UN11ED COMMERCIAL BANK LTD. v. OKARA GRAIN BUYERS SYNDICATE LTD. & ANR. Marcil 4, 1968 (J. C. SiIAH, R. S. BACHAWAT AND G. K. MITTER, JJ,] Banking-Deposit Rectif!t-Syndicate openinl/ account in Bank-De· posit rteeipt in the name of Syndicate account DiJtrict Mqistrate If con- stitutes him owner of deposit-Condition of deposit that on due date deposit receipt should be discharged by depositor-Non production of deposit receipt-Equitable jurisdiction of High Court.
The respondent-a syndicate with its registered office in Montgo= in undivided Punjab, had depOl!ited certain amount with the appellant-Bank and obtained a Fixed Deposit Receipt. The deposit was required to be made for due performance of the conditiona of a scheme for procure- ment devised by the Government of Punjab in 1946. The receipt was made out in the name of the Syndicate Account District Magistrate, Montgomery.
No account was opened in the bank's books in the name of the District Magistrate and under the conditions of deposit it was repay- able to the respondent on demand on due date. The respondent served a notice of withdrawal upon the Bank. An endorsement in that behalf was made on the receipt which was handed over to the District Magistrate, Montgomery. Following the communal riots in 1947 the staff of the res- pondent migrated to India and the respondent aet up a new business at Amritsar.
The respondent demanded the money to which the appellant replied that the amount could not be returned until the respondent obtains a discharge from the District Magistrate, MontgOmery (in Pakistan) of his lien on the fixed deposit reccipt. The respondent filed a petition before the Debt Adjustment Tribunal, Amritsar, for an order directing the appellant to pay the amount with interest, and impleaded the District Magistrate, Montgomery as a respondent.
The District Magistrate filed no claim before the Tribunal. The Tribunal 'dismissed the petition holding that the amount stood forfeited by' order of the Disliict Magistrate, Montgomery. Jn appeal, the High Court made an order in terms of the prayers in the petition, subject to the condition that the respondent shall give an indem- nity for restitution of the amount in case the bank had to pay the amount to the District Magistrate, Montgomery.
In appeal to this Court. HELD : The deposit receipt gave rise to no contractual obligation in favour of the Disliict Magistrate, Montgomery nor was the bank a trustee for that officer. By an express condition the receipt was not tranlferable. The name in which the receipt was made out was by itself not sufficient to create an interest in the amount in favour of the District Magistrate. The District Magistrate was not in Jaw constituted owner of the money deposited by the respondent with the appellant by virtne of the delivery of the, receipt.
Jn the books of the appellant the fund stood to the credit of the resp0ndent : the respondent was the owner thereof and it was the respo.ndent alone which was entitk:d to d..~m.uid payn1ent of the fund. Jn the absenre of any obligalion--cuntractual or fiducia.ry-un:dertuken by the appellant. in favour of the District ~1agistrate, the appellant could not withhold payment of money deposited after-the expiry of the period of notice. [399 D-HJ A !I c D E F G H A B c D E F G H tl.
CO. BANK V. tJ. G. B. SYNDICAtE (Shah, J.) 397 Even if the condition in the terms of deposit that on due date the de- posit n!ceipt should be discharged by the depositors was to be considered a condition pn!eedent to the enforcement of the obligation of the Bank in favour of the respondent, the High Court was right in the exercise of its equitable jurisdiction to direct that the money be paid to the respondent without production of the receipt.
It might =nably be inferred that the receipt was lost or was destroyed and in such cases the court's equitable jurisdiction ·could appropriately be exercised. fhe . direction of the Hill!' Court that an indemnity be given by the n!spondent to the Bank for resti- tution if the Bank was to pay the amount to the District Magistrate, Montgomery has fully protected the Bank against any possible Joss and this eminently reasonable direction was not liable to be set side. 1400 F-Hl CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 449 of 1965~ Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 29, 1960 of the Punjab High Court in F.A.0.
No. 14 of 1954. Bishan Narain and Hans Raj Dhawan, for 'the appellant. S. V. Gupte, B. K. Maheshwari and B. P. Maheshwari, for respondent No.
1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah, J. This appeal is filed with certificate granted by the High Court of Punjab. The Okara Grain Buyers Syndicate Ltd.-hereinafter called 'the Syndicate'-was incorporated under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, with its registered office at Okara, District Montgo- mery .in the undivided Punjab.
In 1946 the Government of un- divided Punjab devised a scheme for procurement of foodgrains and appointed the Syndicate to buy foodgrains on its behalf. For due performance of the conditions of the scheme, the Syndicate was required to make a deposit with a recognized Bank. The Syndicate deposited an amount of Rs. 40,000/- on March 29, 1947, with the United Commercial Bank Ltd.-hereinafter called 'the Bank'-and obtained a Fixed Deposit Receipt dated March 29, 1947.
The terms of the receipt were these: "The United Commercial Bank Limited. No. Misc. 9872-4/18 Okara(Punjab) 29th March, 1947. Received from the Okara Grain Buyers Syndicate Limited, Okara A/ c District Magistrate, Montgomery Rs. Forty thousand only as a depllsit at the rate of 2 per cent per annum to remain till notice of twelve months for its withdrawal by either side expires. For the United Commercial Bank Ltd. (Sd.) ............... .
Accountant. Rs. 40,000/- Manager. 396 SUPUMB coua.t B.BPO&tS [1968) 3 S.C.R. Terms for the Deposit Receipt This deposit receipt is issued subject to the follow- ing terms and conditions.
1. This receipt is not transferable.
2. This deposit cannot be withdrawa before due date.
3. Interest on this deposit ceases on the due date.
4. The amount of this deposit cannot be withdrawn in part or by cheque or draft.
5.
On due date this deposit receipt should be dis- charged by the depositors on one anna stamp if it is required to be repaid, otherwise an endorsement as to its renewal should be made in the space provided there- of.
6. Receipts will when so required, be issued in the names of two or more persons and will be made pay- able to any one or more of them or to the survivors." The Syndicate served a notice of withdrawal on March 29, 1947 upon the Bank and an endorsement in that behalf was made on the receipt.
The rc!ceipt was then handed over to the District Magistrate, Montgomery. On account of widespread communal riots in the month of August 1947, non-muslim residents of the area found it unsafe to continue to reside at Okara, and the staff and Managing Director of the Syndicate migrated to India leav- ing all the property, goods etc. of the Syndicate at Okara. The Syndicate set up a new place of business at Amritsar and regis- tered itself in the State of Punjab.
In reply to a demand made on October 26, 1951, by the Syndicate the Bank replied that the amount deposited will not be returned until the Syndicate obtains a discharge from the District Magistrate, Montgomery, of his lien on the fixed deposit receipt and an intimation in that behalf was given by the District Magis- trate relinquishing his lien on the fixed deposit receipt. The Syndicate then filed a petition before the Debt Adjustment Tribu- nal, Amritsar, .under s. 13 of the Displaced Persons (Debt Ad- justment) Act 70 of 1951, for an order against the Bank for payment of Rs. 40,000/- as principal and Rs. 3,200/- as interest @ 2% per annum upto March 3, 1952, and future interest at 6% per . annum till realization.
To this petition, the District Magistrate, Montgomery, was also impleaded as party-respondent. The Tribunal dismissed the petition holding that the amount of Rs. 40,000/- deposited by the Syndicate stood forfeited by order of the District Magistrate, Montgomery, and the petition was A B c D E •• G H A I B c ii I. H U. CO. BANK v. U. G. B. SYNDICATE (Shah, J.) 399 on that account not maintainable. In appeal, the High Court of Punjab made an order in terms of the prayer in the petition, subject to the condition that the respondent shall give an indem- nity for restitution of thP. amount in the event of the Bank having to pay the amount to the District Magistrate, Montgomery.
The High Court held that the deposit was sl4bject to conditions ~x pressly mentioned in the receipt and no others and that the District Magistrate was not given any dominion over the amount of Rs. 40,000/- dep'Osited by the Syndicate. In this appeal, counsel for the Bank urged that the terms of the receipt created no obligation enforceable against the Bank at the instance of the syndicate, and that in any event the liability could be enforced only if the District Magistrate discharged the receipt and handed it over to the Bank acknowledging that he had no claim against the Syndicate.
The deposit receipt is made out in the name of the Syndicate. It is acknowledged by the receipt that an amount of Rs. 40,000/- was received from the Syndicate and the amount was to remain with the Bank till notice of twelve months for its withdrawal by either side expired. The deposit receipt gave rise to no contrac- tual obligation in favour of the District Magistrate, Montgomery, nor was the Bank a trustee for that officer.
It is common ground that no account was opened in the Bank's books in the name of the District Magistrate, Montgomery. Condition No. 5 of the Conditions of Deposit also clearly indicates that payment of the amount on the due date was to be made to the Syndicate, for it expressly provides that on due date the deposit receipt shall be discharged by the depositors if it is required to be repaid, other- wise an endorsement as to its renewal shall ·be made in the space provided in that behalf.
It is not the case of the Bank that the receipt was transferred to the District Magistrate, Montgomery. By an express condition the receipt is not transferable. The name in which the receipt was made out is by itself not sufficient to create an interest in the amount in favour of the District Magis- trate. The District Magistrate was not in law constituted an owner of the money deposited by the Syndicate with the Bank by virtue of the delivery of the receipt.
In the books of the Bank the fund stood to the credit of the Syndicate : the Syndicate was the owner thereof and it was the Syndicate alone which was entitled to demand payment of the fund. In the absence of any obligation- contra~tu~J or fi~uciary-undertaken by the Bank in favour of the D1str1ct Ma_gIStrate, the Bank could not withhold payment of money deposited after the expiry of the period of notice.
It was urged by counsel for the Bank that unless the receipt wa~ p~oduced duly discharged, the Bank was not under an obhgat10n to repay the money. Reli~nce was placed upon the • 400 SUPREME COURT llEPOllTS [1968] 3 S.C.R. following observations in Sheldon's Practice and Law of Banking, A 8th Edn., at p. 163 : "If the deposit receipt merely acknowledges the de- posit of the money, the banker cannot demand its pro- duction before paying over the money.
But if the form of the receipt is such that the signing of the receipt is a condition precedent to the withdrawal of the money, then the deposit receipt must be returned when the money is handed over. But the banker is not entitled to with- hold payment of the money should the receipt be lost or destroyed. All that he can .do is to ask the depositor for an indemnify. Whether he is legally entitled to de- .'mand such an indemnity, the receipt not being a nego- tiable instrument, is another question.", and upon the statement at p. 174, Art. 327 Vo]; 2 of Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edn. : "The receipt of money on deposit account constitutes the banker a debtor to the depositor, but not a trustee thereof for him.
The debt is repayable either on de- mand or on condition agreed with the depositor. Speci- fied notice may be stipulated for, and the return of the deposit book (or receipt) made a condition of repay- ment, or the deposit may be for a fixed period. If the return of the deposit book is a condition precedent, no actual debt arises until its return. In case of the loss of the book, however, a court would exercise its equit- "able jurisdiction, and not allow the absence of the re- ceipt to stand in the way of the depositor reclaiming his money." In the proceeding before the Tribunal, the District Magis- trate, Montgomery filed no claim.
We are of the view, even if Condition No. 5 of the terms of deposit receipt is a condition precedent to the enforcement of the obligation of the Bank in favour of the Syndicate, that the High Court was right in exer- cise of its equitable jurisdiction to direct that the money be paid to the Syndicate without production of the receipt. It may reasonably be inferred that the receipt is lost or destroyed and the Court's equitable jurisdiction may appropriately be exercised in this case.
Whether the District Magistrate has the receipt is on the evidence problematic. Again the High Court has fully pro- tected the Bank against any possible loss by directing that an indemnity be given by the Syndicate to the Bank for restitution if the Bank is to pay the amount to the District Magistrate, Mont- gomery, and this eminently reasonable direction is not liable to be set aside. B c D E F G H \.
A B c D E F G H U. CO. BANK V. U. G. R. SYNDICATE (Shah, J.) 401 It was urged that the Government of Pakistan have forfeited the amount standing to the credit of the Syndicate in the Bank's books of account at Okara, and the validity of that act cannot be questioned in the Indian Courts. But there is no evidence on the record that any order was passed by the Pakistan Government forfeiting, in exercise of any authority-statutory or sovereign-, the amount deposited by the Syndicate with the Bank.
The only document on the record on which reliance is placed is a sheet of paper entitled "A list of securities of rion-muslims forfeited to Government of Pakistan deposited in the United Commercial Bank Ltd." tendered in evidence by Shamim Yazdani an employee of the Bank in Pakistan. The witness was examined on interroga- tories and he identified the list of securities of non-muslims which, it was claimed, were forfeited by the Government of Pakistan and in the list produced by him, Item No. 14 is the amount of Rs. 40,000/- deposited by the Syndicate on March 29, 1947 at Okara.
The list does not purport to bear the signature of any officer of the Government of Pakistan, nor does it purport to specify the authority in exercise in which it is claimed that the amount was forfeited. A copy of a letter dated March 4, 1949, from N. A. Haroon, Officer on Special Duty, West Pakistan Government, Finance Department, Laltore, addressed to the Manager, United Commercial Bank Ltd. was also produced by Shamim Yazdani.
It is recited in the Jetter that he was directed to enclose a list of securities of non-muslims deposited with the Branch Office and forfeited at Lyallpur, Okara and the Bank was requested to make arrangements for early realization of the amount for payment to .the District Food Controllers concerned. Neither the original letter nor its authenticated copy has been produced. There .is no reference to the source of the authority of the officer who purported to forfeit the amount.
The letter even does not recite that the order of forfeiture was made by him acting on behalf of the Government of Pakistan. It is common ground that the money deposited had not been paid by the Bank to the Government of Pakistan till the High Court decided the appeal. Counsel for the Bank urged that once an order was passed forfeiting the amount, the Bank held the amount on behalf of the Government of Pakistan.
But underlies that argument the assumption that such an order was in fact pass- ed by the Government of Pakistan. In the absence of any evid- ence .to that effect, we are unable to hold that any such order of forfe1un:e was passed. We do not feel called upon in this case to ~ons1der whether. ~n order passed by the Government of a foreign country forfe1tmg the property of an Indian national must be recognized by the Courts in this country as a complete dis- charge of the obligation in circumstances similar to those in this case, when the question is raised in .the Courts here. 402 SUPREME COURT REPORTS [1968] 3 S.C.R It was faintly suggested that the amount of Rs. 40,000/- had vested in the Custodian, Evacuee Property in Pakistan.
But the question was never mooted at any stage of this litigation, and we cannot permit counsel for the Bank to make out that case for the first time in this Coun. Finally it was contended, relying upon the judgment of this Court in The Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Hamam Singh and Others(') that the dispute must be determined by the law of Pakistan and not by the law in India. In that case, the plaintiffs were residents of Lyallpur and were appointed by the Government of undivided Punjab to administer a scheme for ra- tioning of cloth.
The Cloth Mills through its branch office at Lyallpur supplied those persons with cloth from time to time and maintained a running account of the transactions. On partition in 1947, Lyallpur was allotted to Pakistan and the plaintiffs mi- grated to India as refugees. The Pakistan Government i~sued an Ordinance vesting all evacuee property in Pakistan in the Custo- dian of Evacuee Property in Pakistan, and prohibited payment of money to evacuees in Pakistan and ordered that all moneys payable to, or claimable by ev~cuees, be paid to the Deputy Custodian of Evacuee Property iu Pakistan.
Payments so made were to operate as a discharge from further liability to the extent of the payment. Breach of this Jaw was punishable· as an offence. The Deputy Custodian of Evacuee Property demandetl of the Mills the money payable to the plaintiffs and in sath;faction of the payment the Mills paid the amount. In defence to a suit filed by the plaintiffs in the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Delhi, the Mills pleaded that they had discharged their liability by pay- ment made to the Deputy Custodian of Evucuee Property in Pa- kistan.
The Court held that Lyallpur was the place of primary obligation, that the elements out of which the contract to pay arose were most densely grouped at Lyallpur, and Lyallpur was the natural seat of the contract and the place with which i• had its closest and most real connection. Accordingly the proper law of the contract was the Jaw of Pakistan, and that even under the English doctrine 1he situs of the debt was Lyallpur and therefore either way the Jaw of Pakistan applied.
Assuming that it was the Jaw of Pakistan which applied to the repayment of the debt due under the receipt, the Bank has failed to prove its defence that they are not liable to pay the money due under the deposit receipt. To recapitulate the facts, the amount was deposited by the Syndicate; it was repayable to the Syndicate when demanded; the notice of repayment of the amount was served at the date when the deposit was made.
The District Magistrate, Montgomery had no contractual relationship with (I) [19SS] 2 $.C.R. 4a2. A B c D E F G H U, CO. BANK V. U.G.B. SYNDICATE (Shah, J.) 403 A the Bank, nor was the Bank constituted a trustee for the District Magistrate. The Bank has failed to prove that in exercise of any statutory or sovereign authority the Government of Pakistan have forfeited the amount. Nothing has been placed which may sup- port the plea that under the law of Pakistan the Bank is not liable to repay the amount due under a deposit feceipt on the B. due date, because an officer of the State is said to have the custody of the receipt evidencing the deposit. c D The order for payment -0f interest at a rate exceeding 2 % per annum was also chaJlenged by the Bank.
But the rate of interest was stipulated only for the period of the deposit receipt. The Syndicate claimed interest at rate of 6% per annum from the date on which the petition was filed before the Tribunal under the Displaced Persons (Debt Adjustment) Act 70 of 1951. In- terest from the date of the petition was within the discretion of the High Court, and the High Court has awarded interest at the rate claimed.
We do not see any reason to interfere with the rate of interest awarded by the High Court. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs. Y.P. Appeal dismissed.