Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARIDAS MONDAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANATH NATH MITTRA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/02/1961
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1419 1961 SCR (3) 880
ACT:
Money lending-Reopening of transactions-Successive suits by
-borrower for relief-Maintainability-Res judicata-Bengal
Money-lender; Act, 1940 (Ben. X of 1940), s. 36-Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), s. 11, O. 2, r. 2.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant obtained a preliminary and then a final mort-
gage decree against the respondent and thereafter a personal
decree for the debt remaining due to him ’after sale of the
property mortgaged. The appellant applied for execution of
the personal decree and thereupon the respondent sued for
relief under s. 36 of the Bengal Money-lenders Act, 1940, by
reopening the personal decree. In the suit relief for
reopening the preliminary decree and final decree was not
claimed. The personal decree was reopened in that suit and
an instalment decree for a smaller amount passed instead,
which was ultimately upheld by the High Court. The
respondent failed to pay the instalments and the appellant
applied for executing the decree. The respondent then filed
another suit under S. 36 of the Act for reopening the
preliminary and final decrees. The Subordinate judge
dismissed the suit holding that it wag barred as res
judicata and the District judge on appeal affirmed that
decision. But the
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High Court in second appeal reversed those decisions and
directed the preliminary and the final decrees be reopened
and remanded the case to the trial court for passing a fresh
preliminary decree. Hence this appeal with special leave.
Held (per Kapur and Shah, JJ.), that S. 36 of the Bengal
Money-lenders Act, 1940, contemplated the filing of one and
not successive suits for the reopening of transactions
including decrees and obtaining relief under the Act. If in
such a suit, the borrower failed to seek the entire relief
he was entitled to and abandoned his right to a part of the
relief, he would be precluded from seeking that relief in
another suit.
The principle underlying r. 2 of 0. 2 of the Code of Civil
Procedure as also the principle of res judicata applied to a
suit under s. 36 of the Act.
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Per Hidayatullah, J.-When the respondent moved the executing
court under s. 36 of the Act he had not filed a suit but
only an application. It was the duty of the court
thereunder to give him full relief although he might not
have asked for it. If the court failed in its duty and he
filed a suit no question of waiver or constructive res
judicata could at all arise. This was made clear by the non
obstante words of sub-ss. (1) and (6) Of s. 36 and the
question that arose under the section was not s? much of the
right of a party as of the duty of the court to give entire
relief under the Act. The remedies enjoined by the Act were
not exclusive of one another, either expressly or by
necessary intendment, and were intended to give the widest
possible relief to the borrowers.
jadhunath Roy v. Kshitish Chandra Achariya Choudhury (1949)
L.R. 76 I.A. I79 and joy Chand Lal Babu v. Kamalaksha
Choudhury, (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 131, referred to.
Since the Act required that the decrees passed against the
respondent had to be reopened, no provision of the Code of
Civil Procedure or of equity could bar the suit, the former
being expressly excluded and the latter made inapplicable by
the substantive provisions of the Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 508 of
1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
June 3, 1955, of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from
Appellate Decree No. 1090 of 1949.
N. C. Chatterjee and D. N. Mukherjee, for the appellant.
B. C. Panda and P. K. Chaterjee, for the respondent,
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1961. February 21. The Judgment of Kapur and Shah, JJ. was
delivered by Shah, J. Hidayatullah, J. delivered a separate
judgment.
SHAH, J--To secure repayment of Rs. 2,500/- Anath Nath
Mittra-hereinafter referred to as Mittra-mortgaged four
parcels of land to Haridas Mondalhereinafer referred to as
Mondal-by deed dated April 25, 1930. Mondal filed suit, No.
18 of 1937 on June 11, 1937, for enforcement of the mortgage
in the Court of the 2nd Subordinate Judge, Midnapore, and
obtained a preliminary mortgage-decree for Rs. 5,000/and
interest and costs. This decree was made absolute and in
execution of the decree, the mortgaged property was sold for
Rs. 4,160/- and an amount of Rs. 2,176,66 out of the
decretal amount remained due and payable under the mortgage
decree. Out of the four parcels of land sold, three were
purchased by Mondal and the remaining was purchased by
Mittra’s wife. Mondal then applied for a personal decree
under 0. 34, r. 6 of the Civil Procedure Code and obtained
on September 7, 1940, a decree for payment of Rs. 2,338,15,0
against Mittra. Mondal then applied for executing the
personal decree by Misc. Execution Cage No. 1 1 of 1941.
In the meanwhile, the Bengal Legislature enacted the Bengal
Money-lenders Act, 1940, which enabled the courts in certain
circumstances to reopen decrees already passed. Availing
himself of this Act, Mittra filed a suit under s. 36 of the
Bengal Money-lenders Act for an order reopening the personal
decree. By order dated August 16, 1941, the Subordinate
Judge, Midnapore, decreed the suit and directed that a new
decree for Rs. 1,431-15-0 be drawn up and that the amount
due under the personal decree be paid in three annual
instalments. Against this decree, an appeal was preferred
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to the District Court, Midnapore. The District Judge
dismissed the appeal and allowed the cross-objections filed
by Mondal. In Second Appeal No. 1442 of 1942, the High
Court of Judicature at Calcutta set aside the decree of the
District Judge and restored the decree of the Subordinate
Judge, 2nd Court, Midnapore. Mittra did not pay the amount
as directed under the
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new decree and Mondal applied for executing the decree.
Mittra then filed another suit under s. 36 of the Bengal
Money-lenders Act in the 2nd Court of the Subordinate Judge,
Midnapore, for reopening the, decrees preliminary and final
passed in the mortgage suit. The Subordinate Judge
dismissed this suit as it was, in his view, barred as res
judicata. In appeal to the District Court, the decree was
confirmed. But the High Court in Second Appeal ordered that
the preliminary and final decrees be reopened and the case
be remanded to the trial court for passing a fresh
preliminary decree. Against the said decree of the High
Court, this appeal is filed with special leave.
Section 30 of the Bengal Money-lenders Act, 1940, provides
in so far as it is material that notwithstanding anything
contained in any law for the time being in force, or in any
agreement, no borrower shall be liable to pay after the
commencement of the Act a sum in respect of principal and
interest which,, together with any amount already paid or
included in any decree in respect of a loan exceeds twice
the principal of the original loan and that the borrower
shall not be liable to pay interest at rate per annum in
cases of secured loans exceeding 8 per cent. simple. By s.
36, the liability on loans secured or otherwise which
contravenes the provisions of s. 30 is liable to be
reopened. It is provided by sub.s. (1) of s.36 in so far as
it is material that notwithstanding anything contained in
any law for the time being in force, if in any suit brought
by a borrower for relief under this section whether heard ex
parte or otherwise, the court has reason to believe that the
exercise of one or more of the powers under the section will
give relief to the borrower it shall exercise all or any of
the powers specified therein as may be considered
appropriate. The court is invested with the power of
reopening transactions including taking of accounts between
the parties, of releasing the borrower of all liability in
excess of the limits specified in cls. (1) and (2) of s. 30
and offsetting aside either wholly or in part or of revising
or altering any security given or agreement made in respect
of any loan. Exercise of these powers
884
is subject to the provisos which are not material for the
purposes of this appeal. By sub-s. (2), the court reopening
a decree is prohibited from doing anything which affects the
rights acquired bona fide by any person other than the
decree-holder in consequence of the execution of the
reopened decree; but is enjoined to order the restoration to
the judgment-debtor of such property, if any, of the
judgment-debtor acquired by the decree-holder in consequence
of the execution of the reopened decree as may be in the
possession of the decree-holder on the date on which the
decree was reopened and also to order the judgment-debtor to
pay to the decree-holder in such number of instalments as it
may think fit, the whole amount of the new decree passed
under cl. (a). The court is further enjoined to direct that
in default of payment of any instalments, the decree-holder
shall be put into possession of the property which has been
restored to the judgment-debtor and that the amount for
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which the decree-holder purchased such property in execution
of the reopened decree shall be set off against so much of
the amount of the new decree as remained unsatisfied. Sub-
section (6) provides that notwithstanding any. thing
contained in any law for the time being in force, the court
which, in a suit to which the Act applies, passed a decree
which was not fully satisfied by the first day of January,
1939, may exercise the powers conferred by sub-ss. (1) and
(2) in any proceeding in execution of such decree. Section
36, sub-s. (1), contemplates the institution of a suit by a
borrower for relief under that section and the court is
thereby invested with the power of reopening decrees already
passed.
Mittra in the year 1941 filed the suit under s. 36 of the
Act for reopening the personal decree passed under 0. 34, r.
6 of the Civil Procedure Code. In Schedule " A " to the
plaint, he set out the principal amount due under the
mortgage. the interest at the rate of 8% due thereon from
the date of the mortgage till the date of the suit, costs of
the suit, and after giving credit for the price realised by
sale of the properties, he submitted that Mondal was
entitled to
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recover only Rs. 66-13-2 and that Mondal should be declared
entitled to that amount in twenty annual instalments. By a
suit under s. 36, Mittra undoubtedly was entitled to reopen
the preliminary decree, decree absolute for sale and also
the personal decree;’ but in the first suit, he gave up his
right to reopen the preliminary decree and the decree
absolute for sale, and was content to obtain an order that
the personal decree alone be reopened. In the execution
under the mortgage decree one parcel of land was purchased
by Mittra’s wife and it is presumably on account of this
circumstance that Mittra was unwilling to have the
preliminary decree reopened. The District Judge, Midnapore,
who heard the appeal against the order passed by the 2nd
Court of the Subordinate Judge in the first suit under s. 36
of the Act observed:
" It is admitted before me by the learned
pleader for the appellant that the reopening
of the entire transaction will not be to the
benefit of the appellant and the latter,
therefore, does not want this to be done. The
only relief he claims is that the new decree
passed by the learned Subordinate Judge for
Rs. 1,431-15-0 shall be reduced to Rs. 66-13-2
as mentioned in his application under s. 36 of
the Act."
In the first suit under s. 36 filed by Mittra, the claim to
reopen the preliminary decree and the decree absolute was
deliberately abandoned and he obtained relief expressly on
the footing that he did not, desire that those decrees
should be reopened. Is it thereafter open to Mittra to file
another suit for obtaining relief under s. 36 by reopening
the preliminary decree and the decree absolute ? In our
judgment, s. 36 contemPlates filing of one suit and not
successive suits for reopening transactions including
decrees and obtaining relief under the Act. If in a suit
filed for that purpose, a borrower does not obtain relief
which he has asked for or abandons his right to relief, in
our judgment it will not thereafter be open to him to
institute a second suit for relief which could have been but
was not claimed in the earlier suit.
The plea that in the previous suit it was not open to Mittra
to make a claim for reopening the
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preliminary decree and the decree absolute is without
substance. By sub-s. (6) of s. 36, the right to grant
relief in proceedings in execution of a decree already
passed but which is not satisfied is vested in. the court
passing the decree and the first suit under s. 36 was filed
in the court which had originally passed the mortgage
decree. The claim to reopen the decrees preliminary and
final was abandoned not because the court was incompetent to
grant relief but because Mittra did not at that stage desire
to reopen those decrees. We are unable to agree with the
High Court that to a suit under s. 36 of the Act, the rule
contained in 0. 2, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure does
not apply. We are also of the view that the right to claim
relief which could have been but has not been asked for in
the previous suit must be regarded as res judicata.
In that view of the case, this appeal will be allowed and
Mittra’s suit No. 105 of 1947 dismissed with costs
throughout.
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-I have had the advantage of reading the
judgment just delivered by my brother, Shah, J.; but I
regret my inability to agree that the judgment under appeal
be reversed.
The appellant, a money-lender, had advanced a sum of Rs.
2,500/- to the respondent on a simple mortgage of four
properties. He filed a suit which was decreed on November
13, 1937, when a preliminary decree for Rs. 5,000/- plus
costs was passed against the respondent. This decree was
made final on February 25, 1938. On May 17, 1939, the four
properties were sold for Rs. 4,160/-, and the balance then
remaining due was Rs. 2,176/-. Three of the properties were
purchased by the appellant (decree-holder), and the fourth,
by the wife of the mortgagor.
On September 7, 1940, a personal decree for Rs. 2,338-15-3
was passed against the respondent. In 1941, execution of
that decree was taken out. In the meantime, the Bengal
Money-lenders Act had come into force on August 1, 1940.
The respondent there. upon made an application under s. 36
of the Bengal Money-lenders Act for reopening the decree.
The
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respondent did not say which decree he wanted reopened; but
with his application he gave a statement of account of the
entire amount as reduced under the Bengal Money-lenders Act
and by the amount realised A by sale of the four properties,
and asked that a decree for the balance, Rs. 66-13-2, should
be passed against him. The application was partly allowed,
and afresh decree for Rs. 1,431-15-0 was passed. If the
earlier decrees had been reopened, the amount due would have
been Rs. 5,591-15-0, but the Subordinate Judge said :
" As Rs. 4,160/- was paid, I find no necessity
of cancelling the sale and ordering
restitution, but for the balance of Rs. 1,431-
15-0, a new decree be drawn up."
The respondent appealed, and the appellant cross-objected.
The District Judge dismissed the appeal, allowed the cross-
objection, and dismissed the application. On appeal to the
High Court by the present respondent, R. C. Mitter, J.
allowed the appeal. He held that the personal decree was
liable to be reopened, and restored the decree for Rs.
1,431-15-0 passed by the Subordinate Judge.
The respondent who was directed to pay the amount by
instalments under the orders of Mitter, J. made default in
payment, and a money execution case was ,started against
him. He, thereupon, brought a suit under s. 36 of the
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Bengal Money-lenders Act for reopening the preliminary,
final and personal decrees. This suit was dismissed as
barred by constructive res judicata and the principle of 0.
2, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, by the Subordinate
Judge, and the appeal to the District Judge also failed. On
further appeal to the High Court, K. C. Das Gupta, J. (as he
then was) and Guha, J. allowed the appeal. The learned
Judges held that 0. 2, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure
did not apply to the suit, because it refers to a previous
suit and not to an application filed in execution for relief
They also pointed out that under the Bengal Money-lenders
Act the duty was laid upon the Court to reopen any decree,
if it was likely to give relief to the borrower, and that
the relief did not
888
depend upon the desire or claim of the borrower. They
further pointed out that even Mitter, J. was of the opinion
that the relief to be given was incumbent ,,,upon the Court
and independent of the wishes of the borrower.
In the appeal before us filed with special leave, Mr. N. C.
Chatterjee contended that the suit was barred by res
judicata, waiver and estoppel, and that the Divisional Bench
of the High Court was in error in ordering the reopening of
the three decrees, when the respondent himself had not asked
on the earlier occasion that they be reopened.
The scheme of the Bengal Money-lenders Act is as follows:
The Act, though passed to control moneylenders and to
regulate and control money-lending, gave relief to borrowers
in many ways. One such way was to put the limit of what is
popularly known as Damdupat on interest, and another was to
limit the rate of interest to 8 per cent. simple in the case
of secured loans. By s. 36, transactions which contravened
these provisions were required to be reopened. This reopen-
ing was not limited to transactions, but decrees also were
required to be reopened, unless fully satisfied by the first
day of January, 1939. The section gave vast powers to
Courts reopening decrees. Sub-section (2) of
s. 36 provided:
" (2) If in exercise of the powers conferred
by sub-section (1) the Court reopens a decree,
the Court-
(a) shall, after affording the parties an
opportunity of being heard, pass a new decree
in accordance with the provisions of this Act,
and may award to the decree-holder such costs
in respect of the re. opened decree as it
thinks fit,
(b) shall not do anything which affects any
right acquired bona fide by any person, other
than the decree-holder, in consequence of the
execution of the reopened decree,
(c) shall order the restoration to the
judgment-debtor of such property, if any, of
the judgmentdebtor acquired by the decree
-
holder in consequence of the execution of the
reopened decree as may be in
889
the possession of the decree-holder on the
date on which the decree was reopened,
(d) shall order the judgment-debtor to pay
to the decree-holder, in such number of
instalments as it A may think fit, the whole
amount of the new decree passed under clause
(a), and
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(e) shall direct that, in default of the
payment of any instalment ordered under clause
(d), the decree-holder shall be put into
possession of the property referred to in
clause (c) and that the amount for which the
decree-holder purchased such property in
execution of the reopened decree shall be set
off against so much of the amount of the new
decree as remains unsatisfied. "
The stages at which decrees could be reopened were laid down
by sub-ss. (1) and (6) of s. 36. Sub-section (1) provided :
" Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law for the time being in force, if in any
suit to which this Act applies, or in any suit
brought by a borrower for relief under this
section whether heard ex parte or otherwise,
the Court has reason to believe that the
exercise of one or more of the powers under
this section will give relief to the borrower,
it shall exercise all or any of the following
powers as it may consider appropriate......"
Sub-section (6) provided:
" Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law for the time being in force,-
(a) the Court which, in a suit to which this
Act applies passed a decree which was not
fully satisfied by the first day of January,
1939, may exercise the powers conferred by
sub-sections (1) and (2)-
(i) in any proceedings in execution of such
decree, or
(ii) on an application for review of such
decree made within one year of the date of
commencement of this Act, and the provisions
of rules 2 and 5 of Order XLVII of the First
Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908,
shall not apply to any such application;
890
(b) any Court before which an appeal is
pending in respect of a decree referred to in
clause (a) may either itself exercise the like
powers as may be exercised under sub-sections
(1) and (2), or refer the case to the Court
which passed the decree directing such Court
to exercise such powers, and such Court shall
after exercise thereof return the record with
the additional evidence, if any, taken by it
and its findings and the reasons therefore to
the Appellate Court and thereupon the
provisions of rule 26 of Order XLI of the
First Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, shall apply. "
The words "suit to which this Act applies" were defined to
mean:
" 2 (22)...... any suit or proceeding
instituted or filed on or after the 1st day of
January, 1939, or pending on that date and
includes a proceeding in execution-
(a). for the recovery of a loan advanced
before or after the commencement of this Act;
(b) for the enforcement of any agreement
entered into before or after the commencement
of this Act, whether by way of settlement of
account or other:wise, or of any security so
taken, in respect of any loan advanced whether
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before or after the commencement of this Act;
or
(c) for the redemption of any security given
before or after the commencement of this Act
in respect of any loan advanced whether before
or after the commencement of this Act. "
By s. 2(21), " suit " included an appeal. The definition
was still further widened for purposes of s. 36 vide sub-s.
(3) but nothing turns on it.
The effect of these provisions may be summed up: The
reopening of transactions and decrees could be achieved:
(a)in any suit to which the Act applied;
(b) in a suit brought by the borrower for
relief under s. 36;
(c) in any proceeding in execution of
decrees;,:
(d) by an application for review of a decree
made within one year of the date of
commencement of the Act; and
891
(e) by appellate Courts at all the above
stages. Once the Court was moved, the action
of the Court was dictated by the Act, and the
Court was compelled by the Act to give full
relief. The Court in this case, was required
by law to reopen all the decrees passed
against the respondent. Indeed, R. C. Mitter,
J. quite correctly pointed out:
" In this case the judgment-debtor was
entitled to have all the decrees, namely, the
preliminary, final and the personal decrees
reopened. He should not have been refused
relief simply because he had asked for the
reopening of the personal decree only if there
had been a contravention of the provisions of
section 30 of the Bengal Money-lenders Act. "
The learned Judge, however, declined to remand the case for
the application of the Act or even to apply it himself,
because he felt that what was asked for by the respondent
should at,least have been granted, and he granted only that
relief. The law, however, gave no such option. It was
mandatory, and laid a duty upon the Court.
The respondent then filed a suit, and asked for all the
reliefs which the Court had to award, and there can be no
doubt that unless the suit be incompetent, the Act must be
applied even now, because the volition of the borrower is
entirely out of place in the application of the Act. The
respondent no doubt, when he applied on the previous
occasion, asked that the Act be applied only so far as
benefited him; but his wishes were irrelevant, and the Act
had to be applied, as it stood. Every one who has dealt
with this case has felt this to be the true position in law.
Thus, the question is whether the respondent was precluded
from bringing the suit. The suit could be barred under s.
11 or 0. 2, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or by the
application of the principle of constructive res judicata,
or because of waiver, estoppel or the equitable principle of
approbation and reprobation. The opening words of Sub-s.
(1) and again of sub=s. (6) of s. 36 are:
" Notwithstanding anything contained in any
law for the time being in force
892
and they are apt to put out of consideration both s. 11 and
O. 2, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Waiver and the
equitable doctrine of approbation and reprobation can apply
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only if a right were give up. They can have no application
where the question is not so much of a right of a party as
of the duty of a Court under the Act. The Court was moved,
and had to do its duty. If it can be moved a second time by
another proceeding, neither those principles nor the
principle of constructive res judicata can apply.
The remedies which are enjoined by the Act are not exclusive
of one another, either expressly or by necessary intendment.
As the law stands, the Court could take action to enforce it
at almost any stage of the proceedings between the parties
commenced by the creditor, and, in addition, in proceedings
or a suit commenced by the borrower. The intention of the
law is clear and manifest that borrowers must be protected.
Indeed, in Jadunath Roy v. Kshitish Chandra Achariya
Choudhury (1), the Judicial Committee held that the
preliminary, the final and the personal decrees in a suit to
enforce a simple mortgage were all connected and were, in
effect, one decree only, and there could be no question of
reopening one decree and not the others. And in Joy Chand
Lal Babu v. Kamalaksha Choudhury (2), a consent decree in a
mortgage suit,,, which combined the preliminary, the final
and the personal decrees into one decree, was held to, be
properly reopened. The decrees passed against the
respondent were required by law to be reopened, and no
provision of the Code of Civil Procedure or of equity could
bar the suit. The first was excluded expressly, and equity
was hardly applicable in view of the law on the subject.
Indeed, by the suit even the.decree, of Mitter, J. could be
reopened, if it did not comply. with the law.
In my opinion, the order of the Divisional Bench of
the Calcutta High Court, with respect, is correct and to
hold otherwise is to decline to give effect to the
protection, which the Act has sedulously erected in
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 179,
(2) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 131.
893
favour of borrowers and against rapacious moneylenders. I
find myself in such complete agreement with the judgment
impugned, that I do not find it necessary to cover the same
ground.
I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal with ’Costs.
BY COURT.-In view of the majority judgment of the Court,
this appeal will be allowed and Mittra’s Suit No. 105 of
1947 dismissed with costs throughout.