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advocatemmmohan
- advocatemmmohan
- since 1985 practicing as advocate in both civil & criminal laws. This blog is only for information but not for legal opinions
Just for legal information but not form as legal opinion
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Friday, September 9, 2011
The appellants had not approached the Court with clean hands inasmuch as they withheld Aks Sijra, site plan and the demarcation report and award Exhibit PW4/1. Not only this, they raised illegal construction The appellants, who have not only made encroachment on the public land, but also abused the process of the Court are saddled with cost, which is quantified at Rs.5 lacs. Of this, Rs.2.5 lacs be deposited with the Supreme Court Legal Services Committee within two months from today. The balance amount of Rs.2.5 lacs be deposited with the Delhi State Legal Services Committee within the same period. If the appellants fail to deposit the cost, the Secretaries of the two Legal Services Committees shall be entitled to recover the same as arrears of land revenue. « advocatemmmohan
provident fund- The respondent bank is under an obligation to pay provident fund to its employees in accordance with the provisions of statutory Scheme. The respondent bank cannot be compelled to pay the amount in excess of its statutory liability for all times to come just because the respondent bank formed its own trust and started paying provident fund in excess of its statutory liability for some time. The appellants are certainly entitled to provident fund according to statutory liability of the respondent bank. The respondent bank never discontinued its contribution towards provident fund according to the provisions of the statutory Scheme. « advocatemmmohan
The sole respondent, who is none other than the husband of the aggrieved person in an application filed under Section 12 of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (hereinafter referred to for short as ‘the Act’ only) is the revision petitioner. By order dated 19.5.2010 in M.P.No.6596 of 2008, the court of the Judicial First Class Magistrate-I, Thrissur allowed the petition in part granting the following reliefs, in favour of the aggrieved person/wife:- “1. The respondent is restrained from uttering obscene words and from making defamatory statements against the petitioner and also from committing any acts of violence in her working place. 2. The respondent is directed to remove himself from the shared house situated in the ‘A’ schedule property. 3. The respondent is restrained from committing any mischief to the ‘B’ schedule items kept in the ‘A’ schedule house. 4. The respondent is restrained from alienating or from encumbering the property having an extent of 6= cents comprised in survey No.598/1 of Thrissur village.” « advocatemmmohan
sister filed domestic violence case – As a matter of fact, especially when there is no quarrel between the « advocatemmmohan
As a matter of
fact, especially when there is no quarrel between the
Crl. R.P. No.131/2011
6
aggrieved person and her mother/RW2, and in the
absence of the father, aggrieved person/the daughter,
naturally expected to have entrusted the gold
ornaments with RW2/mother. The same fact is further
reiterated by Ext.D6 and D7 series. However, there is
no clear evidence regarding the entrustment of the gold
ornaments with the 1st respondent/1st revision
petitioner. Going by the judgment of the trial court, it
can be seen that in paragraph 11, the learned
Magistrate has observed that "In this circumstances,
what can be inferred is that the gold ornaments came to
the possession of RW2 from the custody of the first
respondent". On the basis of the above observation, the
learned Magistrate further found in paragraph 12 that
"It is already found that the gold ornaments came to the
possession of RW2, mother from the custody of the first
respondent. So the first respondent had not seriously
challenged the quantity of gold ornaments entrusted
with him". Going by the evidence, which read over by
Crl. R.P. No.131/2011
7
the counsel for the contesting parties and the available
materials would show that, the gold ornaments were
finally pledged by RW2, the mother of the contesting
parties. Except the mere suggestion of PW1, there is no
evidence to show that the gold ornaments were
entrusted with RW1. As per the fourth direction,
learned Magistrate directed the first respondent to
return 32 sovereigns of gold ornaments to the
aggrieved person. The value of 32 sovereigns of gold
ornaments is very high and therefore according to me,
in the absence of proper, reliable and acceptable
evidence that, 32 sovereigns of gold ornaments were
entrusted with the first respondent, the learned
Magistrate ought not have issued such direction. The
said direction is liable to be set aside
Thursday, September 8, 2011
the terms of the OTS were independent of any condition that might have come from the respondent in course of negotiations preceding the OTS or any condition that the respondent might have put in its application for grant of OTS. The terms of the OTS would also not be controlled or altered by any decision taken in any regional industrial meeting chaired by the State’s Industrial Commissioner. The terms of the OTS would continue to bind the respondent until those are duly changed and amended by the Corporation. « advocatemmmohan
NON-REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2160 OF 2007
U.P.FINANCIAL CORPORATION & ORS. ... APPELLANTS
VERSUS
M/S SRI BHARAT PAPER UDYOG P.LTD. & ORS. ... RESPONDENTS
J U D G M E N T
Aftab Alam, J.
1 This appeal, by grant of special leave, at the instance of UP Financial
Corporation and its officials is directed against the judgment and order dated
September 7, 2006 passed by a division bench of the Allahabad High Court
on a writ petition (C.M.WP. No. 43800/2006) filed by the respondent
company. By the impugned order, the appellants are directed to issue the no-
2
dues certificate to the writ petitioner-respondent, release to it the title deeds
of the disputed plot and to hand over to it the possession of the property
(mortgaged in the favour of the appellant Corporation). The High Court
order is based on the premise that it was a term of the one time settlement
between the two sides that on payment of the first installment under the
settlement by the respondent, the Corporation would release in its favour a
piece of land, 4000 sq. yds. in area, which the respondent might sell or give
on lease in order to facilitate payment of the remaining installments under
the OTS. The High Court found that contrary to its obligation under the
OTS, the appellant Corporation did not release the land in question in favour
of the respondent. The respondent, therefore, could not be held responsible
for the delay in payment of the installments under the OTS and the liability
of interest on delayed payments could not be fastened on it. The High Court
held that the Corporation's insistence on realizing from the respondent the
amount of interest on delayed payments of the installments (a substantial
sum!) even after it had paid the full amount under the OTS was unjust,
unreasonable, bad and illegal. Hence, the directions to the appellant
Corporation as noted above.
2. The respondent company took a loan from the appellant Corporation.
It defaulted in repayment of the loan and with accumulation of interests the
3
outstanding dues grew to a very large sum. According to the appellant, by
the time the respondent was allowed the facility of OTS, the accumulated
interests amounted to almost Rs.3 crores, which the Corporation waived off.
3. Be that as it may, the respondent made an application to the appellants
for a one time settlement of its outstanding dues. The application was
accepted by the appellants and intimation was given to the respondent vide
letter dated August 5, 2002 containing the terms of the settlement. The
relevant terms of the settlement as stipulated in the aforesaid letter are as
under -
"1. That the settled amount of Rs. 28,50,000/- under OTS shall
be paid as under:
(i) Earnest Money (Already Paid) Rs. 2,85,000.00
(ii) Down payment within one month
i.e. upto 04.09.2002 Rs. 4,28,000.00
(iii) Balance within 8 equal quarterly
installments of Rs. 2,67,125/- each,
commencing from 15.11.2002 Rs. 21,37,000.00
---------------------
Total Rs. 28,50,000/-
---------------------
The repayment schedule as mentioned above should be strictly
adhered to and any deviation will be liable for cancellation of
facilities granted under One Time Settlement while you will be
entitled for interest free period upto 20.09.2002 Interest @ 16%
shall be payable on outstanding OTS amount after interest free
period which shall be payable quarterly on 20th March, 20th
June, 20th September and 20th December.
1. That the installments of OTS fixed will not be in
any case linked with the sale of assets of the unit
4
and the OTS installments fixed on schedule dates
will be paid by the party on the due dates."
(emphasis added)
4. In the letter dated August 5, 2002 by which the respondent's
application for one time settlement of its dues was accepted by the
Corporation, there is absolutely nothing to suggest that on payment of the
first installment within one month i.e. by September 4, 2002, the
Corporation would release the piece of land in question to the respondent so
as to facilitate payment of the subsequent installments by it by selling or
leasing out the land.
5. According to the respondent, however, the terms contained in the
letter dated August 5, 2002 are not conclusive on the issue. The one time
settlement was arrived at after a protracted negotiation involving, besides the
respondent company and the appellant Corporation, the Divisional Udyog
Bandhu, Meerut. Further, in course of the negotiations certain terms had
been arrived at which were finally formalized in the OTS. The counsel
appearing for the respondent invited our attention to a letter dated July 3,
2002 addressed on behalf of the respondent to the Additional Director of
Industries (WZ), Meerut. In this letter, after referring to the decisions of the
Divisional Udyog Bandhu, Meerut, dated November 1, 1999 and March 14,
2001 and further referring to the discussions held between the parties, it was
5
stated that the OTS with the Corporation would be finalised and settled
under certain terms mutually agreed between the parties as enumerated from
paragraph 1 to 4 of the letter. Paragraph 4 on which the counsel laid great
stress reads as under -
"(4) Balance 75% of settled O.T.S. amount is payable within
2 years in 8 equal quarterly installments upto July 2004
with applicable simple interest as per O.T.S. matrix and
guidelines of the Corporation after release of spare
factory land of 4000 sq. yds. as per settlement."
(emphasis added)
6. The counsel also referred to a letter dated August 22, 2006 from the
General Manager of the Corporation to the Executive Director, Udyog
Bandhu, Lucknow. In paragraph 4 of the letter there is a reference to the
release of 4000 sq. yds. of land of the respondent's unit, subject to certain
conditions.
7. He also referred to the minutes of the regional industrial meeting held
on June 22, 2006 under the Chairmanship of the Industrial Development
Commissioner, UP. In those minutes too there is some reference that even
after having received 25% of the OTS amount the Corporation had not
released the land in question in favour of the respondent.
8. The main emphasis of the counsel for the respondent, however, was
on the letter dated July 3, 2002 and it was contended that the condition
6
contained in paragraph 4 of that letter (as quoted above) must be construed
as one of the conditions of the OTS, binding upon the Corporation.
9. Counsel for the appellants, on the other hand, submitted that there was
no such condition in the OTS. On the contrary, the OTS made a clear
stipulation as to levy of interest on delayed payments of the installments.
10. In view of the divergent stands of the parties we asked the counsel for
the Corporation to produce the original records, including the original copy
of the letter dated July 3, 2002, that was submitted on behalf of the
respondent to the Corporation. In pursuance of our direction, the original
record was produced before the court.
11. In the original copy of the letter dated July 3, 2002 paragraph 4 reads
as follows -
"(4) Balance 75% of settled O.T.S. amount is payable within
2 years in 8 equal quarterly installments upto July 2004
with applicable simple interest as per O.T.S. matrix and
guidelines of the Corporation."
After the above, which is in type, the following (on which the entire case of
the respondent is based) appears to have been added by hand -
"after release of spare factory land of 4000 sq. yds. as per
settlement."
7
12. A bare perusal of the letter dated July 3, 2002 as it was originally
submitted to the Corporation and as it is contained in the Corporation's
records, makes it clear that the respondent had acknowledged that after
payment of the first installment the balance 75% of the OTS amount would
be cleared off in eight quarterly installments upto July 2004 and the
condition of release of the land was not there in the letter as it was originally
submitted to the Corporation. The release of land is a later addition, is
evident from the fact that the cut off date July 2004, for clearing off the
entire OTS amount does not match with that condition.
13. In any event, in regard to the payment schedule, the respondent was
bound by the terms of the OTS. Further, the terms of the OTS were
independent of any condition that might have come from the respondent in
course of negotiations preceding the OTS or any condition that the
respondent might have put in its application for grant of OTS. The terms of
the OTS would also not be controlled or altered by any decision taken in any
regional industrial meeting chaired by the State's Industrial Commissioner.
The terms of the OTS would continue to bind the respondent until those are
duly changed and amended by the Corporation.
8
14. For the reasons, discussed above, we are satisfied that the respondent
was not entitled to the relief claimed on its behalf and the writ petition filed
in the High Court was liable to be dismissed. The order of the High Court is,
accordingly, set aside and the writ petition filed on behalf of the respondent
is dismissed. The appeal is allowed with costs amounting to Rs. 20,000/-.
..............................J.
(Aftab Alam)
..............................J.
(R.M. Lodha)
New Delhi;
September 8, 2011.
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