Public Demands Recovery Act, 1914
WHEREAS it is expedient to consolidate and amend the law relating to the recovery of public demands in Bihar and Orissa;
AND WHEREAS the previous sanction of the Governor-General has been obtained, under Section 5 of the Indian Councils Act, 1892, to the passing of this Act:
55 and 52 Vict, c. 14.
It is hereby enacted as follows:
Section 1. Short title, commencement and extent
(1) This Act may be called the Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery Act, 1914;
(2) It shall come into force on such date]2 as the 3[State] Government may appoint by Notification in the Official Gazette; and
(3) It extends to the whole of Bihar [and Orissa except the District of Angul and Sambalpur].
Section 2. Repeal
The following enactments are hereby repealed, namely
(a) The Public Demands Recovery Act, 1895 (Ben. Act I of 1895), and
(b) The Bengal Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1897 (Ben. Act I of 1897).
Certificate proceeding for recovery of loss caused by illegal mining beyond leased area. Proper remedy was to initiate civil suit for damage instead of certificate proceeding on self assessment made by Collector. Certificate proceeding quashed. Devi Construction v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 335.
Continuance of void certificate proceeding. Certificate case that was illegal and invalid at its inception cannot be allowed to proceed simply by introduction of new Certificate officer. Shobha Coir Foam Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 31.
Section 3. Definitions
In this Act, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context
(1) certificate debtor means the person named as debtor in a certificate filed under this Act and includes any person whose name is substituted or added as debtor by the Certificate Officer;
(2) Certificate Holder means the Government or person in whose favour a certificate has been filed under this Act, and includes any person whose name is substituted or added as creditor by the Certificate Officer.
(3) Certificate-Officer means a Collector, a Sub-Divisional Officer, and any officer appointed by a Collector, with the sanction of the Commissioner, to perform the functions of a Certificate Officer;
(4) Movable Property includes growing crops;
(5) Prescribed means prescribed by Rules;
(6) Public Demand means any arrear or money mentioned or referred to in Schedule I, and includes any interest which may by law, be chargeable thereon upto the date on which a certificate is signed under Part II; and
(7) Rules means Rules and forms contained in Schedule II or made under Section 48.
Certificate proceeding dropped on ground that demand made by Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank is not covered under definition of Public demand under Section 3. Complaint case also filed by petitioner against private respondent who has pleaded that he is neither loanee nor Bank has made any agreement with him. Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank is not included under Entry 15 of Schedule I of Act and as such demand is not sustainable. Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 253.
Demand of interest on rent is a public demand. Petitioners have liberty to raise all objections denying their liability to pay same. In case of non-filing of such objections it was open to certificate officer to proceed in accordance with law. Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 1995 (2) BLJ 618 : 1995 (2) BLJR 1187 : 1995 BBCJ 479.
Proceeding to recover any amount of money can only be in relation to a public demand. Payments were on account of contractual obligation and amount sought to be recovered was disputed. Amount sought to be recovered must be determined and only then certificate proceeding can be initiated. Recovery cannot be undertaken when amount is seriously disputed. Arun Kr. Chourasia v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 22.
An appeal is provided against final order passed on petition denying liability. Law contemplates a fair trial followed by a fair appeal. Unless a final order is passed and it is put in execution, there is no question of issuance of warrant of arrest. Dharmendra Kumar v. State of Bihar, 2009 (3) BBCJ 338.
Certificate case cannot be instituted against school teacher for recovery of salary drawn by him on the allegation that appointment was obtained by practising fraud. Power to recover has to be authorised by law. Certificate case quashed. Uma Shaknar Pathak v. State of Bihar, 2010 (3) BBCJ 702.
Only such Government dues can be recovered under provisions of PDR Act, 1914 which may be in nature of public demand within meaning of Act. There was no stipulation in jimmanama that dues would be recoverable as a public demand. Certificate case cannot stand even if dues in question were Government dues. Shanti Devi v. State of Bihar, 2000 (2) PLJR 206.
Certificate proceeding challenged on ground of inherent lack of jurisdiction. Plea raised that money is recoverable as public demand only if person liable to pay the same agreed by a written instrument. In absence of agreement certificate proceeding not maintainable and liable to be quashed. Kartik Kumar v. Bihar State Credit and Investment Corporation Ltd., 2004 (3) BLJ 348.
Recovery of debt from guarantor. Although guarantor is equally liable to repay loan but he cannot be proceeded against under Public Demand Recovery Act as long as he did not separately and independently agree that money payable by him would be recoverable as public demand within meaning of Entry 15 of Schedule-1. Sunil Kumar Mehrotra v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) BLJ 748.
Public demand. Amount payable to Bank can be realized as public demand or not, can be appropriately examined by Certificate Officer by giving opportunity of hearing to petitioner as also Bank. Matter remitted to Certificate Officer for fresh consideration. Smt. Chintamani Sinha v. State, 2001 (3) BLJ 803.
Money advanced for construction of Road Bridge can be recovered as public demand. Certificate case was rightly instituted for recovery of advance amount. Binod Kumar Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2003 (1) BLJ 616.
Officer of Corporations having financial interest cannot be entrusted with duties of enforcement of Act and its provisions against citizens. BICICO having financial interest in promulgating provisions of Act, its employee including high official like Managing Director or Law Officer cannot be entrusted with such sovereign powers. Officer or employee of a Company are not Government employee. Appointment of officer of BICICO as Certificate Officer, held to be without jurisdiction. Babul Smokeless Fuel Industries v. State of Bihar, 2003 (1) BLJ 723.
Initiation of certificate proceeding for recovery of interest. A party cannot approbate and reprobate at the same time. Once payment was accepted as full and final payment, State cannot be permitted to resile and raise a fresh dispute and a fresh demand. Speedcrafts Limited v. State of Bihar, 2008 (2) PLJR 750.
Liability of Guarantors. In the deeds of guarantee, there was no stipulation that money recoverable from sureties would be payable by them to BICICO as a public demand. Certificate proceeding not maintainable and accordingly quashed. Nav Bharat Link Chain Manufacturers Pvt. ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2004 (1) PLJR 487.
Certificate case instituted by BICICO. Such money is recoverable as public demand only if person liable to pay the same has agreed by a written instrument. Nav Bharat Link Chain Manufacturers Pvt. ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2004 (1) PLJR 487. See also Kartik Kumar v. Bihar State Credit & Investment Corporation Ltd., 2004 (2) PLJR 603.
Only specified amount can be recovered as public demand. When no amount has been specified in the agreement certificate proceeding cannot be sustained and accordingly quashed. Bishwanath Pandey v. State of Bihar, 2000 (1) PLJR 102.
Certificate proceeding initiated for recovery of dues out of contract for granting fishery rights. To evade payment on ground that amount cannot be recovered in law as a public demand is inequitable. When dues are pending since long then taking recourse to legal submissions to avoid an admitted debt, violates equity of contract. Appeal dismissed. Katra Fishermen Cooperative Society v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 275.
Section 4. Filing of certificate for public demand payable to Collector
When the Certificate-Officer is satisfied that any public demand payable to the Collector is due, he may sign a certificate in the prescribed form, stating that the demand is due and shall cause the certificate to be filed in his office.
Realisation of liability of Company cannot be enforced against its officers including Director or Managing Director. Any debt payable can be realized only by seizing assets of Company and not by putting in prison Managing Director. Issuance of body warrant against petitioner bad and liable to be quashed. Naresh Kumar v. State of Bihar, 2004 (3) BLJ 328.
Father of appellant took loan from Bihar State Land Development Bank. After death of his father distress and body warrant issued against appellant. It has not been brought to notice of Court whether he was substituted in Court below after death of his father. Bank could have proceeded to realise loan money from security furnished by loanee. It is not necessary for Bank or certificate officer to issue body warrant against appellant. Lallan Singh v. Bihar Raiyat Bhumi Vikas Bank, 2001 (3) BLJ 288.
Section 5. Requisition for certificate in other cases
(1) When any public demand payable to any person other than the Collector is due such person may send to the Certificate Officer a written requisition in the prescribed form:
Provided that in the case of an order framed by a liquidator under the Cooperative Societies Act, 1912 (2 of 1912)4 the written requisition shall be sent by the Registrar of Co-operative Societies, Bihar and Orissa.
(2) Every such requisition shall be signed and verified in the prescribed manner, and except in such cases as may be prescribed, shall be chargeable with a fee of the amount which would be payable under the Court-fees Act, 1870 (VII of 1870) in respect of a plaint for the recovery of a sum of money equal to that stated in the requisition as being due.
Note 1. Damages under Section 68 of the Bengal Tenancy Act, * * * or Section 175 of the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act cannot be included in certificates for arrears of rent.
5[Note 2. Requisitions made in respect of public demands payable to Government shall not be chargeable with any Court-fee (Board's Notification No. 4-4169, dated the 15th July, 1970).
Note 3. Government are pleased to exempt the Encumbered estates in Chota Nagpur and all Court of Wards estates in Bengal having properties in this province from pre-payment of ad valorem and process fees in certificate cases on the understanding that no question of remission of the fees will be considered, however insolvent the estates will be.
Government are also pleased to extend the concession to the Wards estates in Bihar which have difficulty in finding the money for purchase of stamps in advance on the aforesaid condition and also on the condition that estate should be exempted from pre-payment of fee for a given period.
[Memo No. 11198 R-IW-64, dated the 26th October, 1934, of the Government of Bihar and Orissa, Revenue Department.]
Note 4. Government have exempted from pre-payment of ad valorem Court-fee, certificates issued under the Bihar and Orissa Co-operative Societies Act, 1935, on condition that the Court-fee will be the first charge on any sum realised in cash.
The Court-fee payable on a requisition for a certificate under a liquidator's order under Section 44 or an award under Section 48 of the Bihar and Orissa Cooperative Societies Act, 1935, is a Court-fee of 6[75 paise and not an ad-valorem Court-fee.
Petitioner seeking reclamation of house which was auction sold. Neither notice u/s. 7 of Act nor notice of proclamation of sale under Rule 25 of Rule was served on certificate debtor. Certificate Officer rejected petition filed by petitioners for reviewing order on ground of delay. Certificate Officer acted contrary to mandate of law as contained in Sections 7, 9 and 14. Vidya Devi Sinha v. State of Bihar, 1999 (1) BLJ 123 : 1999 (1) PLJR 143 : 1999 (1) BLJR 420.
Initiation of certificate proceeding against petitioner who was Managing Director of his Company for dues against company. Petitioner not having any private or individual agreement. Certificate proceeding cannot be initiated against petitioner in his personal name. Abu Noman v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) PLJR 127.
Certificate proceeding for recovery of loss caused by illegal mining beyond leased area. Proper remedy was to initiate civil suit for damage instead of certificate proceeding on self assessment made by Collector. Certificate proceeding quashed. Devi Construction v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 335.
Continuance of void certificate proceeding. Certificate case that was illegal and invalid at its inception cannot be allowed to proceed simply by introduction of new Certificate Officer. Shobha Coir Foam Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 31.
Certificate proceeding. Defacto doctrine. Petitioner was arrested in course of proceeding. In order to obtain freedom he paid Rs. 50,000/- towards repayment of loan. Very limited application of defacto doctrine. Petitioner cannot be heard to say that his detention was illegal and he is entitled to refund of Rs. 50,000/- and to payment of damages for his illegal detention. Shobha Coir Foam Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 31.
No specific agreement between company and guarantor. No clause that loan money would be recovered as public demand. BICICO precluded from initiating proceeding against petitioner. However, fresh proceeding can be initiated after decision in LPA. Shobha Coir Foam Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 31.
Petitioner took agricultural loan and mortgaged his land as security for repayment of loan amount. Deed of simple mortgage presented for registration. Registrar was of the view that agricultural loan was exempted from stamp duty and registration fee and registered document without it. Later it was realized that loan was taken from Regional Rural Bank and which is not Nationalised Bank. Petitioner not entitled to exemption and recovery certificate. Recovery proceeding quashed. Uma Shankar Sah v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 636.
Loan taken by Transport Co-operative Society. Agreement executed by petitioner in official capacity. They cannot be preceded in their individual capacity. Certificate proceeding against petitioner quashed. Nawal Kishore Pd Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 676.
Cancellation of certificate on ground of fraud. Plea of fraud absent in objection filed by borrower u/s. 9. No civil suit shall lie against grant of recovery of certificate when Certificate-Debtor has omitted to file a petition denying liability or any such petition denying liability on ground upon which he claims to have certificate cancelled or modified and cannot satisfy Court that there was good reason for omission. Impugned order set aside; State Bank of India v. Kishore Kumar Sah, 2005 (3) BLJ 131.
Certificate proceeding against dead person. If certificate proceedings were against persons who were dead, then proceedings are non est. Certificate issued in such proceeding would be void ab initio. However, in case of joint loan if one loanee is alive then certificate case can be instituted against him. Loanee cannot be allowed to say that notwithstanding liability being joint and several, either all three have to be proceeded against or none. Anand Mohan Singh v. Sate of Bihar, 2008 (1) PLJR 443.
Right to information is a facet of fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 19 of Constitution and transparency in working of public offices is need of hour. Enclosing a copy of statement of account along with requisition made under Section 5, must be held to be implicit in provisions of Sections 5 to 9. Copy of statement of account should be furnished to Ioanee/certificate debtor alongwith notice. Binod Kumar Nayak v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 455.
Section 6. Filing of certificate on requisition
On receipt of any such requisition the Certificate Officer, if he is satisfied that the demand is recoverable and that recovery by suit is not barred by law, may sign a certificate, in the prescribed form, stating that the demand is due and shall include in the certificate the fee if any paid under Section 5, sub-section (2); and shall cause the certificate to be filed in his office.
Certificate proceeding for recovery of loan. No recovery can be made under PDR Act when there is no agreement between parties. Certificate proceedings quashed. Satya Narain Singh v. State of Bihar, 2010 (4) BBCJ 214.
Recovery of money after 25 years is barred by limitation. If claim is not enforceable in Civil Court bar cannot be circumvented by resorting to Public Demand Recovery Act. Chandeswar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (4) PLJR 191.
Certificate proceeding cannot be initiated after a delay of 25 years. Law bars recovery on account of delay. Certificate Officer has to consider question of limitation before issuing certificate. Chandeshwar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (3) BBCJ 269.
If claim is not enforceable in Civil Court bar cannot be circumvented by resorting to Public Demand Recovery Act. Chandeshwar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (3) BBCJ 269.
Dues payable to Bank can be recovered as public demand only when debtor has agreed that it shall be recoverable as a public demand. Certificate case quashed with liberty to respondent to take appropriate steps for recovery of dues. Jitendra Kumar Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (1) BBCJ 368.
Section 7. Service of notice and copy of certificate on certificate debtor
When a certificate has been filed in the office of a certificate officer under Section 4 or Section 6, he shall cause to be served upon the certificate-debtor, in the prescribed manner, a notice in the prescribed form and a copy of the certificate.
Petitioner seeking reclamation of house which was auction sold. Neither notice u/s. 7 of Act nor notice of proclamation of sale under Rule 25 of Rule was served on certificate debtor. Certificate Officer rejected petition filed by petitioners for reviewing order on ground of delay. Certificate Officer acted contrary to mandate of law as contained in Sections 7, 9 and 14. Vidya Devi Sinha v. State of Bihar, 1999 (1) BLJ 123 : 1999 (1) PLJR 143 : 1999 (1) BLJR 420.
Demand of interest on rent is a public demand. Petitioners have liberty to raise all objections denying their liability to pay same. In case of non-filing of such objections it was open to Certificate Officer to proceed in accordance with law. Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 1995 (2) BLJ 618 : 1995 (2) BLJR 1187 : 1995 BBCJ 479.
Initiation of certificate proceeding against petitioner who was Managing Director of his Company for dues against company. Petitioner not having any private or individual agreement. Certificate proceeding cannot be initiated against petitioner in his personal name. Abu Noman v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) PLJR 127.
Certificate and criminal case can proceed together because there is no legal bar in it. Both cases may validly continue against petitioner. Uday Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) PLJR 152.
Period of limitation for filing objection. Arrest warrant cannot be issued only on the ground that objection was not filed within prescribed period. Arrest warrant should not be issued in a casual manner. Arrest warrant set aside. Yugal Singh v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 656.
Recovery of Road tax. Authorities directed to work out the balance dues in terms of amnesty notification and on deposit of said amount within specified time, proceeding would stand abated. Sitaram Choudhary v. State of Bihar, 2007 (4) PLJR 788.
On receipt of requisition seeking amendment in original requisition Certificate Officer not awarded certificate so far and without making any amendment issued impugned demand after delay of one and half year which cannot be sustained. Application allowed. Ambika Cold Storage v. State of Bihar, 2004 (2) BLJ 371 : 2004 (2) PLJR 619.
Realization of difference of rental amount under the Act. An amount which is not a Government dues within meaning of Act cannot be realized in certificate proceedings. Lakshmi Fertilizer Agency v. State of Bihar, 2002 (3) PLJR 275.
Right to information is a facet of fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 19 of Constitution and transparency in working of public offices is need of hour. Enclosing a copy of statement of account along with requisition made under Section 5, must be held to be implicit in provisions of Sections 5 to 9. Copy of statement of account should be furnished to loanee/certificate debtor alongwith notice. Binod Kumar Nayak v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 455.
Section 8. Effect of service of notice of certificate
From and after the service of notice of any certificate under Section 7 upon a certificate-debtor
(a) any private transfer or delivery of any of his immovable property situated in the district or, in the case of a Revenue paying Estate, borne on the revenue roll of the district in which the certificate is filed or of any interest in any such property shall be void against any claim enforceable in execution of the certificate; and
(b) the amount due from time to time in respect of the certificate shall be a charge upon such property, to which every other charge created subsequently to the service of the said notice shall be postponed.
Section 9. Filing of petition denying liability
(1) The certificate debtor may within thirty days from the service of the notice required by Section 7, or where the notice has not been duly served then within thirty days from the execution of any process for enforcing the certificate, present to the Certificate Officer in whose office the certificate is filed or to the Certificate Officer who is executing the certificate, a petition, in the prescribed form, signed and verified in the prescribed manner, denying his liability, in whole or in part.
(2) If any such petition is presented to a Certificate Officer other than the Certificate Officer in whose office the original certificate is filed, it shall be sent to the latter officer for disposal.
Certificate proceeding dropped on ground that demand made by Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank is not covered under definition of Public demand under Section 3. Complaint case also filed by petitioner against private respondent who has pleaded that he is neither loanee nor Bank has made any agreement with him. Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank is not included under Entry 15 of Schedule I of Act and as such demand is not sustainable. Kosi Kshetriya Gramin Bank v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 253.
Petitioner seeking reclamation of house which was auction sold. Neither notice u/s. 7 of Act nor notice of proclamation of sale under Rule 25 of Rule was served on certificate debtor. Certificate Officer rejected petition filed by petitioners for reviewing order on ground of delay. Certificate officer acted contrary to mandate of law as contained in Sections 7, 9 and 14. Vidya Devi Sinha v. State of Bihar, 1999 (1) BLJ 123 : 1999 (1) PLJR 143 : 1999 (1) BLJR 420.
Demand of interest on rent is a public demand. Petitioners have liberty to raise all objections denying their liability to pay same. In case of non-filing of such objections it was open to Certificate Officer to proceed in accordance with law. Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 1995 (2) BLJ 618 : 1995 (2) BLJR 1187 : 1995 BBCJ 479.
Secretary of Co-operative Society is not personally liable for dues against Society. Certificate demand set aside. Md. Enamul Haque v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 802.
Period of limitation for filing objection. Arrest warrant cannot be issued only on the ground that objection was not filed within prescribed period. Arrest warrant should not be issued in a casual manner. Arrest warrant set aside. Yugal Singh v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 656.
Loan taken by Transport Co-operative Society. Agreement executed by petitioner in official capacity. They cannot be proceeded in their individual capacity. Certificate proceeding against petitioner quashed. Nawal Kishore Pd. Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 676.
Issuance of distress warrant without deciding objection raised is illegal. Certificate Officer directed to decide objection. Execution of distress warrant stayed. Madan Gopal Lal v. State of Bihar, 2002 (1) BLJ 250.
Certificate proceedings initiated against petitioner for defalcation of certain amount. Petitioner contended that it was not defalcation but advances were made. Finding arrived at after considering evidence. Further appeal is provided against order, writ petition not maintainable. Petition allowed. Lakshmi Paswan v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) BLJ 345.
Recovery of Road tax. Authorities directed to work out the balance dues in terms of amnesty notification and on deposit of said amount within specified time, proceeding would stand abated. Sitaram Choudhary v. State of Bihar, 2007 (4) PLJR 788.
A certificate proceeding contemplated under law proceeded on premise that there is money due and payable either in terms of agreement or contract of under provisions of law. Mere an allegation of Bank with regard to defalcation by employee in course of period of his service would not tantamount ipso facto that amount due was legally payable to Bank by person against whom such allegations are made. Certificate Officer of Siwan Central Cooperative Bank v. State of Bihar, 2006 (2) BBCJ 354.
Disposal of objection by Certificate Officer. Certificate Officer can decide it after doing proper investigation by giving proper opportunity to the parties to adduce proper documents. Anwar Ali v. State of Bihar, 2002 (4) PLJR 255.
Any debt payable by an incorporated Company can be realized only by seizing assets of Company and not by putting in prison M.D. or any of officers of Company. Amar Prasad Sahu v. State of Bihar, 2004 (2) PLJR 515.
No coercive steps can be taken against certificate debtor without deciding objecting filed by him. Certificate Officer erred in directing for issuance of distress warrant without deciding objection raised by petitioner. Madan Gopal Lal v. Sate of Bihar, 2002 (1) PLJR 438.
Only specified amount can be recovered as public demand. When no amount has been specified in the agreement certificate proceeding cannot be sustained and accordingly quashed. Bishwanath Pandey v. State of Bihar, 2000 (1) PLJR 102.
Arrest and attachment of property for realisation of certificate dues cannot be resorted to without considering objection under Section 9. Certificate Officer is legally bound to dispose of objection filed by petitioner. Impugned notice quashed and set aside. Petition allowed. Amar Prasad Sahu v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) PLJR 845.
Dues of bodies and organisation will not become public demand on the basis of entry 7 merely because Collector held some ex-officio position in that body/organization. Collector cannot recover his personal loans as public demand on the plea that money was payable to Collector. Bilas Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 138.
Section 10. Hearing and determining of such petition
The Certificate Officer in whose office the original certificate is filed shall hear the petition, take evidence (if necessary) and determine whether the certificate-debtor is liable for the whole or any part of the amount for which the certificate was signed; and may set aside, modify or vary the certificate accordingly:
Provided that if the Certificate Officer is not the Collector, and considers that the petition involves a bonafide claim of right to property, he shall refer the petition to the Collector for orders, and the Collector, if he is satisfied that a bonafide claim or right of property is involved, shall make an order cancelling the certificate.
No coercive action can be taken against a person who has taken loan without taking final decision under Section 10. Requirement of depositing 40% of certificate dues at the time of filing revision is mandatory but where certificate dues has not been determined certificate debtor cannot be debarred to file a revision petition under Section 62. Birendra Kumar Mehta v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 404.
Secretary of Co-operative Society is not personally liable for dues against Society. Certificate demand set aside. Md. Enamul Haque v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 802.
Demand of ad valorem Court fee. Petitioner liable to pay only fixed Court-fee. Impugned order of Courts below asking petitioner to pay ad valorem Court-fee not in accordance with law. Uday Prakash Dwivedi v. Punjab National Bank, 1997 (2) BLJ 809 : 1997 (2) PLJR 786.
Period of limitation for filing objection. Arrest warrant cannot be issued only on the ground that objection was not filed within prescribed period. Arrest warrant should not be issued in a casual manner. Arrest warrant set aside. Yugal Singh v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 656.
Loan taken by Transport Co-operative Society. Agreement executed by petitioner in official capacity. They cannot be proceeded in their individual capacity. Certificate proceeding against petitioner quashed. Nawal Kishore Pd. Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 676.
Arrest and distress warrants issued against petitioner for realisation of electrical dues. Petitioners willfully not complying with direction to make part payment. Order passed by Certificate Officer having become final, right from certificate appeal upto LPA Court. Writ petition not maintainable. Board held entitled to recover dues by taking recourse to all lawful means. Govind Pd. Kanudia v. State of Jharkhand, 2002 (2) BLJ 58.
Deposit of 40% of certificate dues is mandatory for entertainment of appeal of revision. Harilal Prasad v. State of Bihar, 2004 (3) BLJ 549.
Misappropriation of public account by Nazir. Such amount can be recovered by way of certificate proceeding. Certificate proceeding is directly attracted for recovery of any amount defalcated by public accountant. Lakshmi Paswan v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) PLJR 343.
Section 11. Power to amend certificate by addition, omission or substitution of parties
Subject to the law of limitation the Certificate Officer may at any time amend a certificate by the addition, omission or substitution of the name of any certificate-holder or certificate-debtor or by the alteration of the amount claimed therein:
Provided that when any such amendment is made a fresh notice and copy shall be issued as provided in Section 7.
Power under Section 11 cannot be invoked for amendment of requisition of certificate. Respondent restrained from proceeding against petitioner in certificate cases. Shanti Devi v. State of Bihar, 2000 (2) PLJR 205.
On receipt of requisition seeking amendment in original requisition Certificate Officer not awarded certificate so far and without making any amendment issued impugned demand after delay of one and half year which cannot be sustained. Application allowed. Ambika Cold Storage v. State of Bihar, 2004 (2) BLJ 371 : 2004 (2) PLJR 619.
Institution of certificate case for realization of sales tax dues. Form 9C not issued but still tax deducted. Liability having been created in assessment order for recovery thereof, certificate proceedings were initiated even though petitioner was not at fault, liability arose as a consequence of non-furnishing of Form 9C. Once Coal Companies disclose to Assessing Officer directly that no further forms are liable to be given then after hearing parties, Certificate Officer would proceed to determine the balance liability of petitioner, if any and then proceed to recover the same in accordance with law but till such time, proceedings shall not be proceeded with. Pushpanjali Coal & Coke Pvt. v. State of Bihar, 2008 (2) PLJR 525.
Section 12. Who may execute certificate
A certificate filed under Section 4 or Section 6 may be executed by
(a) the Certificate Officer in whose office the original certificate is filed or
(b) the Certificate Officer to whom a copy of the certificate is sent for execution under Section 13 sub-section (1).
Section 13. Transmission of certificate to another Certificate Officer for execution
(1) A Certificate Officer in whose office a certificate is filed may send a copy thereof, for execution, to any other Certificate Officer in the same district or to the Collector of any other district.
(2) When a copy of a certificate is sent to any such officer, he shall cause it to be filed in his office, and thereupon the provisions of Section 8 with respect to certificates filed in the office of a Certificate Officer shall apply as if such copy were an original certificate:
Provided that it shall not be necessary to serve a second notice and copy under Section 7.
Section 14. When certificate may be executed
No step in execution of a certificate shall be taken until the period of thirty days has elapsed since the date of the service of the notice required by Sections 7 and 11, or when a petition has been duly filed under Section 9, until such petition has been heard and determined:
Provided that, if the Certificate Officer in whose office a certificate is filed is satisfied that the certificate-debtor is likely to conceal, remove or dispose of the whole or any part of such of his movable property as is liable to attachment under this Act, and that the realization of the amount of the certificate would in consequence be delayed or obstructed, he may at any time direct, for reasons to be recorded in writing, an attachment of the whole or any part of such movable property.
Petitioner seeking reclamation of house which was auction sold. Neither notice u/s. 7 of Act nor notice of proclamation of sale under Rule 25 of Rule was served on certificate debtor. Certificate Officer rejected petition filed by petitioners for reviewing order on ground of delay. Certificate officer acted contrary to mandate of law as contained in Sections 7, 9 and 14. Vidya Devi Sinha v. State of Bihar, 1999 (1) BLJ 123 : 1999 (1) PLJR 143 : 1999 (1) BLJR 420.
Arrest of certificate debtor is the last option. First of all property must be attached and sold. Only thereafter certificate debtor can be detained. Detention of petitioner without following provisions of Sections 14 and 15 cannot be sustained. Uday Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) PLJR 152.
Period of limitation for filing objection. Arrest warrant cannot be issued only on the ground that objection was not filed within prescribed period. Arrest warrant should not be issued in a casual manner. Arrest warrant set aside. Yugal Singh v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 656.
Arrest and attachment of property for realisation of certificate dues cannot be resorted to without considering objection under Section 9. Certificate Officer is legally bound to dispose of objection filed by petitioner. Impugned notice quashed and set aside. Petition allowed. Amar Prasad Sahu v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) PLJR 845.
Law does not bar initiation of a criminal case as well as certificate case, both of which are for different purposes and in return of different spheres. Criminal case under Motor Vehicles Act is instituted for penal offences, whereas certificate proceeding is primarily initiated for recovery of demand and civil dues. Arrest and detention of petitioner without following provisions of Section 14 or 15 is not permissible. Uday Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) BBCJ 38.
Section 15. Modes of execution
Subject to such conditions and limitations as may be prescribed, a Certificate Officer may order execution of a certificate
(a) by attachment, and sale, if necessary, of any property, or, in the case of immovable property, by sale without previous attachment, or
(b) by arresting the Certificate-debtor and detaining him in civil prison, or
(c) by both of the methods mentioned in clauses (a) and (b). Explanation to clause (a) and (b).
Explanation to clause (c). The Certificate Officer may, in his discretion, refuse execution at the same time against the person and property of the certificate-debtor.
Arrest of certificate debtor is the last option. First of all property must be attached and sold. Only thereafter certificate debtor can be detained. Detention of petitioner without following provisions of Sections 14 and 15 cannot be sustained. Uday Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) PLJR 152.
Recovery of debt from guarantor. Although guarantor is equally liable to repay loan but he cannot be proceeded against under Public Demand Recovery Act as long as he did not separately and independently agree that money payable by him would be recoverable as public demand within meaning of Entry 15 of Schedule-1. Sunil Kumar Mehrotra v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) BLJ 748.
Agreement for settlement of Municipal Bus Stand for collection of tolls. Settlement in favour of Ex-Services League and petitioner executed agreement in capacity as President. Society alone held liable for recovery. Action be taken against properties of Society. Coercive measure against person or personal properties not justified. Certificate Officer directed to recall distress warrant against petitioner personally and proceed against properties of Ex-services league at its Headquarters. Ramji Mishra v. State of Bihar, 2004 (1) BLJ 136 : 2003 (2) PLJR 452.
Law does not bar initiation of a criminal case as well as certificate case, both of which are for different purposes and in return of different spheres. Criminal case under Motor Vehicles Act is instituted for penal offences, whereas certificate proceeding is primarily initiated for recovery of demand and civil dues. Arrest and detention of petitioner without following provisions of Section 14 or 15 is not permissible. Uday Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (4) BBCJ 38.
Section 16. Certain sales by whom to be held
Where a revenue-paying estate or any share therein is liable to sale in execution of a certificate, such sale may be held either
(a) by the Certificate Officer exercising jurisdiction in the district to the revenue roll of which the estate or share appertains, or
(b) by the Certificate Officer exercising jurisdiction in the district in which such estate or share is situated:
Provided that in the latter case previous notice of the sale shall be sent to the Collector of the district on the revenue roll of which the estate or share is borne.
Section 17. Interest, cost and charges recoverable
7[ There shall be recoverable in the proceedings in execution of every certificate filed under this Act
8[(a) interest upon the public demand to which the Certificate relates at the rate of twelve per centum per annum from the date of the signing of the certificate up to the date of realisation.
(b) such costs as are directed to be paid under Section 54 and
(c) all charges incurred in respect of
(i) the service of notice under Section 7 and of warrants and other processes and,
(ii) all other proceedings taken or realising the demand.
Agricultural loans. Plea that only 6.5% interest can be charged by Banks on agricultural loans as per Jahuri Yadav's case. Case does not lay down correct legal position and it is not to be followed for being violative of Article 141 of Constitution. No direction can be given as prayed for to charge interest on agricultural loan @ 6.5% per annum. Jainath Pd. v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 191 : 1999 (3) PLJR 227.
On receipt of requisition seeking amendment in original requisition Certificate Officer not awarded certificate so far and without making any amendment issued impugned demand after delay of one and half year which cannot be sustained. Application allowed. Ambika Cold Storage v. State of Bihar, 2004 (2) BLJ 371 : 2004 (2) PLJR 619.
Payment of interest, costs and charge in certificate proceedings. Once a certificate is put in execution, interest would be calculated from date of signing of certificates. Recovery of interest is only in course of execution proceeding and not before. Certificate holder accepted payment without certificate being put in execution. A party cannot approbate and reprobate at the same time. Impugned order quashed. Deoki Nandan Kejriwal v. State of Bihar, 2007 (1) BBCJ 271.
Section 18. Property liable to attachment and sale in execution of a certificate
(1) The following property is liable to attachment and sale in execution of a certificate under this Act, namely lands, houses or other buildings, goods, money, bank-notes, cheques, bills of exchange, hundies, promissory notes. Government securities, bonds of other securities for money, debts, shares in Corporation and save as hereinafter mentioned, all other saleable property, movable or immovable belonging to the certificate-debtor, or over which or the profits of which, he has a disposing power which he may exercise for his own benefit, whether the same be held in the name of the certificate-debtor or by any other person in trust for him or on his behalf.
Note. Under Sections 2(1)(a) and (b) and 33 of the Bengal Settled Estates Act, 1904, immovable property, securities and heir looms forming part of an estate settled under that Act can only be sold under the certificate procedure with the Special sanction of the State Government:
Provided that the following particulars shall not be liable to such attachment or sale namely
(a) the necessary wearing-apparel, cooking vessels, beds and bedding of the certificate-debtor, his wife and children, and such personal ornaments as, in accordance with religious usage, cannot be parted with by any woman;
(b) tools of artizans and where the certificate-debtor is an agriculturist his implements of husbandry and such cattle and seed grain as may, in the opinion of the Certificate Officer, be necessary to enable him to earn his livelihood as such, and such portion of agricultural produce or as of any class of agricultural produce may have been declared to be free from liability under the provision of the next following Section;
(c) houses and other buildings (with the materials & the site thereof and the land immediately appurtenant thereto and necessary for their enjoyment) belonging to an agriculturist and occupied by him;
(d) books of account;
(e) a mere right to sue for damages;
(f) any right of personal service;
(g) stipends and gratuities allowed to pensioners of the Government or payable out of any service family pension fund notified in the Official Gazette by the Central or any State Government in this behalf and political pensions;
(h) allowances (being less than salary) of any public officer or of any servant of a railway company or local authority while absent from duty;
(i) the salary or allowances equal to salary of any such public officer or servant as is referred to in clause (h), while on duty, to the extent of
(i) the whole of the salary where the salary does not exceed twenty rupees monthly;
(ii) twenty rupees monthly, where the salary exceeds twenty rupees and does not exceed forty rupees monthly; and
(iii) one moiety of the salary in any other case;
(j) the pay and allowances of persons to whom the Indian Articles of War apply;
(k) all compulsory deposits and other sums in or derived from any fund to which the Provident Funds Act, 1897 (Act IX of 1897) for the time being applies in so far as they are declared by the said Act not to be liable to attachment;
(l) the wages of labourers and domestic servants whether payable in money or in kind;
(m) an expectancy of succession by survivorship or other merely contingent or possible right or interest;
(n) a right to future maintenance;
(o) any allowance declared by any Indian law in force in the State, to be exempt from liability to attachment or sale in execution of a decree;
(p) where the Certificate debtor is a person liable for the payment of land revenue, and movable property which, under any law for the time being applicable to him, is exempt from sale for the recovery of an arrear of such revenue, and
(q) any immovable property which under the Tenancy law for the time being in force in the local area in which the Certificate is to be executed, would not have been liable to sale had the certificate been a decree of a Court of ordinary jurisdiction.
Explanation. The particulars mentioned in clauses (g), (h), (i), (j) and (o) are exempt from attachment or sale whether before or after they are actually payable. (2) Nothing in this Section shall be deemed
(a) to exempt houses and other buildings (with the materials and sites thereof and the lands immediately appurtenant thereto and necessary or their enjoyment) from attachment or sale in execution of certificates for rent of any such house, building, site or land; or
(b) to affect the provisions of the Army Act or of any similar law for the time being in force.
Section 19. Partial exemption of agricultural produce
The State Government may, by general or special order published in the local Official Gazette, declare that such portion of agricultural produce, or of any class of agricultural produce as may appear to the State Government to be necessary for the purpose of providing until the next harvest for the due cultivation of the land and for the support of the certificate-debtor and his family shall in the case of all agriculturists or of any class of agriculturists, be exempted from liability to attachment or sale in execution of a certificate.
Section 20. Payment of moneys, contrary to attachment, to be void
Where an attachment has been made in execution of a certificate, any payment to the certificate debtor of any debt, dividend or other money, contrary to such attachment, shall be void as against all claims enforceable under the attachment.
Period of limitation for filing objection. Arrest warrant cannot be issued only on the ground that objection was not filed within prescribed period. Arrest warrant should not be issued in a casual manner. Arrest warrant set aside. Yugal Singh v. State of Bihar, 2008 (3) PLJR 656.
Section 21. Investigation by Certificate Officer
(1) Where any claim is preferred to or any objection is made to the attachment or sale of any property in execution of a certificate, on the ground that such property is not liable to such attachment or sale, the Certificate Officer shall proceed to investigate the claim or objection:
Provided that no such investigation shall be made where the Certificate Officer considers that the claim or objection was designedly or unnecessarily delayed.
(2) Where the property to which the claim or objection applies has been advertised for sale, the Certificate Officer ordering the sale may postpone it pending the investigation of the claim or objection.
Certificate Officer auctioned land with making any investigation or giving any opportunity of hearing to interested parties. Valuable right of interested persons have been lost. Auction sale can be challenged. Surendra Prasad Mishra v. State of Bihar, 2002 (4) PLJR 134.
Right of third party to challenge auction sale. When the claim is based on title and possession then 12 years being limitation period and with that respect period is within limitation. Limitation does not come as a barrier in present case. Surendra Prasad Mishra v. State of Bihar, 2002 (4) PLJR 134.
Section 22. Evidence to be adduced
The claimant or objector must adduce evidence to show that
(a) (in the case of immovable property) at the date of the service of the notice under Section 7, or
(b) (in the case of movable property) at the date of the attachment, he had some interest in, or was possessed of the property attached.
Section 23. Release of property from attachment or sale
Where upon the said investigation, the Certificate Officer is satisfied that for the reason stated in the claim or objection, such property was not
(a) (in the case of immovable property) at the date of the service of the notice under Section 7, or
(b) (in the case of movable property) at the date of the attachment, in the possession of the certificate-debtor or of some person in trust for him or in the occupancy of a tenant or other person paying rent to him, or that, being in the possession of the certificate-debtor at the said date it was so in his possession, not on his own account or as his own property but on account of or in trust for some other person, or partly on his own account and partly on account of some other person.
The Certificate Officer shall make an order releasing the property, wholly or to such extent as he thinks fit, from attachment or sale.
Section 24. Disallowance of claim to property attached
Where the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the property was at the said date, in the possession of the certificate-debtor as his own property and not on account of any other person, or was in the possession of some other person in trust for him, or in the occupancy of a tenant or other person paying rent to him, the Certificate Officer shall disallow the claim.
Section 25. Saving of suits to establish right to attached property
Where a claim or an objection is preferred, the party against whom an order is made may institute a suit in a Civil Court to establish the right which he claims to the property in dispute; but subject to the result of such suit (if any), the order shall be conclusive.
Section 26. Purchaser's title
(1) Where property is sold in execution of a certificate there shall vest in the purchaser merely the right, title and interest of the certificate-debtor at the time of the sale, even though the property itself be specified.
(2) Where immovable property is sold in execution of a certificate, and such sale has become absolute, the purchaser's right, title and interest shall be deemed to have vested in from the time when the property is sold, and not from the time when the sale becomes absolute.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), in areas in which Chapter XIV of the Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 [* * *] is in force where a tenure or holding is sold in execution of a certificate for arrears of rent due in respect thereof the tenure or holding shall, subject to the provisions of Section 22 * * * of the said Act, pass to the purchaser subject to the interest defined in the said Chapter as protected interests , but with power to annul the interests defined in the said Chapter as incumbrances ;
Provided as follows
(i) a registered and notified incumbrance within the meaning of the said Chapter shall not be so annulled except in the case mentioned therein, and
(ii) the power to annul shall be exercisable only in the manner directed under that Chapter.
9[(4) In areas in which the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908, is in force
(a) the Commissioner may by order, in any case in which he may consider it desirable so to do (i) prohibit the sale of any tenure or portion thereof; (ii) stay any such sale for any period specified in the order;
(b) when a tenure or holding is sold in execution of a certificate for arrears of rent due in respect thereof, sub-section (1) shall not apply, buit the purchaser shall acquire such right therein as if he had purchased at a sale thereof under sub-section (1) of Section 208 of the Chotanagpur Tenancy Act, 1908 in execution of a decree for such arrears.
(5) Where the certificate-holder is a co-sharer landlord and the certificate is for his share of the rent only, the provisions of sub-sections (3) and (4) shall not apply.
10[(6) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), where any estate is sold in pursuance of Section 98 of the Cess Act, 1880 (Bengal Act IX of 1880), in execution of certificate for any amount due to the Collector under the provisions of the said Act in respect of any arrears of cess, of any expenses incurred, of any fee or costs payable, of any notices served, or any fines imposed, or on any other account, the purchaser of the estate shall subject to the payment of any amount due under the provisions of the Bengal Land-Revenue Sales Act, 1859 (Bengal Act XI of 1859) or the Bengal Land-Revenue Sales Act, 1868 (Bengal Act VII of 1868) in respect of the arrears of land revenue accruing due in respect of that estate on or before the date of the sale
(i) in the case of a sale of one or more shares, acquire the shares, subject to all incumbrances, and
(ii) in the case of a sale of the entire estate, acquire the estate free from all incumbrances with the following exceptions namely
First Istamrarior mukarrari tenures which have been held at a fixed rent from the time of the permanent settlement.
Secondly Tenures existing at the time of permanent settlement which have not been held at a fixed rent;
Thirdly Tenures created or recognised by the settlement proceedings of any current temporary settlement, as tenures bearing a rent which is fixed for the period of such settlement;
Fourthly Tenures of lands whereon dwelling houses, manufactories or other permanent buildings have been erected, or whereon permanent gardens, plantations, tanks, canals, places of worship or burning or burying grounds have been made:
Provided that
(a) Where a separate account has been opened or one or more shares, the share or shares from which the arrears may be due shall be put up to sale in the first instance but if in any case of such sale the highest bid for share or shares put up to sale does not reach a sum sufficient to liquidate the amount of the certificate and costs including the costs of sale, the Certificate Officer shall stop the sale; and shall declare that the entire estate shall be put up to sale for the arrears of cess and costs of the certificate at a further date; unless the other recorded sharer or sharers or one or more of them shall within a period of thirty days from the date on which the share or shares were last put up to sale, purchase the shares in arrears by paying the said amount of certificate due from such share;
(b) where the entire estate is sold, it shall, in the first instance be put up to auction subject to incumbrances created by registered instruments and if the bidding reaches a sum sufficient to liquidate the amount of the certificate and costs including the costs of sale, the estate shall be sold subject to such incumbrances;
(c) where the bidding for the entire estate does not reach a sum sufficient to liquidate the amount of the certificate and costs as aforesaid and if the certificate-holder thereupon desires that the estate be sold with power to annul all incumbrances, the officer holding the sale shall adjourn the sale and make a fresh proclamation for sale announcing that the estate shall be put to auction and sold with power to annul all incumbrances upon a future day specified therein, and upon that day, the estate shall be put up to auction and sold with power to annul all incumbrances;
(d) where a purchaser or an estate having power to annul an incumbrance under the foregoing clause of this proviso desires to annul the same he may within one year from the date of the sale or the date on which he first has notice of the incumbrance, whichever is later, present to the Certificate Officer an application in writing, requesting him to serve on the incumbrancer a notice in the prescribed from declaring that the incumbrance is annulled, and thereupon the Certificate Officer shall cause the notice to be served in the prescribed manner and the incumbrance shall be deemed to be annulled from the date on which it is so served;
(e) reasonable facilities may be allowed to the certificate-debtor to pay the amount of the certificate and costs at any time before the date of sale of the estate in such number of instalments as the Collector may think fit;
(f) notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, the certificate debtor shall have the right to deposit the amount of certificate and costs including the cost of sale within ninety days after the date of sale and on the amount being so deposited, the Certificate Officer shall make an order setting aside the sale.]
11[Explanation. For the purposes of this proviso, when there is a separate account for the State of Bihar in respect of any share of an estate which has vested in that State under any provision of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 (Bihar Act XXX of 1950), the expression entire estate shall not include the share or interest which has so vested in the State and the expression the other recorded sharer or sharers or one or more of them shall not include the State of Bihar.]
Section 27. Suit against purchaser not maintainable on ground of purchase being on behalf of plaintiff
(1) No suit shall be maintained, against any person claiming title under a purchase certified by the Certificate Officer in such manner as may be prescribed on the ground that the purchase was made on behalf of the plaintiff or on behalf of some one through whom the plaintiff claims.
(2) Nothing in this Section shall bar a suit to obtain a declaration that the name of any purchaser certified as aforesaid was inserted in the certificate fraudulently or without the consent of the real purchaser or interfere with the right of a third person to proceed against that property, though ostensibly sold to the certified purchaser, on the ground that it is liable to satisfy a claim of such third person against the real owner.
Section 28. Application to set aside sale of immovable property on deposit
(1) Where immovable property has been sold in execution of a certificate, the certificate-debtor, or any person whose interests are affected by the sale, may, at any time within thirty days from the date of the sale, apply to the Certificate Officer to set aside the sale, on his depositing
(a) for payment to the certificate-holder; the amount specified in the proclamation of sale as that for the recovery of which the sale was ordered with interest thereon at the rate of six and a quarter per centum per annum calculated from the date of the sale to the date when the deposit is made;
(b) for payment to the purchaser, as penalty, a sum equal to ten percent of the purchase money, but not less than one rupee;
(c) for payment to the Collector (where the certificate is for a public demand payable to the Collector), such outstanding charges due to the Government under any law for the time being in force as the Collector certifies to be payable by the certificate-debtor.
(2) Where a person makes an application under Section 29 for setting aside the sale of his immovable property, he shall not unless he withdraws that application, be entitled to make or prosecute an application under this Section.
Note. In computing the 30 days prescribed in Section 28(1), the day of sale should be excluded.
Sale of immovable property. Certificate Officer can extend time to deposit the amount for setting aside sale of immovable property. Narayan Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2008 (2) BBCJ 632.
Section 29. Application to set aside sale of immovable property on ground of non-service of notice or irregularity
(1) Where immovable property has been sold in execution of a certificate, the certificate holder, the certificate-debtor or any person whose interests are affected by the sale, may at any time within sixty days from the date of the sale, apply to the Certificate Officer to set aside the sale on the ground that notice was not served under Section 7 or on the ground of a material irregularity in the certificate proceedings or in publishing or conducting the sale:
Provided as follows
(a) no sale shall be set aside on the ground of any such material irregularity unless the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the applicant has sustained substantial injury thereby; and
(b) before the Certificate Officer passes an order setting aside a sale under this Section he shall require the certificate-debtor to pay the amount actually found due from him.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) the Certificate Officer may entertain an application made after the expiry of sixty days from the date of the sale if he is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for so doing.
Section 30. Application to set aside sale on ground that certificate-debtor had no saleable interest or that property did not exist
The purchaser at any sale or immovable property in execution, of a certificate may, at any time within sixty days from the date of the sale, apply to the Certificate Officer to set aside the sale on the ground that the certificate-debtor had no saleable interest in the property sold or that the property did not exist at the time of the sale, or that the purchaser has suffered substantial injury owing to any misdescription in the sale proclamation of the interest of the certificate-debtor in the property sold.
Section 31. Sale when to become absolute or be set aside
(1) Where no application is made under Section 28, Section 29 or Section 30, or where such an application is made and disallowed, the Certificate Officer shall make an order confirming the sale and thereupon the sale shall subject to the provisions of sub-section (2) of Section 29 become absolute.
(2) Where such an application is made and allowed, and where in the case of an application under Section 28, the deposit required by that Section is made within thirty days from the date of the sale, the Certificate Officer shall make an order setting aside the sale:
Provided that no order shall be made unless notice of the application has been given to all persons affected thereby.
Grant of sale certificate is not necessary for filing application for delivery of possession. Application for delivery of possession filed after six years of dismissal of suit is barred by limitation. Right of auction purchaser extinguished on expiry of limitation. Petition dismissed. Satyanarain Pandey v. State of Bihar, 2005 (1) BLJ 172.
Section 32. Disposal of proceeds of execution
(1) Whenever assets are realised, by sale or otherwise in execution of certificate, they shall be disposed of in the following manner
(a) there shall first be paid to the certificate-holder the cost incurred by him;
(b) there shall, in the next place, be paid to the certificate-holder the amount due to him under the certificate in execution of which the assets were realised;
(c) if there remains a balance after these sums have been paid, there shall be paid to the certificate-holder therefrom any other amount recoverable under the procedure provided by this Act which may be due to him upon the date upon which the assets were realised; and
(d) the balance (if any) remaining after the payment of the amount (if any) referred to in clause (c) shall be paid to the certificate-debtor.
(2) If the certificate debtor disputes any claim made by the certificate-holder to receive any amount referred to in clause (c), the Certificate Officer shall determine the dispute.
Section 33. Application by purchaser resisted or obstructed in obtaining possession of immovable property
(1) If the purchaser of any immovable property sold in execution of a Certificate is resisted or obstructed by any person in obtaining possession of the property he may apply to the Certificate Officer.
(2) The Certificate Officer shall fix a day for investigating the matter, and shall summon the party against whom the application is made to appear and answer the same.
Section 34. Procedure on such application
(1) If the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the resistance or obstruction was occasioned without any just cause by the certificate-debtor or by some person on his behalf; he shall direct that the applicant be put into possession of the property; and if the applicant is still resisted or obstructed in obtaining possession, the Certificate Officer may also, at the instance of the applicant, order the certificate-debtor or such other person to be detained in the civil prison for a term which may extend to thirty days.
(2) If the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the resistance or obstruction was occasioned by any person (other than the certificate-debtor) claiming in good faith to be in possession of the property on his own account or on account of some person other than the certificate-debtor, the Certificate Officer shall make an order dismissing the application.
Section 35. Dispossession by purchaser
(1) Where any person, other than the certificate debtor, is dispossessed by the purchaser of immovable property which has been sold in execution of certificate, he may make application to the Certificate Officer complaining of such dispossession.
(2) The Certificate Officer shall fix a day for investigating the matter and shall summon the party against whom the application is made to appear and answer the same.
Section 36. Bona fide claimant to be restored to possession
Where the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the applicant was in possession of the property on his own account or on account of some person other than the certificate-debtor he shall direct that the applicant be put into possession of the property.
Section 37. Orders conclusive subject to suit in a Civil Court
Any person not being a certificate-debtor, against whom an order is made under Section 36 or Section 34, sub-section (2), may institute a suit in a Civil Court to establish the right which he claims to the present possession of the property; but subject to the result of such (if any) the order shall be conclusive.
Section 38. Power of arrest and detention
A certificate-debtor, may be arrested in execution of a certificate at any hour and on any day, except as provided in Section 56, and when so arrested, shall as soon as practicable, be brought before the Certificate Officer; and his detention may be in the civil prison of the district in which the Certificate Officer ordering the detention exercises jurisdiction or, where such civil prison does not afford suitable accommodation in any other place which the State Government may appoint for the detention of persons ordered by the Civil Courts of such district to be detained:
Provided that, if the amount entered in the warrant of arrest as due under the certificate, and the costs of the arrest, have been paid either to the Certificate Officer or to the officer arresting the certificate-debtor such officer shall at once release him.
Realization of Bank loan by way of certificate proceeding. Neither equity nor law is in favour of appellant. Taking a loan from Bank rests on a contract which rests on equity. Appellant has violated every principle of equity in not discharging a tone for 17 years. Law cannot come to his aid. Appeal dismissed. Anil Srivastova v. State Bank of India, 2003 (2) PLJR 289.
Section 39. Release from arrest and re-arrest
The Collector may order the release of a certificate-debtor who has been arrested in execution of a certificate upon being satisfied that he has disclosed the whole of his property and has placed it at the disposal of the Certificate Officer and that he has not committed any act of bad faith.
(2) If the Certificate Officer has grounds for believing the disclosure made by a certificate-debtor under sub-section (1) to have been untrue he may order the rearrest of the certificate-debtor in execution of the certificate, but the period of his detention in the civil prison shall not in the aggregate exceed that authorised by Section 40, sub-section (1):
Provided that if such order is passed by a Certificate Officer other than the Collector, the previous sanction of the Collector shall be necessary.
Section 40. Detention in, and release from prison
(1) Every person detained in the civil prison in execution of a certificate may be so detained
(a) where the certificate is for a demand of an amount exceeding fifty rupees for a period of six months, and
(b) in any other case for a period of six weeks:
Provided that he shall be released from such detention
(i) on the amount mentioned in the warrant for his detention being paid to the office-in-charge of the civil prison, or
(ii) on the certificate being otherwise fully satisfied or cancelled, or
(iii) on the request of the person (if any) on whose requisition the certificate was filed or of the Collector, or
(iv) on the omission by the person (if any) on whose requisition the certificate was filed to pay the subsistence allowance fixed by the Certificate Officer:
Provided, also, that he shall not be released from such detention under clause (ii) or clause (iii) without the order of the Certificate Officer.
(2) A certificate-debtor released from detention under this Section shall not merely by reason of his release, be discharged from his debt; but he shall not be liable to be re-arrested under the certificate in execution of which he was detained in the civil prison.
Non-compliance with demand. Detention for more than 6 months is illegal. Petitioner is entitled to claim compensation for illegal detention. Binod Kumar Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2003 (1) BLJ 616.
Section 41. Release on ground of illness
At any time after a warrant for the arrest of a certificate-debtor has been issued, the Certificate Officer may cancel it on the ground of his serious illness;
(2) Where a certificate-debtor has been arrested, the Certificate Officer may release him if in the opinion of the Certificate Officer, he is not in a fit state of health to be detained in the civil prison.
(3) Where a certificate-debtor has been committed to the civil prison, he may be released therefrom
(a) by the Collector, on the ground of the existence of any infections or contagious disease, or
(b) by the Certificate Officer, or the Collector, on the ground of his suffering from any serious illness.
(4) A certificate-debtor released under this Section may be re-arrested, but the period of his detention in the civil prison shall not in the aggregate exceed that authorised by Section 40, sub-section (1).
Section 42. Prohibition of arrest or detention of women and persons under disability
Notwithstanding anything in this Act, the Certificate Officer shall not order the arrest, or detention in the civil prison of
(a) a woman, or
(b) any person who, in his opinion, is a minor or of unsound mind.
Section 43. Suit in Civil Court to have certificate cancelled or modified
The certificate-debtor may, at any time within six months
(1) from the service upon him of the notice required by Section 7, or
(2) if he files, in accordance with Section 9, a petition denying liability from the date of the determination of the petition, or
(3) if he appeals, in accordance with Section 60, from an order passed under Section 10 from the date of the decision of such appeal.
bring a suit in a Civil Court to have the certificate cancelled or modified and for any further consequential relief to which he may be entitled:
Provided that no such suit shall be entertained
(a) in any case, if the certificate-debtor has omitted to file, in accordance with Section 9 a petition denying liability, or to state in his petition denying liability the ground upon which he claims to have the certificate cancelled or modified, and cannot satisfy the Court that there was good reason for the omission, or
(b) in the case of a certificate for a demand mentioned in Article 1, or Article 2 of Schedule I, if the certificate-debtor has not paid the amount due under the certificate to the Certificate Officer
(i) within thirty days from the service of the notice required by Section 7, or
(ii) if he has filed in accordance with Section 9, a petition denying liability then within thirty days from the date of the determination of the petition, or
(iii) if he has appealed in accordance with Section 60 then within thirty days from the decision of the appeal:
Provided also that no sale in execution of a certificate shall be set aside in such a suit unless the purchaser has been made a party to the suit and until a direction is made for the refund of the amount of the purchase money, with such interest (if any) as the Court may allow.
Recovery of agricultural loan. Certificate case filed by Bank after nine years. Certificate proceedings was not legally maintainable in view of decree of Civil Court in title suit. Once Civil Court held that amount in question was not recoverable as public demand, no proceeding for recovery of it could legally be initiated under PDR Act. Narbdeshwar Jha v. State of Bihar, 1999 (2) BLJ 165.
Demand of ad valorem Court fee. Petitioner liable to pay only fixed Court-fee. Impugned order of Courts below asking petitioner to pay ad valorem Court-fee not in accordance with law. Uday Prakash Dwivedi v. Punjab National Bank, 1997 (2) BLJ 809 : 1997 (2) PLJR 786.
Cancellation of certificate on ground of fraud. Plea of fraud absent in objection filed by borrower u/s. 9. No civil suit shall lie against grant of recovery of certificate when certificate-debtor has omitted to file a petition denying liability or any such petition denying liability on ground upon which he claims to have certificate cancelled or modified and cannot satisfy Court that there was good reason for omission. Impugned order set aside. State Bank of India v. Kishore Kumar Sah, 2005 (3) BLJ 131.
It is imperative for borrower or certificate-debtor to raise a ground or a justifiable reason for omission to satisfaction of Court. Suit is permissible only on ground of plea of fraud which has to be established conclusively. Omission of such a vital point in objection u/s. 9 while questioning liability speaks volume about conduct of certificate-debtor. Impugned order of cancellation of certificate suffering from vice of illegality and non-application of mind and accordingly quashed. State Bank of India v. Kishore Kumar Sah, 2005 (3) BLJ 648.
Section 44. Grounds for cancellation or modification of certificate by Civil Court
(1) No certificate duly filed under this Act shall be cancelled by a Civil Court, except on one of the following grounds, namely
(a) that the amount stated in the certificate was actually paid or discharged before the signing of the certificate;
(b) that no part of the amount stated in the certificate was due by the certificate debtor to the certificate holder; or
(c) that, in the case of fines imposed, or costs, charges, expenses, damages, duties or fees adjudged, by a Collector or a public officer under any law or any Rule having the force of law, the proceedings of such Collector or public officer were not in substantial conformity with the provisions of such law or Rule, and that in consequence the certificate-debtor suffered substantial injury from some error, defect or irregularity in such proceedings.
(2) No certificate duly filed under this Act shall be modified by a Civil Court except on one of the following grounds namely
(i) that a portion of the alleged debt was not due; or
(ii) that the certificate-debtor has not received credit for any portion which he has paid.
Note. The mere fact that a greater sum is claimed as due in a certificate made under this Act does not render the certificate and the notice bad so as to exclude the operation of the Rule of limitation laid down in Section 43.
Section 45. Suit to recover possession of, or to set aside sale of immovable property, where notice of certificate not served
Notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained, a sale of immovable property in execution of a certificate shall not be held to be void on the ground that the notice required by Section 7 has not been served; but a suit may be brought in a Civil Court to recover possession of such property or to set aside such sale on the ground that such notice has not been served:
Provided that no such suit shall be entertained
(a) if instituted more than one year from the date on which possession of the property was delivered to the purchaser; or
(b) if the certificate-debtor has made appearance in the certificate proceedings, or has applied to the Certificate Officer under Section 28 to set aside the sale.
Section 46. General bar to jurisdiction of Civil Courts, save where fraud alleged
Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, every question arising, between the certificate-holder & the certificate-debtor, or their representatives, relating to the making, execution, discharge or satisfaction of a certificate duly filed under this Act, or relating to the confirmation or setting aside by an order under this Act, of a sale held in execution of such certificate, shall be determined no by suit but by order of the Certificate Officer before whom such question arises, or of such other Certificate Officer as he may determine:
Provided that a suit may be brought in a Civil Court in respect of any such question upon the ground of fraud.
It is imperative for borrower or certificate-debtor to raise a ground or a justifiable reason for omission to satisfaction of Court. Suit is permissible only on ground of plea of fraud which has to be established conclusively. Omission of such a vital point in objection u/s. 9 while questioning liability speaks volume about conduct of certificate-debtor. Impugned order of cancellation of certificate suffering from vice of illegality and non-application of mind and accordingly quashed. State Bank of India v. Kishore Kumar Sah, 2005 (3) BLJ 648.
Rents of houses and shops allotted by Market Committee cannot be recovered as public demand in absence of registered agreement between parties. In absence of written agreement certificate proceeding not maintainable. Lal Chand Panna Lai v. State of Bihar, 2007 (4) BBCJ 419 : 2007 (4) PLJR 590.
Ouster of jurisdiction of Civil Court. Where question referred to a stage after conclusion of certificate proceeding and consequent upon grant of certificate to certificate holder, bar does not apply. Chairman, BSEB v. Magadh Re-rolling Mill, 2001 (2) BBCJ 98 : 2001 (2) PLJR 286.
Section 47. Effect of Rules in Schedule II
The Rules in Schedule II shall have effect as if enacted in the body of this Act, uritil altered or annulled in accordance with the provisions of this part.
In case sale is postponed beyond a period of 7 days, fresh publication is necessary. Surendra Prasad Mishra v. State of Bihar, 2002 (4) PLJR 134.
Section 48. Power of Board of Revenue to make Rules as to procedure
(1) The Board of Revenue may, after previous publication and with the previous sanction of the State Government, make Rules, regulating the procedure to be followed by persons making requisitions under Section 5 and by Collectors and Certificate Officers acting under this Act, and may be such Rules, alter, add to or annul any of the Rules in Schedule II.
(2) Such Rules shall not be inconsistent with the provisions in the body of this Act, but subject thereto, may, in particular and without prejudice to the generality of the power conferred by sub-section (1), provide for all or any of the following matters, namely
(a) the signature and verification of requisition made under Section 5;
(b) the Certificate Officers to whom such requisition should be addressed;
(c) the cases in which such requisition shall not be chargeable with a fee;
(d) the service of notices issued under Section 7, the service of other notices or processes issued under this Act and the manner in which service may be proved;
(e) the signing and verification of petitions, under Section 9, denying liability;
(f) the transfer of such petitions to other officers for disposal;
(g) the scale of charges to be recovered under Section 17, clause (c);
(h) the maintenance and custody while under attachment, of live stock and other movable property, the fees to be charged for such maintenance and custody, the sale of such live-stock and property, and the disposal of the proceeds of such sale;
(i) the registers, books and accounts to be kept by Certificate Officers, and the inspection thereof by the public;
(j) the fee to be charged for the inspection of the register or certificates maintained under Rule 55, in Schedule II;
(k) the recovery of expenditure on the certificate establishment by the levy of costs under Section 17, clause (b), and Section 54;
(l) the recovery of poundage fees;
(m) the forms to be used under this Act.
Section 49. Publication and effect of Rules made under Section 48
(1) Rules made and sanctioned under Section 48 shall be published in the Official Gazette and shall, from the date of publication or from such other date as may be specified have the same force and effect as if they had been contained in Schedule II.
(2) All references in this Act to the said Schedule II shall be construed as referring to that Schedule as for the time being amended by such Rules.
Section 50. Persons under disability
Where the Certificate Officer is satisfied that the certificate-debtor is minor or of unsound mind he shall in any proceeding under this Act, permit him to be represented by any suitable person.
Section 51. Continuance of certificate
No certificate shall cease to be in force by reason of
(a) the property to which the demand relates ceasing to be under the charge or management of the Court of Wards or the revenue-authorities; or
(b) the death of the certificate-holder.
Section 52. Procedure on death of certificate-debtor
(1) Where certificate-debtor dies before the certificate has been fully satisfied, the Certificate Officer may, after serving upon the legal representative of the deceased a notice in the prescribed form proceed to execute the certificate against such legal representative and the provisions of this Act shall apply as if, such legal representative were the certificate debtor and as if such notice were a notice under Section 7:
Provided that where the certificate is executed against such legal representative, he shall be liable only to the extent of the property of the deceased which has come to his hands and has not been duly disposed of; and, for the purpose of ascertaining such liability, the Certificate Officer executing the certificate may, of his own motion or on the application of the certificate-holder compel such legal representative to produce such accounts as the Certificate Officer thinks fit.
(2) for the purposes of this Section, property in the hands of a son or other descendant which is liable under Hindu Law for the payment of the debt of a deceased ancestor, in respect of which a certificate has been filed, shall be deemed to be property of the deceased which has come to the hands of the son or other descendant as his legal representative.
Where certificate debtor dies during pendency of certificate proceeding then Certificate Officer can proceed against legal representatives of deceased brought on record and after serving them notice as prescribed under the Act. Section 52 does not confer power to Certificate Officer to continue proceeding against legal representatives even if certificate proceeding was initiated against dead person. Smt. Gita Devi v. State of Bihar, 2000 (1) PLJR 591.
A certificate proceeding cannot be finally dropped after certificate debtor is declared insolvent and his legal heirs/representatives are alive and a suit or other proceeding is pending. However, straightaway issuance of attachment order/distress warrant against heirs of original certificate debtor is not justified. Nand Kishore Singh v. State of Bihar, 2000 (1) BLJ 278.
Section 53. Cancellation of certificate
(1) The Certificate Officer shall cancel any certificate at the request of the certificate holder.
(2) The Certificate Officer may cancel any certificate filed under Section 6 if the certificate-holder is not reasonably diligent.
12[(3) The Certificate Officer may cancel any certificate under which only an amount not exceeding 13[Rs. 25.00 (Rs. twenty five) on account of interest, cost and charges mentioned in Section 17 remains to be recoverable in a certificate proceeding if
(i) the certificate-debtor has paid the entire amount mentioned in the certificate, as filed in the office of Certificate Officer under Section 4 or Section 6, without contest before or after the issue of notice under Section 7 of this Act;
(ii) the certificate-debtor is not traceable.]
Section 54. Cost
Subject to such limitation as may be prescribed, the award of any costs of, incidental to any proceeding under this Act shall be in the discretion of the officer presiding, and he shall have full power to direct by whom and to what extent such costs shall be paid.
Section 55. Compensation
If the Certificate Officer is satisfied that any requisition under Section 5 was made without reasonable cause, he may award to the certificate-debtor such compensation as the Certificate Officer thinks fit;
and the amount so awarded shall be recoverable from the certificate-holder under the procedure provided by this Act for recovery of costs.
14[55-A. Restitution consequent on reversal or modification of order. (1) When the order of a Certificate Officer is set aside or modified by reason of any order passed under Sections 60, 62 or 63 the Certificate Officer shall have full power to give effect to such order and may for that purpose direct that the certificate debtor shall be restored to possession of the property sold in consequence of the order so set aside or modified or receive such compensation from the certificate-holder as the Certificate Officer may thinks fit, and such compensation shall be recoverable as a public demand.
(2) An order passed under sub-section (1) shall for the purposes of Section 60 deemed to be an original order.]
Section 56. Entry into dwelling-house
(1) No person executing any warrant of arrest issued under this Act, or any process issued under this Act directing or authorizing the attachment of movable property, shall enter any dwelling-house after sunset or before sunrise.
(2) No outer door of a dwelling-house shall be broken open unless the dwelling-house or a portion thereof is in the occupancy of the certificate debtor and he or any other occupant of the house refuses or in any way prevents access thereto; but when the person executing any such warrant or other process has duly gained access to any dwelling-house, he may break open the door of any room and enter, if he has reason to believe that entering into the room is necessary in order to enable him to execute the process.
(3) Where a room in a dwelling-house is in the actual occupancy of a woman who, according to the customs of the country, does not appear in public, the person executing the process shall give notice to her that she is at liberty to withdraw; and, after allowing a reasonable time for her to withdraw and giving her reasonable facility for withdrawing, he may enter such room for the purpose of executing the process; and if the process before the attachment of property, he may at the same time use every precaution, consistent with this Section, to prevent its clandestine removal.
Section 57. Application of Act XVIII of 1850
Every Collector, Certificate Officer, Assistant Collector or Deputy Collector acting under this Act, and every Government Officer making a requisition under Section 5, shall, in the discharge of his functions under this Act, be deemed to be acting judicially within the meaning of the Judicial Officers' Protection Act, 1850.
Section 58. Officer to have powers of Civil Court for certain purposes
Every Collector, Certificate Officer, Assistant Collector or Deputy Collector acting under this Act, shall have the powers of a Civil Court for the purposes of receiving evidence, administering oaths, enforcing the attendance of witnesses and compelling the production of documents.
Section 59. Control over officers
All Certificate Officers (not being Collectors), Assistant Collectors and Deputy Collectors shall, in the performance of their duties under this Act, be subject to the general supervision and control of the Collector.
Section 60. Appeal
(1) An appeal from any original order made under this Act shall lie
(a) if the order was made by an Assistant Collector or a Deputy Collector, or by a Certificate Officer not being the Collector to the Collector; or
(b) if the order was made by the Collector to the Commissioner:
Provided that no appeal shall lie from any order setting aside a sale on an application made under Section 28:
15[Provided further that no appeal against an order passed under Section 10 shall be entertained unless the appellate authority is satisfied that the appellant has paid forty percent of the amount determined under that Section or such amount as the appellant admits to be due from him, whichever is greater.]
(2) Every such appeal must be presented, in case (a), within fifteen days, or in case (b) within thirty days, from the date of the order.
(3) The Collector may, by order, with the previous sanction of the Commissioner, authorise
(i) any Sub-divisional Officer; or
(ii) any officer appointed under clause (3) of Section 3 to perform the functions of a Certificate Officer;
to exercise the appellate powers of the Collector under sub-section (1).
(4) When any officer has been so authorized, the Collector may transfer to him for hearing any appeal referred to in clause (a) of sub-section (1), unless the order appealed against was made by such officer.
(5) Pending the decision of any appeal, execution may be stayed if the appellate authority so directs, but not otherwise.
Appeal against order of Certificate Officer. Writ petition filed instead of appeal as payment of 40% of amount of demand by way of deposit is required. Plea raised that order suffers for want of jurisdiction and not necessary to exhaust statutory remedy. Plea not acceptable and Single Judge rightly held that petitioner ought to have resorted to provisions of Section 60. Mahendra Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 48.
Deposit of 40% of certificate dues is mandatory for entertainment of appeal of revision. Harilal Prasad v. State of Bihar, 2004 (3) BLJ 549.
Certificate proceedings initiated against petitioner for defalcation of certain amount. Petitioner contended that it was not defalcation but advances were made. Finding arrived at after considering evidence. Further appeal is provided against order, writ petition not maintainable. Petition allowed. Lakshmi Paswan v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) BLJ 345.
Certificate proceeding initiated for realization of surface rent. Proceedings initiated only after obtaining opinion of Advocate General of State of Bihar that such amount could be claimed by State Govt. against appellant Company. In view of existence of alternative remedy writ petition was rightly dismissed by High Court. Central Coalfields Ltd. v. State of Jharkhand, (2005) 7 SCC 492 : AIR 2005 SC 3425.
Appellate power. Collector does not include Additional Collector for any other officer. Only Collector can hear appeal against original order passed by Certificate Officer. Collector can authorise any SDO or other officer with previous sanction of Commissioner. Additional Collector does not have appellate power. Branch Manager, Sheikhpura Branch State Bank of India v. Arjun Prasad Singh, 2001 (1) PLJR 552.
Initiation of certificate proceeding against company. If the company is aggrieved by recovery preceding it has option to file appeal under Section 62 by depositing 40% of disputed amount. Court will not entertain writ petition filed with sole purpose of evading deposit of 40% of amount. Appeal dismissed. Apurva Kumar v. BSEB, 2003 (2) PLJR 503.
Section 61. Bar to second appeals
No appeal shall lie from any order of a Collector, or an officer authorized under Section 60, sub-section (3) when passed on appeal.
Initiation of certificate proceeding against company. If the company is aggrieved by recovery preceding it has option to file appeal under Section 62 by depositing 40% of disputed amount. Court will not entertain writ petition filed with sole purpose of evading deposit of 40% of amount. Appeal dismissed. Apurva Kumar v. BSEB, 2003 (2) PLJR 503.
Section 62. Revision
The Collector may revise any order passed by a Certificate Officer, Assistant Collector or Deputy Collector under this Act; the Commissioner may revise any order passed by a Collector under this Act; and the Board of Revenue may revise any order passed by a Commissioner under this Act:
16[Provided that no revision petition shall be entertained by any authority unless the certificate-debtor deposits forty per cent of the certificate dues at the time of its filing:
Provided further that no certificate debtor shall be called upon to do so if he has already deposited this amount at any earlier stage.]
No coercive action can be taken against a person who has taken loan without taking final decision under Section 10. Requirement of depositing 40% of certificate dues at the time of filing revision is mandatory but where certificate dues has not been determined certificate debtor cannot be debarred to file a revision petition under Section 62. Birendra Kumar Mehta v. State of Bihar, 1999 (3) BLJ 404.
Writ petition filed when recovery proceeding initiated. Single Judge permitted that petitioner may have his revision revived provided requirement of 40% of amount under certificate is deposited. Order not complied with. Appeal dismissed. Ashok Kumar Bajaj v. State of Bihar, 2002 (2) BLJ 528.
Deposit of 40% of certificate dues is mandatory for entertainment of appeal of revision. Harilal Prasad v. State of Bihar, 2004 (3) BLJ 549.
Recovery of electricity dues. Recovery certificate issued against Managing Director of Mill who entered into agreement with Electricity Board. Managing Director cannot be put in prison but dues is to be recovered from Company. Order of Collector not sustainable. Kanhaiya Lal v. State of Bihar, 2004 (1) BLJ 52.
Section 63. Review
Any order passed under this Act may, after notice to all persons interested, be reviewed by the officer who made the order, or by his successor in office, on account of mistakes or error either in the making of the certificate or in the course of any proceeding under this Act.
Collector can review its own decision if it is found that order of Certificate Officer is patently illegal. Sri Prakash Singh v. State of Bihar, 2002 (1) BLJ 760.
Certificate Officer has to execute certificate in accordance with law. Certificate Officer is not obliged make arrangement of auction purchaser. Auction sale could not have been dropped only on the ground that certificate holder was not able to arrange purchaser. Order of Certificate Officer patently illegal. Sri Prakash Singh v. State of Bihar, 2002 (1) PLJR 650.
Section 64. Saving of other Acts
The powers given by this Act shall be deemed to be in addition to, and not in derogation from, any powers conferred by any other Act now in force for the recovery of any due, debt or demand to which the provisions of this Act are applicable; and, except where expressly so provided. No legal remedy shall be affected by this Act.
Section 65. Application of the 17[Limitation Act, 1963]
(1) Section 6 to 9 of 18[the Limitation Act, 1963 (Act no. 36 of 1963) shall not apply to suits, appeals or applications under this Act.
(2) Except as declared in sub-section (1), or as otherwise provided in this Act, the provisions of the 17[limitation Act, 1963], shall apply to all proceedings under this Act as if a certificate filed hereunder were decree of a Civil Court.
Under sub-section (2) of Section 65, Certificates filed thereunder are decree of a Civil Court and not a suit for which provision of Article 21 of Limitation Act can be applied. Mukta Plastic Works v. State of Bihar, 1999 (2) BLJ 199 : 1999 (1) PLJR 34.
Provisions of Limitation Act are fully applicable to certificate proceeding. Certificate proceeding has to be initiated within a period of three years. Certificate Officer is under obligation to find out whether certificate proceeding is barred by limitation or not. Lal Chand Panna Lai v. State of Bihar, 2007 (4) BBCJ 419 : 2007 (4) PLJR 590.
Section 66. Certificate Officer deemed to be a Court
A Certificate Officer shall be deemed to be a Court, and any proceeding before him shall be deemed to be a civil proceeding within the meaning of Section 14 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908]19.
Section 67. Penalties
Whoever fraudulently removes, conceals, transfers or delivers to any person any property or any interest therein, intending thereby to prevent that property or interest therein from being taken in execution of a certificate, shall be deemed to have committed an offence punishable under Section 206 of the Indian Penal Code (XLV of 1860).
Section 68. Signature of documents by ministerial officers
(1) Any Certificate Officer may, by written order, authorise any ministerial officer to sign, on behalf of the Certificate Officer, any copy, issued by the Certificate Officer under this Act, of any document referred to therein.
(2) The State Government may, by notification, in the Official Gazette, empower Certificate Officers to authorize ministerial officers, by written order, to sign on behalf of Certificate Officers any classes of original notices, summonses or proclamations issued by Certificate Officers under this Act which are specified in such notification.
Section 69. Amendments of the 20[Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 (8 of 1885); the Orissa Tenancy Act, 1913 (B. & O. Act 2 of 1913); and the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908 (Ben. Act 6 of 1908)
21[Chapter XIIIA and Sections 158B, 167, 171 and 172 of the 20[Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 (8 of 1885), Chapter XV and Sections 212, 221, 225 and 226 of the Orissa Tenancy Act, 1913 (B. & O. Act 2 of 1913); and Section 244 and 248 of the Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908 (Ben. Act 6 of 1908) are amended in the manner and to the extent shown in Schedule III.
22[Public Demands
[See Sections 3(6) and 43, proviso (b)]
1. Any arrear of revenue which remains due in the following circumstances, namely
When, under the provisions of Bengal Land Revenue Sales Act, 1859 (XI of 1859), or the Bengal Land-Revenue Sales Act, 1868 (Ben. Act VII of 1868), or any other law for the time being in force, an estate or tenure, or any share of an estate or tenure, has been sold for the recovery of arrears of revenue-due thereupon, and, after deducting the expenses of such sale, the balance of the sale proceeds remaining is insufficient to liquidate the arrears of revenue in discharge of which such sale-proceeds may, under the said provisions, be applied.
Petitioner is a tenant from Court of Wards and is in occupation of house in question for residential purposes. In absence of written instrument between parties arrears of enhanced rent cannot be realized by way of certificate proceedings. Certificate proceeding quashed. Ram Prit Rao v. State of Bihar, 2006 (2) BBCJ 362.
Dues of rent against allotment of rent by Government can be recovered by initiating certificate proceeding under the Act. In absence of a formal agreement inter-parties, terms of agreement can be inferred from conduct of parties or letters of parties. Om Prakash Sharma v. State of Bihar, 2000 (1) PLJR 924.
2. Any arrear of revenue which is due from a farmer on account of an estate held by him in farm, and is not paid on the latest day of payment fixed under Section 3 of the Bengal land-Revenue Sales Act, 1859 (XI of 1859).
3. Any money which is declared by any law for the time being in force to be recoverable or realizable as an arrear of revenue or land-revenue, or by the process authorized for the recovery of arrears of revenue or of the public revenue or of Government revenue.
Any money which is recoverable as arrears of land revenue is a public demand. Amount sought to be recovered by Bank is recoverable as a public demand and is not covered by Entry 15, Schedule-I. Chandeswar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (4) PLJR 191.
Exemption from certificate proceeding. Amount due and payable to Central Cooperative Bank is a public demand and recoverable as a Public demand and it is not covered by Entry 15 of Schedule-I. Chandeshwar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (3) BBCJ 269.
4. Any money which is declared by any enactment for the time being in force
(i) to be a demand or public demand; or
(ii) to be recoverable as arrears of a demand or public demand, or as a demand or public demand; or
(iii) to be recoverable under the Bengal Land-Revenue Sales Act, 1868 (Ben. Act VII of 1868).
5. Any money due from the sureties of a farmer in respect of the revenue of the estate farmed by him.
6. Any money awarded as fees or costs by a Revenue-authority under any law or any Rule having the force of law.
7. Any demand payable to the Collector by a person holding any interest in land, pasturage, forest-rights, fisheries or the like, whether such interest is or is not transferable, when such demand is a condition of the use and enjoyment of such land, pasturage; forest-right, fisheries or other things.
An autonomous and independent society registered under Societies Registration Act cannot invoke the provisions of PDR Act for recovery of arrears of bid amount. Certificate amount does not qualify as public demand. Certificate case instituted against petitioner is without jurisdiction. Bilas Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2003 (2) BLJ 353.
Dues of bodies and organisation will not become public demand on the basis of entry 7 merely because Collector held some ex-officio position in that body/organization. Collector cannot recover his personal loans as public demand on the plea that money was payable to Collector. Bilas Yadav v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 138.
8. In the case of property which under the provisions of any law for the time being in force, is under the charge of, or is managed by the Court of Wards or the Revenue-authorities on behalf of a private individual, any arrear of rent, or of any demand which is recoverable as rent, whether such arrear became due before or after the management devolved upon such Court or such authorities:
Provided that this clause shall not apply to any arrears to the person liable to pay the same or has been confirmed by a competent Court.
Note 1. The Act does not apply to rents of houses and shops and the certificate procedure cannot be applied to the recovery of such rents, unless by a written instruments, duly registered, the persons liable to pay such rents have agreed that they shall be recoverable as public demands.
Note 2. In trust estates managed by Government as express trustee, arrears of rent are recoverable under Article 7. In attached estates managed by the Revenue Authorities on behalf of private individuals, arrears of rent are recoverable under Article 8.
23[8-A. Any outstanding loans and advances payable to State Government or to a Department or Official of the State Government by any body whatsoever.]
9. Any money payable to a servant of the Government or any local authority, in respect of which the person liable to pay the same has agreed, by a written instrument 24[x x x x], that it shall be recoverable as a public demand.
25[Explanation This item shall not apply to any money or demand specified in items 3, 4 and 7.]
Only such Government dues can be recovered under provisions of PDR Act, 1914 which may be in nature of public demand within meaning of Act. There was no stipulation in jimmanama that dues would be recoverable as a public demand. Certificate case cannot stand even if dues in question were Government dues. Shanti Devi v. State of Bihar, 2000 (2) PLJR 206.
26[9A. Any money being arrears of dues payable on account of the supply by the State Government of water under any lift irrigation scheme or of electrical energy and in respect of which the consumer or the person liable to pay the same has agreed by a written instrument, whether executed before or after the 17th day of March, 1943, that the said money shall be recoverable as a public demand.
10. Any stamp duty payable by a proprietor in respect of a paper of partition prepared under the Estates Partition Act, 1897 (Ben. Act V of 1897).
11. In the case of a person to whom the collection of tolls has been farmed under Section 8 of the Canals Act, 1864 (Ben. Act V of 1864) or of the sureties of such person any money due in respect of such farm.
12. Any money awarded as compensation under Section 2 of the Bengal Land Revenue Sales Act, 1868 (Ben. Act V of 1868).
13. Any money due from a purchaser at a sale held in execution of a certificate under this Act, whether the sale is subsisting or not.
14. Any money ordered by a liquidator appointed under Section 42 of the Cooperative Societies Act, 1912, to be recovered as a contribution to the assets of a society or as the costs of liquidation (Ben. Act 5 of 1912).
27[15. Any money payable to
(i) State Bank of India constituted under the State Bank of India Act, 1955 (No. 23 of 1955); or
(ii) a Bank specified in column (2) of the first schedule to the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer or Undertaking) Act, 1970 (Act V of 1970); or
(iii) a company or a statutory body, including a registered society carrying on financial transactions, owned by or in which Government has a majority of shares or which is managed by an authority appointed under any law for the time being in force; or
(iv) the Bihar State Electricity Board.
in respect of which the person liable to pay the same has agreed, by a written instrument that it shall be recoverable as public demand.]
Certificate case instituted by BICICO. Such money is recoverable as public demand only if person liable to pay the same has agreed by a written instrument. Nav Bharat Link Chain Manufacturers Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Bihar, 2004 (1) PLJR 487. See also Kartik Kumar v. Bihar State Credit & Investment Corporation Ltd., 2004 (2) PLJR 603.
Question as to whether certificate proceeding can be initiated in respect of loan by Respondent-Bank in absence of written instrument in terms of item 15 of 1st Schedule, can be examined by Certificate Officer. Matter remitted to Certificate Officer for fresh consideration. Birendra Kumar Das v. State of Bihar, 2001 (3) BBCJ 149 : 2001 (4) PLJR 396.
Loan taken by Transport Co-operative Society. Agreement executed by petitioner in official capacity. They cannot be preceded in their individual capacity. Certificate proceeding against petitioner quashed. Nawal Kishore Pd. Singh v. State of Bihar, 2006 (3) BLJ 676.
Exemption from certificate proceeding. Amount due and payable to Central Cooperative Bank is a public demand and recoverable as a Public demand and it is not covered by Entry 15 of Schedule-I. Chandeshwar Pd. Singh v. Muzaffarpur Central Co-operative Bank Ltd., 2008 (3) BBCJ 269.
Existence of a liability, in sense of pecuniary obligation is one thing and mode, means and mechanism by which person under liability may be compelled to make payment is something quite different. In absence of agreement by guarantors, money recoverable from them cannot be treated as public demand and certificate proceeding cannot be initiated against them. Separate and independent agreement by guarantor is necessary. Sunil Kumar Mehrotra v. State of Bihar, 2003 (3) PLJR 757.
(Bihar Act 46 of 1982)]28
An Act to amend the Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery, Act, 1914.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Bihar in the Thirty third Year of the Republic of India as follows
1. Short title, extent and commencement. (1) This Act may be called the Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1982.
(2) It extends to the whole of the State of Bihar.
(3) It shall come into force with immediate effect.
2. To 5. Incorporated in the text of the Act.
6. Repeal and savings. (1) Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Ordinance, 1982 (Bihar Ordinance No. 33 of 1982) is hereby repealed.
(2) Notwithstanding any such repeal anything done or any action taken in the exercise of any power conferred by or under the said Ordinance shall be deemed to have been done or taken in the exercise of the powers conferred by or under this Act, as if this Act were in force on the day on which such thing or action was done or taken.
[Bihar Act 23 of 1993]29
An Act to amend The Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery Act, 1914.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Bihar in the Forty-fourth year of the Republic of India as follows
(i) This Act may be called the Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1993.
(ii) It shall extend to the whole of the State of Bihar.
(iii) It shall be deemed to have come into force from 2nd Februaury, 1993.
2. Inserted in the Text of the Act.
3. Saving. Anything done or any action taken in the exercise of any power conferred by or under the Bihar and Orissa Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Ordinance, 1992 (Bihar Ordinance No. 26 of 1992) shall be deemed to have been done or taken in exercise of the power conferred by or under this Act, as if this Act was in force on the day on which such thing or action was done or taken.
1. Published in the Bihar and Orissa Gazette of the 1st July, 1914.
2. The Act came into force from the 1st November, 1914, under Government Notification No. 7510 VIC-6-R, dated the 5th October, 1914, published in the Bihar and Orissa Gazette of the 7th October, 1914.
3. Subs. by A.L.O. for Provincial .
4. See now Bihar Co-operative Societies Act, 1935.
5. Subs. by C.S. No. 7, dated 15.7.1975.
6. Subs. for twelve annas.
7. Subs. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amdt.) Act, 1974 (7 of 1974).
8. Subs. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amdt.) Act, 1982 (46 of 1982).
9. Subs. for the original sub-section by Section 71 of the Chota Nagpur Tenancy (Amendment) Act, 1920 (B & O Act 6 of 1920).
10. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Second Amendment) Act, 1951 (2 of 1952).
11. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1953 (2 of 1954).
12. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1974 (7 of 1974).
13. Subs. for Rs. 5 by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1982 (46 of 1982).
14. Ins. by B & O. Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1928 (3 of 1928).
15. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amdt.) Act, 1974 (7 of 1974).
16. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amendment) Act, 1982 (46 of 1982).
17. Subs. by Bihar Public Demands (Amdt.) Act, 1982 (46 of 1982).
18. Published in the Bihar and Orissa Gazette of the 1st July, 1914.
19. Now see Section 14 of Limitation Act, 1963.
20. Now Bihar Tenancy Act.
21. See Chapter XIII A and Sections 158B, 167, 171 and 172 of Bihar Tenancy Act, 1985.
22. For a detailed list of demands falling under Articles 3, 4 and 6 See Appendix A to the Board's Instructions.
23. Ins. by Act 20 of 1993.
24. Words duly registered deleted by Act 4 of 1956.
25. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amdt.) Act, (XLV of 1951).
26. Ins. by Bihar Public Demands Recovery (Amdt.) Act, 1951 (XLV of 1951).
27. Ins. by Act 7 of 1974.
28. Hindi text of the Act published in Bihar Gazette (Ex-ord.) dated 29.4.1982 and the Ordinance No. 33 of 1982 published in the Bihar Gazette (Ex-ord) dated 1.2.1982 (published also in Bihar Revenue & Labour Journal 1982).
29. Published in Bihar Gazette dated 26.8.1993.