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[Cites 18, Cited by 0]

Karnataka High Court

Sri Hari Ram K Cham vs Karnataka State Industrial Investment on 23 July, 2021

Bench: Krishna S. Dixit, Pradeep Singh Yerur

          IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA
                  DHARWAD BENCH

       DATED THIS THE 23RD DAY OF JULY 2021

                           PRESENT

     THE HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE KRISHNA S.DIXIT

                               AND

THE HON'BLE MR.JUSTICE PRADEEP SINGH YERUR

               MFA No.23064/2013 (SFC)
             C/w. MFA No.22866/2013 (SFC)
              & MFA No.101186/2020 (SFC)

MFA No.23064/2013 & C/w. Matters

In MFA No.23064/2013:
Between:

Shri Munivenkata Swamy @ M.V. Swamy,
S/o. Muniswamy, Age major,
R/at Doddakurubara Halli,
Via Dalsanur Holur Post,
Kolar Taluk & District.
                                                   ... Appellant

(By Shri A.S. Ponnanna, Sr. Adv.
 For Shri Y.V. Raviraj & Shri R.M. Kulkarni, Advocates)

And:

1.     M/s. Cham Lukking Pvt. Ltd.,
       Having its registered office at
       P.O. Box No.47, Bokhira,
       Porbandar, Gujarat-360595.
                               :2:



1.b.   And having its Head office at
       No.19/20, Mafco Yard, Vashi,
       Navi Mumbai-400705.

1.c.   And its factory at Sy.No.1744,
       Hissa-1, Majali Village, Karwar Taluka,
       Goa-Karwar Highway, Uttara Kannada.

2.     Hariram K. Cham S/o. Kanji Devji Cham,
       Age major, R/o.: Kodiyarkrupa,
       Wageshwari Plot, Porabandar,
       Gujarat-360595.

3.     Ramesh K. Cham S/o. Kunji Devji Cham,
       Age major, R/o.: Kodiyarkrupa,
       Wageshwari Plot, Porabandar,
       Gujarat-360595.

4.     Ramachandra Panchaksharam Naidu
       @ R.P. Kumar, S/o. Ramachandran Naidu,
       Age major, R/o.: Raj Palace Road,
       Porabandar, Gujarat-360595.

5.     Karnataka State Industrial Investment
       & Development Corporation Ltd.,
       Having its registered office at No.49,
       Khanija Bhavan, 4th Floor, East Wing,
       Race Course Road, Bengaluru-560001.

       Also having Zonal Office at
       No.407, 408 III Floor, Mahendra Arcade,
       Kudmul Range Rao Road, Karanga Pody,
       Mangalore-560068,
       Rep. by its Manager (Legal)
       Shri H. Venkatesh Moorthy.
                                                 ... Respondents

(By Shri M.V.V. Ramana, Adv. for R1 to R3;
 Shri G.S. Kannur, Sr. Adv. for Shri A.S. Patil, Adv. for R5)

       This Writ Appeal is filed u/s 32(9) of the State Financial
Corporation Act, against the order dated 20.03.2013 in Misc.
                               :3:



No.5/2008 on the file of the District & Sessions Judge, Uttara
Kannada, Karwar, allowing the petition filed u/s 31(1)(a)(aa)
and u/s 32 of the State Financial Corporation Act.


In MFA No.22866/2013:
Between:

1.     Shri Rahi Ram K. Cham
       S/o. Kanji Devji Cham,
       'Kodiyar Krupa', Wageswari Plot,
       Porbandar-360595, Gujarat,
       Rep. by P.A. Holder,
       Shri Mohan K. Somaiah,

2.     Shri Ramesh K. Cham,
       S/o. Kanji Devji Cham,
       'Kodiyar Krupa', Wageswari Plot,
       Porbandar-360595, Gujarat,
       Rep. by P.A. Holder,
       Shri Mohan K. Somaiah,
                                                     ... Appellants

(By Shri M.V.V. Ramana, Advocate)

And:

Karnataka State Industrial Investment
& Development Corporation Ltd.,
With its registered office at 4th Floor
Khanija Bhavan, No.49, Race Course Road,
Bengaluru-560001,
Also having Zonal Office at
No.407, 408 III Floor, Mahendra Arcade,
Kudmul Range Rao Road, Karanga Pody,
Mangalore-560068,
Rep. by its Manager (Legal)
                                                  ... Respondent

(By Shri G.S. Kannur, Sr. Adv. for Shri A.S. Patil, Adv.)
                                :4:



       This Writ Appeal is filed u/s 32(9) of the State Financial
Corporation Act, 1951 against the order dated 20.03.2013 in
Misc. No.5/2008 on the file of the District & Sessions Judge,
Uttara Kannada, Karwar, allowing the petition filed u/s
31(1)(a)(aa) and u/s 32 of the State Financial Corporation
Act.


In MFA No.101186/2020:
Between:

Ramachandra Panchakasharam Naidu,
Alias R.P. Naidu, S/o. Ramachandran Naidu,
Age 72 years, R/o.: No.515, CMH Road,
Binnamangala, 1st Stage, Indiranagar,
Bengaluru-560038.
                                                     ... Appellant

(By Shri Vivek Holla, Sr. Adv. for Shri Aravind D.Kulkarni,
Adv.)

And:

1.     Karnataka State Industrial Investment
       & Development Corporation Ltd.,
       Having its registered office at
       No.49, Khanija Bhavan, 4th Floor,
       East Wing, Race Course Road,
       Bengaluru-560001.

       Also having its Zonal Office at
       No.407, 408 III Floor, Mahendra Arcade,
       Kudmul Range Rao Road, Karanga Pody,
       Mangalore-560068,
       Rep. by its Manager (Legal)
       Shri H. Venkatesh Moorthy.

2.     M/s. Cham Lukking Pvt. Ltd.,
       Having its registered office at
                               :5:



       P.O. Box No.47, Bokhira,
       Porbandar, Gujarat-360595.

       And having its Head office at
       No.19/20, Mafco Yard, Vashi,
       Navi Mumbai-400705.

3.     Hariram K. Cham S/o. Kanji Devji Cham,
       Age major, R/o.: Kodiyarkrupa,
       Wageshwari Plot, Porabandar,
       Gujarat-360595.

4.     Ramesh K. Cham S/o. Kanji Devji Cham,
       Age major, R/o.: Kodiyarkrupa,
       Wageshwari Plot, Porabandar,
       Gujarat-360595.

5.     Shri Munivenkata Swamy,
       Alias M.V. Swamy, S/o. Muniswamy,
       Age major, R/at Doddakurubara Halli,
       Via Dalasanur Holur Post,
       Kolar Taluka & District.
                                                 ... Respondents

(By Shri G.S. Kannur, Sr.Adv. for Shri A.S. Patil, Adv. for R1;
 Shri M.V.V. Ramana, Advocate for R3 & R4;
 Shri A.S. Ponnanna, Sr.Adv. for Shri R.M. Kulkarni, Adv. for R5)


       This Writ Appeal is filed u/s 32(9) of the State Financial
Corporation Act, 1951 against the order dated 20.03.2013 in
Misc. No.5/2008 on the file of the District & Sessions Judge,
Uttara Kannada, Karwar, allowing the petition filed u/s
31(1)(a)(aa) and u/s 32 of the State Financial Corporation
Act.


       These MFAs coming on for further hearing, having
been heard and reserved on 20.07.2021, this day, the Court
pronounced the following:
                                    :6:



                            JUDGMENT

These appeals by the borrower and the guarantors seek to lay a challenge to the Judgment & Order dated 20.03.2013, whereby the learned District Judge, Uttara Kannada, Karwar having favoured lenders Miscellaneous Case No.5/2008 filed under Sections 31(1) & 32 of the State Financial Corporation Act, 1951, has held them liable to pay a sum of Rs.8,75,63,691/- with current interest at the rate of 18.5% p.a. and another sum of Rs.1,85,74,890/- with interest at the rate of 21% from the date of petition, with post judgment interest at the reduced rate of 15% p.a.

2. After service of notice, the respondent lender i.e., Karnataka State Industrial Investment and Development Corporation Ltd., (hereafter 'KSIIDC') having entered appearance through its counsel resisted these appeals making submission in justification of the impugned Judgment & Order and the reasons on which they have been constructed. Learned Sr. Adv. Shri G.S. Khannur taking the Court through the LCR contends that, though the challenge lies both in law and facts, the Court below having considered the pleadings of the parties and the evidentiary material borne out from the :7: records has entered the subject Judgment & Order and therefore, interference at the hands of this Court is not warranted, the arguable insignificant lacunae therein, notwithstanding.

3. Brief facts:

(a) The KSIIDC is a lending agency which answers the description of State Financial Corporation under the provisions of SFC Act; it is a State Government Agency; the appellant No.1(a) namely M/s. Cham Lukkung Pvt. Ltd., is a company (hereafter 'the borrower') incorporated under the provisions of the erstwhile Companies Act, 1956; the other respondents happen to be the guarantors; in April 1996, the KSIIDC had advanced a Term Loan of Rs.1 crore with 21% interest p.a. to be charged on quarterly rests; subsequently a Bridge Loan of Rs.25 lakh with compound interest at the rate of 25% p.a. to be levied on quarterly rests came to be advanced in May 1996.
(b) These loans were secured by the mortgage of certain properties in addition to the personal guarantee of other respondents; the above loans having remained over due and no repayment having been made despite demand, the KSIIDC :8: had taken over the plant and machinery by invoking Section 29 of the Act; the Miscellaneous case came to be filed against the borrower and the guarantors; the same was resisted by filing objections, inter alia contending that the claim was not maintainable in law and that the guarantors have not put their signatures to the loan papers at all.

(c) From the side of KSIIDC, its official Shri G.C. Kempahonnaiah got examined as PW1 and in his deposition, 12 documents came to be marked as per Exs.P1 to P12 which inter alia comprised of loan documents, loan sanction letter, guarantee agreement, demand notice & legal notice and the account extract. From the side of the guarantors one Mr. Hari Ram Cham i.e., one of the guarantor for the Term Loan was examined as RW1; the learned Judge of the Court below having adverted to pleadings of the parties and having weighed the evidentiary material on record has made the subject Judgment & Order that are put in challenge both by the borrower and the guarantors before us.

4. We have heard the learned counsel for the parties, perused the appeal papers and the original TCR; we have adverted to the rulings cited at the Bar; we are inclined :9: to grant a marginal indulgence in the matter as under and for the following reasons:

(i) A 'Term Loan' of Rs.100 lakh was sanctioned vide letter dated 18.03.1995, the loan documents have been signed by the Directors of the borrower company on duly stamped papers; by way of security of repayment mortgage has been created of the plant & machinery and the land on which they are founded; this Term Loan has been guaranteed by the sureties namely the respondent Nos.2 & 3;

however, the respondent No.4-Ramachandra Panchaksharam Naidu and respondent No.5-Mr. Munivenkataswamy has nothing do with this loan, he being one of the five personal guarantors to the Bridge Loan of Rs.25 lakh; fairly enough, this is, not much disputed by the Sr. Adv. Mr. Kannur appearing for KSIIDC that being the position, the liability for the repayment of this Term Loan is confined to the borrower company and two guarantors namely Hari Ram K.Cham & Ramesh K. Cham; there is wealth of evidentiary material placed on record i.e., TCR which proves this loan transaction and the suretiship, beyond any pale of doubt; the contra : 10 : contention taken up in the objection statement therefore are rightly rejected by the learned Judge of the Court below.

(ii) The borrower company had availed the 'Bridge Loan' of Rs.25 lakh only subsequent to availing the Term Loan and that the appellant Mr. Munivenkataswamy & Ramachandra Panchaksharam Naidu happen to be two of the five personal guarantors is again established by the loan documents and the individual guarantee agreements which are part of the records; after seeing all this, findings are recorded by the learned trial Judge; these guarantors had unconscionably and fraudulently taken a false plea in the objection statement that he has not signed the guarantee documents; however cogent evidence having been placed on record by the lender, it was open to produce the rebuttal evidence which has not been done by him; there is no explanation offered by him for not doing this, either; that being the position, he cannot escape liability at all for the repayment of loan in question.

(iii) The contention of the guarantors that other four similar guarantors have not been made parties to the recovery proceedings and therefore, the KSIIDC could not : 11 : have maintained the miscellaneous case is liable to be rejected; it is always open to the lender to choose any one from amongst the debtors and sureties for recovering the common/joint debt; the surety who has repaid the loan arguably may have right to contribution from the borrower and other sureties, of course subject to all just exceptions is beside the point; no law or ruling is brought to our notice that a recovery proceedings to which only a debtor and few of the sureties are arraigned as parties, others having been left out is not maintainable.

(iv) The vehement contention of learned advocates appearing for the guarantors that the liability of the surety is coextensive with that of the borrower needs no elaboration, law being as clear as the Gangetic waters; a guarantor of one loan cannot be saddled with the liability of another to which he is not the guarantor, the borrower being the same again does not need any argument; in the case at hands the appellants Ramachandra Panchaksharam Naidu & Munivenkataswamy are the guarantors only for the Bridge Loan of Rs.25 lakh and therefore, his liability is confined to this loan and to the exclusion of the aforesaid Term Loan; : 12 : the other appellants being the guarantors, are saddled with the liability in respect of both the loans and in our considered opinion the same cannot be faltered.

(v) The vehement contention of learned Sr. Adv. A.S. Ponnanna and learned advocates Mr. Holla & Ramanna that there being no demand notice, recovery of loans could not have been ordered by the Court below cannot be countenanced; firstly, the demand notices are part of the record; regardless of this factual aspect, law is well settled since centuries that it is the duty of debtors which necessarily include the sureties as well, to find the creditor and put into his pocket the loan amount with all the interest that has accrued due thereon as per the agreed terms; as already mentioned above, the guarantors have tried to play fraud on the Court below and on the lender KSIIDC as well by taking up a false contention as to they being not the signatories to the respective guarantee agreements; such of the guarantors who have taken such a blatantly false plea are liable to be prosecuted for the offence of perjury; however, it is for the lender to take appropriate proceedings in this regard. : 13 :

(vi) The vehement contention of learned Sr. Adv. and other counsel appearing for the appellants that the loan itself is time barred the impugned recovery order could not have been made is difficult to agree with; the terms of guarantee agreements make it abundantly clear that they comprise not only a personal guarantee but the continuing ones as well; the guarantee agreements in the original have been marked in the evidence of respondent lender; learned Sr. Adv. Mr. G.S. Kannur is more than justified in drawing our attention to one of the terms in the guarantee agreement which characterizes the guarantors as the borrower too; it reads as under:

"14. The Guarantor further declare that as between the Corporation and the Guarantor, the Guarantor will be treated as principal debtors jointly with the company and accordingly the Guarantor shall not be entitled to and the Guarantor hereby waives all the rights conferred on the Guarantor by Sections 133, 134, 135, 139 and 141 of the Indian Contract Act."

(vii) The above apart, there are other terms too in the said guarantee agreements which repel the contention of Mr. Holla and Ramana that the enforcement of liability as against the guarantors had become time-barred; they fervently invoke the Apex Court decision in Maharashtra State Financial Corpn. V. Ashok K. Agarwal (2006) 9 SCC 617, in support of : 14 : their contention; however, it did not involve a case of personal-cum-continuous guarantee; it hardly needs to be mentioned that a decision is an authority for the proposition that it actually lays down in a given fact matrix and not for all that, that logically follows from what has been so laid down:

Lord Halsbury in the celebrated case of Quinn V. Leathem, 1901 AC 495.
(viii) The Vehement contention of Mr. Ramana and Mr. Holla that the proceedings against the guarantors were time barred does not impress us even otherwise; they cannot support this contention by placing reliance on the decision of Apex Court in Deepak Bandari V. Himachala Pradesh State Industrial Development Corporation Ltd., 2015(5) SCC 518;

Mr. Kannur points out from the very decision that the limitation of three years under Article 55 of Schedule to the Limitation Act, 1963 avails in the case at hands inasmuch as the limitation for instituting the recovery proceedings need to be reckoned from the date when the amounts received from the auction of mortgaged/hypothecated properties were appropriated to the loan and the residue thereby was ascertained; he thus contends and in our opinion rightly, that : 15 : the limitation period begins not from the date when notice recalling the loan amount was issued; admittedly, the mortgaged properties were auctioned for a sum of Rs.15,50,000/- on 29.01.2008; this was pursuant to action taken u/s 29 of the SFC Act; the Miscellaneous Case has been presented on 15.04.2008; the proceeds of auction were received by the lender KSIIDC from the auction buyers in only June 2008; this aspect has been duly considered by the learned Judge of the Court below at paragraphs 11, 12 & 13 of the impugned order.

(ix) Learned advocates appearing for the appellants passionately contended that for computing the limitation period, we have to bank upon the residuary Article 137 of the Limitation Act, 1963; in support of this they banked upon a Full Bench decision of this Court in Karnataka State Financial Corporation V. Smt. Jaya Menon, ILR 2004 KAR 2735, wherein arguably it has been held that the limitation for the proceedings instituted u/s 31 of SFC Act are governed by Article 137 of the Limitation Act; however, what the Apex Court observed at paragraph 28 in Deepak Bhandari case : 16 : (supra) as under, is in variance with the view of the Full Bench:

"28. It is thus clear that merely because the Corporation acted under Section 29 of the State Financial Corporations Act did not mean that the contract of indemnity came to an end. Section 29 merely enabled the Corporation to take possession and sell the assets for recovery of the dues under the main contract. It may be that on the Corporation taking action under Section 29 and on their taking possession they became deemed owners. The mortgage may have come to an end, but the contract of indemnity, which was an independent contract, did not. The right to claim for the balance arose, under the contract of indemnity, only when the sale proceeds were found to be insufficient. The right to sue on the contract of indemnity arose after the assets were sold. The present case would fall under Article 55 of the Limitation Act, 1963 which corresponds to old Articles 115 and 116 of the old Limitation Act, 1908. The right to sue on a contract of indemnity/guarantee would arise when the contract is broken."

(x) To put the above succinctly where the lender in exercise of power u/s 29 of the SFC Act has taken over the possession of the mortgaged property and has realized the auction/sale proceeds thereof, the same have to be appropriated to the repayment of the loan; thereafter what amount still remains as due, has to be ascertained; from the date of such ascertainment the limitation period of three years as provided under Article 55 has to be reckoned; thus in the fact matrix of this case there is no scope for invoking residuary Article 137 : 17 : as rightly contended by learned Sr. Adv. Mr. Kannur; even otherwise where two decisions of precedential value broadly covering similar facts are cited at the Bar, the one whose fact matrix matches more, becomes the guiding star.

(xi) Lastly we will be failing in our duty if we do not refer to unethical act of the officials of the lender KSIIDC; admittedly, the mortgaged properties were sold in January 2008; the recovery proceedings have been instituted subsequent thereto i.e., in April 2008; not even a whisper was made about the KSIIDC invoking Section 29 of the SFC Act and auctioning of the mortgaged property for a consideration of Rs.15,50,000/-; this amount reached hands of the SFC in August 2008 as admitted by PW1; but nothing prevented it from amending the pleadings; this it did not do, unfairly to say the least; strangely the guarantors too did not seek amendment of their pleadings, either; all this came to light only in the cross-examination of PW1 done on 19.06.2012; there is unfairness on the part of the guarantors as well who had taken up a false plea of not being the signatories to the guarantee agreements in question; this is a case of unfairness : 18 : of the lender qua the unfairness of the sureties; thus far and not further, we delebrate in the matter.

In the above circumstances and with the above observations, these appeals are disposed off; the impugned Judgment & Order are modified holding the guarantors Mr. Ramachandra Panchaksharam Naidu and Mr. Munivenkataswamy i.e., the appellants in MFA No.23064/2013 and MFA No.101186/2020 liable only in respect of the Bridge Loan of Rs.25 lakh and the interest that has accrued due thereon and not in respect of Term Loan, rest of the impugned order is left intact.

Costs made easy.

Sd/-

JUDGE Sd/-

JUDGE Vnp*