refund of the sum paid to the first respondent. After
institution of the suit the Bihar Land Reforms Act came into
force as a result of which the appellant’s claim in respect
of possession of the mines became unenforceable. The
appellant, therefore, confined its claim for the recovery of
the sum paid.
Dismissing the appeal, the trial court held that the
appellant was not entitled to claim any relief under s. 65
of the Contract Act because there was no occasion for it to
have been under any kind of ignorance of law and as the
Mineral Concession Rules of 1949 rendered any stipulation
for payment of salami illegal, the lease on that basis was
also illegal. The High Court unheld the view of the trial
Court.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : This is not a case to which sections 65, 70 and 72 of
the Contract Act apply. The payment of the money was not
made lawfully nor was it done under mistake or coercion.
[709A]
(1) Where an agreement is void ah initio or a contract
becomes void due to subsequent happenings any person
receiving an advantage under such agreement at contract is
bound to restore such advantage or to make compensation for
it to the per-son from whom he received it. But where even
at the time when the agreement was entered into both the
parties knew that it was not lawful and, therefore, void,.
there was no contract but only an agreement. [705F]
Harnath Kaur v. Inder Bahadur Singh, 1923, 50 I.A. 69, 75-76
and Shri Ramagya Prasad Gupta & Ors. v. Sri Murli Prasad &
Ors. C.A. Nos. 17 10 of 1967 & 1986 of1966 decided on 11-4-
1974, referred to.
Budhulal v. Deccan Banking Company A.I.R. 1955 Hyd. 69 and
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Sivaaramakrishnaiah v. Narahari Rao, A.I.R. 1960 A.P. 186,
approved.
(2) Section 4 of the Mines and Mineral (Regulation and
Development) Act, 1948 provides that no mining lease shall
be granted otherwise than in accordance, with the Rules made
under the Act. Rule 45 of the Mineral Concession Rules,,
1949 provides that a mining lease shall be granted only to a
person holding a certificate of approval from the State
Government. Rule 49 provides that no grantor of mining
lease shall charge any premium in addition to or in lieu of
the rent specified in such a lease. In the present case the
appellant had no certificate as required under r. 45 and
contrary to r. 49 there was a stipulation for payment of a
premium, under the lease deed. The lease in favour of the
appellant was, therefore, contrary, to the provisions of the
Act and the rules and as such void. [708F]
(3) There was no occasion for the plaintiff to have been
under any kind of ignorance of law under the Contract Act
and the Mineral Concession Rules, 1949. The appellant was
in the business of mining and had the advantage of
consulting-. its lawyers and solicitors. [708H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1865 of
1967.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment & Decree dated the
19th October, 1965 of the Patna High Court in Original
Decree No311 of 1960.
704
O. P. Malhotra and D. N. Mishra, for the appellant.
D. N. Mukherjee and N. R. Chaudhury, for respondent Nos. 1,
3, & 5.
S. N. Prasad, for respondent Nos. 3 & 4.
D. P. Singh, S. C. Aggarwala, V. J. Francis and S. S.
Bhatnagar,for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J.-This appeal is against the judgment of the
Patna High Court by Special Leave granted by this Court. It
arises out of a mining lease granted by the 1st respondent
but alleged to have been ,done so in the name of the 1st
respondent by the 2nd respondent in favour of Haricharan
Singh J.D. & Co. on 7-9-1950. In pursuance of the lease a
sum of Rs. 80,000/- was paid to the 1st respondent. The
plaint allegation was that the 1st respondent was a Limited
Company created by the 2nd respondent. There was an earlier
lease in respect of the same property in favour of
respondents 3 and 4 which expired on 4-4-1950. Haricharan
Singh J.D. & Co. later changed its name to Kuju Collieries
Ltd. who are the appellants. As the plaintiff did not get
the possession of the leased property it instituted a suit
for recovery of possession of the leased property along with
mesne profits and in the alternative for refund of the sum
of Rs. 80,000/- and certain other sums. The present appeal
is, however, concerned only with that amount.
In the suit the 1st respondent and the 2nd respondent took
the stand that the 1st respondent was not created by the 2nd
respondent, that the lease was by the 1st respondent and the
amount was paid to the 1st respondent alone and not to the
2nd respondent. The 1st respondent also contended that the
leased properties were handed over to the plaintiff, that
they were not aware that respondents 3 and 4 were resisting
the plaintiff’s claim and that the 1st respondent was not in
any case responsible therefor and that therefore the
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plaintiff was not entitled to any relief. During the
pendency of this appeal respondents 2 and 3 died and their
legal representatives have not been brought on record. The
appellant is not claiming any relief against any of the
other respondents except respondent No. 1 and it is,
therefore, unnecessary to refer to the attitude taken by
them in the :suit.
It is necessary at this stage to mention that after the
institution of the suit the Bihar Land Reforms Act came into
force as a result of which any lessee working a mine became
direct lessee under the State, and ,as the plaintiff was not
working the mines any claim in respect of the possession of
the mines became unenforceable. The appellant has,
therefore, confined his claim to the sum of Rs. 80,000/- as
payable to it by the 1st respondent.
The Trial Court held that as the pailntiff was already in
the business of mining and had the advantage of consulting
its lawyers and solicitors and their lease deed was drawn up
and prepared by solicitors, there was no occasion for the
plaintiff to have been under
705
any kind of ignorance of law and as the Mineral Concession
Rules of 1949 rendered any stipulation for payment of salami
illegal and the lease on that basis was also illegal, the
plaintiff was not entitled to claim relief under s. 65 of
the Indian Contract Act. It, therefore, dismissed the suit.
On appeal the High Court also held that neither s. 65 nor s.
72 of the Contract Act applied to the facts of the case.
We are of the view that s. 65 of the Contract Act cannot
help the plaintiff on the facts and circumstances of this
case. Section 65. reads as follows :
"When an agreement is discovered to Be void,
or when a contract becomes void, any person
who has received any advantage under such
agreement or contract is bound to restore it,
or to make compensation for it to the person
from whom he received it".
The section makes a distinction between an agreement and a
contract. According to s. 2 of the Contract Act an
agreement which is enforceable by law is a contract and an
agreement which is not enforceable by law is said to be
void. Therefore, when the earlier part of the section
speaks of an agreement being discovered to be void it means
that the agreement is not enforceable and is, therefore, not
a contract. It means that it was void. It may- be that the
parties or one of the parties to the agreement may not have,
when they entered into the agreement, known that the
agreement was in law not enforceable. They might have come
to know later that the agreement was not enforceable. The
second part of the section refers to a contract becoming
void. That refers to a case where an agreement which was
originally enforceable and was, therefore, a contract,.
becomes void due to subsequent happenings. In both these
cases any person who has received any advantage under such
agreement or contract is bound to restore such advantage, or
to make compensation for it to the person from whom he
received it. But where even at the time when the agreement
is entered into both the parties knew that it was not lawful
and, therefore, void, there was no contract but only an
agreement and it is not a case where it is discovered to be
void subsequently. Nor is it a case Of the contract
becoming void due to subsequent happenings. Therefore, s.
65 of the Contract Act did not apply.
The Privy Council in its decision in Harnath Kaur v. Inder
Bahadur Singh (1923, 50 f. A. 69, 75-76) observed:
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The section deals with (a) agreements and (b)
contracts. The distinction between them is
apparent by s. 2; by clause (c) every set of
promises forming the consideration for each
other is an agreement, and by clause (h) an
agreement enforceable by law is a contract.
Section 65, therefore, deals with (a)
agreements enforceable by law and (b) with
agreements not so enforceable. By clause(g)an
agreement not enforceable by law is said to
706
.lm15
be void. An agreement therefore, discovered to be void is
one discovered to be not enforceable by law, and, on the
language of the section would include an agreement that was
void in that sense from its inception as distinct from a
contract that becomes void."
A full Bench of five Judges of the Hyderabad High Court in
Budhulal v. Deccan Banking Company (AIR 1955 Hyd. 69)
speaking through our brother, Jaganmohan Reddy J., as he
then was, referred with approval to these observations of
the Privy Council. They then went on to refer to the
observations of Pollock and Mullah in their treatise on
Indian Contract and Specific Relief Acts, 7th Edn. to the
effect that s. 65, Indian Contract Act does not apply to
agreements which are void under s. 24 by reason of an
unlawful consideration or object and there being no other
provision in the Act under which money paid for an unlawful
purpose may be recovered back, an analogy of English law
will be the best guide. They then referred to the reasoning
of the learned authors that if the view of the Privy Council
is right namely that agreements discovered to be void’ apply
to all agreements which are ab-initio void including
agreements based on unlawful consideration, it follows that
the person who has paid money or transferred property to
another for .an illegal purpose can recover it back from the
transferee under this section even if the illegal purpose is
carried into execution and both the transferor and
transferee are in pari delicto. The Bench then proceeded to
observe:
"In. our opinion, the view of the learned
authors is neither supported by any of the
subsequent Privy Council decisions nor is it
consistent with the natural meaning to be
given to the provisions of S. 65. The section
by using the words ’when an agreement is
discovered to be void’ means nothing more nor
less than: when the plaintiff comes to know or
finds out that the agreement is void. The
word ’discovery’ would imply the preexistence
of something which is subsequently found out
and it may be observed that s. 66, Hyderabad
Contract Act makes the knowledge (11m) of the
agreement being void as one of the pre-
requisites for restitution and is used in the
sense of an agreement being discovered to be
void. If knowledge is an essential requisite
even an agreement ab-initio void can be
discovered to be void subsequently. There may
be cases where parties enter into an.
agreement honestly thinking that it is a
perfectly legal agreement and where one of
them sues the other or wants the other to act
on it, it is their. that he may discover it to
be void. There is nothing specific in s. 65
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Indian Contract Act or its corresponding
section of the Hyderabad Contract Act to make
it inapplicable to such cases.
A person who, however, gives money for an
unlawful purpose knowing it to be so, or in
such circumstances that knowledge of
illegality or unlawfulness can as a finding of
fact be imputed to him the agreement under
which the payment is made cannot on his part
be said to be discovered to be void. The
,criticism that if the aforesaid view is right
then a person who has
707
paid money or transferred property to another
for illegal purpose can recover it back from
the transferee under this Section even if the
illegal purpose is carried into execution,
notwithstanding the fact that both the
transferor and transferee are in pari delicto,
in our view, overlooks the fact that the
courts do not assist a person who comes with
unclean. hands. In such cases, the defendant
possesses at,. advantage cover the plaintiff-
in pari delicto potior est conditio
defendentio.
Section 84, Indian Trust Act however has made an exception
in a case
where the owner of property transfers it to
another for illegal purpose and such purposes
is not carried it into execution or the
transferor is not as guilty as the t
ransferee
or the effect of permitting the transferee to
retain the property might be to defeat the
provisions of any law the transferee must hold
the property for the benefit of the
transferor".
This specific provision made by the
legislature cannot be taken advantage of in
derogation of the principle that s. 65
Contract Act in applicable where the object of
the agreement was illegal to the knowledge of
both the parties at the time it was made. In
such a case the agreement would be void ab-
initio and there would be no room for the
subsequent discovery of that fact,,.
We consider that this criticism as well as the view taken by
the Bench is justified. It has rightly pointed out that if
both the transferor and transferee are in pari delicto the
courts do not assist them.
A Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in its
decision in Sivaramakrisnaiah v. Narahari Rao (AIR 1960 AP
186 held that
"In order to invoke section 65 the invalidity
of the contractor agreement should be
discovered subsequent to the making of it.
This cannot be taken advantage of by parties
who knew from the beginning the illegality
thereof. It only applies to a case where one
of the parties enters into an agreement under
the belief that it was a legal agreement, i.e.
without the knowledge that the agreement is
forbidden by law proposed to public policy and
as such illegal. The effect of section 65 is
that in such a situation, it enables a person
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not in pari delicto to claim restoration since
it is not based on an illegal contract but
dissociated from it. That is permissible by
reason of the section because the action is
not founded on dealings which are contaminated
by illegality. The party is only seeking to
be restored to the status quo ante. Section
65 also does net recognise the distinction
between a contract being illegal by reason of
its being opposed to public policy or morality
or a contract void for other reasons. Even
agreement the performance of which is attended
with penal consequences, are not outside the
scope of section 65. At the same time Courts
will not render assistance to persons who
induce innocent parties to enter into
contracts of that nature by playing fraud on
them to retain the benefit which they obtained
by their wrong".
708
They also referred with approval to the
earlier decision of the Hyderabad High Court
in Budhulal v. Deccan Banking Co. Ltd.
(supra).
In a recent judgment of this Court in Shri Ramagya Prasad
Gupta & Ors v. Shri Murli Prasad & Ors. (C.A. Nos. 1710 of
1967 & 1986 of 1968 decided on 11-4-1974). to which one of
us was a party, this Court quoted with approval the
observations of the Full Bench of the Hyderabad High Court
in Budhulal v. Deccan Banking Company (supra). These
decisions are in accordance with the view we have taken.
The Mineral Concession Rules came into force on 25-10-1949.
As the lease came into force on September 7, 1950 and money
was paid on that date, the fact that there was an earlier
unregistered contract does not make any difference to the
question at issue. Section 4 of the Mines and Minerals
(Regulation and Development) Act. 1948 provides "no mining"
lease shall be granted after the commencement of this Act
otherwise than. in accordance with the rules made under this
Act. and any mining lease granted contrary to the provisions
of sub-section (1) shall be void and of no effect". Under
Rule 45 of the Mineral Concession. Rules 1949 "no
prospecting license or mining lease shall be granted except
to a person holding certificate of approval from the
Provincial Government having jurisdiction over the land in
the respect of which the concession is required". The
plaintiff had no certificate of approval from the State
Government. Under Rule 49 "no grantor of a prospecting
license or a mining lease shall charge any premium in.
addition to or in lieu of the prospecting fee. surface fee,
surface rent, dead rent or royalty specified in such license
or lease". There was a stipulation for payment of a premium
under the lease deed in favour of the plaintiff. Therefore.
clearly the lease in favour of the plaintiff was contrary to
the provisions of the Mines and Minerals (Regulation &
Development) Act.. 1948 and the Mineral Rules 1949 and as
such void.
The further question is whether it could be said that this
contract was either discovered to be void or became void.
The facts enumerated above would show that the contract was
void at its inception and this is not a case where it became
void subsequently. Nor could it be said that the agreement
was discovered to be void after it was entered into. As
pointed out by the Trial Court the plaintiff was already in
the business of mining and had the advantage of consulting
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its lawyers and solicitors. So there was no occasion for
the plaintiff have been under any kind of ignorance of law
under the Act and the Rules. Clearly, therefore this is not
a case to which s. 65 of the Contract Act applies.
709
Nor is it a case to which s. 70 or s. 72 of the Contract Act
applies. The payment of the money was not made lawfully,
nor was it done under a mistake or under coercion.
We agree with the Trial Court that the plaintiff should have
been aware of the illegality of the agreement even when it
entered into it and therefore s. 65 of the Contract Act
cannot help it.
The appeal is therefore, dismissed but in the circumstances
without costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
S--M 185Stp. C1/75
710