02 March 2020
Supreme Court
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THE SUPERINTENDENT OF POST OFFICE Vs JAMBU KUMAR JAIN

Bench: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE UDAY UMESH LALIT, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE VINEET SARAN
Judgment by: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE UDAY UMESH LALIT
Case number: C.A. No.-001894-001895 / 2020
Diary number: 11441 / 2019
Advocates: GURMEET SINGH MAKKER Vs


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Civil Appeal Nos. 1894-1895 of 2020  

Arising out of SLP(C) Nos.16164-16165 of 2019   

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REPORTABLE  

 

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA  

 

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION  

 

CIVIL APPEAL NOS.1894-1895 OF 2020  

(Arising out of SLP (Civil) Nos.16164-16165 of 2019)  

 

 

THE SUPERINTENDENT OF POST OFFICE,  

BOLANGIR DIVISION, BOLANGIR, ODISHA                  …Appellant  

 

 

VERSUS  

 

 

JAMBU KUMAR JAIN                                              …Respondent  

WITH  

 

CIVIL APPEAL NOS.1896-1897 OF 2020  

(Arising out of SLP (Civil) Nos.16166-16167 of 2019)  

 

 

THE SUPERINTENDENT OF POST OFFICE,  

BOLANGIR DIVISION, BOLANGIR, ODISHA                        …Appellant  

 

VERSUS  

 

CHHAGAN LAL JAIN                                                      …Respondent  

 

 

J U D G M E N T  

 

UDAY UMESH LALIT, J.  

 

 

CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 1894-1895 OF 2020  

(Arising out of SLP (Civil) Nos.16164-16165 of 2019)  

 

1. Leave granted.

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Civil Appeal Nos. 1894-1895 of 2020  

Arising out of SLP(C) Nos.16164-16165 of 2019   

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2. These appeals arise out of the final judgment and order dated  

11.09.2018 passed by the National Commission1 in Revision Petition No.2116  

of 2018 and order dated 11.10.2018 in Review Application No.355 of 2018  

preferred in the aforesaid revision petition.  

 

3. Complaint, being CDC No.43 of 2015 was filed by the respondent  

herein before the District Forum2 contending inter alia that 88 Indira Vikas  

Patras (‘IVP’, for short) of the denomination of Rs.5000/- each, purchased by  

the father of the complainant sometime during the period 1996 to 1998, were  

lost in the month of June 2001.  A police complaint was lodged on 25.06.2001  

alleging theft of those IVPs and thereafter by intimation dated 14.07.2001 a  

request was made to the Superintendent of Post Offices, Bolangir to stop  

payment of any amount upon maturity of the IVPs without proper verification  

of the holder. It was further submitted that despite demands made by the  

complainant, the value of the lost IVPs was not being made over by the Post  

Office to him and as such, there was deficiency in service on part of the Post  

Office.  With the aforesaid allegations, the following principal reliefs were  

claimed in the complaint:   

“(i) The O.P. be directed to pay the maturity value of 88  

numbers of IVP of Rs.5,000/- each denomination =  

Rs.8,80,000/- and due interest till final payment is  

 1 National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, New Delhi  2 District Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum, Bolangir, Odisha

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Arising out of SLP(C) Nos.16164-16165 of 2019   

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made,  

 

(ii) A sum of Rs.1,00,000/- as claimed as compensation  

for deficiency in service and loss caused to the  

complaint and Rs.10,000/- is claimed towards the cost  

of litigation”  

 

 

4. In its reply, the appellant submitted that in terms of Indira Vikas Patra  

Rules, 1986, (‘the Rules’, for short), no formal application was necessary to  

purchase the IVPs and in case the IVPs were purchased by cash, the identity  

of the purchaser would not be recorded by the Post Office in any document  

nor any receipt would be issued at the time of issuance of the IVPs, that all  

the IVPs were bearer instruments like currency notes; that there was no proof  

or evidence that any consideration was paid by the complainant; and that the  

complainant could not be termed as a “consumer” within the meaning of the  

Act3.  It was further submitted that the Rules were binding on the Department  

and since it had acted purely in terms of the Rules, there was no deficiency on  

its part.  

 

5. The aforesaid complaint was allowed by the District forum vide its  

order dated 30.03.2016 and it was directed as under:   

“We hereby direct the O.P. to release payment of the  

maturity value of 88 nos. of IVPs bearing No.63C  

113623 to 113666 and 3515 to 3558 and 113667 to  

113710 and 3559 to 3602 respectively amounting to  

Rs.8,80,000/- (Rupees Eight Lakh Eighty thousand)  

only, to the petitioner after furnishment of an  

indemnity bond from the petitioner within thirty-five  

 3The Consumer Protection Act, 1986

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days of this order.  Non compliance will attract a  

penalty of Rs.20 per day till realization.”   

 

 

6. The appellant being aggrieved filed Appeal No.356 of 2016 before the  

State Commission4, which was dismissed by the State Commission on the  

ground of non-prosecution.  The matter was carried further by filing Revision  

Petition No.2116 of 2018 before the National Commission.  

 

7. The submissions advanced on behalf of the appellant were recorded as  

under:  

“The Learned Counsel for the Petitioner contended that since  

inception the Respondent is not a Consumer and no deficiency in  

service has been committed on the part of the Petitioner and the  

Complaint of the Respondent is not maintainable.  As per Rule 7(2)  

and 10 of the IVP Rules, 1986, the Respondent is not entitled to any  

claim and hence his claim has been rejected by the Department.”  

 

 

However, the view taken by the District Forum was accepted by the  

National Commission.  It was observed in order dated 11.09.2018:  

“The Respondent’s Father had purchased 88 IVPs for a total  

amount of Rs.8.8 lakhs.  The same were lost and a Police  

Complaint was filed.  The claim of the Respondent on maturity  

was rejected.  Several years have elapsed and the amount  

deposited still lies with the Postal Department.  So far there  

appears no other claimant for the amount.  It certainly cannot be  

the case of the Petitioner to appropriate the entire amount  

forever, since the lost documents has not been submitted to them.   

It is but fair and reasonable that after proper verification and  

taking due precautions like idemnity bond etc., the Department  

after securing its interests, should at least pay the maturity value  

to the Respondent, after having not succeeded in the several  

rounds of litigation.  This Commission way back in the year  

 4 State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, Cuttak, Odisha

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2002, in a matter of similar nature has elaborately discussed the  

issues and directed the department to release the money, as  

sufficient time had elapsed since the date of maturity.  Therefore,  

it clearly appears that there is no error in the order passed by the  

District Forum.”   

 

8. Thereafter, Review Application No.355 of 2018 was preferred by the  

appellant.  However, said Review Application was also dismissed by the  

National Commission vide order dated 11.10.2018.  

 

9. The aforesaid two orders passed by the National Commission are  

presently under appeal before us.  We have heard Mr. R. Balasubramanian,  

learned Senior Advocate for the appellant and Mr. S.B. Upadhyay, learned  

Senior Advocate for the respondent.  It was submitted by Mr. Upadhyay that  

in the present matter, the value in respect of the IVPs in question had not been  

claimed by any other person and in any case the respondent was willing to  

furnish any indemnity bond that in case any claim were to surface, he would  

indemnify the Department.  

 

10. Before we consider the matter, we must set-out the relevant Rules.   

The Rules were issued vide Ministry of Finance (DEA) Notification  

No.G.S.R. 1183(E) dated 05.11.1986.  Rules 5, 6 and 7 of the Rules, as  

amended from time to time, are as under:  

“5 Procedure for purchase of certificates: (1) A certificate  

may be purchased at a Post Office on payment of any one of the  

following modes, namely:  

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(i) by cash; or  

 

(ii) by locally executed cheque, pay order or demand draft  

drawn in favour of the Postmaster; or  

 

(iii) by presenting a duly signed withdrawal form or cheque with  

the Pass Book for withdrawal from Post Office Savings Account  

standing in the credit of the purchaser at the same Post Office.  

 

2. No formal application is necessary for purchase of a  

certificate.  

 

6.  Issue of Certificate: (1) On payment being made by cash, a  

certificate shall be issued immediately and date of such  

certificate shall be the date of payment.  

 

(2)  Where payment for purchase of a certificate is made by  

locally executed cheque, pay order or demand draft, the  

certificate shall not be issued before the proceeds of the cheque,  

pay order or demand draft, as the case may be, are realised and  

the date of such certificate shall be the date of encashment of the  

cheque, pay order or demand draft, as the case may be.  

 

(3)  If, for any reason, a certificate cannot be issued immediately,  

a provisional receipt shall be given to the purchaser which may  

later be exchanged for a certificate and the date of such  

certificate shall be as specified in sub-rule (1) or sub-rule (2), as  

the case may be.  

 

(4) A certificate issued under this rule is transferable.  

 

7. Replacement of certificate: (1) If a certificate is mutilated or  

defaced, the bearer is entitled for replacement form the Post  

Office of issue on payment of fee of rupee one.  

 

(2) A certificate lost, stolen, mutilated, defaced or destroyed  

beyond recognition, will not be replaced by any Post Office.”   

 

 

11. In terms of Rule 5 of the Rules, IVPs could be purchased at any Post  

Office after payment in cash or by a Cheque/Pay Order or Demand Draft and  

no formal application was necessary for such purchase.  As against payment

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made in Cash, the IVPs would be delivered immediately while in respect of  

payments made either through Cheque or Pay Order or Demand Draft, the  

same would be issued only after the encashment of any of those instruments.   

In terms of Rule 6(4), IVPs were transferable.  According to Rule 7(1), if the  

Certificate was mutilated or defaced, the bearer would be entitled to have it  

replaced on payment of fee of rupee one but if the certificate was lost or  

stolen or mutilated or defaced or destroyed beyond recognition, in terms of  

Rule 7(2) it would not be replaced by any Post Office.     

 

12. It is not in dispute that the IVPs in the present matter were purchased  

through cash.  At no stage, the identity of the purchaser was thus disclosed or  

registered with the Department.  In a situation, where the IVPs were  

purchased either through Cheque of Pay Order or Demand Draft, there would  

still be a possibility, through link evidence, to establish the identity of the  

purchaser but in case of a purchase through the modality of cash, there would  

be nothing on record which could establish the identity of the purchaser.    

It may be that there are no claims in respect of the IVPs in question but  

that does not mean that any person can claim maturity sum in respect of such  

IVPs and offer an indemnity.    

 

13. The matter has to be considered purely from the perspective of the  

governing Rules. If in case the IVPs are lost/stolen or mutilated or defaced

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beyond recognition, the Rules are clear that they shall not be replaced by the  

Post Office.  In the face of such statutory provision, the refusal on the part of  

the Department to entertain any request for maturity sum was absolutely right  

and justified.  It can never be said that there was deficiency on the part of the  

Department in rendering any service expected of them.   

If the Department had refused to encash the Certificates upon  

presentation or even after encashment had refused to make the payment or  

had made short payment, there could still be a grievance about deficiency in  

service but if the Certificates themselves are lost and the identity of the initial  

holder could never be established through the record, the Department was  

well within its rights not to accept the prayer for return of the maturity sum.   

 

14. In Central Government of India and others vs. Krishnaji Parvetesh  

Kulkarni5, similar prayer made through a writ petition, was rejected by this  

Court with following observations:-  

“An IVP is akin to an ordinary currency note. It bears no name  

of the holder. Just as a lost currency note cannot be replaced,  

similarly the question of replacing a lost IVP does not arise. Rule  

7(2) makes the position clear that a certificate lost, stolen,  

mutilated, defaced or destroyed beyond recognition will not be  

replaced by any post office. Similar is the position as regards the  

certificate which is either lost or stolen. Undisputedly there was  

no challenge to the legality of the rule 7(2). In the absence of a  

challenge to the provision, any direction should not really have  

been given. It is fundamental that no direction which is contrary  

to law can be given.”  

 

 5 (2006) 4 SCC 275

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15. In our view, the District Forum and the National Commission  

completely erred in accepting the claim.  We, therefore, allow these appeals,  

set-aside the view taken by the National Commission and dismiss the original  

complaint.  No costs.   

 

CIVIL APPEAL NOs. 1896-1897 OF 2020  

(Arising out of SLP (Civil) Nos.16166-16167 of 2019)  

 

 

16. Leave granted.   

 

 

17. These appeals arise out of the final judgment and order dated  

11.09.2018 passed by the National Commission in Revision Petition No.2117  

of 2018 and order dated 11.10.2018 in Review Application No.356 of 2018  

preferred in the aforesaid revision petition.  

 

18. In this case, 160 IVPs of the denomination of Rs.5000/- each, were  

stated to have been lost and the claimant in this case and the claimant in the  

earlier matter are members of the same family.  Similar relief was granted by  

the District Forum and the National Commission, which orders are presently  

under appeal before us.  

 

19. It is somewhat strange that only the IVPs were lost in both the cases  

by the family and no other instrument was lost.  Be that as it may, for the  

reasons recorded in Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (Civil) Nos.16164-16165

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of 2019, these appeals also deserve to be allowed.  

 

20. We, therefore, allow these appeals, set-aside the view taken by the  

National Commission and dismiss the original complaint.  No costs.   

  

 

    …….................................J.  

            [UDAY UMESH LALIT]  

 

 

 

 

    ..…..................................J.  

[VINEET SARAN]      

NEW DELHI;  

       MARCH 02, 2020.