Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 151 of 1998
PETITIONER:
The Kerala State Co-operative Marketing Federation
RESPONDENT:
State Bank of India and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/01/2004
BENCH:
S. N. VARIAVA & H. K. SEMA
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
S. N. VARIAVA, J.
This Appeal is against a Judgment dated 5th October, 1995.
Briefly stated the facts are as follows:
The Appellant received a cheque for Rs. 1,00,000/- from the 3rd
Respondent. The cheque was drawn on the 2nd Respondent Bank. The
Appellant sent the cheque by post along with some other cheques.
However, the cheque in question was stolen in post and was altered to
read as if it was payable to Shri K. Narayhanan. A person calling
himself K. Narayhanan opened a bank account with the 1st Respondent
Bank on 24th December, 1982. The account was opened with a sum
of Rs. 20/-. The customer then asked for a cheque book and was
informed that the minimum balance had to be Rs. 100/- to obtain a
cheque book. He therefore put in Rs. 80/- into the account. He was
then issued a cheque book. Thereafter on 29th December, 1982 the
cheque for Rs. 1,00,000/- was deposited into the account and the
same was collected by the 1st Respondent on behalf of its client. On
30th December, 1982 a sum of Rs. 50,000/- was withdrawn from the
account just prior to stop instructions being received.
The said K. Narayhanan turned out to be a fictitious person. He
was never traced again. The remaining balance of Rs. 50,000/- was
ultimately returned to the Appellant. When the Appellants claimed the
sum of Rs.50,000/- from the 1st Respondent they claimed protection of
Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act.
The Appellant thus filed a Suit for recovery of the sum of Rs.
50,000/-. The Suit was decreed by the trial Court. However, the High
Court has allowed the Appeal of the 1st Respondent, set aside the
decree of the trial Court and dismissed the Suit. Hence this Appeal.
Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act reads as follows:
"131. Non-liability of banker receiving payment of
cheque.- A banker who has in good faith and without
negligence received payment for a customer of a cheque
crossed generally or specially to himself shall not, in case
the title to the cheque proves defective, incur any liability
to the true owner of the cheque by reason only of having
received such payment."
It is thus to be seen that a banker, who encashes a cheque, in respect
of which his client had no title, would become liable in conversion or
for money had and received. However, Section 131 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act protects the banker, provided he has received
payment in good faith and without negligence of a cheque crossed
generally or specially.
In the case of Indian Overseas Bank vs. Bank of Madura Ltd.
reported in (1992) Vol. 75 Company Cases 481, the receiving banker
was held guilty of negligence and lack of good faith inasmuch as it had
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allowed the opening of an account with a small amount and shortly
thereafter, i.e. within 9 days allowed withdrawal of a sum of Rs.
9,500/-. It was held that the opening of the account, the presentation
of the draft and withdrawal of the amount were part of one integral
scheme. The fact that the person who introduced the account holder
had not been examined in the suit was held against the Bank.
In the case of Syndicate Bank vs. United Commercial Bank
reported in (1991) 70 Company Cases 748, it was held that the
Appellant bank had to prove that it had acted in good faith and without
negligence. It was held that the fact that the customer had just
opened the account and had only one transaction with the bank,
namely the encashment of the cheque, showed that the bank had not
acted in good faith and without negligence.
In the case of Brahma vs. Chartered Bank reported in AIR 1956
Calcutta 399, it has been held that the onus of proving "good faith"
and "absence of negligence" is on the banker claiming protection under
Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. It is held that in
deciding whether a collecting banker has or has not been negligent it
becomes necessary to take into consideration many factors such as
the customer, the account and the surrounding circumstances. It is
held that if the cheque is of a large amount, then the bank has to be
more careful unless the customer was a customer of long standing,
good repute and with great personal credit and was one who regularly
deposited and withdrew cheques of large amounts.
The same principles are reiterated in the cases of Central Bank
of India Ltd. v. Gopinathan Nair reported in 1972 Kerala Law Times
518 and Indian Bank vs. Catholic Syrian Bank Ltd. reported in AIR
1981 Madras 129.
This Court has also considered this question in the case of Indian
Overseas Bank vs. Industrial Chain Concern reported in (1990) 1 SCC
484. In this case, on the basis of evidence lead by the bank (evidence
of the Manager and the accountant of the bank) the bank was
exonerated. However, principles which governed such cases were
noted from various decisions. The relevant portion reads as follows:
"9. What is the standard of care to be taken by a bank in
opening an account ? In the Practice and Law of Banking
by H. P. Sheldon, 11th edn., in chapter 5 at page 64 it is
said :
"Before opening an account for a customer who
is not already known to him, a banker should
make proper preliminary inquiries. In particular,
he should obtain references from responsible
persons with regard to the identity, integrity
and reliability of the proposed customer.
If a banker does not act prudently and in
accordance with current banking practice when
obtaining references concerning a proposed
customer, he may later have cause for regret."
10. M. L. Tannan in Banking Law and Practice in India,
18th edn. at page 198 says :
"Before opening a new account, a banker
should take certain precautions and must
ascertain by inquiring from the person wishing
to open the account, if such person is unknown
to the banker, as to his profession or trade as
well as the nature of the account he proposes
to open. By making necessary inquiries from
the references furnished by the new customer,
the banker can easily verify such information
and judge whether or not the person wishing to
open an account is a desirable customer. It is
necessary for a bank to inquire, from
responsible parties, given as references by the
customer, as to the latter’s integrity and
respectability, an omission of which may result
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in serious consequences not only for the banker
concerned, but also for other bankers and the
general public."
11. One of the tests of deciding whether the bank was
negligent, though not always conclusive, is to see whether
the Rules or instructions of the banks were followed or not.
We may accordingly consult those instructions. Ex. B-6
contains the general instructions regarding constituent
accounts for bank. Mark II deals with opening with opening
of accounts. It says :
"Except at large branches where the sub-agent
or accountant may be authorised to open
Current Accounts, no new Current Account
shall be opened without the authority of the
agent manager who is solely responsible for all
Current Accounts being opened in the proper
manner. A written application on the
appropriate from must be submitted and will
be initialled by the agent at the top left corner
after he has satisfied himself of the
respectability of the applicant(s). It is
important that every party must be introduced
to the Bank by a respectable person known to
the Bank, who must normally call at the Bank
and sign in the column specially provided for
the purpose in the account opening form. In all
cases his signature must be verified with the
specimen lodged and attested. The agent or
accountant may introduce constituents to the
Bank provided they are known to him
personally and in such cases he should sign the
application from at the appropriate place in his
personal capacity. When the introduction of
any other member of the staff is accepted, the
agent must invariably make independent
inquiry and record his findings on the account
opening form for future reference if the need
arises ..."
12. Mark IV deals with accounts of proprietary concerns. It
says :
"An individual trading in the name of concern should
fill in Form F.S. 5 and sign it in his personal Name
and also affix his signature on behalf of he concern
as proprietor in the space provided."
If the banker was negligent in following up the references
given at opening of account and subsequently cheques etc.
are collected for the customer paid into that account and
those happened to be of someone else the Bank may be
liable for conversion, unless protected by law. In the
instant case, Sethuraman having been known to the
Manager who gave the introduction, there was no violation
of any instruction or rules.
13. It was held in Commissioners of Taxation v. English,
Scottish and Australian Bank (1920 AC 683), that a
negligence in collection is not a question of negligence in
opening an account, though the circumstances connected
with the opening of an account may shed light on the
question whether there was negligence in collecting a
cheque.
14. In Ladbroke and Co. v. Todd ((1914) 30 TLR 433 :
(1914) 111 LT 43 : 19 Com Cas 256), the plaintiff drew a
cheque and sent it to the payee by post. The letter was
stolen and the thief took it to the defendant, a banker, and
used it for the purpose of opening an account for the
purpose of which he forged the payee’s endorsement. The
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defendant accepted believing him to be the payee. He was
not introduced to the bank and no references were
obtained. The defendant opened the account and the
cheque was specially cleared at the request of the thief,
and he drew out the proceeds on the next day. On the
discovery of the fraud the plaintiff brought an action
against the defendant for conversion. One of the main
questions raised was whether the account having been
opened by payment in all the cheques to be collected the
defendant could be properly regarded as having received
payment for a customer. It was held that as account was
already opened when the cheque was collected, payment
had been received for a customer. The drawer thereupon
sent another cheque to the real payee and took an
assignment of his rights in the stolen cheque and, as
holders of the cheque or alternatively as assignees,
brought an action against the bank to recover the proceeds
collected by the bank as money had and received to their
use. Evidence was given that it was the general practice of
bankers to obtain a satisfactory introduction or reference.
It was held that the banker had acted in good faith, but
was guilty of negligence in not taking reasonable
precautions to safeguard the interests of the true owner of
the cheque and that therefore he had put himself outside
the protection of Section 82 of the Bills of Exchange Act,
1882. Bailhache, J. also said that the banker would have
been entitled to the protection of the section as having
received payment for a customer, but had lost it owing to
his want of due care. It was also held that the relation of
banker and customer began as soon as the first cheque
was handed in to the banker for collection, and not when it
was paid.
15. In Turner v. London and Provincial Bank ((1903) 2
Legal Decisions Affecting Bankers 33 : (1903) XXIV Journal
of Institute of Bankers 220), evidence was admitted as
proof of negligence, that the customer had given a
reference on opening the account and that this was not
followed up."
The principles governing the liability of a collecting banker have
also been extracted in the impugned judgment. They read as follows:
"(1) As a general rule the collecting banker shall be
exposed to his usual liability under common law for
conversion or for money had and received, as against the
’true owner’ of a cheque or a draft, in the event the
customer from whom he collects the cheque or draft has
not title or a defective title.
(2) The banker, however, may claim protection from
such normal liability provided he fulfils strictly the
conditions laid down in S. 131 or S. 131A of the Act and
one of those conditions is that he must have received the
payment in good faith and without negligence.
(3) It is the banker seeking protection who has on his
shoulders the onus of proving that he acted in good faith
and without negligence.
(4) The standard of care to be exercised by the
collecting banker to escape the charge of negligence
depends upon the general practice of bankers which may
go on changing from time to time with the enormous
spread of banking activities and cases decided a few
decades ago may not probably offer an unfailing guidance
in determining the question about negligence today.
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(5) Negligence is a question of fact and what is relevant
in determining the liability of a collecting banker is not his
negligence in opening the account of the customer but
negligence in the collection of the relevant cheque unless,
of course, the opening of the account and depositing of the
cheque in question therein from part and parcel of one
scheme as where the account is opened with the cheque in
question or deposited therein so soon after the opening of
the account as to lead to an inference that the depositing
the cheque and opening the account are interconnected
moves in a integrated plan.
(6) Negligence in opening the account such as failure to
fulfill the procedure for opening an account which is
prescribed by the bank itself or opening an account of an
unknown person or non-existing person or with dubious
introduction may lead to a cogent, though not conclusive,
proof of negligence particularly if the cheque in question
has been deposited in the account soon after the opening
thereof.
(7) The standard of care expected from a banker in
collecting the cheque does not require him to subject the
cheque to a minute and microscopic examination but
disregarding the circumstances about the cheque which on
the face of it give rise to a suspicion may amount to
negligence on the part of the collecting banker.
(8) The question of good faith and negligence is to be
judged from the stand point of the true owner towards
whom the banker owes no contractual duty but the
statutory duty which is created by this section and it is a
price which the banker pays for seeking protection, under
the statute, from the otherwise larger liability he would be
exposed to under common law.
(9) Allegation of contributory negligence against the
paying banker could provide no defence for a collecting
banker who has not collected the amount in good faith and
without negligence."
On the basis of the above law, let us now see whether the 1st
Respondent bank has discharged the burden which lay upon it to show
that it had acted in good faith and without negligence.
The facts narrated hereinabove indicate that the transaction of
opening of the account, depositing the exact amount for being entitled
to receive a cheque book, depositing of the cheque of Rs. 1,00,000/-
and the withdrawal of the sum of Rs. 50,000/- were all part of the
same transaction. All these took place in close proximity to each other.
The 1st Respondent’s Branch Manager gave evidence. From his
evidence it is clear that the person who called himself K. Narayhanan
opened an account on the introduction of an account holder by name
Dharman Panicker. In the Account Opening Form the address is given
only as "Kaniyarath P.O., Kallisseri". Thus an absolutely vague
address was given. The Bank made no enquiries as to the credit
worthiness of the said K. Narayhanan or as to his full address or even
about his telephone number. Thereafter even though initially the
account was opened with only Rs. 20/- the exact amount of Rs. 80/-
was deposited for purposes of receipt of a cheque book. The 1st
Respondent bank does not seem to have put on its guard, even when
a cheque for a very large amount i.e. Rs. 1,00,000/- was deposited
soon thereafter. In cross-examination the Branch Manager admits that
in the Account opening form neither the name nor the occupation of
the person introducing had been filled up. He admits that no enquiry
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was made regarding the nature of business of K. Narayhanan or where
the place of business was. Even after it was found out that that a
cheque had been forged and stop payment notice had been issued, no
enquiry was made by the Bank with the introducer. When asked why
no enquiries were made, the answer given was that the bank has no
responsibility to look into it. Another factor which mitigates against
the 1st Respondent Bank is that it made no attempt to lead the
evidence of the person who had introduced the account holder.
It appears to us that the above mentioned facts discloses that
the 1st Respondent bank has not discharged the burden which lay upon
it to show that it had acted in good faith and without negligence.
In this view of the matter, we are unable to sustain the
impugned Judgment. It is accordingly set aside. The decree of the
trial Court is restored. This Appeal stands disposed of accordingly.
There will be no order as to costs.