Venkatachallan Chetty vs A.N.R.M. Narayanan Chetty And … on 15 December, 1914

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Madras High Court
Venkatachallan Chetty vs A.N.R.M. Narayanan Chetty And … on 15 December, 1914
Equivalent citations: (1915) 28 MLJ 140
Author: S Iyer


JUDGMENT

John Edward Power Wallis Kt., C.J.

1. The first defendant was employed by the plaintiffs, a firm of Nattukottai Chetties of “Devakottah in the Ramnad District to carry on business at certain places in Burmah as their agent under the terms of a document, Exhibit A, known as a salary chit executed by the 1st defendant on his appointment. By this he undertook to carry on the business under the direction on the 1st plaintiff and stipulated that on bringing back the cash and accounts to Devakottah and rendering the same he was to get back the salary chit. It is explained that in the case of these agents the return of the salary chit means that the agent has passed his accounts and that his conduct has been satisfactory. The present suit is brought by the plaintiffs for an account of his dealings, and the question is whether it is barred by limitation. The 1st defendant continued to represent the plaintiffs in Burmah after the expiry of the three years originally agreed upon, and the plaintiffs who were dissatisfied with his conduct had some difficulty in getting rid of him as appears from the correspondence. As early as the 24th November 1906 they wired to him to give the keys, accounts and a power to the 4th defendant who was to succeed him, and at length on the 2nd March 1907, having executed a power of attorney in favour of his successor apparently with a view to facilitate the collection of debts owing to the firm, he handed over charge to his successor, who gave him Exhibit IV, a signed receipt, and a list of outstandings which were stated to have been checked, and also apparently, Exhibits G and G1, certain further particulars signed by his successor, which he subsequently handed over to the plaintiff at Devakottah.

2. He then received a sum of Rs. 200 for his travelling expenses and for sweets and other presents to be purchased for the principals. According to the evidence taken in commission for the plaintiffs, Exhibits VIII (a), this sum was not given as a loan, but he could do what he liked with it. It is customary to pay such sums to agents when they are returning. It is not very easy to reconcile this with the earlier statement made by the witness that if any surplus remained it was to be handed over to the principal or an account rendered. On his arrival at Madras, on the 19th March 1907, the 1st defendant wrote Exhibit H and wired Exhibit 1 to the plaintiffs announcing his arrival and stating that he was coming in two days. According to the evidence for the plaintiffs, he came later and handed over Exhibit G and G1 but he never accounted for his agency or got back his salary chit.

3. The question then is, whether in these circumstances the suit is barred. It is now well settled that money is moveable property within the meaning of Article 89 of the Limitation Act. That article applies to suits, by a principal against an agent for moveable property received by the latter and not accounted for and time begins to run, “when the account is, during the continuance of the agency, demanded and refused, or where no such demand is made, when the agency terminates.” The 1st defendant in the present case relies on the termination of the agency. Under Section 201 of the Indian Contract Act an agency is terminated among other ways, by the principal revoking his authority, or by the agent renouncing the business of the agency, or by the business of the agency being completed, and it is from this point under article 89 that time is to begin to run in a suit by the principal for money received or not accounted for. Under Section 218 of the Indian Contract Act, the agent is no doubt bound to pay the principal, the sums received on his account, but it cannot be said that until he does so, the agency is not determined because the business of the Agency is not completed, for the terms of article 89 necessarily involve that the agency may be terminated before the payment is made. I am therefore, with great respect, unable to agree with the observations to that effect in Babu Ram v. Ram Dayal (1890) I.L.R. 12 A. 541 and Fink v. Buldeo Dass (1899) I.L.R. 26 C. 715 which do not seem to have been necessary for the decision as there were other grounds for holding that the agency had not been determined. The better view appears to be that the agency is determined when the agent ceases to represent the principal though his liability in respect of acts done by him as agent may continue.

4. Article 89 was worded in its present form for the first time in the Act of 1877, but in Hurrinath Rai v. Krishna Kumar Bakshi () I.L.R. 14 C. 147 a case under Act IX of 1871, their Lorships of the Judicial Committee observed that whether article 60, or article 90 or article 118 of that Act applied, time must be counted from the day when the defendant ceased to discharge the duties of Dewan by departing from the plaintiff’s service. That was a case of termination of the agency by the agent renouncing the business of the agency within the meaning of Section 201 of the Indian Contract Act. The present would appear to be an equally clear case of termination of the agency by the principal revoking his authority and the agent handing over charge to his successor. I think that on the facts set out above his agency was determined before he left Burmah and that as the suit was instituted more than three years later it is barred if Article 89 applies.

5. It is said however that under Exhibit A the 1st defendant was bound to return to Devakottah, hand over the money and accounts and pass his accounts, and that article 89 is inapplicable as there was an express agreement that the 1st defendant should pass his accounts on his return. The plaintiffs rely on a decision in Jogesh Chandra alias Dhala Ghose v. Benode Lal Roy Choudhry (1909) 14 C.W.N. 122 that where there was a definite contract to render an account yearly, article 115 and not article 89 would be the article applicable in the case of unregistered contracts. This case proceeded to some extent on the authority of a decision in Mati Lal Bose v. Amin Chand Chattopadhay (1902) 1 C.L.J. 211 that in the case of a contract in writing registered, article 89 does not apply, but article 116. The authority of the latter decision has been doubted in Shib Chandra Roy v. Chandra Narain Muherjee (1905) I.L.R. 32 C. 719 and Hafezuddin Mandal v. Jadu Nath Saha (1908) I.L.R. 35 C. 298 and it is in my view conclusive of the present case.

6. As regards the present question it seems to me that the agent’s contract to account to his principal, whether express or implied, is specially provided for in article 89, and if that be so, it cannot having regard to the language of article 115, be brought under that article. I am therefore unable with great respect to follow the decision in Jogesh Chandra alias Dhala Ghose v. Benode Lal Roy Chowdry (1901) I.L.R 24 A. 27 and hold that the suit was barred and that the appeal must be allowed and the suit dismissed with costs throughout.

7. The memorandum of objections is not pressed and is dismissed.

Seshagiri Iyer, J.

8. I agree with the learned Chief Justice.

9. The suit is by the plaintiffs, the principals for an account against the 1st defendant the agent. The Subordinare Judge dis-believed the plea that the accounts were finally rendered and passed a preliminary decree for the taking of accounts. Mr. C.S. Venkatachariar for the 1st defendant in the appeal argues that the suit is barred by limitation.

10. With great reluctance I have come to the conclusion that the contention is well founded. I do not see any way to holding that either article 115 or article 120 of the Limitation Act applies to this case, as contended for by Mr. C.V. Ananthakrishna Iyer for the respondents Nos. 1 to 5. Article 115 is the residuary article relating to contracts and is made applicable only where here is no special provision relating to contracts. Article 120 Is the general residuary article. Article 89 in terms provides for an account respecting moveable property received by the agent from the principal. The Judicial Committee have laid down in Ashghar Ali Khan v. Khurshed Ali Khan (1901) I.L.R 24 A. 27 that money is moveable property within the meaning of this article. The suggestion of the learned Vakil for the respondents Nos. 1 to 5 that as the account claimed by the principal related to monies lent out by the agent on his behalf and which are still unrealised the present claim is not for moveable property received from the principal ignores the fact that the outstandings are part of the original advance made by the plaintiff to the defendant and of its augmentation. It was also contended that as Exhibit A provides for the rendering of the accounts at Devakottah on the return of the agent from Burmah, the agency did not terminate till that was done. I am unable to accept this contention. Under Section 201 of the Contract Act, an agency is terminated by the principal revoking his authority, or by the business of the agency being completed. In this case, the plaintiffs sent a telegram on the 24th November 1906 to the 1st defendant to hand over to one Muthiah the accounts (Ex. VII). On the 18th December 1906, he asked the agent to start immediately (Ex.VI. B). A similar communication was sent on the 20th December 1906 (Ex. VII A). On the 2nd of March 1907, the 1st defendant handed over the accounts to Muthiah and started for Madras, I am of opinion that the agency terminated on this date and as the suit was instituted more than three years after this date, it is barred by limitation.

11. The decisions in Babu Ram v. Ram Dayal (1890) I.L.R. 12 A. 541 and Fink v. Buldeo Dass (1899) I.L.R. 26 C. 715 do not affect this conclusion. It was held in those cases that until an agent for the sale or purchase of goods pays the sale proceeds or delivers the purchased property to the principal, the agency does not terminate. This rests on the ground that the business is not completed with the effecting of the sale or purchase, because it is the essence of an agency in such cases that the sale proceeds or the property purchased should be handed over to the principal.

12. It is said that the 1st defendant took Rs. 200 as passage money for which he had to render an account. There may be a separate accountability for this sum, but this is no part of the business carried on in Rangoon for which the defendant was constituted the agent. It is in evidence that the agent came to Madras, and handed over some accounts to the plaintiffs at Devakottah. That fact will not have the effect of intercepting the termination of the agency. The business in which the 1st defendant was engaged was completed when he handed over the accounts to Muthiah. That was done in obedience to the order of the plaintiffs in that behalf thereby revoking the agency. The 1st to 5th Respondents’ Vakil relied on Jogesh Chandra alias Dhalu Ghose v. Benode Lal Boy Choudhry (1909) 14 C.W.N. 122 for the position that when there is a special contract fixing a date for the rendering of the accounts, the article applicable to suits by principals against agent is 115 and not article 89. The fixing of a date for rendering accounts cannot stop the termination of the agency. The authority relied upon in Jogesh Chandra alias Dhalu Ghose v. Benode Lal Roy Choudhry (1909) 14 C.W.N. 122 has been dissented from by Maclean CJ. in Hafezudain Mandal v. Jadu Nath Saha (1908). I.L.R. 35 C 298. Mr. Justice Mookerjee in Shib Chandra Roy v. Chandra Narain Mukerjee (1905) I.L.R. 32 C.719 held that the article 89 would apply to a case like the present. I am therefore constrained to hold that the suit is barred by limitation.

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