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This is not to sound racist and must be taken in the right spirit of mistaken identity.

We always used to say that all the Chinese look alike, which is that it would be difficult to tell one apart from the other. But then, of course, it was an exaggeration.

Yet, that sort of thing is not far removed from reality.

Sikhs wear turbans. They are also quite hirsute. This is what happened when even the cars they drove were similar.

Remember how banks did, till some time ago, use strong-arm methods to recover their dues. When they faced ‘flac’ from the courts, they shifted the muscular arm-twisting to what was euphemistically termed “collection agents”. Many of them turned out to be no less than the guys that the Dons and the Nosa Costra send out.

Accidents happen when a number of isolated incidents happen together. Independently, no one even notices the stray occurrences. One such constellation occurred some years back at Wagle Estate in Thane. A borrower had taken a loan on a car. He was a Sikh gentleman but even gentlemen can sometimes default. The bank decided enough was enough. It let loose the agents who promptly took up their positions outside the estate.

Soon they saw their quarry. Sikh. Car. Nab him.

Only it wasn’t “he”. It was another Sikh who did not know what the hell was going on. Unluckily for him, he had an almost identical car.

NOW YOU BE THE JUDGE.

The court came down heavily on the bank. Any advocate worth his salt would have foreclosed the bank, instead of the poor guy. The damages should have been so heavy as to make the Sikh gentleman the owner not only of the car but of the bank itself.

Anyway, the net result was such an outcry that the “agents” were put out of business. Some time back we had talked of a civilised society and the rule of law. People cannot take the law into their own hands.

We move to America. A woman in Ohio stayed across the street from another house. She went out leaving her home locked. When she got back she discovered that the house had been cleared out AND new locks installed!

Again it turned out to be a bank.  The mistaken identity turned out to be the fault of the GPS system that pointed to the wrong house. And since the home was not kept up to date, the bankers assumed it to be the home of the borrower who they presumed had run away.

The woman sued. As is usual with the big guys as compared to the small we, instead of settling the claim, the bank asked for receipts of all the goods they had ransacked. The woman said that any such receipts would be in the very belongings that the bankers had taken away.


NOW YOU BE THE JUDGE.

If you were the woman’s lawyer, what would you do? Charge the bank and its managers and directors with house-breaking, theft, destruction of property, unlawfully restricting her entry and compensation for mental and physical cruelty coupled with loss of reputation.

Can you think of any more charges?

Maybe we will now have a new bank owner!

We shall soon be writing of another such incident of high handedness in America in the 1950s in Chicago. It happened to the aunt of the writer’s friend, Don Roeslar, then working with the USA embassy in Bombay.

Bapoo Malcolm is a practising lawyer in Mumbai. Please email your comments to bapoomalcolm@gmail.com or mail@moneylife.in

COURTESY: Moneylife


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