Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRINIVASAVARDACHARUR AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOPALA MENON AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/10/1966
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 412 1967 SCR (1) 721
ACT:
Usurious Loans (Madras Amendment) Act (8 of 1937), s. 3-Rate
of interest permissible.
HEADNOTE:
The first appellant advanced monies to D against mortgages
of her property. D was adjudicated an insolvent in 1949 and
her properties got vested in the Official Assignee of
Madras. The Official Assignee brought the properties to sale
which were ultimately purchased by the first respondent.
The Trial Court decreed the appellants’ suit for enforcement
of the mortgages against the property and awarded interest
at the rate of 15 per cent compoundable with yearly rests.
In appeal the Division Bench of the High Court found that in
the circumstances of the case a rate of 10, per cent
compound interest with yearly rests was just. With
certificate the appellants came to this Court. Section 3 of
the Usurious Loans (Madras Amendment) Act, 1937 fell for
consideration.
HELD : The net result of the various clauses of s. 3 to be
that the court must go back to the date of the original
transaction and form an opinion as to the rate of interest
which would be reasonable after considering
(a) the value of the security offered;
(b) the financial condition of the debtors including the
result of any earlier transaction;
(c) the known and probable risks in getting repayment;
(d) whether compound interest was provided for and if so
the frequency of the Period of calculation of interest for
being added to the principal amount of the loan. [725 E-G]
In the circumstances of the case the Division Bench rightly
held that 10 per cent compound interest with yearly rests
would meet the justice of the case. The security was not
inadequate and the threat of a suit by the brother of the
mortgagor was not serious. [726 A-B]
Venkatarao v. Venkatratnam, A.I.R. 1952 Madras 872 and Sri
Balasaraswati v. A. Parameswara Aiyar, A.I.R. 1957 Mad. 122
referred to.
There was also no reason to interfere with the scaling down
of the rate of interest to 6 per cent from the date of
filing of the suit. Although the reasons were not indicated
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it was fairly clear that the High Court was, using its
discretion as regards interest pendente lite. [726 E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 636 of
1964.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 1, 1959
of the Madras High Court in O. S. Appeal No. 104 of 1955.
T. V. R. Tatachari, for the appellants.
R. Thiagarajan, Jayaram and M. R. K. Iyer, for
respondents, Nos. 1 and 9.
722
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. This is an appeal from a judgment of the
High .Court at Madras on a certificate granted by it.
The main question in this appeal relates to the rate of
interest payable in respect of four mortgages executed in
between March 20, 1936 and January 2, 1938. Both the
learned trial Judge, Ramaswami J. of the Madras High Court
and the Bench of two Judges in appeal were of the view that
the provision for interest in the impugned mortgages should
be reduced; but whereas the learned trial Judge reduced the
rate of interest from 15 pet cent compoundable every quarter
to 15 per cent compoundable with yearly rests, the Judges in
appeal after taking all the circumstances into consideration
held that 10 per cent compound interest with yearly rests
would not be excessive and they reduced the rate
accordingly. They also scaled down the rate of interest to
6 per cent from the date of the institution of the suit.
The creditor has come up before this Court in appeal and his
substantial complaint is that the rate of interest should
not have been cut down by the Division Bench of the Madras
High Court.
The power of the court to reduce interest in a case like
this is derived from s. 3 of the Usurious Loans (Madras
Amendment) Act VIII of 1937. Sub-section (1) of that
section gives the court the power to give relief in various
ways if it has reason to believe that the transaction as
between the parties thereto was substantially unfair. One
of such reliefs is the reopening of the transaction and
relieving the debtor of all liability in respect of any
excessive interest. Explanation I to the section lays down
that "if the interest is excessive, the court shall presume
that the transaction was substantially unfair; but such
presumption may be rebutted by a number of special
circumstances justifying the rate of interest." Sub-section
(2) of s. 3 provides by clause (a) that the word "excessive"
in the section means in excess of that which the court deems
to be reasonable having regard to the risk incurred as it
appeared or must be taken to have appeared, to the creditor
at the date of the loan. Under clause (b) of the said sub-
section the court has also to take into account any amounts
charged or paid etc. and if compound interest is charged,
the period at which it is calculated and the total advantage
which may reasonably be taken to have been expected from the
transaction. Clause (c) of sub-section 2 provides that in
considering the question of risk, the court shall take into
account the presence or absence of security and the value
thereof, the financial condition of the debtor and the
result of any previous transactions of the debtor, by way of
loan, so far as the same were known, or must be taken to
have been known, to the creditor. Clause (d) of the said
sub-section enjoins upon the court to consider also all
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circumstances materially affecting the relations
723
the parties at the time of the loan or tending to show that
the transaction was unfair, including the necessities or
supposed necessities of the debtor at the time of the loan
so far as the same were known, or must be taken to have been
known, to the creditor.
In effect the provisions of the section which are relevant
for the purpose of this appeal are as follows:-
(a)If the Court has reason to believe that the transaction
was unfair it will exercise the powers given by subsection,
(1).
(b)The court shall presume the transaction to be sub-
stantially unfair if the interest is excessive, such pre-
sumption being a rebuttable one by the special circumstances
of the case;
(c)In order to find out whether the interest is excessive
the court must examine the circumstances of the case in the
light of the risk incurred or the risk as would be apparent
to the creditor at the date of the loan, and then judge
whether compound interest at the rate prescribed and with
therests provided for was justifiable keeping also in view
thesecurity given by the mortgagor, the value of such
securityand the condition of the debtor including the
result of any previous transaction.
The net result of the above seems to be that the Court must
go back to the date of the original transaction and form an
opinion as to the rate of interest which would be reasonable
after considering
(a) the value of the security offered;
(b) the financial condition of the debtor including the
result of any prior transaction;
(c) the known or probable risks in getting repayment,
(d) whether compound interest was provided for and if so
the frequency of the period of calculation of interest for
being added to the principal amount of the loan.
The facts of the case may now be briefly stated. The
original mortgagor Dhanakoti Ammal had succeeded to the
properties of her father along with her sisters under a will
executed by him on the basis that the properties were his
self-acquired properties. Her brother Alavandar filed a
suit in the year 1919 through a next friend claiming that
the properties were not the self-acquired properties of his
father and as such not capable of bequest under a will.
This suit was dismissed as also the appeal therefrom to
724
the Madras High Court preferred in 1922. By the year 1936
when the first mortgage in favour of Srinivasavaradachariar,
the appellant, before us, was executed, Dhanakoti Ammal was
involved in debts. The most important item of her
properties was a market on the outskirts of the city of
Madras which had become dilapidated and the Corporation of
Madras was refusing to renew the licence unless it was put
in good order. She had further borrowed a sum of money
repayable with interest at 20 per cent compoundable monthly.
Her brother Alavandar who was due to attain majority very
soon threatened to file another suit impeaching the decree
in the earlier suit. As a matter of fact, the first two
mortgages were executed in 1936 before Alavandar had filed
his suit and the last mortgage was executed in January 1938.
Dhanakoti Ammal got more and more involved -in debt and was
adjudicated an insolvent in 0. P. 148 of 1949. Her
properties got vested in the Official Assignee of Madras.
The Official Assignee brought the properties to sale which
were ultimately purchased by Dr. Gopala Menon for Rs.
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5,0001-. Dr. Gopala Menon tried to come to an arrangement
with Srinivasavaradachariar but nothing came out of it and
the suit out of which this appeal has arisen was filed in
the year 1950. Other aliences were involved in the suit but
we are not concerned with them. According to the learned
trial Judge the risks which the creditor ran in advancing
the money were considerable in that the adequacy of the
security was questionable in view of the threat of suit by
Dhanakoti Ammal’s brother and the condition of the property
in an undeveloped area of Kodambakkam. The learned trial
Judge could not find anything unfair in the transaction, but
nevertheless he thought that the rate of interest should be
scaled down to 15 per cent compoundable at the end of each.
year.
The learned Judges of the Division Bench of the Madras High
Court found that the amount advanced under the old mortgages
came to nearly Rs. 48,000/- that there was already a prior
mortgage in respect of which nearly Rs. 8,000/- was due and
the value of the security though not very ample could not be
said to be markedly inadequate and there was a shadow on the
title of the mortgagor by reason of the threat of suit by
her brother. On a consideration of the entire evidence
bearing on the point revealing the circumstances in which
the loan transaction came into existence the appellate bench
held that 15 per cent compound interest calculated with
quarterly rests was certainly excessive. Taking note of
several decisions of the Madras High Court to which we shall
presently refer, the learned Judges thought that the rate of
interest to be allowed was 10 per cent compound interest
with yearly rests.
It is difficult to predicate of any rate of interest as
being excessive divorced from the circumstances of the case
unless the rate
725
fixed is so high as to be suggestive of an unfair
transaction on the face of things. It is not for us to
speculate as to why the Legislature of the State of Madras
proceeded in such a round about way in making amendments to
the Usurious Loans Act of 1918 for the purpose of giving
relief to borrowers when it is well known that at or about
the time of the Madras amendment the Legislatures of other
States in India had fixed certain rates as being the maximum
beyond which the courts of law were not competent to go. So
far as we are aware difference was made in the treatment of
unsecured loans and secured loans and even in the case of
the former the rate allowed was not to exceed 12 per cent
simple in most of the States. With regard to the rate of
interest allowed by the Madras High Court after 1937 we find
that in Venkatarao v. Venkataratnam(l) a bench consisting of
Govinda Menon and Ramaswami JJ. observed, "that anything
above 12 per cent per annum simple interest is excessive,
considering the nature of transaction in this State." There
the suit was on a mortgage which provided for payment of
interest at 12 1/2 per cent per mensem with annual rests.
In Sri Balasaraswati v. A. Parameswara Aiyar(2) a Division
Bench consisting of Rajamannar C. J. and Panchapekesa Ayyar
J. observed, "in normal cases where the security is ample to
cover the loan and there is no danger at all to the
principal and interest the court will hold more than 12 per
cent simple interest to be excessive, as held in A.I.R. 1952
Madras 872 and by us in A.S. 348 and 361 of 1948".
According to the learned Judges "Where the security is not
sound, 10 per cent compound interest can be allowed as in
A.I.R. 1954 Madras 764." In the result the learned Judges
only allowed simple interest at 12 per cent per annum. In
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the instant cases the learned Judges in appeal also referred
to a judgment, of Subba Rao J. (as he then was) in C. S. 163
of 1949 as containing an observation that the dictum in
Venkatarao v. Venkatratnam(l) that "anything above 12 per
cent simple interest was excessive would not be taken as a
principle of law applicable to all cases irrespective of the
circumstances obtaining at the time of the transaction".
That transaction also related to Dhanakoti Ammal-the
original debtor in this case and Subba Rao J. (as he then
was) reduced the rate of interest from 15 per cent compound
interest to 12 per cent per annum simple. We have not had
the benefit of reading the judgment of his Lordship, but we
take it that the result of it is as indicated in the
judgment in appeal before us.
It appears to us therefore that in the opinion of a number
of Judges of the Madras High Court who were cognizant of the
state of affairs prevailing in the State interest beyond the
rate of 12%. per annum simple would be considered excessive
by court of law where the security was not inadequate and
the risk run by the creditor was not abnormal. There can be
no dispute that
(1) A.I.R. 1952 Madras 872.
(2) A.I.R. 1957 Madras 122, 129.
726
interest payable at the rate of 10 per cent compoundable
annually over a number of years would be more in the
interest of the creditor than 12 per cent per annum simple
for the same period. In our opinion the learned Judges of
the Division Bench of the Madras High Court were right in
holding that 10 per cent compound interest with yearly rests
would meet the justice of the case. The security was not
inadequate and the threat of suit by Alavandar in view of
the fact that his earlier suit which had been taken in
appeal to the Madras High Court and subsequently lost, was
never regarded seriously. This is corroborated by the fact
that even after the institution of that suit in 1937 the
appellant before us advanced further sums of money to
Dhanakoti Ammal at the same rate of interest as before; if
he had thought that his security was put in jeopardy by the
institution of the suit he would have been careful not to
advance any further amounts and would in any case have
insisted on the rate of interest being higher than that
provided for in the earlier mortgages.
In our opinion the Division Bench of the Madras High Court
made a correct assessment of the situation and their
pronouncement with regard to the rate of interest prior to
the date of the suit ought not to be disturbed.
We also find no reason to interfere with the scaling down of
the rate of interest to 6 per cent from the date of the
filing of the suit. Although the reasons are not indicated,
it seems fairly plain that their Lordships were using their
discretion as regards interest pendente lite. We cannot
overlook the fact that the mortgages -were executed as far
back as 1936 and 1938 and that the creditor who had waited
till 1950 for the institution of the suit would, in any
event, get interest substantially exceeding the principal
amount of the loans. In this view of things we are not
prepared to interfere with the exercise of the discretion
exercised by the learned Judges of the Madras High Court
even though they have given no reasons for the reduction of
rate of interest pendente lite.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G. C. Appeal dismissed.
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