Official Receiver, Kanpur & ANR Vs.
Abdul Shakur & Ors [1964] INSC 193 (11 September 1964)
11/09/1964 SHAH, J.C.
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) AYYANGAR, N.
RAJAGOPALA
CITATION: 1965 AIR 920 1965 SCR (1) 254
CITATOR INFO:
E 1969 SC1334 (8A)
ACT:
Provincial Insolvency Act (5 of 1920), ss.
33, 75(1) and 80Negotiable Instruments Act (26 of 1881), s. 118Official
Receiver-If bound to rely upon statutory presumption-High Court-Jurisdiction
under s. 75(1) of the Insolvency Act.
HEADNOTE:
The second appellant, who had executed
promissory notes in favour of the respondents was adjudicated an insolvent on a
petition by them. The Official Receiver in exercise of the powers under ss. 33
and 80 of the Provincial Insolvency Act (5 of 1920) and under directions of the
Insolvency Judge, inquired into the claims of the respondents and rejected
them. On appeal, the Insolvency Judge directed the inclusion of their names in
the schedule of creditors. The appeal to the District Court against the order
of the Insolvency Judge was allowed. In second appeal to the High Court, it was
held, that the inference drawn by the District Court from its findings was a
matter of law and that therefore the High Court had jurisdiction under s.
75(1), to interfere with the order of the District Court. Relying upon the
presumption in favour of creditors in s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act
(26 of 1881), the High Court set aside the judgment of the District Court. The
Official Receiver and the insolvent appealed to the Supreme Court.
HELD : The appeal should be allowed.
Since all the findings of the District Court
were findings of fact and the question whether a statutory presumption was
rebutted by the rest of the evidence was also a question of fact, the High
Court had no jurisdiction to set aside the judgment of the District Court.
[259A-C].
Wali Mohammad V. Mohammad Bakhsh, (1930) L.R.
57 I.A. 86.
approved.
Section 118 of the Negotiable Instruments
Act, enacts a special rule of evidence which operates only between parties to
the instrument or persons claiming under them in a suit or proceeding relating
to the negotiable instrument. The section does not affect s. 114 of the
Evidence Act, and in cases not falling within s. 118 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act the Court may or may not presume that a promissory note was
founded on good consideration.
Therefore, in a proceeding relating to proof
of debts, the question being not one between the insolvent and the proving
creditor alone, and since the rights of other creditors of the insolvent have
of necessity to be considered, the Court has jurisdiction to investigate
whether there is a real -debt. Even if for some reason the debtor himself is
estopped from denying the debt, there could be no estopped against the Insolvency
Court. There is thus no statutory presumption of consideration in favour of the
creditors under promissory notes in proceedings under s. 33 of the Provincial
Insolvency Act for settlement of the schedule of creditors, and the Receiver
exercising powers under s. 80 of that Act is not bound to admit the debts in
the schedule merely because the insolvent or the creditors have failed to
displace such a presumption. [261F-262C; 264E-G].
Case law reviewed.
255
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 257 of 1962.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated
February 19, 1957 of the Allahabad High Court in S. A. F. No. 4 of 1952.
S. T. Desai, and J. P. Goyal, for the
appellants.
G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta, J. B. Dadachanji, O.
C.
Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for respondent
No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. Respondents I to 3 in this appeal presented a petition before the
Insolvency Judge, Kanpur for an order adjudicating the second
appellant--Kotwaleshwar Prasadinsolvent. In their petition they alleged that
Kotwaleshwar had in the course of business dealings with them borrowed Rs.
15,000 on September 28, 1935 from respondents I and 3 and had executed a
promissory note agreeing to repay the amount, and that he had borrowed Rs.
3,500, on January 9, 1936 and Rs. 4,000 on April 7, 1936 from respondent 2, and
executed similar promissory notes, that he had failed to repay the amounts due
by him and with a view to defeat or delay his creditors secluded himself so as
to deprive his creditors of the means of communicating with him, and had
thereby committed an act of insolvency. The Insolvency Judge by order dated
October 8, 1937 adjudicated Kotwaleshwar insolvent and appointed the first
appellant the Official Receiver, Kanpur, as receiver of his estate with powers
under s. 80 of the Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920--hereinafter called 'the
Act'.
The Receiver proceeded in exercise of the
powers under s. 33 read with s. 80 of the Act to frame a schedule of debts.
The claims set up by the respondents were
challenged by Kotwaleshwar and a creditor named Abdul Sayed, but the Official
Receiver included the claims of the respondents in the schedule of debts, for
in his view Kotwaleshwar had admitted the claims on October 8, 1937 before the
Insolvency Court.
In appeal under s. 68 to the Insolvency Judge
the matter -was remanded to the Official Receiver with directions to hold a
fresh enquiry into the debts due to the respondents.
The Official Receiver then held a further
enquiry and rejected the claims of the respondents I to 3. He held that it was
not proved that Kotwaleshwar had received consideration for the three
promissory notes. In the view of the Official Receiver the documentary evidence
produced by Kotwaleshwar and the respondents established that the promissory
notes were executed by Kotwai256 eshwar under the influence of respondents I to
3 and their servant Amir Hassan and that the evidence including the books of
account of respondents 1 to 3 in support of the advance of consideration under
the promissory notes was unreliable.
In appeal against the order of the Official
Receiver, the Insolvency Judge, Kanpur directed that the names of respondents I
to 3 be included in the schedule of creditors.
In the view of the Insolvency Judge the presumption
of consideration arising under s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act
supported the rest of the evidence which was directed to establish the
genuineness of the signatures and the endorsements of execution on the
promissory notes by Kotwaleshwar and on the receipts executed by him and that
the Kachi Rokar of the respondents were adequately corrborated by the evidence
of the creditors, their witness Abdul Rashid and others and that Kotwaleshwar
had failed to discharge the burden which lay heavily on him to establish want
of consideration.
Against the order of the Insolvency Judge an
appeal was preferred to the District Court, Kanpur. During the pendency of the
appeal respondents 1 and 3 were declared evacuees under the Administration of
Evacuee Property Act and the Assistant Custodian of Evacuee Property in whom
their property had vested was impleaded as a party respondent. In the view of
the District Court the testimony of witnesses of the respondents in support of
the plea of payment of consideration was unreliable and that the admission made
by Kotwaleshwar before the Insolvency Judge on October 8, 1937 was procured by
the exercise of undue influence and that the books of account relied upon by
the respondents and the oral evidence in support thereof were unreliable. The
District Judge observed that the presumption under s. 118 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act in respect of the promissory notes did arise, but it stood in
the circumstances of the case weakened and the burden shifted to respondents I
to 3, to prove affirmatively that the sums covered by the three promissory
notes were in fact paid to the insolvent and that they failed to discharge the
burden.
Against the order passed by the District
Judge, a second appeal being No. 4 of 1952 was preferred under s. 75 (I.)
proviso 2 of the Provincial Insolvency Act. 1920 to the High Court -of
Allahabad. The Division Bench hearing the appeal referred the following two
questions to a Full Bench. These questions were (1) Whether the presumption
mentioned in cl.
(a) of s. 118, Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881
can be 257 invoked in insolvency proceedings where an alleged debt against the
insolvent is called in question by the official receiver or by a creditor or by
the insolvent ? (2) If it can be invoked, would circumstances tending to make
it doubtful that consideration passed under the n egotiable instrument even
though coupled with a denial on the part of the maker of the instrument,
suffice to deprive the creditor of the benefit of the presumption and require
him to prove by evidence that consideration did actually pass ? A Full Bench of
the High Court by majority having recorded an affirmative answer on the first
question, the second appeal was placed for hearing before a Division Bench of
the High Court. The Division Bench observed that the District Court had
recorded certain findings and from those findings it had inferred as a matter
of law that the statutory presumption under s. 118 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act stood rebutted. The High Court then observed :
"The correctness, or otherwise, of the
preliminary inference must need (sic) be considered first. Scrutiny of that
inference should however be prefaced with the observation that it is open to
question not only because the various findings, or at least the material ones,
described as circumstances by the court below, whereon that inference was based
suffer from one or the other of the legal defects pointed out above, but also
because the inference drawn by that court as a result of its view that the
statutory presumption stood rebutted was a finding on a question of law and not
on a question of fact.
That inference, or finding, of the court
below was that the onus of proving consideration had shifted on to the creditors.
. . . . . . . .A finding which has to draw on a rule of law for the recording
of it or for the ascertainment of its truth is a finding on a question of law,
any other a finding on a question of fact.
The finding that onus has shifted has to draw
on the rules of pleading and proof, of procedure and evidence, for the
recording of it as well as for the ascertainment of its truth. It is therefore
a finding on a question of law." The Court then held that in the case
before it "not only had the insolvent failed to displace, or even to
weaken, the presumption in favour of the creditors under s. 118 of the
Negotiable Instru258 ments Act, but the consideration stood fully established,
even if there was no initial presumption in favour of the creditors, by the evidence
adduced by them and by the insolvent's own admission." With special leave,
this appeal is preferred by the Official Receiver and Kotwaleshwar.
The District Court found on the evidence that
the insolvent's father died in 1933 leaving considerable properties, that the
insolvent was at the time of his father's death a young man about 20 years of
age, inexperienced and open to all the temptations of early life, that the
insolvent "got mixed up" with Amir Hassan and others and "they
initiated him into the mysteries of wine and women", that although the
promissory notes were not executed ",under the influence of drink"
there were grounds for holding that he was under the influence of Amir Hassan
when he signed them, that it was significant that the three promissory notes
were executed in quick succession and at that time the insolvent was already
indebted to other creditors to the extent of Rs. 6,000 that the respondents had
no previous business relations with the insolvent, that although the creditors knew
that the insolvent's share in the property left by his father was only Rs.
28,000 to Rs.
30,000 and that he was joint in estate with
his brother, no kind of security was taken from the insolvent, nor was any
enquiry made whether the said property was encumbered or not, that respondent 3
Abdul Wahid admitted that about 21 months after the execution of the promissory
note dated September 28, 1935 he came to know that the insolvent was executing
"bogus and fictitious promissory notes" in favour of his friends to
defraud his real creditors, and therefore it was incredible that further sums
should have been advanced under the two subsequent promissory notes of the
aggregate value of Rs. 7,500, that the insolvent was "fairly well off for
his ordinary needs" and there was no apparent reason why he should have
borrowed those considerable sums of money, that the respondents did not have
sufficient funds or resources with them to advance either the amounts covered
by the three promissory notes or those under the prior promissory notes of
September 4, 1935 and September 15, 1935, that the thumb impression of the
insolvent had been taken in addition to his signatures on the promissory note,
and that his signatures were also obtained on the Rokar Bahi, that the oral evidence
produced by the respondents in proof of the payment of consideration did not
inspire confidence, that the admission of the insolvent dated October 8, 1937
on the foot of which the order of adjudication was passed appeared to have been
made in suspicious circumstances and it was an erroneous admission and
therefore did not bind the insolvent and that the Bahi 259 Khatas of the
creditors were of a suspicious character. AR these findings were findings of
fact. The District Court inferred from the facts found that the statutory
presumption under s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act had been weakened
and the burden which lay upon the insolvent was discharged and it was not open
to the High Court exercising jurisdiction under s. 75(1) proviso 1, nor even
under proviso 2, of the Provincial Insolvency Act to set aside the judgment of
the District Court, for it is well settled that the question whether a
statutory presumption is rebutted by the rest of the evidence is a question of
fact : Wali Mohammad v. Mohammad Bakhsh (1).
This would be sufficient to dispose of the
appeal. But the question whether the Official Receiver is bound to give effect
to the statutory presumption in respect of a negotiable instrument arising
under s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act when the negotiable instrument
is sought to be relied upon by a creditor in the course of the insolvency
proceeding in proof of the debts to be entered in the schedule of creditors,
has been fully argued before us and as the High Court has overruled an earlier
decision of that Court: Ram Lal Tandon v. Kashi Charan (2), and as the question
is of some importance, we deem it necessary to express our opinion on that
question.
Section 33 of the Provincial Insolvency Act
by the first subsection provides :
"When an order of adjudication has been
made under this Act, all persons alleging themselves to be creditors of the
insolvent in respect of debts provable under this Act shall tender proof of
their respective debts by producing evidence of the amount and particulars
thereof, and the Court shall, by order, determine the persons who have proved
themselves to be creditors of the insolvent in respect of such debts, and the
amount of such debts, respectively, and shall frame a schedule of such persons
and debts :
The Act imposes a duty upon the court to
frame a schedule of creditors and of the debts due to them which are provable
under the Act. For that purpose the court has to hold an enquiry into the debts
due by the insolvent which are provable.
A proceeding under s. 33 of the Provincial
Insolvency Act is not a proceeding between the insolvent and the proving
creditor.
(1) L.R. 57 I.A. 86, 92.
(2) A.I.R. 1928 All. 380.
260 The proceeding is between the creditors
represented by the official receiver and the insolvent. When a creditor,
seeking to prove a debt relying upon a negotiable instrument, or other evidence
makes a claim for inclusion of the debt due to him, the court, or where he is
authorised the receiver of the estate of the insolvent, has to be satisfied
about the existence of the debt, the amount due, its particulars and that it is
provable in insolvency.
Section 33 does not indicate the quantum of
proof which may be regarded as sufficient to prove a debt. A court may accept
in proof of a debt a registered letter to the court and an affidavit verifying
the debt (see s. 49 of the Act).
That however is a matter of procedure, and
does not lay down as to what is sufficient to prove the debt. In each case it
is for the court or the receiver (Subject of course to review in the manner
provided by the Act) to consider whether the debt of which the creditor claims
inclusion is proved. The decision of the question must of necessity depend upon
the circumstances and the evidence led to prove the debt.
In the present case the High Court by
majority took the view that in a proceeding under s. 33 when the promissory
note is brought before the Court by the promisee, a presumption that the
promissory note was made for consideration arises under s. II 8 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act and unless that presumption is rebutted by the promissory by
other creditors or by the receiver that the amount for which the promissory
note is executed must be included in the schedule. In so holding the High Court
primarily relied upon absence of any reference to the nature of the proceeding
in which the presumptions are required to be raised in relation to negotiable
instruments.
It,,must be noticed in the first instance
that presumption under s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act is a
presumption of consideration : it does not in all cases prove the quantum of
debt due by the insolvent at the date of insolvency. The Insolvency Court has,
it must be remembered, to ascertain whether a debt is due by the insolvent,
whether the debt is provable in insolvency, and the quantum of the debt due at
the material date. In making this enquiry in its three aspects even the
judgment of a court against the debtor may not be regarded as binding upon the
Court. In Ex Parte Lennox(1), it was held that a judgment which the judgment
debtor cannot set aside, may still be subjected to investigation by the court
of Bankruptcy to enquire whether the debt on which the judgment was founded was
a good debt, and if the Court be satisfied that it was not, the Court may
refuse to make a receiving (1) [1885]16 Q.B.D. 315, 261 order in respect of the
debt. The principle of that case was extended in In Re. Fraser Ex Parte Central
Bank of London(1). It was held in that case that "upon the hearing of a
creditor's petition for a receiving order against a judgment debtor, the Court
of Bankruptcy has power, at the instance of the debtor himself, to go behind
the judgment and to inquire into the validity of the debt, even though the
debtor has previously applied in the action to set aside the judgment, and his
application has been refused, and the refusal affirmed by the Court of
Appeal." Lord Esher, M. R., observed at pp. 636-637 "The decision (Ex
parte Lennox) is based upon the highest ground-viz., that in making a receiving
order, the Court is not dealing simply between the petitioning creditor and the
debtor, but it is interfering with the rights of his other creditors, who, if
the order is made, will not be able to sue the debtor for their debts, and that
the Court ought not to exercise this extraordinary power unless it is satisfied
that there is a good debt due to the petitioning creditor. The existence of the
judgment is no doubt prima facie evidence of a debt; but still the Court of
Bankruptcy is entitled to enquire whether there really is a debt due to the
petitioning creditor." A debt to be entered in the schedule must therefore
be a real debt. A judgment against a debtor which is sought to be relied upon
in proving a debt does not necessarily establish the existence of a real debt
for the judgment may have gone by default, it may have gone by consent or it
may have been procured for any other reason. In a proceeding relating to proof
of debts the question which arises being not one between the insolvent and the
proving creditor alone, the rights of other creditors of the insolvent have of
necessity to be considered. Even if for some reason the debtor himself is
estopped from denying the debt there will be no estoppel against the Insolvency
Court.
The Court therefore in each case has
jurisdiction to investigate whether there is a real debt: whether production of
a judgment or a negotiable instrument or other evidence may be regarded as
sufficient to regard the debt as proved is a matter for the Insolvency Court to
decide. The question is not to be adjudged in the light of any estoppel which
may operate against the insolvent or of any presumption. The Court in a given
case may rely merely upon a judgment or a negotiable or other instrument, and
admit the debt to the schedule not because there is an estoppel 1. [1892] 2 Q .
B.D. 633.
L2Sup./64-4 262 against the Receiver or the
other creditors, or presumption of 1aw in favour of the evidence produced, but
because in its view in the light of the circumstances no further enquiry beyond
proof of the judgment or negotiable instrument or other document evidencing the
debt and proof of non-satisfaction of the debt since the date thereof is
sufficient. The Court has power, however, to insist upon proof of the debt
apart from the judgment or the negotiable or other instrument. The reason is
that the Insolvency Court with a view to effectively distribute the estate of
the insolvent among the creditors is entitled to go behind outward forms of
transactions and to ascertain the truth of the debts sought to be proved, and
the estoppel to which the insolvent may have subjected himself will not prevail
against the Receiver. Whether the power should be exercised in the case of a
judgment debt in a given case depends upon the discretion of the Court which
has to be exercised on sound judicial principles. It is true that the Court
ordinarily; does not go behind a judgment against the debtor, on a bare
suggestion by the debtor that the debt which is merged in the judgment did not
exist or was bad.
There must undoubtedly be circumstances prima
facie justifying an enquiry There must appear something that the judgment was
procured by fraud or collusion, or that there has been miscarriage of justice
But a mere irregularity or error in form will not be a sufficient reason for
going behind the judgment.
When a debt secured by a promissory note is
sought to be proved, the Insolvency Court must enquire into the reality, and
the quantum of consideration. What shape this enquiry may take will depend upon
the circumstances of the case. In a given case the Insolvency Court may regard
an affidavit setting out the particulars ,of the debt, and affirming execution
of the promissory note by the insolvent, and asserting non-satisfaction of the
debt, as sufficient In other cases, the Court may enter upon a fuller enquiry
which the circumstances of the case may demand. But in all cases of proof of
debts under s. 33 the burden is upon the -creditor. That burden may be
discharged by the affidavit of the creditor viewed in the light of a
presumption which the Court may raise under s. 114 of the EvidenceAct, that a
bill of exchange accepted or endorsed, was for good consideration. If that be
the true effect of. s. 33 of the Provincial Insolvency Act, and we think both
on principle and authority that is the true effect, of necessity the
presumption under s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act that every
negotiable instrument was made or drawn for consideration cannot avail against
the Receiver of the estate of the insolvent 263 It is true that s. 118 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act, unlike s. 119 to s. 122 which occur in Ch. XIII, does not refer
to a proceeding in suit where the various presumptions directed have to be
raised. The section is undoubtedly in terms general. But there is no reason to
suppose that it was intended to apply to a proceeding which is not in the
nature of a civil dispute between the parties to the negotiable instrument or
their privies. The Negotiable Instruments Act is intended to codify the law
merchant relating to 'dealings concerning negotiable instruments. The
presumptions which are raised under s. 118 do undoubtedly set out special rules
of evidence relating to negotiable instruments, but in our opinion the nature
of the presumptions from their very nature operate in favour of or against the
parties to the negotiable instrument or their privies and cannot generally
apply to persons who do not claim under the parties to the instrument. In
Anumolus Narayana Rao v. Chattaraju Venkatappayya(1) it was observed by
Varadachariar J., that a suit on a promissory note instituted against an
undivided son of a Hindu promisor governed by the Mitakshara law after the
latter's death cannot be regarded as one against the heirs or representatives
of the promisor, because it only seeks to enforce the Hindu law theory of pious
obligation of the sons in respect of the property which the sons have taken by
survivorship. The pious obligation can arise only on the assumption of the
existence of a debt due by the father and in such a case the onus of proving
the existence of the debt must prima facie be laid on the creditor who can call
in aid the presumption permissible under the general law of evidence, namely,
s. 114 of the Indian Evidence Act and not the presumption under s. 118 (a) of
the Negotiable Instruments Act. The learned Judge observed "Though this
section is not, like sections 119 to 122, limited in terms to a suit upon the
instrument, it seems only reasonable to hold that the special rules of evidence
laid down in section 118 must have been intended to apply only as between the
parties to the instrument or those claiming under them. In other cases the
presumption can only be in the terms enacted in section 114 of the Evidence Act
(vide illus. c) which by the use of the expression 'may presume leaves it to
the Court to apply the presumption or not according to circumstances." (1)
I.L.R. [1937] Mad. 299.
264 Section 114 of the Indian Evidence Act
authorises the Court to presume the existence of any fact which it thinks
likely to have happened, regard being had to the common course of natural
events, human conduct and public and private business in their relation to the
facts of the particular case. Under the third illustration of s. 114 the Court
may presume that a bill of exchange accepted or endorsed was accepted for good
consideration. But the section provides, that the, Court shall also have regard
to other material facts in considering whether the maxim does or does not apply
in the particular case before it. It is therefore open to the Court to consider
in its proper setting, the fact that the drawer of a bill of exchange was a man
of business, and the acceptor was a young and ignorant person completely under
the former's influence. This is one illustrative fact which the Court may
consider in raising the presumption. There may be other circumstances which may
also justify the Court in declining to raise the presumption. Mr. Pathak for
the respondents urged that the Indian Evidence Act was enacted in 1872 and the Negotiable
Instruments Act having been enacted in 1881, and as the two provisions conflict
or overlap, s. 118 of the Negotiable Instruments Act must supersede S. 114 of
the Evidence Act.
We are unable to accept that contention.
Undoubtedly S. 114 of the Evidence Act is a general provision which enables the
Court to presume, though not obliged to do so, that a bill of exchange or a
promissory note were founded on a good consideration. Section 118 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act, however, enacts a special rule of evidence which operates
between parties to the instrument or persons claiming under them in a suit or
proceeding relating to the bill of exchange and does not affect the rule
contained in s. 114 of the Evidence Act, in cases not falling within s. 11 8
the Negotiable Instruments Act.
In our view the High Court was in error in
holding that a statutory presumption of consideration arose in favour of the
respondents in the proceedings under S. 33 for settlement of the schedule of
creditors, and the Receiver exercising power under S. 80 of the Act was bound
to admit the debts in the schedule if the insolvent or the other creditors
failed to displace that presumption The appeal must therefore be allowed, the
order of the High Court set aside, and the order of the District Court
restored, with costs in this Court.
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