Memon Abdul Karim Haji Tayab Vs.
Deputy Custodian General, New Delhi & Ors [1964] INSC 39 (19 February 1964)
19/02/1964 WANCHOO, K.N.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION: 1964 AIR 1256 1964 SCR (6) 780
ACT:
Evacuee Property -Money deposited with an
Indian by a person who migrated to Pakistan-Liability to pay that amount to the
Custodian-Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950 (31 of 838 1950) Amended
v. 48 (Act No. 91 of 1956)-Limitation Act, 1908 (9 of 1908), Art. 60.
HEADNOTE:
Rupees 85,000/was deposited with the
appellant by his sister in January 1946. The appellant's sister migrated to
Pakistan sometimes between June to August 1949. The Assistant Custodian called
upon the appellant -to pay this sum lying in deposit under s. 48 of the Administration
of Evacuee Property Act, 1950. The appellant pleaded that the amount could not
be recovered from him because the money had been given to him as a loan and its
recovery was barred in January 1949. The Assistant Custodian rejected the
contention of the appellant and directed him to pay the amount under s. 48 of
the Act, as it then stood. This decision was affirmed in appeal as well as in
revision.
Then the appellant moved a writ petition
before the High Court which was dismissed by the single Judge. On Latters
Patent Appeal the High Court held that the amount was not recoverable under s.
48 of the Act as it stood at the relevant time. This decision was given on
December 9, 1957.
In the meantime, s. 48 had been amended on
October 22, 1956.
On January 22, 1958 another notice of demand
was served on the appellant by the Assistant Custodian. The Assistant Custodian
again directed the amount to be recovered The appellant preferred an appeal
before the Custodian-General.
The Custodian General allowed the appeal and
remanded the proceedings for further enquiry as directed by him. After the
remand further evidence was taken and it was held that the amount in question
was payable by the appellant as it was a deposit and was still recoverable when
the property vested in the Custodian. Thereupon the appellant preferred an
appeal to the Custodian-General and that appeal was dismissed. Then the
appellant applied to this Court for special leave which was granted. Hence the
appeal.
Held: (i) Sub-ss. 1 and 2 of the amended s.
48 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act are clearly procedural and
would apply to all cases which have to be investigated in accordance therewith
after October 22, 1956, even though the claim may have arisen before the
amended section was inserted in the Act. It is well-settled that procedural
amendments to a law apply, in the absence of anything to the contrary,
retrospectively in the sense that they apply to all actions after the date they
come into force even though the actions may have begun earlier or the claim on
which the action may be based may be of an anterior date. In the present case
when the Assistant Custodian issued notice to the appellant on January 22,
1958, claiming the amount from him, the recovery could be dealt with under
sub-ss. (1) and (2) of the amended a. 48, as they are merely procedural
provisions.
(ii) In the present case the property which
vested in the Custodian was not the actual money in specie lying with the
appellant who must be treated as a banker with respect to the property with
him; on the other hand the property which vested in the Custodian would be the
right of the appellant's sister to recover the amount from the appellant 839
and that would be incorporeal property in the form of an actionable claim. It
is in respect of that actionable claim that the Custodian can proceed under s.
48 sub-ss. (1) and (2), to recover the sum payable to him in respect of that
property, namely, the actionable claim. The Custodian could not take action
under s. 9 by physically seizing the amount because the amount cannot be
treated as specific property which is liable to be seized under that section.
(iii) As this amount was a deposit,
limitation would run at the earliest from the date of demand and there is no
evidence that any demand was made by the appellant's sister for the return of
the money before she migrated to Pakistan.
Therefore, the period of limitation had not
even begun to run on the date the appellant's sister migrated to Pakistan,
assuming Art. 60 of the Limitation Act No. 9 of 1908 applied. Consequently the
right of the appellant's sister to recover the amount vested in the Custodian
and was not barred by limitation & the time when she became an evacuee.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 119 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated January 16, 1961 of the Deputy Custodian-General, New Delhi in
Appeal No. 172-A /SUR/ 1960.
M. C. Setalvad, Atiqur Rehman and K. L.
Hathi, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, K. S.
Chawla and B. R. G. K. Achar, for the respondents.
February 19, 1964. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by WANCHOO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
order of the Deputy Custodian General, and the question involved is whether the
appellant is liable to pay Rs.
85,000/-to the Custodian. The matter has a
long history behind it which it is necessary to set out in order to understand
the point now in dispute in the present appeal.
The money in question was deposited with the
appellant by his sister as far back as January 1946. The total amount deposited
was Rs. 90,000/-, but the appellant's sister took back Rs. 5,000/-, with the
result that the balance of Rs. 85,000/remained deposited with the appellant.
The appellant's sister thereafter migrated to Pakistan sometimes between June
to August 840 1949. Sometime later, the Assistant Custodian General called upon
the appellant to pay this sum lying in deposit under s. 48 of the Administration
of Evacuee Property Act, No. XXXI of 1950, (hereinafter referred to as the
Act). The appellant contested the matter on the ground that the money had been
given to him as a loan and its recovery was barred in January 1949 long before
his sister had migrated to Pakistan, and therefore the amount could not be
recovered from him. The Assistant Custodian however directed the recovery of
the amount as arrears of land revenue under s. 48 of the Act, as it then stood.
The matter was taken in appeal before the Custodian, Saurashtra, but the appeal
failed. The appellant then went in revision to the Custodian General, and the
revision also failed. Then followed a writ petition by the appellant before the
Saurashtra High Court in 1955. The writ petition was dismissed by a learned
Single Judge; but on Letters Patent Appeal the appellant succeeded, the High
Court holding that the amount was not recoverable under s. 48 of the Act as it
stood at the relevant time. This decision was given on December 9, 1957. In the
meantime, s. 48 had been amended on October 22, 1956 and we shall refer to this
amendment in due course.
After the appellant had succeeded in the High
Court, another notice of demand was served on him by the Assistant Custodian on
January 22, 1958, and after hearing the objections of the appellant, the
Assistant Custodian again directed the amount to be recovered. The appellant
then took the matter in appeal to the Custodian General. The Custodian General
allowed the appeal in August 1958 and remanded the proceedings for further
enquiry as directed by him. The Custodian General then held that s. 48 as
amended applied to the fresh proceedings which began on the notice issued by
the Assistant Custodian in January 1958. He further held that the amount was
-recoverable under the amended s. 48 provided it was due to the evacuee on the
date the property of the evacuee vested in the Custodian. He was therefore of
opinion that it would have to be determined when the sister of the appellant
migrated and whether the amount was due to her on the date of her migration and
had.
not become barred by the law of Iimitation on
that date. Ho was further 841 of opinion that the question whether the
transaction amounted to a loan or a deposit had to be determined as there were
different periods of limitation for these two types of transactions. He
therefore remanded the matter for disposal after finding the facts in
accordance with the directions given by him. After the remand further evidence
was taken and it was held that the amount in question was payable by the
appellant as it was a deposit and was still recoverable when the property
vested in the Custodian.
Thereupon the appellant again went in appeal
to the Custodian General and that appeal was dismissed on February 6, 1961.
Then the appellant applied to this Court for special leave which was granted;
and that is how the matter has come up before us.
Two questions have been urged before us on
behalf of the appellant. The first is whether the amended s. 48 can be applied
to the present case. The second is whether the claim of the Custodian is barred
even on the basis of the transaction between the appellant and his sister being
a deposit and not a loan.
The amended s. 48 came into the Act by Act
No. 91 of 1956 from October 22, 1956 and runs as follows: "48. Recovery of
certain sums as arrears of land revenue:-(1) Any sum payable to the Government
or to the Custodian in respect of any evacuee property, under any agreement,
express or implied, lease or other document or otherwise howsoever, may be
recovered in the same manner as an arrear of land revenue.
(2) If any question arises whether the sum is
payable to the Government or to the Custodian within the meaning of sub-section
(1), the Custodian shall, after making such inquiry as he may deem fit, and
giving to the person by whom the sum is alleged to be payable an opportunity of
being heard, decide the question; and the decision of the Custodian shall,
subject to any appeal or revision under this Act, be final and shall not be
called in question by any court or other authority 842 (3) For the purpose of
this section, a sum shall be deemed to be payable to the Custodian
notwithstanding that its recovery is barred by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908
(9 of 1908), or any other law for the time being in force relating to
limitation of action." It will be seen that this is mainly a procedural
section replacing the earlier s. 48 and lays down that sums payable to the Government
or to the Custodian can be recovered there under as arrears of land revenue.
The section also provides that where there is any dispute as to whether any sum
is payable or not to the Custodian or to the Government, the Custodian has to
make an inquiry into the matter and give the person raising the dispute an
opportunity of being heard and thereafter decide the question. Further, the
section makes the decision of the Custodian final subject to any appeal or
revision under the Act and not open to question by any court or any other
authority. Lastly the section provides that the sum shall be deemed to be
payable to the Custodian notwithstanding that its recovery is barred by the
Indian Limitation Act or any other law for the time being in force relating to
limitation of action. Subsections (1) and (2) are clearly procedural and would
apply to all cases which have to be investigated in accordance therewith after
October 22, 1956, even though the claim may have arisen before the amended
section was inserted in the Act. It is well settled that procedural amendments
to a law apply, in the absence of anything to the contrary, retrospectively in
the sense that they apply to all actions after the date they come into force
even though the actions may have begun earlier or the claim on which the action
may be based may be of an anterior date. Therefore, when the Assistant
Custodian issued notice to the appellant on January 22, 1958 claiming the
amount from him, the recovery could be dealt with under sub-ss. (1) and (2) of
the amended s. 48, as they are merely procedural provisions. But it is urged on
behalf of the appellant that sub-s. (1) in terms does not apply to the present
case, and if so, sub-s. (2) would also not apply. The argument is that under
sub-s. (1) it is only any sum payable to the Government or to the Custodian in
respect of any evacuee property which can be recovered as arrears of land
revenue.
843 Therefore, the argument runs, evacuee
property itself cannot be recovered under sub-s. (1), for that sub-section only
provides for recovery of any sum payable in respect of any evacuee property. In
this connection reference has been made to s. 9 of the Act, which lays down
that if any person in possession of any evacuee property refuses or fails on
demand to surrender possession thereof to the Custodian, the Custodian may use
or cause to be used such force as may be necessary for taking possession of
such property and may, for this purpose, after giving reasonable warning and
facility to any woman not appearing in public to withdraw, remove or break open
any lock, bolt or any door or do any other act necessary for the said purpose.
The argument is that the Custodian can only take action for recovery of evacuee
property under this section. We are of opinion that the argument is
misconceived. Section 9 deals with the recovery of immovable property or
specific movable property which can be physically seized; it does not deal with
incorporeal evacuee property which may vest in the Custodian and which, for
example, may be of the nature of an actionable claim. So far as actionable
claims are concerned, they are dealt with by s. 48 as amended read with s. 10
(2) (i). It is also a misconception to think that the amount of Rs. 85,000/which
is involved in this case is actually evacuee property. It is true that under s.
48 as amended, the Custodian can take action for recovery of such sums as may
be due in respect of any evacuee property and if the sum of Rs. 85,000/which
was deposited with the appellant is actually evacuee property, the Custodian
may not be able to take action under s. 48 (1) and (2) in respect of the same.
But the property which vested in the Custodian was not the actual money in
specie lying with the appellant who must be treated as a banker with respect to
the property with him-, on the other hand the property which vested in the
Custodian would be the right of the appellant's sister to recover the amount
from the appellant and that would be incorporeal property in the form of an
actionable claim. It is in respect of that actionable claim that the Custodian
can precede under s. 48, sub-ss. (1) and (2), to recover the sum payable to him
in respect of that property, namely, the actionable claim. The contention of
the appellant that s. 48 (1) will not apply to the recovery of this sum of
money must 844 therefore fail and the Custodian would have the right to recover
this sum of money as it is payable in respect of the evacuee property of the
appellant's sister, namely, the right which she had to recover the sum from the
appellant, and it is this right which vested in the Custodian. The Custodian
could not take action under s. 9 by physically seizing the amount because the
amount cannot be treated as specific property which is liable to be seized
under that section. If the appellant's sister had the right to recover this
amount from the appellant that right would be incorporeal property which would
vest in the Custodian and in respect of which action could be taken under s. 48
as amended and not under s. 9 of the Act. The contention of the appellant that
s. 48, (1) and (2) do not apply to this case must therefore fail.
The next contention is that in any case
treating the amount as a deposit the right to recover it had become barred and
therefore the Custodian could not recover it under this section and that sub-s.
(3) of s. 48 would not apply as it affects vested rights and is not procedural
in nature and therefore could not be applied retrospectively. Some dates would
be relevant in this connection. On the findings of the authorities concerned,
it appears that the deposit was made sometime in January 1946. The appellant's
sister migrated sometimes between June to August 1949. According to the law in
force in that area at the relevant time, on the date of migration of the
appellants sister, she became an evacuee and her property would vest in the
Custodian on such date. So her right to recover this amount from the appellant
would vest in the Custodian sometime between June to August 1949, if it was
still alive under the law of limitation, even apart from the question that in
such cases only the remedy is barred though the right remains. Further as this
was a deposit, limitation would run at the earliest from the date of demand and
there is no evidence that any demand was made by the appellants sister for the
return of the money before she migrated to Pakistan. Therefore, the period of
limitation had not even begun to run on the date the appellant's sister
migrated to Pakistan, assuming art.
60 of the Limitation Act, No. 9 of 1908
applied.
Consequently the right of, the appellant's
sister to recover the amount vested in the Custodian and was not barred by
limitation at the time when she became an evacuee. The demand was made for the
first time on January 10, 1952 by the Assistant Custodian and time would run
from that date, at the earliest.
Then it is urged that even if the actionable
claim vested in the Custodian, the demand in this case was made for the first
time on January 10, 1952, and therefore under art. 60 of the Limitation Act,
the right to recover the amount would be barred in January 1955, and
consequently no proceeding could be taken under s. 48 to recover the same after
January 1955. It is further urged that the amended Act came into force on October 22, 1956 and sub-s. (3) would only apply to such cases where the limitation had
not expired before that date. We do not think it necessary for purposes of the
present appeal to decide the effect of sub-s. (3) of s. 48, for the appellant
never contested before the authorities concerned that recovery could not be
made tinder s. 48 even if the amount was treated as a deposit. What the
appellant had contended before the authorities concerned was that the recovery
would be barred as the amount was given to him., as a loan. The appellant
therefore cannot Dow for the first time in this Court take the plea that
recovery could not be made under s. 48 and sub-s. (3) thereof would not apply
even if the amount is treated as a deposit. This contention thus raised in this
Court for the first time raises a question as to the effect of sub-s. (3) of s.
48. Besides the effect of s. 48 (3), it is contended for the respondent that if
this question had been raised before the proper authorities evidence might have
been led to show that the recovery was not barred, for the case proceeded on
,he assumption that At. 60 of the Limitation Act applied and proper defences
could have been raised as for example the conditions on which the deposit was
made i.e. whether on demand or otherwise and acknowledgements of liability made
by the appellant. Such defence would have raised questions of fact which have
never been investigated. Therefore it is urged that the appellant should not be
allowed to raise the point that the recovery would be barred even if the amount
was treated is a deposit and should be confined to his case 846 that this was a
loan and not a deposit, for he never pleaded at any time before the authorities
concerned that even if it was a deposit the recovery would be barred by time.
We are of opinion that there is force in this contention on behalf of the
respondents and we are not prepared to allow the appellant to raise the
question whether the recovery would be barred even if the amount is treated as
a deposit. In this view of the matter, it would not be necessary to consider
the exact effect of s. 48(3) and to decide whether it will apply even to cases
where the recovery had become barred under the Limitation Act before October
22, 1956. We therefore do not allow the appellant to raise the point that the
recovery would be barred even if the amount was a deposit.
The appeal therefore fails and is hereby
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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