SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Saroj Kumar Poddar
Vs
State (NCT of Delhi) & Anr.
Crl.A.No.70 of 2007
(S.B.Sinha and Markandeya Katju, JJ.)
16.01.2007
JUDGMENT
S.B.Sinha, J.
SLP.(Crl.)No.4645 of 2006
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellant herein was a Director of a public limited company, incorporated
and registered under the Companies Act, 1956, known as VHEL Industries
Limited (hereinafter referred to as "the Company"). The Company
issued three cheques bearing Nos. 138015, 138016 and 138017 for a sum of Rs. 2,
50, 000/-, Rs. 2, 50, 000/- and Rs. 3, 03, 952.60, respectively in favor of
Elkay International Private Limited, Respondent No. 2 herein.
3. The complainant Respondent No. 2 is manufacturer and supplier of chemical
compounds of different kinds. It supplied its product to the Company.
Allegedly, a sum of Rs. 13, 36, 923/- was due and payable to the complainant by
the Company. The Company issued three cheques, as noticed hereinbefore, in
favour of the complainant. The said cheques were deposited in a bank but were dishonored.
A complaint petition came to be filed by the complainant in the Court of Chief
Metropolitan Magistrate, Delhi against the appellant as also the said Company.
The Managing Director of the said Company as also the other Directors were also
arrayed as accused therein. It was alleged that Shri K.K. Pilania Accused No. 3
and Shri N.K. Munjal Accused No. 8 signed the said cheques for and on behalf of
the Company.
4. Cognizance was taken against the appellant and other accused persons. Inter
alia on the premise that the appellant had resigned from the Directorship of
the Company before the date of issuance of the cheques and much before the
deposit thereof by the drawee with its bank, and thus, he was not liable for the
action of the Company, applications for quashing of the orders taking
cognizance of the offence in the said complaint petitions were filed by the
appellant before the High Court of Delhi which were marked as Crl. M.C. Nos.
4583, 4580 and 4575 of 2003. By reason of the impugned judgment, the said
petitions have been dismissed by the High Court stating:
"The learned trial judge while dealing with the recalling order of the
petitioner made specific mention of the fact that the cheque in question was
post dated cheque issued through letter dated 10th May, 1997. If that be so the
matter needs further probe by way of trial and the petitioner cannot claim
complete innocence at this stage in view of the letter dated 10th May, 1997
prima facie indicating that the cheque in question was issued on this date and
the petitioner was the Director of the Company on 10th May, 1997 as he himself
admitted that he resigned from the company with effect from 19th June,
1997."
5. The appellant is, thus, before us.Ms. Vanita Bhargava, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant, would contend that the averments made in complaint petitions even if given face value and taken to be correct in their entirety do not constitute an offence as against the appellant in terms of Section 141 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 (for short "the Act").
6. It was further submitted that in any event, the appellant having resigned
from the Directorship of the said Company, the complaint petitions as against
him were not maintainable.
7. Mr. B.L. Wali, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the respondents, on
the other hand, would submit that the appellant had not disclosed as to when
the resignation purported to have been submitted by him was accepted by the
Company and in that view of the matter the complaint petitions were
maintainable.
8. Section 138 of the Act reads as under:
"138. Dishonour of cheque for insufficiency, etc., of funds in the account
–
Where any cheque drawn by a persons on an account maintained by him with a
banker for payment of any amount of money to another persons from out of that
account for the discharge, in whole or in part, of any debt or other liability,
is returned by the bank unpaid, either because of the amount of money standing
to the credit of that account is insufficient to honour the cheque or that it
exceeds the amount arranged to be paid from that account by an agreement made
with that bank, such person shall be deemed to have committed an offence and
shall, without prejudice to any other provisions of this Act, be punished with
imprisonment for a term which may be extended to two years, or with fine which
may extend to twice the amount of the cheque, or with both:"
For creating a criminal liability in terms of the said Section, the complainant
must show:
(i) That a cheque was issued;
(ii) The same was presented;
(iii) But, it was dishonoured;
(iv) A notice in terms of the said provision was served on the person sought to
be made liable; and
(v) Despite service of notice, neither any payment was made nor other
obligations, if any, were complied with within fifteen days from the date of
receipt of the notice. Section 141 of the Act postulates constructive liability
on the part of the Directors of the Company or other persons responsible for
its conduct of the business of the company. It reads as under:
"141. Offences by companies.(1) If the person committing an offence under
section 138 is a company, every person who, at the time the offence was
committed, was in charge of, and was responsible to, the company for the
conduct of the business of the company, as well as the company, shall be deemed
to be guilty of the offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly:
Provided that nothing contained in this sub-section shall render any person
liable to punishment if he proves that the offence was committed without his
knowledge, or that he had exercised all due diligence to prevent the commission
of such offence.
Provided further that where a person is nominated as a Director of a company by
virtue of his holding any office or employment in the Central Government or
State Government or a financial corporation owned or controlled by the Central
Government or the State Government, as the case may be, he shall not be liable
for-prosecution under this Chapter.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in Sub- section (1), where any offence
under this Act has been committed by a company and it is proved that the
offence has been committed with the consent or connivance of, or is
attributable to, any neglect on the part of, any director, manager, secretary
or other officer of the company, such director, manager, secretary or other
officer shall also he deemed to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable
to be proceeded against and punished accordingly."
9. A person would be vicariously liable for commission of an offence on the
part of a Company only in the event the conditions precedent laid down therefor
in Section 141 of the Act stand satisfied. For the aforementioned purpose, a
strict construction would be necessary.
10. The purported averments which have been made in the complaint petitions so
as to make the appellant vicariously liable for the offence committed by the
Company read as under:
"That the accused No. 1 is a public limited company incorporated and
registered under the Companies Act, 1956, and the accused 2 to 8 are/ were
its Directors at the relevant time and the said company is managed by the Board
of Directors and they are responsible for the incharge of the conduct and
business of the company Accused No. 1. However, cheques referred to in the
complaint have been signed by the Accused No. 3 & 8 i.e. Shri K.K. Pilania
and Shri N.K. Munjal for and on behalf of the Accused Company No. 1."
11. Apart from the Company and the appellant, as noticed hereinbefore, the
Managing Director and all other Directors were also made accused. The appellant
did not issue any cheque. He, as noticed hereinbefore, had resigned from the Directorship
of the Company. It may be true that as to exactly on what date the said
resignation was accepted by the Company is not known, but, even otherwise,
there is no averment in the complaint petitions as to how and in what manner
the appellant was responsible for the conduct of the business of the Company or
otherwise responsible to it in regard to its functioning. He had not issued any
cheque. How he is responsible for dishonour of the cheque has not been stated.
The allegations made in paragraph 3, thus, in our opinion do not satisfy the
requirements of Section 141 of the Act.
12. Our attention, however, has been drawn to the averments made in paragraphs
7 and 10 of the complaint petition, but on a perusal thereof, it would appear
that therein merely allegations have been made that the cheques in question
were presented before the bank and they have been dishonoured. Allegations to
satisfy the requirements of Section 138 of the Act might have been made in the
complaint petition but the same principally relate to the purported offence
made by the Company. With a view to make a Director of a Company vicariously
liable for the acts of the Company, it was obligatory on the part of the
complainant to make specific allegations as are required in law.
13. The question came up for consideration before a 3-Judge Bench of this Court
in S.M.S. Pharmaceuticals Ltd. v. Neeta Bhalla and Another1
wherein upon consideration of a large number of decisions this Court opined:
"While analysing Section 141 of the Act, it will be seen that it operates
in cases where an offence under Section 138 is committed by a company. The key
words which occur in the Section are "every person". These are
general words and take every person connected with a company within their sweep.
Therefore, these words have been rightly qualified by use of the words "
who, at the time the offence was committed, was in charge of and was
responsible to the company for the conduct of the business of the company, as
well as the company, shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence etc."
What is required is that the persons who are sought to be made criminally
liable under Section 141 should be at the time the offence was committed,
in charge of and responsible to the company for the conduct of the business of
the company. Every person connected with the company shall not fall within the
ambit of the provision. It is only those persons who were in charge of and
responsible for conduct of business of the company at the time of commission of
an offence, who will be liable for criminal action. It follows from this that
if a director of a Company who was not in charge of and was not responsible for
the conduct of the business of the company at the relevant time, will not be
liable under the provision. The liability arises from being in charge of and
responsible for conduct of business of the company at the relevant time when
the offence was committed and not on the basis of merely holding a designation
or office in a company. Conversely, a person not holding any office or
designation in a Company may be liable if he satisfies the main requirement of
being in charge of and responsible for conduct of business of a Company at the
relevant time. Liability depends on the role one plays in the affairs of a
Company and not on designation or status. If being a Director or Manager or
Secretary was enough to cast criminal liability, the Section would have said
so. Instead of "every person" the section would have said "every
Director, Manager or Secretary in a Company is liable"....etc. The
legislature is aware that it is a case of criminal liability which means
serious consequences so far as the person sought to be made liable is
concerned. Therefore, only persons who can be said to be connected with the
commission of a crime at the relevant time have been subjected to action.
14. A reference to Sub-section (2) of Section 141 fortifies the above reasoning
because Sub-section (2) envisages direct involvement of any Director, Manager,
Secretary or other officer of a company in commission of an offence. This
section operates when in a trial it is proved that the offence has been
committed with the consent or connivance or is attributable to neglect on the
part of any of the holders of these offices in a company. In such a case, such
persons are to be held liable. Provision has been made for Directors, Managers,
Secretaries and other officers of a company to cover them in cases of their
proved involvement."
15. It was further opined:
"To sum up, there is almost unanimous judicial opinion that necessary
averments ought to be contained in a complaint before a persons can be
subjected to criminal process. A liability under Section 141 of the Act is
sought to be fastened vicariously on a person connected with a Company, the
principal accused being the company itself. It is a departure from the rule in
criminal law against vicarious liability. A clear case should be spelled out in
the complaint against the person sought to be made liable. Section 141 of the
Act contains the requirements for making a person liable under the said
provision. That respondent tails within parameters of Section 141 has to be
spelled out. A complaint has to be examined by the Magistrate in the first
instance on the basis of averments contained therein. If the Magistrate is satisfied
that there are averments which bring the case within Section 141 he would issue
the process. We have seen that merely being described as a director in a
company is not sufficient to satisfy the requirement of Section 141. Even a non
director can be liable under Section 141 of the Act. The averments in the
complaint would also serve the purpose that the person sought to be made liable
would know what is the case which is alleged against him. This will enable him
to meet the case at the trial."
16. This aspect of the matter has also been considered recently by this Court
in Sabitha Ramamurthy & Anr.v. R.B.S. Channabasavaradhya2 stating:
"Section 141 raises a legal fiction. By reason of the said provision, a
person although is not personally liable for commission of such an offence
would be vicariously liable therefor. Such vicarious liability can be inferred
so far as a company registered or incorporated under the Companies Act,
1956 is concerned only if the requisite statements, which are required to
be averred in the complaint petition, are made so as to make the accused
therein vicariously liable for the offence committed by the company. Before a
person can be made vicariously liable, strict compliance of the statutory
requirements would be insisted"
17. For the reasons aforementioned, we have no other option but to hold that
the allegations made in the complaint petitions even if are taken to be correct
in their entirety do not disclose any offence as against the appellant herein. The
proceedings against him, thus, should have been quashed by the High Court. The
impugned judgment, therefore, cannot be sustained which is set aside
accordingly. The appeal is allowed.
1(2005) 8 SCC 0089
2(2006) 9 SCALE 0212