(1.) This appeal arises out of a suit brought by the plaintiff Baldeo Narain Tandon (hereinafter referred to as Tandon) against a firm called the United Provinces Aniline Dyes Company (described as "the firm" for convenience) for the recovery of Rs. 14,950 with interest. The High Court of Judicature at Allahabad, dissenting from the trial Judge, has granted a decree in favour of the plaintiff; and from that decree Manmohan Das, one of the partners of the firm, has appealed to His Majesty in Council. The plaintiff stated that the sum of Rs. 14,950 was advanced by him as a loan to the firm by a cheque for that amount. The cheque in question was drawn by the Secretary of the Finance Board of the Congress Reception Committee, Amritsar, on 12 August 1923, in favour of another firm called Bond Brothers for the price of the work done by them for the Reception Committee. It was endorsed by two of the partners of Bond Brothers, namely Tandon and Banerji, in favour of one Sri Kishan Das Wahal.
(2.) Now, it is common ground that Sri Kishan Das Wahal was the manager of the defendant firm, and it appears that the money payable on the cheque was received by him on behalf of the firm. The plaintiff claims that he received the cheque from his partners in Bond Brothers in part payment of the money due to him by the latter, and that he made it over to the firm as a loan. The first question for consideration is whether the firm received the money, which was payable on the cheque. It is conceded that, if the money was received by the firm, it must be deemed to be a loan made by the plaintiff. Now, a satisfactory proof of the receipt of the money is furnished by the account books of the firm; and it cannot therefore be disputed that the plaintiff is entitled to recover it.
(3.) The money due on the cheque was paid on 30 August 1923, by the Central Bank of India at Amritsar, on which the cheque was drawn, and the suit for its recovery was instituted on 27 August 1926. It is suggested that the suit is governed by Art. 58 of Sch. 1 to the Indian Limitation Act, 1908, which prescribes a period of three years for a suit for the recovery of money lent, when the lender has given a cheque for the money lent by him. That Article however applies to a case in which the lender draws his own cheque and gives it to the borrower. It does not govern a suit in which he transfers to the borower a cheque which had been drawn by another person and endorsed in his favour by the payee. The period of three years prescribed by the Art. begins to run from the date on which the cheque is paid, and a cheque is paid when it is cashed by the lender's bankers: Garden V/s. Bruce, (1868) LR 3 CP 300. It is only then that the lender's money passes into the hands of the borrower, and the loan is made by the former to the latter; the mere handing over of a cheque by the lender to the borrower does not amount to a payment of the cheque. Nor does the period begin to run against the lender when the cheque received by the borrower is given by him to his own bank, and the amount is credited to him by the bank.