Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2770 2000
PETITIONER:
WESTERN PRESS PVT LTD., MUMBAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CUSTODIAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/12/2000
BENCH:
B.N.Kripal, Doraswamyy Raju, Brijesh Kumar
JUDGMENT:
Raju, J.
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The appellant before us was the unsuccessful applicant
in Miscellaneous Application No.2 of 1999 before the Special
Court (Trial of offences relating to transactions in
securities) at Bombay (called for convenience as the
Special Court). The appeal has been filed under Section 10
of the Special Court (Trial of offences relating to
transactions in securities) Act, 1992 (hereinafter referred
to as the Act) against the order of the Special Court
dated 16.2.2000, whereunder the relief sought to set aside
the Minutes of the Order dated 5.7.1995 in Miscellaneous
Petition No.30 of 1995 and the Order dated 24.9.1997 in
Miscellaneous Application No. 280 of 1997 earlier passed by
the Special Court insofar as it related to the appellant and
the premises of the appellant situated at Regent Chambers,
Nariman Point, Bombay-400 021, on 2nd floor bearing unit
Nos. 3 & 4 admeasuring approximately 2030 sq. ft. came to
be rejected.
The relevant facts insofar as they are necessary for a
proper appreciation of the issues raised before us, need a
brief mention before adverting to the grievance of the
parties. M/s Dhanraj Mills Private Ltd., the 5th respondent
in this appeal, is a notified party under the Act. On the
information furnished by the Income Tax Department that
public money belonging to Banks and Financial Institutions
have been siphoned out into the accounts of the notified
party and which, in turn, came to be successively siphoned
to Kenilworth Investment Company Private Ltd., the 6th
respondent herein, and from them to CIFCO Properties Private
Ltd., CIFCO Finance Ltd. and M/s Champaklal Investments
(Respondents 2, 3, 4 & 6), the Custodian filed Miscellaneous
Petition No. 30 of 1995 against all those respondents.
When the petition reached the stage of hearing by consent of
parties, Minutes of the Order dated 5.7.1995 came to be
filed and recorded as per which, among other things
Kenilworth Investment Company submitted to a decree in
favour of Dhanraj Mills Private Ltd., in a sum of
Rs.11,82,81,316/- with interest @ 20% per annum from 24.4.92
till date of payment and CIFCO Group of Companies and
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Champaklal Investment Company Private Ltd., submitted to a
decree in favour of the 6th respondent and the decretal
debts also stood charged in favour of Dhanraj Mills to
receive payment from Kenilworth Investment.
Clause 7 of the Minutes of the Order dated 5.7.95
declared the ownership of the 3rd respondent herein, in the
premises bearing unit Nos. 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 at Regent
Chambers, Nariman Point, Bombay, in 2nd floor admeasuring
4931 sq. ft and unit No.5 in ground floor admeasuring 451
sq. ft. as well as the residential flat bearing unit No.36
in 3rd floor of Anita Apartment in Mount Pleasant Road at
Malabar Hills admeasuring 575 sq. ft. Clauses 8, 12 and 13
on which both parties fixed their hopes read as follows:
8. The Respondent No.2 declares that one Western
Press Pvt. Ltd. (formerly known as Jayakrishna Pvt. Ltd.)
is the owner of the premises admeasuring approximately 2030
sq. ft. and described in Schedule A-3 hereunder written.
The said premises are used and occupied by the Respondent
Nos. 2 and 3 along with the said Western Press Pvt. Ltd.
The Respondent Nos. 2 and 3 declare and undertake to this
Honble Court that they will not claim any right, title or
interest in the said premises mentioned in Schedule A-3.
The respondent Nos. 2, 3 and the said Western Press Pvt.
Ltd. undertake to this Honble Court that pending
satisfaction of the decree the Respondent Nos. 2, 3 and the
said Western Press Pvt. Ltd. will not alienate, encumber
or part with possession of or create third party right,
title or interest in the said property described in Schedule
A-3 hereto or any part thereof, till the decree herein is
marked satisfied.
12. In the event of the decree herein becoming
executable against the Respondent Nos.1 and 2 or 3, the
Respondent No.2 and the Companies listed in Schedule C as
well as the said Western Press Pvt. Ltd. and the said
employee occupying the flat as per Schedule A-2, undertake
to this Honble Court that on sale in execution being held
and sanctioned by this Honble Court the Respondent No.2 and
the said companies mentioned in the Schedule B hereto shall
hand over the possession of the premises mentioned in
Schedule A-1 to A-3 hereto to the purchaser.
13. The companies mentioned in the Schedules B and
C and the said employee will within one week from today
file separate affidavits declaring that they have no right,
title or interest in the premises mentioned in Schedules
A-1 to A-3, hereto as also giving the undertaking to this
Honble Court to vacate the premises in their occupation in
the event happening as stated above.
Pursuant to the above, the Chairman of the
appellant-company Mr. Milan Dalal filed on 28.7.95 an
affidavit of undertaking not to alienate, encumber or part
with possession of or create third party right, title or
interest in the aforesaid property of the appellant-
company, till the decree is satisfied and in case of events
happening as provided in Clauses 12 and/or 13 of the Minutes
of the Order further undertaking to vacate the premises in
the occupation of the appellant.
Since there was a default, the Custodian filed
Miscellaneous Application No.280 of 1987 by way of execution
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proceedings against the respondent-companies which suffered
a decree (of course not including or specifically initiating
against the appellant and their property) and the Special
Court passed an order on 24.9.97 appointing a Receiver to
take possession and to dispose of the properties by sale.
At this stage, apparently apprehending similar course of
proceedings for execution by the Custodian against the
properties in question of the appellant, Miscellaneous
Application No.2 of 1999 came to be filed for the reliefs
noticed supra. The sum and substance of the claim in this
application of the appellant was (a) that the appellant-
company is the absolute owner of the properties in question,
(b) that they have not created any interest in the
properties in favour of the 3rd respondent herein, (c) that
the undertaking given on behalf of the appellant was wrong
and unauthorised, (d) that no such undertaking could have
been given by any one else in respect of the property of the
appellant unless duly authorised by the company (e) that at
no point of time the appellant was a party to any of the
proceedings or it was represented by any counsel or was ever
been put on notice of the orders to be passed affecting its
rights/interest, (f) that the appellant is neither a
judgment debtor nor it claims through a judgment debtor, (g)
that it neither agreed to give guarantee nor stand as surety
for the payment of the debts of the judgment debtor and
consequently the properties of the appellant cannot be
attached or proceeded against in any manner for realisation
of the dues under the decree in question.
The Special Court, after a careful consideration of
the respective contentions of parties, held that the Minutes
of the order dated 5.7.95 covered also units 3 & 4 belonging
to the appellant and it would be open to the Custodian to
prefer an appropriate application for execution, as was done
in the case of units 2, 5 to 8 as and when required. The
Special Court also held that the said two units of the
appellant also constituted an integral part of the
compromise. As regards the ground based upon want of
registration, the Special Court was of the view that the
minutes of the order stood excepted from compulsory
registration and that in any event in view of Section 41 of
the Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act, 1960 it stood
also exempted, having regard to the fact that the interests
of the appellant in the properties being merely that of a
tenant in co-partnership housing society and the right to
occupy the flats flowing only from the ownership of shares,
the same cannot be considered to be immovable property.
Consequently, the application of the appellant came to be
dismissed. Hence, this appeal.
Dr. Rajeev Dhavan, learned senior counsel appearing
for the appellant, strenuously contended, while reiterating
the stand taken before the Special Court, that the appellant
is an utter third party to the proceedings before the
Special Court it being neither a notified party nor claiming
through any of the parties and, as a fact, also not having
been arrayed as one such, its properties cannot be made
liable for the recovery of the dues in question. It is also
further contended that neither the appellant gave any
undertaking nor it stood as surety for the realisation of
the amount secured in the minutes of the order dated 5.7.95
and, therefore, cannot be said to have encumbered its
property by any specific thing in writing and the
undertaking, if any, given on its behalf is not only an
unauthorised one not binding upon the appellant but that it
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has been given also under a mistaken view of facts and,
therefore, the same could not adversely affect the rights of
the appellant. Argued the learned senior counsel further
that in the absence of registration as envisaged under
Section 17 (1) (b) of the Registration Act, it cannot in any
manner affect the rights of the appellant in immovable
property and that the appellants property cannot be
proceeded against. Shri Shiraz Rustomjee, learned counsel
for the Custodian, while drawing inspiration from the
reasoning of the Special Court, endeavoured to sustain the
conclusions arrived at by the Special Court. It is the
contention of the learned counsel that the very object of
the consent order passed on 5.7.95 was to effectively ensure
the recovery of the dues and it is too late in the day to
retrace steps to disown responsibility and liability in this
regard. The case on hand is said to squarely fall under
Section 17 (2) (vi) of the Registration Act and that the
attempt of the appellant is to somehow delay indefinitely
realisation of the dues. The learned counsel on either side
also elaborately invited our attention to portions of the
order under challenge to substantiate their respective
stand.
We have carefully considered the submissions of the
learned counsel appearing on either side. In our view,
apart from the lack of merits in the challenge made to the
well considered order of the Special Court, the appellants
case does not merit countenance in our hands for another
reason also. The parties before the Special Court having
consented and invited the Court to pass the order dated
5.7.95 and obtained benefits by giving undertaking of their
own and on behalf of the appellant-company, ought not to be
allowed to take shelter under technicalities to overreach
the Court, which believed the parties and counsel appearing
on their behalf and acted in good faith by accepting the
terms suggested by the parties themselves.
The questions, which loom large for consideration in
this appeal, are as to what are the legal consequences
flowing from the consent order of the Special Court dated
5.7.95 and the affidavit filed by Mr. Milan Dalal on
28.7.95 as the Chairman of the appellant-company? and do
they suffer any legal infirmities such as want of
registration, want of authority and mistake of fact so as to
render them either non- est or unenforceable? If it is held
that the consent order dated 5.7.95 and the affidavit dated
28.7.95 are binding upon not only the parties but upon the
appellant, as one who has undertook to abide by certain
consequences and such an undertaking was given to secure any
or some benefit for any one or more of the parties from the
Court, the facts such as the appellant not being itself a
party in the proceedings before the Court and it was only a
third party and that the property in question is of the
appellant and that the appellant is neither a notified party
nor one claiming through such notified party or the judgment
debtor pale into insignificance and are rendered wholly
irrelevant in determining the actual issues arising.
The Minutes of the order dated 5.7.95 came to be
passed as a consent order, decreeing for the recovery of
Rs.11,82,81,316/- with interest @ 20% and the manner in
which such decree has to be satisfied as well as
proportionate liabilities, inter se, of the parties thereto.
The permission for payment in instalments sought for has
been countenanced. Clauses 8, 12 and 13 make it abundantly
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clear that Respondents 2 and 3 before the Special Court
declared that they will not claim any right, title or
interest in the premises in question (Schedule A3
properties) and Respondents 2 and 3 before the Special Court
as well as the appellant undertook to the Special Court, not
to alienate, encumber or part with possession of or create
third party right, title or interest in or over the Schedule
A3 properties or any part thereof pending satisfaction of
the decree passed therein. The consent decretal order
further stipulated that in the event of the decree becoming
executable the Companies including the appellant undertook
to hand over possession of the properties mentioned in
Schedules A1 to A3 to the purchaser, on the sale being held
and sanctioned by the Special Court. In carrying out the
directions contained in the above consent decretal order,
Mr. Milan B. Dalal, Chairman of the appellant-company,
filed the required affidavit of undertaking dated 28.7.95.
In the said affidavit of undertaking, while affirming the
factum of ownership of Western Press Pvt. Ltd., to the
property in question and noticing the factual position that
the said property is being used and occupied by M/s CIFCO
Ltd. and CIFCO Finance Ltd., it has been stated in
unmistakable terms in paragraphs 2 and 3 as follows:-
2. In terms of the Minutes of the order dated 5th
July, 1995, passed by the Honble Special Court, Western
Press Pvt. Ltd., do hereby undertake that not to alienate,
encumber or part with possession of or create third party
right, title or interest in the aforesaid premises till the
decree is marked satisfied.
3. On behalf of the Company, I hereby undertake to
this Honble Court that in the events happening as provided
in Clauses 12 and 13 of the said Minutes, the company
undertake to vacate the premises in their occupation.
Though for fixing liability as such the mere fact that
the judgment debtor companies and the appellant-company
being part of the same group of companies completely
controlled by Dalal family and its group concerns may not be
sufficient as such, the said factual information indicating
that the cluster of companies is a mere cloak for these
groups will be a just and relevant piece of material in
appreciating the foul play and attempts on the part of the
Directors of the appellant and their opportunistic stands
adopted, as it suits them, from time to time, not only
before the Court below but even in this Court. Mr.Milan B.
Dalal has been found to be and seems to have been openly
allowed by others without demur to liberally play the
multifarious roles he held in different companies of Dalal
group families. Though the authority of Milan B. Dalal as
Chairman of the appellant-company was seriously questioned
by another Director of the appellant at a later stage, the
rejoinder filed in this appeal by the very same Milan B.
Dalal, in support of the stand of the appellant- company
patently betrays the sinister motive of all those who are
fighting under the shadow of the appellant-company harping
upon some technicalities of law or otherwise unmindful of
the fact realities starring at them, who cannot disown their
own responsibilities too in the matter. We are constrained
to observe that both the parties as well as their advisers
who have been responsible for the respective roles they seem
to have played in misguiding and misleading the Special
Court to pass a particular order, assuring the existence of
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certain obvious facts, ought not to be allowed to either
retrace their steps or derive, retain or enjoy the fruits of
their own machinations and manipulations by now assuming
different postures and asserting facts which they
deliberately withheld from the Court and were found to be
giving a different picture altogether when such orders came
to be passed. This condemnable conduct of the parties
alone, in our view, is more than sufficient to reject their
claims now made in desperateness under the cover of
pretended and invented illegalities.
On a careful consideration of the events which
occurred before the Special Court which made the said Court
to believe the existence of certain facts on the
representations made before it, the orders passed and the
affidavits found and noticed to have been filed from time to
time before the Special Court, the Special Court could not
be either faulted for its conclusions or that the specific
findings arrived at that the consent order dated 5.7.95
taken together with the affidavit of undertaking dated
28.7.95 covered within its fold the property of the
appellant-company in question for being proceeded against in
execution of the decree passed for recovering the amount due
as declared in the consent order dated 5.7.95, could not be
said to be vitiated in any manner warranting our
interference. Consequently, it would be permissible for the
Custodian to proceed against the property comprised in Units
3 and 4 belonging to the appellant- company also by means of
an appropriate execution application as and when he choose
to do so. The plea of lack of authority in Milan B. Dalal
to bind the appellant needs mention only to be rejected even
for the simple reason that the Directors of the
appellant-company, who allowed Milan B. Dalal a free hand
as Chairman of the appellant- company to deal with the
matter, cannot be permitted to blow hot and cold as it suits
them. Equally untenable is the pretended mistake of fact
which, in our view, is nothing but a self-serving attempt
found to be made as a pure afterthought to wriggle out of
the lawful commitments made and retrace the position in
which the Directors of the company have allowed themselves
to be landed in. So far as the challenge based on the want
of registration under Section 17(1) (b) of the Registration
Act is concerned, we are of the view that the same is
neither genuine nor has any merit whatsoever or capable of
being countenanced at our hands. The reasons assigned by
the Court below to reject the said plea cannot be considered
to be either unjust or untenable. Even otherwise, a careful
analysis and consideration of the consent order dated 5.7.95
as also the affidavit of undertaking dated 28.7.95 made in
this case disclose no intention, per se, to purport or
operate to create, declare, assign, limit or extinguish in
present or in future any right, title or interest, whether
vested or contingent in the immovable property of the value
of Rs. 100 and upwards. On the other hand, the terms as
well as the tenure of the above proceedings make clear the
dominant intention and purpose of them to be merely an
undertaking given by a third party to the proceedings to the
Court to abide by a particular course of action if the
judgment-debtor fails to satisfy the decree. Even in cases
of such default by the judgment-debtor in this case, the
undertaking as well as the consent decree only enables the
Custodian to initiate execution proceedings against the
properties in question of the appellant- company and it is
only in the event of such sale, the question of coming into
existence any document which would require compulsory
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registration under Section 17 of the Act would arise and not
at this stage. In substance and effect what has been
undertaken to the Court is to preserve the properties intact
for being proceeded against in a given eventuality and
deliver peaceful possession of the property in the event of
such action becoming necessary. Declaration or undertaking
conceding such liberty of action cannot be construed to fall
under clause (b) of Section 17 (1) of the Registration Act.
It is important to note that both the consent decree as well
as the undertaking do not, by itself, envisage the execution
of any deed or document also to create, declare, assign,
limit or extinguish, whether in present or in future any
right, title or interest whether vested or contingent of the
value of Rs.100 or upwards in immovable property. The
consent order as also the undertaking given in this case
would squarely fall within the exempted category of ‘any
decree or order of the Court envisaged under Section 17 (2)
(vi) and take it outside the excepted category of cases for
the simple reason that it does not deal with, as such, any
immovable property envisaged in the manner of clause (b) of
Section 17 (1) of the Registration Act. In the first
instance, the decree/order in question does not comprise any
immovable property as such. In any event, in a matter like
the one before us where the consent order which came to be
passed on agreement as well as the undertaking given in
pursuance thereof, was an undertaking to the Court, the
words subject-matter of the suit need not be confined to
the subject-matter of the plaint or subject- matter of the
dispute alone, but would include all that which is made to
become part of the proceedings in order to finally and
effectively settle all the disputes between the parties.
Shorn of all these unnecessary controversies now raised, we
are also of the view that in a case where an item of
property is referred to in an undertaking given to the Court
as one which can be proceeded against in the event of the
judgment- debtor failing to pay the decretal amount within
the stipulated time, the immovable property does not get
ipso facto affected or suffer in anyone of the manner
envisaged under Section 17 (1) so as to require compulsory
registration.
That apart, the provisions contained in Section 145
CPC also would enure to the benefit of the Court as well as
the Custodian to proceed against the appellant in
enforcement of the undertaking given to the Court and there
are no merits in the contentions sought to be urged to the
contrary. For all the reasons stated above, we see no merit
whatsoever in the above appeal. The appeal is dismissed
with costs quantified at Rs.25,000/- to be paid to the
Custodian.