Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KASHINATH SANKARAPPA WANI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NEW AKOT COTTON GINNING & PRESSINGCO., LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/02/1958
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
KAPUR, J.L.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 437 1958 SCR 1331
ACT:
Limitation-Suit on deposit receipt--Acknowledgment of
liability-Evidence--Balance sheet obtained from Registrar of
ComPanies-Admissibility-Presumption of authenticity and
correctness -Commercial Documents Evidence Act (XXX Of
1939), s. 3(b).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant advanced various sums of money to the res-
pondent, in lieu of which the respondent passed a deposit
receipt for 12 months from August 1, 1939 to July 31, 1940-
On June 16, 1944 the appellant filed a suit to recover the
amount with interest on the allegation that the amount
became due on May 17, 1941 when the demand for the amount
was made and limitation for the suit expired on May 17, 1944
and the suit was filed on the reopening day of the Court
thereafter. The appellant also relied upon the
acknowledgments of his debt by the respondent in the resolu-
tion passed by the Board of Directors on May 2o, 1941 and in
the balance sheet of the respondent for the year 1940-41
dated October 10, 1941 :
Held, that the suit was barred by limitation as the monies
due under the deposit receipt became payable on July 31,
1941 and as no agreement had been proved that the monies due
under the deposit receipt were re-payable on demand.
Held further, that limitation was not saved by the alleged
acknowledgments.
The resolution of the Board of Directors merely proposed a
settlement of a claim of the appellant, which, if accepted
by the appellant, was to be placed before a general meeting
of the shareholders. The resolution only referred to a past
liability of the respondent to the appellant and it could.
not be construed as an
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acknowledgment of the liability of the respondent under the
deposit receipt in question.
A copy of the balance sheet of 1940-41 obtained from the
Registrar of Companies which was filed in the case was
wrongly rejected by the High Court as inadmissible on the
ground that no evidence was adduced to prove it. This copy
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was admissible under s. 3(b) of the Commercial Documents
Evidence Act. Under that section the Court could also raise
a presumption as regards the balance sheet having been duly
made by or under the appropriate authority or in rggard to
the statements contained therein. The presumption was not
compulsory but was discretionary with the Court. In the
circumstances of this case, where there were factions in the
Company and the regularity of the meeting at which the
balance sheet was passed was in dispute, the High Court
would have been perfectly justified in not raising the
presumption. Consequently, the acknowledgment in the
balance sheet was of no avail to the appellant.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 77 of 1954.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 25, 1949,
of the former Nagpur High Court in First Appeal No. 91 of
1945 arising out of the judgment and decree dated July 31,
1945, of the Court of Second Additional District Judge,
Akola in Civil Suit No. 7-B of 1944.
C. B. Agarwala and Ratnaparkhi A. G. for the appellant.
Veda Vyasa and Ganpat Rai, for the respondent.
1958. February 18. The following Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
BHAGWATI J.-This appeal with a certificate under s. 109(a)
read with S. 110 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Act V of
1908) is directed against the judgment and decree passed by
the Nagpur High Court dismissing the appeal of the appellant
and confirming the dismissal of his suit by the learned
Second Additional District Judge, Akola.
The appellant, who was the plaintiff in the trial court
filed in the Court of the First Additional District
Judge, Akola, Civil Suit No. 2-B of 1944 against the
---
7-B
respondent, a limited company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act of 1882, which owned a
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Ginning and Pressing Factory and carried on business of
ginning and pressing cotton at Akot in District Akola.
The appellant alleged that he was one of the creditors of
the company which used to borrow money, from him for about
35 years past. He claimed to have acted as Banker of the
company and the sums borrowed from him were entered in the
account books of the company in two khatas, one known as
current account or " chalu khata " and the other described
as ,,fixed deposit khata ". An account used to be made up at
the end of’ every year and the amount found due at the foot
of the account was entered in the balance-sheet of the
company which was adopted at the Annual General Meeting of
the company. Deposit receipts also used to be passed for
the amounts standing in the fixed deposit khata from time to
time and at the end of the year ending July 1939, a sum of
Rs. 79,519-12-9 was found due by the company to him on both
these accounts. On January 15, 1940, the company passed a
deposit receipt in his favour for this amount which he
demanded from the company by his letters dated May 10, 1941
and May 17, 1941. The company failed and neglected to pay
the said amount with the result that he filed on June
16,1944, a suit against the company for recovery of a sum of
Rs. 1,03,988 made up of Rs. 79,519-12-9 for principal and
Rs. 24,468 as interest from August 1, 1939, to January 15,
1944.
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The claim as laid in the plaint was that all these amounts
which had been borrowed by the company from him were payable
on demand to be made by him as creditor and they were
deposits with the company, but in order that the company may
not be compelled to pay a big sum, on demand, items in the
current account were being transferred to the fixed deposit
account from time to time. The amounts of these deposits
being thus payable on demand the cause of action accrued to
him on May 17, 1941, and limitation for the suit expired on
May 17, 1944. But, as the courts were closed on that day,
the suit was filed on
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the first opening day i. e., June 16, 1944, and limitation
was therefore saved by s. 4 of the Limitation Act. He also
relied upon the acknowledgments of his debt made by the
company in (a) the resolution passed by the Board of
Directors on May 20, 1941, (b) the balance-sheet of the
company for the year 1940-41 dated October 10, 1941, and for
the years 1941-42 and 1942-43, and (c) the entry in the
khata of the plaintiff in the books of the company made on
or about July 31, 1941, and signed by the Chairman of the
company. He further relied upon an application made under
s. 162 of the Companies Act to liquidate the company on June
16, 1941, which application was however dismissed by the
court on June 16, 1944, stating that as he was bona fide
prosecuting this application for the same relief as claimed
in the suit and as the court was unable to entertain the
application because the debt was disputed by the company, he
was entitled to deduct from the period of limitation, the
time spent by him under s. 14 of the Limitation Act.
This claim of the appellant was contested by the respondent
mainly on the ground that the suit was barred by the law of
limitation. Both the courts below negatived his claim. The
trial court dismissed his suit and the High Court, on
appeal, dismissed his appeal and confirmed the dismissal of
his suit by the trial court; hence this appeal.
The only question which arises for our consideration in this
appeal is whether the appellant’s suit was barred by
limitation. The appellant, in the first instance, relied
upon the deposit receipt which was passed by the company in
his favour on January 15, 1940. This receipt (Ex. P-1)
evidenced a deposit of Rs. 79,519-12-9 for 12 months from
August 1, 1939, to July 31, 1940, and the amount at the foot
thereof became due and payable by the respondent to him on
July 31, 1940. The appellant, however, sought to extend the
commencement of the period of limitation to May 17, 1941, on
the ground that the monies, the subject-matter of that
deposit receipt, were payable to him on demand, that such
demand was made by him
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on May 17, 1941, and that therefore that was the date for
the commencement of the period of limitation. No express
agreement in this behalf could be proved by him nor could an
agreement be implied from the course of dealings between him
and the company for the period of 25 years during which the
dealings continued between the parties. As a matter of
fact, such an agreement, either express or implied, was
negatived by the very terms of the deposit receipt which,
apart from mentioning that the monies were received by the
company as deposit for 12 months from August 1, 1939, to
July 31, 1940, contained on the reverse a note that interest
would cease on due date. This was sufficient to establish
that the amount due at the foot of the deposit receipt
became due and payable on the due date mentioned therein and
that there was no question of the amount being payable at
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any time thereafter on demand being made in this behalf by
the creditor. The course of dealings between the parties
also negatived any such agreement because it appears from
the record that such deposit receipts were passed by the
company in his favour from time to time, each of such
receipts being for a fixed period in the same terms as the
deposit receipt in question and the receipts containing
similar notes on the reverse that interest would cease on
due date. Both the courts below were therefore right in
coming to the conclusion that there was no agreement of the
kind put forward by the appellant that the monies due at the
foot of the deposit receipt in question were repayable on
demand and that monies due at the foot thereof became due
and payable by the company to him on July 31, 1940.
The next question to consider is whether the bar of
limitation which set in on July 31, 1943, was saved by
reason of the circumstances set out in the plaint for
avoidance of the same. Out of the three acknowledgments of
debt pleaded by the appellant the third was abandoned by him
in the course of the hearing and the only two
acknowledgments which were pressed were (a) the resolution
passed by the Board of Directors on May 20, 194 1, and (b)
the balance-sheet of the company for the year 1940-41 dated
October 10,
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1941. It may be noted that he made no attempt at all to
prove the balance-sheets of the company for the years 1941-
42 and 194-2-43.
In regard to the resolution passed by the Board of Directors
on May 20, 1941, the position is that at that meeting one
Pandurang Narsaji Hadole, who was one of the Directors of
the company. made a reference to a:proposed settlement of
the claim of the appellant for a sum of RIB. 67,939 as found
due at the end of July 1936, which had been resolved upon by
the Board of Directors on December 22,1936, but had not been
accepted by the appellant. The resolution then requested
the appellant to inform the company again if even then he
was prepared to abide by the terms of that proposed
settlement which would be placed before the general meeting
of all the share-holders of the company if a reply was
received from him in the affirmative.
This resolution of the Board of Directors was alleged by the
appellant to be an acknowledgment of a subsisting liability
in regard to the debt due by the company to him at the foot
of the deposit receipt in question’. We do not see how it
could ever be spelt out as such acknowledgment. The
contents of the resolution only referred to a past liability
of the company to the appellant and there was nothing
therein which could by any stretch be construed as referring
to the liability of the company, to him at the foot of the
deposit receipt dated January 15, 1940. Our attention was
drawn to the deposit receipts which had been passed by the
company in favour of the appellant on May 30, 1935, October
18, 1936, and November 30,1938, each of which was for a sum
of Rs. 47,500. No connection was, however, established
between the sum of Rs. 47,500, the subject-matter of these
receipts, and the sum of Rs. 79,519-12-9, the subject-matter
of the deposit receipt in question and in the absence of any
such connection ’having been established the appellant could
not avail himself of the alleged acknowledgment of liability
contained in the resolution of the Board of Directors dated
May 20, 1941,
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even if it could perchance be construed as an acknowledgment
of a subsisting liability. This resolution of the Board of
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Directors dated May 20, 1941, could not, therefore, avail
the appellant as an acknowledgment of his debt.
In regard to the balance-sheet of the company for’ the year
1940-41 dated October 10, 1941, it is to be noted that, even
though the appellant applied before the trial court for
filing the balance-sheet of 1940-41 on April 28, 1945, he
expressly stated that he did not want to adduce any oral
evidence to prove it. He was, however, allowed to file the
same. But it was realised later that the balance-sheet did
not prove itself and he therefore made another application
on July 11, 1945, for permission to file a copy from the
Registrar of Companies and contended that this proved
itself. This document was, however, rejected by the trial
court as filed too late. When the appeal came up for
hearing before the High Court, it was contended on behalf of
the appellant that the copy which was adduced from the
office of the Registrar was admissible in evidence but that
evidence was rejected by the High Court on a consideration
of ss. 65 and 74(2) of the Evidence Act. The attention of
the High Court was evidently not drawn to the Commercial
Documents Evidence Act (XXX of 1939) which has amended the
Law of Evidence with respect to certain commercial
documents. Section 3 of that Act enacts that " for the
purposes of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, and
notwithstanding anything contained therein, a Court:
(a).........................................................
(b) may presume, within the meaning of that Act, in
relation to documents included in Pt. 11 of the Schedule :-
That any document purporting to be a document included in
Part I or Part II of the Schedule, as the case may be, and
to have been duly made by or under the appropriate
authority, was so made and that the statements contained
therein are accurate. "
Item No. 21 in Pt. 11 of the Schedule mentions:-
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" Copy, certified by the Registrar of Companies of the
Balance Sheet, Profit and Loss Account, and audit i report
of a company, filed with the said Registrar under the Indian
Companies Act, 1913 and the rules made thereunder.
If the attention of the High Court had been drawn to this
provision of law, we are sure, it would not have rejected
the copy of the balance-sheet obtained by the appellant from
the office of the Registrar of Companies. We are of the
opinion that the copy should have been admitted in evidence
and we do hereby admit the same.
The appellant contends that that balance-sheet which was
signed by the Directors contained an acknowledgment of the
debt due by the company to the appellant for the sum of Rs.
67,939 as and by way of fixed deposit and that was
sufficient to save the bar of limitation. The question
therefore arises whether any presumption can be raised as
regards the balance-sheet having been duly made by or under
the appropriate authority or in regard to the accuracy of
the statement contained therein under s. 3(b) of the Commer-
cial Docuinents Evidence Act (XXX of 1939).
It is to be noted that this presumption is not compulsory as
in the case of s. 3(a) of the Act; it is discretionary with
the court. The difficulty in the way of the appellant here
is however insuperable because we find that there were
factions in the company at or about the relevant time. A
Directors’ meeting was held on April 27, 1941, and the
resignation of the appellant as the Chairman was accepted
and another person was appointed in his place. A second
meeting was called for May 17, 1941, but it had to be
adjourned for want of a quorum. The adjourned meeting was
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held on May 20,1941, but no balance-sheet was passed at that
meeting. There is nothing on the record to show that there
was another meeting of the Board of Directors for passing
the balance-sheet of the company for the year 1940-41. A
general meeting of the Shareholders was called for November
16, 1941, to pass the balance-sheet. This also had to be
adjourned to the following day for want of a quorum. At the
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adjourned meeting the shareholders then present refused to
pass the accounts and it was not till some five weeks later,
namely on December 30, 1941, that the rival faction met and
passed the accounts. But this meeting only purported to be
a continuation of the meeting which bad to be adjourned for
want of a quorum and that clearly was irregular because the
adjourned meeting had to be called within twentyfour hours.
It did not purport to be a fresh meetino, convened after due
notice, etc. Under the circumstances,it could not be urged
that the balance-sheet was duly passed.
Even if the attention of the High Court had been drawn to
the provisions of s. 3 (b) of the Commercial Documents
Evidence Act, (XXX of 1939) it would have been perfectly
justified in not, raising the presumption in regard to the
balance-sheet having been duly made by or under the
appropriate authority and in regard to the accuracy of the
statement contained therein. We are, therefore, of the
opinion that this alleged acknowledgment also is of no avail
to the appellant.
In regard to s. 14 of the Indian Limitation Act which was
sought to be relied upon by the appellant, it may be shortly
stated that the liquidation proceedings had not been filed
in the courts below and there is nothing to show that the
requirements of s. 14 were at all satisfied. No cogent
argument has been advanced before us on behalf of the
appellant which would induce us to hold that the conclusion
reached by the High Courtin this behalf was incorrect in any
manner whatever.
On all the above grounds we have come to the conclusion that
the appellant’s claim was clearly timebarred and the
dismissal of his suit by the trial court as well as the
dismissal of his appeal by the High Court were in order.
This appeal will therefore stand dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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