Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
J. K. GAS PLANT
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/04/1980
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
BENCH:
KOSHAL, A.D.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1330 1980 SCR (3) 893
1980 SCC (3) 469
ACT:
Contract Act, Section 70, Scope of-Conditions to be
applied- Government of India Act, 1935, Section 175(3),
applicability of-Defence of India Act, Section 17(2), scope
of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant had supplied some steel to the respondent
plaintiff Company for manufacturing gas plants at Rampur.
Only a part of the steel so supplied was utilized for the
intended purpose and with regard to the rest, the Regional
Deputy Iron & Steel Controller, U.P. Circle, Kanpur directed
the respondents through a letter dated 8th /10th of
November, 1944 to deliver the same to the U.P. Registered
Stock Holders Associations and to send to the Kanpur office,
the bill of costs of the material, handling charges etc.
made in the name of Iron & Steel Controller, Calcutta. Since
the order contained in that letter could not be implemented
on account of lack of transport facilities, the Kanpur Con-
troller, directed the respondent company to deliver the
surplus steel to M/s G. Brothers Ltd., Rampur and to this
extent the order dated 8th/10th November 1944 stood
modified.
Though the surplus material was delivered to Govan
Brothers between 11th April 1945 and 30th of April, 1945,
the price therefor to the tune of Rs. 43,728-6-6 remained
unpaid inspite of repeated demands made by the respondent.
Ultimately, the Iron & Steel Controller informed the
respondent to take up the matter with Govan Brothers.
As the price of the steel remained unpaid by the Union
of India as well as G. Brothers the plaintiff company filed
its suit for Rs. 46,652-14-6 which was inclusive of interest
on the principal price calculated at the rate of 6 per cent
per annum from April, 1945, upto the date of the institution
of the suit, after serving the defendant with the requisite
notice under section 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The trial Court decreed the claim of the plaintiff
company in full and also directed that it would be entitled
to the costs of the suit as also interest at the rate of 3
per cent per annum from the date of the institution of the
suit to the date of payment. The trial Court held that the
Kanpur Controller had undertaken the liability to pay the
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price of the goods to the plaintiff Company even in respect
of the delivery to G. Brothers and that the defendant could
not escape liability by reason of the contents of section 65
of the Indian Contract Act even though the provisions of
section 175(3) of the Government of India Act, 1935, had not
been complied with. The contention raised by the defendant
to the effect that section 17(2) of the Defence of India Act
was a bar to the suit was negatived.
In appeal, the High Court agreed that Section 17(2) of
the Defence of India Act would be a complete bar to the suit
if it was one for damages or
894
compensation but held that the suit was not of that nature
and, on the other hand, it was for recovery of the price of
the goods supplied to G. Brothers as was also found by the
trial Court. It further held that even though the provisions
of section 175(3) of the Government of India Act were not
complied with the agreement resulting from the
correspondence which took place between the plaintiff
company and the officers of the defendant was good. Relying
on Section 70 of the Indian Contract Act and on the basis
thereof, it held the plaintiff company to be entitled to
recover the price of the goods from the defendant even if it
was assumed that the provisions of section 175(3) were a bar
to the recognition of the contract envisaged by the
correspondence between the parties. The High Court dismissed
the appeal, but granted a certificate under Article
133(1)(a) of the Constitution to the appellant.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD: 1. The suit is not one for compensation or
damages etc. as contemplated by Section 17(2) of the Defence
of India Act and hence is not barred by nat section [898 A].
2. The legality of the matter under which the
respondent company transferred its stock to G. Brothers
cannot be allowed to be questioned at the appellate stage.
The question whether the requirements of clause (5) of the
Indian Iron and Steel Control order, 1941 which postulates
only a written direction for disposal of surplus stocks were
satisfied or not is a mixed question of fact and law which
was never raised in the Courts below. Further the plea taken
in paragraph (4) of the written statements filed by the
appellant was categorically to the effect that "the fresh
instructions issued to the plaintiff are contained in the
letter in the possession of the plaintiff" runs counter to
the factual part of the argument. Besides another question
would arise whether the word "written" in clause (5)
aforesaid is directory or mandatory. [898 C-D]
3. Three conditions must be satisfied before Section 70
of the Indian Contract Act can be invoked: first, a person
should lawfully do something for another person or deliver
something to him; second, in doing the said thing or
delivering the said thing he must not intend to act
gratuitously; and third, the other person for whom something
is done or to whom something is delivered must enjoy the
benefit thereof. [898 H, 899 A]
In the instant case, the appellant had enjoyed the full
benefit of the delivery of the goods to G. Bros. and not
merely an indirect benefit thereof. [901 B]
State of West Bengal v. M/s. B. K. Mondal [1962] 2
Suppl. S.C.R. 876; reiterated.
S.I. Indian Rly. Co. v. Madura Municipality, A.I.R.
1964 Madras 427; distinguished.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No.
1273/70.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Decree
dated 28-1-1966 of the Allahabad High Court in First Appeal
No. 431 of 1957.
895
P.P. Rao, Subodh Markendeya, R. Venkataramani and Miss
A. Subhashini for the Appellant.
Soli. J. Sorabjee and Rameshwar Nath for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KOSHAL, J. This appeal by certificate granted under
article 133(1)(a) of the Constitution of India by the
Allahabad High Court is directed against its judgment dated
the 28th of January, 1966, confirming on appeal a decree
passed by the Civil Judge, Kanpur, for the recovery of Rs.
46,652-14-6 with interest at the rate of 3 percent per annum
from the date of the institution of the suit till payment in
favour of M/s. J.K. Gas Plant Manufacturing Company Limited
against the sole defendant, namely, the Union of India.
2. The case of the plaintiff company may be briefly
stated thus. The Government of India had supplied some steel
to the plaintiff company for manufacturing gas plants at
Rampur. Only a part of the steel so supplied was utilized
for the intended purpose and with regard to the rest the
Regional Deputy Iron and Steel Controller, U.P. Circle,
Kanpur (here in after referred to as the Kanpur Controller)
directed the plaintiff company through a letter dated the
8th/10th of November, 1944 (exhibit 16) to deliver the same
to the U.P. Registered Stock Holders Association Kanpur (for
short the Association). In relation to the recovery of price
of the material the letter stated:
"Your bill for cost of the material supported by
original receipts from suppliers should be made out in
the name of lorn and Steel Controller, Calcutta, and
submitted to this office. Please make out a separate
bill for handling, storage expenses, etc., and send to
this office supported with original freight and payee’s
receipt.’
The order contained in letter exhibit 16 could not be
implemented on account of lack of transport facilities. The
Kanpur Controller therefore directed the plaintiff company
to deliver the surplus steel to M/s. Govan Brothers Ltd.,
Rampur (hereinafter referred to as G. Brothers) and to this
extent the order contained in letter exhibit 16 stood
modified
The plaintiff company delivered to G. Brothers the
surplus material lying with it between the 11th April, 1945
and 30th of April, 1945. The deliveries totalled 135 tons, 6
cwt., 1 quarter and 1 pound, the price whereof amounted to
Rs. 43,728-6-6 which remained unpaid inspite of repeated
demands made by the plaintiff company through letters
addressed to the Kanpur Controller to whom the bills had
been forwarded as desired. Ultimately the plaintiff company
was informed by the Accounts officer attached to the Iron
and Steel Controller, Calcutta, that it should take up the
matter with G. Brothers.
896
As the price of the steel remained unpaid by the Union
of India as well as G. Brothers the plaintiff company filed
its suit for Rs. 46,652-14-6 which was inclusive of interest
on the principal price calculated at the rate of 6 per cent
per annum from April, 1945, up to the date of the
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institution of the suit, after serving the defendant with
the requisite notice under section 80 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
3. In its written statement the Union of India admitted
the correctness of the order contained in letter exhibit 16.
It pleaded however that order was cancelled in toto and not
merely in regard to the party to whom the plaintiff company
had to make over the surplus steel. It was specifically
denied that the disputed goods had been delivered to G.
Brothers at the risk and responsibility of the defendant and
that the defendant Was liable to pay the price thereof. It
was asserted that the defendant was merely controlling the
supply and distribution of iron and steel and that the
liability to pay the price of any goods dealt with by it in
the exercise of its powers of control rested upon the party
receiving the goods. Another plea taken was that the suit
was not maintainable in view of the provisions of section
175(3) of the Government of India Act, 1935, which enjoins
that a contract between the Government of India and a third
party has to be in writing and in a particular form. It was
emphasized that G. Brothers alone were liable for the
payment demanded by the plaintiff company.
4. The trial court held that the Kanpur Controller had
undertaken the liability to pay the price of the goods to
the plaintiff company even in respect of the delivery to G.
Brothers and that the defendant could not escape liability
by reason of the contents’ of section 65 of the Indian
Contract Act even though the provisions of section 175(3) of
the Government of India Act, 1935, had not been complied
with. The contention raised by the defendant to the effect
that section 17(2) of the Defence of India Act was a bar to
the suit was negatived by the trial court. Some other
findings were also arrived at which are not relevant for the
purposes of this appeal. The trial court therefore decreed
the claim of the plaintiff company in full and also directed
that it would be entitled to the costs of the suit as also
interest at the rate of 3 per cent per annum from the date
of the institution of the suit to the date of payment.
5. When the first appeal came up for hearing before the
High Court the contention based on the provisions of section
17(2) of the Defence of India Act was reiterated on the
ground that the suit was one for damages or compensation.
Section 17(2) states:
"Save as otherwise expressly provided under this
Act, no suit or other legal proceeding shall lie
against the Crown for
897
any damage caused or likely to be caused by anything in
good faith done or intended to be done in pursuance of
this Act or any rules made thereunder or any order
issued under any such rule."
The High Court agreed with the learned counsel for the
defendant that this section would be a complete bar to the
suit if it was one for damages or compensation but held that
the suit was not of that nature and, on the other hand, it
was for recovery of the price of the goods supplied to G.
Brothers as was also found by the trial court. The
contention was therefore rejected as untenable. The High
Court then proceeded to examine the true nature of the
transaction culminating in the delivery of steel to G.
Brothers and held that the defendant had failed to establish
that the direction regarding preparation and submission of
bills contained in letter exhibit 16 had been cancelled when
the plaintiff company was required to deliver the goods to
G. Brothers. It was further held that even though the
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provisions of section 175(3) of the Government of India Act
were not complied with the agreement resulting from the
correspondence which took 1 place between the plaintiff
company and the officers of the defendant was good. In this
connection reliance was placed on Debi Prasad Srikrisna
Prasad Ltd. v, Secretary of State(l). The sheet anchor of
the judgment of the High Court however was its reliance on
section 70 of the Indian Contract Act and on the basis
thereof it held the plaintiff company to be entitled to
recover the price of the goods from the defendant even if it
was assumed that the provisions of section 175(3) were a bar
to the recognition of the contract envisaged by the
correspondence between the parties. In this connection
reference was made to New Marine Coal Co. (Bengal) Private
Ltd. v. Union of India(2). It was argued before the High
Court that the conditions requisite for the applicability of
section 70 of the Indian Contract Act were not available in
the present case in as much as the defendant had not been
shown to have enjoyed the benefit of the transaction which
accrued only to G. Brothers. The High Court however took a
contrary view with the observation:
"The benefit or advantage that has been derived by
the defendants lies in the fact that it has been able
to distribute the stock to persons of its choice
according to the rules and regulations framed by it."
It was in these premises that the High Court dismissed the
defendant’s appeal with costs.
898
6. The argument based on section 17(2) of the Defence
of India Act has been reiterated before us but it has merely
to be noticed to be rejected. We are clearly of the opinion
that the suit is not for damages, etc., such as are
contemplated by that section.
7. It was seriously argued on behalf of the defendant
that throughout the period during which the Kanpur
Controller dealt with the matter in dispute he was
exercising the powers conferred on him under the Iron and
Steel Control order, 1941, that under clause of that order
the plaintiff company could dispose of its stock of steel
only in pursuance of a written direction from the Kanpur
Controller and that the mandate issued by the Kanpur
Controller to the plaintiff company requiring the latter to
deliver the goods to G. Brothers having been found to be an
oral one, the whole transaction fell outside the ambit of
the law so that the Union of India could not be bound by it.
The argument as it stands does not lack plausibility
although it would be a question whether the word ’written’
occurring in clause (S) of the Indian Iron and Steel Control
order is directory or mandatory. However we refuse to allow
the argument to be raised and that for two reasons. Firstly,
it is a mixed question of fact and law which was never
raised in the courts below. Secondly, the plea taken in
paragraph 4 of the written statement filed by the defendant
was categorically to the effect that "the fresh instructions
issued to the plaintiff are contained in the letter in the
possession of the plaintiff", which plea runs counter to the
factual part of the argument. In this view of the matter the
legality of the order under which the plaintiff company
transferred its stock to G. Brothers cannot be allowed to be
questioned at this a stage.
8. The only other ground put forward in support of the
appeal was that the provisions of section 70 of the Indian
Contract Act were not applicable to the facts of the present
case. That section reads:
"Where a person lawfully does anything for another
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person or delivers anything to him, not intending to do
so gratuitously, and such other person enjoys the
benefit thereof, the latter is bound to make
compensation to the former in respect of, or to
restore, the thing so done or delivered."
As pointed out in State of West Bengal v. M/s. B.K
Mondal, three conditions must be satisfied before this
section can be invoked:
"The first condition is that a person should lawfully
do something for another Person or deliver something to
him. The second condition is that in doing the said
thing or ’delivering the said
899
thing he must not intend to act gratuitously; and the
third is that the other person for whom something is
done or to whom something is delivered must enjoy the
benefit thereof. When these conditions are satisfied
section 70 imposes upon the latter person, the
liability to make compensation to the former in respect
of or to restore, the thing so done or delivered."
On behalf of the defendant the objection raised to the
applicability of this section to the transaction in dispute
is two-fold. The first contention in this behalf is that the
delivery to G. Brothers was unlawful-a contention which we
have already turned down. Secondly it is said that no
benefit at all was derived from the transaction by the Union
of India and that its sole beneficiaries were G. Brothers.
This objection has not only been overruled by the High Court
but appears to us also to be without substance. In this
connection reference may be made to some documentary and
oral evidence. To begin with, letter exhibit 16 which
directed the plaintiff company to deliver the goods to the
Association specifically required that the plaintiff company
would make the bills in the name of the Iron and Steel
Controller, Calcutta, and send them for payment to the
Kanpur Controller, The inference which may reasonably be
drawn from the contents of the letter is that the Kanpur
Controller was dealing with the goods as if they belonged to
the Government of India whose duty it was to pay for them
when they changed hands, and that the identity of the party
to whom the goods were to be delivered by the plaintiff
company under the orders of the Kanpur Controller was
immaterial. Secondly, the Kanpur Controller (Mr.R.R. Chari)
in his deposition dated the 24th of June, 1946 made before
the Second Special, Tribunal, Lahore (Camp Bombay) in
Criminal Case No. 3 of 1946, stated thus:
"In September, 1944, J.K. Gas Plant Manufacturing
Co., Rampur, Ltd., handed over 137 tons of iron and
steel to Messrs. Govan Brothers, Rampur, under
instructions from our department. Messrs Govan Brothers
thus held the, materials on behalf of the Government."
It has been urged by learned counsel for the defendant
that this statement is not admissible in evidence as it was
not made at the trial of the case in hand. But’ it is too
late in the day for such an objection to be entertained. The
statement was admitted in evidence as exhibit 15 at the
trial presumably, without objection and cannot now be thrown
out. According to it G. Brothers held the supply of steel
made to then by the plaintiff company not for themselves but
on behalf of the Government. Besides, a letter (exhibit 51)
which was issued by the
900
Kanpur Controller to Mr. Siddiq Ali Khan of the Department
of Industries and Commerce, Rampur, also states:
"In this, connection I may mention that the steel
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is virtually the property of the Government of India,
War Transport Department and under no circumstances can
the Government loose , money in the bargain. I am
obtaining the actual cost of the materials plus all
incidental charges and I will let you know the amount
to be paid by each party along with written orders re
gularising the issue of these materials to the various
parties. I have to hold you and you in turn Messrs.
Govan Bros. (Rampur) Ltd., responsible for the recovery
of the cost of the materials when intimated to you."
There is no reason for us to hold, in view of this
statement that the steel supplied by the plaintiff company
to G. Brothers was not being held by the latter on behalf of
the Government of India and if that be so, the Government
must be held to have reaped full benefit of the delivery to
G. Brother’s and it is immaterial how the steel supplied to
the latter was dealt with later on.
9. Learned counsel for the defendant cited S. 1.
Railway Co. v. Madura Municipality for the proposition that
the benefit to the defendant was in any case an indirect one
which would not fall within the ambit of the third
condition; envisaged by the provisions of section 70 of the
Indian Contract Act. In that case the South Indian Railway
had, widened a culvert in compliance with an order passed by
the Provincial Government under certain provisions of the
Railways Act, 1890. The work was done primarily for the
benefit of the private owners of property in the
neighborhood. The Railway Company however sued the Municipal
Committee within the territorial limits of whose
jurisdiction the culvert lay for the cost of widening it on
the ground that the Municipal Committee received a benefit
because it recovered taxes from the owners or occupiers of
the property. In turning down the claim of the South Indian
Railway Company Leach, C. J., who delivered the judgment of
the division Bench consisting of himself and Lakshmana Rao.
J. stated:
"This is a very indirect benefit, and section 70
can in our opinion only have application where there is
direct benefit to the person for whom the work is done.
The persons who are enjoying the benefit of this work
are the owners and occupiers of the buildings in the
locality. It would be doing violence to
901
the section to say that in these circumstances the work
was done for the benefit of the municipality."
The judgment of the Division Bench was upheld by their
Lord ships of the Privy Council in Governor-General In
Council, Represented by the General Manager. South Indian
Railway v. Municipal Council, Madura, Through its
Commissioner along with the reasons on which it was based.
But then the case is of no help to the defendant who had
enjoyed the full benefit of the delivery of goods to G.
Brothers and not merely an indirect benefit thereof.
10. For the reasons stated the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed
902