Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JYOTI CHIT FUND & FINANCE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/03/1976
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1163 1976 SCR (3) 763
1976 SCC (3) 607
CITATOR INFO :
R 1987 SC 808 (9,11)
ACT:
Provident Funds Act, 1925, Ss. 3 and 4-Provident fund
and allied amounts fall due, whether exclusion from
attachability continues-Objection to attachment taken pro
bono publico by Union of India, if valid-’Locus standi’,
scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant Union of India objected to the attachment
of certain provident fund and pension dues held by it (on
behalf of the Rajya Sabha Secretariat) in trust for the
fourth respondent, an ex-employee of the Rajya Sabha
Secretariat. The attachment was sought in satisfaction of a
money-decree held by the first respondent. The High Court
dismissed the appellant’s Civil Revision petition upholding
the decision of the executing court.
In appeal by special leave, the appellant contended
before this Court that although a third party to the suit,
the state had acted pro bono publico, by objecting to the
illegality of the proposed attachment, and that it was a
question of principle, affecting a wide circle of government
servants. The respondent contended that the amounts having
already fallen due, had lost the character of provident fund
or pension under Ss. 3 and 4, and had become attachable, and
also that the government had no locus standi to object to
the attachment.
Allowing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD: (1) So long as the amounts are Provident Fund
dues then, till they are actually paid to the government
servant who is entitled to it on retirement or otherwise,
the nature of the dues is not altered. The government is a
trustee for those sums and has an interest in maintaining
the objection in court, to attachment. [767D-E]
Union of India v. Radha Kissen Agarwalla & Anr. [1969]
3 S.C.R. 28, followed.
(2) Cases where public policy is involved and the court
has a certain duty to observe statutory prohibitions, a
wider concept of locus standi has to be taken. Any public
authority interested in the matter, and not behaving as an
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officious busy-body may bring to the notice of the court the
illegality of the steps it proposes to take. When the
court’s jurisdiction is so invoked, it may be exercised
without insisting on some other directly affected party
appearing to defend himself. [767F-G]
(3) The argument that the Rajya Sabha Secretariat is
different from the Union of India, has the merit of novelty,
little else. [767 G & 768H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2179 of
1970.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 1st May, 1970 of the Delhi High Court in Civil
Revision No. 26 of 1970.
G. L. Sanghi, Girish Chandra and S. P. Nayar for the
Appellants.
K. B. Rohtagi, M. K. Garg, V. K. Jain and M. K. Rastogi
for Respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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KRISHNA IYER, J.-The moral of this case is that a short
cut may often be a wrong cut-in law, as in life. The ratio
of this appeal is that technicality will not triumph in
courts of law and justice, where substantial public policy
is involved and it is such public policy which
humanistically protects provident fund and pensionary dues
of government servants from claims of judgment-creditors to
attach in satisfaction of decrees.
The appellant, the Union of India, has come up in
appeal, by special leave, challenging a laconic order of
dismissal in Civil Revision made by the Delhi High Court,
thus upholding the view of the executing court over-ruling
the contention of the State, objecting to the attachment of
certain provident fund and pension dues held by Union of
India (on behalf of the Rajya Sabha Secretariat) in trust
for the judgment-debtor who had been employed in the Rajya
Sabha Secretariat. The first court had held that the Union
of India had no locus standi to object to the attachment by
the decree-holder on the score that an outsider to the suit
without ’interest in the attached money’ has standing to
intervene to dispute the attachability even if the sum was
clearly immune to attachment in law. The relevant reasoning
is in these terms:
"It is not the case of the Union of India that
Union of India has any interest in the attached
property so as to entitle Union of India to make an
application under Order 21, r. 58 CPC. In my opinion,
if the attachment has been wrongly made it is for the
judgment-debtor to make an application to the court for
releasing the provident fund or the compulsory deposits
from attachment."
The Court also expressed the view that it was premature to
hold:
"that attached money will fall within the
definition of provident fund or compulsory deposit."
In fairness to the Subordinate Judge it must be said he
did feel ’inclined to agree that provident fund and
compulsory deposits are not liable to any attachment under
any decree or order of the civil court.
The ground which weighed with the trial court and has
won the approval of the High Court is that "the Government
has no interest in the attached money and therefore no
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standing to come to court. The judgment-debtor may file
objections for release of the attached money. The
objections, if made, will be decided afresh on merits." It
is apparent from this statement of facts that the courts
below took the narrow view, with an escapist flavour which
led to long litigation and large expense, that only the
judgment-debtor and not the Government could raise
objections regarding non-attachability of provident fund and
pension amounts, as if Government were an officious
intruder, bereft of any concern in the insultion of the
amounts against execution of decrees of court.
The amount involved is small, but Shri Sanghi, for the
appellant, contends that the question is one of principle
and affects a wide circle of government servants. We agree
and indeed appreciate the State’s
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anxiety to fulfil the policy of the statute on behalf of the
weaker-sections by taking up the burden on itself. May be,
it is like a test case ventilating a cause in which a large
number of employees may be vitally involved.
We may make it clear here that the stand taken by Shri
Rohatgi, counsel for the respondent, is two-fold. He argues
firstly that this amount in the hands of Government is
admittedly being held on behalf of the Rajya Sabha
Secretariat servant who has just retired and, therefore, has
lost the character of provident fund or pension. The
inhibition of attachment of provident fund and like amounts,
even if valid, cannot apply to this class of sums which have
suffered a metamorphesis. Secondly, the Government has no
right to move the court raising objection to the attachment
since the judgment-debtor is the only appropriate person who
can do so. We disagree.
Processual law is neither petrified nor purblind but
has simple mission-the promotion of justice. The court
cannot content itself with playing umpire in a technical
game of legal skills but must be activist in the cause of
deciding the real issues between the parties. And one
guiding principle is not to exaggerate the efficacy of
procedural defects where issues of public concern are
involved and a public authority vitally interested in the
correct principle alerts the attention of the court to the
problem. A broadened view of locus standi loads to the
futility of technical flaws where larger issues are involved
and that is the trend of modern processual jurisprudence.
These general considerations were trite, yet too often
ignored, and so need reiteration. Further, the consumers of
justice can have scant respect for a procedural policy which
is obsessed more with who sparks the plugs of the court
system than with what the merits of the rights or wrongs of
the relief are. A shift on the emphasis, away from technical
legalistics, is overdue if the Judicature is not to aid its
grave diggers. We express the view strongly so that hopefuls
may be dissuaded from taking up court time by playing up
technicalities.
We may now move on to a consideration of the basic
contentions and, before that, the basic facts may be briefly
set down. On March 31, 1967 a money decree for a little over
Rs. 2,000/- was passed in Suit No. 516 of 1966 in favour of
respondent No. 1 and against respondents 2 to 4 (who are ex
parte). A warrant or attachment of the ’funds’ of respondent
No. 4, in the hands of the Rajya Sabha Secretariat, was
sought and ordered. It reads:
"To
The Pay & Accounts Officer,
Rajya Sabha Secretariat,
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New Delhi.
Whereas judgment-debtor No. 3, Shri S. Krishnaswamy, an
ex-reporter has failed to satisfy a decree passed
against him on the 31st day of March, 1967 in suit No.
516/66 in favour of M/s Jyoti Chit Fund and Finance P.
Ltd., for Rs. 2193-50. It is ordered that the defendant
judgment-debtor is hereby prohibited and restrained
until the further
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order of this Court from receiving from the Pay and
Accounts Officer the following property in possession
of the said Pay and Accounts Officer that is to say Rs.
2193-50 to which the defendant judgment-debtor is
entitled, subject to any claim of the said J. D. and
the said Pay and Accounts Officer is hereby prohibited
and restrained, until the further order of this court
from delivering of the said property to any person.
Given under my hand and seal of the Court on 12th
day of September 1968.
Sd/-
Sub-Judge 1st Class, Delhi."
On service of the attachment order, objection was
raised by the appellant, Union of India, on January 30, 1969
on the score that provident fund amounts and pensionary
benefits were not liable to attachment and therefore the
order may be rescinded. The decree holder (respondent 1)
successfully contested in the trial court and on the
objection being over-ruled, the appellant moved the High
Court. It may be stated, at this stage, that the trial Court
did not actually investigate the claim of the appellant as
to whether the whole, or part of the amount sought to be
attached, represented provident fund or pensionary benefits
nor did the High Court go into the question. This means that
even if we uphold the contention of the appellant, the case
will have to go back for investigation on the merits
We may formulate what has been indicated-the actual
points urged before us by Shri Sanghi and vigorously
controverted by Shri Rohtagi. (1) Is it permissible in law
for amounts representing provident fund contributions and
pensionary benefits to be attached, having due regard to ss.
3 and 4 of the Provident Funds Act, s. 11 of the Pensions
Act and s. 60(1), provisos (g) and (k) of C.P.C.? (2) Is the
Union of India entitled to move the Court and request it to
investigate the question that the whole or part of the sum
in its hands on account of the judgment-debtor as provident
fund, compulsory deposits and pensionary benefits and,
therefore, not liable to be attached, or is it out of bounds
for a third party to the suit, like the Union of India, even
if the step be taken pro bono publico by a relevant public
authority, to invoke the jurisdiction of the Court in this
behalf? (3) Is the Rajya Sabha Secretariat staff so totally
separated from the Union of India that the latter cannot
urge, in these proceedings, the claims belonging to
employees of the said Secretariat in the civil court even if
the attachment of the sums involved is contrary to law ? We
are inclined to hold,, without hesitation that on all the
points the appellant is bound to succeed. A bare reading of
ss. 3 and 4 of the Provident Funds Act, 1925, read with s.
2(a) of that Act, will convince anyone that attachment of
amounts bearing their description are prohibited. It will be
a gross violation of legal mandates involving public
interest if, in the teeth of such injunction, an attachment
should still be ordered by a court.
The finer distinction sought to be made by Shri Rohatgi
that because the appellant has already retired, therefore,
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the provident fund
767
and allied amounts have already fallen due and have ceased
to possess the complexion of sums ’by way of provident fund
under ss. 3 and 4’, is fallacious. On first principles and
on precedent, we are clear in our minds that these sums, if
they are of the character set up by the Union of India, are
beyond the reach of the court’s power to attach. Section 2
(a) of the Provident Funds Act has also to be read in this
connection to remove possible doubts because this
definitional clause is of wide amplitude. Moreover, s-60(1),
provides (g) and (k), leave no doubt on the point of non-
attachability. The matter is so plain that discussion is
uncalled for.
We may state without fear of contradiction that
provident fund amounts, pensions and other compulsory
deposits covered by the provisions we have referred to,
retain their character until they reach the hands of the
employee. The reality of the protection is reduced to
illusory formality if we accept the interpretation sought.
We take a contrary view which means that attachment is
possible and lawful only after such amounts are received by
the employee. If doubts may possible be entertained on this
question, the decision in Union of India v. Radha Kissen
Agarwala & Anr. erases them. Indeed our case is an afortiori
one, on the facts. A bare reading of Radha Kissen makes the
proposition fool-proof that so long as the amounts are
Provident Fund dues them, till they are actually paid to the
government servant who is entitled to it on retirement or
otherwise the nature of the dues is not altered. What is
more, that case is also authority for the benignant view
that the government is a trustee for those sums and has an
interest in maintaining the objection in court to
attachment. We follow that ruling and over-rule the
contention.
It is possible to take a broad view that cases where
public policy is involved and the court has a certain duty
to observe statutory prohibitions, a wider concept of locus
standi has to be taken. Any public authority interested in
the matter and not behaving partially as an officious busy-
body may bring to the notice of the court the illegality of
the steps it proposes to take. When the court’s jurisdiction
is so invoked, it may be exercised without insisting on some
other directly affected party, like the judgment-debtor in
the instant case, appearing to defend himself.
The argument that the Rajya Sabha Secretariat is
different from the Union of India is a new gloss which Shri
Rohatgi has put upon his contention of locus standi. He has
pressed into service Articles 300 and 98(2) of the
Constitution of India, neither of which is helpful or
768
applicable. This point has the merit of novelty, little
else. Consequentially, we set aside the decision of the High
Court and of the executing court, but this is not the end of
the matter.
We direct the court of the Subordinate Judge to go into
the merits of the objection raised by the Union of India as
to whether the entire amount or any portion thereof held by
it on behalf of the Rajya Sabha Secretariat staff, so far as
the judgment-debtor in this case is concerned, represents
provident fund and compulsory deposits or pensionary
benefits, excluded from attachability in execution of civil
decrees under the provisions already adverted to. If it is
feasible to effect service of notice on the judgment-debtor,
well and good, but if it is not, the court cannot absolve
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itself of the duty to investigate into the merits of the
claim or character of the amounts, so long as the Union of
India is ready to make good its contention.
The appeal is allowed with costs in this Court.
M.R. Appeal allowed.
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