CENTRAL BANK OF INDIA v. P. R. GARMENTS INDUSTRIES PRIVATE LIMITED
1985-03-15
A.P.RAVANI, R.A.MEHTA
body1985
DigiLaw.ai
R. A. MEHTA, J. ( 1 ) THE appellant original plaintiff Central Bank of India has preferred this appeal against the judgment and decree in so far as the trial Court has refused to decree the interest at the contractual rate of 16-12 per annum and against the quarterly instalment of Rs. 5 0 with interest due against the decretal dues of Rs. 9 23 521. 44 ( 2 ) THE respondents-defendants are a private limited company and their two Directors have been held personally jointly and severally liable along with the Company because they have given personal guarantees. The defendants had executed several documents on 30/07/1977 for obtaining advances and credit facility one was letter of credit facility with a limit of Rs. 5 0 one was overdraft facility with a limit of Rs. 25 0 and the third was cash credit with a limit of Rs. 8 0 0 Thus there was a total credit facility upto the limit or Rs. 13 25 0 There were also personal guarantees executed by the defendants Nos. 2 and 3 for Rs. 13 25 0 with 16-1/2% interest per annum. On the date of the suit no amounts were due under the letter of credit facility and overdraft facility ( 3 ) AS per the statement of accounts produceed a sum of Rs. 9 23 521 44 was due and payable by the defendants as on 31/12/1979 and the statement of that account is at Exhs. 38 to 45 and from 1-1-1979 interest is due at the rate of 16-1/2% per annum. On behalf of the defendants. Defendant No. 2 Prafulchandra R. Shah had deposed at Exh. 71. He has stated that when he was the Director of defendant No. 1 Company the Factory was started in 1977 He has stated that his Garment Unit in the Kandla Free Trade Zone was facing financial difficulties. His brother defendant No. 3 was a Director of Kanti Cotton Mill which was closed before about a year. He has stated that the Unit had to incur huge debts. He has stated that defendants Nos.
His brother defendant No. 3 was a Director of Kanti Cotton Mill which was closed before about a year. He has stated that the Unit had to incur huge debts. He has stated that defendants Nos. 2 and J have large family and social obligations and they have no other property except the factory of the Unit and the Kanti Cotton Mill and that his sons have no income of their own and they are dependent on them and they have got to be married and their marriage expenditure was required to be met and therefore it was prayed that small instalment may be granted and looking to the economic condition he prayed that instalment of Rs. 50 quarterly be granted. He also stated that he had his personal income of Rs. 20 to Rs. 2500/- and that he had cash deposit of about Rs. 100 to Rs. 1250 and that he was getting 12 interest on that amount and he was a member of Hindu Undivided Family in which there were total 7 members residing together and he did not have movable or immovable property. He has stated that defendant No. 3 was getting Rs. 5000. 00 per month when Kanti Cotton Mill was being run. He stated that he will not be in a position to say what instalment the defendant No. 3 could pay. The defendant No. 3 has not entered the witness box. He has not even appeared before this Court. He has not prayed for any instalment. He has not contested this appeal. Defendant No. 2 has admitted in the cross examination that it is true that there was contract with the Bank regarding rate of interest. As per the contract the rate of interest was at the rate of 16-1/2%. Inspite of that only a decree for the principal amount has been granted and against that there is no cross appeal or cross objection filed by any of them. ( 4 ) IT is curious and inexplicable as to why in such circumstances the secured loan of the Bank has been put to jeopardy for an incredibly long period. The learned Judge has granted quarterly instalment of Rs. 5. 000/ with interest due. It is not clear as to whether Rs. 5 0 includes interest. It is also not clear whether the defendant is required to pay every quarter Rs.
The learned Judge has granted quarterly instalment of Rs. 5. 000/ with interest due. It is not clear as to whether Rs. 5 0 includes interest. It is also not clear whether the defendant is required to pay every quarter Rs. 50 only inclusive of interest or Rs. 5 0 plus interest. Defendant No. 2 has clearly stated that he wanted instalment of Rs. 50 and he could pay Rs. 50 only per quarter and the learned Judge seems to have accepted the same without any question. Calculating the interest at the rate of 6% as per the decree the yearly interest would be more than Rs. 540 and the decretal amount is more than Rs. 900 Quarterly instalment of Rs. 50 would bring only Rs. 200 and that would certainly not be sufficient even to pay up the interest. The interest amount on the principal amount would go on mounting and the decree would never be satisfied. This instalment of Rs. 50 inclusive of interest also gets support from the further direction in the decree which is as under:"the defendants should continue to pay the amount due every quarterly at the rate of Rs. 50 per quarter. If they fail in pay any one instalment the plaintiff shall he entitled to recover the whole of the remaining amount due together with cost and interest at a time in one lump sum". Thus the learned Judge makes it clear that quarterly instalment of Rs. 5 0 is the only thing required to be paid inclusive of interest. In the alternative assuming that interest has to be paid over add above quarterly instalment of Rs. 50 the yearly payment towards principal decretal dues will be Rs. 200 per year and for the dues of Rs. 9,230 it would require 45 years to pay up the dues of the Bank. The learned Judge does not seem to have given any serious thought whatsoever to this aspect of the matter while granting decree for instalment. ( 5 ) THE learned Judge has also not considered that commercial loans by the Bank and Public Finance Institutions are given on securities of immovable property or movable property or personal guarantees of other solvent persons. tn the present case apart from the dues being secured by hypothecation of goods the defendants Nos. 2 and 3 had given personal guarantees to the tune of Rs.
tn the present case apart from the dues being secured by hypothecation of goods the defendants Nos. 2 and 3 had given personal guarantees to the tune of Rs. 13,250 While giving such guarantees they must have professed to be solvent to that extent and induced the Rank to accept the personal guarantees. It is of course impossible to believe that they are in insolvent circumstances. If instalments were to be granted in such secured commercial transactions with Public Financial Institutions the whole prurpose of securing the advance would be lost. These securities are taken only with a view to see that dues can be recovered from all the securities taken. Even when the principal debtor may not be in a Position to pay the liability of such persons such as sureties and guarantors is joint several and co-extensive and in such circumstances the decree for instalment and relief for instalment cannot be justified and therefore that direction is clearly illegal unjust and without any valid reason and is required to be quashed and set aside. It is curious to note that defendant No. 2 who had stated in his deposition that it was his duty to discharge the debt by paying instalment of Rs. 50 quarterly has not paid any single instalment uptill now nor any other defendant has paid any dues towards the decree. In view of the default clause in the impugned decree. an execution application has been filed in 1982 and we are told that. till today no recovery has been made. ( 6 ) ON the question of interest there is no dispute that the contractual rate of interest is 16-1/2% per annum. The learned Trial Judge also upheld this observing that no doubt the rate of interest is stated as 16-1/2% but further held that it cannot form the basis of contractual rate of interest on the ground that. the plaintiff had not shown the exact amount which was advanced to the defendants under the Cash Credit Scheme and the statements if accounts produced by the plaintiff did not show the exact amount advanced to the defendants under the said Scheme This is absolutely incorrect. ( 7 ) THE hypothecation agreement and cash credit against goods (Exh. 40) in para 7 prescribes compound interest at the rate of 16-1/2% over the Bank rate subject to a minimum of 16-1/2% per annum. Exh.
( 7 ) THE hypothecation agreement and cash credit against goods (Exh. 40) in para 7 prescribes compound interest at the rate of 16-1/2% over the Bank rate subject to a minimum of 16-1/2% per annum. Exh. 63 also refers to same credit account namely packing credit account. It is the same as Cash Creditcum-Packing facility Moreover it would not make any difference as to under which of the three accounts the amounts were advanced because in respect of every account the contracted rate of interest is 16-1/2% and the learned Judge was obviously in error in holding that the contractual-rate of 16-1/2% interest would not be attracted on the ground that the plaintiff had not shown the exact amount which has been advanced under the Cash Credit Scheme. The other reason given by the learned Trial Judge that the defendant No. 1s financial position is stringent is also without any basis. The learned Judge has observed as under: It appears that looking to the stringent financial position of the defendant No. I"it appears that the said Exh. 40 was also passed by the defendant under pressure and so the same cannot be relied upon". This agreement Exh. 40 was executed on 30/07/1977 at the time of obtaining advance and at that time there was no question whatsoever about the stringent financial position of defendant No. 1 or any pressure on defendant No. 1 This Exh. 40 is also produced for inspection before the Registrar of Companies on 5-9-1977 as per endorsement on the said document. Exh. 40 in para 7 clearly stipulates compound interest at the rate of 16-1/2%. Thus the learned Judge has clearly erred. The learned Judge has observed that the plain tiff in order to claim contractual rate of interest ought to have shown the exact amount advanced to the defendants under each head namely Cash Credit-Cum-Packing Credit and overdraft limit. Overdraft limit was only Rs. 25. 000. 00 and no amount was due under that head. Letter of Credit facility was not availed of at all. Therefore the only account that had remained was Cash Credit cum-Packing Credit facility and Exh. 63 the statement of accounts clearly shows the head of the account i. e. account of the defendant in respect of packing credit account Interest amounts have also been shown separately and periodically. The accounts are properly maintained.
Therefore the only account that had remained was Cash Credit cum-Packing Credit facility and Exh. 63 the statement of accounts clearly shows the head of the account i. e. account of the defendant in respect of packing credit account Interest amounts have also been shown separately and periodically. The accounts are properly maintained. Thus all the reasons given by the learned Trial Judge for not awarding 16-1/2% rate of interest are erroneous and without any basis and it appears that reasons have been stretched to give unduly low rate of 6 interest only as against the contractual rate of 16 interest. ( 8 ) PROVISO to section 34 Civil Procedure Code inserted by Amendment in 1976 provides that where the liability in relation to the sum so adjudged had arisen out of a commercial transaction the rate of such further interest may exceed six per cent per annum but shall not exceed the contractual rate of interest or where there is no contractual rate the rate at which moneys are lent or advanced by nationalised banks in relation to commercial transactions; a commercial transaction is defined to be connected with industry. trade or business of the party incurring the liability. Undoubtedly this was a commercial transaction and therefore ordinarily the rate of interest shall be contractual rate or such rate at which moneys shall be lent by the nationalised banks in relation to commercial transactions; otherwise it will amount to the Court granting credit facility of somebody elses money at a lower rate of interest. The Bank would not have advanced a commercial loan at a lesser rate of interets. Because the party has committed default in payment and the Bank is required to file a suit against such party such a defaulting party cannot have the benefit of lesser rate of interest. Therefore ordinarily in such transactions the contractual rate of interest should be the rule and departure a rare exception. ( 9 ) IN such transactions by the public financial institutions where money is advanced on security including personal guarantees the granting of instalments is ruled out because that would frustrate the very purpose of taking security and granting of lesser rate of interest is also ordinarily ruled out.
( 9 ) IN such transactions by the public financial institutions where money is advanced on security including personal guarantees the granting of instalments is ruled out because that would frustrate the very purpose of taking security and granting of lesser rate of interest is also ordinarily ruled out. ( 10 ) IN the result the appeal is allowed and the Judgment and decree of the Trial Court is modified and the direction in respect of interest is substituted by 16-1/2% per annum instead of 6% and the direction for instalment is quashed and set aside. Rest of the decree will stand as modified as hereinabove. The appeal is accordingly allowed with costs. ( 11 ) BEFORE parting with this matter we must express our feeling of great distress over the fact that though the execution proceeding was filed in 1982 because the defendants then did not pay any instalment there is no significant progress in the matter. It now appears that there are some legal difficulties in effecting the recoveries by sale of goods lying in Kandla Free Trade Zone. However that does not mean that other properties of defendants Nos. 1 2 and 3 and their persons cannot be simultaneously proceeded with. We are told that the plaintiff Bank has prayed for the execution not only against the properties of defendant No. 1 but also against the properties of defendants Nos. 2 and 3 as well as against their persons. The Executing Court should now see that the decree is executed in all manner and against all persons simultaneously and expeditiously. Appeal allowed: Decree modified .