Padrauna Rajkrishna Sugar Works Ltd.
& Ors Vs. Land Reforms Commissioner, U.P. & Ors [1969] INSC 19 (31
January 1969)
31/01/1969 SHAH, J.C.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION: 1969 AIR 897 1969 SCR (3) 468 1969
SCC (1) 485
ACT:
U.P. Zamindari Abolition & Land Reforms
Act (U.P. 1 of 1951), ss. 279 and 286-Dues under other statutes recoverable as
arrears of land revenue-Whether restrictions under ss.
279 and 286(1) applicable.
HEADNOTE:
The amount of dues under the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 the U.P. Sugar Factories Control Act. 1938 and the Co-operative
Societies Act, 1912 were recoverable as arrears of land revenue. Section 286(1)
of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition & Land Reforms Act provides that if any
arrears of land revenue could not be recovered by any of the processes
mentioned in cls. (a) to (e) of s. 279, the Collector may realise the same by
attachment and sale of the interests of the defaulter in any other immovable
property of the defaulter, and s. 286(2) provided that money recoverable as
arrears of I" revenue, may be recovered by process "under this
section" from any immovable property of the defaulter.
As the appellant company was unable to meet
its liabilities in respect of income-tax dues, sugar cess and the amount due
for cane supplied to it, the immovable property of the company were sold to
meet the dues. The appelant challenged the sale contending that (i) the
immovable prop" of the company would be attached and sold only after the
processes prescribed in cls. (a) to (a) of a. 279 ie. by the age of movable
properties were resorted to; (ii) the sale was illegal or irregular as the
Collector ignored the intimation of the Income-tax Officer staying the sale for
recovery of income-tax; and (iii) the appellant was prevented from raising
funds for making the deposit as provided by r. 285H (of the rules framed under
the Act) for setting aside the sale as the purchaser was appointed as the
Authorised Controller and put in possession of all the properties of the
appellant. Dismissing the appeal this Court,
HELD : (i) Power to recover arrears of land
revenue from a defaulter is governed by the processes mentioned in cls. (a) to
(e) of s. 279 of the Act and s. 286(1) places certain restrictions upon the
power of the Collector to recover land revenue by attachment and sale of lands
other than the holding in respect of which the land revenue is due. But the
restrictions on the power of the Collector operated only when land revenue is
in arrears. Restrictions, if any, upon the p ower of the Collector to recover
dues under statutes, as arrears of land revenue arise, from the statute which
is the source of the liability and not from the U.P. Zamindari Abolition &
Land Reforms Act, which merely sets out the processes for recovery of the dues.
To hold that sub-s. (2) of s. 286 requires the Collector in the first instance
to recover out of the movable property or by arrest and detention of the
defaulter before immovable property of the defaulter is attached and sold is to
amend the substantive provisions of the Acts under which the liability for
money due is recoverable as land revenue. For instance, under a. 46 of the
Income-tax Act, 1922, the powers exercisable by the Collector in recovering
arrears of income-tax, which are recoverable as arrears of land revenue are not
restricted to the Land Revenue Code; the Collector is entitled to exercise all
the powers of' a Civil Court for the purpose of recovery of an amount due under
a decree under the Code of Civil Procedure, an the Code, of Civil procedure im469
poses no obligations to recover the dues by sale of movables or by arrest and
detention of the defaulter before immovable property may be attached. The
provisions of the Act, which authorise recovery of sums of money as arrears of
land revenue, do not require the Collector to follow any sequence of the
processes for recovery; it is competent to the Collector to resort to any
process prescribed by s. 279 in aid of recovery of the dues which are
recoverable as arrears of land revenue, [473 H-474 D; 475 H] (ii) The sale was
not illegal or irregular for the reason that the Collector ignored the
intimation of the Income-tax Officer staying the sale for recovery of
income-tax dues.
The immovable property could have been put up
for sale for recovery of sugar cane cess and the cane price which were many
times more than the income-tax dues. [476 G] (iii) There was no force in the
contention that the appellant was unable to raise funds and make the deposit
under r. 285H because the purchaser was appointed the Authorised Controller,
who took possession of all the properties of the Company. The appellant could
not comply with the provision of r. 285H for having the sale set aside as the
movables were not sufficient to enable the appellant to raise the amount
required for deposit under r. 285H. [476 H]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 130 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated
December 13, 1961 of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal No. 217 of
1958.
C. K. Daphtary, B. Sen, J, P, Goyal and A.
Banerjee, for the appellants.
C. B. Agarwala and O. P. Rana, for
respondents Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 8.
T. A. Ramachandran and R. N. Sachthey, for
respondent No.
M. C. Chagla, G. D. Srivastava, B. Datta and
J. B. Padachanji, for respondents Nos. 5 and 6.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The Padrauna Rajkrishna Sugar Works Ltd.hereinafter called 'the
Company carried on the business of manufacture and sale of sugar and supply of
electricity. The Company was in financial difficulties in 1954 and was unable
to meet its obligations. The principal liabilities of the Company in July 1955
were Rs. 81,821-2-0 due as income-tax provisionally assessed for the assessment
year 1952-53 in respect of which an order for recovery was made under s.
46(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1922; Rs.
5,64,301-14-9 due as sugarcane cess under s. 29 of the Sugar Factories Control
Act, 1938, for the years 1952-53 to, 1954-55: and Rs.
1,92,053-12-3 due by the Company to the
Co-operative Development Union Ltd. as arrears of cane price for the year
1954-55.
470 By order dated July 14, 1954, issued
under the Essential Supplies (Temporary Powers) Act, the Government of U.P.
appointed the Collector, Deoria as the
Authorised Controller of the Company. On August 8, 1955 the Land Reforms Commissioner
sanctioned the proposal submitted by the Collector, Deoria, to sell the
holdings and the property of the Company for realizing Rs. 8,38,176-13-0.
Sardar Jagjit Singh, Chief Engineer, Indian Institute of Sugar Technology,
Kanpur, valued the movables belonging to the Company i.e. tools and workshop
plant, mill stores, spare parts and furniture at Rs. 7 , 64,817/-,and the lands
and the factory at Rs.
23,75,000/-. Thereafter a sale proclamation
was issued on October 4, 1955, for recovery of the total amount of Rs.
8,38,176-13-0. The sale was fixed for
November 8, 1955. In the first instance only the movables were put up for sale
by the Collector, Deoria, but the highest bid offered was Rs.
2,75,000/-. The Collector then put up for
sale the immovable property for which a bid of Rs. 13,50,000/-was made and
accepted. The movables were then put up for sale, and the highest bid for Rs.
2,75,000/was accepted. The purchasers of both the lots were the Cawnpore Sugar
Works Ltd., through their managing agent Tulsidas Mundra-respondent No. 7 in
this appeal.
On December 6, 1955, the Company moved an
application before the Commissioner, Gorakhpur Division, under r. 285-1 of the
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Rules praying that the sale be set
aside. The Commissioner rejected the petition, observing that an application
under r. 285-1 of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Rules, 1952, to
set aside a sale on the ground of material irregularity or mistake in
publishing or conducting a sale may be granted only if the applicant proves to
the satisfaction of the Commissioner that he has sustained substantial injury
by reason of such irregularity or mistake, and that no material irregularity or
mistake was proved to be committed in publishing or conducting the sale, far
less, a mistake or irregularity which could have caused substantial injury to
the applicant. The sale was confirmed by order dated July 2, 1956, by the Land
Reforms Commissioner.
On, July 30, a petition was moved by the
Company in the High Court of Allahabad for a writ in the nature of certiorari
quashing the order dated June 25, 1956, of the Commissioner, Gorakhpur
Division. The petition was dismissed by Oak, J.
In appeal under the Letters Patent the order
was confirmed by the High Court. Mukherji, J., was of the view that s.
286 of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land
Reforms Act did not oblige the Collector to exhaust the processes prescribed
by, cls. (a) to (e) in s. 279 of that Act before resorting to the sale of
immovable property of the Company and that it was not proved that 471 there was
any material irregularity or mistake_ in publishing or conducting the sale or
that any substantial injury had resulted to the Company., Jagadish Sahai, J.,
was of the view that s. 2861(2) of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land
Reforms Act provides that where an amount is recoverable as arrears of land
revenue, the Collector has first to attempt under cls. (a) to (e) of s.279 to
recover the amount due, and if he is unable to recover the amount,, he may
proceed to sell the immovable property of the defaulter. But the learned Judge
was of the opinion that the provision was merely directory and not. mandatory.
He observed:
"........ the provision relating to the
exhaustion of the processes contemplated by clauses (a) to (e) of section 279
of the Act is merely directory. In view of the provisions of the various Acts
which make the realization of sums becoming due under those Acts as arrears of
land revenue and in view of the provisions of the Act the, Collector has got a
duty and a statutory obligation to realise those sums. He has no discretion in
the matter. Consequently I read the words "may realise the same from the
interest of the defaulter in any immovable property" in subsection (1) or
"may be recovered from any immovable property of the defaulter" in
subsection (2) as meaning that if the Collector does not succeed in recovering
the amount by having recourse to the processes mentioned in clauses (a) to (e)
of section 279 of the Act he shall sell immovable property of the
defaulter." The learned Judge also observed that the Collector acted in
violation of the statutory provision contained in s. 286(2) of the Act in
selling the immovable property before selling the movable property, but the
sale could not be set aside, because substantial injury was not shown to have
been caused. The Company has appealed to this Court against the order passed by
the 'High Court confirming the order passed by Oak, J.
In this appeal, it is urged in the first
instance, that the Company possessed stocks of sugar of value exceeding the liability
for payment of Rs. 8,38,000/odd. But the stocks of sugar were not mentioned in
the Collector's report to the Land Reforms Commissioner : they were not
included in the sale proclamation as property put up for sale, nor were they
valued in the report of Sardar Jagjit Singh. The Company asserted in the
petition ,before the High Court that it possessed stocks of sugar worth Rs. 9
lakhs. which had not been, attached earlier, but no such. contention was
advanced in support of the application for setting.
472 aside the sale before the Commissioner,
nor was any argument advanced before the High Court. It appears that the stocks
of sugar were mortgaged separately and the amount for which they were mortgaged
was not included in the claim, made for which the property of the Company was
to be put up for sale.
It was then urged that under S. 286(2) of Act
1 of 1951, the Collector, was bound in the first instance to exhaust, the
processes for recovery of arrears prescribed by cls. (a) to (e) of S. 279 of
the Act and he could not attach and sell immovable property of the Company
until those processes were exhausted. It was urged that s. 286(2) of the Act
was mandatory and the Collector not having sold the movables in the first
instance, the sale must be declared void.
The amount for the recovery of which the sale
of the assets of the Company was held, included income-tax dues, sugarcane cess
and the amount due for cane supplied to the Company.
This amount was recoverable as arrears of
land revenue because of the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the
U.P. Sugar Factories Control Act, 1938, and the Co-operative Societies Act 1912.
Section 286(2) of the U.P.
Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act
provides:
"Sums of money recoverable as arrears of
land revenue, but not due in respect of any specific land, may be recovered by
process under this section from any immovable property of the defaulter."
Though the amount for which the property was put up for sale was recoverable as
arrears of land revenue, no part of it was due in respect of any specific land.
The amount could prima facie be recovered from the immovable property of the
defaulter. But relying upon the expression "under this section" in S.
286(2) of Act 1 of 1951 it was contended that the immovable property of the
Company could be attached and sold only after the processes prescribed in s.
279 cls. (a) to (e) were resorted to and the Collector was unable to recover the
dues. It was urged that this is the true effect of s. 286(1) and s. 279 of Act
1 of 1951. Section 286(1) provides :
"It any arrears of land revenue cannot
be recovered by any of the processes mentioned in clauses (a) to (e) of Section
279, the Collector may realize the same by attachment and sale of the interest
of the defaulter in any other immovable property of the defaulter."
Section 279 of the Act set-, out the procedure for recovery of land revenue.
The section as it stood at the. date of We provided 473 An arrear of land
revenue may be recovered by any one or more of the following processes :
(a) by serving a writ of demand or a citation
to appear on any defaulter, (b) by arrest and detention of his person,.
(c) by attachment and sale of his movable property
including produce, (d) by attachment of the holding in respect of which the
arrear is due, (e) by sale of the holding in respect of which the arrear is
due.
(f) by attachment and sale of other immovable
property of the defaulter." Section 280 deals with the mode of recovery
prescribed by cl. (a) of s. 279; s. 281 with the mode prescribed by cl.
(b) i.e. by arrest and detention; and s. 282
with the mode prescribed by cl. (c) i.e. by attachment and sale of the movable
property including produce. Section 284 sets out the procedure for sale of the
holding in respect of which the arrear was due and s. 286(1) deals with the
power to proceed. against the interest of the defaulter in other immovable
property.
For recovery of arrears of land revenue, the
Collector is bound to resort to one or more of the processes mentioned in s.
279 read with ss. 280, 282, 284 & 285 of the Act, before he attaches and
sells the immovable property of the defaulter, other than the holding in
respect of which the land revenue is due. That clearly follows from the terms
of sub-s. (1) of s. 286. Subsection (2) of s. 286 makes the same process
applicable for recovery of sums of money which are recoverable as arrears of
land revenue. But the liability to pay the amount so recoverable arises by
virtue of the provisions of other Acts and is not due in respect of any holding
of the defaulter. It is only recoverable as arrears of, land revenue by virtue
of the provisions of the Act under which the liability has arisen. Since U.P.
Act 1 of 1951 provides by s. 286(2) that sums of money recoverable as arrears
of land revenue may be recovered from any immovable property of the defaulter,
the procedure prescribed by the Act applies to such recovery. Because of the
use' of the expression "under this section" in sub-s.
(2) of s. 286 it is not intended that the
Collector must resort in the first instance to the processes prescribed by cls.
(a) to (e) before he resorts to cl. (f), of s. 279.
Cls. (d) & (e) of s. 279 have no
application, where income tax dues and sugarcane cess or cane price are
recoverable from the defaulter : and cl. (b) is inapplicable where the
defaulter is an artificial person like a Company. Power to recover arrears of
land revenue from a defaulter is governed by the processes mentioned in S. 279
cls. (a) to (e), and s. 286(1) places certain restrictions upon the power of
the Collector to recover land revenue by attachment and sale of lands other
than the holding in respect of which the land revenue is due. But the restrictions-on
the power of the Collector operate only when land revenue is in arrears.
Restrictions if any upon the power of the Collector to recover dues under other
statutes, as arrears of land revenue arise from the statute which is the source
of the liability and not from Act 1 of 1951 which merely sets out the processes
for recovery of the dues.
To hold that sub-s. (2) of s. 286 requires
the Collector in the first instance to recover out of the movable property or
by arrest and detention of the defaulter before immovable property of the
defaulter is attached and sold is to amend the substantive provisions of the
Acts under which the liability for money due is recoverable as land revenue.
For instance , under s. 46 (2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, it is
provided "The Income-tax Officer may forward /to the Collector a
certificate' under his signature specifying the amount of arrears due from an
assessee, and the Collector, on receipt of such certificate, shall proceed to
recover from such assessee the amount specified therein as if it were an arrear
of land revenue. :
Provided that without prejudice to any other
powers of the Collector in this behalf, he shall for the purpose of recovering
the said amount have the powers which under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
(V of 1908), a Civil Court has for the purpose of the recovery of aim amount
due under a decree.
The power exercisable, by the Collector in
recovering arrears of income-tax which are recoverable as arrears of land
revenue are, it is clear, not restricted to the Land Revenue Code: the
Collector is entitled to exercise all the powers of a Civil Court for the
purpose of recovery of an amount due under a decree under the Code of Civil
Procedure, and the Code of Civil Procedure imposes no obligation to recover the
dues by sale of movables or by arrest and detention of the defaulter before,
immovable property may be attached. Section 51 of the Code of Civil Procedure
provides:
"Subject to such conditions and
limitations as may be prescribed, the Court may, on the application of the
decree-holder, order execution of the decree(a) by delivery of any property
specifically decreed;
(b) by attachment and sale or by sale without
attachment of any property;
475 (c) by arrest and detention in prison;
(d) in such other manner as the nature of
'the relief granted may require Provided.................
By virtue of 0. 2 1 r. 30(e) of the Code of
Civil Procedure simultaneous execution both against the property and person of
the judgment-debtor is allowed. To hold, therefore, that in seeking to recover
income-tax dues the Collector is in the first instance, by virtue of sub-s. (2)
of s. 286, restricted to the recovery of arrears by attachment and sale of
movables or by arrest and detention in prison of the defaulter and it he cannot
recover the amount then and then only to have recourse to the immovable
property of the judgment-debtor is to seek to amend both the, Income-tax Act,
1922, as well as the Code of Civil Procedure. The U .
P. Legislature is competent to alter the
provisions of the Income-tax Act.
We are, therefore, unable to agree with the
opinion expressed by jagadish Sahai, S., that the use of the words "under
this ,section" points to the applicability of the whole section i.e.
subsection (1) in the recovery dues recoverable under sub-section (2) of
section 286, and "that the two sub-sections have got to be read together
and the effect of sub-section (2) is that even in connection with the recovery
of miscellaneous dues as arrears of land revenue it is permissible to sell
immovable property of the defaulter but subject to what is provided for in
sub-section (1)". We are also unable to agree with the observations made
by the learned Judge that "........ if sub-section (2) of section 286 of
the Act were to be read in isolation and detached from subsection (1) it would
become impossible to administer the same. Subsection (2) only provides that the
arrears of miscellaneous dues may be recovered from any immovable property of
the defaulter without specifying the manner in which they are to be recovered,
that is to say, without indicating whether it would be recovered from the
usufruct of the property or by its sale or by mortgage or lease." The
provisions of the Act which authorise recovery of sums of money as arrears of
land revenue do not require the Collector to follow any sequence of the
processes for recovery: it is competent to the Collector to 'resort to any
process prescribed by s. 279 in aid of recovery of the dues which are
recoverable as arrears of land revenue. It is unnecessary in the circumstances
to 476 consider whether the provisions of s. 286(1) are mandatory or directory.
It was urged in the alternative that after
selling the immovable property which realized more than Rs. 23,50,000/the
Collector should not have sold the movable property, for the claim for which
the properties of the Company were put up for sale, was only Rs. 8,38,176-13-0.
At first blush there is force in this argument. Why the Collector thought it
necessary to sell the movables after the immovable property was knocked down to
the Cawnpore Sugar Works Ltd.
for Rs. 23,50,000/was never explained. After
the immovable property belonging to the Company was knocked down to the
purchasers for an amount of Rs. 23,50,000/it was apparently not necessary to
hold the auction for sale of movables valued at Rs. 7,64,817/and to accept a
bid of only Rs. 2,75,000/-. The argument that the movables were of no use to
any person other than the purchaser of immovable property is without substance.
The movables sold we're the tools and workshop plant, mill stores, spare parts
and furniture, and it is difficult to accept the contention that these movables
were of no value except to the purchaser.
But the Company raised no contention in this
behalf before the Commissioner, nor in the petition before the High Court.
The question was also not argued before the
High Court in that form. We cannot at this stage investigate the reasons why
movables valued at Rs. 7,64,817/were put up for sale and sold when it was not
necessary to sell them to realise the dues.
It was then urged that the Income-tax Officer
had, by intimation dated December 11, 1954, asked the Collector to stay the
sale proceeding for recovery of income-tax dues amounting to Rs. 81,821-2-0.
For some reason, which is not clear from the record, the Collector ignored the
intimation given by the Income-tax Officer and proceeded to put the property to
sale. He included the amount in the sale proclamation, overruling the protests
of the Company, and sold the properties for recovery of a consolidated amount
which included Rs. 81,821-2-0 due as income-tax. But on that account the sale
is not illegal or irregular. An amount exceeding Rs. 7 lakhs was recoverable
for the sugarcane cess and the cane price and the immovable property of the
Company could have been put up for sale for recovery of those dues. The sale is
not proved to be vitiated on the ground of any material irregularity or mistake
in publishing or conducting it, and it is therefore not liable to be set aside.
It was finally con that the Company was
prevented from exercising its right under r. 285-H of the rules framed under
U.P. Act 1 of 1951, because the purchaser at the sale was appointed, by order
of the Central Government, Authoriged Controller of the factory of the Company,
and all the properties of the 'Company were put in +.he possession of the
purchaser, and that the Company was unable to raise the requisite amount to be
deposited under r. 285-H. Under r.
285-H any person whose holding or other
immovable property has been sold under the Act may, at any time within thirty
days from the date of sale, apply to have the sale set aside on his depositing
in the Collector's office(a) for payment to the purchaser, a sum equal to 5 per
cent. of the purchase money;
and (b) for payment on account of the arrear,
the amount specified in the proclamation in Z.A. Form 74 as that for the
recovery of which the sale was ordered, less any amount which may, since the
date of such proclamation of sale, have been paid on that account; and (c) the
cost of the sale.
If the deposit is made, the Collector shall
pass an order setting aside the sale. It was open to the Company under r.
285-H even after the bids were accepted to
deposit 5 per cent. of the sum realised by sale of the immovable property and
to pay the amount due for the recovery of which the sale was ordered and the
cost of the sale. But no attempt was made to deposit the amounts mentioned in
cls. (a), (b) & (c) of r. 285-H. The contention that the Company was unable
to make the deposit under Rule 285-H because the purchaser was appointed
Authorised Controller was also not raised before the Commissioner and the High
Court. The argument that if the movable property had not been sold, the Company
may have raised the amount liable to be deposited under cls. (a), (b) &
(c), but by sale of those properties and purchase of the same by a person who
was shortly after the purchase appointed the Authorised Controller prevented
the Company from exercising the right under r. 285-H is hypothetical.
Again even that argument was not raised
before the Commissioner, nor in the petition, nor in the arguments before the
High Court. Evidently, the Company was required to comply with the provisions
of r. 285-H for having the sale set aside to deposit an amount of Rs. 9,50,000/besides
the cost of the sale. Even if the movables had not been sold, and assuming that
they were of the value of Rs. 7,64,817/the movables were not sufficient to
enable the Company to raise the amount required for deposit under r. 285-H.
The contentions raised by the Company fail
and the appeal is dismissed. We are, however, of the view, especially because
of the action of the Collector in putting the movables to sale even Sup
CI/69-12 478 after the immovable property realised an amount very much in
excess of the dues, and ignoring the intimation sent by the Income-tax Officer
to stay the sale proceeding, which has involved the Company in loss of property
of substantial value, that the parties should bear their own costs throughout.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
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