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1919 DIGILAW 31 (SC)

TEXAS COMPANY v. BOMBAY BANKING COMPANY, LIMITED,

1919-05-30

LORD BUCKMASTER, LORD DUNEDIN, VISCOUNT HALDANE

body1919
Judgement Appeal from a judgment and decree of the High Court (July 13, 1916) affirming a decree of Beaman J. The appellants brought an action in the High Court against the respondent bank in liquidation and the official liquidators thereof claiming Rs. 65,000, and an order on the official liquidator to pay the same out of assets of the bank before distribution to the creditors. The appellants alleged that the above-mentioned sum was money belonging to them in the hands of their agent Vaidya, and that it had been paid by him to the respondent bank without their knowledge or consent. The facts appear from the judgment of their Lordships. The trial Judge, Beaman J., dismissed the action. He held that the money paid by Vaidya into the respondent bank was not the money of the appellants, nor held in trust for them, and that if it were, the appellants had not proved such knowledge by the bank as entitled them to succeed. Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. 250 ( 1914- 1915) Texas Company V. Bombay Banking C ompany, Limited 88 An appeal, heard by Sir Basil Scott C.J. and Heaton J., was dismissed. 1919. May 2, 5. MacKinnon K.C. and Hansell for the appellants. The whole Rs. 65,000, as was stated in evidence by Vaidya, was the money of the appellants. Having regard (to s. 194 of the Indian Contract Act, the agents appointed by Vaidya became the appellants agents, and the deposits paid by them to Vaidya became the appellants money. Part of the money, namely, Rs. 20,000, was proved to have been a loan obtained by Vaidya upon securities purchased with other money of the appellants in his hands. The Rs. 65,000 was impressed with a trust in favour of the appellants, who were entitled to recover it from any person who received it with notice Kennedy v. Green ((1834) 3 M. & K. 699, 720.); In re Halletts Estate. (( 1879) 13 Ch. D. 696, 709.) Under the articles of association of the respondent bank Vaidyas firm had the complete control and management of its affairs. He was under a duty to disclose the facts to the bank and his knowledge must be attributed to the respondents Cave v. Cave (( 1880) 15 Ch. D. 639.); In re David Payne & Co. ([ 1904] 2 Ch. He was under a duty to disclose the facts to the bank and his knowledge must be attributed to the respondents Cave v. Cave (( 1880) 15 Ch. D. 639.); In re David Payne & Co. ([ 1904] 2 Ch. 608.) Further, the form of the signature of the cheque by which the money was paid to the respondents was sufficient in itself to put them upon inquiry. Their duty to inquire was greater since the bank benefited by the payment; in that, and in other respects, this case differs from Coleman v. Bucks and Oxon Union Bank. ([ 1897] 2 Ch. 243.) In any case the appellants were entitled to an account. Upjohn K.C. and E. B. Raikes for the respondents were not called upon. May 30. The judgment of their Lordships was delivered by LORD BUCKMASTER. The appellants are a Corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of Texas in the United States of America, and either owning or having control over extensive oil fields. Their head office for India is in Bombay, and for the purpose of securing distribution of kerosene oil throughout the district of Bengal, they entered into an agreement in writing, on October 25, 1911, with one Prabhakar Govind Vaidya, whereby he was appointed for five years their exclusive agent for the sale of such oil within named areas on certain specified terms. So far as they are material to the present dispute, these terms provided that, on receipt by the company of an order from the agent for kerosene oil, they would give to him a delivery order for the quantity required in exchange for a deposit by him with the company of such an amount of certain specified securities as should, at the market rate at the date of the deposit, represent 5 per cent, excess of the market rate of the oil, and that they should have power to realize the securities after seven days notice of the failure by the agent to remit the sale proceeds of the oil in respect of which the deposit was made. The price at which the oil was to be sold by the agent was to be named by the company from time to time, and the agent guaranteed that the full sale proceeds should be paid to the company, his commission being 4 annas per 8 gallons of oil. The price at which the oil was to be sold by the agent was to be named by the company from time to time, and the agent guaranteed that the full sale proceeds should be paid to the company, his commission being 4 annas per 8 gallons of oil. Sales were to be for cash, credits were to be at the risk of the agent, and the agent expressly agreed to remit to the company all sale proceeds directly they became due, without any deduction on any account. The only other material provision of this agreement was clause 23, which is in the following terms " The agent has deposited with the company the sum of Rs. 5,000 in 5 per cent. Tansa Bonds as a guarantee of good faith which amount is liable to confiscation by the company for any breach of any clause of this agreement, and it is hereby expressly agreed and understood that the interest accruing on such Tansa Bond deposit will be paid to the agent by the company so long as the agent faithfully observes and performs the conditions of this agreement." The agent proceeded to make this agreement effectual by entering into a series of sub-agency Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. 250 ( 1914- 1915) Texas Company V. Bombay Banking C ompany, Limited 89 agreements between himself and a variety of people operating in the district, constituting them as agents on terms which provided for a smaller rate of commission but in other respects following the provisions of his agreement with the Texas Oil Company. They are entitled sub-agency agreements ; but, except so far as Vaidya is referred to as being the sole agent for the Texas Oil Company, no reference whatever is made to the company in the agreement, and no privity whatever is established between the company and the sub-agent. They are entitled sub-agency agreements ; but, except so far as Vaidya is referred to as being the sole agent for the Texas Oil Company, no reference whatever is made to the company in the agreement, and no privity whatever is established between the company and the sub-agent. Clause 23 of the original agreement found its equivalent in clause 24, which ran as follows " The sub-agent shall deposit with the sole agent the sum of money which the sole agent may fix from time to time as a guarantee of good faith which amount is liable to confiscation by the sole agent for any breach of any clause of this agreement and it is hereby expressly agreed and understood that interest at per cent, per annum occurring on such deposit will be paid to the sub-agent by the sole agent so long as the sub-agent faithfully observes and performs the conditions of this agreement." Considerable business appears to have been done under these agreements, and large sums of money were received by Vaidya pursuant to their terms, both from the sale of the oil and from the deposits made under clause 24, the deposits alone amounting to at least Rs. 52,000 in September, 1912. In addition to Vaidyas position as agent for the Texas Company, he was also a member—together with one Kothavle— in a firm, V. N. Apte & Co., and this firm were the secretary, treasury and agent of the respondents bank. In October of 1912 Vaidya, who had various accounts with the bank, was overdrawn to the extent of about Rs. 300,000. At the beginning of this month the bank, finding themselves face to face with fast gathering financial difficulties, Kothavle was asked by two directors to obtain from Vaidya the money that he owed to them. Vaidya was then returning from England, and on his return an interview took place between him and Kothavle, with the result that Vaidya sent to the bank the sum of Rs. 65,000—Rs. 60,000 in October and Rs. 5,000 in the following February. Of this sum, Rs. 60,000 was paid in cash by cheques drawn by or on behalf of Vaidya on the Indian Specie Bank, Bombay, and Rs. 5,000 by a cheque on the Eastern Bank, Bombay. The moneys so received were credited by the Bombay Bank as to Rs. 65,000—Rs. 60,000 in October and Rs. 5,000 in the following February. Of this sum, Rs. 60,000 was paid in cash by cheques drawn by or on behalf of Vaidya on the Indian Specie Bank, Bombay, and Rs. 5,000 by a cheque on the Eastern Bank, Bombay. The moneys so received were credited by the Bombay Bank as to Rs. 52,000 to the personal account of Vaidya, as to Rs. 8,000 to the account of Kothavle, and Rs. 5,000 to an account headed Vaidyas Texas Account. It appears to be accepted in these proceedings that the whole of these moneys came from the moneys provided by the sub-agents, either by way of guarantees or by moneys pai for oil purchased ; as to Rs. 45,000 from actual deposits and purchase moneys of oil, and as to Rs. 20,000 by a loan granted to Vaidya on the security of certain bonds which had been purchased by him out of moneys derived from the same source. The Bombay Bank suspended payment in October, 1913, and on February 13, 1915, the appellant company instituted the proceedings out of which this appeal has arisen, claiming repayment of the sum of Rs. 65,000 in priority to other creditors of the bank, on the ground that such sum represented their money in the hands of Vaidya, and had been received by the bank with knowledge of this fact. In order that this claim should succeed, it is essential that the appellant company should be in a position to establish two independent facts —First, that the money was theirs and held for them by Vaidya as trustee, and secondly, that the bank knew this fact when they received it. If they fail in establishing both these points the question as to how the money was dealt with does not arise. With regard to the first matter, the trial Judge, Beaman J., held that the aggregate amount of the deposits alone made by the sub-agents with Vaidya was some Rs. 68,000 in cash, and he decided that these moneys were never in any real sense the plaintiffs moneys at all. Upon the character and Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. With regard to the first matter, the trial Judge, Beaman J., held that the aggregate amount of the deposits alone made by the sub-agents with Vaidya was some Rs. 68,000 in cash, and he decided that these moneys were never in any real sense the plaintiffs moneys at all. Upon the character and Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. 250 ( 1914- 1915) Texas Company V. Bombay Banking C ompany, Limited 90 quality of these moneys, so far as they represented deposits, their Lordships, from the evidence before them on this appeal, have no hesitation whatever in accepting the conclusions of the learned Judge. There is no evidence to show that the Oil Company ever expressly or impliedly authorized Vaidya to enter into any sub-agency agreements at all, nor that they ever knew of the actual agreements or of their terms. It has already been pointed out that the agreements did not establish any privity of relationship between the Texas Company and the sub-agents ; nor did the course of business between the company and Vaidya necessarily imply that the parties must be assumed to contemplate the establishment of such sub-agencies. The appellants, however, say that such priority is established by s. 194 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872, which is in these terms " Where an agent, holding an express or implied authority to name another person to act for the principal in the business of the agency, has named another person accordingly, such person is not a sub-agent, but an agent of the principal for such part of the business of the agency as is entrusted to him." The answer to this contention is to be found in the fact already mentioned that Vaidya never did have express or implied authority to name any person to act for the Texas Oil Company in the business ; that he did not appoint them to act on behalf of the principal but on behalf of himself, and that the guarantees and deposited moneys were to secure him as against them, and not for the security of the Oil Company. If, therefore, the Rs. 65,000 consisted entirely of these deposited moneys, there would be no need for any further investigation into the matter ; but in truth the appellants made a strong case for showing that only Rs. 52,000 were properly attributable to this source. If, therefore, the Rs. 65,000 consisted entirely of these deposited moneys, there would be no need for any further investigation into the matter ; but in truth the appellants made a strong case for showing that only Rs. 52,000 were properly attributable to this source. In these circumstances it might have been necessary to hear the respondents upon the question as to what was the true extent of these moneys, and whether there was not, in the circumstances, some material difference between them and the sale moneys, had it not been that their Lordships have come to the clear conclusion that, from whatever source the money was drawn, it was not paid into the bank under circumstances that affected them with knowledge of any infirmities in Vaidyas title. The notice that it was alleged they received was first, by reason of the form in which some of the cheques were drawn, and secondly, by reason of Vaidyas association with the firm of Apte & Co. Upon the form of the cheque the notice is assumed to come from the signature, which in four cases is in these terms " B. R. Manerikar, per pro P. G. Vaidya, sole agent for Bengal & U.P." Manerikar was the head clerk and manager of Vaidyas agency for the appellants, and the signature was authorized and honoured ; but there is nothing on the face of these documents that would lead the bank to doubt that Vaidya was perfectly entitled to deal with the - moneys to which they related in whatever manner he thought fit. To affect a bank with knowledge of the ownership of moneys paid into the accounts of their customers by the mere form of the signature on the negotiable documents by which such moneys are transferred is to proceed far beyond the recognized limits of the doctrine of notice, and such a principle if accepted would create a serious embarrassment to the conduct of banking business. The case of Coleman v. Bucks and Oxon Union Bank ([ 1897] 2 Ch. 243.) is an authority to show that even a direction to carry money to the credit of a customers trust account when no such account existed is insufficient for such a purpose. The case of Coleman v. Bucks and Oxon Union Bank ([ 1897] 2 Ch. 243.) is an authority to show that even a direction to carry money to the credit of a customers trust account when no such account existed is insufficient for such a purpose. Had Vaidyas account, to which the proceeds of the oil business were paid, been kept with the Bombay Bank under circumstances that could fairly impute to them knowledge that the moneys were not Vaidyas, different considerations would apply (see Gray v. Johnston (( 1868) L. R. 3 H. L. 1.)) ; but in this case there is nothing beyond the fact that a cheque signed per pro with a statement that Vaidya is sole agent for Bengal and United Provinces is handed in to the bank to be placed to the credit of Vaidyas account. Indeed, if the ledger account of the Indian Specie Bank be correctly stated in the record, there is nothing on the face of that account itself to suggest any infirmity in Vaidyas title, for it is simply headed " Account of P. G. Vaidya, Esq.," and there is no explanation offered of the meaning of the signature, which indeed appears to have been quite unnecessary, for the cheque for Rs. 5,000 drawn on February 22, 1913, is signed without any such qualification, and is met out of the same Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. 250 ( 1914- 1915) Texas Company V. Bombay Banking C ompany, Limited 91 account. Probably because of the infirmity of the proposition it does not appear from the documents and judgment that this point was ever raised in the whole course of the proceedings until the hearing of this appeal. As to verbal notice the only person with whom it appears that any interview took place was Kothavle, and both Vaidya and Kothavles evidence are in agreement upon the fact that Kothavle was told that Vaidya had complete control over the moneys, and to quote Kothavles own evidence, Vaidya told him that the moneys of all the cheques j belonged to his rock oil business, as is shown by the following extract from this evidence —" A.....Vaidya told me that the moneys of all the cheques belonged to his rock oil business. Q. And that he had full power and authority to give you those moneys ? A. Yes. Q. And that he had full power and authority to give you those moneys ? A. Yes. Q. He did not tell you that he was giving you someone elses money ? A. No. Q. As far as you knew, the moneys belonged to Vaidya ? A. They did as far as I knew. Q. You told your Directors so after the moneys were paid, namely, that Vaidya had paid in moneys belonging to himself? A. Yes." This evidence, which appears to have been accepted by the trial Judge, and was certainly not impaired by cross-examination, is complete for the purpose of showing that neither by the knowledge of the directors nor of Kothavle can notice be imputed. There remains only the question of whether the knowledge of Vaidya himself is sufficient to form the necessary link. With regard to this it is important to observe that the banking company, though governed in the ordinary way by a board of directors, had, by articles of association, appointed the firm of V. N. Apte & Co., secretaries, treasurers, and agents, and provided that they should have the general management of the business. But this is entirely insufficient to bring home to the company notice of an irregularity on the part of Vaidya in his own private concerns which was only within his knowledge, and was solely due to his own improper conduct. There is no principle and there is no authority to establish that, in such circumstances, the bank could be affected with notice, and authorities indeed establish the exact opposite of such a proposition. Without considering the earlier decisions it is sufficient to refer to the two cases of Cave v. Cave (15 Ch. D. 639.) and In re David Payne &Co. ([ 1904] 2 Ch. 608.) In the former, a solicitor, who was the sole trustee of a settlement, paid the trust money in the joint name of his brother and himself and used the fund in the purchase of land, which was conveyed to his brother alone. The property was then mortgaged in favour of a mortgagee for whom the trustee acted as solicitor ; but it was decided that this fact could not affect the mortgagees with notice of the improper use of the trust money in the purchase of the estate. The property was then mortgaged in favour of a mortgagee for whom the trustee acted as solicitor ; but it was decided that this fact could not affect the mortgagees with notice of the improper use of the trust money in the purchase of the estate. In the latter case, the director of a company induced the advance by them of 6,000L on the security of a second mortgage debenture in another company, with the intention of using the money for the purpose of forwarding a scheme in which he was personally interested, a scheme outside the scope of their business. No other director of the lending company knew anything of the circumstance. It was sought to affect the lending company by the knowledge which the director possessed. Lord Wrenbury—then Buckley J.—decided that no such notice could be imputed, and he stated the law in terms which their Lordships regard as accurate and appropriate. He said " I understand the law to be this that if a communication be made to an agent which it would be his duty to hand on to his principals .... and if the agent has an interest which would lead him not to disclose to his principals the information which he has thus obtained, and in point of fact he does not communicate it, you are not to impute to his principals knowledge by reason of the fact that their agent knew something which it was not his interest to disclose and which he did not disclose." And this view was again supported in the Court of Appeal. Law Rep. 42 Ind. App. 250 ( 1914- 1915) Texas Company V. Bombay Banking C ompany, Limited 92 The facts in the present case do not, in their Lordships opinion, go so far to constitute notice as those in the cases mentioned. In fact, they amount to nothing more than this, that a company wanting payment of a debt from one of its agents asked that payment should be made, and obtained part of their debt without any knowledge whatever of the sources from which the money came. In fact, they amount to nothing more than this, that a company wanting payment of a debt from one of its agents asked that payment should be made, and obtained part of their debt without any knowledge whatever of the sources from which the money came. It would be straining the doctrine of notice beyond all reasonable limits to hold that in such circumstances moneys received in absolute good faith should be earmarked with some independent ownership, because the debtor, who was also a servant of the company, committed a fraud in order to discharge his obligations. Their Lordships will therefore humbly advise His Majesty that this appeal should be dismissed with costs.