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[Cites 2, Cited by 1]

Punjab-Haryana High Court

L. Amin Chand vs Firm Madho Ram Banwari Lal And Ors. on 16 September, 1954

Equivalent citations: AIR1954P&H301, AIR 1954 PUNJAB 301

JUDGMENT

 

 1. The appellant before us, Amin Chand, instituted a suit in the Court at Moga against the firm Madho Ram-Banwari Lal and its five partners, Banwari Lal, Ram Parshad, Chanan Ram. Siri Ram and Bholu Ram, for the recovery of Rs. 41,040/- on the allegation that the firm through Banwari Lal defendant borrowed Rs. 36,000/- from the plaintiff on the 3rd of July 1945 and Banwari Lal executed the hundi P. I on behalf of the firm undertaking to repay the sum of Rs. 36,000/- after 300 days. The suit was instituted on the 1st of December 1948 claiming the recovery of Rs. 36,000/- as principal and Rs. 5,040/- by way of penalty as interest according to the rate customary In the 'mandis' of Moga and Kot Kapura. 
 

 2. A written statement was filed by Banwari Lal defendant on behalf of himself and the firm admitting liability, but the suit was contested by the other defendants, who denied liability on the ground that the 'hundi' was without consideration and that its execution was a collusive transaction between Banwari Lal and the plaintiff. It was in fact alleged that Banwari Lal had severed his business connections with the other defendants on the 27th of September 1945 when accounts had been settled between them, and that he had executed the 'hundi' sometime thereafter. The preliminary plea was also raised that the 'hundi' in suit was Inadmissible in evidence and no

action could be taken upon it as it was not do
stamped.  
 

 3. The lower Court framed eleven issues the pleadings of the parties, who led evidence
thereon, but the suit has been dismissed with(sic)
going into the merits at all on the finding th(sic)
the 'hundi' was not properly stamped, a belated
application by the plaintiff filed after the cash
was otherwise finished for obtaining a validations
certificate from the Collector under Rule 18 of the
Indian stamp Rules being rejected.  
 

 4. The plaintiff has accordingly appealed on the grounds that the 'hundi' was in fact properly stamped, but that even if it were not held so to be, the plaintiff's suit ought not to have been dismissed purely on this technical ground and he should have been allowed to approach the Collector under Rule 18. The 'hundi' is on Government stamped paper intended for 'hundis' bearing an impressed stamp of Rs. 4/8/- and (sic) may be stated at once that although the low(sic) Court has found to the contrary, the amount of the stamp appears to be correct. The finding of the lower Court that the proper amount was Rs. 36/- was based on the finding that it was payable at Kot Kapura in Faridkot State, but the finding is not justified by anything on the record. 
 

 Admittedly the plaintiff resides at Kot Kapur (sic) but  the  'hundi'  was  executed  at  Moga   and   (sic) does not state that it was payable at any o(sic) place and therefore it must be deemed to to(sic) been    payable    at    Moga    in     British     In(sic) for   which   the   stamp   duty   required   was   two(sic) annas  per thousand rupees of the bill.    It has (sic) however, been pointed out by the learned couns(sic) for the respondents that the rules regarding the (sic) 'hundi'   in   suit   required   more   than   the   me (sic) execution of the document on a paper containing   an impressed  stamp   of  the  required   (sic) Rule 4 of the Indian Stamp Rules reads : "(1) Hundis, other than 'hundis' which may be (sic)stamped  with   an   adhesive   stamp   under  Section 11,   shall be  written on  paper as  follow namely : 
   

 (a) A 'hundi' payable otherwise than (sic) demand, but not at more than one year after date or sight, and for an amount not exceeding rupees thirty thousand, in value, shall be written on paper on which a stamp of the proper value bearing the word 'hundi' has been engraved or embossed. 
 

 (b) A 'hundi' for an amount exceeding rupees thirty thousand in  value,  or payable  at more than one year   after date   or sight,   shall   be written on paper supplied for sale by the Government to which a label has been affixed by the Collector of stamps Revenue, Calcutta, or a Superintendent of Stamps, and Impressed by such    officer   in    the    manner   prescribed    by Rule 11". Rule 11  reads : 
 

 "(1) The proper officer shall upon any instrument specified   in   Rule   10   being   brought   to   hi(sic) before   it   is   executed,   and   upon   application being  made  to  him,  affix  thereto  a  label  or labels   of   such   value   as   the   applicant   may require and pay for, and impress or perforate such label  or labels by means of a stampi(sic) machine  or  perforating  machine,   and  also  a (sic)amp or write on the face of the label or labels (sic) date of impressing or perforating the same."  
 

 5. It is also contended on behalf of the defendants  that  although  Rule   18  provides   for   the (sic)idation by the Collector of instruments bear- (sic) stamps of the proper amount but of improper (sic)scription, and certain provisions in the Act itself (sic) the rectification of the defects in other-(sic) improperly stamped documents,  certain   in-(sic)uments    including    'hundis'    are    specifically (sic)eluded from these privileges.    Sections 31 and (sic) of the Act provide that a person in doubt as (sic)   whether   an   instrument   has   been   properly (sic)tamped   whether   it  has   or has not   yet been (sic)ompleted or not may bring it before the Collec-(sic)or  who  will determine  whether  it  is  properly (sic)mped or what is the proper amount payable (sic) it and after the Collector has certified by an endorsement   that   the   instrument   is   properly (sic)mped it shall be deemed to be duly stamped, Section 32, however, is subject to the following proviso : 
   

 "Provided   that   nothing   in   this   section   shall authorise the Collector to endorse : 
 (a) *   *    *    *    *
(b) *   *    *    *    *

 

 (c) any instrument chargeable with the duty (sic) one anna or half an anna or any bill of ex-change  or  promissory note,  when brought to
sum, after the drawing  or  execution  thereof,
on paper not duly stamped."  
 

 Section 35  makes  inadmissible  in   evidence  any (sic)rurnent  not  duly  stamped,  and  although  in proviso   (a)   an   improperly   stamped   instrument may be admitted in  evidence  after stamp duty (sic) penalty have been paid upon it, here again (sic) find an instrument chargeable with the duty (sic) one anna or half an anna only or a bill of exchange    or    promissory    note    excluded.    Section 41 again allows deficiencies of stamp duty (sic) be made on instruments produced voluntarily before   the   Collector   within   one   year   of   their execution but excludes the  above-named instruments. 
 

 6. From the above provisions it would seem that bills of exchange in general, which include 'hundis', are excluded from the instruments in which original mistakes regarding the amount or method of stamping can be subsequently rectified even on payment of penalty, and regarding 'hundis' for an amount exceeding Rs. 30,000/-(sic), for a period of more than one year, the rules regarding the method of stamping are particularly stringent, apparently with the object of entirely precluding the possibility of ante -- or post dating such 'hundis'. 
 

  Quite evidently Rule 18 must be read subject to the provisions of the statute itself and Rules 4
and 11.   Rule 18 only provides for the validation (sic) an instrument which bears the correct amount
(sic) stamp duty, but in  the  wrong form,  and it
cannot possibly be said that a 'hundi' for a sum
exceeding  Rs.  30,000/-,   even  if  the  stamp  duty
pad on it is correct, is covered by Rule  18 in
view of the strict formalities required by Rule 11 regarding the stamping of such a 'hundi'.   I am

therefore of the opinion that the learned Subordinate Judge rightly held the 'hundi' in suit to be inadmissible although he has not given the proper reasons for doing so. 
 

 7. The only question which remains is whether at this stage, in spite of the fact that the plea was never raised in the lower Court, nor is it even now raised in the grounds of appeal, the plaintiff should be allowed to abandon his claim on the basis of the 'hundi' itself and be permitted to base his suit on the original loan which, formed the consideration for the 'hundi'. There is undoubtedly some conflict of authority on this point but at the same time the weight of authority appears to be decidedly against the plaintiff. A leading case on the point appears to be -- 'Perumal Chettiar v. Kamakshi Ammal', AIR 1938 Mad 785 (FB) (A). Here the point was considered by five judges regarding a promissory note and the view of four of the Judges, Leach C. J., Madhavan Nair, Varadachariar and Lakshamana Rao JJ., is summarised as follows : 
  "If the promissory note embodies all the terms-of the contract and the instrument is improperly stamped, no suit on the debt will lie. Section 91 of the Evidence Act and Section 35 of the Stamp Act bar the way. But if it does not embody all the terms of the contract the true nature of the transaction can be proved; and where an instrument has been given as collateral security or by way of conditional payment, a suit on the debt will lie. The fact that the execution of the promissory note is contemporaneous with the borrowing cannot exclude the possibility of the Instrument as having been given as collateral security or by way of conditional payment. Whether a suit lies on the debt apart from the instrument therefore depends on the circumstances under which the instrument was executed." 
 

 In that case the plea had apparently been taken, in the trial Court that even if a promissory note was inadmissible, the suit could be decreed on the basis of the loan, and the trial Court had in fact decreed the suit on the ground that the loan was transaction independent of the promissory note because the money had been lent one and a half hours before the promissory note was executed. The four learned Judges were of the opinion summarised above and the effect of their order was to remand the suit to, the trial Court for reconsideration in the light, thereof. 
 

 In other words, the suit was to be dismissed unless the plaintiff could prove that the promissory note did not embody all the terms of the contract between him and the defendant. Only the fifth Judge who was a member of/ the Bench was of the opinion that he could see no difference in principle between a case where the promissory note embodied the whole of the terms of the contract between the parties and a case where it was executed by way or collateral security or conditional payment. 
 

 8. The earliest case appears to be -- 'Sheikh Akbar v. Sheikh Khan', 7 Cal 256 (B), in which Sir Richard Garth C. J. and McDonell J. held as follows : 

  "When   a cause of action for money is once complete in itself, whether for goods sold or for money lent, or for any other claim, and the debtor then gives a bill or note to the
creditor for payment of the money at a future time, the creditor if the bill or note is not paid at maturity, may always as a rule, sue for the original consideration, provided that he has not endorsed or lost or parted with the bill
or note, under such circumstances as to make the debtor liable upon it to some third person. But when the original cause of action is the bill or note itself, and does not exist independently of it, as for instance when in consideration of A depositing money with B, B, contracts
by a promissory note to repay it with interest
at six months' date, here there is no cause of action for money lent or otherwise than upon the note itself, because the deposit is made upon the terms contained in the note, and no other. In such a case the note is the only contract between the parties, and if for want of a proper stamp or some other reason the note is not admissible in evidence, the creditor must lose his money." 
 

 In this case also the question of whether the debt could be proved independently of the promissory note was raised in the trial Court. This decision was followed by R.C. Mitter J. in --'Tarachand Protapmal v. Tamijuddin Sheikh', AIR 1935 Cal 658 (C), in a case in which it was proved that part of the consideration had been taken before hand and part of the money was advanced at the tune of the execution of the promissory note. 
 

 In -- 'Sheo Nath v. Sarjoo Nonia', AIR 1943 All 220 (FB) (D), all five of the learned Judges
Collister, Bajpai, Hamilton, Dar and Mathur JJ. were agreed that when a promissory note embodies all the terms of the contract between the parties but is not admissible in evidence for want of proper stamping, the suit cannot proceed on the basis of the loan, but the suit can proceed where all the terms of the contract have not been embodied in the promissory note. There was, however, some disagreement among them on the facts of that particular case as to whether the promissory note in suit did embody all the terms of the contract. 
 

 9. There are undoubtedly some cases which appeal to support the case of the present plaintiff. For instance, the same learned Judge R. O. Mitter, who had followed -- '7 Cal 256 (B)' in --'AIR 1935 Cal 658 (C)', expressed a contrary view more or less similar to that of stodart J. in the Madras Full Bench case in two cases --'Indra Chandra v. Hiralal Rong', AIR 1936 Cal 127 (E) and -- Mahatabuddin Mia v. Mohammad Nazir Joddar AIR 1936 Cal 170 (F). In the first of these case he did not even refer to - 
  7  Cal  258   (B)', but in the second, while mentioning that decision he apparently preferred to follow the decision in -- 'Pramatha Nath Sandi v. Dwarka Nath Dey', 23 Cal 851 (G), in which Petheram C. J. and Rampini J. held in a su(sic) regarding a pronote that plaintiff had a ca(sic) of action independently of the document. 
 

 The earlier Calcutta  decision  was  referred  (sic) therein but it was distinguished on the, to my (sic) mind,  somewhat unsubstantial  ground  that the pronote  in that case was executed  with  regard to   a   simple    loan,    whereas   the    pronote   (sic) the earlier case was executed on receipt of wh(sic) was called a 'deposit'.    I can only say regarding this decision   that   I do not consider   that  the earlier decision was properly distinguished. 
 

 10. It will thus be seen that us far as other High Courts are concerned, there is a very decided  preponderance  of  opinion  in  favour  of  the view that unless it can be shown that promissory note does not contain all the terms of the con-tract   between   the   parties   the   suit   must   fa(sic) where  the  instrument  is  inadmissible  for  want of proper stamping.   As regards the Lahore High Court, there does not seem  to be any wavering side upon this proposition.    The first, decision is by Chevis and Harrison JJ. in -- 'Chanda Singh v. Amritsar Banking Co.', AIR 1922 Lah 307  (H) 
 

 They held even in a case where the execution of the 'hundi' had for certain reasons been postponed for some time after the loan had been advanced, that the loan, having been granted on the security of the 'hundi', the plaintiff had no cause of action independent of the 'hundi', and as the 'hundi' was inadmissible in evidence and Section 91 of the Evidence Act forbids secondary evidence, the plaintiff's suit must fail. A similar decision was given with regard to a promissory note by Broadway and Fforde JJ. in -- 'Ram Jas v. Shahabuddin', AIR 1927 Lah 69 (I). In --'Sohan Lal Nihal Chand v. Raghu Nath Singh', AIR 1934 Lah 606 (J), Shadi Lal C. J. and Rangi Lal J. went so far as to hold that a decree cannot be passed on the basis of a pronote which is inadmissible in evidence even if the defendant admits his liability on it. 
 

 11. In the light of these, authorities I am (sic)
the opinion that the plaintiff in the present case
cannot be allowed to fall back on the loan which
formed the consideration for the 'hundi', in suit
and in the circumstances it does not seem necessary to express any opinion on the question whether, even if he could have been allowed to fa(sic)
back on the original consideration, he should be
allowed to do so at this stage, after the point
had been raised for the first time in the course
of arguments without having been raised in the
trial Court or even in the grounds of appeal. 
would accordingly dismiss the appeal but in the
circumstances leave the parties to bear their own
costs.  
 

Khosla, J.
 

12. I agree.