SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Fairgrowth Investments Limited
Vs
The Custodian
Civil Appeal No. 4065 of 2004
((Mrs.) Ruma Pal and Arun Kumar)
14/10/2004
JUDGMENT
MRS. RUMA PAL, J.
1. Question raised in this appeal is whether the Special Court constituted
under The Special Courts (Trial of Offences Relating to Transactions in
Securities) Act, 1992 (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act') has power to
condone the delay in filing a petition under Section 4(2) of the Act.
2. The object of the Act as stated in the Statement of Objects and Reasons is
to deal with the situation created by large scale irregularities and
malpractices in transactions in securities indulged in by some brokers in
collusion with the employees of various banks and financial institutions. In
particular, the Act seeks to ensure speedy recovery of the funds which have
been diverted from banks and financial institutions to the individual accounts
of brokers. The other objectives of the Act are to punish the guilty and to
restore confidence in and maintain the basic integrity and credibility of the
banks and financial institutions.
3. With these objectives in view the Act provides for the appointment of one or
more Custodians to take action against any person involved in any offence
relating to transactions in securities for the period after 1st April, 1991
upto and including 6th June, 1992. In terms of sub-section (3) of Section 3 of
the Act, the Custodian may notify the name of the such person in the Official
Gazette. From the date of such notification, any property moveable or
immoveable or both, belonging to any person so notified stands attached under
Sub-section (3) of Section 3. Such attached properties may be dealt with by the
Custodian in such manner as the Special Court may direct.
4. The Special Court was established under Section 5 of the Act. It has the
same jurisdiction as a Civil Court inter alia in relation to any matter
relating to any property attached under Sub-section (3) of Section 3 of the Act
as well as in relation to transactions in securities entered into during the
aforesaid period in which the person notified is involved as a party, broker,
intermediary or in any other manner (Section 9-A(1) ).
5. Sub-Section (2) of Section 4, (in so far as it is relevant) permits any
person aggrieved by a notification issued under Sub-section (2) of Section 3 to
file a petition objecting to the notification within 30 days of the issuance of
the notification. The Special Court after hearing the parties may make such
order as it deems fit on such petition. While dealing with such a case, the
Special Court is not bound by the procedure laid down by the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, but shall be guided by the principles of natural justice and,
subject to the other provisions of the Act and of any Rules, the Special Court
has the power and under Sub-section (4) of Section 9 to regulate its own
procedure. Section 10(3) of the Act, provides for an appeal to this Court from
any judgment, sentence or order of the Special Court within a period of 30 days
from the date of such judgment etc. Under the proviso to Section 10(3) this
Court has been empowered to entertain the appeal even after the expiry of a
period of 30 days if the court is satisfied that the appellant had sufficient
cause for not preferring appeal within the period of limitation. Section 13
provides that the provisions of the Act would have overriding effect over other
laws. These, in short, are the provisions of the Act which are material for the
purposes of this appeal.
6. The Act came into force on 6th June, 1992. The appellant was notified along
with others under Section 3(2) on 20th November, 2001. On 23rd November, 2001,
the Custodian informed the appellant that it had been notified under Section
3(2) of the Act and its properties stood attached with effect from the date of
the notification. The appellant was requested to furnish the Custodian the
details of its properties as on the date of the notification. In answer to the
Custodian's letter, the appellant asked for the reasons and circumstances which
formed the basis of the Custodian's decision to notify the appellant. The
appellant also stated that it was in the process of submitting details of its
properties. On 8th October, 2002, the appellant filed a petition of objection
to the notification under Section 4(2) of the Act. The Special Court rejected
the application solely on the ground that it was filed beyond the period of
limitation prescribed by Sub-section (2) of Section 4.
7. The appellant has contended that the Custodian had issued the notification
under Section 3(2) of the Act almost 10 years after coming into force of the
Act. It is submitted that the notification was also otherwise invalid.
According to the appellant the right of notified persons to object to a
notification under Section 4(2) was a valuable right, since the consequences of
being notified were drastic viz. the attachment of all properties both
immoveable and moveable. It is submitted that the notified persons could not be
deprived of the right merely on the ground of limitation. It is submitted that
the rule o limitation was a procedural requirement and like all matters of
procedure should serve to further the ends of justice and not defeat it.
Learned counsel for the appellant has referred to the decisions of this Court
in Chairman, Thiruvalluvar Transport Corporation vs. Consumer Protection
Council 1995 (2) SCR (1), Syndicate Bank vs. Prabha D. Naik & Anr. 20 and C. Beepathumma & Ors. vs. Kudambalithaya &
Ors. in support of this submission. According to the appellant the
provision prescribing a period of limitation in Section 4(2) was directory and
therefore the Special Court could not reject the application only because of
non compliance with such a directory provision. The absence of any penal
consequence, according to the appellant's counsel, showed that the non
fulfillment of the requirement to file an objection within a specified time
would not vitiate the substantive right of the notified person to question the
notification. The decision of this Court in Topline Shoes Ltd. vs. Corporation
Bank , has been relied on as an authority for this proposition. The next
submission of the appellant's counsel was based on the applicability of Section
29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1963 and
Vidyacharan Shukla vs. Khub Chand Baghel that merely because a power to
condone the delay had been granted under Section 10(3), it could not be
construed as a necessary exclusion of the same power under Section 5 of the
Limitation Act in respect of Section 4(2) It is, however conceded by learned
counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant that this Court in L.S. Synthetics
Ltd vs. Fairgrowth Financial Services Ltd. & Anr. 2004(7) SCALE 427 held
that the provisions of Limitation Act, 1963 did not
apply to the Act. However, it is submitted that irrespective of the wide
language in which the conclusion of the Court had been stated in that case, the
reasoning showed that it was limited to the question whether the periods
prescribed under the Limitation Act applied to Section 11 of the Act. It is
submitted that the decision in L.S. Synthetics must be narrowly construed, as
otherwise the conclusion would be based on a factual error. Our attention was
drawn to paragraphs 38 and 39 of the decision as reported where this Court has
held that the provisions of the Limitation Act were excluded because the Act
did not provide for any period of Limitation. It is pointed out that the Act
was not a complete code since Sections 4(2) and 10(3) did provide for a period
of Limitation.
8. Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Custodian has stated that the
period of limitation prescribed under Section 4(2) could not be said to be
merely directory. The decision in Topline (supra) was said to be
distinguishable and in any event not good law in view of the subsequent
decision of a larger Bench in Dr. J.J. Merchant vs. Shrinath Chaturvedi: 7. It is submitted that Section 29 (2) of the Limitation
Act would have no application to the Act because it is clear from the object
and scheme of the Act that the period prescribed under Section 4(2) of the Act
was not extendable by Court. The conferment of such expressly in connection
with appeals under Section 10 according to the learned counsel for the
Custodian necessarily implied the exclusion of such power in the Court under
Section 4(2). This fact coupled with Section 13 which gives overriding effect
to the provisions of the Act, it was submitted, a clear indication that the
provisions of the Limitation Act would not apply. Reliance has been placed on
the decision of this Court in Gopal Sardar vs. Karuna Sardar , in this
connection. Finally, it is contended that the question raised in this appeal
must be taken to have been concluded by the decision of three Judges in L.S.
Synthetics case (supra).
9. We are of the view that the provision prescribing a time limit for filing
a petition for objection under Section 4(2) of the Act is mandatory in the
sense that the period prescribed cannot be extended by the Court under any
inherent jurisdiction of the Special Court. Prescribed periods for initiating
or taking steps in legal proceedings are intended to be abided by, subject to
any power expressly conferred on the court to condone any delay. Thus the Limitation Act 1963 provides for different periods of limitation
within which suits, appeals and applications may be instituted or filed or made
as the case may be. It also provides for exclusion of time from the prescribed
periods in certain cases, lays down bases for computing the period of
limitation prescribed and expressly provides for extension of time under
Section 5 in respect of certain proceedings. If the periods prescribed were not
mandatory, it was not necessary to provide for exclusion or extension of time
in certain circumstances nor would the method of computation of time have any
meaning. #
10. Section 4 (2) of the Act plainly read similarly requires a person objecting
to a notification issued under sub-section (2) of Section 3 to file a petition
raising such objections within 30 days of the issuance of such notification.
The words are unequivocal and unqualified and there is no scope for reading in
a power of Court to dispense with the time limit on the basis of any principle
of interpretation of statutory provisions. In R. Rudraiah vs. State of
Karnataka 9 it was contended on behalf of the
appellants that Section 48-A of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act, 1961 which
provided for the making of an application within a particular period should be
construed liberally in favour of tenants so that the period was to be read as
extendable. The submission was rejected on the ground that the language of
Section 48-A was unambiguous and could not be interpreted differently only on
the ground of hardship to the tenants.
11. The mere fact that the Special Court may have been imbued with the same
status of a High Court would not alter the situation. We are of the view that
it was not necessary for Section 4(2) of the Act to use additional peremptory
language such as "but not thereafter" to "shall" to mandate
that an objection had to be made within 30 days. The mere use of the word
"may" in Sections 4 (2) of the Act does not indicate that the period
prescribed under the Section is merely directory. The word `may' merely enables
or empowers the objector to file an objection. The language in Section 4(2) of
the Act may be compared with Sections 4 and 6 of the Limitation
Act, 1963.
Section 4 of the Limitation Act provides:
"4. Expiry of prescribed period when court is closed:- Where the
prescribed period for any suit, appeal or application expires on a day when the
court is closed, the suit, appeal or application may be instituted, preferred
or made on the day when the court reopens." *
Certain sub-sections of Section 6 of the Limitation Act also provide for the period
within which a minor or insane or an idiot may institute suits. It cannot be
contended that the word "may" in these Sections indicate that the
prescribed periods were merely directory. This Court in Mangu Ram vs. Municipal
Corporation of Delhi described statutory provisions of periods of
limitation as "mandatory and compulsive" and also said:-
"It is because a bar against entertainment of an application beyond the
period of limitation is created by a Special or local law that it becomes
necessary to invoke the aid of Section 5 (of the Limitation Act) in order that
the application may be entertained despite such bar". *
12. If the power to condone delay were implicit in every statutory provision
providing for a period of limitation in respect of proceedings before Courts,
Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act 1963 would be
rendered redundant. We will discuss the scope and applicability of Section
29(2) in greater detail subsequently.
13. It is not for the Courts to determine whether the period of 30 days is too
short to take account the various misfortunes that may be faced by notified
persons who wish to file objections under Section 4(2) of the Act nor can the
Section be held to be directory because of such alleged inadequacy of time. As
was held by the Privy Council in Nagendra Nath vs. Suresh 1962 Indlaw MUM 41:-
"The fixation of periods of limitation must always be to some extent
arbitrary and may frequently result in hardship. But in construing such
provisions equitable considerations are out of, place, and the strict
grammatical meaning of the words is, their Lordships think, the only safe
guide." *
[See also: Antonysami vs. Aruianandam Pillai (dead) By Lrs. & Anr. ,
666].
14. In any event the statutory attachment of the property of the notified party
under Section 3, sub-section 3, of the Act, is subject to a final decision on
the matter by the Special Court under Section 9(A) and Section 11 of the Act.
It is, in that sense just an interim measure.
15. The three decisions relied upon by the appellant, namely, Sangram Singh vs.
Election Tribunal, Kotah Bhurey Lal Baya, , Syndicate Bank vs. Prabha
(supra) and C. Beepathumma (supra) do not deal with statutes which could be
said to be in pari materia with the Act. In Sangram Singh, this Court had to
consider whether the Election Tribunal was justified in refusing to recall an
order directing that an election petition should be disposed of ex-parte. It
was noted that Section 19(2) of the Representation of Peoples Act, 1951
directed the Tribunal to follow the procedure prescribed for trials under the
Civil Procedure Code. It was found on a construction of the provisions of the
Code of Civil Procedure as they then stood, that the Court had the power to
allow a defendant to participate in the proceedings even after the passing of
an order that the trial should be proceeded with ex-parte. Both the cases i.e.
Syndicate Bank and C. Beepathuma have been cities as authorities for the
proposition that the law of limitation is a procedural law and the provisions
existing on the date of the suit would apply. We have no quarrel with this
proposition but we fail to see that the relevance of the decisions to the
question to be decided in this appeal. None of these decisions touch the
question whether a statutory provision such as Section 4(2) of the Act should
be treated as mandatory or directory.
16. The decision which does deal with this question is Topline Shoes Ltd. vs.
Corporation Bank 2002 (2) SCC 33. The subject matter of interpretation in
that case was Section 13(1)(a) of the Consumer Protection
Act, 1986 ]. We are therefore of the view that the period for
filing an objection in Section 4(2) in the Act is a mandatory provision given
the language of the Section and having regard to the objects sought to be served
by the Act.
17. This brings us to the question whether the power to condone the delay in
filing a petition under Section 4(2) exists in the Special Court. We have held
that the statute itself does not provide for it. A possible source of the power
could be Section 5 of the Limitation Act, 1963 that
the word 'exclusion' also includes 'exclusion by necessary implication'. This
proposition of law is not in dispute. The only question is - does the Act
expressly or necessarily exclude the provisions of Limitation Act? We think it
does. The fact that it has provided for a power to condone delay under Section
10(3) of the Act, shows that Parliament had consciously excluded the power of
the Court in relation to Section 4(2). This view also finds support in the
decision of this Court in Gopal Sardar vs. Karuna Sardar . The statutory
provision under consideration in that case was Section 8 of the West Bengal
Land Reforms Act, 1955. It was held:
"When in the same statute in respect of various other provisions relating
to filing of appeals and revisions, specific provisions are made so as to give
benefit of Section 5 of the Limitation Act and such provision is not made to an
application to be made under Section 8 of the Act, it obviously and necessarily
follows that the legislature consciously excluded the application of Section 5
of the Limitation Act." *
18. The decision relied upon by learned counsel for the appellant, namely,
Mangu Ram (supra) has been distinguished in Gopal Sardar vs. Karuna Sardar, in
our opinion, correctly. In Mangu Ram's case the Court had to deal with the
question whether despite the mandatory period of limitation provided in
sub-Section (4) of Section 417 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1898, it
excluded the application of Section 5 of the Limitation Act
1963. The provisions of Section 29(2)(b) of the Limitation
Act, 1963, were construed and it was held:-
"Mere provision of a period of limitation in howsoever peremptory or
imperative language is not sufficient to displace the applicability of Section
5". *
19. But in this case apart from the mandatory and compulsive provisions of
sub-Section (2) of Section 4 of the Act, there are a addition two provisions of
the Act which show that the provisions of Section 5 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 cannot be invoked. These are: an express provision for
condonation of delay under Section 10(3) and the non-obstante provision in
Section 13 of the Act which states that the provisions of the Act:-
"....shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent herewith
contained in any other law for the time being in force or in any instrument
having effect by virtue of any law, other than this Act, or in any decree or
order of any Court, tribunal or other authority." *
20. The decision in Competent Authority Tarana vs. Vijay Gupta; no doubt
held that the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh Ceiling of Agricultural Holdings
Act, 1960 will not exclude the provisions of Section 5 of the Limitation Act.
However, there is no reference to the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh Act
which persuaded the Court to arrive at such conclusion.
21. Reliance on the decision in Vidya Charan Shukla vs. Khub Chand by the
appellant is equally misplaced. One of the issues raised in that case related
to the question whether Section 116-A of the Representation
of People Act, 1951 could be construed as expressly or impliedly
excluding the provisions of the Limitation Act, 1908 as would otherwise be
applicable under Section 29(2)(a) of that Act. The argument was that
sub-section 3 of Section 116-A of the 1951 Act not only provided for a period
of 30 days to prefer an appeal from the date of an order of the Tribunal to the
High Court, but also provided that the High Court could entertain an appeal
after the expiry of the period only if it was satisfied that the appellant had
sufficient cause for not preferring an appeal within such period. The
sub-section under consideration in Vidya Charan Sukhla was, therefore,
substantially similar to Section 10(3) of the Act which is required to be construed
by us. But that is where the similarity ends. The Court in that case held that
the proviso did not amount to an express or implied exclusion because of the
wording of Section 29(2)(a) of the Limitation Act, 1908. Section 29(2) (a) of
the 1908 Act is dissimilar from the provisions of section 29(2)(b) of the Limitation Act, 1963 and it was held that this
particular controversy was no longer relevant for determining whether such a
special or local Act excluded the provisions of the Limitation Act within the
meaning of the word "exclude" in Section 29(2)(b) of the Act. The
decision of Hukumdev Narayan has in turn been considered and followed by this
Court in Gopal Sardar vs. Karuna Sardar .
22. The argument of the appellant then is that the provisions for exclusion of
time contained in Section 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act if not included would
lead to an incongruous result. For example an appeal would be barred by time
even though a copy of the order of the Special Court was not made available to
the appellant; because Section 12(2) of the Limitation Act would not be
available. The argument is unacceptable. The time taken by the appellant for
obtaining a copy of the order appealed against may be a factor relevant to the
exercise of discretion by this Court under Section 10(3) of the Act. The
exclusion of Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation Act would only mean that the
appellant could not claim the exclusion of time as provided under those
Sections as a matter of right but could raise pleas on grounds available under
those Sections to establish 'sufficient cause' under Section 10(3).
23. The decision by a larger Bench in L.S. Synthetics Ltd. (supra) holding that
the provisions of the Limitation Act, 1963 do not
apply to the Act may not have, by itself, concluded the question formulated by
us at the outset. That case was, as has been rightly contended by learned
counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant, limited to a consideration of
Section 11 of the Act and the proceedings by the Special Court thereunder. It
was in that context that the Court had said that the Act had not provided for
any period of limitation. But for the reasons already stated by us we concur in
the final conclusion reached by the Court in L.S. Synthetics to the extent that
the provisions of the Limitation Act 1963 have no
application in relation to a petition under Section 4(2) of the Act.
24. Finally, Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act speaks of application of the
provisions contained in Sections 4 to 24 "only in so far as, and to the
extent to which they are not expressly excluded by such special or local
laws". This language, together with our earlier reasoning, particularly
with regard to L.S. Synthetics, would answer the further question raised by the
appellant, namely, whether the question of exclusion of the provisions of the
Limitation Act must be separately considered with reference to different
provisions of a Special/Local Act or in connection with the provisions of the
Special/Local Act, as a whole, by affirmation of the first alternative. We are
therefore not called upon to decide whether claims either preferred for the
first time before the Special Court or transferred to the Special Court under
Section 9-A(2) would attract the provisions of Sections 4 to 24 of the Limitation
Act. It is enough for the purpose of this appeal to hold that Section 29(2)
of the Limitation Act, 1963 does not apply to
proceedings under Section 4(2) of the Special Courts (Trial of Offences
Relating to Transactions in Securities), Act 1992. Since the appellant's
petition of objection had been filed much beyond the period prescribed under
that Section, the Special Court was right in rejecting the petition in limine.
# The appeal is accordingly dismissed but without any order as to costs.