Punjab-Haryana High Court
Joginder Singh vs Basawa Singh And Anr. on 3 June, 1983
Equivalent citations: [1985]58COMPCAS843(P&H)
ORDER Prem Chand Jain, J.
1. The facts of this case may briefly be stated thus:
Joginder Singh, appellant, had shares Nos. 424 to 443 and 3859 to 3868 of M/s. Onkar Bus Service Ltd., Jullundur, respondent (hereinafter referred to as "the company"), as entered in Share Certificate No. 41 L.F. No. 50, dated October 30, 1945, and No. 41, L. F. No. 339, dated December 19, 1951, respectively. According to the plaintiff, the appellant transferred the aforesaid shares to him and executed a transfer deed for this purpose. The transfer deed was handed over to the company for giving effect to the transfer of the aforesaid shares in the name of the plaintiff-respondent. It was further alleged that the company in collusion with the appellant failed to give effect to the said transfer in favour of the plaintiff in the registers of the company, with the result that the plaintiff was not paid any dividend on those shares, in spite of repeated demands. With the above allegations, the plaintiff-respondent filed a suit for a declaration against the appellant and the company to the effect that he was the owner, by transfer, of shares Nos. 424 to 443 and 3859 to 3868 as described above. A further prayer for the issuance of a permanent injunction to the company to recognise the rights of the plaintiff and to bring his name as a shareholder in the company's registers and to pay all dividends accruing in respect of the said shares to the plaintiff has been made.
2. The suit was contested by the defendants on several grounds.
3. On the pleadings of the parties, the following issues were framed:
(i) Whether civil court has no jurisdiction to try this suit? OPD
(ii) Whether the suit in the present form does not lie ? OPD
(iii) Whether the transfer deed was not in accordance with the rules and regulations of the company ? If so, its effect ? OPD.
(iv) Whether there was compromise between the plaintiff and defendant No. 2 as alleged in para 5 of the W. S. ? If so, its effect? OPD (v) Whether the suit has been properly valued for purposes of court fee and jurisdiction ? OPD. (vi) Relief.
4. The main and the only issue with which we are concerned in the present appeal is issue No. 1 which relates to the jurisdiction of the civil court.
5. What was sought to be argued by Mr. Ranjit Pachnanda, learned counsel for the appellant, was that the civil court had no jurisdiction to try the suit in view of the provisions of Sections 111 and 155 of the Companies Act. On the other hand, Shri J. S. Narang, learned counsel for the respondents, submitted that the remedy provided under the aforesaid provisions of the Act was a summary remedy and that the civil court's jurisdiction was not excluded.
6. I have heard the learned counsel for the parties at length and find that the question whether the civil court's jurisdiction to try the suit is barred in view of the provisions of Sections 111 and 155 of the Act is of considerable importance and deserves to be decided by a larger Bench. There is no direct authority on this question of this court. Consequently, I direct that the papers of this case be laid before the learned Chief Justice for constituting a larger Bench.
[The matter then came up before their Lordships S. S. SANDHAWALIA C.J. and PREM CHAND JAIN J.] JUDGMENT Prem Chand Jain J.
1. Joginder Singh, appellant, had shares Nos. 424 to 443 and 3859 to 3868 of M/s Onkar Bus Service Ltd., Jullundur, respondent (hereinafter referred to as "the company"), as entered in Share Certificate No. 41, L.F. 50, dated October 30, 1945, and No. 41, L.F. 339, dated December 19, 1951, respectively. According to the plaintiff, the appellant transferred the aforesaid shares to him and executed a transfer deed for this purpose. The transfer deed was handed over to the company for giving effect to the transfer of the aforesaid shares in the name of the plaintiff-respondent. It was further alleged that the company in collusion with the appellant failed to give effect to the said transfer in favour of the plaintiff in the registers of the company, with the result that the plaintiff was not paid any dividend on those shares, in spite of repeated demands. With the above allegations, the plaintiff-respondent filed a suit for a declaration against the appellant and the company to the effect that he was the owner by transfer of shares Nos. 424 to 443 and 3859 to 3868 as described above. A further prayer for the issuance of a permanent injunction to the company to recognise the rights of the plaintiff and to bring his name as a shareholder in the company's registers and to pay all dividends accruing in respect of the said shares to the plaintiff has been made.
2. The suit was contested by the defendants on several grounds.
3. Besides other issues, one of the issues that required determination in the suit was whether the civil court had no jurisdiction to try the suit. Both the courts have held that the civil court has jurisdiction to try the suit. The question of jurisdiction was again agitated before me sitting singly when the appeal came up for hearing. Finding that the point regarding the jurisdiction was of considerable importance, I directed that the matter be decided by a larger Bench. That is how we are seized of the matter.
4. The legal question requiring our decision in this appeal may be formulated thus:
" Is the civil court's jurisdiction expressly or impliedly barred to try a suit in respect of matters falling within the purview of the provisions of Section 155 of the Companies Act (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act')?"
5. It was contended by Mr. Pachnanda, learned counsel for the appellant, that for the relief claimed in the suit, the plaintiff should have filed a petition under Section 155 of the Act, that the company court has jurisdiction to grant the relief claimed in the suit and that the civil court's jurisdiction to entertain a suit in respect of those matters regarding which relief can be granted by the company court, is barred. In the alternative, what was sought to be argued by the learned counsel was that with regard to the matters covered by the provisions of Section 155, the civil court's jurisdiction to entertain a suit, even if not expressly barred, would be deemed to be impliedly barred.
6. On the other hand, Mr. J. S. Narang, learned counsel for the plaintiff, submitted that the jurisdiction of the company court under Section 155 of the Act was of a summary nature, that cases involving complicated questions of law and fact are ordinarily to be decided by a civil court and that the civil court's jurisdiction to entertain the suits and decide the same in respect of the matters falling under Section 155 of the Act was not barred.
7. Section 155 of the Act, which deals with the power of the court to rectify register of members, reads as under :
"155. (1) if-
(a) the name of any person-
(i) is without sufficient cause, entered in the register of members of a company, or
(ii) after having been entered in the register, is, without sufficient cause, omitted therefrom ; or
(b) default is made, or unnecessary delay takes place, in entering on the register the fact of any person having become, or ceased to be, a member;
the person aggrieved, or any member of the company, or the company, may apply to the court for rectification of the register.
(2) The court may either reject the application or order rectification of the register; and in the latter case, may direct the company to pay the damages, if any, sustained by any party aggrieved.
In either case, the court in its discretion may make such order as to costs as it thinks fit.
(3) On an application under this section, the court-
(a) may decide any question relating to the title of any person who is a party to the application to have his name entered in or omitted from the register, whether the question arises between members or alleged members, or between members or alleged members on the one hand and the company on the other hand; and
(b) generally, may decide any question which it is necessary or expedient to decide in connection with the application for rectification.
(4) From any order passed by the court on the application, or on any issue raised therein and tried separately, any appeal shall lie on the grounds mentioned in section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (V of 1908):
(a) if the order be passed by a District Court, to the High Court;
(b) if the order be passed by a single judge of a High Court consisting of three or more judges, to the Bench of that High Court.
(5) The provisions of Sub-sections (1) to (4) shall apply in relation to the rectification of the register of debenture holders as they apply in relation to the rectification of the register of members."
8. An analysis of the aforesaid section shows that a right is given to a person aggrieved or any member of the company, or the company, for rectification of the register in case the name of any person entered in the register of members of the company or after having been entered in the register, is without sufficient cause omitted therefrom or default is made or unnecessary delay takes place in entering on the register the fact of any person having become, or ceased to be a member. On such an application being made, the court would proceed to decide that application as provided under Sub-sections (2) and (3) of the section.
9. In order to find out a correct answer, it would be necessary first to determine the nature and scope of the power exercisable by the company court under this section. As is evident from the contentions of Mr. Pach-
nanda, the stand taken on behalf of the appellant is that the power exercisable by the company court under this section is not of a summary nature. In support of this contention of his, the learned counsel had relied on the judgment of the Gujarat High Court in Shri Gulabrai Kalidas Naik v. Laxmidas Lallubhai Patel of Baroda [1978] 48 Comp Cas 438.
10. After giving my thoughtful consideration to the entire matter, I find myself unable to agree with the proposition enunciated by the learned counsel that the enquiry under Section 155 of the Act is not of a summary nature. This matter is not res integra and there are precedents within this court, as well as of the other High Courts and the Supreme Court, wherein it has been held that the relief under Section 155 is discretionary and the scope of Section 155 of the Act is restricted to a summary enquiry.
11. The first case to which reference may be made is in People's Insurance Co. Ltd. v. C. R. E. Wood and Co. Ltd, [1961] 31 Comp Cas 61 (Punj) ; AIR 1960 Punj 388 (p. 390), wherein, while referring to some earlier decisions of this court, Tek Chand J. (as his Lordship then was) observed thus (p. 67 of 31 Comp Cas):
" In the above-noted decisions I had held that when serious disputes were involved, the proper forum for their adjudication was a civil court. I had expressed the view that the summary remedy under Section 155 of the Companies Act, 1956, was not available to the litigant as of right without the court having discretion to refuse it. I had also expressed the view that if the case be one of difficulty and complication, it should more appropriately be decided at a regular trial, and that this provision was not intended for settling controversies under several heads necessitating a regular investigation. Having regard to the nature of the controversy and comparatively simpler facts of this case, it is a case which can be suitably disposed of by this court under Section 155 of the Act. In determining whether judicial discretion be exercised by the court for purposes of directing or refusing rectification of register of members, depends on the facts of each particular case."
12. The next case to which reference may be made is in Smt. Soma Vati Devi Chand v. Krishna Sugar Mills Ltd., AIR 1966 Punj 44, wherein, H.R. Khanna J. (as his Lordship then was), relying on the earlier deci sions, declined relief on the ground that there were complicated matters which could only be adjudicated after recording evidence and that it would not be proper to go into them in the summary proceedings under Section 155 of the Act. A similar view has been taken in a latest unreported judgment of this court in C. P. No. 12 of 1980 (Rakesh Kumar Malik v.
Rohtak Ashoka Theatres Pvt. Ltd.), decided by R. N. Mittal J., on March 31, 1983.
13. The next case to which reference may be made is in Public Passenger Service Ltd. v. M.A. Khadar [1966] 36 Comp Cas 1(SC) ; AIR 1966 SC 489 (p. 492), wherein it has been observed thus (p. 6 of 36 Comp Cas) :
" Counsel for the appellant contended that the relief under Section 155 is discretionary and the court should have refused relief in the exercise of its discretion. Now, where by reason of its complexity or otherwise, the matter can more conveniently be decided in a suit, the court may refuse relief under Section 155 and relegate the parties to a suit. But the point as to the invalidity of the notice dated January 20, 1957, could well be decided summarily and the courts below rightly decided to give relief in the exercise of the discretionary jurisdiction under Section 155. Having found that the notice was defective and the forfeiture was invalid, the court could not arbitrarily refuse relief to the respondents,"
14. There are other decisions of the various High Courts to the same effect, but I do not propose to refer to those judgments as it would unnecessarily be burdening this judgment, in view of the precedents of this court and the decision of the Supreme Court in Public Passenger Service's case [1966] 36 Comp Cas 1 (SC); AIR 1966 SC 489.
15. The only judgment that needs specific mention and consideration is in Shri Gulabari's case [1978] 48 Comp Cas 438 of the Gujarat High Court on which reliance had been placed by Mr. Pachnanda. I have gone through that judgment carefully. The question that was posed by the learned judge for decision in that case was that where the arena of dispute involves such disputed questions of fact which involve allegations and counter-allegations and which requires to be determined so as to find1 out the title to shares in the presence of persons other than the members of the company, would the company judge be precluded from proceeding with the petition within the four corners of Section 155 of the Act? From the aforesaid question, it is quite evident that what was sought to be argued before the learned judge was that a petition involving disputed questions of fact was bound to be rejected outright, and, in my view, it is in that context that the learned judge held that the question of title could be decided by the company court and that there was nothing to suggest in the section that the scope of enquiry was summary in nature. But, before us, that is not the question nor has it been suggested that this court's jurisdiction is straightway barred where serious disputed questions involving investigation arise in a petition under Section 155 of the Act. There can be no gainsaying that a company court has jurisdiction to entertain and decide a petition on merits under Section 155 of the Act. But the established practice recognised universally practically by all the High Courts is that the company court ordinarily does not decide a petition under Section 155 of the Act if complicated questions involving serious disputes arise in the petition. As I read Shri Guldbrai's case [1978] 48 Comp Cas 438 (Guj), the learned judge in the circumstances of that case felt that the matter could be decided under Section 155 of the Act and on that score decided the same. The learned judge positively felt that no such complicated or complex question arose in that petition which could not effectively be decided by him. Thus, the decision in Shri Gulabrai's case [1978] 48 Comp Cas 438 (Guj) is of no assistance to the learned counsel for the appellant.
16. As a result of the aforesaid discussion, I find no escape from the conclusion that the scope of enquiry under Section 155 of the Act is of a summary nature and that the company court may refuse and decline to grant the discretionary relief where serious disputed and complicated questions are involved.
17. Having arrived at the aforesaid conclusion, the question posed in this appeal for decision becomes very easy to be answered. Under Section 9, CPC, a civil court can entertain a suit of a civil nature except a suit of which its cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred. It is settled principle that it is for the party who seeks to oust the jurisdiction of a civil court to establish his contention. There can be no gainsaying that if the legislature intends to oust the jurisdiction of the civil court, it must say so expressly or by necessary implication. I cannot find any words either in Section 155 of the Act or in some other provision of the Act which can lead to the inference that the civil court's jurisdiction is barred.
18. In this view of the matter, I hold that for the matters falling within the purview of Section 155 of the Act, the jurisdiction of the civil court is not barred.
19. No other point arises for consideration.
20. For the reasons recorded above, I find no merit in this appeal and consequently dismiss the same. In the circumstances of the case, I make no order as to costs.
S.S. Sandhawalia, J.
21. I agree.