Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4092 of 1998
PETITIONER:
Purushottam & Anr
RESPONDENT:
Shivraj Fine Art Litho Works & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/2006
BENCH:
B.P. Singh & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. Singh, J
In this appeal by special leave the plaintiffs are the appellants.
Their suit against original defendant nos. 1 to 9 was decreed for the
sum of Rs.8,92,815.14 by the Third Joint Civil Judge (Senior
Division), Nagpur in Civil Suit No.52 of 1980. On appeal by original
defendants 1 to 3, the High Court in First Appeal No.35 of 1988 by its
impugned judgment and order of April 10, 1992 allowed the appeal
and dismissed the suit holding that in view of the provisions of
Section 69(2) of the Indian Patnership Act (hereinafter referred to as
the ’Act’), the suit was not maintainable, the plaintiff being an
unregistered firm.
The facts of the case are not in dispute and they will be briefly
noticed. Plaintiff No.1, Pursushottam, carried on business as whole-
sale paper merchant in the name and style of "Dinesh Paper Mart" as
the sole proprietor of the concern. During this period he supplied
goods to the defendant firm namely \026 Shivraj Fine Arts Litho Works,
a firm registered under the Partnership Act. Defendants 2 to 9 were
the partners of the said firm. In the year 1974, Special Civil Suit No.9
of 1974 was filed for dissolution of the defendant partnership firm and
for rendering of accounts. During the pendency of the suit a receiver
was appointed initially to take possession of the properties of the firm
and to run the business of the firm. Later joint receivers were
appointed, and it is not in dispute that at the relevant time defendant
No.2 and defendant No.12 were in management of the aforesaid
registered firm \026 respondent No.1 herein as joint receivers.
The aforesaid Purushottam had business dealings with the
respondent No.1 \026 firm. Goods were supplied and payments made
from time to time. It is not in dispute that the amounts due and
payable to the plaintiff No.1, Purushottam were fully paid up as on
March 20, 1974, that is, before the date of appointment of Receiver.
Even after appointment of the Receiver, successive Receivers
purchased goods from Plaintiff No.1, Purushottam, herein for the
business of respondent No.1 \026 firm. A khata was maintained by
plaintiff No.1 \026 Purushottam in which payments made were duly
entered, and at the end of the year the amount outstanding as on
December 31, was carried forward to the next year. The defendant
firm acknowledged their liability to pay the amount entered in the
khata by making an endorsement in the khata. As at the end of the
financial year 1979 a sum of Rs.6,22,713.06 was the balance due from
the defendant firm to plaintiff Purushottam. The plaintiff was also
entitled to interest at the agreed rate of 18% per annum on the balance
outstanding for more than seven days.
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With effect from January 1, 1980 the proprietary \026 firm of
Purushottam (Plaintiff No.1) was taken over by a partnership of which
plaintiff Purushottam was also a partner. The said partnership firm
took over all the assets and liabilities of "Dinesh Paper Mart" and
continued their business in the same name. Though the said
partnership firm came into existence on January 1, 1980, an
application for registration of the firm under the Act was made on
January 14, 1980. While the said application was pending, the instant
suit was filed on March 31, 1980. Later, on November 29, 1980, the
Plaintiff No.2 \026 firm was granted registration under the Act. It would
thus appear that though the newly constituted partnership firm had
applied for registration on January 14, 1980, on the date on which the
suit was filed, that is on March 31, 1980, it was an unregistered firm
and registration was granted later on November 29, 1980. This
therefore, gave rise to the objection urged on behalf of the defendants
relying on Section 69(2) of the Act that the suit by an unregistered
firm was not maintainable to enforce a right arising from a contract.
The High Court took the view relying upon authorities that the
suit was barred by Section 69(2) of the Act, and even if registration
was subsequently granted, that would not cure the defect. Repelling
the argument that in any event Plaintiff No.1, the erstwhile proprietor
may be entitled to enforce his claim, the Court held that once he had
transferred his rights to the partnership which took over all the rights
and liabilities of the proprietary concern, he lost his exclusive right to
recover the amount since that had become an asset of the partnership
firm over which he as a partner had no exclusive right. He, therefore,
did not have any enforceable subsisting claim after the partnership
came into existence, and, therefore, no relief could be granted to him
in his personal capacity as erstwhile proprietor of the concern.
Shri V.A. Mohta, Sr. Advocate, appearing on behalf of the
appellants before us advanced three main submissions. Firstly, he
submitted that once registration is granted, even though after the filing
of the suit, the suit should be held to be maintainable as from the date
on which registration is granted subject to the law of limitation.
Secondly, he submitted that Plaintiff No.1, Purushottam in his
personal capacity could sue the respondent firm for the amount in
question, if the firm of which he was a partner was for reason of non-
registration unable to maintain a suit. Lastly, he submitted that
Section 69(2) of the Act is not attracted to a case where the contract in
question is not with the unregistered firm and for this he relied on the
judgment of this Court in Haldiram Bhujiawala and Anr. Vs. Anand
Kumar Deepak Kumar and Anr. : (2000) 3 SCC 250.
In M/s.Shreeram Finance Corporation Vs. Yasin Khan and
Ors. (1989) 3 SCC 476; it was held by this Court that a suit filed by
the existing partners of the firm after reconstitution was not
maintainable if the newly added partners were not shown as partners
in the Register of Firms under the Act. In that case the suit was filed
in the name of the current partners as on the date of the suit, whose
names were not shown as partners in the Register of Firms maintained
under the Act. It is no doubt true that in the aforesaid decision the bar
was attracted not on account of non-registration of a partnership firm
but on account of the fact that the persons suing had not been shown
in the Register of Firms as partners of the firm. Counsel for the
respondent submitted that Section 69(2) of the Act is mandatory and
unless the conditions specified therein are fulfilled, a suit by a
partnership Firm will be hit by the bar contained in that provision.
The question as to whether the subsequent registration of the
firm would cure the initial defect in the filing of the suit arose for
consideration in D.D.A. Vs. Kochhar Construction Work and Anr.
(1998) 8 SCC 559. This Court held that in view of the clear provision
of the Act it was not possible to subscribe to the view that subsequent
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registration of the firm may cure the initial defect, because the
proceedings were ab initio defective as they could not have been
instituted since the firm in whose name the proceedings were
instituted was not a registered firm on the date of the institution of the
proceedings. This Court also noticed the difference of opinion
amongst the High Courts and concluded thus:-
"Counsel for the respondents, however, invited our
attention to two decisions which take a view that
subsequent registration of the firm can cure the initial
defect provided the registration is before the period of
limitation has run out. Our attention was drawn to
M.S.A. Subramania Mudaliar Vs. East Asiatic Co.
Ltd. and Atmuri Mahalakshmi Vs.Jagadeesh Traders.
However, the High Court of Patna in Laduram
Sagarmal Vs. Jamuna Prasad Chaudhuri and the
High Court of Madras in T. Savariraj Pillai Vs. R.S.S.
Vastrad & Co. take a contrary view and hold that the
suit is incompetent ab initio. We have considered
these decisions, but in the light of the plain language
of Section 69 of the Partnership Act read with Section
20 of the Arbitration Act and in view of the decision
of this Court reported in Shreeram Finance Corpn.
We are clearly of the opinion that proceedings under
Section 20 of the Arbitration Act were ab initio
defective since the firm was not registered and the
subsequent registration of the firm cannot cure that
defect".
The same view was also reiterated in U.P. State Sugar Corporation
Ltd. Vs. Jain Construction Co. And Anr. (2004) 7 SCC 332.
These decisions squarely answer the first submission of Shri
V.A. Mohta. The submission must therefore be rejected.
The second submission urged on behalf of the appellants is also
squarely answered by a judgment of this Court reported in Addanki
Narayanappa and Anr. Vs. Bhaskara Krishnappa (D) & Ors., (1966)
3 SCR 400 This Court held:
"It seems to us that looking to the scheme of the
Indian Act no other view can reasonably be taken.
The whole concept of partnership is to embark upon a
joint venture and for that purpose to bring in as capital
money or even property including immovable
property. Once that is done whatever is brought in
would cease to be the exclusive property of the person
who brought it in. It would be the trading asset of the
partnership in which all the partners would have
interest in proportion to their share in the joint venture
of the business of partnership. The person who
brought it in would, therefore, not be able to claim or
exercise any exclusive right over any property which
he has brought in, much less over any other
partnership property. He would not be able to exercise
this right even to the extent of his share in the
business of the partnership. As already stated, his
right during the subsistence of the partnership is to get
his share of profits from time to time as may be
agreed upon among the partners and after the
dissolution of the partnership or with his retirement
from partnership of the value of his share in the net
partnership assets as on the date of dissolution or
retirement after a deduction of liabilities and prior
charges."
The High Court has, therefore, rightly held that the partnership
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having come into existence of which Plaintiff No.1 was a partner, and
he having transferred to the said partnership all his assets and
liabilities of his proprietary concern, he had no subsisting exclusive
right to enforce the liability against the defendants since such rights as
he had as the proprietor vested in the partnership. He could not
therefore either file a suit or claim any relief in the suit filed by the
partnership asserting his right as the erstwhile proprietor. The second
submission also fails.
This brings us to a consideration of the third submission that the
bar in Section 69(2) of the Act is not attracted to a suit in which the
contract in question is not with the unregistered firm which is the
plaintiff. Counsel placed considerable reliance on the judgment of
this Court in Haldiram Bhujiawala and Anr. (supra), and submitted
that the principles laid down therein applied to his case with full force.
On the other hand, the respondents insist that the case is clearly
distinguishable on facts, and in any case the observations relied upon
by the appellants do not constitute the ratio, as it was wholly
unnecessary to go into the question which did not fall for
consideration after the first question was answered in favour of the
appellants.
It therefore becomes necessary for us to notice the relevant facts
of the case, the questions that fell for consideration, and the principles
laid down therein.
The plaintiffs in the suit were the sons of Moolchand, the first
plaintiff being the partnership firm of which three of his sons were
partners, and the second plaintiff being his fourth son. Their case was
that the partnership of which their late father Moolchand was a partner
was the duly registered proprietor of the trademark Haldiram
Bhujiawala. On dissolution of the firm on 16.11.1974 in terms of the
deed of dissolution, Moolchand became the sole proprietor of the
trademark for the whole country except State of West Bengal. Smt.
Kamla Devi, another partner, who was the wife of R.L. Aggarwal a
brother of Moolchand, was given ownership of the trademark rights
for West Bengal. Upon the death of Moolchand in 1985 his four sons
got themselves recorded as joint proprietors of the trademark. Three
of them formed a partnership in the year 1983 and were running a
shop in Chandni Chowk, Delhi.
In the meantime on 10.10.1977 R.L. Aggarwal and his son
applied in Calcutta for registration of the same trademark in their
name claiming to be full owners of the trademark, without disclosing
the dissolution deed of 16.11.1974. In these circumstances a suit was
filed by the partnership firm with three of the sons of Moolchand as
partners thereof being the first plaintiff. The second plaintiff in the
suit was the fourth son of Moolchand. They claimed the relief of
injunction restraining the defendants from using the said trademark,
damages, and for destruction of the material etc. The defendants filed
an application under Order 7, Rule 11, CPC for summary dismissal of
the suit since Plaintiff No.1 partnership firm was not a registered
partnership firm on the date of the filing of the suit. The Trial Court
dismissed the application and so did the appellate bench of the High
Court of Delhi. The defendants appealed to this Court by Special
Leave.
Two questions were framed which arose for consideration.
"(i) Whether Section 69(2) bars a suit by a firm
not registered on the date of suit where permanent
injunction and damages are claimed in respect of
trademark as a statutory right or by invoking common
law principles applicable to a passing-off action?
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(ii) Whether the words "arising from a
contract" in Section 69(2) refer only to a situation
where an unregistered firm is enforcing a right arising
from a contract entered into by the firm with the
defendant during the course of its business or whether
the bar under Section 69(2) can be extended to any
contract referred to in the plaint unconnected with the
defendant, as the source of title to the suit property?"
The first question was answered relying upon the law laid down
by this Court in Raptakos Brett & Co. Ltd. Vs. Ganesh Property
(1998) 7 SCC 184 that the bar in Section 69(2) of the Act did not
operate to bar a suit by an unregistered firm seeking enforcement of a
statutory right or a common law right. It was held that a passing off
action being a common law action based on tort, and not on contract,
Section 69(2) did not apply. The reliefs of permanent injunction and
damages were claimed on the basis of infringement of registered
trademark. Thus the suit was held to be one based on statutory right
under the Trade Marks Act, and therefore not barred by Section 69(2).
Counsel for the respondents contended before us that having
answered the first question in favour of the plaintiffs, it was wholly
unnecessary for the disposal of the appeal to consider the second
question formulated by this Court. Therefore, any observation made
or principle enunciated, in relation to the second question was at best
obiter, and not a binding precedent.
We shall assume in favour of the respondents that the
observations made and principles laid down are obiter and therefore
not a bind precedent. Even so that does not preclude this Court from
appreciating the reasons given for the principles laid down, and if the
reasoning appears to this Court to be cogent, and merit acceptance, the
same may be accepted by this Court as its own and applied to the case
before it.
In Haldiram Bhujiawala and Anr. (supra) this Court noticed the
recommendations made by the Special Committee in its report which
was considered by the legislature while enacting the Partnership Act,
1932. The Committee recommended that registration of firms be
made optional as it considered making registration compulsory too
drastic for a beginning in India. It was proposed that registration
should lie entirely with the discretion of the firm or partner concerned,
but any firm which was not registered will be unable to enforce its
claim against third parties in the civil court; and any partner who is
not registered will be unable to enforce his claims either against third
parties or against fellow partners. Paragraphs 18 and 19 of the Report
reads as follows :-
"18. Once registration has been effected the statement
recorded in the register regarding the constitution of
the firm will be conclusive proof of the facts therein
contained against the partners making them and no
partner whose name is on the register will be
permitted to deny that he is a partner \026 with certain
natural and proper exceptions which will be indicated
later. This should afford a strong protection to
persons dealing with firms against false denials of
partnership and the evasion of liability by the
substantial members of a firm.
19. \005\005On the other hand, a third party who deals
with a firm and knows that a new partner has been
introduced can either make registration of the new
partner a condition for further dealings, or content
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himself with the certain security of the other partners
and the chance of proving by other evidence, the
partnership of the new but unregistered partner. A
third party who deals with a firm without knowing of
the addition of a new partner counts on the credit of
the old partners only and will not be prejudiced by the
failure of the new partner to register".
It would thus appear that registration of a firm was conceived as
a protection to third parties dealing with a partnership firm.
Registration ensured the certainty of existence of the firm and its
membership, so that later an unsuspecting third party contracting with
the firm may not run the risk of being defeated on discovery that
neither the partnership firm nor its partners existed in fact. On the
other hand, an unregistered firm could not bring a suit for enforcing
its right arising from a contract.
In Raptakos Brett & Co. Ltd. (Supra) this court after noticing
Section 69 of the Act observed :
"A mere look at the aforesaid provision shows that the
suit filed by an unregistered firm against a third party
for enforcement of any right arising from a contract
with such a third party would be barred at its very
inception. To attract the aforesaid bar to the suit, the
following conditions must be satisfied:
(i) That the plaintiff-partnership firm on the
date of the suit must not be registered under the
provisions of the Partnership Act and consequently or
even otherwise, the persons suing are not shown in the
Register of Firms as partners of the firm, on the date
of the suit.
(ii) Such unregistered firm or the partners
mentioned in the sub-section must be suing the
defendant-third party.
(iii) Such a suit must be for enforcement of a
right arising from a contract of the firm with such a
third party".
Relying upon the aforesaid analysis this Court in Haldiram
Bhujiawala and Anr. (supra) held that the contract contemplated by
Section 69 of the Act is the contract entered into by the firm with the
third party defendant. The contract by the unregistered firm referred
to in Section 69(2) must not only be one entered into by the firm with
a third party defendant, but must also be one entered into by the
plaintiff firm in the course of the business dealings of the plaintiff
firm with such third party defendant.
With respect, we find ourselves in complete agreement with the
principles enunciated in Haldiram Bhujiawala and Anr. (supra).
Having regard to the purpose Section 69(2) seeks to achieve and the
interest sought to be protected, the bar must apply to a suit for
enforcement of right arising from a contract entered into by the
unregistered firm with a third party in the course of business dealings
with such third party. If the right sought to be enforced does not arise
from a contract to which the unregistered firm is a party, or is not
entered into in connection with the business of the unregistered firm
with a third party, the bar of Section 69(2) will not apply.
In the instant case the contract was entered into with the
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respondent firm by the erstwhile proprietor of the concern namely
Purushottam. The partnership firm came into existence later. The
amount claimed in the suit were due to the proprietor Purushottam
who carried on his proprietary business in the name and style of
"Dinesh Paper Mart". When he entered into partnership with others,
he contributed to the partnership by way of his contribution to the
capital, all the assets and liabilities of his erstwhile proprietary
concern. Thus, though the partnership firm, which was unregistered,
became entitled to enforce the contractual obligation of the defendant
firm which it owed to Purushottam, the contract was not one entered
into by the unregistered firm with a third party, nor was it one entered
into by the unregistered firm in the course of its business dealings
with the defendants. So viewed, the bar of Section 69(2) cannot apply
to the suit filed by the Plaintiff \026 appellants.
We, therefore, allow this appeal with costs and set aside the
impugned judgment and decree of the High Court and restore that of
the Third Joint Civil Judge (Senior Division) Nagpur, in Civil Suit
No.52 of 1980 dated 29.4.1987.