Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
CASE NO.:
Appeal (crl.) 949 of 2001
PETITIONER:
PUNJAB & SINDH BANK
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VINKAR SAHAKARI BANK LTD AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/09/2001
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & S.N. Variava
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
This case involves a queer situation when a Pay
Order was dishonoured by the drawer bank. The holder
thereof (Punjab and Singh Bank) filed a complaint under
Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,1881 (for
short the Act). The drawer bank and its officials have
been arraigned as accused in the complaint. But a single
Judge of the High Court of Bombay quashed the complaint
mainly on the premise that the instrument (described as the
pay order) is not a cheque. The Punjab & Sindh Bank has
filed this appeal in challenge of the aforesaid order of
the High Court. Besides the premise stated above learned
single Judge of the High Court adopted two more grounds for
quashing the complaint. One among them is that even
assuming that the instrument is a cheque it was crossed and
hence the complainant-bank should only have collected the
amount and remitted the same to the account of the person
shown as payee in the instrument. The other is, the
complainant was not a holder in due course inasmuch as no
endorsement was made on the instrument in the manner
prescribed under Section 50 of the Act and hence the
complainant has no locus standi to file the complaint.
The short facts leading to the filing of the complaint
are these:
The first accused in the complaint is a co-operative
bank. It drew the Pay Order on 18.12.1992 in a sum of
Rs.48.40 lacs, the relevant inscriptions of which are the
following: Payees account only - To pay Punjab & Sindh
Bank M/s. Poise Leasing and Finance Company Ltd. or
order. According to the appellant the said Pay Order was
got assigned to the complainant-bank from M/s. Poise
Leasing and Finance Company Ltd. When the instrument was
presented for clearance before the first accused bank on
18.12.1992 it was returned with the remarks funds
uncleared. It was again presented on 6.1.1993 and then it
was returned dishonoured with the remarks drawee banks
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
funds with our bank i.e. sponsoring bank, are
insufficient. This was followed by sending a notice to the
first accused bank as contemplated in Section 138 of the
Act. Since the amount was not paid within the statutory
period a complaint was filed on 9.3.1993.
On process being served on the respondents a writ
petition was filed by them before the High Court of Bombay
for quashing the criminal proceedings. But the High Court
dismissed the writ petition on 1.7.1999 without prejudice
to the rights of the accused to make a plea before the
trial court for discharging the accused. Thereafter the
accused moved the trial magistrate for recalling the
process on the ground, inter alia, that the instrument is
not a cheque as per Section 138 of the Act. The magistrate
dismissed the aforesaid plea as per his order dated
29.1.2000. When the accused filed a second writ petition
in the High Court in challenge of the aforesaid order of
the magistrate the learned single Judge allowing the said
writ petition passed the impugned order.
The first question raised is whether the instrument
which is described by both sides as a Pay Order is a
cheque within the meaning of Section 138 of the Act. Mr.
Shekar Naphde, learned senior counsel who argued for some
of the respondents contended that the Pay Order is only a
draft issued by the bank and it may at best be a promissory
note and is not a cheque.
For deciding the said question we have to know what is
a cheque. Section 6 of the Act defines a cheque as this:
A cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker
and not expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand.
Now we have to look at the definition of Bill of exchange.
It is contained in Section 5 of the Act. The first
paragraph of this section is enough for the purpose of this
case and hence it is extracted below:
A bill of exchange is an instrument in
writing containing an unconditional order,
signed by the maker, directing a certain
person to pay a certain sum of money only
to, or to the order of, a certain person or
to the bearer of the instrument.
The maker or the drawer of a Bill of Exchange must
direct a certain person to pay a particular sum of money.
This is the quintessence of a Bill of Exchange. Learned
senior counsel for the respondent contended that in every
Bill of exchange there must necessarily be three parties,
the maker, the payee and the person to whom direction is
given to pay. As a draft or a pay order contains only two
persons, i.e. the drawer and the payee, it is only an
instrument promising to pay a certain sum of money,
according to the learned counsel. He made an endeavour to
show that a draft may at best be a promissory note but the
bid made by him did not succeed as it is a difficult task
to bring the draft or a pay order, as in this case, within
the purview of the definition of promissory note in Section
4 of the Act. The indispensable postulate for a promissory
note is that there should be an unconditional undertaking
to pay a certain sum by the drawer. Such an undertaking
cannot be read out from the impugned instrument. At any
rate the instrument involved in this case is closer to a
bill of exchange because of the unconditional order of its
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
maker to the person concerned to pay a certain sum.
The postulate in Section 5 of the Act that the Bill of
Exchange shall contain an unconditional order directing a
certain person to pay need not necessarily refer to a
third person. Such a certain person could as well be
the bank which has drawn the bill of exchange. So long as
the instrument is in the possession of a holder or a holder
in due course such instrument would operate as a bill of
exchange even if the drawer and the drawee happened to be
the same person or banking institution.
In this context a reference to Section 85A of the Act
is of advantage. We may point out that the said section
falls within Chapter VII under the title Of Discharge from
liability on notes, bills and cheques. Section 85A deals
with drafts drawn by one branch of a bank on another branch
of the same bank. The section says that where any draft,
that is an order to pay money, drawn by one office of a
bank upon another office of the same bank for a sum of
money payable to order on demand, purports to be indorsed
by or on behalf of the payee, the bank is discharged by
payment in due course. It is evident that the section
renders such draft a negotiable instrument.
Section 131A, which was introduced in the statute by
Act 33 of 1947, makes all the provisions for crossing of
cheques applicable to the drafts also. That section says:
The provisions of this Chapter shall apply to any draft,
as defined in section 85A, as if the draft were a cheque.
Learned counsel for the first respondent contended that the
said section is more in favour of the position that a draft
is otherwise not a cheque and it is declared to be a cheque
only for the limited purpose of Chapter XIV which deals
with crossed cheques. We are unable to agree with the
said contention that Section 131A is intended to limit the
operation of a draft as a cheque only for crossing
purposes. In our view, the said section is intended to
widen the scope of crossed drafts as to contain all
incidences of a crossed cheque. This is for the purpose of
foreclosing a possibility of holding the view that draft
cannot be crossed.
Even if it is possible to construe the draft either as
a promissory note or as a Bill of Exchange, law has given
the option to the holder to treat it as he chooses. This
can be discerned from Section 17 of the Act which says
where an instrument may be construed either as a
promissory note or bill of exchange, the holder may at his
election treat it as either and the instrument shall be
thenceforward treated accordingly. This means once the
holder, which in this case is the complainant-bank, has
elected to treat the instrument as a cheque it cannot but
be treated as a cheque thereafter. This is an
irretrievable corollary of exercising such an election by
the holder himself.
House of Lords had to consider whether a bankers
draft payable to order on demand addressed by one branch of
a bank to another branch of the same bank, in the wake of
Section 82 of the Bills of Exchange Act 1882. While
holding that such a draft is not a cheque within the
meaning of Sections 60 and 82 of the said Act Lord Lindley
made the following observations in Capital and Counties
Bank vs. Gordon (1903 AC 240):
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
But I agree with the Court of Appeal in
thinking that the bank, which is both drawer
and drawee of these instruments, is not
entitled to treat them as bills of exchange
as defined in s.3 of the Bills of exchange
Act, although a holder may sue the bank upon
them, and treat them either as bills of
exchange or as promissory notes.
The said observation was followed by a Division Bench
of the Patna High Court in Bibi Kazmi Begum vs. Lachman Lal
Sao and ors., (AIR 1930 Patna 239). In that case, the
trial court took the view that when the drawer and the
drawee are the same person the instrument drawn would not
become a Bill of Exchange. The Patna High Court held that
even though such an instrument might not become a bill of
exchange between the drawer and the drawee when both were
the same person it is well established that the holder of
the instrument may treat it as a bill of exchange.
Later, a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court in
Birbhum Central Co-operative Bank Ltd. vs. Pioneer Bank
Ltd. (AIR 1956 Calcutta 615), even without reference to the
aforementioned observations, adopted the same view.
Chakravartti, C.J., speaking for the Division Bench has
stated thus:
It is well settled that a bankers draft is
a bill of exchange and as such it is a
negotiable instrument. The issue of a draft
is regarded in banking practice as a matter
of purchase and ordinarily the relationship
between the holder of a Demand Draft and the
bank issuing it is that of debtor and
creditor. The holder of the draft is a
creditor and his remedy is on the draft.
In the matter of the Palai Central Bank Ltd. (AIR 1962
Kerala 210), P.T. Raman Nayar, J. (as the learned Chief
Justice then was) made a survey of the relevant provisions
and the case law and then made the following observations:
However that might be, there is no denying
that a demand draft is nothing more or less
than a negotiable instrument governed by the
provisions of the Negotiable Instruments
Act; and on the face of it, the obligations
it creates are nothing more than ordinary
debts.
We are of the opinion that the High Courts have taken
the correct view in the above decisions. However,
Mr. Shekar Naphde, learned senior counsel for the
respondents, invited our attention to the decision of a
single Judge of the Bombay High Court in Maturi
Sanyasilingam vs. The Exchange Bank of India and Africa
Ltd. (AIR 1948 Bombay 1) wherein it was held that the
demand draft issued by the branch of a bank to its head
office or vice-versa is not a cheque nor a bill of
exchange. But learned single Judge expressed the opinion
that a demand draft may be a bill of exchange if it is
issued by one bank drawn on another. The said observation
was made in the wake of the contention that the collecting
bank could claim protection under Section 131 of the Act.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
The said decision of the Bombay High Court cannot hold good
because the Negotiable Instruments Act was amended by
incorporating Section 131A in the said Act.
That apart, learned single Judge while relying on the
decisions of the House of Lords in Capital and Counties
Bank vs. Gordon (supra) restricted himself to the former
limb of the observation therein. It is in the latter limb
that the House of Lords said that when the draft is in
possession of a holder the instrument can be treated as
bill of exchange.
We therefore dissent from the view adopted by the
learned single Judge in the impugned judgment that the pay
order is not a cheque.
The second premise of the learned single Judge that
since the pay order was a crossed instrument the
complainant-bank could have only collected the amount and
remitted the proceeds to the account of the payee. The
said view could not be supported by the learned counsel for
the respondents. Hence it is unnecessary for us to dwell
into that.
The third ground for quashing the complaint is that
the complainant was not a holder in due course in the
absence of an endorsement made on the instrument in the
manner prescribed under section 50 of the Act. This ground
was adopted by the learned single Judge without regard to
certain relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 142 of the Act envisages a complaint to be
made in writing either by the payee or the holder in due
course of the cheque, as the case may be. Section 8 of the
Act defines holder as any person entitled in his own name
to the possession of the cheque and to receive or recover
the amount due thereon from the parties thereto. We have
no doubt that complainant-bank was well within its right to
possess the cheque and to receive or recover the amount
covered by the instrument. Holder in due course means a
person who for consideration became the possessor of a
cheque if payable to bearer before the amount became
payable. (vide Sec.9).
In this context reference has to be made to Section
118(g) of the Act which contains a mandate that until the
contrary is proved the holder of a negotiable instrument
shall be presumed to be a holder in due course. Thus there
is no escape for the court from drawing such presumption.
It is undisputed that the complainant-company is the
holder of the instrument on its own right. As such it
could be a holder in due course also until the concerned
party adduces evidence to rebut the presumption. It is of
course open to the respondents to rebut the presumption in
the trial but till then the High Court could not say that
the complainant is not a holder in due course at all.
For the aforesaid reasons we allow this appeal and set
aside the impugned judgment. The trial shall now proceed
to reach the final judgment without any more delay.
J
[ K.T. Thomas ]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
J
[ S.N. Variava ]
September 17, 2001.