08 May 1998
Supreme Court
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INDIAN BANK Vs THE OFFICIAL LIQUIDATOR, CHEMMEENS EXPORTS (P) LTD. & ORS.

Bench: B.N. KIRPAL,SAYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI
Case number: Appeal Civil 4393 of 1986


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PETITIONER: INDIAN BANK

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE OFFICIAL LIQUIDATOR, CHEMMEENS EXPORTS (P) LTD. & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       08/05/1998

BENCH: B.N. KIRPAL, SAYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T QUADRI,J.      This appeal,  by special leave, is directed against the order  of  the  Division  Bench  of  Kerala  High  Court  in M.C.A.No.11 of  1983 passed on January 29, 1986. That was an application filed  before the  learned Single  Judge of  the High Court  of  Kerala  (hereinafter  referred  to  as  ’the Company Court’)  by  the  Official  Liquidator  against  the Indian Bank  and respondents Nos.2 to 5 herein under Section 446(2) and  Section 460(4)  read with  Section  125  of  the Companies Act,  1956 (for short ’the Act’) and Rule 9 of the Companies (Court) Rules, 1959 praying for a declaration that the charge  created by  the in  Liquidation in favour of the Indian bank  against the  land and buildings of the company, being plaint  schedule properties  in O.S.169/80  before the Principal  Sub-Court,   Cochin,  was   void  and  a  further declaration that  the preliminary  decree passed in the said suit to  the extent  that it  created three  charge  on  the assets of  the company  was contrary  to the  provisions  of Section 125   of  the Act and as such void and unenforceable against the  Official Liquidator  representing  the  Central body of creditors excluding the decree holder.      It will be necessary to notice the facts giving rise to this appeal  for a  proper  appreciation  of  the  questions raised before  us. The  Indian Bank advanced certain amounts to M/s.  Chemmeens Exports Pvt. Ltd. which was secured by an equitable mortgage  by deposit  of title deeds of the debtor company with  the Bank.  Thereafter, winding  up proceedings were initiated  against the  debtor-company and  on March 1, 1979 and  winding up  order was  passed in  Company Petition No.18 of 1978. The bank sought leave of the Company Court to file a  suit for  recovery of  the debt  amount in  a sum of Rs.29,50,609.58  due  to  it.  The  permission  having  been granted by  the Company  Court on  7.12.79, the  Indian Bank filed the said suit, O.S.No.169/80 in the Subordinate Judg’s Court, Cochin,  against the  debtor company  in  liquidation which was  represented  by  the  Official  Liquidator,  duly impleading  the  Directors  of  the  Company.  The  Official Liquidator filed  written statement  and contested  the suit taking, inter  alia, the  plea that  the charge  against the

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properties of  the company  not having been registered under Section 125  of the  Act, was  void. On 28.5.82, in the said suit the  Court passed a preliminary decree in favour of the Bank. No appeal was filed by the Official Liquidator against the said decree.      However, on  March 21,  1983, the  Official  Liquidator filed an  application being  C.M.A.No.11 of  1983 before the Company Court  for the  reliefs indicated  above.  The  bank resisted the  application on  the  ground  that  the  decree passed by  the Court  had become  final and  operates as res judicata. The  learned Company  Judge referred the case to a Division Bench expressing the view that the question was not free from  doubt. By the impugned order of January 29, 1986, the Division  Bench held  that the preliminary decree passed in the suit did not operate as res judicata; that on account of non-registration  of the charge it was void under Section 125 of the Act and that plea could be raised by the Official Liquidator as  such and  also on  behalf of  the body of the creditors in  the application  and also  declared  that  the preliminary decree passed on the basis of the charge created by the  company in  favour of  the bank  against  the  land, buildings and  machinery of  the company,  as set out in the preliminary decree, was void against the Official Liquidator and the  creditors of  the company and that the same was not enforceable against the assets of the company.      Shri Ram  Kumar, the learned counsel for the appellant, contended that  since no  appeal was  preferred against  the preliminary decree passed in the suit filed by the bank with permission  of   the  Company   Court  against  the  company represented by  the liquidator  on the  basis  of  equitable mortgage of the company’s property, it had become final, and the Division  Bench could not have gone behind the decree to hold that  as the  charge, the  basis of the decree, was not registered with  the Registrar and was void, the decree, was not registered  with the  Registrar and was void, the decree itself was void; that under Section 125 of the Act, what was required to  be registered was charge created by the company and as  the preliminary decree in the suit could not be said to be  a charge  created by  the company, Section 125 had no application to  the decree  of  the  court.  In  any  event, submitted the  learned counsel, the liquidator himself being a party  to the  decree, it  was binding on him and he could not be  permitted to plead to the contrary. Shri E.M.S.Anam, the learned counsel appearing for the contesting respondent, argued that because the charge created by the company on its properties was  void  in  view  of  mandatory  provision  of Section 125,  the Division  Bench had  rightly held that the preliminary decree  was also  void against the creditors and the liquidator  and that  it was  of no consequence that the liquidator did  not appeal against it and that the principle of res judicata had no application.      On these  submissions, the  question  which  falls  for consideration is  : what is the effect of Section 125 of the Act on a preliminary decree in a mortgage suit passed on the basis of an unregistered charge; and what is relief to which the judgment creditor will be entitled to in such a case?      Since the  preliminary decree is assailed as being void under Section  125 of  the Act,  it would  be useful to read here the  said provision,  insofar as it is relevant for our purposes. It reads :      "Certain charges to be      void against liquidator      or creditors unless registered.      125. (1)  Subject to the provisions      of this  Part, every charge created

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    on or  after the  Ist day of April,      1914, by  a  company  and  being  a      charge  to   which   this   section      applies  shall,   so  far   as  any      security on  the company’s property      or   undertaking    is    conferred      thereby,  be   void   against   the      liquidator and  any creditor of the      company,  unless   the   prescribed      particulars of the charge, together      with instrument,  if any,  by which      the charge is created or evidenced,      or a  copy thereof  verified in the      prescribed manner,  are filed  with      the Registrar  for registration  in      the manner  required  by  this  Act      within thirty  days after  the date      of its creation :           Provided  that  the  Registrar      may  allow   the  particulars   and      instrument or  copy as aforesaid to      be filed  within thirty  days  next      following the  expiry of  the  said      period of thirty days on payment of      such additional  fee not  exceeding      ten  times   the  amount   of   fee      specified  in  Schedule  X  as  the      Registrar  may  determine,  if  the      company  satisfies   the  Registrar      that it  had sufficient  cause  for      not  filing   the  particulars  and      instrument  or   copy  within  that      period.      (2)  Nothing   in  sub-section  (1)      shall  prejudice  any  contract  or      obligation for the repayment of the      money secured by the charge.      (3)  When  a  charge  becomes  void      under  this   section,  the   money      secured thereby  shall  immediately      become payable.      (4) This  section  applies  to  the      following charges :      (a)  a charge  for the  purpose  of           securing    any    issue    of           debentures:      (b)  a  charge  on  uncalled  share           capital of the company;      (c)  a   charge  on  any  immovable           property, wherever situate, or           any interest therein:      (d) a  charge on  any book debts of           the company;      (e) a  charge, not  being a pledge,           on any  moveable  property  of           the company;      (f)  a   floating  charge   on  the           undertaking or any property of           the company  including  stock-           in-trade;      (g) a  charge on calls made but not           paid;      (h) a charge on a ship or any share           in a ship;      (j) a  charge  on  goodwill,  on  a

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         patent or  a licence  under  a           patent, on a trade mark, or on           a copyright or a licence under           the copyright.      Sub-sections (5)  to (8)  ***   ***      ***"      On a  plain reading  of sub-section (1) it become clear that if  a company creates a charge of the nature enumerated in sub-section  (4), after  Ist day  of April,  1914, on its properties, and  fails to  have  the  charge  together  with instrument,  if   any,  by  which  the  charge  is  created, registered with the Registrar of the Companies within thirty days, it  shall be  void  against  the  liquidator  and  any creditor of  the company.  This, however,  is subject to the provisions of  Part-V of  the Act.  The proviso  enables the Registrar to  relax the  period of limitation of thirty days on payment  of specified additional fees, on being satisfied that there  has been  sufficient cause  for not  filing  the particulars and  instrument or  a copy  thereof  within  the specified  period.   Sub-sections  (2)  and  (3)  deal  with repayment of  money secured  by the  charge. Sub-section (2) provides that  the provision  of sub-section  (1) shall  not prejudice the  contract or obligation for repayment of money secured by  the charge  and sub-section (3) says that when a charge becomes  void under  the section,  the money  secured shall become payable immediately. Though as a consequence of non-registration of  charge  under  Part-V  of  the  Act,  a creditor may  not be  able to enforce the charge against the properties of the company as a secured creditor in the event of liquidation  of the  company as  the charge  becomes void against the  liquidator and  the creditor,  yet he  will  be entitled to recover the debt due by  the company on par with other unsecured  creditors. It  is also  evident the Section 125 applies  to every  charge created  by the  company on or after the Ist day of April, 1914. But where the charge is by  operation of  law or is created by an order or decree of the court, Section 125 has no application.      In re:  Overseas Aviation Engineering (G.B.) Ltd, [1963 (33) Company  Cases 315],  the Court  of appeal  held, inter alia, that an order passed by the court giving effect to the charge  unregistered  under  Section  95    of  the  English companies Act  (which is  not  only  in  pari  materia  with Section 125  of the  Companies Act  but is also identical in terms) was not void against the liquidator of the company on its winding up.      In Praga  Tools Ltd.  vs. Official  Liquidator  of  the Bengal Engineering  Co. (P)  Ltd. [1984  (56() Company Cases 214], a  consent decree  for repayment  of money  was passed against the  Bengal Engineering Company on the suit filed by Praga Tools  Company. The  decree provided, inter alia, that in the event of non-payment of the decreed amount, the praga Tools Company would be entitled to execute decree and in the event of  execution of the decree, the security furnished by the Bengal  Engineering Company  with the Registrar under an earlier order  of the  court to  the extent  of Rs. 53,000/- would continue  as security  for the decree. That decree was not registered.  Thereafter, Bengal Engineering Company went into liquidation  and its  entire assets  were sold  by  the official  liquidator.   The  Praga   Tools  Company  applied claiming  to   be  a  secured  creditor  to  the  extent  of Rs.50,000/-. A  learned Single  Judge of  the Calcutta  High Court held that as the charge was created by an order of the court, it  would not  require registration under Section 125 of the Companies Act and that the Praga Tools Company should be treated  as secured creditor to the extent of Rs.50,000/-

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and was  entitled to  recover the  amount from  the official liquidator. We  approve  the  principle  laid  down  by  the learned Single  Judge of  the Calcutta  High Court.  We also make it  clear that  an order  or decree of a Court creating charge  on   the  properties   of  a   company  has   to  be distinguished from a preliminary decree passed in a mortgage suit based on an unregistered charge which is hit by Section 125 of the Act. We shall advert to this aspect presently.      Now, it  will be  necessary to read here Section 446 of the Act. It deals with the effect of winding up order on the suits and  other  proceedings  pending  or  in  the  offing. Section 446 is in the following terms :      " Suits stayed on winding up order,      446. (1)  When a  winding up  order      has  been   made  or  the  Official      Liquidator has  been  appointed  as      provisional liquidator,  no suit or      other  legal  proceeding  shall  be      commenced, or  if  pending  at  the      date of the winding up order, shall      be  proceed   with,   against   the      company, except  by  leave  of  the      Court and  subject to such terms as      the Court may impose.      (2) The  Court which  is winding up      the company  shall, notwithstanding      anything contained in any other law      for the  time being  in force, have      jurisdiction   to   entertain,   or      dispose of --      (a) any  suit or  proceeding by  or           against the company;      (b) any  claim made  by or  against           the company  (including claims           by  or   against  any  of  its           branches in India);      (c)  any   application  made  under           Section 391  by or  in respect           of the company;      (d) any  question of  priorities or           any other question whatsoever,           whether of  law or fact, which           may  relate  to  or  arise  in           course of  the winding  up  of           the company;      Whether such suit or proceeding has      been instituted,  or is instituted,      or  such   claim  or  question  has      arisen   or    arises    or    such      application has  been  made  or  is      made before  or after the order for      the winding  up of  the company, or      before or after the commencement of      the  Companies   (Amendment)   Act,      1960.      (3) Any  suit or  proceeding by  or      against  the   company   which   is      pending in  any  Court  other  than      that in which the winding up of the      company    is    proceeding    may,      notwithstanding anything  contained      in any other law for the time being      in force,  be  transferred  to  and      disposed of by that Court.      (4) Nothing  in sub-section  (1) or

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    sub-section (3)  shall apply to any      proceeding pending in appeal before      the Supreme Court or a High Court."      A perusal  of the provisions, extracted above, makes it clear that  when a  winding up  order has  been made  or the official  liquidator   has  been  appointed  as  provisional liquidator in  respect of  a company,  the Court passing the winding up  order is empowered to adopt any of the following courses : (1) To  grant leave  to any  person to institute or continue suit or  legal proceeding, pending at the date of winding up against the  company subject to such terms as that court may impose; (2) to entertain or dispose of (a) any suit or proceeding by or against the company; (b)  any claim  made by  or against  the company;  including      claims by or against any of its branches in India; (c)  any application made under Section 391 by or in respect      of the company; and (d)  any  question  of  priorities  or  any  other  question      whatsoever whether  of law  or fact which may relate to      or arise  in the  course of  winding up of the company;      and (3) to  transfer to  itself any  suit or  proceedings by  or against the  company which  is pending  in any  court (other than that  in  which  the  winding  up  of  the  company  is proceeding) and disposed of the same.      It  may   be  noted   that  these  provisions  have  no application to  any proceeding  pending in  appeal before  a High Court  or the  Supreme Court. From this what follows is when  a  suit  is  instituted  in  the  court  of  competent jurisdiction with  the leave  of the court under sub-section (1) and  a decree  is passed  by that  court whether  on the basis of  mortgage or  otherwise, it would be binding on the official liquidator and no plea inconsistent with the decree passed against  the official  liquidator can be raised while deciding the  questions of  priorities under  clause (d)  of sub-section (2). We wish to make it clear that under Section 446, no power is conferred on the company court to declare a decree of  the competent court void - a prayer which is made by the  official liquidator  in the application out of which this appeal arises - so to that extent the application filed by the liquidator in the company court is not maintainable.      The question,  however, remains  what is  the effect of the preliminary  decree passed  by  the  court  against  the official liquidator  on May  28, 1982.  It will be useful to read here the material portion of the preliminary decree :      "It is  ordered and  decreed that a      preliminary decree  is  passed  and      that the  plaintiff is  entitled to      realise from  the defendants  a sum      of Rs.  29,50,605.59 with  interest      at 14%  from the  date of suit till      the realization  and that plaintiff      is entitled to the cost of the suit      also and that the defendants 1 to 3      will deposit  in Court on or before      28.8.1982 the above said amount and      cost of the Suit and on payment  of      the amount  the equitable  mortgage      will stand discharged and documents      of   title   deposited   with   the      plaintiff  by  the  defendants  and      which are produced by the plaintiff      in Court  will be  delivered to the

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    defendants and  that in  default of      payment as aforesaid, the plaintiff      may apply  to the court for passing      a final  decree for the sale of the      plaint schedule  property and  that      the money  realised  by  such  sale      shall be  applied in payment of the      amount due  under the  decree,  and      the balance  if any,  shall be paid      to the  Ist defendant  and that  if      the money  realised by  the sale of      the  plaint  schedule  property  is      insufficient  for  payment  of  the      decree debt  in full, the plaintiff      shall be  at liberty to apply for a      personal decree  against defendants      2 to 5 for the balance and that the      defendants   will    suffer    cost      hitherto incurred."      From  the  above  quoted  extract  of  the  decree  the following directions of the Court may be noticed : (1) that  the appellant  (plaintiff therein) became entitled to realize  from the  respondent (defendants  therein  which included company  represented by  the official  liquidator a sum of Rs.2,50,605.590 with interest and costs of the suit; (2) the  respondents were  given liberty to deposit the said amounts on or before August 28, 1982; (3) if  the amounts  are deposited,  the equitable  mortgage will stand  discharged and  the documents of title deposited with the appellant-Bank by the respondents will be delivered to them; (4) in  default of payment of the amounts, the appellant was authorised to  apply to  the court  for  passing  the  final decree  for   the  sale   of  the   company’s  property  and realisation of the decreed amount; and (5) in  the event  of the  sale proceeds being less than the amount decreed,  a personal  decree was  also passed against Defendants 2  to 5  therein for  recovery of  the unrealised amount.      The aforementioned preliminary decree was passed by the Court even though the official liquidator raised the plea in the  written  statement  that  the  charge  created  on  the company’s property  was void  under Section  125 of the Act. But it  may be  that plea  was not  argued at  the  hearing. However, what  is clear  from the material on record is that no appeal  was filed  against the said preliminary decree by the official  liquidator  and  the  preliminary  decree  has attained finality.      From the above discussion, it follows that the right of the respondents  including the  company represented  by  the official  liquidator   to  deposit  the  decree  amount  was available till August 28, 1982. In other words, the right to recover  the  amounts  pursuant  to  the  contract  creating charge, even  under the  terms of  the decree  was available till the  said date  and thereafter  ’the matter  had passed from the domain of the contract to that of judgment’. In Rani  Sundar Koer  vs.  Rai  sham  Krishan  [1934  Indian Appeals P.9 (P.C.)], Lord Davey observed as follows :      "Their  Lordships  think  that  the      scheme   and   intention   of   the      Transfer of  Property Act  (now the      corresponding  provisions   of  the      Civil Procedure  Code) was  that  a      general  account  should  be  taken      once  for  all,  and  an  aggregate

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    amount be  stated in the decree for      principal, interest  and costs  due      on a  fixed day; and that after the      expiration  of  that  day,  if  the      property should  not  be  redeemed,      the matter  should  pass  from  the      domain  of   contract  to  that  of      judgment  and  the  rights  of  the      mortgagee    should     thenceforth      depend, not  on the contents of his      bond, but  on the directions in the      decree." That principle  was followed  by the  Privy Council in Kusum Kumari vs.  Debi Prosad  Dhandhania &  Ors. [1936  P.C.  63] where the  question of  granting interest under Regulation 6 of 1872  fell for consideration. Regulation 6 provided, "the total interest  decreed on  any loan  or  debt  shall  never exceed one-fourth of the principal sum, if the period be not more than  one year,  and shall not in any other case exceed the principal of the original debt or loan". The trial court decreed the  suit based on mortgage with interest at six per cent per  annum  from  the  date  of  the  decree  till  its realisation. The  amount of interest so decreed exceeded the limitation prescribed  under the  said Regulation. The Privy Council has observed that once a decree had been passed, the loan or debt as the subject of enforcement no longer exists; it was  in effect  merged in the decree and the allowance of interest on  the decree  was not the allowance of additional interest on  the  loan  or  debt.  The  same  principle  was reiterated by  this Court in Gyarsi Bai vs.Dhansukh Lal [AIR 1965 SC  1055]. This  Court observed,  "it  cannot  also  be disputed and  the  rights  of  the  parties  are  thereafter governed by the said decree".      In Suryakant  Natvarlal Surati  & Ors.  vs. Kamani Bros Pvt. Ltd. [1985 (58) Company Cases 121], the company created a charge  under a  mortgage in favour of the trustees of the Employees’ Gratuity  Fund. The  creditors by  a  preliminary decree of  December 3,  1977 were  entitled to  receive  the amount secured  on the  property of  the company;  the court fixed December  8, 1988  as  the  date  for  redemption  and ordered that  in default  of payment  of the sum due by that date, the  property was  to be sold by public auction. On an application made  on February  16,  1978,  the  company  was ordered to be wound up by and order dated August 3, 1979. As default in  payment of the decreed amount was committed, the mortgages applied  for leave  of the court under Section 446 to execute  the decree  against the  official liquidator  by application dated July 10, 1981. Three contributories sought injunction   against taking any further action on the ground that the  charge created  by the  company was not registered under Section  125 of  the  Companies  Act,  therefore,  the mortgages should  be treated  only  as  unsecured  creditor. Their application  was dismissed  by a learned Single Judge. On appeal,  speaking for  the Division  Bench of  the Bombay High Court  Justice Bharucha  (as he  then was)  laid  down, inter alia, the principle that the question of applicability of Section  125 had to be decided on the terms of the decree - whether  the unregistered charged created by the mortgagor was kept  alive or  extinguished or  replaced by an order of sale created  by the  decree; if  upon a construction of the decree, the  court found  that the  unregistered charge  was kept alive,  the provisions  of Section  125 would apply and if,  on   the  other   hand,  the  decree  extinguished  the unregistered charge,  the section would not apply. We are in respectful agreement  with that  principle. We  hold that  a

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judgment creditor  will  be  entitled  to  relief  from  the Company Court accordingly.      Reverting  to   the  facts   of  this   case,  on   the construction of  the decree  we have  already held  that the charge was kept alive till August 28, 1982 and thereafter in default of  payment of  decree amount  the sale  order would take effect. In this case, admittedly the  decree amount was not paid  before August  28, 1982,  as such  the matter  had passed from  the domain  of contract  to the  realm  of  the judgment. The official liquidator filed application on March 21, 1983 seeking to declare the decree as void. By that date what was operative in the decree as void. By that dates what was operative  in the  decree was  not a  more  unregistered charge but  an order  for sale  of  mortgaged  property  for realisation of  decree amount. The preliminary decree cannot therefore by said to be void and inoperative.      For the  above reasons  we hold that the Division Bench ought not to have hold that the preliminary decree passed by the competent  court on  May  25,  1980  was  void  and  un- enforceable and  accordingly we  set aside  the order  under appeal dated  January 29,  1986 by allowing the appeal dated January 29, 1986 by allowing the appeal with costs.