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1990 DIGILAW 425 (CAL)

VOLTAS LIMITED v. HIRALAL AGARWALLA

1990-11-13

S.P.RAJKHOWA

body1990
S. P. RAJKHOWA, J. ( 1 ) BY this revisional application the petitioners have challenged the order dated 1st March 1990 passed by the Learned Metropolitan Magistrate, 9th Court, Calcutta in case No. C/1930 of 1989 u/s 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, whereby the learned Magistrate rejected the petition filed by the petitioners praying for dropping the proceeding on the ground of maintainability. ( 2 ) THE facts of the complaint case as disclosed from the copy of the complaint petition dated 23rd August 1989, appended to this revisional application may be summarised as follows: -the opposite party as complainant filed the said complaint case in the capacity of the Secretary, Titagarh Steels Limited. The complaint petition goes on to say that accused petitioner No. 1 is a Public Company with its registered office at 19, J. N. Heredia Marg, Volkart Building, Ballard Estate, Bombay-38 and Calcutta Office at Gillander House, N. S. Road, Calcutta-1. Accused petitioners No. 2, 3 and 4 are Chairman, Vice-Chair-man and Secretary of accused petitioner No. 1. Accused petitioner Nos. 5 and 7 are working for gain in the said company at its Calcutta Once and accused petitioner No. 6 is the Divisional Manager (Industrial Machinery Division) of the said company and he sits in the registered office at Bombay. According to the complaint, all the accused petitioners were and are in charge of and responsible for the day-to-day conduct of the business of :accused petitioner No. 1. The complaint's company purchased two machines from the accused petitioner No. 1 on full payment thereof to the tune of Rs. 15,46,780. 00. The said machines were not working properly due to some inherent defects and so a settlement was arrived at by and between the complainant's company and the accused petitioners which was recorded in a minute signed by accused Nos. 5 and 6 on behalf of accused No. 1 on 12. 7. 89 and as per said settlement the accused petitioners agreed to return 90% of the total price of the said machines. In terms of the said settlement, the accused issued an A/c Payee Cheque bearing No. 329985 dt. 27. 7. 89 in favour of the complainant's company for a sum of Rs. 14,12,996/-drawn on the Bank of America, India Exchange Place, Calcutta. The said cheque was duly presented for encashment through the banker of the complainant's company, viz. In terms of the said settlement, the accused issued an A/c Payee Cheque bearing No. 329985 dt. 27. 7. 89 in favour of the complainant's company for a sum of Rs. 14,12,996/-drawn on the Bank of America, India Exchange Place, Calcutta. The said cheque was duly presented for encashment through the banker of the complainant's company, viz. The State Bank of Bikanir and Jaipur, Park Street Branch, Calcutta within its validity period. But the said cheque was returned being dishonoured by non-payment with the remark "referred to Drawer" on 1. 8. 89. This fact of dishonouring the cheque was brought to the notice of the accused by Sri R. L. Gaggar, Solicitor and Advocate of complainant's company by his letter dt. 9. 8. S9 wherein he requested the accused to make full payment of the said cheque failing which it was intimated that legal consequences would follow. The accused received the said notice but in order to avoid their criminal liability u/s 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, started making wild, frivolous and contradictory statements in their letters and raised some false and flimsy grounds which were false and false within their knowledge. The accused failed and neglected to pay the aforesaid amount within the stipulated period as contemplated u/s 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act as amended by the Banking, Public Financial Institutions and Negotiable Instruments Laws (Amendment) Act 1988. . ( 3 ) THE learned Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Calcutta took cognizance of the offence and thereafter transferred the case to the court of the learned Metropolitan Magistrate, 9th Court for disposal before whom the accused petitioners prayed for dropping the proceeding and the learned Magistrate by his impugned order rejected that prayer of the accused petitioners. ( 4 ) THE learned counsel for the petitioners has contended that the case is not at all maintainable against the petitioners as they are not at all responsible for the day-to-day conduct of the business of the Company which. is cited as accused No. 1. According to the learned counsel, the petitioners are at the top of the hierarchy of the officers of the Company who are responsible for framing the policies of the Company and not directly responsible for the day-to-day conduct of its business and, therefore, the case is not maintainable against them. is cited as accused No. 1. According to the learned counsel, the petitioners are at the top of the hierarchy of the officers of the Company who are responsible for framing the policies of the Company and not directly responsible for the day-to-day conduct of its business and, therefore, the case is not maintainable against them. The learned counsel wants to draw support from certain reported decisions to prove his point that the case is not maintainable. I am presently 'going to discuss them one by one. In 1982 L. A. B. I. C. 1777 (Calcutta High Court), K. N. Gender v. State, the complainant's case was that the petitioners were the principal employees of' Messrs. Calco Engineering Works, a factory which was covered under the Employees State Insurance Act. It was alleged that the petitioners as principal employees of the said factory deducted a sum of Rs. 2206. 75p. as employees' share of contribution from the wages of the employees for the period from June 1980 to March 1981, but failed to deposit the said amount to the Employees State Insurance Funds within the specified time In such circumstances, it was alleged that the accused persons had committed criminal breach of trust in respect of the aforesaid amounts and had committed an offence punishable u/s 406 of the Indian Penal Code. The Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Calcutta took cognizance of the offence and issued process against the accused petitioners. Being aggrieved, the accused petitioners came up before this Court and this Court quashed the proceeding on the ground that the only averment in the complaint that the accused was the principal employer was not sufficient to connect the accused with the alleged offence. In the case of M/s. Mahalderam Tea Estate Pvt. Ltd v. D. N. Prodhan, reported in 1978 0 Calhn 336, this Court was addressed on the point as to whether Directors of the Company were liable for the offence under the Employees Provident Fund Act, 1952. It was held that a Director of a Company may be concerned only with the policy to be followed and might not have any hand in the management of its day-to-day affairs and such person must necessarily be immune from such prosecution. It was held that a Director of a Company may be concerned only with the policy to be followed and might not have any hand in the management of its day-to-day affairs and such person must necessarily be immune from such prosecution. In this case there was no material before the learned Magistrate to satisfy himself that the accused petitioners took some part in the running of the business of the Company and there was no such averments in the petition of complaint and, therefore, cognizance taken on such complaint was held bad in law. A similar question arose in the case of G. Atherton and Company v. Corporation of Calcutta, reported in 1979 Criminal Law Journal 86 (Calcutta High Court ). It was a case under Prevention of Food Adulteration Act and this Court was urged to decide whether by virtue of the provisions u/s 17 of the Act, the Officers of the Company were vacariously liable for the offences committed. It was held that "u/s 17, a Company has been made primarily liable, but to make, other persons vicariously liable, it has to be shown that such persons were in charge of or were responsible to the Company for the conduct of its day-to-day business. In the absence of any mention in the petition of complaint as to how the accused persons were concerned in the carrying on of the day-to-day business of the Company, process could not have been issued against them". The case of Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Ram Kishan, reported in AIR 1983 SC 67 , is also a case under the prevention of Food Adulteration Act. The case was instituted against the Company, its Directors and Manager. There was no clear allegations against the Manager and the Directors that they were responsible for conduct of business of the disputed sample of the adulterated food. It was held that the proceedings could be quashed against the Directors but not against the Manager. ( 5 ) HOWEVER, Sri Roy, learned counsel for the opposite party has referred to a decision of the Supreme Court as reported in AIR 1983 SC 158 Municipal Corporation of Delhi v. Purshotam Dass, as his trump card. It was also a case under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act in which Directors of a Sugar Mill for manufacturing adulterated milk toffee were sought to be prosecuted. It was also a case under the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act in which Directors of a Sugar Mill for manufacturing adulterated milk toffee were sought to be prosecuted. The averments in the complaint gave complete details of the role played by the Directors and the extent of their liability and so it was held by the Supreme Court that the Directors could be proceeded against. The Supreme Court quoted in its judgment paragraph 5 of the complaint petition which is as follows: -"5. That accused Ram Kishan Bajaj is the Chairman, accused R. P. Neyatia is the Managing Director and accused Nos. 7 to 12 are the Directors of the Hindustan Sugar Mills Ltd. and were in charge of and responsible to it for the conduct of its business at the time of commission of offence". ( 6 ) THE Supreme Court observed that for the purpose of quashing the proceeding only the allegations set forth in the complaint have to be seen and nothing further and from a perusal of the various clauses of the complaint, including para 5, the Supreme Court found it quite clear that a prima facie case for summoning the accused had been made out. ( 7 ) PARAGRAPH 3 of the complaint petition in the instant proceeding before me has been intelligently constructed and' appears to me to be almost identical to paragraph 5 of the complaint petition of the case before Supreme Court under reference i. e. AIR 1983 SC 158 . It is constructed thus -"3. That all the accused were and are in charge of and were and are responsible for the day-to-day conduct of the business of accused No. 1. The Company having its Calcutta Office at Gillander House, N. S. Road, (P. S. Hare Street) Calcutta-1 within the jurisdiction of this learned Court". ( 8 ) THE averments in the complaint petition as a whole disclose a prima facie case against the accused petitioners. Following the decision of the Supreme Court in AIR 1983 SC 158 (supra) I hold that the case is maintainable against the accused petitioners. ( 8 ) THE averments in the complaint petition as a whole disclose a prima facie case against the accused petitioners. Following the decision of the Supreme Court in AIR 1983 SC 158 (supra) I hold that the case is maintainable against the accused petitioners. ( 9 ) THE next argument of the learned counsel for the petitioners is that there are no prima facie materials to show that the accused petitioners have committed an offence punishable ups 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act 1881 as amended by the Banking, Public Financial Institutions and Negotiable Instruments Laws (Amendment) Act 1988, hereinafter referred as ande Act of 1988. ( 10 ) AS regards the criminal liability of the accused-petitioners u/s 138 of the Act of 1988, the complainant alleged in the complaint petition (already adverted to) that in discharge of the accused/petitioners' liabilities, they issued an account payee cheque bearing No. 329985 dt. 27. 7. 89 in favour of the complainant Company for a sum of Rs. 14,12,996. 00p. drawn on Bank of America, India Exchange Place, Calcutta. But when the cheque was presented for encashment through the complainant's bankers, State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, Park Street Branch, Calcutta, the said cheque was returned being dishonoured by non-payment with the remark "refer to drawer" on 1. 8. 89. S6 a letter was addressed to the accused petitioners on 9. 8. 89 requesting them to make full payment of the said cheque. Despite this letter, the accused petitioners neglected to pay the said amount within the stipulated period. These averments in the complaint petition will show that the complainant had observed the formality as required by provisos (a), (b) and (c) of section 1318 of the Act of 1988 before initiating the criminal proceeding against the petitioners. The learned counsel for the petitioners has submitted that the clause "refer to drawer" does not necessarily mean that the cheque was dishonoured. He had tried to draw support from a judgment of the House of Lords as reported in 1918 Appeal Cases 777 at page 824 (London Joint Stock Bank Ltd. v. Macmillan and Arther ). The relevant passage reads as follows:"the case, then, must be taken as the simplest one, namely, of a cheque duly signed, forwarded on behalf of the customer to the banker, and honoured. My Lords, there are in these circumstances reciprocal obligations. The relevant passage reads as follows:"the case, then, must be taken as the simplest one, namely, of a cheque duly signed, forwarded on behalf of the customer to the banker, and honoured. My Lords, there are in these circumstances reciprocal obligations. If the cheque do not contain on its face any reasonable occasion for suspicion as to the wording and figuring of its contents, the banker, under the contract of mandate which exists between him and his customer, is bound to pay. He dare not, without liability at law, fail in this obligation, and the consequences to both parties of the dishonour of a duly signed and ex facie valid cheque are serious and obvious. In the second place, if there be on the face of the cheque any reasonable ground for suspecting. that it has, been tampered with, then that in the usual case is met by the marking "refer to drawer", and by a delay in payment until that reference clears away the doubt. Always granted that the doubt was reasonable, the refusal to pay is warranted. These obligations on the banker do not, of course, exist until after the cheque has been presented. " ( 11 ) AS against the above submission, the learned counsel for the opposite party has produced xerox copies of 3 letters, one from the General Manager, Allahabad Bank, one from the Assistant Secretary, Bharat Chamber of Commerce and one from the Branch Manager, State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur. By these letters they have intimated that the remark "refer to drawer" necessarily means as per banking custom that the cheque has been returned for want of funds in the account of the drawer of the cheque. In view of this clarification it is prima facie seen that the cheque in question bounced because of inadequacy of funds in the drawer's account. As the cheque in question bounced, the complainant requested the accused petitioners to make the full payment of the said cheque but the response of the accused petitioners was not at all helpful. Under the facts and circumstances, it would be premature to held that the accused persons have not committed an offence u/s 138 of the Act of 1988. That can be brought out only in the regular trial of the case. Under the facts and circumstances, it would be premature to held that the accused persons have not committed an offence u/s 138 of the Act of 1988. That can be brought out only in the regular trial of the case. In my opinion, the learned Magistrate has not committed any illegality in proceeding with the trial of the case and directing examination of the accused u/s 251 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. ( 12 ) IN the result the application fails and the same is rejected. The impugned order is upheld. Application rejected.