Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KALURAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/09/1966
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
WANCHOO, K.N.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1105 1967 SCR (1) 266
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC1432 (7)
R 1980 SC1528 (13)
D 1992 SC1740 (23)
ACT:
Indian Contract Act, s. 141-Forest contract-Contractor
allowed to remove wood without making due payment--Security
for payment thus lost-Surety whether discharged.
HEADNOTE:
At an auction held by the Divisional Forest Officer
Hoshangabad Division for sale of ’felled trees’, one J was
declared the highest bidder. The amount of the bid was
payable in four installments. According to the contract the
Forest Contract Rules were binding on the contractor, and
the contractor could be prevented from removing the forest
produce in case he made default in payment of the
instalments due. One K had stood surety for J along with
another surety. J paid the first instalment due under the
contract but without making the subsequent payments was
allowed to remove the whole forest produce contracted to be
gold from the contract area. The State of Madhya Pradesh
thereafter took proceedings to recover from K -as arrears of
land revenue the amount due from J. K commenced an auction
for a declaration that he was not liable to pay the dues
recoverable from J and for an injunction against the State.
He contended that since the Forest Department had allowed J
to remove the forest produce the security was lost and he
stood discharged. The trial Court and-the High Court both
held in K’s favour. The State of Madhya Pradesh appealed to
this, Court by special leave.
HELD : (i) The expression "security" in s. 141 of the Indian
Contract Act is not used in any technical sense : it
includes all rights which the creditor has against the
property at the date of the contract. The Surety is
entitled on payment of the debt or performance of all that
he is liable for to the benefit of the rights of the
creditor against the principal debtor which arise out of the
transaction which given rise to the right or liability: be
is therefore on payment of the amount due by the principal
debtor entitled to be put in the same position in which the-
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creditor stood in relation to the principal debtor. If the
creditor has lost or parted with the security without the
consent of the surety, the latter is by the express
provision contained in s. 141, discharged to the extent of
the value of the security lost or parted with. [272 E-G]
Wulff and Billing v. Jay, L.R. (1872) 7 Q.B. 756, referred
to.
(ii) The Forest Officer parted with the forest produce
before receiving payment of the amount due by the
contractor’ Thereby the charge in favour of the State was
seriously impaired and the statutory power to sell the
produce for nonpayment of the amount remaining due became,
for all practical purposes, ineffective. Again, under the
terms of the contract the Forest authorities had the right
to prevent removal of the produce sold until the price was
paid : that right was also lost. The right conferred by s.
83 of the Forest Act and under the terms of the contract to
prevent removal and right to -sell the produce for non-
payment of the price, coupled with charge on the produce
constituted the security of the State and that security was
lost because the Forest Officers permitted removal of the
produce by the contractor. [273 G-H]
Accordingly the surety stood discharged from liability to
pay the amount undertaken by him under the terms of the
surety bond.
267
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 359 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
September 29, 1961 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in First
Appeal No. 123 of 1958.
B. Sen J.P. Dube and I.N. Shroff, for the appellant
B. C. Misra and S. S. Shukla, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J, This is an appeal with special leave against the
decree passed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in appeal
No. 123 of 1958 confirming the decree of the Additional
District Judge, Hoshangabad, decreeing the plaintiff’s suit.
The State of Madhya Pradesh has appealed to this Court.
At an auction held on July 20, 1954 by the Divisional Forest
Officer, Hoshangabad Division, for sale of "felled trees" in
Coupe No. 66 Dhekna, Range Seoni, one Jagatram was declared
the highest bidder and the trees were sold to him for Rs.
12,100. The amount of the bid was payable in four
instalments of Rs. 3,025 each: the first instalment to be
paid immediately on acceptance of the bid, the second on
December 1, 1954, the third on February 1, 1955 and the
fourth on May 1, 1955. Jagatram executed a contract in
favour of the Governor of Madhya Pradesh in which were
incorporated the terms and conditions of the sale. The
following are the material terms of the contract:
"2. The quantity of the said forest produce to
be sold under this contract shall be the
quantity which may exist at the time of
executing this indenture or may come into
existence thereafter in the contract area all
of which forest contractor by collect and
remove from it in accordance with the
conditions herein contained during the period
from the date the forest contractor furnishes
the necessary coupe boundary certificate after
inspection of the contract area to the 30th
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day of June, 1955
3. The forest contractor shall commence his
work of collecting and removing the said
forest produce within one month after
furnishing the necessary certificate mentioned
in clause 2 above
5. The said forest produce shall be removed
by the forest contractor from the contract
area by the routes specified in the following
table and shall be presented by him for
examination at one or other of the depots
specified in that table:-
(Table Omitted)
6. The Forest contractor shall be subject
to the Forest Contract Rules as amended from
time to time
up C. I.166-4
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and the Rules shall be deemed to be part of
this contract in so far as they are applicable
thereto : .........."
Jagatram paid the first instalment due under
the contract on July 28, 1954, and subscribed
his signature to the terms of the contract.
Nathuram and Kaluram stood sureties for him
and executed the following bond:
"Whereas the Governor in order to secure the
due performance of conditions of the above
contract demanded security from the forest
contractor, I
(1) Nathuram son of- Kashiram resident of
Chaterkheda
(2) Kaluram son of Jhandusingh resident of
PipaliyaKalan, by occupation Agriculturists,
surety on behalf of the forest contractor,
undertake to discharge the liability of the
forest contractor in case of any act,
omission, negligence or default on the part;
of the forest contractor for any sum which may
become payable by the forest contractor to the
Governor by or under the conditions of the
above contract.
I also agree that any sum which may be payable
by me to the Governor under the terms of this
bond shall be recoverable in the same manner
as an arrear of land revenue."
Jagatram removed almost the entire quantity of trees sold to
him, but since he did not pay the remaining three
instalments of the price, the State of Madhya Pradesh took
proceedings to recover from Kaluram the amount due by
Jagatram as arrears of land revenue.
Kaluram then commenced an action against the State of Madhya
Pradesh for a declaration that he was not liable to pay the
arrears of forest dues recoverable from Jagatram and for an
injunction restraining the State from realising or from
continuing the recovery proceedings with regard to those
forest dues from him. The principal ground in support of
the claim was that the forest authorities gave time to
Jagatram and omitted to take steps which their duty to the
surety required them to take i.e., prompt seizure and sale
of the trees after the second instalment had fallen due, and
since on that account his eventual remedy against Jagatram
was impaired, he Kaluram stood discharged from liability as
surety.
The Trial Court held that the forest officers were negligent
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in allowing the contractor Jagatram to remove the trees
sold, and on that account the security of the surety was
impaired, and the surety stood discharged for the whole
amount recoverable from the contractor. The High Court of
Madhya Pradesh confirmed the decree of the Trial Court.
269
By virtue of cl. 6 of the terms of the contract, the
relevant Forest Contract Rules were to be treated as part of
the contract between Jagatram and the State. By r. 2 it was
provided that all contracts whereby the Government sells
forest produce to a purchaser shall be subject to the rules,
insofar as they are applicable, and that those rules’ shall
be deemed to be binding on every forest contractor not only
as rules made under the Forest Act, but also as conditions’
of his forest contract. By r. 6 the forest contractor is
required to carry with him an "accessory licence" entitling
him and his servants and agents to go upon the land
specified in the contract and to do all acts necessary for
the proper extraction of the forest produce purchased under
the contract. Rule 8 provides:
"Where the consideration payable to Government
under a forest contract is payable in
instalments and the Divisional Forest Officer
at any time before the last instalment is
paid, considers that the value of the forest
produce removed by the contractor exceeds the
amount of the instalments already paid, the
Divisional Forest Officer may stop further
removal until the contractor has paid such
further sum as may, in his opinion, be
sufficient to cover such excess:
Provided that, if in the opinion of any Forest
Officer not below the rank of a Range Officer,
it is necessary to take immediate action to
prevent a breach of this rule, such Forest
Officer-
(i) may by notice in writing serve on the
contractor or his agent, if any, stating the
grounds for the direction, require the
contractor or his agent to stop further
removal of the forest produce from the
contract area; and
By r. 12 a forest contractor is prohibited from removing any
forest produce from the contract area, unless it is
accompanied by a pass in the prescribed form signed by the
contractor or his authorized agent. By r. 13 the forest
contractor is required to remove forest produce only by the
route or routes specified by rules under the Act, or by his
forest contract, and to take all forest produce removed by
him to such depots or places as may be similarly prescribed,
for check and examination. Rule 16 requires the forest
contractor to keep accounts of the quantity of forest
produce removed by him from the contract area, and that such
accounts shall be open to inspection at any time by the
Divisional Forest Officer or by any forest subordinate duly
authorized in that behalf. Rule 29(1) provides that a
forest contract may be, terminated by the Office empowered
to execute it on behalf of the Government, if the Forest
270
contractor makes default in the payment of the consideration
for his contract or of any instalment thereof, or commits a
breach of any of the other conditions of his contract. By
sub-r. (2) of r. 29 it is provided that such termination
shall be notified to the forest contractor by a written
notice and thereupon all the contractor’s rights under the
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contract including all accessory licences shall cease and
all the forest produce remaining within the contract area or
at the depots specified under r. 13 shall become the
absolute property of Government. Rule 33(1) provides that
all forest produce removed from a contract area in
accordance with the rules and duly checked and passed at the
depots established under r. 13 shall be at the absolute
disposal of the forest contractor. By cl. (2) of r. 33 it
is provided that the forest contractor may assign any forest
produce not so removed, but such assignment shall not be
valid unless it is made with the previous sanction in
writing of the forest officer who executed the contract.
It is also necessary to refer to ss. 82 & 83 of the Indian
Forest Act 16 of 1927. By s. 82 it is provided that all
money payable to the Government under the Act or under any
rule made under the Act, or on account of the price of any
forest produce, or of expenses incurred in the execution of
the Act in. respect of such produce, may, if not paid when
due, be recovered as if it were an arrear of land-revenue.
Section 83 provides:
"(1) When any such money is payable for or in
respect of any forest-produce, the amount
thereof shall be deemed to be a first charge
on such produce, and such produce may be taken
possession of by a Forest-officer until such
amount has been paid.
(2) If such amount is not paid when due, the
Forest Officer may sell such produce by public
auction, and the proceeds of the sale shall be
applied first in discharging such amount.
(3)........................"
Beside the contractual right which is conferred upon the
State by r. 8 to stop removal of goods in value exceeding
the amount already paid by the contractor, where the
consideration is payable in instalments the statute has
imposed a charge upon the goods sold, inter alia, for the
price thereof, and has authorised the Forest Officer to take
possession of the goods until such amount is paid. If the
amount is not paid when due, the Forest Officer may sell the
produce by public auction. The State Government has
therefore under the terms of the contract and by virtue of
the statute, even though the property in the goods has
passed to the contractor, the right to stop removal of the
goods and take possession thereof till the amount due is
paid and to sell the goods if the amount is not
271
paid when due; the State has also the power to prohibit
removal, of the goods when the value of the forest produce
removed by the contractor exceeds the amount of instalments
already paid, to check and examine the goods, and to
terminate the contract in case of default in payment of the
amount due and to take possession of the goods either in the
contract area or in the depots of the contractor.
The contract between Jagatram and the State was in respect
of "felled trees" and the area and denomination of the coupe
were set out. The trees agreed to be sold being in a
deliverable state, by virtue of s. 20 of the Sale of Goods
Act, the property in the goods sold passed on the production
of the "coupe boundary certificate". It is true that
because of the diverse covenants contained in the contract
and the provisions of the Rules which formed part of the
contract, certain restrictions were imposed upon the
contractor. Rule 8 authorised the forest authorities to
stop removal of the -foods sold if it was found that the
contractor had removed goods of value exceeding the amount
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of instalments already paid. Again the contractor was
required to take the goods to the depots and to get the same
checked and examined. But on that ground it cannot be said
that the contractor did not become the owner of the goods
when the "coupe boundary certificate" was produced. The "
coupe boundary certificate" is not on the record, and we are
unable to hold that any goods were removed or permitted to
be removed without the production of the coupe boundary
certificate. That is not the case of the State and we will
not be justified in so assuming. The terms of rr. 29 & 33
also abundantly support the view that on the production of
the "coupe boundary certificate" the contractor becomes the
owner of the goods. Under cl. (2) of r. 29 when a contract
is terminated for reasons mentioned in cl. (1) all forest
produce remaining within the contract area or at the depots
specified under r. 13 becomes the absolute property of the
Government. it is implicit in the rule that till the
eventuality contemplated by r. 29(1), property in the forest
produce is in the contractor. The terms of r. 33(2) which
authorize the forest contractor to assign any forest produce
also support that inference. The right to assign the forest
produce not removed from the contract area predicates title
to the forest produce. The argument of the State that the
property in the goods had not passed to the forest
contractor till they were removed, and on that account the
statutory charge under s. 83 of the Forest Act did not
attach to the goods sold, has therefore no force. As soon
as the contract was entered into and the coupe boundary
certificate was produced and we assume in this case that it
was so produced, the property in the goods passed to
Jagatram. But for the contract price there was a first
charge on such produce in favour of the State of Madhya
Pradesh under s. 83(1). The Divisional Forest Officer had
authority to stop removal of those goods until
272
the amount of instalments payable by the contractor was paid
and even to sell the goods for recovery of the amount which
had fallen due. The forest authorities however allowed
Jagatram to remove the goods sold before the instalments due
on December 1, 1954 and thereafter were paid.
Kaluram by executing the surety bond had undertaken to
discharge the liability arising out of any act, omission,
negligence or default of the forest contractor. The surety
Kaluram contends that because the State lost or parted with
the security he stood discharged. By s. 140 of the Indian
Contract Act, 1872, where a guaranteed debt has become due,
or default of the principal debtor to perform a guaranteed
duty has taken place, the surety, upon payment or
performance of all that he is liable for, is invested with
all the rights which the creditor had against the principal
debtor; and by s. 141 it is provided :
"A surety is entitled to the benefit of every
security which the creditor has against the
principal debtor at the time when the contract
of suretyship is entered into, whether the
surety knows of the existence of such security
or not; and, if the creditor loses, or,
without consent of the surety, parts with such
security, the surety is discharged to the
extent of the value of the security."
The State had as already observed, a first charge over the
goods: the State was also entitled to prevent the goods from
being removed without payment of the amount of instalments
due. The expression "security" in s. 141 is not used in any
technical sense: it includes all rights which the creditor
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had against the property at the date of the contract. The
surety is entitled on payment of the debt or performance of
all that he is liable for, to the benefit of the rights of
the creditor against the principal debtor which arise out of
the transaction which gives rise to the right or liability:
he is therefore on payment of the amount due by the
principal debtor entitled to be put in the same position in
which the creditor stood in relation to the principal
debtor. If the creditor has lost or has parted with the
security without the consent of the surety, the latter is,
by the express provision contained in s. 141, discharged to
the extent of the value of the security lost or parted with.
The State had a charge over the goods sold as well as the
right to remain in possession tilt payment of the
instalments. When the goods were removed by Jagatram that
security was lost and to the extent of the value of the
security lost the surety stood discharged. In the present
case the State has not produced the accounts furnished under
r. 16 by the contractor relating to the quantity of goods
removed by Jagatram. We must in the circumstances hold that
the entire quantity contracted to be sold to Jagatram had
been removed, and the surety is, because the State has
parted with the security
273
which it held, discharged from liability to pay the amount
payable under the terms of the contract.
In Wulff and Billing v. Jay,(1) Hannen, J.,
stated the law thus:
".......... I take it to be established that
the defendant became surety upon the faith of
there being some real and substantial security
pledged, as well as his own credit, to the
plaintiff; and he was entitled, therefore, to
the benefit of that real and substantial
security in the event of his being called on
to fulfill his duty as a surety, and to pay
the debt for which he had so become- surety.
He will, however, be discharged from his
liability as surety if the creditors have put
it out of their power to hand over to the
surety the means of recouping himself by the
security given by the principal. That
doctrine is very clearly expressed in the
notes in Rees v. Barrington-2 White & Tudor’s
L.C., 4th Edn. at p. 1002-’As a surety, on
payment of the debt, is entitled to all the
securities of the creditor, whether he is
aware of their existence or not, even though
they were given after the contract of
suretyship, if the creditor who has had, or
ought to have had, them in his full po
ssession
or power, loses them or permits them to get
into the possession of the debtor, or does not
make them effectual by giving proper notice,
the surety to the extent of such security will
be discharged. A surety, moreover, will be
released if the creditor, by reason of what he
has done’. cannot, on payment by the surety,
give him the securities in exactly the same
condition as they formerly stood in his
hands.’ "
Subject to certain variations, which are not material for
the matter under discussion, s. 141 of the Contract Act
incorporates the rule of English law relating to the
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discharge from liability of a surety when the creditor parts
with or loses the security held by him.
The Forest Officers of the State of Madhya Pradesh parted
with the goods before receiving payment of the amount due by
the contractor Jagatram. Thereby the charge in favour of
the State was seriously impaired and the statutory power to
sell the goods for non-payment of the amount remaining due
became, for all practical purposes, ineffective. Again
under the terms of the contract the Forest authorities had
the right to prevent removal of goods sold until the price
was paid: that right was also lost. The right conferred by
s. 83 of the Forest Act and under the terms of the contract
to prevent removal and right to sell goods for non-payment
of the price, coupled with the charge on the goods
constituted the security of the State, and that security was
lost because the Forest Officers permitted removal of the
goods by the contractor.
(1) L.R. (1872) 7 Q.B. 756.
274
It was urged however on behalf of the State that mere
inaction on the part of the forest authorities does not
amount to parting with the security. But the terms of the
statute do not apply only to cases in which by positive
action on the part of the creditor the security is parted
with. Even if the security is lost by the creditor, the
surety is discharged. In any event the facts in the present
case make it abundantly clear that it was on account of the
conduct of the forest authorities that the security was
lost,. The goods sold were under the control of the Forest
Officers, when they were in the coupe and even when they
were in the depot of the contractor. The goods could be
removed on the production of a pass from the coupe, and even
after the goods were removed, unless they were examined and
checked they were not at the disposal of the contractor. It
is not pleaded by the State that the trees sold were not
checked and examined at the depot of the contractor.
Knowing that the goods were removed without payment of the
instalments, if the Forest authorities checked and examined
the goods and took no action for recovery of the amount
payable, and did not enforce the charge, it would be
difficult to say that there was mere inaction on the part of
the forest authorities.
We therefore agree with the High Court that the surety Kalu-
ram stood discharged from liability to pay the amount
undertaken by him under the terms of the surety bond because
the forest authorities of the State had parted with the
security which they possessed for recovery of the amount due
from the contractor.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G.C.
Appeal dismissed.
275