Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RM.NL. RAMASWAMI CHETTIAR AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE OFFICIAL RECEIVER, RAMANATHAPURAM Art MADURAI & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/08/1959
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 70 1960 SCR (1) 616
ACT:
Insolvency--Decree-holder assigning decree-Adjudication as
insolvent on ground of assignment being fraudulent
preference-Whether upon adjudication decree vests in
official Receiver-Orderannulling assignment-if relates back
to date of assignment-Execution applications made by
assignee before annulment order, whether incompetent-
Official Receiver making application for execution after
annulment order-Limitation--Whether limitation saved by
applications made by assignee-Indian Limitation Act, 1908 (V
of 1908)-Provincial Insolvency Act 1920 (V Of 1920), SS. 28
and 54.
HEADNOTE:
On May 91 1935, one V obtained a decree against R and later
assigned the same in favour of his mother M. M made an
application for an order recognizing her as the assignee and
for
617
execution which was disposed of on September 27, 1937. In
1939, V was adjudicated an insolvent on the ground that the
assignment was a fraudulent preference. Thereafter M made a
second application for execution which was disposed of on
September 30, 1940. The Official Receiver who had been
appointed receiver in insolvency applied under s. 54 of the
Provincial Insolvency Act and on April, 9, 1943 obtained an
order annulling the assignment. On September 27, 1943, the
Receiver applied for execution of the decree relying upon
the applications made by M to save limitation under art.
182, Limitation Act. The judgment debtor objected that the
execution application was time barred because, in view of
the orders in the insolvency proceedings, M was not entitled
to the decree on the dates she applied for execution and her
applications were incompetent and could not save limitation.
The judgment debtor contended that (i) the order of
annulment related back to the date of assignment and
consequently M had never been entitled to the decree, (ii)
the order of adjudication had the effect itself of
annulling the assignment and vesting the decree in the
receiver from the date of presentation of the application
for adjudication, and (iii) the receiver was not entitled to
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take advantage of the applications made by M as he was not
claiming through her but against her.
Held, (per curiam) that the application for execution made
by the receiver was within time as the previous applications
made by M were competent and saved the limitation. The
assignment in favour of M stood till it was annulled and
till then M had the right to execute the decree. Even if
the annulment related back to the date of assignment, it did
not make illegal the exercise of the rights under the
assignment made prior to the annulment. Sub-sections (2)
and (7) Of S. 28 of the Provincial Insolvency Act which
provided that upon adjudication all the assets of the
insolvent vested in the receiver with effect from the date
of the application for adjudication, could not have the
effect of vesting the decree in the receiver. The order of
adjudication, though it was based on the ground that the
assignment was a fraudulent preference amounting to an act
of insolvency, did not itself annul the assignment and the
assignment stood till it was annulled by an order under S.
54. As such M was competent to execute the decree and the
applications made by her were in accordance with law and
could be relied upon by the receiver to save the limitation
for the application made by him. The fact that the receiver
did not claim through M did not disentitle him from taking
advantage of the applications made by M. Article 182,
Limitation Act, merely required the application for
execution of a decree to be made within three years of the
final order on a previous application made in accordance
with law for the execution of the same decree.
Mahomed Siddique Yousuf v. Official Assignee of Calcutta,
(1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93; Ex-Parte Learoyd, (1878) 10 Ch. D.
3, distinguished.
618
Subba Rao J.-The order of adjudication did not by its own
force divest the title of M and vest it in the Official
Receiver. An assignment made before the filing of the
application for adjudication was binding on the Official
Receiver until it was annulled under ss. 53, 54 or 54-A of
the Act.
Mahomed Siddique Yousuf v. Official Assignee of Calcutta,
(1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93 and Ex-parte Learoyd, (1878) 10 Ch.
D. 3, distinguished.
Official Receiver, Guntur v. Narra Gopala Krishnayya I.L.R. 1945
Mad. 541 and D. G. Sahasrabudhe v. Kala Chand Deochand
JUDGMENT:
(i) A transfer by a debtor before insolvency with a view to
give fraudulent preference conveyed a valid title to the
transferee; (2) such a transfer was voidable against the
Official Receiver in circumstances mentioned in s. 54 of the
Act; (3) when the transfer was annulled the property vested
in the Official Receiver who could administer it in the
interest of the creditors ; and (4) even after annulment the
transfer stood as between the transferor and the transferee
and the transferee was entitled to the balance of the sale
proceeds remaining after satisfying the creditors.
Official Receiver, Coimbatore v. Palaniswami Chetti, (1925)
I.L.R. 48 Mad. 75o, Amir Hasan v. Saiyid Hasan, (1935)
I.L.R. 57 All. 900, and Rukhmanbai v. Govindram I.L.R. 1946
Nag. 273, relied on.
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 207 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
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the 6th December 1950, of the Madras High Court in C.M.A.
No. 332 of 1945, arising out of the’ judgment and order
dated the 17th January 1945, of the Subordinate Judge,
Devakottai in E. P. No. 90 of 1944 in 0. S. No. 14 of 1926.
M. S. K. Iyengar, for the appellants.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and T. B. V. Sastri for respondent
No. 1.
1959. August 28. The judgment of S. K. Das and A. K.
Sarkar JJ. was delivered by Sarkar, J. Subba Rao, J.-
delivered a separate judgment.
SARKAR J.-This appeal arises out of an application for
execution of a decree for money and the only question is
whether the application was made within the time prescribed
by the Limitation Act.
619
The decree was passed in favour of one Venkatachalam
Chettiar on May 9,1935, against the appellants and certain
other persons. On February 3, 1936, Venkatachalam Chettiar
transferred the decree to his mother, Meenakshi Achi, by an
assignment in writing never having tried to execute it
himself,. Soon thereafter, namely, on March 26, 1936, a
creditor of Venkatachalam Chettiar presented a petition
under the Provincial Insolvency Act (hereinafter referred to
as the Act) for adjudicating him an insolvent on the ground
that the transfer of the decree to Meenakshi Achi was a
fraudulent preference and as such an act of insolvency.
This petition remained pending for a considerable time and
ultimately on January 7, 1939, an order was made on it
adjudicating Venkatachalam Chettiar an insolvent. By that
order respondent No. 1, the Official Receiver of
Ramanathapuram, was appointed the receiver in insolvency and
the insolvent’s estate vested in him. This order was based
on the finding that the transfer of the decree by Venkata-
chalam Chettiar to Meenakshi Achi was a fraudulent
preference and an act of insolvency. On January 26, 1942,
the receiver made an application in the insolvency
proceedings for an order annulling the transfer of the
decree by the insolvent to Meenakshi Achi and on this
application an order was made on April 9, 1943, under s. 54
of the Act annulling that transfer.
In the meantime, Meenakshi Achi had made two applications
for execution of the decree as the assignee of -it and a
reference to them is necessary. The first of these
applications was made on December 14, 1936, for an order
recognising her as the assignee of the decree and for its
execution against some of the judgment-debtors. This
application was disposed of by an order made on September
27, 1937, recognising her right to execute the decree as the
assignee and directing a certain compromise made presumably
with the judgment debtors concerned, to be recorded. The
terms of this compromise are not relevant for the purpose of
the appeal. Thereafter, on August 2, 1940, Meenakshi Achi
as the assignee of the decree made another application for
its execution and this
620
application was disposed of by an order made on September
30, 1940, dismissing it for default of prosecution. It
will be remembered that it was after these applications and
the orders thereon had been made that the order annulling
the assignment of the decree to Meenakshi Achi was passed.
After the order annulling the transfer of the decree to
Meenakshi Achi had been made, the, receiver considering
himself then entitled to the decree, made an application for
its execution on September 27, 1943. It is this application
which has given rise to the present appeal.
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The executing court dismissed the application as having been
made beyond the time prescribed by the Limitation Act. On
appeal, the High Court at Madras set aside the order of the
executing court and held that the application was within
time. Some of the judgment-debtors have now come up in
appeal to this Court. The appeal is contested by the
receiver, the respondent No. 1. The other respondents among
whom are the remaining judgment-debtors or their successors
in interest, have not appeared.
Applications for execution like the present one are governed
by art. 182 of the Limitation Act. That article provides a
period of three years within which the application must be
made. The article prescribes different points of time for
different cases from which the period is to commence
running. The first point of time so prescribed is the date
of the decree. The fifth point of time prescribed is
expressed in these words:
(Where the application next hereinafter mentioned has been
made) the date of the final order passed on an application
made in accordance with law to the proper court for
execution.....
The question for determination is whether the fifth point of
time applies to the receiver’s application for execution.
If it does not, the application must be held to have been
made out of time, while if it does, the application would
not be barred by limitation.
The receiver contends that the two applications by Meenakshi
Achi were " applications made in accordance with law to the
proper court for execution"
621
within the meaning of the article and his application was
within time as it had been made within three years of the
date on which the final order on Meenakshi Achi’s last
application was made.
It is said on behalf of the appellants that in view of the
orders in the insolvency proceedings it must be held that
she was not entitled to the decree on any of the dates on
which she applied for its execution and that her
applications were therefore incompetent and not in
accordance with law.
The appellants put their contention in several ways. It is
first said that the order annulling the assignment of the
decree to Meenakshi Achi related back to the date of the
assignment with the result that it has to be deemed as if
she had never been entitled to the decree and that,
therefore, the applications for execution by her were not
competent and hence were not in accordance with law.
We think this contention is wholly unfounded. We will
assume for the purpose of the present case that when an
order is made tinder s. 54 of the Act annulling a transfer,
the transfer stands annulled as from the date it was made.
But even so, the transfer stands till it is annulled and
therefore, till then, the transferee hag all the rights in
the property transferred. So long as the transferee had
such rights he was competent to exercise them and such
exercise would be legal and fully in accordance with law.
The fact, if it be so, that the transfer on annulment,
becomes void as from the date of the transfer cannot turn
the exercise of a right under the transfer, made prior to
the annulment and which was legal when made, illegal.
Meenakshi Achi had hence full legal competence to execute
the decree, till the transfer of it to her was annulled.
Her two applications for execution of the decree were,
therefore, fully in accordance with law when they had been
made and that is all that art. 182 requires.
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Next, it is said that the provisions of sub-ss. (2) and (7)
of s. 28 of the Act make Meenakshi Achi’s two applications
for execution incompetent in law. These provisions have now
to be considered. Sub-section (2)
79
622
says that upon the making of an order of adjudication the
whole of the property of the insolvent shall vest in the
receiver and sub-s. (7) says that an order of adjudication
shall relate back to and take effect from ,the date of the
presentation of the petition on which it is made. It is
said that under these provisions, the assets of the
insolvent in this case, including the decree under
execution, became vested in the receiver on March 26, 1936,
when the petition for adjudicating him an insolvent had been
presented, and consequently, the two applications for
execution by Meenakshi Achi which had been made after that
date were incompetent and not in accordance with law.
It seems to us that this contention also is fallacious.
These sub-sections cannot have the effect of vesting the
decree in the receiver till its transfer to Meenakshi Achi
had been annulled. Till then it was not a part of the
insolvent’s estate. The annulment, as we have earlier
pointed out, was made under s. 54 of the Act. That section
provides that certain transfers of property by the insolvent
would be deemed fraudulent and void as against the receiver
in insolvency and shall be annulled by court. It is obvious
that a transfer liable to be annulled under this section
remains a perfectly valid transfer till it is annulled. If
it had become void automatically on an order for
adjudication being made, there would be no need to provide
for its annulment by court. It would follow that Meenakshi
Achi was legally possessed of the decree and competent to
apply for its execution till the transfer of the decree to
her was annulled under s. 54.
It is then said that though it may generally be that a
transfer liable to be annulled under s. 54 remains valid
till it is annulled, that is not so where the transfer is
the act of insolvency upon which the order of adjudication
is founded, for, in such a case the order itself annuls the
transfer. So, it is said that as the order of adjudication
in this case was founded upon the transfer of the decree to
Meenakshi Achi, that transfer became annulled on the order
being made on January 7, 1939, and the second application
for execution by Meenakshi Achi was incompetent, It is
623
true that if this in the correct view, then the receiver’s
application for execution must be held to have been made
beyond the time allowed, for, it had been made more than
three years after the final order on the first application
for execution by Meenakshi which is the only order on which
the receiver can on this basis rely for resorting to the
fifth point of time fixed by art. 182.
Now this argument is based solely on the decision of the
Judicial Committee in Mahomed Siddique Yousuf v. Official
Assignee of Calcutta(1) which it is said held that where a
transfer is the act of insolvency on which the order of
adjudication is founded, that order itself has the effect of
annulling the transfer.
We think this case has been misunderstood. We find nothing
in it to lead to the view that an order of adjudication
founded on an act of insolvency constituted by a transfer of
property amounting to a fraudulent preference, itself and
without more annuls that transfer. That was a case decided
under the Presidency towns Insolvency Act. In that case one
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of the acts of insolvency on which the order of adjudication
had been founded was a transfer by the insolvent of a
certain decree in his favour to the appellant, which was
held to have been a fraudulent preference. The transferee
was not a party to the order of adjudication. The official
assignee, that is, the receiver in insolvency, applied to
have that transfer annulled. It was contended on behalf of
the official assignee before the judge in insolvency in the
High Court that the order of adjudication holding the
transfer to be a fraudulent preference was conclusive and
binding on the transferee though he was not a party to the
insolvency petition. It was said that had been held in Ex-
parte Learoyd(2) which turned on the English Bankruptcy Act,
1869, the terms of which were similar to the relevant
provisions in the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act. The
learned judge felt some difficulty in view of a decision of
the Madras High Court to which it is unnecessary to refer,
whether the principle of the
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93.
(2) (1878) 10 Ch. D. 3.
624
English decision applied to a case under the Presidency
towns Insolvency Act. He, therefore, went into the facts
and came to the conclusion that the transfer amounted to a
fraudulent preference and thereupon made an order annulling
it. On appeal the appellate Judges of the High Court "
expressed some doubt whether the intent to prefer was in
fact proved; but they were both of opinion (following Ex-
parte Learoyd (1) that the order of adjudication was conclu-
sive and could not be disputed." They hold that this was so
though the transferee was not a party to the order of
adjudication. In that view of the matter the appellate
Judges felt that there was a decision binding on the
transferee that the transfer was void as a fraudulent
preference and they thereupon annulled the transfer as a
matter of course. The judgments in the High Court are
reported in 45 C.W.N. 441. The transferee who was not a
party to the insolvency petition, then asked for an
extension of time to prefer an appeal from the order of
adjudication but this was refused.
Then the matter was taken up to the Judicial Committee in
further appeal. The Judicial Committee held that the
appellate Judges of the High Court, were right in their view
that the principle of Ex parts Learoyd (1), applied to cases
under the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act, but they thought
that in the circumstances of the case the order of the
appellate judges refusing to extend time for the transferee
to appeal from the order of adjudication was not justified
and set it aside and’ extended the time to appeal. In
order, however, to make the order in the contemplated
appeal, should it succeed, effective, they also set aside
the order annulling the transfer though in their view it was
"plainly right ". This would appear from their observations
at p. 99 of the report :
" It is plain that an appeal against the adjudication order
would be useless while the orders stand in this independent
proceeding declaring the transfer void because of the
adjudication order itself. On the other hand, the decision
of the High Court avoiding the transfer is plainly right
while the adjudication
(1) (1878) 10 Ch. D. 3.
625
order stands and the appellant as a condition of the
extension of time must pay, as he has offered to do, the
costs thrown away."
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And at p. 100 they said,
"The order is without prejudice to the right of the official
assignee, if he is so advised, to make a further application
to have the transfer declared void."
It is therefore abundantly clear that all that the Judicial
Committee held in Mahomed Siddique Yousuf’s case (1) was
that in a case under the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act,
when the act of insolvency upon which an order of
adjudication is founded is a transfer amounting to a
fraudulent preference, the transferee cannot so long as the
order of adjudication stands, question that finding, namely,
that the transfer was a fraudulent preference and that,
therefore, in an application by the official assignee to
have that transfer annulled on the ground that it was a
fraudulent preference, the order of adjudication is
conclusive proof that the transfer was by way of a
fraudulent preference and it was not open to the transferee
to lead evidence to prove that the transfer was not a
fraudulent preference. In such a case therefore the order
of annulment had to be made as a matter of course on proof
of the order of adjudication. The Judicial Committee did
not hold that in such a case the order of adjudication
itself annulled the transfer and no separate order of
annulment was required for the purpose. In fact, it is
obvious that they thought that a separate order annulling
the transfer would be necessary even in such a case for
otherwise they would not have stated that’ "the decision of
the High Court avoiding the transfer is plainly right " nor
while setting aside the order annulling the transfer
reserved the right of the official assignee, should the
occasion arise, to make a further application to have the
transfer declared void. The case therefore does not support
the proposition for which it has been cited. On the
contrary, it clearly proceeds on the basis that even where
the order of adjudication is based on an act of insolvency
constituted by a
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93.
626
transfer of property found to be a fraudulent preference,
the transfer stands till it is set aside. In our view, this
is the correct position and nothing to the contrary has been
brought to our notice.
An argument had been raised at the bar that under the
Provincial Insolvency Act an order of adjudication has -not
that binding force which Mahomed Siddique Yousuf’s case (1)
held it had under the Presidency-towns -Insolvency Act. It
was said that this was so because the terms of the two Acts
were dissimilar. We do not think it necessary to express
any opinion on this question. We have discussed Mahomed
Siddique Yousuf’s case (1) only to show that it does not
support the proposition for which it was cited. It is un-
necessary for us to say whether it will govern a case Under
the Provincial Insolvency Act or what the effect of’ the
dissimilarity pointed out in the terms of the two Acts is.
That question is not before us.
There remains one other point to deal with. It is said that
the official receiver was not entitled to take advantage of
the applications for execution made by Meenakshi Achi as he
had not been claiming under her but had actually claimed
against her. This contention is equally unfounded. Article
182 does not say that no advantage of a previous application
can be taken for the purposes of saving the bar of limita-
tion, unless it had been made by a person under whom the
applicant in a later application, which is said to be barred
by limitation, claimed. All that the article contemplates
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is an application for execution of a decree made within
three years of the final order on a previous application
made in accordance with law for the execution of the same
decree. That being so, we must reject this contention of
the appellants also.
In view of what we have already said, it becomes unnecessary
to deal with the other points raised at the bar.
In the result, we think that the appeal should be dismissed
and we order accordingly. The appellant must pay the costs
of this appeal.
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93.
627
SUBBA RAO J.-This appeal raises a question of limitation.
There is no dispute about the facts. On May 9, 1935, one
Venkatachalam Chettiar obtained a compromise decree against
the appellants and respondents 2, 3 and 4 and predecessors
in interest of respondents 5 and 6 in A. S. No. 226 of 1930,
on the file of the High Court of Madras. Under the decree
the defendants were directed to pay the plaintiffs therein a
sum of Rs. 1,10,101.4-0 together with interest at 3 per
cent. per annum in certain instalments, the last of the
instalments being payable on May 30, 1942. The decree also
provided that in the event of a default in payment of any
one of the instalments, the entire decree amount would
become payable. On February 27, 1937, one Visvanathan
Chettiar obtained a decree against the said Venkataclialam
Chettiar in 0. S. No. 22 of 1936, on the file of the Court
of Subordinate Judge, Devakottai, for a sum of Rs. 33,000.
The suit ending in the above decree was filed on January 29,
1936. On February 3, 1936, Venkatachalam Chettiar executed
a deed of assignment transferring the decree obtained by him
in C. S. No. 14 of 1926 to his mother, Meenakshi Achi, for
consideration. On March 26, 1936, Visvanathan Chettiar
filed 1. P. No. 10 of 1936 in the Court of Subordinate
Judge, Devakottai, for adjudicating Venkata chalam Chettiar
an insolvent on the ground that the transfer of the decree
in favour of Meenakshi Achi was an act of insolvency. On
December 14, 1936, the assignee, Meenakshi Achi, filed E.P.
No. 37 of 1937 for recognition of the assignment in her
favour and for execution of the decree. The judgment-
debtors did not object either to the recognition of the
assignment of the decree or the execution thereof The said
Visvanatban Chettiar intervened in the execution petition
and applied in E.A. No. 817 of 1937 for stay of execution of
the decree on the ground that he had filed an insolvency
petition against the decree-holder and also on the ground
that the said assignment was nominal. The learned
Subordinate Judge disallowed the objection of the creditor,
recognised the assignment, and permitted the assignee-
decree-holder to proceed with the execution of the decree.
628
On September 27, 1937, a settlement was entered into between
the assignee-decree-holder and the judgment debtors and the
said ’execution petition was closed. On January 7, 1939,
Venkatachalam Chettiar was ,,adjudicated insolvent on the
ground that the assignment of the said decree by him in
favour of his mother, Meenakshi Achi, was an act of
insolvency, whereupon his properties vested in the first
respondent, the Official Receiver, Ramanathapuram at
Madurai. On August 2, 1940, the assignee-decree-holder
filed another execution petition, E.P. No. 243 of 1940, and
it was struck off on September 30, 1940. On January 26,
1942, the Official Receiver filed I.A. No. 20 of 1942 in 1.
P. No. 10 of 1936 in the Court of the Subordinate Judge,
Devakottai, for setting aside the assignment, and by order
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dated April 9, 1943, the assignment was set aside by the
Court on the ground of fraudulent preference within the
meaning of s. 54 of the Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920,
hereinafter called the Act. On September 27, 1943, the
Official Receiver filed a fresh execution petition, E.P. No.
90 of 1944, for executing the decree. It was alleged by the
appellants and the respondents 2 to 6, inter alia, that the
said execution petition was barred by limitation on the
ground that the two earlier execution petitions were not in
accordance with law within the meaning of art. 182, cl. 5,
of the Limitation Act. The Official Receiver contended that
they were in accordance with law and therefore the present
execution petition was in time. He further pleaded that the
present execution petition was also saved from the bar of
limitation by the payments made by the judgment-debtors to
Meenakshi Achi, and that, in any event, the decree in
respect of the last three instalments was not barred by
limitation. The learned Subordinate Judge rejected the
contentions of the Official Receiver and held that the
execution petition was barred by limitation. The Official
Receiver preferred an appeal against the said order of the
Subordinate Judge to the High Court of Madras. Govinda
Menon and Basheer Ahmed Sayeed, JJ., of the said High Court
came to the conclusion that the earlier execution petitions,
were in accordance with
629
law and, therefore, the present execution petition was
within time. They also expressed the view that the payments
made by the judgment-debtors to Meenakshi Achi were valid
payments and therefore they also saved the bar of
limitation. In any view, they found that the last two
instalments were not barred by limitation. On their
findings, the learned judges of the High Court set aside the
order of the learned Subordinate Judge and remanded the
’execution petition to the Court of the Subordinate Judge,
Devakottai, for taking steps in furtherance of execution.
The present appeal to this Court was filed against the said
order of remand.
Learned Counsel for the appellants contended that the
execution petitions, E.P. No. 37 of 1937 and E.P. No. 243 of
1940, were not in accordance with law for the following
reasons: (1) The order dated April 9, 1943, annulling the
assignment of the decree by Venkatachalam Chettiar in favour
of his mother, Meenakshi Achi, related back to the date of
the transfer, i.e., February 3, 1936, and, therefore, E.P.
No. 37 of 1937, which was filed on December 14, 1936 and E.
P. No. 243 of 1940 which was filed on August 2, 1940, were
ineffective to save the bar of limitation, as on the dates
they were filed Meenakshi Achi had no title in the decree;
(2) the order of adjudication dated January 7, 1939, was
based on the finding that the said assignment of the decree
was an act of fraudulent preference and that the order
related back to the date of the filing of I. P. No. 10 of
1936 on March 26, 1936, and, therefore, the two execution
petitions filed thereafter were filed by a person without
title, with the result that the said two petitions were not
in accordance with law; (3) assuming that the said two
execution petitions were in accordance with law, the
Official Receiver neither claims under, nor represents, the
assignee-decree-holder, and, therefore, he has no locus
standi to file the present execution petition; (4) payments
made by the judgment-debtors to Meenakshi Achi, who had no
title in the decree, could not save the bar of limitation;
and (5) as Meenakshi Achi in her execution petitions, by
exercising her option, claimed the entire decree amount, the
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Official Receiver
80
630
cannot now claim that the last two instalments are within
time.
At the outset it may be stated that it would be sufficient
if we consider the objections of the appellants in regard to
E. P. No. 243 of 1940, for, if that was not in accordance
with law, the present execution petition would be barred by
limitation. The validity of E. P. No. 37 of 1937 was also
questioned on the same -grounds of attack taken against the
later execution petition.
The relevant part of the Limitation Act is art. 182 and it
reads:
-----------------------------------------------------------
Description of Period of Time from which period
application Limitation begins to run
-----------------------------------------------------------
For the execution Three years; or, 5. (where the applic-
of a decree or where a certified tion next hereinafter
order of any copy of the decree mentioned has been m-
Civil Court not or order has been ade) the date of the
provided for by registered, Six final order passed on
article 183 or Years. an application made in
by section 48 of accordance with law to
the code of Civil the proper Court for
Under this article the latest execution petition should have
been filed within three years from the date of the final
order passed on an application made in accordance with law
to the proper Court of execution. Taking first the second
contention of the learned Counsel for the appellants, the
question may be posed thus: Whether the execution petition,
E.P. No. 243 of 1940, filed on August 2, 1940, by Meenakshi
Achi after Venkatachalam Chettiar was adjudicated insolvent
on January 7, 1939, was one in accordance with law? If the
order of adjudication of Venkatachalam Chettiar on the
ground that the assignment of the decree made by him in
favour of Meenakshi Achi was an act of insolvency ex proprio
vigore annul the transfer in her favour, the execution
petition filed by her after the said order of adjudication
would not be one filed in accordance with law. On the other
hand, if the assignment of the decree continued to be good
till it was annulled on an application filed by the Official
Receiver, which was done in
631
the present case on April 9, 1943, the execution petition,
subject to another argument that I would consider at a later
stage, would be one filed in accordance with law. What then
is the legal effect of such an order of adjudication ?’The
question in the main falls to be decided on a true
construction of the relevant provisions of the Act. Section
6 of the Act defines the act of insolvency; it enumerates
eight acts of insolvency, and one of them is a transfer made
by a debtor which would be void as a fraudulent preference
if he were adjudicated insolvent. Section 7 enables a
creditor or a deter to present an insolvency petition for
adjudicating the debtor an insolvent. Section 9 lays down
the conditions on which a debtor may petition. Section 13
prescribes the particulars a creditor has to give in his
petition, and one of the particulars to be given is the act
of insolvency committed by the debtor. When an insolvency
petition is admitted, s. 19 provides that notice should be
given to creditors in such manner as may be prescribed, and,
when the debtor is not the petitioner, notice of the order
admitting the petition should be served on the debtor. On
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the date fixed for hearing, the Court should require proof
of the matters mentioned under s. 24 of the Act; it enables
the Court to examine the debtor and the creditors and take
the evidence adduced by them. After making the, necessary
enquiry, the Court may dismiss the petition or make an order
of adjudication. On the making of the said order of
adjudication, the whole property of the insolvent would vest
in the Court or in the Receiver appointed under the Act, and
the said property becomes divisible among the creditors.
Under sub-s. 7 of s. 28 the order of adjudication shall
relate back to, and take effect from, the date of the
presentation of the petition. Under s. 30 notice of an
order of adjudication stating the name, address and
description of the insolvent, the date of adjudication, the
period within which the ’debtor should apply for his
discharge and the Court by which the adjudication is made,
should be published in the Official Gazette and in such
manner as may be prescribed. It will be seen from the
aforesaid provisions that till an order of adjudication is
made the
632
person to whom the insolvent transferred his property does
not come into the picture at all. The purchaser is neither
a party to the proceedings nor any notice is given to him.
It would, therefore, be contrary to all ,principles of
natural justice to hold that the finding arrived at in
regard to an assignment of a property by the insolvent in
favour of a third party behind his back, is binding on him.
If the legislature intended that the order should have that
effect, it would have provided for personal, or, at any
rate, public notice to the purchasers, or would have given
in express terms such a binding effect; and the fact that it
did not do so is a clear indication of the legislative
intention that an incidental finding was not intended to
have such a far-reaching effect.
On the other hand, the Act makes ample provision for setting
aside such transfers. Sections 53 and 54 of the Act enable
the Official Receiver to have voluntary transfers made
within two years of the insolvency petition and that made in
fraudulent preference of one creditor over another within
three months from the date of the petition annulled by the
Court. If the legislature intended to exclude a transfer
constituting an act of insolvency from the operation of
these provisions, it would have introduced a proviso to that
effect. Therefore, unless such a transfer is duly annulled
in the manner prescribed, the transfer would’ be valid.
That this is the intention of the legislature is also made
clear by the other provisions of the Act vis-avis transfers.
The Act provides for three stages: (1) Transfers made before
the presentation of the insolvency petition; (2) transfers
made after the presentation of the petition and before the
order of adjudication; and (3) transfers made after
adjudication. A transfer made after adjudication is not
binding on the Receiver. A transfer by an insolvent after
the filing of the petition is also not binding on the
Receiver subject to a protection clause. A purchase in good
faith under a sale in execution (s. 51(3)) and a transfer
inter vivos in good faith for valuable consideration,
633
A transfer before the filing of the petition is binding on
the Receiver unless it is annulled under ss. 53, 54 or 54-A
of the Act. The scheme of the Act in regard to transfers
clearly demonstrates that transfers before the filing of the
petition are good unless they are annulled in the manner
prescribed in the Act and even the doctrine of relating back
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of the order of adjudication does not reach them as they
fall on the other side of the line. If it was the intention
of the legislature that the said order by its own force
should declare the transaction void, it would have fixed the
date of the transfer as the datum line instead of the date
of the filing of the petition. It appears to me that this
was designedly done to give an opportunity to the party
affected to defend his title when the Official Receiver
filed an application to annul the transfer. Sections 53 54
and 28 must be reconciled and they can be reconciled without
doing violence to the language of the said sections if the
order of adjudication is conclusive only in regard to the
status of the insolvent it declares and the transfer, though
it formed the basis of the adjudication, so far as the
transferee is concerned, continues to be good till set
aside.
Strong reliance is placed upon the judgment of the Judicial
Committee in Mohamed Siddique Yousuf v. Official Assignee of
Calcutta (1) in support of the contention that the finding
that the transfer of the decree in favour of Meenakshi Achi
was an act of insolvency was binding on the transferee,
though she was not a party to the adjudication proceedings.
That decision turned upon the relevant provisions of the
Presidency towns Insolvency Act, 1909, and the corresponding
provisions of the Bankruptcy Act of 1869. That decision
cannot apply to a situation created under the Provincial
Insolvency Act, unless the provisions of said Act are pari
materia with those of the Presidencytowns Insolvency Act and
the Bankruptcy Act. A comparative study of the three sets
of provisions by placing them in juxtaposition will
facilitate a better understanding of the problem.
(1) (1943) L.R. 7o I.A. 93.
634
Bankruptcy Act, 1869
S. 10 A copy of an order of the Court adjudging the debtor
to be bankrupt shall be published in the London Gazette, and
be advertised locally in such manner (if any) as may
beprescribed, and the date of such order shall be the date
of the adjudication for the purposes of this Act, and the
production of a copy of the Gazette containing such order as
aforesaid shall be conclusive evidence in all legal
proceedings of the debtor having been duly adjudged a bank-
rupt, and of the date of the adjudication.
S. 11: The bankruptcy of a debtor shall be deemed to have
relation back to and to conimence at the time of the act of
bankruptcy being completed on which the order is made
adjudging him to be bankrupt ; or if the bankrupt is proved
to have committed more acts of bankruptcy than one, to have
relation back and to commence at the time of the first of
the acts of bankruptcy that may be proved to have been
committed by the bankrupt within twelve months next
preceding the order of adjudication ; but the bankrcptcy
shall not relate to any prior act of bankruptcy, unless it
be that at the time of committing such prior act the
bankrupt was indebted to some creditor or creditors in a sum
or sums sufficient to support a petition in bankruptcy, and
unless such debt or debts are still remaining due at the
time of the adjudication,
The Presidency-towns Insolvency Act, 1909
S. 116 6 (1) : A copy of the Official Gazette containing
any notice inserted in pursuance of this Act shall be
evidence of the facts stated in the notice.
(2): A copy of the Official Gazette containing any notice of
an order of adjudication shall be conclusive evidence of the
order having been duly made, and of its date.
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S. 5I: The insolvency of a debtor, whether the same takes
place on the debtor’s own petition or upon that of a
creditor or creditors, shall be deemed to have relation back
to and to commence at--
(a) the time of the commission of the act of insolvency on
which an order of adjudication is made against him, or
(b) if the insolvent is proved to have committed more acts
of insolvency than one, the time of the first of the acts of
insolvencyproved to have been cornmited by the insolvent
within three months next preceding the date of the
presentation of the insolvency petition:
Provided that no insolvency petition or order of
adjudication shall be rendered invalid by reason of any act
of insolvency committed anterior to the debt of the
petitioning creditor.
The Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920
S. 30: Notice of an order of adjudication stating the
name, address and description of the insolvent, the date of
the adjudication, the period within which the debtor shall
apply for his discharge, and the Court by which the
adjudication is made, shall be published in the Official
Gazette and in such other manner as may be prescribed.
S. 28(7): An order of adjudication shall relate back to,
and take effect from, the date of the presentation of the
petition on which it is made.
635
Bankruptcy Act, 1869
Nil...
The Presidency-towns Insolvency Act, 1909
S.56(1) : Every transfer of property, every payment made,
every obligation incurred, and every judicial proceeding
taken or suffered by any person unable to pay his debts as
they become due from his own money in favour of any
creditor, with a view of giving that creditor a preference
over the other creditors, shall, if such person is
adjudicated insolvent on a petition presented within three
months after the date thereof, be deemed fraudulent and void
as against the Official assignee.
(2):This section shall not affect the rights of any person
making title in good faith an for valuable consideration
through or under a creditor of the insolvent.
635
The Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920
S.54(1) : Every transfer of property, every payment made,
every obligation incurred, and every judicial proceeding
taken or suffered by any person unable to pay his debts as
they become due from his own money in favour of any creditor
with a view of giving that creditor a preference over the
other creditors, shall, if such person is adjudged insolvent
on a petition presented within three months after the date
thereof, be deemed fraudulent and void as against the
receiver, and shall be annulled by the Court.
(2):This section shall not affect the rights of any person
who in good faith and for valuable consideration has acquir-
ed a title through or under a creditor of the insolvent.
With some difference in. the phraseology, with which we are
not concerned, Ss. 116 and 51 of the Presidencytowns
Insolvency Act are,-in terms similar to the corresponding
sections, ss. 10 and II, of the Bankruptcy Act. Section 10
of the Bankruptcy Act and s. 116 of the Presideticy-towns
Insolvency Act make the copy of the Official Gazette
containing the order of adjudication conclusive evidence of
the date of adjudication and the fact that the order of
adjudication was duly made. But s. 30 of the Provincial
Insolvency Act only enjoins that the notice of the order of
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adjudication with the necessary particulars should be
published in the Official Gazette and in such manner as may
be prescribed; but a copy of the said Gazette containing the
said notification is not made conclusive evidence either of
the facts mentioned therein or of the fact that adjudication
has been duly made. Section 51 of the Presidency-towns
Insolvency Act is in terms similar to that of s. II of the
Bankruptcy Act, and
636
under both the sections the insolvency of a debtor relates
back to the time of the commission of the act of insolvency
on which the order of adjudication has been made against
him. But under s. 28(7) of the ,Provincial Insolvency Act,
the order of adjudication relates back to and takes effect
from the date of the presentation of the application on
which it is made. Under s. 56 of the Presidency-towns
Insolvency Act, transfer of a property in favour of a
creditor with a view to give preference to him over other
creditors shall be deemed fraudulent and void as against the
Official Assignee, whereas under s. 54 of the Provincial
Insolvency Act, the said transfer has to be annulled by the
Court. There are, therefore, essential differences in the
structure of the scheme between the three Acts in the matter
of adjudication.
With this background let us look at the Privy Council
decision in Mohomed Siddique Yousuf’s case, (1) to ascertain
the basis of that decision. The facts in that case were: On
January 20, 1939, the insolvent assigned to the appellant a
decree obtained by him for consideration. On April 19,
1939, the petitioning creditor filed a petition in the High
Court for the adjudication of the insolvent as such. One of
the acts of insolvency alleged was the said assignment of
the decree in, favour of the appellant. On June 13, 1939,
an adjudication order was made against the insolvent. No
one appeared except the petitioning creditor, and the order
-recited that the insolvent had committed each of the acts
of insolvency alleged in the petition. On November 23,
1939, the Official Assignee gave notice of motion in the
Insolvency Court for a declaration that the indenture of
assignment dated January 20, 1939, should be declared void
as against the Official Assignee and that the transfer
should be set aside. The Judge in Insolvency held on the
merits that the said transfer was void under s. 56 of the
Presidency-towns Insolvency Act. On appeal the High Court
held that the order of adjudication was conclusive evidence
against the appellant that the assignment was a fraudulent
preference, and on that
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 93.
637
ground it declared the transfer void. On further appeal,
the Privy Council agreed with the High Court. Relying on
the decision in Ex _varte Learoyd (1), a decision on
analogous provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, the Privy
Council made the following observations at p. 98:
"The provisions of the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act,
1909, are also in similar terms, and their Lordships feel no
doubt that the principles of the English decision are as
valid in India as in England. No doubt it is anomalous that
a decision affecting the right of a third party should be
conclusively determined against him in his absence, and even
without notice to him, but the words of the section and the
importance of maintaining the status of the debtor as
determined by an order of adjudication, and the necessity of
securing the stability of the administration of the debtor’s
estate once his status has been fixed, have been justly held
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to outweigh the consideration of hardship to the private
citizen." But the Privy Council came to the conclusion, on
the facts that a case was made out for the -High Court for
excusing the delay in preferring the appeal against the
order of adjudication. On that view they set aside the
order of the High Court and made the following observations
for its guidance, at p. 99:
" It may be that if the appellant takes advantage of the
extension of time and appeals, the High Court may adopt the
procedure in Ex parte Tucker (2) and content themselves with
striking out the act of bankruptcy complained of, and
leaving the official assignee to make a fresh application
without themselves determining the facts."
This decision decides three points, namely: (i) having
regard to the express provisions of the Presidency-towns
Insolvency Act, and for maintaining the status of the debtor
and the stability of the administration of his estate, the
decision affecting the rights of a third party though made
behind his back, would be binding on him; (ii) an appeal can
be entertained against the,
(1)(1878) 10 Ch.D 3. (2) (1879) 12 Ch. D. 308.
81
638
order of the adjudication at the instance of the trans.
feree, and, if necessary, by excusing the delay in
preferring the appeal; and (iii) in such an appeal, the High
Court may strike out one of the acts of insolvency, i.e.,
the transfer in favour of the appellant, and leave it to the
Official, Assignee to make a fresh application. Though the
principles underlying the relevant provisions of the Act
were expounded, the decision mainly rested on the express
provisions of the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act. Nor did
the Privy Council hold that when there was an order of
adjudication on the basis of an act of insolvency, there was
no necessity on the part of the Official Assignee to take
out an application for setting aside the transfer
constituting the act of insolvency. Though it is not very
clear, it appears to me that what the Privy Council stated
was that in such an application the decision on the transfer
forming part of the order of adjudication is conclusive
evidence of the invalidity of the transfer. To put it
differently, in such an application the Official Assignee
need not prove afresh that the transfer was a fraud on
creditors or an act of fraudulent preference. That decision
was mainly based upon Ex parte Learoyd (1), which in its
turn was founded upon the interpretation of ss. 10 and 11 of
the Bankruptcy Act-sections corresponding to ss. 116 and 51
of the Presidency-towns Insolvency Act. A scrutiny of that
decision, therefore, will disclose the raison detre of the
decision of the Privy Council. There, on August 30, 1877,
an insolvent executed in favour of George Payne a bill of
sale of his household furniture etc., by way of security for
consideration. The goods remained in the apparent
possession of the mortgagor until January 1, 1878, when
Payne removed them. On January 3, 1878, a bankruptcy
petition was presented against the insolvent by a creditor,
relying upon an alleged act of bankruptcy, namely, that the
insolvent, being a trader, departed from his dwelling-house
on December 31, 1877. On January 3, 1878, an order of
adjudication was made on the petition upon proof of the said
act of bankruptcy, and that
(1) (1878) 10 Ch. D. 3.
639
order was advertised in the usual way in the London Gazette.
On January 8, 1878, the goods removed by Payne were sold on
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his behalf. The trustees in the Bankruptcy claimed the
proceeds of the sale, and the Judge of the County Court
ordered the payment. On appeal Bacon, C. J., allowed the
appeal on the ground that it had not been established that
there was an act of insolvency before Payne took possession
of the goods. On further appeal, the Court of Appeal set
aside the judgment of Bacon, C.J., on the ground that by
virtue of ss. 10 and 11 of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869, "a bill
of a sale holder is conclusively bound by the adjudication
so long as it stands, and cannot dispute that the act of
bankruptcy on which the adjudication professedly proceeded
was in fact committed," and that the trustee’s title related
back to that act of bankruptcy James, L.J., after a brief
survey of the historic background of the Bankruptcy Act,
based his judgment mainly on the construction of the
provisions of ss. 10 and I I of the Bankruptcy Act. The
learned Judge observed at p. 8:
" A man cannot be I duly’ adjudged a bankrupt, unless the
great requisite of all exists, that he has committed an act
of bankruptcy. That is the capital offence of which he must
have been guilty before he can be ’duly’ adjudged a
bankrupt. That he has been ’duly’ adjudged a bankrupt,
necesssarily involves the previous commission of an act of
bankruptcy. The mere fact that an adjudication has been
made could have been proved without the aid of sect. 10.
That section may, however, only involve this, that some act
of bankruptcy had been committed before the adjudication was
made. But then comes sect. II, which has no operation at
all as between the bankrupt and the trustee. The bankrupt
has no rights whatever; all his rights have been transferred
to the trustee. The mere fact that sect. 1 1 is dealing
with the relation back of the trustee’s title, shews that it
is dealing with the rights of third persons, and not merely
with the rights of the bankrupt and persons indebted to
him.... Then sect. 11 goes on to provide that, by way of
enlargement
640
of the trustee’s title, he may go behind the act of
bankruptcy on which the adjudication was founded, and may,
under certain circumstances and subject to certain
limitations, prove that other earlier acts of bankruptcy
have been committed, and if this is done the trustee’s title
is to relate back to the earliest act of bankruptcy which is
proved to have been committed within twelve months before
the adjudication. This, however, is to be proved by
evidence, whereas the act of bankruptcy on which the adjudi-
cation is founded is proved by the production of the
adjudication itself. It seems to me to be impossible to
evade the words of these sections."
Baggallay, L. J., also, after emphasizing on the words "
duly made " in s. 10 of the Bankruptcy Act, remarked on the
scope of s. 11 thus, at p. 10:
" But then comes sect. II, which, I think, if more was
needed, makes the adjudication conclusive on third persons
that the act of bankruptcy on which it was founded was
really committed."
Thesiger, L. J., also said much to the same effect, at P. 11
:
" We start, therefore, with this, that we are bound to hold
conclusively that a ’due’ adjudication was made on the 3rd
January. It must, therefore, have been founded upon a
proper act of bankruptcy. Then sect. 11 goes still further,
and it is important to compare it with the provisions
contained in the prior Bankruptcy Acts. Sects. 234 and 235
enabled third persons to dispute the act of bankruptcy upon
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giving notice of their intention so to do. That provision
is swept away by the Act of 1869, and in language clear and
distinct the Legislature has said by sect. II that I the
bankruptcy of a debtor shall be deemed to have relation
-back to and to commerce at the time of the act of
bankruptcy being completed on which the order is made
adjudging him to be bankrupt."
From the aforesaid extracts from the judgments, it is
manifest that the decision turned upon the express’
provisions of ss. 10 and 11 of the Bankruptcy Act. Under s.
10 of that Act, the gazette containing the
641
order was conclusive evidence that the order of adjudication
was duly made on the basis of an act of insolvency and s. 11
fixed the datum line for the commencement of the trustee’s
title from the act of bankruptcy. The former section made
the order of,., adjudication conclusive against third
parties and the latter section vests the title of the
property concerned in the official receiver from the date of
the act of insolvency. This judgment, therefore, cannot be
applied to an Act which differs in all respects-from the
relevant provisions of ss. 10 and 11 of the Bankruptcy Act
on the basis of which that judgment was given. In the
Provincial Insolvency Act, neither the order of adjudication
is conclusive evidence that it has been duly made, nor the
trustee’s title dates back to the act of insolvency on which
the adjudication is founded. I am, therefore, of the view
that neither the decision in Ex parte Learoyd (1) based on
the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act, 1869, nor the Privy
Council decision in Mahomed Siddique Yousuf v. Official
Assignee of Calcutta (2) based upon the provisions of the
Presidencytowns Insolvency Act, has any bearing in
construing the relevant provisions of the Provincial
Insolvency Act. A similar view was expressed by a Full
Bench of the Madras High Court in The Official Receiver,
Guntur v. Narra Go v. Narra Gopala Kri8hnayya(3) and by a
Full Bench of the Nagpur High Court in D. G. Sahasrabudhe v.
Kila Chand Deochand & Co., Bombay (4). Both Courts held
that the decision of the Privy Council did not apply to a
case under the Provincial Insolvency Act and that a
transferee, who was not a party to the adjudication
proceeding, could contend in subsequent proceedings for
annulment that his transfer was good notwithstanding that
the order of adjudication was based on the alleged transfer
as being an act of insolvency. I accept the correctness of
the said two decisions. If so, it follows that the order of
adjudication made in the present case did not by its own
force divest the title of Meenakshi Achi and vest it in the
official receiver and that she continued to be the
transferee of the decree at the time
(1) (1878) 10 Ch. D. 3.
(2) 1943 L.R. 70 I.A. 93.
(3) I. L. E. 1945 Mad. 541
(4) 1.L.R. 1947 Nag. 85.
642
when she filed the second execution petition, E.P. No. 243
of 1940.
For the same reasons, when E.P. No. 37 of 1937, was filed,
Meenakshi Achi had subsisting title to the decree runder the
transfer deed dated ’February 3, 1936, and, therefore’ the
said execution petition was also in accordance with law.
The next argument of the learned Counsel for the appellants
is that the order of the Insolvency Court dated April 9,
1943, related back to the date of the transfer i.e.,
February 3, 1936, and that by the order of annulment, the
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transfer became void from its inception with the result that
on the dates when the Execution Petitions Nos. 37 of 1937
and 243 of 1940 were filed Meenakshi Achi-had no title to
the decree, and, therefore, the said petitions were not
filed in accordance with law. The answer to this contention
depends upon the true legal effect of the order of annulment
of the transfer on the ground of fraudulent preference.
That part of s. 54 of the Provincial Insolvency Act so far
relevant to the present enquiry reads thus:
S. 54 (1): " Every transfer of property ... in favour of
any creditor, with a view of giving that creditor a
preference over the other creditors, shall, if such person
is adjudged insolvent on a petition presented within three
months after the date thereof, be deemed fraudulent and void
as against the receiver, and shall be annulled by the Court.
(2): This section shall not affect the rights of any person
who in good faith and for valuable consideration has,
acquired a title through or under a creditor of the
insolvent."
It is clear from the provisions of this section that a
transfer of property by a debtor before insolvency in favour
of a creditor giving him preference over other creditors is
not absolutely void. As between the transferor and the
transferee, the title in the property conveyed passes from
one to the other, but it is liable to be annulled at the
instance of the receiver. This is because the Insolvency
Act confers on the official ,receiver a title superior that
of the insolvent enabling
643
the former to get it annulled in the interest of the
creditors. Sub-section 2 of that section also indicates
that the-transfer is not void ab initio, for under that sub-
section the rights of any person, who in good faith and for
valuable consideration acquired title through, or under a
creator of the insolvent, are protected. If the transfer
was ab initio void in the sense that it is a nullity, all
the depending transactions should fall with it. Emphasis is
laid upon the word " void " in s. 54(1) of the Act, but the
said word in the context can only mean voidable, for it is
made void only against the receiver and requires to be
annulled by the Court. It follows from the aforesaid
premises that such a transfer is valid till annulled in the
manner prescribed by the provisions of the Provincial
Insolvency Act.
The legal effect of annulling a transfer under s. 53 of the
Act was considered by a Division Bench,of the Madras High
Court in The Official Receiver, Coimbatore v. Palaniswami
Chetti (1). In that decision, Devadoss, J., observed as
under at p. 758:
"But till such a declaration is made by the Insolvency Court
under section 53, the transaction is good and the mortgagee
could proceed with the suit or with the execution of his
decree against the insolvent’s property."
Wallace, J., elaborated thus, at p. 764:
" Section 53 implies an attack by the Official Receiver on
behalf the general body of creditors, and the remedy which
he is entitled to get on proving his case is that the
transfer is voidable against him and may be annulled by the
Court............. it does not really affect the
relationship of the transferor and transferee as mortgagor
and mortgagee. For example, if the property is sold by the
Official Receiver, and the creditors and costs are fully
paid out of the proceeds and there is a surplus remaining.,
that surplus belongs primafacie to the transferee and not to
the transferor, and is his unless the transferor has by
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appropriate proceedings established his right to
it............ The relationship between the mortgagor and
mortgagee remains
(1) (1925) I.L.R. 48 Mad. 750.
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unaffected by any proceedings under section 53, and the
mortgagee is entitled therefore to enforce his mortgage
against the mortgagor except so far as proceedings under
section 53 may have held the property mortgaged as assets of
the mortgagor at the disposal of the general body of
creditors."
The observations of the learned Judges establish two
propositions: (i) that the transaction inter se between the
debtor and transferee is good; and (ii) it is not binding on
the Official Receiver so far as it is necessary to protect
the interests of the creditors. The decision in Amir Ahmad
v. Saiyid Hasan (1) is also one laying down the legal effect
of s. 53 of the Act. The learned Judges made the following
observations in that case, at p. 903:
It seems quite clear that if a transfer made by a debtor is
wholly fictitious and bogus and no interest in the property
passes to the transferee, then the transfer is void ab
initio and subsequent transferees can never be protected
because the foundation of their title does not
exist.......... On the other hand, if the transfer made by
the debtor was not wholly fictitious and bogus but the
intention of the parties was that property should is fact
pass to the transferee, then the result would depend on
whether the transferee was a purchaser in good faith and for
valuable consideration, or not. The transfer for the time
being is valid, though it is voidable at the option of the
receiver, and it is discretionary with court to annul it
under section 53 of the Provincial Insolvency Act."
The said observations will apply mutatis mutandis to a
situation under s. 54 of the Act. Indeed, a Division Bench
of the Nagpur High Court in Rukhmanbai v. Govindram (1), in
the context of s. 54 of the Act, stated to the same effect
thus at p. 275:
"The wording of the section (s. 54) thus very clearly
indicates that a transfer of the nature mentioned therein is
voidable as against the receiver and is not void ab initio
and may be annulled by the Court......... It is thus clear
from the section
(1) (1935) I.L.R 57 All. 900.
(2) I.LR. 1946 Nag. 273.
645
that till the transfer is actually annulled by the Court it
remains a valid transaction."
The aforesaid discussion yields the following result: (1) a
transfer by a debtor of his property before insolvency in
favour of a creditor with a view to giving him preference
over other creditors conveys a valid title to the
transferee; (2) under circumstances mentioned in s. 54 of
the Act, it is voidable against the receiver; (3) when it is
annulled by the Court on the ground of fraudulent
preference, the property vests in the official receiver, who
can administer it in the interest of the creditors; and (4)
even after the transfer is annulled, it continues to be good
between the transferor and transferee, and in a contingency
of any balance remaining of the sale proceeds after the cre-
ditors are fully paid, the transferee would be entitled to
the same.
Two lines of decisions have been relied upon by the learned
Counsel for the appellants. The first one holds that in the
case of conflicting claims to an estate, the claimant
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ultimately declared to be the owner thereof by the final
Court cannot rely, to save the bar of limitation, upon a
petition filed by the rival claimant to execute the decree
pertaining to the estate at the time the title was in his
favour; and the other decides that when a transfer is set
aside on the ground of fraudulent preference, the official
receiver can claim to recover mesne profits from the
transferee of the property of an insolvent from the date of
the transfer. The first line of decisions turns upon the
principle that a defeated claimant had no title to the
property at the time he filed the application, for the
effect of the final decree is that the said claimant had no
title at any time, and the second line of decisions is
founded on some equitable doctrine. There are also
decisions taking the contrary view. It is not necessary in
this case’. either to go into that question or attempt to
resolve the conflict. As I have held that in the case of a
transfer in fraud of creditors or by fraudulent preference,
the transfer is good till set aside by the Court, the
transferee would have title to file the execution petition
before the transfer was set aside.
82
646
The third contention of the learned Counsel for the
appellants is a weak one. It is said that the official
receiver does not claim under Meenakshi Achi, and,
therefore, he cannot rely upon the execution petition filed
by her to save the bar of limitation. There is a fallacy
underlying this argument. The question for decision is not
whether the official receiver claims under Meenakshi Achi,
but whether the execution petitions filed by her were in
accordance with law. If as I held, at the time the previous
execution petitions were filed, Meenakshi Achi had a valid
title to execute the decree, the execution petitions filed
by her would certainly be in accordance with law within the
meaning of art. 182(5) of the Indian Limitation Act. I,
therefore, reject this contention.
In view of the aforesaid conclusions arrived at by me, the
last two contentions based on payments of instalments do not
arise for consideration.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.