Palai Central Bank Ltd
v.
C. Ramaswami Nadar
(High Court Of Kerala)
Appeal Suits No. 110, 233 Of 1957 | 01-12-1958
1. These two appeals arise from an order, dated 17-2-1957, made by the learned District Judge of Trivandrum in the proceedings before him to execute the decree of the Nagercoil District Court in O.S. No. 66 of 195
3. The Nagercoil District Court had transferred the decree to the Trivandrum District Court for execution and when the decree holders, the Palai Central Bank Ltd., applied for execution, judgment debtor No. 1, (defendant) raised objections thereto on two grounds. The learned District Judge repelled one objection and accepted the other. Hence these two appeals, one by the decree holders Bank and the other by judgment-debtor No. 1.
2. For a proper appreciation of the objections raised to the execution it is necessary to state a few facts. The suit O.S. No. 66 of 1953, was on the basis of an overdraft security bond (Ex. A in the suit) which judgment-debtor No.1 had executed in favour of the decree holder Bank and that agreement provided for advances to be made to a limit of Rs. 75,000. The plaint claim, however, came to Rs. 1,51,514/8. This was because the security bond sued upon contained a provision that in case interest at the stipulated rate or any portion thereof remained unpaid for a period of six months, arrears of interest would be treated as principal and added on to the original or previous principal and that interest would be paid at the stipulated rate on the sum so arrived. Indeed some time before the institution of the suit defendant 1 had accepted the liability on this basis and sent letters to the Bank confirming the correctness of the balance they claimed. The judgment in the case, a certified copy of which was made available to us by the decree holders counsel, shows these details.
3. In the plaint the plaintiffs Bank claimed 12% interest on the entire claim of Rs. 1,51,514/8/- till the date of the decree and thereafter till realisation at 9% per annum on the aggregate sum. Defendant 1 contested the suit on various grounds, but the court passed a decree in terms of the plaint subject to the modification that from the date of the institution of the suit till the date of the decree the plaint claim would carry interest only at 9% per annum and thereafter until realisation only at 6% per annum on the aggregate amount of the decree. The Plaintiffs Bank were also allowed their costs of the suit.
4. The first objection judgment debtor No.1 raised to the execution application was that, by way of interest in respect of the period antecedent to the institution of the suit, the Bank was not entitled to realise more than one half of the principal amount sued for. According to the judgment debtor No.1 even though the plaint claimed Rs.1,51,514/8/- Rs. 75,000 out of it, that is, the limit fixed in the overdraft agreement alone constituted "the principal amount sued". The other objection was that from the date of the decree the principal amount as per the judgment debtors contention should alone carry interest and not the full plaint claim of Rs. 1,51,514/8/-. The learned District Judge repelled the first contention and judgment debtor No.1 has preferred A. S. No. 233 of 1957 against that. The second contention was however accepted by the learned District Judge and the decree holders Bank have preferred A.S. No. 110 of 1957 with respect to that part of the order.
5. In our opinion both the appeals can and have to be disposed of on the broad ground that an execution court cannot go behind the decree and question its correctness - see Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sarangdhar Sing LXXV Indian Appeals 300 at 30
4. Regard, however, being had to the approach the lower court made to the questions raised before it and the arguments urged before us on behalf of judgment-debtor No. 1, we shall refer to those arguments and try to meet them independently of the consideration just mentioned. With respect to the first contention that the decree-holders cannot realise as interest for the period antecedent to the institution of the suit anything more than one-half of Rs. 75,000 is based on S.31(1) of the Travancore Civil Procedure Code Act (Act VIII of 1100) and the said Sub-Section reads:
"In suits for money, no Court shall, in respect of the period antecedent to the institution of the suit, allow in its decree a higher rate of interest than twelve per cent per annum and the amount adjudged as interest for such period shall not exceed one half of the principal amount sued for".
We are here concerned with the second part of the Sub-section that the amounts adjudged as interest for the period antecedent to the institution of the suit shall not exceed one half of the amount sued for. Civil
Procedure Code Act VIII of 1100 was in force when the suit agreement came into being, but the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, (Act V of 1908) had by the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 1951 (Act II of 1951) been extended to the territory concerned long before the suit was brought. Apart, however, from the question whether the corresponding provision of the Indian Civil Procedure Code, namely, S.34, applied to the case or S.31(1) of the Travancore Code applied, we shall first attempt to show that S.31(1) of the Travancore Code as interpreted by the Travancore High Court itself did not warrant Rs. 75,000 alone being treated as the principal amount sued for". A line of Full Bench decisions of the Travancore High Court had held that when the agreement between the parties to a litigation sanctioned arrears of interest remaining unpaid for any specified period being treated as principal, the principal amount sued for within the meaning of the concerned provision would be the amount claimed in the plaint as principal on that basis. Varghese v. Ittan, 1948 T.L.R. 1044 (F.B.), would appear to be the last case of the erstwhile Travancore High Court to decide the point. In that case there was difference of opinion between the two learned judges who first heard the case and while they delivered separate judgments setting out their respective view points, both agreed that the case may be referred to a Full Bench for decision. The Full bench that heard it affirmed the correctness of a long line of previous Full Bench rulings beginning with Eappen v. Kochugovindan (1920) T. L. J. 367 F. B. In Varghese v. Ittan it is seen observed:
"It was expressly laid down, in these Full Bench cases, that the term principal used in S.31 C. P. C. is not restricted, in its meaning, to the original sum lent, that an agreement to treat arrears of interest, at fixed periods, as principal, which is to carry interest, is valid, and does not offend S.31 C. P. C. and that all that the section prohibits, is the allowing of interest of more than a moiety of the principal amount sued for, the words "principal" amount, not being-restricted to the original sum lent, but comprehensive to include arrears of interest, on which interest is agreed to be paid".
The other decisions bearing on the question have all been reviewed in the leading judgment in that case and it has been clearly laid down that the dissentient notes struck in certain Division Bench rulings did not interpret the section correctly. Some division Bench rulings had criticised the decision in Philipose v. Geevarghese Kathanar, (1939) XXIX T.L.J. 1275, which followed Eappen v. Kochugovindan. Evidently these criticisms led to Varghese v. Ittan being referred to a Full Bench. It is unnecessary to repeat here that the security bond sued upon in this case contained a provision similar to those contained in the bonds sued upon in the Full Bench case referred to. In view of these rulings of the Travancore High Court, it is puerile to argue that the principal amount sued for in the suit was Rs. 75,000 and not Rs. 1,51,514-8-0. On this sole ground A.S. No. 233 of 1957 has to be dismissed.
6. It is however another line of approach which the lower court made to repel this contention of judgment-debtor No.
1. The question whether S.31(1) of the Travancore Civil Procedure Code applied to the case or S.34 of Act V of 1908 applied is a matter which was raised and decided in the suit itself. It would be mere common place to observe here that S.34(1) of Act V of 1908 contained no such restriction as its counterpart in the Travancore Code had that the amount adjudged as interest for the period antecedent to the institution of the suit shall not exceed one half of the principal amount sued for. The plaint, as stated earlier claimed Rs. 1,51,514-8-0 and interest thereon for the period of the pendency of the suit and thereafter till realisation, no doubt at different rates. The court admitted the claim for Rs. 1,51,514- 8-0 but varied the rates of the interest for both periods. Issue No. 3 in the suit is in these terms: "Is not the plaintiff entitled to the interest claimed in the plaint" The trial court disposed of that issue as follows:
"In the absence of any evidence on the defence side the plaintiff is entitled to interest as per the terms of Ex. A. Under S.34 of the C. P. C. there is no prohibition to realise more than half the principal by way of interest. So the ruling reported in 29 - T.L. J. 1275 relied on by the 1st defendants counsel will not help him in any way as S.31 of the old Travancore Civil Procedure Code will not apply to the case filed after the new C. P. C. has come into force. I therefore hold that the plaintiff is entitled to the interest claimed in the plaint".
The decision of the Privy Council in Bank of Bihar v. Saranghadhar Sing is clear authority for the position that the judgment-debtor cannot be heard to contend in the execution proceeding that S.31(1) of the Travancore Code applied to the case and not S.34 of Act V of 1908. We are not unaware that in Ouseph v. Araya Antharjanam 1943
T. L R.509, a Full Bench decision of the Travancore High Court presided over by
T.M. Krishnaswami Iyer, C. J. had held that S.31 of the Civil Procedure Code (Travancore) was a substantive provision and not merely a bare rule of procedure. The rule of the decision has however no application to the present case. The principle enunciated in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Saranghadar Sing was only a reiteration of the earlier Privy Council rulings. A few among them may be cited here - see Sri Rajah Papamma Rao Bhadur v. Sri Vira Pratapa Korkonda - XXIII Indian Appeals 32 at 35 - Girish Chunder Lahiri v. Soshi Shikhareswar Roy- XXVII Indian Appeals 110 at 124 - and Udwant Singh v. Tokhan Singh - XXVIII Indian Appeals 57.
7. Before disposing of A.S. No. 233 of 1957 another argument of the learned counsel for judgment-debtor No.1 may also be referred to. On the authority of three decisions of the Travancore High Court reported in (1936) XXVI T. L. J. Mr. Neelakanta Iyer contended that the decree awarding the full claim of Rs. 1,51,514/8/ was one passed without jurisdiction and hence void. It was therefore argued that it was open to his client to question its correctness or validity in the present execution proceedings. The decisions relied upon were Rama Shenoi v. Kochukuria Tharakan (1936) XXVI T.L.J. 294, Abraham v. The Indian Bank Ltd. (1936) XXVI T.L.J. 351 and Mathai v. Chakko (1936) XXVI T.L.J. 61
2. The second of these cases related to a compromise decree and the other two to subsequent orders in execution based on agreement of parties varying the terms of the decree passed in the suit in such way as to contravene one or the other of the provisions in S.31, Civil Procedure Code (Travancore). The judgment in the second case contains observations to the effect that the section is binding on courts whether the decree is passed by the court itself after trial or whether the decree grants its sanction as a court decree to any compromise arrived at between the parties and that a court of law has no jurisdiction to circumvent or violate the provision. With respect we cannot agree that a decree passed by a court contravening S.31 was a void one or that there was any question of jurisdiction involved in it. So long as the suit was before a court competent to try it, it had jurisdiction to deal with all matters in controversy between the parties and because the decision did not conform to a particular provision of law it cannot be said that there was lack of inherent jurisdiction of the court to deal with the question. In one of the Privy Council cases cited earlier, Sri Rajah Papamma Rao Bhadur v. Sri Vira Pratapa Korkonda the court which passed the decree had allowed a simple mortgagee to recover possession of the mortgage security in the event of the mortgage money remaining unpaid even after the specified time. Lord Hobouse who delivered the judgment in that case pointed out that the decree was not according to law and that in default of payment a simple mortgage gives to the mortgagee a right, not to possession but to sale, which he must work out in execution proceedings. His Lordship further observed that as the mortgagor, however, did not appeal, and did not seek relief by way of review until it was too late, the decree would stand and would be binding on the parties. Assuming that the trial court went wrong in passing a decree for more than one half of the principal amount towards interest, we cannot visualise how the position is any the different than in that Privy Council case. Courts may some times pass wrong decisions and the aggrieved partys remedy is by way of appeal or review. We have however shown that the trial court did not contravene the provision in the latter part of S.31(1) as that prevision was understood by the Travancore High Court. Further more the question whether S.31 applied at all or S.34 of the Act of 1908 applied was a point that was raised and decided in the case. The judgment debtor cannot seek to get behind it. If his contention as to absence of jurisdiction is correct, a decision adverse to him by us now would also be void and there would be nothing preventing him from re-agitating the question in a subsequent stage of the execution. To us the position would appear to be not only untenable, but even intolerable.
8. For the reasons stated above A. S. No. 233 of 1957 fails and we dismiss it with costs.
9. The foregoing discussion would show that the lower court went wrong in upholding the judgment debtors second objection. On the authority of the decisions in Varghese v. Ittan, Eappen v. Kochugovindan and Philipose v. Geevarghese Kathanar we have held that the principal amount sued for in this case was Rs. 1,51,514/8/- and not the original amount lent, Rs. 75,000. The lower court while holding that the claim for Rs. 1,51,514 was tenable at the same time held in the second part of its order that the principal amount sued for was only Rs. 75,000 & that even according to S.34 of the Act of 1908 interest on that amount alone was realisable until the date of the decree. To our minds this is contradictory of what the court had said in the earlier part of its order. Further, it held that the trial court
had no jurisdiction to award interest on the full plaint claim for the period the suit was pending before that court. Para.7 of the order which contains the grounds for upholding the objection may be reproduced here:
"The second objection also relates to jurisdiction, and can therefore be entertained by the court. On the merits, the objection is well founded, as interest has been calculated not on the principal sum adjudged which is Rs. 75,000 but on the plaint amount. This is not warrated by the provisions of the Travancore Cochin Code, under which the suit was decided. The decree is therefore modified by allowing future interest from the date of the suit to the date of the decree to be computed at the rate prescribed on the plaint amount. Interest from the date of the decree will of course be computed on the aggregate sum adjudged, to be calculated in the above manner. The contention of the judgment debtor is accepted to the above extent, and the amount realisable to the decree will be computed afresh".
It needs no reiteration that the principal amount adjudged by the trial court was Rs. 1,51,514/8/-. This in itself is sufficient to entail the reversal of the lower courts view.
The decretal portion of the judgment in the case is as follows:- "In the result the suit is decreed in terms of the plaint with costs against the 1st defendant subject to the following modifications: Interest on the amount from the date of plaint till date of decree is 9%. Future interest on costs at 6 per cent. Time to proceed against the hypotheca is three months".
There is an express decision allowing interest for the period of the pendency of the suit on the full claim and it is not the execution courts function to sit in judgment over that adjudication. Putting the judgment debtors case at its highest, the decision was wrong, but the remedy as indicated earlier was by way of appeal or review. The decree shows that the plaint claim of Rs.1,51,514/8/- together with interest thereon at 9% annum till the date of the decree amounting to Rs. 18,562 and aggregating to Rs. 1,70,076/13/- and costs of the suit have been decreed to the plaintiffs Bank. It is this aggregate sum of Rs. 1,70,076/13/- and future interest as allowed by the decree and costs that are claimed in the execution application filed before the Trivandrum District Court. The decree holders Bank are entitled to the claim as put forward as their claim is in terms of the decree.
10. We therefore, allow A S.No 110 of 1957, reverse the lower courts decision on this part of the case and hold that the decree holders bank are entitled to claim all the amounts shown in their execution application. Judgment-debtor No. 1, the respondent in this appeal, will pay the appellants Bank their
costs.
Order accordingly.
Advocates List
K. K. Mathew; For Appellant S. Nilakanta Iyer; For Respondent
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE CHIEF JUSTICE MR. KOSHI
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE VAIDIALINGAM
Eq Citation
1959 KLJ 20
AIR 1959 KER 194
LQ/KerHC/1958/303
HeadNote
Subject Index: CIVIL P. C., 1908 - S.31 EXECUTION Comparative Citation: 1959 KLT 1 :1959 KLJ 20: AIR 1959 Ker.194: 1959 KLR 23 Relied on 1948 TLR 1044 FB; 1920 TLJ 367 FB; 29 TLJ 1275 23 IA 32; 27 IA 110; 28 IA 57; 75 IA 300 Reffered to 1943 TLR 509 FB
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