Judgments
Judgments
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad
  4. /
  5. 1966
  6. /
  7. January

Raghunath Swarup Mathur vs Har Swarup Mathur

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|24 April, 1966

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Gangeshwar Prasad, J.
1. This is an appeal by a complainant against the appeHate order of acquittal passed by the learned Sessions Judge of Saharanpur in a case which was started by Raghunath Swarup Mathur, complainant, against Har Swarup Mathur, respondent, for the alleged contravention of Section 269(2) of the Companies Act.
2. At Saharanpur there is a company known as the Co-operative Company Limited (Distillers), Saharanpur. All the shares of the company are held by the family of the parties who are brothers. It is admitted that Har Swarup Mathur was the managing director of the company before the commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960. It is also admitted that he was reappointed as the managing director of the company by a resolution of the general body of shareholders on 30th September, 1961, and began functioning as such. The complaint was that, since the approval of the Central Government was necessary under Section 269(2) of the Companies Act before the reappointment could take effect and the approval had not been received, Har Swarup Mathur committed a breach of the said section by acting as a managing director of the Company.
3. The learned Magistrate who tried the case found the accused guilty under Section 269(2) Of the Companies Act and sentenced him to a fine of Rs. 500 and also to a recurring fine of Rs. 25 per day for every day the contravention continued after the passing of the order. In default of payment of fine the accused was directed to undergo simple imprisonment for a period of one month. It was also provided in the order of the Magistrate that the complainant would receive Rs. 100 as reward including cost of litigation out of the fine, if realised. On appeal by the accused his conviction and sentence were set aside by the learned Sessions Judge and he was acquitted. The complainant has now preferred an appeal to this court.
4. The order of acquittal passed by the learned Sessions Judge is based on the view that Section 269(2) of the Companies Act does not prohibit a person from functioning as a managing director before the receipt of the approval of the Central Government and it cannot, therefore, be said that in doing so the accused contravened the said provisions. We think that the view taken by the learned Sessions Judge is perfectly correct.
5. Section 269(2) of the Companies Act reads as follows ;
" Where a public company or a private company which is a subsidiary of a public company, is an existing company, the re-appointment of a person as a managing or whole-time director for the first time after the commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960, shall not have any effect unless approved by the Central Government."
6. Mr. Asif Ansari, learned counsel , for the complainant, has contended that, inasmuch as the above section provides that the reappointment of a person as managing director shall not take effect unless approved by the Central Government, there is an implied prohibition against acting as a managing director before the receipt of the approval. The contention appears to us to be manifestly untenable. All that Section 269(2) of the Companies Act does is that it prevents the reappointment of a person as a managing or whole-time director for the first time after the commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960, from taking effect, i.e., from being operative in law, unless approved by the Central Government, and there is nothing in the section which contains any prohibition directed against acting or purporting to act under such a reappointment. Before an act can be regarded as an offence there must be a specified statutory prohibition against the commission of the act and such a prohibition is entirely lacking in Section 269(2) of the Companies Act. Mr. Asif Ansari has further contended that even in the absence of such a prohibition in Section 269(2) of the Companies Act, the person acting as a managing director without the approval of the Central Government on the basis of a reappointment made for the first time after the commencement of the Companies (Amendment) Act, 1960, would be liable to punishment under Section 629A of the Act. This contention appears to us to be equally untenable. It would be seen that Section 629A does not create any offence and only provides penalty for such contraventions of the Act for which no specific penalty has been provided elsewhere. Section 629A of the Act presupposes a contravention of the provisions of the Act and there can be a contravention only when there is a direction or prohibition. As we have already observed, Section 269(2) of the Companies Act contains no direction or prohibition, and Section 629A does not, therefore, have any application. It is obvious that the accused was not guilty of the offence with which he was charged under the complaint.
7. We may note that it is a matter of dispute in this case whether or not the Co-operative Company Limited (Distillers), Saharanpur, is a public company or a private company which is a subsidiary of a public company. Section 269(2) of the Companies Act can apply only when the company is a company of the above description. However, even if we assume that the company is a public company or a private company which is subsidiary of a public company, no case was made out against the accused and he was rightly acquitted by the learned Sessions Judge.
8. The appeal has no force and it is accordingly dismissed.
Disclaimer: Above Judgment displayed here are taken straight from the court; Vakilsearch has no ownership interest in, reservation over, or other connection to them.
Title

Raghunath Swarup Mathur vs Har Swarup Mathur

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
24 April, 1966
Judges
  • M Chandra
  • G Prasad