Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3827 of 2007
PETITIONER:
M/S PRESTIGE LIGHTS LTD
RESPONDENT:
STATE BANK OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/08/2007
BENCH:
C.K. THAKKER & ALTAMAS KABIR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3827 OF 2007
ARISING OUT OF
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO.9409 OF 2005
C.K. THAKKER, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. The present appeal is directed against the
judgment and order dated March 29, 2005 passed by the
High Court of Uttaranchal at Nainital in Writ Petition No.
293 of 2005 by which the petition filed by the petitioner
(present appellant) was dismissed in limine.
3. To appreciate the controversy, few relevant
facts may be noted.
4. Appellant herein is a Private Limited Company
engaged in manufacturing bulbs, chokes and fittings.
The factory of the appellant is situated at Dhalwala
Industrial Area, Rajpur Road, Dehradun, Uttranchal. In
1992, the appellant obtained a loan of Rs. 85 lakhs from
State Bank of India, Commercial Branch, Radha Palace,
Rajpur Road, Dehradun \026 respondent herein. The
Company mortgaged its land and building with the
respondent-Bank. According to the appellant, till 2001,
the business of the appellant was comparatively good and
it had no problem in depositing the interest accrued
towards credit facilities. In or about 2001-02, however,
because of heavy slump in the market due to arrival of
cheaper Chinese Products, the appellant suffered huge
losses and could not deposit the interest-amount with
the respondent-Bank. The respondent-Bank, therefore,
issued a notice on October 16, 2004 under sub-section
(2) of Section 13 of the Securitization, Reconstruction of
Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest
Act, 2002 (hereinafter referred to "the Act") alleging
therein that the appellant failed to pay a sum of
Rs.87,64,549.42 P. It was stated that the appellant had
created security by equitable mortgage of land, bearing
Khasra No. 550/3 and 550/4 admeasuring 10,036 sq. ft.
situated at village Jagjitpur, Pargana Jwalapur, Tehsil
and District Haridwar. The notice also sought to invoke
personal guarantee given by M.P. Goel, Sudha Goel and
Abhinav Goel. The appellant was called upon to deposit
the amount mentioned in the notice with interest,
expenses and costs within sixty days failing which the
Bank would exercise power under sub-seciton (4) of
Section 13 of the Act. It was also stated that the
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appellant should not transfer by sale, lease or otherwise
the secured assets detailed in Schedule to the notice. The
notice was served on the appellant-Company on October
19, 2004. It is the case of the appellant that it submitted
a representation on October 20, 2004 wherein it was
stated that the appellant had proposed to pay dues of the
Bank after selling the land and building of the Factory. It
was further stated that the appellant had proposed to
regularize assets of the Company as per fixed plan. If the
respondent-Bank would continue working in a healthy
spirit, the appellant was confident that it would be able
to regularize the assets of the Company as per the
proposal. It was also stated that the Bank had a second
charge on the assets of the Company and the dues to be
paid to Uttar Pradesh Financial Corporation were very
small and the substantial sale proceeds of the assets of
the Company would automatically go to the Bank and the
Bank need not take any hasty action by invoking the
provisions of the Act.
5. It may be stated at this stage that it is the case
of the respondent-Bank that it had not received any such
representation said to have been sent by the appellant on
October 20, 2004. According to the appellant-Company,
without considering the representation of the appellant,
dated October 20, 2004, the respondent-Bank in
purported exercise of the power under sub-section (4) of
Section 13 of the Act, threatened the appellant to take
over residential premises of the Directors of the
appellant-Company by a communication, dated February
8, 2005. On March 19, 2005, the respondent-Bank
issued a notice to take over possession of the residential
house of the Director. Being aggrieved by all these illegal
actions and ’dispossession-notice’, the appellant
approached the High Court of Uttranchal at Nainital on
March 24, 2005 by invoking writ jurisdiction of the Court
under Article 226 of the Constitution. The High Court,
however, dismissed the petition in limine on March 29,
2005 which constrained the Company to challenge the
action of the respondent-Bank in this Court under Article
136 of the Constitution.
6. It appears that a mention was made to the
Court on April 28, 2005 and the Court ordered Registry
to list the matter ’as notified’. Stay of dispossession was,
however, granted. On May 6, 2005, notice was issued
and interim relief was granted on certain terms and
conditions which we will refer to at an appropriate stage.
Affidavits and further affidavits were filed and the Court
directed the Registry to place the matter for final hearing.
Accordingly, the matter has been placed before us.
7. We have heard the learned counsel for the
parties.
8. The learned counsel for the appellant
contended that the action of the respondent-Bank was
wholly illegal, unlawful and against the provisions of the
Act. It was also in violation of the law laid down by this
Court in Mardia Chemicals Ltd. v. Union of India & Ors.,
(2004) 4 SCC 311. It was submitted that once a
representation was made, it was incumbent on the
respondent-Bank to consider the same, to extend an
opportunity to the appellant to enable the Company to
pay-off the amount and in case of rejection of such
representation, to inform the appellant about such
decision by recording reasons. Nothing had been done
by the respondent. The orders passed by the Bank,
therefore, were totally illegal and unsustainable. A
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grievance was also made that the respondent-Bank
which is ’State’ within the meaning of Article 12 of the
Constitution has acted arbitrarily and unreasonably. It
ought to have appreciated the difficulties of the appellant
that it was doing business in manufacturing electric
goods and because of availability of Chinese Products at
a cheaper rate, it suffered huge losses. Had the
respondent-Bank shown sympathetic attitude and
adopted constructive approach, the situation could have
been avoided and the appellant- Company would have
been able to pay-off the dues. No such opportunity had
been granted and high-handed action was taken. A
complaint was also made that the High Court was wholly
wrong in summarily dismissing the writ petition when
several questions of power, authority and jurisdiction of
respondent-Bank had been raised which required a
detailed judgment. It was stated at the time of hearing
that even now the appellant is prepared to pay the
amount if time is granted by the respondent-Bank. But if
the respondent-Bank is not prepared to show grace, this
Court may set aside the action of the Bank by granting
time and allowing the appellant-Company to pay-off the
entire amount.
9. The learned counsel for the respondent-Bank,
on the other hand, supported the action taken by the
Bank and the order passed by the High Court. It was
stated that there was suppression of material facts by the
appellant and it has not come with clean hands. Only on
that preliminary ground, this Court may decline to hear
the appellant and may refuse to enter into merits. It was
also submitted that no representation dated October 20,
2004 said to have been made by the appellant had been
received by the respondent-Bank. According to the
counsel, it was an after-thought and only with a view to
take benefit of observations in Mardia Chemicals, such a
case had been put forward by the appellant-Company.
Grievance was also raised that apart from failure to pay
regular instalments, the appellant-Company has not
complied with the order passed by this Court. This is,
therefore, not a fit case to exercise discretionary
jurisdiction in favour of the Company and the appeal
deserves to be dismissed.
10. Having considered the rival contentions of the
parties and going through the records and proceedings of
the case, in our view, no case has been made out by the
appellant-Company to claim any relief from this Court. It
is clear from what is stated above that the appellant took
a credit facility from the respondent-Bank to the extent of
Rs. 85 lakhs. It is not disputed even by the appellant
that no regular re-payment of loan was made by the
Company. The respondent-Bank was, therefore, within
its power to take appropriate action in consonance with
law. Accordingly, a notice came to be issued on October
16, 2004 which was received by the Company on October
19, 2004. So far as the representation said to have been
made by the appellant on October 20, 2004 is concerned,
it is the case of the respondent-Bank that no such
representation was made by the appellant and such
stand was taken belatedly by the Company with a view to
get benefit of Mardia Chemicals. In this connection our
attention has been invited by the learned counsel for the
respondent-Bank to an affidavit-in-reply, dated
September 5, 2005 filed by D.K. Rudola, Chief Manager
wherein it was stated that though the appellant had
asserted that it submitted a representation on October
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20, 2004 in terms of Section 13(3A) of the Act, the Bank
had never received the ’alleged representation’. A letter
dated October 20, 2004 written by the appellant-
Company had been received by the Bank. That letter,
however, did not refer to the notice and was not in reply
to the notice issued by the Bank. There was no reference
of notice in the said letter. In fact, it was expressly stated
that the letter was with reference to ’telephonic talks’
held on that day, i.e. on October 20, 2004.
11. The Counsel also referred to an order passed
by this Court on October 24, 2005 which inter alia read
as under\027
"It is stated by learned counsel appearing for
the respondent, as supported by the counter
affidavit that the alleged representation stated
to have been made at page 55 to the
respondent by the petitioner had never in fact
been received by the respondent. No rejoinder
has been filed. The statement made in the
counter affidavit therefore till today stands
unrebutted.
One week’s time granted to file rejoinder
affidavit".
(emphasis supplied)
12. It is interesting to note that though the
affidavit-in-reply was filed on September 5, 2005,
wherein it was explicitly stated that no representation
dated October 20, 2004 said to have been submitted by
the appellant had been received by the respondent-Bank,
there was no rejoinder by the appellant-Company. The
said fact was pressed in service by the respondent-Bank
at the time of subsequent hearing of the case and was
reflected in the order dated October 24, 2004 extracted
hereinabove. It was only thereafter that a rejoinder
affidavit was filed on November 5, 2005 in which it was
asserted by the Company that the representation dated
October 20, 2004 was made and was sent through
courier "First Flight Couriers Ltd." a reputed courier
company having its office at 414-415, 2nd Floor, Sahara
Trade Centre, Faizabad Road, Lucknow. Thus, there is a
word against word. Moreover, this Court cannot be
oblivious of the fact that it was only after the order dated
October 24, 2005 passed by this Court that in rejoinder-
affidavit filed in November, 2005, such a statement was
made. The respondent-Bank, in the circumstances
appears to be right in contending that in spite of notice
issued under Section 13 (2) of the Act, neither payment
was made nor a representation was submitted by the
Company and only with a view to take benefit of Mardia
Chemicals, as an afterthought it was alleged that in
pursuance of notice issued by the respondent-Bank
under sub-section (2) of Section 13 of the Act, the
appellant-Company had forwarded a representation, it
ought to have been considered by the respondent-Bank,
a decision ought to have taken thereon by recording
reasons and such decision ought to have been intimated
to the appellant-Company.
13. It is pertinent to note at this stage that in
Mardia Chemicals, constitutional validity of certain
provisions of the Act had been challenged. Section 13
was one of them. It was contended that no adjudicatory
mechanism for resolution of disputes had been provided
by the Legislature under the said section and the
provision was, therefore, ultra vires and unconstitutional.
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14. Partly accepting the argument of the
petitioner, this Court stated;
"45. In the background we have indicated
above, we may consider as to what forums or
remedies are available to the borrower to
ventilate his grievance. The purpose of serving
a notice upon the borrower under sub-section
(2) of Section 13 of the Act is, that a reply may
be submitted by the borrower explaining the
reasons as to why measures may or may not
be taken under sub-section (4) of Section 13
in case of non-compliance of notice within 60
days. The creditor must apply its mind to the
objections raised in reply to such notice and
an internal mechanism must be particularly
evolved to consider such objections raised in
the reply to the notice. There may be some
meaningful consideration of the objections
raised rather than to ritually reject them and
proceed to take drastic measures under sub-
section (4) of Section 13 of the Act. Once such
a duty is envisaged on the part of the creditor
it would only be conducive to the principles of
fairness on the part of the banks and financial
institutions in dealing with their borrowers to
apprise them of the reason for not accepting
the objections or points raised in reply to the
notice served upon them before proceeding to
take measures under sub-section (4) of Section
13. Such reasons, overruling the objections of
the borrower, must also be communicated to
the borrower by the secured creditor. It will
only be in fulfillment of a requirement of
reasonableness and fairness in the dealings of
institutional financing which is so important
from the point of view of the economy of the
country and would serve the purpose in the
growth of a healthy economy. It would
certainly provide guidance to the secured
debtors in general in conducting the affairs in
a manner that they may not be found
defaulting and being made liable for the
unsavoury steps contained under sub-section
(4) of Section 13. At the same time, more
importantly we must make it clear
unequivocally that communication of the
reasons not accepting the objections taken by
the secured borrower may not be taken to give
an occasion to resort to such proceedings
which are not permissible under the provisions
of the Act. But communication of reasons not
to accept the objections of the borrower, would
certainly be for the purpose of his knowledge
which would be a step forward towards his
right to know as to why his objections have not
been accepted by the secured creditor who
intends to resort to harsh steps of taking over
the management/business of viz. secured
assets without intervention of the court. Such
person in respect of whom steps under Section
13(4) of the Act are likely to be taken cannot be
denied the right to know the reason of non-
acceptance and of his objections. It is true,
as per the provisions under the Act, he may
not be entitled to challenge the reasons
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communicated or the likely action of the
secured creditor at that point of time unless
his right to approach the Debt Recovery
Tribunal as provided under Section 17 of the
Act matures on any measure having been
taken under sub-section (4) of Section 13 of
the Act.
46. We are holding that it is necessary to
communicate the reasons for not accepting the
objections raised by the borrower in reply to
notice under Section 13(2) of the Act more
particularly for the reason that normally in the
event of non-compliance with notice, the party
giving notice approaches the court to seek
redressal but in the present case, in view of
Section 13 (1) of the Act the creditor is
empowered to enforce the security himself
without intervention of the Court. Therefore, it
goes with logic and reason that he may be
checked to communicate the reason for not
accepting the objections, if raised and before
he takes the measures like taking over
possession of the secured assets etc".
The Court concluded;
"80. \005 \005 \005 \005 \005 \005 \005 \005
1. Under sub-section (2) of Section 13 it is
incumbent upon the secured creditor to serve
60 days notice before proceeding to take any of
the measures as provided under sub-section
(4) of Section 13 of the Act. After service of
notice, if the borrower raises any objection or
places facts for consideration of the secured
creditor, such reply to the notice must be
considered with due application of mind and
the reasons for not accepting the objections,
howsoever brief they may be, must be
communicated to the borrower. In connection
with this conclusion we have already held a
discussion in the earlier part of the judgment.
The reasons so communicated shall only be for
the purposes of the information/knowledge of
the borrower without giving rise to any right to
approach the Debt Recovery Tribunal under
Section 17 of the Act, at that stage".
15. It may also be stated that after the above
decision of this Court, Parliament amended the Act and
after sub-section (3) of Section 13, sub-section (3-A) was
inserted by Act 30 of 2004 with effect from November 11,
2004. The said provision reads thus;
(3A) If, on receipt of the notice under sub-
section (2), the borrower makes any
representation or raises any objection, the
secured creditor shall consider such
representation or objection and if the secured
creditor comes to the conclusion that such
representation or objection is not acceptable or
tenable, he shall communicate within one
week of receipt of such representation or
objection the reasons for non-acceptance of
the representation or objection to the
borrower:
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Provided that the reasons so
communicated or the likely action of the
secured creditor at the stage of communication
of reasons shall not confer any right upon the
borrower to prefer an application to the Debts
Recovery Tribunal under section 17 or the
Court of District Judge under section 17A."
16. The submission of the learned counsel for the
respondent-Bank appears to be well-founded that taking
clue from the decision in Mardia Chemicals, the
appellant-Company, as an afterthought alleged that it
had made a representation in pursuance of notice issued
by the respondent-Bank under Section 13(2) of the Act.
17. But, there is an additional factor also as to
why we should not exercise discretionary and equitable
jurisdiction in favour of the appellant. It is contended by
the learned counsel for the respondent-Bank that having
obtained interim order and benefit thereunder from this
Court, the appellant-Bank has not paid even a pie. The
appellant is thus in contempt of the said order. The
Company has never challenged the condition as to
payment of amount as directed by this Court. Thus, on
the one hand, it had taken benefit of the order of interim
relief and on the other hand, did not comply with it and
failed to pay instalments as directed. Neither it raised
any grievance against the condition as to payment of
instalments nor made any application to the Court for
modification of the condition. It continued to enjoy the
benefit of stay ignoring and defying the term as to
payment of money. The Company is thus in contempt of
the order of this Court, has impeded the course of justice
and has no right of hearing till it has purged itself of the
contempt.
18. As already noted, stay of dispossession was
granted by this Court on mention being made on April
28, 2005. The matter was then notified for admission-
hearing on May 6, 2005. A two-Judge Bench of which
one of us was a party (C.K. Thakker, J.) passed the
following order;
"Permission to file additional documents
is granted.
Issue notice.
Subject to the petitioner’s depositing an
amount of Rs.20 lakhs per month in this
Court, there will be stay of the operation of the
impugned order. First of such payment shall
be made by 6th June, 2005 and the
subsequent payments by 6th of each
succeeding month. In default of payment of
any one instalment, the stay will stand
vacated."
19. From the above order, it is clear that notice
was issued to the other side and stay granted earlier was
ordered to continue on the appellant’s depositing a sum
of Rs. 20 lakhs per month in this Court. It was also
made clear that first of such payment should be made by
6th June, 2005 and subsequent payments by 6th of each
succeeding month. A default clause was also introduced
in the order that if such payment would not be made, the
stay would stand vacated. It is an admitted fact that the
order has not been complied with and no payment as per
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the order has been made by the appellant-Company to
the respondent-Bank. The said fact has also been
reflected in the order of this Court passed on July 25,
2007, wherein it was stated;
"It is recorded that the stay is
transgressed by reason of the admitted non-
compliance with the order dated 6th May,
2005".
20. The original order was of May, 2005 and the
matter was heard finally in May, 2007. Thus, about two
years had passed and the order has been thwarted with
impunity. In our opinion, therefore, the learned counsel
for the respondent-Bank is right that such appellant does
not deserve sympathy from the Court.
21. An order passed by a competent court \026interim
or final- has to be obeyed without any reservation. If
such order is disobeyed or not complied with, the Court
may refuse the party violating such order to hear him on
merits. We are not unmindful of the situation that
refusal to hear a party to the proceeding on merits is a
’drastic step’ and such a serious penalty should not be
imposed on him except in grave and extraordinary
situations, but some time such an action is needed in the
larger interest of justice when a party obtaining interim
relief intentionally and deliberately flouts such order by
not abiding the terms and conditions on which a relief is
granted by the Court in his favour.
22. In the leading case of Hadkinson v. Hadkinson,
(1952) 2 All ER 567, the custody of a child was given to
the mother by an interim order of the court, but she was
directed not to remove the child out of jurisdiction of the
Court without the prior permission of the Court. In spite
of the order, the mother removed the child to Australia
without prior permission of the Court. On a summons by
father, the Court directed the mother to return the child
within the jurisdiction of the Court. Meanwhile, an
appeal was filed by the mother against that order. A
preliminary objection was raised by the father that as the
appellant was in contempt, she was not entitled to be
heard on merits.
23. Upholding the contention and speaking for the
majority, Romer, L.J. observed;
"I am clearly of the opinion that the
mother was not entitled, in view of her
continuing contempt of court, to prosecute the
present appeal and that she will not be entitled
to be heard in support of it until she had taken
the first and essential step towards purging
her contempt of returning the child within the
jurisdiction.
24. In a concurring judgment, Denning, L.J. also
stated;
"The present case is a good example of a
case where the disobedience of the party
impedes the course of justice. So long as this
boy remains in Australia, it is impossible for
this court to enforce its orders in respect of
him. No good reason is shown why he should
not be returned to this country so as to be
within the jurisdiction of this Court. He should
be returned before counsel is heard on the
merits of this case, so that, whatever order is
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made, this court will be able to enforce it. I am
prepared to accept the view that in the first
instance the mother acted in ignorance of the
order, but nevertheless, once she came to
know of it, she ought to have put the matter
right by bringing the boy back. Until the boy
is returned, we must decline to hear her
appeal."
(emphasis supplied)
25. That, however, does not mean that in each and
every case in which a party has violated an interim order
has no right to be heard at all. Nor the court will refuse
to hear him in all circumstances. The normal rule is that
an application by a party will not be entertained until he
has purged himself of the contempt. There are, however,
certain exceptions to this rule. One of such exceptions is
that the party may appeal with a view to setting aside the
order on which his alleged contempt is founded. A
person against whom contempt is alleged must be heard
in support of the submission that having regard to the
meaning and intendment of the order which he is said to
have disobeyed, his actions did not constitute a breach of
it.
26. In Gorden v. Gorden, (1904) 73 LJ 41 : 90 LT
597 : 16 Dig 90, 1128, Cozens Hardy, L.J. put the
principle succinctly in the following words;
"\005.I desire expressly to limit my
judgment to a case in which the [party in
contempt] is saying that the order complained
of is outside the jurisdiction of the court, as
distinguished from the case of an order which,
although it is within the jurisdiction of the
court, ought not, it is said, to have been
made."
27. Lord Denning made the following pertinent
observations in Hadkinson;
"It is a strong thing for a court to refuse
to hear a party to a cause and it is only to be
justified by grave considerations of public
policy. It is step which a court will only take
when the contempt itself impedes the course of
justice and there is no other effective means of
securing his compliance."
28. There is still one more reason why the
appellant-Company should be denied equitable relief
under Article 136 of the Constitution. According the
respondent-Bank, the appellant has not come with clean
hands before the Bank. It has suppressed and concealed
material facts from the Court.
29. It is not in dispute that when the loan was
taken by the appellant-Company from the respondent-
Bank, certain immovable properties including residential
premises of the Director of the Company had been
mortgaged with the Bank and a document to that effect
had been executed in favour of the Bank. The
owner/Director Sudha Goel had filed an affidavit dated
February 16, 1996. In the said affidavit, it was, inter alia,
stated as under:
"That I/We declare and say that I/We
have not created any mortgage charge, or
encumbrance of any kind or nature
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whatsoever on or in respect of the said
property. I/We further declare and say that the
said property is free from all encumbrances,
claims or demands of any kind or nature
whatsoever. \005
\005I/We shall not sell, charge, encumbrance,
lease, dispose off or deal with any of my/our
property in any manner whatsoever until such
time all the liabilities under the various
facilities granted to M/s. Prestige Lights Ltd.
has been paid in full by the said M/s. Prestige
Lights Ltd. and the deponent has got the
discharge confirmed in writing".
30. In spite of the above declaration, undertaking
and affidavit, encumbrance has been created by the
deponent and the Company over the property in respect
of which such undertaking has been furnished.
31. It was also alleged by the respondent-Bank
that the appellant-Company had shifted machinery to
other place and stock statements were not supplied to
the respondent-Bank. On August 4, 2004, the Central
Excise and Custom Officials attached the Plant and
Machinery of the Company for recovery of its dues. On
August 25, 2004, Uttar Pradesh Financial Corporation
issued a notice under Section 29 of the State Financial
Corporation Act, 1951 for taking over physical possession
of the assets of the appellant-Company. On May 16, 2005
a collusive suit was got filed by one Yashpal in Haridwar
Court wherein the plaintiff had asserted that he was the
tenant of Sudha Goel in respect of mortgaged property in
question and he should not be dispossessed. A summons
of the said suit was issued to the respondent-Bank. On
May 24, 2005, the respondent-Bank received another
summons from a Court that one Vijendra Singh Tyagi
claimed himself to be the tenant of the aforesaid
mortgaged premises.
32. It is thus clear that though the appellant-
Company had approached the High Court under Article
226 of the Constitution, it had not candidly stated all the
facts to the Court. The High Court is exercising
discretionary and extraordinary jurisdiction under Article
226 of the Constitution. Over and above, a Court of Law
is also a Court of Equity. It is, therefore, of utmost
necessity that when a party approaches a High Court, he
must place all the facts before the Court without any
reservation. If there is suppression of material facts on
the part of the applicant or twisted facts have been
placed before the Court, the Writ Court may refuse to
entertain the petition and dismiss it without entering into
merits of the matter.
33. The object underlying the above principle has
been succinctly stated by Scrutton, L.J., in R v.
Kensington Income Tax Commissioners, [(1917) 1 KB 486 :
86 LJ KB 257 : 116 LT 136], in the following words:
"(I)t has been for many years the rule of
the Court, and one which it is of the greatest
importance to maintain, that when an
applicant comes to the Court to obtain relief on
an ex parte statement he should made a full
and fair disclosure of all the material facts\027
facts, not law. He must not misstate the law if
he can help it\027the Court is supposed to
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know the law. But it knows nothing about
the facts, and the applicant must state fully
and fairly the facts, and the penalty by which
the Court enforces that obligation is that if it
finds out that the facts have not been fully and
fairly stated to it, the Court will set aside, any
action which it has taken on the faith of the
imperfect statement". (emphasis supplied)
34. It is well settled that a prerogative remedy is
not a matter of course. In exercising extraordinary power,
therefore, a Writ Court will indeed bear in mind the
conduct of the party who is invoking such jurisdiction. If
the applicant does not disclose full facts or suppresses
relevant materials or is otherwise guilty of misleading the
Court, the Court may dismiss the action without
adjudicating the matter. The rule has been evolved in
larger public interest to deter unscrupulous litigants
from abusing the process of Court by deceiving it. The
very basis of the writ jurisdiction rests in disclosure of
true, complete and correct facts. If the material facts are
not candidly stated or are suppressed or are distorted,
the very functioning of the writ courts would become
impossible.
35. In the case on hand, several facts had been
suppressed by the appellant-Company. Collusive action
has been taken with a view to deprive the respondent-
Bank from realizing legal and legitimate dues to which it
was otherwise entitled. The Company had never disclosed
that it had created third party’s interests in the property
mortgaged with the Bank. It had also shifted machinery
and materials without informing the respondent-Bank
prejudicially affecting the interest of the Bank. It has
created tenancy or third party’s right over the property
mortgaged with the Bank. All these allegations are
relevant when such petitioner comes before the Court
and prays for discretionary and equitable relief. In our
judgment, the submission of the respondent-Bank is
well-founded that appellant is not entitled to ask for an
extraordinary remedy under Article 226 of the
Constitution from the High Court as also equitable
remedy from this Court under Article 136 of the
Constitution. A party, whose hands are soiled, cannot
hold the writ of the Court. We, therefore, hold that the
High Court was not in error in refusing relief to the
appellant-Company.
36. For the foregoing reasons, we hold that by
dismissing the petition in limine, the High Court has
neither committed an error of law nor of jurisdiction. The
appellant-Company is not entitled to any relief. Though
the respondent-Bank is right in submitting that the
appellant has suppressed material facts from this Court
as also that it has not complied with interim order
passed by the Court and it has, therefore, no right to
claim hearing on merits, we have considered the merits of
the matter also and we are of the considered view that no
case has been made out for interference with the action
taken by the respondent-Bank or the order passed by the
High Court.
37. The appeal, therefore, deserves to be dismissed
and is accordingly dismissed with costs.