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IN THE SUPREME
COURT OF INDIA
Appearances : P. Chidambaram, Andhyarujina, Ashok H. Desai, M. S. Ganesh,
Rao, T. L. V. Iyer, Dushyant A. Dave, U. N. Bachawat, D. A. Dive, Nariman,
Kapil Sibal & Harish N. Salve, senior advocates (Goswami, Ms. Bina
Gupta, Prashyant Naik, Ms. Rekha Ray, Mrs. Urmila Sirur, Nikhil Nayar,
Sareen, Rajiv Dutta, Ms. Enakshi Kulshreshtha, Uday Kumar, Kapil Sharma,
H P. Sharma, G. Sridhar, Y. Raja Copala Rao, Ranjit Kumar, Ms. Anu Mohla,
Mullick, R. N. Keshwani, V. J. Francis, N. S. Tambwekar, G B. Sathe, Nitin
Tambwekar, Alok Sen Gupta, Ranjan Narain, Ms. Deepa Das, Ms. Lavanya,
Ms. Vivek Zutshi, S. Sukumaran, U. U. Lalit, Ms. H. Wahi, Ms. Anu Sawhney,
Asliok Gupta, R. Sasiprabhu, Vinod, Manoj Prasad, Mohit Mathur, Ms. Astha
Tyagi, S Prasad, Rana, Rajesh Nalr, E. R. Kumar, R. Nedumaran, Pavan Kumar,
Kailash Vasdev, R. Rahim, Joshi, Ms. Sweta Sharma, G Prabhakar, Ms. T.
Anamika, Krishnamurthi Swami, Rana, Mrs. Bindra Rana, Vikrant Rana, K.
Maruthi Rao, Mrs. K. Radha, D. Mahesh Babu, Narasimha, Ms. Bharati B,
P. Sridhar, V. G. Pragasam, Sanjeev Sen, Karanjawala, Ms. Nandini Gore,
Arunabh Choudhary, Ms. Manik Karanjawala, Ramesh Shigh, Naris Beerani,
P. Niroop, Paddy, Pavan Kumar, C. S. Sareen, Manish Garg, S. Prasad, Nargolkar,
Chandra Bhushan, A. N. Khanwilkar, Ms. Rakhi Roy, Singh, Ratu Bhalla &
Enakshi Kulshreshtha with them) for the Appearing Parties.
JUDGMENT
THOMAS, J
1. Can a company escape from penal liability under section
138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (for short 'the NI Act)
on the premise that a petition for winding up of the company has been
presented and was pending during the relevant time ? A Division Bench
of the Bombay High Court held that the company cannot avert its liability
on the mere ground that such a petition was presented prior to the company
being called upon by a notice to pay the amount of the cheque. By holding
so, the Division Bench dismissed a batch of writ petitions filed by different
companies challenging the criminal proceedings initiated against them
in different criminal courts for the offence under section
138. We have now to deal with the same question in this batch of appeals
filed by special leave.
2. Though different cases now before us have differing facts we are not
bothering ourselves with such differences. The common features in all
the appeals, which alone are relevant for dealing with the aforesaid question,
can be culled out from one of the appeals. The company involved in the
said sample appeal will be referred to as 'the company'. The cheque which
the company issued bore the date 30th October, 1996 and the amount covered
by the cheque was Rs. 5,72,432. (There is a contention that the cheque
was actually drawn much before that date.) When the cheque was presented
for encashment the drawee bank dishonoured it on 26th December, 1996.
The payee of the cheque issued a notice to the company on 21st December,
1996 calling upon it to pay the amount. As the company failed to pay the
amount a complaint was filed before the magistrate on 29th January, 1997
against the company and two of its directors for the offence under section
138 of the NI Act.
3. The magistrate who took cognisance of the offence issued process to
all the accused. It was then that the accused challenged the criminal
proceedings by means of a writ petition filed before the Bombay High Court,
on the premise that a petition for winding up of the company has been
filed on 27th May, 1996 before the court concerned and a provisional liquidator
was appointed by that court two years later, i.e., on 21st April, 1998.
4. As the facts stated above were not substantially disputed the Division
Bench of the High Court proceeded to hear the writ petition along with
the other writ petitions in the batch, on the limited question whether
the company can avert the penal liability on that premise. The main footing
on which the company resisted the prosecution was that under section
536 (2) of the Companies Act, 1956 any disposition of the property
of the company shall be void if it was made after the commencement of
winding up proceedings by the court. To bolster up the said ground the
company relied on section
441 (2) of the Companies Act which says or that winding up of a company
by the court shall be deemed to commence at the time of presentation of
the petition for winding up. The Division Bench of the High Court noticed
the common features in all the cases in the following sentences :
"In all these matters, a petition for winding up had been filed either
before the cheques were issued (in some cases) and in any event before
the period of 15 days, after receipt of notice, expired. Thus, the question
for consideration is whether merely by reason of a winding up petition
being presented there was a bar or legal disability in making payment."
5. Learned Judges proceeded to consider the question on the aforesaid
admitted premise and, therefore, examined the contention whether disposition
of any property by the company would become 'void' immediately on presentation
of the petition for winding up, or it would become void only when an order
of winding up has been passed, or at least when a provisional liquidator
has been appointed. Section
536 (2) of the Companies Act was sought to be interpreted in a wide
dimension so as to render all transactions void merely because a petition
for winding up was presented - whether or not it was succeeded by an order
of winding up or appointment of a provisional liquidator. The Division
Bench of the High Court repelled the said contention on the following
reasoning :
"If this argument is accepted, persons who purchased shares in the open
market through the stock exchange without any knowledge of a petition
for winding up having been presented, would also get affected as all such
transactions would be void. Therefore, if this wide propositions were
to be accepted then once a petition for winding up is presented, even
without an order for winding up, there would be for all practical purposes
closure of the company. All activities of the company would have to come
to a standstill. If this were the law then unscrupulous parties could
blackmail/pressurise all companies to succumb to unjustified demands by
merely threatening to or presenting petitions for winding up. Conversely
unscrupulous companies could a void payment/discharge of its liabilities
by having their own parties present bogus petitions for winding up.
After one is dismissed another could be filed. In this manner, the company
could avoid discharging its liabilities indefinitely if not permanently.
If the law was that merely on the filing of a petition for winding up
all disposition were void, it would lead to absurd or catastrophic results. In
our view that can never be the legal position."
5. It was then argued before the Division Bench that the words 'in the
winding up' appearing in section
536 (2) of is the Companies Act should mean 'during winding up proceedings'.
Reliance was placed on the decision in Kamani Metallic Oxides Ltd. v.
Kamani Tubes Ltd. [1984] Comp Cas 19 (Bom.) wherein it was held that the
words 'in the winding up' do not mean "after or upon the passing of the
winding up order". Learned Judges of the Division Bench of the High Court
pointed out the distinguishing context in the said case in which such
a view was taken and then expressed the view that merely because a petition
for winding up has been presented all transactions or dispositions undertaken
during the period cannot become ab initio void. The following reasoning
of the Division Bench for repelling the said contention is worthy to be
extracted :
"If they were to be void ab initio, i.e., immediately on their being entered
into, then on the petition being withdrawn or dismissed, they would not
revive. It is clear that if the petition is withdrawn or dismissed then
the transactions would never have been void. This clearly shows that the
transactions/dispositions are not void ab initio but become void on the
passing of an order for winding up or on appointment of a provisional
liquidator. What section
536 (2) read with section
441 (2) provides for is to convert what was otherwise valid into void
by virtue of the legal fiction. Thus, the voidness takes effect on the
passing of the order of winding up or appointment of provisional liquidator.
By virtue of the legal fiction, in section
441 (2), it then relates back to the date of presentation of the petition
for winding up."
6. We will presently consider the effect of section
536 (2) of the Companies Act. The entire section is quoted below :
"536. Avoidance of transfers, etc., after commencement of winding up.
- (1) In the case of a voluntary winding up, any transfer of shares in
the company, not being a transfer made to or with the sanction of the
liquidator, and any alteration in the status of the members of the company,
made after the commencement of the winding up, shall be void.
(2) In the case of a winding up by or subject to the supervision of the
court, any disposition of the property (including actionable claims) of
the company, and any transfer of shares in the company or alteration in
the status of its members, made after the commencement of the winding
up, shall, unless the court otherwise orders, be void."
7. Contextually section
441 (2) of the Companies Act is f very relevant and hence that is
also extracted here :
"441. Commencement of winding up by court. - Where, before the presentation
of a petition for the winding up of a company by the court, a resolution
has been passed by the company for voluntary winding up, the winding up
of the company shall be deemed to have commenced at the time of the passing
of the resolution, and unless the court on proof of fraud or mistake,
thinks fit to direct otherwise, all proceedings taken in the voluntary
winding up shall be deemed to have been validly taken.
(2) In any other case, the winding up of a company by the court shall
be deemed to commence at the time of the presentation of the petition
for the winding up."
8. Three modes of winding up have been prescribed in Part VII of the Companies
Act, (vide section 425).
First is, winding up by the court, next is voluntary winding up and the
third is winding up by subjecting to the supervision of the court.
9. We need not bother ourselves with the first sub-section of section
536 of the Companies Act as it deals with a case of voluntarily winding
up of the company, because none of the companies in the present batch
of appeals is involved in such a contingency. Sub-section (2) deals with
the other two types of winding up. Section
439 of the Companies Act contemplates an application to the court
for the winding up of the company. It can be done by presenting a petition
by any one of the persons enumerated in sub-section (1) of section
439. Such persons include any creditor, including any prospective
creditor.
10. Once a petition for winding up is presented it is not a necessary
concomitant that the winding up would follow. This position is made
clear in section 440
(2) which says that "the court shall not make a winding up order on a
petition presented to it under sub-section (1), unless it is satisfied
that the voluntary winding up or winding up subject to the supervision
of the court cannot be continued with due regard to the interests of the
creditors or contributories or both".
11. So a judicial exercise is called for to reach the satisfaction of
the court that winding up has to be continued with due regard to the interest
of the creditors or the contributors. Section
443 of the Companies Act is important in this context. Sub-section
(1) of that section says that on hearing a petition for winding up, the
court may either (1) dismiss the petition, or (2) make any interim order
as it thinks fit, or (3) make an order for a winding up. Sub-section (2)
says that "where the petition is presented on the ground that it is just
and equitable that the company should be wound up, the court may refuse
to make an order of winding up, if it is of opinion that some other remedy
is available to the petitioners and that they are acting unreasonably
in seeking to have the company wound up instead of pursuing that other
remedy".
12. Two more provisions are relevant in this context. Section
450 says : "At any time after the presentation of a winding up petition
and before the making of a winding up order, the court may appoint the
official liquidator to be liquidator provisionally". Before appointing
a provisional liquidator the court has to give notice to the company and
reasonable opportunity to make his representation. Section
449 enjoins that "on a winding up order being made in respect of a
company the official liquidator shall, by virtue of his office, become
the liquidator of the company".
13. In the above backdrop alone we can consider the impact of the legislative
direction in section 536
(2) that any disposition of the property of the company made after the
commencement of the winding up (i.e., after the presentation of a petition
for winding up) shall be void. There are two important aspects here. First
is that the word 'void' need not automatically indicate that any disposition
should be ab initio void. The legal implication of the word 'void' need
not necessarily be a stage of nullity in all contingencies. Black's
Law Dictionary gives the meaning of the word 'void' as having different
nuances in different connotations. One of them is of course "null, or
having no legal force or binding effect". And the other is "unable in
law, to support the purpose for which it was intended". After referring
to the nuances between void and voidable the Lexicographer pointed out
the following :
'The word "void" in its strictest sense, means that which has no force
and effect, is without legal efficacy, is incapable of being enforced
bylaw, or has no legal or binding force, but frequently the word is used
and construed as having the more liberal meaning of 'voidable'. The word
'void' is used in statutes in the sense of utterly void so as to be incapable
of ratification, and also in the sense of voidable and resort must be
had to the rules of construction in many cases to determine in which sense
the Legislature intended to use it. An act or contract neither wrong in
itself nor against public policy, which has been declared void by statute
for the protection or benefit of a certain party, or class of parties,
is voidable only.'
14. For discerning the legislative idea in employing the word "void" in
the context set out in section
536 (2) of the Companies Act the second aspect to be noticed is that
the provision itself shows that the word void is not employed peremptorily
since court has power to order otherwise. The words 'unless the court
otherwise orders' are capable of diluting the rigor of the word 'void'
and to choose the alternative meaning attached to that word.
15. In Chittoor District Co-operative Marketing Society Ltd. V. Vegetols
Ltd. [1987] SCC Suppl. 167 a two Judge Bench of this court considered
a plea for validation of payments made by a company after presentation
of a petition for winding up. One set of payments were made before the
passing of the winding up order and the other set of payments were made
thereafter. This court declined to validate such payments on the ground
that "there is no evidence to show that those payments were made either
under compulsion if circumstances in order to save or protect the property
of the company or that there was any commercial compulsion to enable it
to run its business". The decision only indicates that such payments could
have been made valid if evidence was adduced to show that there was compulsion
of circumstances. In fact, this decision lends support to the interpretation
that the payments which were made after the commencement of winding up
proceedings, would not become ab initio void.
16. An early
decision of a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in Tulsidas Jasraj
Parekh v. Industrial Bank of Western India AIR 1931 Bom. 2 was sought
to be relied on by most of the learned counsel who argued for different
appellants. The question which the court considered therein pertained
to section 227 (2)
of the old Companies Act, 1913 which was identical to section
536 (2) of the present Act. Certain payments made by a company after
commencement of the winding up proceedings were questioned and the Division
Bench considered the scope of the sub-section and noticed that the principle
had been borrowed from the English Companies Act. Hence, some of the English
authorities were also referred to by Marten, CJ, who spoke for the Division
Bench. Learned Judges stated thus :
"Now here as regards section
227 (2) the court has to steer a middle course between two extremes.
On the one hand the words of the section are wide enough to include any
sale or payment that a company may make after the date of the winding
up petition. On that basis any business would practically have to be stopped
if a petition was presented, because it would be unsafe to dispose of
any of the company's assets. For instance, a mill company might not be
able to buy a ton of coal for the use of its furnaces, or, on the other
hand, it might not be able to sell any of its goods in the ordinary course
of business. Consequently, the court has very properly laid down that,
speaking generally, any bona fide transaction carried out and completed
in the ordinary course of current business will be sanctioned by the court
under section 227 (2).
On the other hand it will not allow the assets to be disposed of at the
mere pleasure of the company, and thus cause the fundamental principle
of equality amongst creditors to be violated. To do so would in effect
be to add to the preferential debts enumerated in section
230 a further category of all debts which the company might choose
to pay wholly or in part."
17. It is useful to refer to the reasoning adopted by a Division Bench
of the Gujarat High Court in Navjivan Mills Ltd., In re. [1986] 59 Comp
Cas 201 in favour of adopting a pragmatic attitude when a company court
was approached for approval of certain dispositions which a company made
after presentation of a petition for winding up. A clear distinction was
drawn by the Division Bench between the period till the passing of the
order for winding up and thereafter, so far as disposition are concerned.
The following reasoning is useful for consideration of the issues involved
:
"The court can exercise the jurisdiction under section
536 (2) of the Companies Act, 1956, of giving directions validating
proposed transactions pending a petition for winding up but before the
winding up order is made for the obvious reason that unless these transactions
are saved from the consequence which may ensue, if at all, on an order
of winding up being made, the company might find it difficult to keep
itself going and its business might be paralysed. The purpose underlying
the investment of the power in court is for the benefit and the interest
of the company so as to ensure that a company which is made the subject
of a winding up petition may nevertheless obtain the money necessary for
carrying out its business and so as to avoid its business being paralysed.
If that is the purpose and object of the section, it would hardly be proper
and just to stultify the power and restrict its operation since otherwise
it is bound to be counter-productive in the sense that the very purpose
of keeping the company as a going concern so as to ensure the interest
of the shareholders and creditors would be defeated."
18. In Grays Inn Construction Co. Ltd., In re. [1980] 1 All ER 814, the
Court of Appeal (Civil Division) considered the principle on which discretion
of the court to validate the dispositions of property made by a company,
during the interregnum between presentation of a winding up petition and
the passing of the order for winding up, has been dealt with. Section
227 of the English Companies Act, 1948 is almost the same as section
536 (2) of the Indian Companies Act. Dispositions which could be validated
are mentioned in the decision. The said decision was cited before us in
order to emphasise the point that courts would be very circumspect in
the matter of validating the payments and the interest of the creditors
as well as the company would be kept uppermost in consideration. Be that
so, the said decision is not sufficient to support the contention that
disposition during the interregnum would be irretrievably void.
19. It is difficult to lay down that all dispositions of property made
by a company during the interregnum between the presentation of a petition
for winding up and the passing of the order for winding up would be null
and void. If such a view is taken the business of the company would be
paralysed, for, the company may have to deal with very many day-to-day
transactions, make payments of salary to the staff and other employees
and meet urgent contingencies. An interpretation which could lead to such
a catastrophic situation should be averted. That apart, if any such view
is adopted, a fraudulent company can deceive any bona fide person transacting
business with the company by stage-managing a petition to be presented
for winding up in order to defeat such bona fide customers. This consequence
has been correctly voiced by the Division Bench in the impugned judgment.
20. If the payment is not ab initio void the company cannot contend that
it is legally forbidden from making payment of the cheque amount when
notice was issued by the payee regarding dishonour of the cheque. To circumvent
this hurdle an endeavour was made by some of the appellants' counsel to
show that the very issuance of a cheque would amount to disposition of
property. We are unable to accept the said contention particularly in
view of the definition of 'cheque' in the NI Act : "A cheque is a bill
of exchange drawn on a specified banker and not expressed to be payable
otherwise than on demand".
21. Bill of exchange is "an instrument in writing containing an unconditional
order, signed by the maker, directing certain person to pay a certain
sum of money only to, or to the order of a certain person or to the bearer
of the instrument". The cheque, therefore, can be an order on the banker
to pay the amount to the holder thereof and no disposition of property
would take place until the payment is made by the banker pursuant thereto.
At the most, drawing of a cheque can be considered as a step towards disposition
of property, but that is insufficient to amount to disposition of property.
22. It was next contended that since one of the conditions to constitute
the offence of section
138 of the NI Act is that a cheque should have been drawn for the
discharge of a legally enforceable 'debt or other liability' no such cheque
can possibly be conceived in a situation such as this because the creditor
would be disabled from legally enforcing the debt with the commencement
of winding up proceedings. Section
138 of the NI Act, no doubt, contemplates only when the cheque is
drawn by a person "for the discharge, in whole or in part, of any debt
or other liability". Explanation to section
138 says that 'for the purposes of this section "debt or other liability"
means a legally enforceable debt or liability'. Therefore, the first limb
of the contention is forceful that for the offence under section
138 the cheque should have been drawn for discharging a legally enforceable
debt or other liability. But the second limb of the contention is tenuous
as the debt would not cease to be legally enforceable merely because some
body has filed a petition for winding up.
23. In this context, a reference to section
139 of the NI Act is indispensable. It reads thus :
"139. Presumption in favour of holder. - It shall be presumed, unless
the contrary is proved, that the holder of a cheque received the cheque,
of the nature referred to in section
138 for the discharge, in whole or in part, of any debt or other liability."
Thus, when a cheque is received by a holder the court has to presume that
(1) it is a cheque of the nature referred to in section 138;
and (2) such cheque was received for the discharge of a legally enforceable
debt or liability. It is a legislative mandate that the court should proceed
with the assumption that such cheque was received for the discharge of
a legally enforceable debt or other liability until the drawer proves
that it is not so. Learned counsel contended that the burden of proof
cast on the drawer of the cheque would stand discharged and the presumption
would stand rebutted when it is shown that the company has been brought
into winding up proceedings, as then no debt can be legally enforced against
the company.
24. There
is no provision in the Companies Act which prohibits enforcement of the
debt due from a company. When a company goes into liquidation, enforcement
of debt due from the company is only made subject to the conditions prescribed
therein. But that does not mean that the debt has become unenforceable
altogether. Perhaps due to want of sufficient assets for the company the
realisation of a debt would be difficult. But that is no premise to hold
that the debt is legally unenforceable. Enforceability of a debt is not
to be tested on the touchstone of the modality or the procedure provided
for its realisation or recovery. Hence, the contention that the special
provision incorporated in the Companies Act regarding the debts and liabilities
due from the company will render the debt unenforceable, cannot be accepted.
25. The alternative approach is this : Even assuming that any disposition
of the property made by a company after commencement of the winding up
proceedings is null and void, how is that an escape ground from the offence
under section
138 of the NI Act ? That section created a statutory offence which
on the confluence of the various factors enumerated therein, commencing
with the drawing of the cheque and ending with the failure of the drawer
of the cheque to pay the amount covered by it within the time stipulated,
ripens into a penal liability.
26. The last factor for constituting the offence under section
138 of the NI Act is formulated in clause (c) of the proviso to the
section which reads thus : "the drawer of such cheque fails to make the
payment of the said amount of money to the payee or, as the case may be,
to the holder in due course of the cheque within fifteen days of the receipt
of the said notice".
27. The words 'the drawer of such cheque fails to make the payment' are
ostensibly different from saying "the drawer refuses to make payment".
Failure to make payment can be due to the reasons beyond the control of
the drawer. An illustrative case is, if the drawer is not a company but
individual who has become so pauper or so sick as he cannot raise the
money to pay the demanded sum. Can he contend that since failure to make
payment was on account of such conditions he is entitled to be acquitted
? The answer cannot be in the affirmative though the aforesaid conditions
can be put forth while considering the question of sentence.
28. We, therefore, feel that Legislature has thoughtfully used the word
'fails' instead of other expressions as failure can be due to variety
of reasons including his disability to pay. But the offence would be complete
when the drawer 'fails' to make payment within the stipulated time, whatever
be the cause for such failure.
29. The drawer of the cheque can have different explanations for the failure
to pay the amount covered by the cheque. But no such explanations would
be sufficient to extricate him from the tentacles of the offence contemplated
in the section. Perhaps some kind of explanations would be sufficient
to alleviate the rigor of the offence which may be useful to mitigate
the quantum of sentence to be imposed. But that is no ground for consideration
at this stage.
30. For all the above reasons, we are not inclined to interfere with impugned
judgment of the Bombay High Court. However, learned counsel who argued
for one of the appellants in this batch of appeals (Atash Industries (India)
Ltd.) pointed out that an observation made by the Division Bench in the
impugned judgment would cause prejudice to that company when the case
proceeds to the trial. We noticed that the following observation in paragraph
59 of the impugned judgment has the potency of creating a prejudice against
them :
"the conduct of Atash Industries (India) Ltd. in suppressing facts and
obtaining orders from courts without pointing out correct facts must be
deprecated. In our view this conduct precludes the company from getting
any equitable reliefs."
31. We make it clear that the observation was made only for the writ petition
pending in the High Court and that will not be counted against the said
company during the remaining stages of trial.
32. All the appeals are accordingly dismissed.
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