14 March 1962
Supreme Court
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THE SUGAULI SUGAR WORKS (PRIVATE) LTD. Vs THE ASSTT. REGISTRAR, CO-OPERATIVESOCIETIES

Bench: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ),SUBBARAO, K.,AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA,MUDHOLKAR, J.R.,AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
Case number: Appeal (civil) 100 of 1962


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PETITIONER: THE SUGAULI SUGAR WORKS (PRIVATE) LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE ASSTT.  REGISTRAR, CO-OPERATIVESOCIETIES

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/03/1962

BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) BENCH: SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) SUBBARAO, K. AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA MUDHOLKAR, J.R. AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1367            1962 SCR  Supl. (3) 804  CITATOR INFO :  F          1967 SC 389  (6)

ACT: Co-operative Society-Reference-Jurisdiction of  Registrar-If can entertain claim by registered society against non-member Bihar and Orissa Co-operative Societies Act, 1985 (B. & O. 6 of 1935), as amended by Bihar Co-operative Societies (Amend- ment)  Act,  1948 (Bihar 16 of 1948), ss.48 (1),  16(1)  and 2(c).

HEADNOTE: The  point for determination in the appeal was  whether  the Registrar  of  Co-operative Societies under  the  Bihar  and Orissa  Co-operative Societies Act, 1935, as amended by  Act 16  of 1948, had the jurisdiction under s. 48(1) of the  Act to hear and decide a reference made by a registered  society against  a non-member.  The appellant company,  incorporated under  the Indian Companies Act, with its registered  office at  Calcutta, manufactured sugar in Bihar.  The second  res- pondent  the  Union of  Co-operative  Societies,  registered under the Co-operative Societies Act, made a reference under s. 48 of the Act, against the appellant claiming the sum  of Rs. 1,20,809/- odd as commission and interest for  supplying sugarcane  in 1959-60.  The first respondent, the  Assistant Registrar of Go-operative Societies registered the reference and issued notice to the appellant.  The appellant took  the preliminary  objection that the Assistant Registrar  had  no jurisdiction under the Act to entertain the reference.  That objection was overruled by the Assistant Registrar  relying, on  a decision of the High Court and the High  Court  upheld that order by dismissing in limine the appellant’s  petition under Arts.226 and 227 of the Constitution. Held, that the High Court had taken a wrong view of the law. Although  under  s. 48 of the Act the claim by  a  financing bank  against  a nonmember to whom it had  made  in  advance either  in cash or kind, with the sanction of the  Registrar under s. 16(1), could be entertained by the Registrar,  that did  not  mean that a claim not of the kind referred  to  in s.16(1), read

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 805 with  s. 2(c), made by a registered society against  a  non- member, who was not an agriculturist, was within the purview of  s. 48(1), read with the Explanation 1. The  addition  of the  word  ‘non-member’ by the amending Act of 1948  to  the Explanation I, did not enlarge the scope of the main section so  as  to make all kinds of dispute  between  a  registered society and a non-member cognizable by the Registrar. Since  in the present case, the second respondent was not  a financing bank nor was the appellant an agriculturist, 48(1) (e)  and, the Explanation 1 could have no  application.Union of India v. Registrar, Co-operative Societies, Patna, (1961) I.L.R. 40 Pat. 7, overruled.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE,  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  100  of 1962. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated October 30, 1961, of the Patna High Court in M.J.C. No.  954 of 1961. A.   N. Sinha, A. K. Nag and P. K. Mukherjee, for appellant. C.   K. Daphtary Solicitor General of India and S.P.  Varma, for respondent No. 2. L. K. Jha, and S. P. Varma   for respondent 1962.   March 14.  ’The Judgment of the Court was  delivered by SINHA  C.  J.-This  appeal, by special  leave,  is  directed against  the  order of a Division Bench of  the  Patna  High Court,  dated  October 30, 1961, dismissing  in  limine  the appellant’s petition dated October 24, 1961, under Arts. 226 and  227 of the Constitution, being  Miscellaneous  Judicial Case  No. 954 of 1961, for a writ of  Prohibition  directing the first respondent not to proceed with the Award case  No. 101 of 1961, and a writ of certiorari for quashing the order of  the  said  respondent, dated September  29,  1961.   The appellant  is a private limited company, incorporated  under the  under  the Indian companies Act,  with  its  registered office at Calcutta.  It 806 carries  on  the  business of  manufacturing  sugar  in  its factory  at Sugauli in the district of Champaran, in  Bihar. The  first  respondent  is  the  Assistant  Registrar,   Co- operative Societies, Motihari Circle, Motihari, in the State of Bihar; the second respondent is the Union of Co-operative Societies, and is registered under the Bihar and Orissa  Co- operative  Societies  Act (B. & O. Act VI of  1935)  (to  be referred to hereinafter as the Act); the third respondent is the State of Bihar. On August 14, 1961, respondent No. 2 made a reference  under s.48 of the Act, against the appellant, claiming the sum  of Rs. 1,20,809/- odd, as commission and interest for supply of sugarcane  during  the crushing season  1959-60.   The  said reference  was registered by the first  respondent as  Award Case  No.  101 of 1961, on August 17, 1961.. Notice  of  the said  reference was issued to the appellant.   On  September 26, 1961, the appellant took a preliminary objection to  the jurisdiction  of  the  first  respondent  to  entertain  the reference  and  to adjudicate upon it, and prayed  that  the reference  be rejected.  The first respondent,  following  a decision of the Patna High Court, reported in Union of India v.  Registrar, Co-operative Societies Patna  (1),  overruled the  appellant’s  preliminary objection by his  order  dated September 29, 1961. Against that order, the appellant  moved

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its  application aforesaid before the High Court  of  Patna. The  High Court, following its previous decision  aforesaid, summarily  dismissed the application.  The  appellant  moved this  Court, and obtained special leave to appeal  from  the order  of the High Court, dismissing his application.   This Court  granted the special leave on December 4,  1961.   The appellant moved this Court for stay, which was finally heard on  January 11 ,1962 and the Court directed that the  appeal be  heard peremptorily on February 15, this year.   That  is how the (1)  (1961) I.L.R. 40 Patna 7. 807 matter comes before us for hearing of the main appeal. The  only  question  for determination  in  this  appeal  is whether   under  the  provisions  of  the  Act,  the   first respondent  had  jurisdiction’  to hear  and  determine  the dispute  referred  to  him at the  instance  of  the  second respondent.   The  answer  to the question  raised  in  this appeal must depend upon the interpretation of the provisions of the Act. Before examining the provisions of the Act, as it stands  at present, it is necessary to set out the legislative  history of  the law on the subject.  When the Co-operative  movement was  set  up  in  the beginning of  this  century,  the  law governing  co.  operative societies was enacted as  The  Co- operative Societies Act (11 of 1912), by the Indian Legisla- ture.   That  Central Act continued in force  in  Bihar  and Orissa  until  it  was  repealed by  the  Bihar  and  Orissa Legislative  Council  by  the Bihar  &  Orissa  Co-operative Societies Act (B. & O. Act VI of 1935), after obtaining  the previous sanction of the Governor-General, under sub-s. 3 of a.  80-A of the Government of ’.India Act.  The Act of  1935 was  enacted  with a view to consolidate and amend  the  law relating to co-operative societies in the Province of  Bihar and Orissa, as it then was.  As it displaced the Cooperative Societies Act. of 1912, so far as the Province of Bihar  and Orissa was concerned, s.5 enacted that all references to the Co-operative Societies Act, 1912, occurring in any enactment made  by any authority in ’British India, and for  the  time being  in  force  in the Province,  shall  be  construed  as references to the new Act.  Under s. 7, a society, which has as  its object the promotion of the common interests of  its members  in  accordance with cooperative  principles,  or  a ,society’  established with the object of  facilitating  the operation of such a society, may be registered 808 under the Act.  On such registration, the Society becomes  a body corporate with perpetual succession     and’  a  common sea], and with power to acquire    and  hold  property,   to enter into contracts,    to institute and defend suits, etc. Under s. 15, a registered society shall receive deposits and loans  from members and non-members only to such extent  and under  such conditions as may be prescribed.  Under  a.  16, ordinarily a registered society shall not make a loan to any person  other  than a member, except with  the,  general  or special  sanction  of  the Registrar  and  subject  to  such restrictions as he may impose.  Section 17 further  provides for  such prohibitions and restrictions, in respect  of  the transactions  of registered society with persons other  than members,   as  the  Provincial  Government  may   by   rules prescribe.  Section 48 makes it obligatory that any  dispute touching  the  business.  of’ a  registered  society,  among members,  past  members, persons claiming  through  members, past  members or deceased members and sureties  of  members, past members or deceased members, whether such sureties  are

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members,  or nonmembers, or between them and the  registered society,  shall he referred to the Registrar.  By virtue  of Explanation  (1)  to the section, a claim  by  a  registered society for any debt or demand due to it from a member or  a past  member  or his heir or legal representative,  or  from sureties. whether they are members or non-members, &hall  be a  dispute  within  the meaning of the  main  section,  even though such debt or demand is admitted and the only point at issue is the ability to pay or the manner of enforcement  of payment. It  will  thus  be  seen that the  Act  is  limited  in  its operation to registered societies and their members in their dealings with one another It is only in exceptional cases of borrowing 809 by a registered society from nonmembers, in accordance  with the   rules  and  bye-laws  prescribed  by   the   competent authority,  or  in case of loan to a  non-member  under  the provisions  of s. 16, that there could be  dealings  between registered  societies  and non-members,  keeping  aside  the cases of sureties of members, who may be nonmembers, but who also  come within the purview of dealings between a  society and its members. Such  were  the relevant provisions of the Act when  it  was amended  by  tile Bihar Co-operative  Societies  (Amendment) Act, 1942, and the Bihar Co-operative Societies  (Amendment) Act,  1944, enacted by the Governor of Bihar in exercise  of tile  powers  assumed to himself by the  Proclamation  dated November  3,  1939,  issued  by  him  under  s.  93  of  the Government  of.  India Act, 1935.  For our purposes,  it  is only necessary to notice some of the amendments made by  the amending  Act of 1944 (-Bihar Act X of 1944).  By a. 2,  cl. (c)  of  s. 2 of the Act of 1935 was  substituted  in  these terms :               "(c)  financing  bank’-  means  a   registered               society  the main object of which if; to  make               advances  in cash or kind to other  registered               societies  or  to agriculturists who  are  not               members  of  registered societies or  to  both               such societies and agriculturists." By s. 3, s. 16 of the Act of 1935 was amended by adding sub- s. (3) to s. 16, as under:               "(3) Where the Registrar has accorded sanction               to  a financing bank under the  provisions  of               sub-section (1), a registered society which is               a  member of such financing bank may,  subject               to  tile terms of the sanction and such  other               terms  and conditions as may be prescribed  by               the Registrar, act as agent for the  financing               bank  and  as such agent carry  out,  with  or               without any commission, all or               810               any  transactions  connected  with  loans   or               advances  made or to be made by the  financing               bank." A  consequential  change was made ’in s. 23 of  the  Act  of 1935,  by  inserting  a. 23-A, so as to make a  debt  or  an outstanding demand to a registered society from a non-member a first charge on the property of the non-member.  The  most important  amendment was made by a. 6, in s. 48 of the  main Act as follows               "6.  In sub-section (1) of section 48  of  the               said Act-(&) after clause (d), the word "shall               be  inserted  and  thereafter  the   following               clause shall be inserted, namely :-

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             "(e) between a financing bank authorised under               the  provisions of sub-section (1) of  section               16  and  a  person who is not a  member  of  a               registered society;" and               (b)   in  Explanation  (1),  after  the  words               "from  a member," the word "non-member"  shall               be  inserted.  an(-]  after the  words  "of  a               deceased  member"  the  words  "or  nonmember"               shall be inserted. It  is  not necessary to refer to  the  other  consequential amendments  made  and  the addition of  a  new  chapter  7A, relating to the manner of recovery.  The amendments effected by the amending Act of 1944 had been enacted by the Governor of  Bihar in exercise of his special powers aforesaid.   The provisions of those amendments were re-enacted as Act XVI of 1948.    We  would,  therefore  refer  hereinafter  to   the amendments in question as the amendments of 1948. As  already  indicated. a Division Bench of the  patna  High Court has laid it down   in the case of 811 Union of India v. Registrar, Co-operative Societies.   Patna (1)  that  the Explanation to s. 48(1) of the Act  covers  a claim by a registered society for any debt or demand from  a non-member,  and that, therefore, the claim of a  registered society  against  the railway company for  compensation  for short  supply is a dispute within the ambit of a. 48 of  the Act,  and  that,  therefore, the  Assistant  Registrar,  Co- operative  Societies  had  jurisdiction  to  determine   the dispute  under  s.  48(2) of the  Act.   Relying  upon  that decision, the High Court dismissed the appellant’s  petition under arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution, in limine.  The appellant  has questioned the correctness of that  decision. The  question,  therefore, .is whether the  High  Court  has taken correct view of the provisions of s. 48, the  relevant portions of which are as follows:               "48  (1) If any dispute touching the  business               of a  registered society ... arises-               (a)   amongst members, past members,persons   claiming               through  members,  past  members  or  deceased               members, and sureties of members, past members               or deceased members whether such sureties  are               members or non-members; or               (b)   between  a member, past member,  persons               claiming  through  a member,  past  member  or               deceased  member or sureties of members,  past               members  or  deceased  members,  whether  such               sureties  are members or nonmembers,  and  the               society,   its  managing  committee   or   any               officer, agent or servant of the society; or               (c)........................               (d)........................               (e)   between  a  financing  bank   authorised               under the provisions of sub-section (1) of (1)               (1961)I.L.R.40Pat.7.               812               section 16 and a person who is not a member of               a registered society ; such disputes shall  be               referred to the Registrar.                           ... .................               Explanation 1--A claim by a registered society               for  any  debt  or demand due  to  it  from  a               member,   non-member,  past  member   or   the               nominee,  heir  or legal representative  of  a               deceased member or non-member or from sureties               of members, past members or deceased  members,

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             whether  such  sureties are  members  or  non-               members,  shall  be  a  dispute  touching  the               business of the society within the meaning  of               this  subsection  even in case  such  debt  or               demand s admitted and the only point at  issue               is   the   ability  to  pay  the   manner   of               enforcement of payment.               (9)   Save  as  expressly  provided  in   this               section,  a  decision of the  Registrar  under               this  section, and subject to tile  orders  of               the Registrar on appeal of review, a  decision               given  in  a dispute transferred  or  referred               under  clause (b) or (c) of  sub-section  (2),               shall be final." From  the  provisions  of  the Act, set  out  above,  it  is manifest  that the act created a special  tribunal,  namely, the  registrar  of  Co-operative  Societies,  to  deal  with certain  disputes  specified in s. 48(1)(a)  to  (e).   This special  tribunal  was  created with a  view  to  shortening litigation   and  providing  speedy  relief  to   registered societies  and their members in their disputes inter  se  in respect  of  the  business  of  the  society.   Before   the amendments introduced by the Act of 1948 the disputes  which could be, entertained by the Registrar were disputes amongst                             813 members,  past members or their heirs or their sureties,  or between  a society and other registered  societies  (without meaning  to  exhaust all the categories.)  But,  before  the amendments, one who was not a member of a society or was not claiming  through  a member or a past member or  a  deceased member,  or  was  not a surety of a  member  or  a  deceased member, was not subject to the jurisdiction of the Registrar under s. 48.  That is to say, any dispute between a  society or its members, past members or deceased members or surities of  such  members  on the one hand and  non-members  on  the other,  was not within the purview of the section  so  that, the appellant company, which is not a registered society, or a member of a registered society, could not have its  claim, or  a claim against it by a registered society, referred  to the  Registrar  for  decision, under this  section,  Such  a dispute by a society or its members against a non-member had to be taken to the ordinary courts for decision. In  our  opinion,  the contention raised on  behalf  of  the appellant  is  correct.  By the amending Act  of  1948,  the aforesaid relevant and important amendments Were  introduced into  the  Act.  The effect of these amendments  is  that  a claim  by a financing bank against a nonmember to  whom  the former  may  have made an advance in cash or kind  with  the sanction  of the Registrar s. 16(1), would be  entertainable by  the Registrar, on a reference.  But that does  not  mean that a claim which is not of the description referred to  in s. 16(1), read with s. 2(c), by a registered society against any  non-member, who is not an agriculturist, is within  the purview  of  s.  48(1).  read  with  the  Explanation.   The Explanation  cannot  be  read as adding a new  head  to  the categories (a) to (e) under s. 48 (1), of disputes which may be  referred to the Registrar.  Originally, the  Explanation had been added only to make it clear that even if a debt or 814 a  demand  is admitted and the only point at  issue  is  the ability to pay or the manner of enforcement of payment,  the dispute would come within the purview of the main s.  48(1). The addition of the word non-member’; by the amending Act of 1948, to the first Explanation has not enlarged the scope of the  main  s.  48(1) so as to make  all  kinds  of  disputes

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between a registered society and a non-member cognizable  by the  Registrar.  thus  excluding  the  jurisdiction  of  the ordinary courts. In  the  instant case, it is manifest that  the  dispute  is between a registered society, the second respondent, and the appellant,  a  non-member,  in  respect  of  the  claim  for commission and interest thereon for supply of sugarcane, and the  appellant alleges that it has a counterclaim of a  lakh and fifty thousand rupees for short and irregular supply  of sugarcane  ’against  that  respondent.   These  are  matters which,  in our view, are wholly beyond the purview of s.  48 of the Act, when it is remembered that the second respondent is  not  a financing bank and that the appellant is  not  an agriculturist to whom  any advances in cash or kind had been made  or could have been made so as to bring  the  appellant within  the purview of s.48 (1) e), and  consequentially  of Explanation  1. The decision of the Patna High Court to  the contrary is, therefore, not correct. In  the result, the appeal is allowed with costs, and it  is directed  that  the  Registrar  should  not  entertain   the reference,  and should not adjudicate upon the dispute,  and not make an award.  The main contesting parties must be left to their remedies in the ordinary courts. Appeal Allowed. 815