Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (crl.) 592 of 2007
PETITIONER:
N. RANGACHARI
RESPONDENT:
BHARAT SANCHAR NIGAM LTD
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/04/2007
BENCH:
TARUN CHATTERJEE & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO 592 OF 2007
(Arising out of SLP (Cri.) No. 1844 of 2006)
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Heard both sides.
3. On behalf of the Data Access (India) Limited, two
cheques were issued to the respondent \026 Bharat Sanchar
Nigam Limited (hereinafter referred to as, "B.S.N.L."). The
cheques were dated 31.8.2004. The cheques were duly
presented by the B.S.N.L. but were dishonoured for
insufficiency of funds. B.S.N.L. thereupon issued requisite
notices calling upon the Data Access (India) Limited to pay the
amounts due under the cheques. The payments not having
been made, B.S.N.L. filed a compliant under Section 138 of the
Negotiable Instruments Act.
4. In the complaint, B.S.N.L. alleged that the cheques
were issued to it by the Data Access (India) Limited in
discharge of a pre-existing liability based on the business
transactions between the companies. The appellant herein
and respondent No. 2 in the complaint were the Directors of
respondent No. 1 Company and they were in charge of and
responsible for the conduct of the business of Data Access
(India) Limited. The relevant statement in the complaint read:
"That accused No. 1 is a company incorporated
under the Companies Act. Accused Nos. 2 and
3 are its Directors. They are incharge of and
responsible to accused No.1 for conduct of
business of accused No. 1 Company. They are
jointly and severally liable for the acts of
accused No. 1."
The complaint also stated that in response to the notice issued
by B.S.N.L., a reply had been sent claiming that the appellant
was no longer the Chairman or Director of Data Access (India)
Limited and accused No. 2 was not aware of the issuance of
the cheques. These statements were false and by not keeping
sufficient funds in their account and failing to pay the cheque
amount on the service of the notice, all the accused committed
an offence as contemplated in Section 138 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act and they were liable to be proceeded against.
The complaint also asserted that all the accused were guilty of
the offence in terms of Section 138 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act and were liable to be punished therefor.
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5. The appellant herein moved the High Court under
Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure seeking the
quashing of the complaint insofar as it related to him. The
appellant pleaded that he was nominated as Honorary
Chairman without any remuneration, sitting fee etc. by the
investors and promoters of the Company of Data Access (India)
Limited on 24.7.2004 and he was designated as Chairman of
the Company. Being a nominated Chairman and holding an
Honorary post in the Company, he was never assigned with
any of the Company’s financial or other business activities.
He was the Chairman for name sake and was never entrusted
with any job or business or constituted a signing authority.
He had resigned effectively on 26.8.2004 when problems
between the promoters and investors of Data Access (India)
Limited started developing. The two cheques that were the
subject matter of the complaint, were dated 31.8.2004, after
the appellant had effectively resigned. He had not signed
those cheques. He was not liable. According to him, the Data
Access (India) Limited had two Managing Directors at the
relevant time and they were the ones who were invested with
substantial powers of management of the Company and as
such the Managing directors were involved in the day to day
affairs of the Company and not himself, who had only acted
for a short period as Honorary Chairman. The complaint did
not contain adequate averments to justify initiation of a
criminal proceeding against him and hence the complaint was
liable to be quashed.
6. On behalf of B.S.N.L., it was contended that the
Petition under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
was not maintainable and that the questions sought to be
raised by the appellant were questions that had to be decided
at the trial. The complaint disclosed sufficient materials
justifying the commencement of the proceedings against Data
Access (India) Limited and the other two accused including the
appellant. The appellant who was the Chairman of the Data
Access (India) Limited was incharge of and responsible to the
Company for the conduct of its business, and no occasion had
arisen for quashing the complaint. The question whether a
person is incharge of and responsible for the conduct of the
business of the Company, is to be adjudged during the trial on
the basis of the materials to be placed on record by the
parties. That could not be decided at the stage of a motion
under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
7. The High Court, on going through the complaint in
the context of Sections 138 and 141 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act, came to the conclusion that the court could
not decide the pleas put forward by the appellant in dealing
with a petition filed under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and that the defences sought to be put forward by
the accused had to be established at the trial. Taking the view
that the complaint disclosed adequate material for proceeding
against the appellant in terms of Section 138 read with
Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, the High Court
refused to accede to the prayer of the appellant and dismissed
the application filed under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. Challenging the said order of the High Court, this
appeal is filed by the appellant.
8. Learned Senior Counsel for the appellant brought to
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our notice a number of decisions of this Court on what should
constitute sufficient allegations in a complaint under Section
138 of the Negotiable Instrument Act when a prosecution is
sought against a Company and its officers, in terms of Section
141 of the said Act. Learned counsel placed considerable
reliance on the decision of this Court in S.M.S.
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. Vs. Neeta Bhalla & Anr. [(2005) 8
S.C.C. 89]. Therein, this Court observed:
"In the present case, we are concerned with
criminal, liability on account of dishonour of
cheque. It primarily falls on the drawer
company and is extended to officers of the
Company. The normal rule in the cases
involving criminal liability is against vicarious
liability, that is, no one is to be held criminally
liable for an act of another. This normal rule
is, however, subject to exception on account of
specific provision being made in statutes
extending liability to others. Section 141 of the
Act is an instance of specific provision which
in case an offence under Section 138 is
committed by a Company, extends criminal
liability for dishonour of cheque to officers of
the Company. Section 141 contains conditions
which have to be satisfied before the liability
can be extended to officers of a company.
Since the provision creates criminal liability,
the conditions have to be strictly complied
with. The conditions are intended to ensure
that a person who is sought to be made
vicariously liable for an offence of which the
principal accused is the Company, had a role
to play in relation to the incriminating act and
further that such a person should know what
is attributed to him to make him liable. In
other words, persons who had nothing to do
with the matter need not be roped in. A
company being a juristic person, all its deeds
and functions are result of acts of others.
Therefore, officers of a Company who are
responsible for acts done in the name of the
Company are sought to be made personally
liable for acts which result in criminal action
being taken against the Company. It makes
every person who at the time the offence was
committed, was incharge of and was
responsible to the Company for the conduct of
business of the Company, as well as the
Company, liable for the offence. The proviso to
the sub-section contains an escape route for
persons who are able to prove that the offence
was committed without their knowledge or that
they had exercised all due diligence to prevent
commission of the offence."
After referring to a number of earlier decisions, this Court
summed up the legal position and laid down:
"It is necessary to specifically aver in a
complaint under Section 141 that at the time
the offence was committed, the person accused
was in charge of, and responsible for the
conduct of business of the company. This
averment is an essential requirement of
Section 141 and has to be made in a
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complaint. Without this averment being made
in a complaint, the requirements of Section
141 cannot be said to be satisfied."
Dealing with the question whether a Director of a Company
would be deemed to be in charge of, or responsible to, the
Company for conduct of the business of the Company and,
therefore, deemed to be guilty of the offence unless he proves
to the contrary, this Court held:
"The answer to question posed in sub-
para (b) has to be in negative. Merely
being a director of a company is not
sufficient to make the person liable under
Section 141 of the Act. A director in a
company cannot be deemed to be in
charge of and responsible to the company
for conduct of its business. The
requirement of Section 141 is that the
person sought to be made liable should
be in charge of and responsible for the
conduct of the business of the company
at the relevant time. This has to be
averred as a fact as there is no deemed
liability of a director in such cases."
Answering the question whether even in the absence of
averments the signatory of the cheque or the managing
directors could be taken to be in charge of the Company and
responsible to the Company for the conduct of its business
and could be proceeded against, the answer was as follows:
"The answer to question (c) has to be in
affirmative. The question notes that the
Managing Director or Joint Managing
Director would be admittedly in charge of
the company and responsible to the
company for conduct of its business.
When that is so, holders of such positions
in a company become liable under
Section 141 of the Act. By virtue of the
office they hold as Managing Director or
Joint Managing Director, these persons
are in charge of and responsible for the
conduct of business of the company.
Therefore, they get covered under Section
141. So far as signatory of a cheque
which is dishonoured is concerned, he is
clearly responsible for the incriminating
act and will be covered under Sub-section
(2) of Section 141."
9. It was submitted by learned Senior Counsel for the
appellant that the allegations in the complaint against the
appellant did not contain sufficient averments to justify the
issue of process to the appellant and therefore the complaint
ought to be quashed. Learned counsel also relied heavily on
the decision in Saroj Kumar Poddar Vs. State (NCT of Delhi)
& Anr. [2007 (2) SCALE 36], wherein two learned judges of
this Court held that the complaint in that case did not satisfy
the requirements of Section 138 read with Section 141 of the
Negotiable Instruments Act. Learned counsel referred us to
paragraphs 13 to 18 of that decision with particular reference
to the allegations in the complaint in that case and submitted
that in the case on hand also, the complaint was along the
same lines and read in the context of that decision, it must be
held that no adequate material was disclosed for proceeding
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against the appellant on the complaint.
10. Learned counsel for B.S.N.L., on the other hand,
submitted that the complaint contained adequate averments
justifying the initiation of prosecution against the appellant for
the offence under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments
Act and the High Court was right in refusing to quash the
complaint under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure leaving it to the appellant to establish his defence at
the trial. Learned counsel relied on S.V. Muzumdar & Ors.
Vs. Gujarat State Fertilizer Co. Ltd. & Anr. [(2005) 4 S.C.C
173] in support. In his reply, learned Senior Counsel for the
appellant referred to Pepsi Foods Ltd. & Anr. Vs. Special
Judicial Magistrate & Ors. [(1998) 5 S.C.C. 749] and
submitted that an application of mind was needed before the
issuance of process and on the averments in the complaint in
this case no process could have been issued against the
appellant. He therefore reiterated that the complaint was
liable to be quashed.
11. The Law Merchant treated negotiable instruments
as instruments that oiled the wheels of commerce and
facilitated quick and prompt deals and transactions. This
continues to be the position as now recognized by legislation,
though possibly a change is taking place with the advent of
credit cards, debit cards and so on. It was said that negotiable
instruments are merely instruments of credit, readily
convertible into money and easily passable from one hand to
another. With expanding commerce, growing demand for
money could not be met by mere supply of coins and the
instrument of credit took the function of money which they
represented and thus became by degrees, articles of traffic. A
man dared not dishonour his own acceptance of a bill of
exchange, lest his credit be shaken in the commercial world.
The Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 is understood to be an
enactment codifying the law on the subject. A cheque is an
acknowledged bill of exchange that is readily accepted in lieu
of payment of money and it is negotiable.
12. By the fall in moral standards, even these
negotiable instruments like cheques issued, started losing
their creditability by not being honoured on presentment. It
was found that an action in the civil court for collection of the
proceeds of a negotiable instrument like a cheque tarried, thus
defeating the very purpose of recognizing a negotiable
instrument as a speedy vehicle of commerce. It was in that
context that Chapter VII was inserted in the Negotiable
Instruments Act by the Banking, Public Financial Institutions
and Negotiable Instruments Laws (Amendment) Act, 1988 (Act
66 of 1988) with effect from 1.4.1989. The said Act inserted
Sections 138 and 142 in the Negotiable Instruments Act. The
objects and reasons for inserting the Chapter was:
"to enhance the acceptability of cheques in
settlement of liabilities by making the drawer
liable for penalties in case of bouncing of
cheques due to insufficiency of funds in the
accounts or for the reason that it exceeds the
arrangements made by the drawer, with
adequate safeguards to prevent harassment of
honest drawers"
While Section 138 made a person criminally liable on
dishonour of a cheque for insufficiency of funds or the
circumstances referred to in the Section and on the conditions
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mentioned therein, Section 141 laid down a special provision
in respect of issuance of cheques by companies and
commission of offences by companies under Section 138 of the
Negotiable Instruments Act. Therein, it was provided that if
the person committing an offence under Section 138 of the Act
was a company, every person who at the time the offence was
committed, was in charge of and was responsible to the
company for the conduct of the business of the company as
well as the company, shall be deemed to be guilty of the
offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly. The scope of Section 141 has been
authoritatively discussed in the decision in S.M.S.
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (supra) binding on us and there is no
scope for redefining it in this case. Suffice it to say, that a
prosecution could be launched not only against the company
on behalf of which the cheque issued has been dishonoured,
but it could also be initiated against every person who at the
time the offence was committed, was in charge of and was
responsible for the conduct of the business of the company.
In fact, Section 141 deems such persons to be guilty of such
offence, liable to be proceeded against and punished for the
offence, leaving it to the person concerned, to prove that the
offence was committed by the company without his knowledge
or that he has exercised due diligence to prevent the
commission of the offence. Sub-section (2) of Section 141 also
roped in Directors, Managers, Secretaries or other officers of
the company, if it was proved that the offence was committed
with their consent or connivance.
13. A Company, though a legal entity, cannot act by
itself but can only act through its directors. Normally, the
Board of Directors act for and on behalf of the company. This
is clear from Section 291 of the Companies Act which provides
that subject to the provisions of that Act, the Board of
Directors of a Company shall be entitled to exercise all such
powers and to do all such acts and things as the Company is
authorized to exercise and do. Palmer described the position
thus:
"A company can only act by agents, and
usually the persons by whom it acts and by
whom the business of the company is carried
on or superintended are termed directors\005 \005.
\005"
It is further stated in Palmer that:
"Directors are, in the eye of the law, agents of
the company for which they act, and the
general principles of the law of principal and
agent regulate in most respects the
relationship of the company and its directors."
The above two passages were quoted with approval in R.K.
Dalmia & ors. Vs. The Delhi Administration [(1963) 1 S.C.R.
253 at page 300]. In Guide to the Companies Act by A.
Ramaiya (Sixteenth Edition) this position is summed up thus:
"All the powers of management of the affairs of
the company are vested in the Board of
Directors. The Board thus becomes the
working organ of the company. In their
domain of power, there can be no interference,
not even by shareholders. The directors as a
board are exclusively empowered to manage
and are exclusively responsible for that
management."
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Therefore, a person in the commercial world having a
transaction with a company is entitled to presume that the
directors of the company are incharge of the affairs of the
company. If any restrictions on their powers are placed by the
memorandum or articles of the company, it is for the directors
to establish it at the trial. It is in that context that Section
141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act provides that when the
offender is a company, every person, who at the time when the
offence was committed was incharge of and was responsible to
the company for the conduct of the business of the company,
shall also be deemed to be guilty of the offence along with the
company. It appears to us that an allegation in the complaint
that the named accused are directors of the company itself
would usher in the element of their acting for and on behalf of
the company and of their being incharge of the company. In
Gower and Davies’ Principles of Modern Company Law
(Seventh Edition), the theory behind the idea of identification
is traced as follows:
"It is possible to find in the cases varying
formulations of the under-lying principle, and
the most recent definitions suggest that the
courts are prepared today to give the rule of
attribution based on identification a somewhat
broader scope. In the original formulation in
the Lennard’s Carrying Company case Lord
Haldane based identification on a person "who
is really the directing mind and will of the
corporation, the very ego and centre of the
personality of the corporation". Recently,
however, such an approach has been
castigated by the Privy Council through Lord
Hoffmann in the Meridian Global case as a
misleading "general metaphysic of companies".
The true question in each case was who as a
matter of construction of the statute in
question, or presumably other rule of law, is to
be regarded as the controller of the company
for the purpose of the identification rule."
But as has already been noticed, the decision in S.M.S.
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (supra) binding on us, has postulated
that a director in a company cannot be deemed to be incharge
of and responsible to the company for the conduct of his
business in the context of Section 141 of the Act. Bound as
we are by that decision, no further discussion on this aspect
appears to be warranted.
14. A person normally having business or commercial
dealings with a company, would satisfy himself about its
creditworthiness and reliability by looking at its promoters and
Board of Directors and the nature and extent of its business
and its Memorandum or Articles of Association. Other than
that, he may not be aware of the arrangements within the
company in regard to its management, daily routine, etc.
Therefore, when a cheque issued to him by the company is
dishonoured, he is expected only to be aware generally of who
are incharge of the affairs of the company. It is not reasonable
to expect him to know whether the person who signed the
cheque was instructed to do so or whether he has been
deprived of his authority to do so when he actually signed the
cheque. Those are matters peculiarly within the knowledge of
the company and those in charge of it. So, all that a payee of
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a cheque that is dishonoured can be expected to allege is that
the persons named in the complaint are in charge of its affairs.
The Directors are prima facie in that position.
15. In fact, in an earlier decision in Monaben
Ketanbhai Shah & Anr. Vs. State of Gujarat & Ors. [(2004) 7
S.C.C. 15], two learned judges of this Court noticed that:
"The laudable object of preventing bouncing of
cheques and sustaining the credibility of
commercial transactions resulting in
enactment of Sections 138 and 141 has to be
borne in mind."
16. In the light of the ratio in S.M.S. Pharmaceuticals
Ltd. (supra) what is to be looked into is whether in the
complaint, in addition to asserting that the appellant and
another are the directors of the company, it is further alleged
that they are incharge of and responsible to the company for
the conduct of the business of the company. We find that
such an allegation is clearly made in the complaint which we
have quoted above. Learned Senior Counsel for the appellant
argued that in Saroj Kumar Poddar case (supra), this Court
had found the complaint unsustainable only for the reason
that there was no specific averment that at the time of
issuance of the cheque that was dishonoured, the persons
named in the complaint were incharge of the affairs of the
company. With great respect, we see no warrant for assuming
such a position in the context of the binding ratio in S.M.S.
Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (supra) and in view of the position of
the Directors in a company as explained above.
17. In Rajesh Bajaj Vs. State of NCT of Delhi & Ors.
[A.I.R. 1999 S.C. 1216], two learned judges of this Court
stated:
"For quashing an FIR (a step which is
permitted only in extremely rare cases) the
information in the complaint must be so bereft
of even the basic facts which are absolutely
necessary for making out the offence."
In M/s Bilakchand Gyanchand Co. Vs. A Chinnaswami
[A.I.R. 1999 S.C. 2182], this Court held that a complaint
under Section 138 of the Act was not liable to be quashed on
the ground that the notice as contemplated by Section 138 of
the Act was addressed to the Director of the Company at its
office address and not to the Company itself. The view was
reiterated in Rajneesh Aggarwal Vs. Amit J. Bhalla [A.I.R.
2001 S.C. 518]. These decisions indicate that too technical an
approach on the sufficiency of notice and the contents of the
complaint is not warranted in the context of the purpose
sought to be achieved by the introduction of Sections 138 and
141 of the Act.
18. In the case on hand, reading the complaint as a
whole, it is clear that the allegations in the complaint are that
at the time at which the two dishonoured cheques were issued
by the company, the appellant and another were the Directors
of the company and were incharge of the affairs of the
company. It is not proper to split hairs in reading the
complaint so as to come to a conclusion that the allegations as
a whole are not sufficient to show that at the relevant point of
time the appellant and the other are not alleged to be persons
incharge of the affairs of the company. Obviously, the
complaint refers to the point of time when the two cheques
were issued, their presentment, dishonour and failure to pay
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in spite of notice of dishonour. We have no hesitation in
overruling the argument in that behalf by the learned Senior
Counsel for the appellant.
19. We think that, in the circumstances, the High Court
has rightly come to the conclusion that it is not a fit case for
exercise of jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure for quashing the complaint. In fact, an
advertence to Sections 138 and 141 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act shows that on the other elements of an
offence under Section 138 being satisfied, the burden is on the
Board of Directors or the Officers incharge of the affairs of the
company to show that they are not liable to be convicted. Any
restriction on their power or existence of any special
circumstance that makes them not liable is something that is
peculiarly within their knowledge and it is for them to
establish at the trial such a restriction or to show that at the
relevant time they were not incharge of the affairs of the
company. Reading the complaint as a whole, we are satisfied
that it is a case where the contentions sought to be raised by
the appellant can only be dealt with after the conclusion of the
trial.
20. We therefore affirm the decision of the High Court
and dismiss this appeal. We make it clear that the case will
have to be tried and disposed of in accordance with law on the
basis of the evidence that may be adduced.