Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHAMLAL MURARI & ANR
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1177 1976 SCR (2) 82
1976 SCC (1) 719
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC2221 (17)
ACT:
Letters Patent Appeals under clause 10-The Punjab and
Haryana High Court Rules and orders, Vol. 5 Chapter 2-C-Rule
3-Core or essence of the Rule-Rule is not mandatory for the
purposes of entertaining the Letters Patent Appeal-Breach of
the Rule is only an irregularity-Interference, by the Court
of Appeal with the discretionary exercise of power should
be exceptional and only when there is something perverse or
irrational in the exercise of that power.
HEADNOTE:
Rule 3 of Chapter 2-C. Vol. 5 of the Punjab and Haryana
High Court Rules and orders reads as follows:
"R.3: No appeal under clause 10 of the Letters
Patent will be received by the Deputy Registrar unless
it is accompanied by three typed copies of the
following:
(a) Memorandum of appeal;
(b) Judgment appealed from, and
(c) Paper book which was before the Judge from
whose judgment
While construing the said rule, the Full Bench of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Bikram Das in The Financial
Commissioner, Revenue, Punjab, Chandigarh and others, A.I.R
1975 Punjab and Haryana 1, held that Rule 3 relating to
filing of Letters Patent Appeals is mandatory.
The appellant-State while preferring the Letters Patent
Appeal against the orders of the single Judge holding in
favour of the respondent that the denial of increments and
certain other benefits for failure to pass departmental test
for which exemption has been granted to him as bad, filed
copies of all the three documents referred to in Rule 3
relating to Letters Patent Appeal, but not three copies of
each and with an application for condonation of delay. The
Court refused to entertain the appeal (1) following Bikram
Das’s case for non-compliance of Rule 3, and (ii) declining
to exercise its discretion as regards the extension of the
period of limitation and condonation of delay.
On appeal, by Special Leave, the State contended:
(1) that the ratio in Bikram Das’s case of the Full
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Bench of Punjab and Haryana High Court holding that Rule 3
relating to
(ii) Reluctance to exercise the discretionary power to
condone the delay and extend the period of limitation was
not proper, and
(iii) Denial of the increments and other benefits to a
Government servant for failure to pass the departmental test
in spite of exemption having been granted to him, was not
bad in law.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: (1) The contention that the failure to pass the
departmental test by the Government servant concerned after
having been put in more than two decades of service cannot
stand in the way of his enjoying the benefits of increments
etc., particularly, because he had been accorded exemption,
is not correct. [84 G.]
(2) It is true that Rule 3 of the Letters Patent Appeal
of the Punjab and Haryana High Court orders and Rules, Vol.
5. Chapter 2-C, in form strikes
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mandatory. note and, in design, is intended to facilitate
plurality of Judges hearing the appeal, equipped with a set
of relevant papers. May be, there is force in the view, that
certain basic records must be before the Court along with
the appeal if the Court is to function satisfactorily in the
exercise of its appellate power. In this sense, the needs of
the Rule transcend the directory level and may perhaps be
considered a mandatory need [85 D-E].
(3) Even taking a stern view, every minor detail in
Rule 3 cannot carry a compulsory or imperative import. Three
copies would certainly be greater advantage, but what is
the core of the matter is not the number but the presence;
and the over emphasis, on three Copies is mistaken. Perhaps,
the Rule requires three copies and failure to comply
therewith may be an irregularity. What is of the essence of
Rule 3 is not that three copies should be furnished, but
that copies of all the three important documents referred to
in that rule. shall be produced. The Court, if it thinks it
necessitous, exercise its discretion and grant further time
for formal compliance with the Rule, if the copies fall
short of the requisite number. Where the non-compliance,
though procedural, will thwart fair hearing or prejudice
doing of justice to parties, the Rule is mandatory. If the
breach can be corrected without injury to a just disposal of
a case, regulatory requirement should not be enthroned into
a dominant desideratum. Since courts are to do justice, not
to wreck this end product on technicalities even what is
regarded as mandatory traditionally may perhaps have to be
moderated into wholesome directions to be complied with in
time or in extended time [85 F-H].
In the present case, as copies of all the three
documents prescribed have been furnished, but not three
copies of each, the omission or default is only a breach
which can be characterised as an irregularity to be
corrected on application by the party fulfilling the
condition within time allowed by the Court. To this extent,
the view taken by the Punjab High Court in Bikram Das’s case
is not correct. [86 B-C].
Bikram Das v. The Financial Commissioner, Revenue,
Punjab, Chandigarh and Ors; A.I.R. 1975 Punjab & Haryana 1,
over-ruled partly.
(4) Discretionary exercise of power by a Court can be
interfered with by a Court of Appeal only when there is
something perverse or irrational in the exercise. I n the
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instant case there being nothing perverse or irrational the
reluctance in interfering at the appellate level by the High
Court by declining to exercise its discretion in condoning
the delay in compliance with Rule 3 of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court orders and Rules, Vol. 5, Chapter 2-C is
normal and proper. [86 D-E].
OBITER:
(a) Passing petty tests after a petrifying length
of dull official service is an odd insistence
except in important levels of work. [84 G]
(b) The use of "shall" -a work of slippery
semantics-in a rule is not decisive and the
context of the statute, the purpose of the
prescription, the public injury in the event
of neglect of the rule and the conspectus of
circumstances bearing on the importance of
the condition are considerations before
condemning a violation of a rule as fatal.
[85 E-F].
(c) Processual law is not to be a tyrant but a
servant, not an obstruction but an aid to
justice. Procedural prrescriptions are the
hand-maid and not the mistress, a lubricant,
not a resistant in the administration or
justice. [85 H, 86 A].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1415 of
1975.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 11th September, 1974, of the Punjab and Haryana
High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 259 of 1974.
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Kapil Sibal and O. P. Sharma, for the Appellants.
Y. C. Mahajan and Mrs. Urmila Sirur for Respondent No.
1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. Having granted special leave we have
heard counsel on both sides in this appeal right away on all
the points involved-of course, with their consent and
preparedness.
The State, the appellant, has urged that the High
Court’s judgment is wrong and our conclusion rests on a
consideration of three obstacles in the way of the appellant
which we now proceed to dispose of. The facts necessary to
appreciate the controversy are minimal and emerge from the
brief, though sufficient, discussion that follows. Brevity
is not inconsistent with clarity and prolixity is not always
or ever a virtue.
The first fatal objection to the Government’s case
stated in the order of the High Court, is the ratio in a
Full Bench decision in Bikram Das v. The Financial
Commissioner, Revenue, Punjab, Chandigarh and ors. (1) which
holds that rule 3 relating to filing of Letters Patent
Appeals is mandatory which, in this instance, has not been
complied with, resulting in the dismissal of the appeal in
limine. The second obstacle in the way of the appellant is
that assuming that r. 3 is directory-cum-discretionary, an
application for condonation of delay in compliance with r. 3
had been made and the High Court, in division Bench, had
declined to exercise its discretion in favour of the
appellant. The reluctance in interfering, at the appellate
level, with the exercise of the discretion by the High Court
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is natural and proper. The . third point, which is the
substantive one on the merits, is as to whether it is just
and legal that a Government servant, who has put in 22 long
and languishing years of service, should be denied
increments and certain other benefits for failure to pass
departmental tests for which exemption had been granted to
him. The learned single Judge had held that the failure to
pass the departmental test should not be a bar to the drawal
of the benefits, and since the letters patent appeal was not
entertained on the procedural ground we have indicated
above, that question did not fall for decision.
Right away, we may indicate that we are not impressed
with the State’s contention that the failure to pass the
departmental test by the Government servant concerned, after
having put in more than two decades of service cannot stand
in the way of his enjoying the benefits of increments, etc.,
particularly because he had been accorded exemption. Passing
petty tests after a petrifying length of dull official
service is an odd insistence except in important levels of
work. That apart, we see no reason to differ from the
learned single Judge’s finding on this matter. That should
put the lid on this appeal but the concern of the State is
to set right the law regarding rule 3 above mentioned.
Counsel for the State contends that a large number of
appeals will be affected by the interpretation of r. 3 of
the Punjab & Haryana High
(1) A. I. R. 1975 Punjab & Haryana 1.
85
Court Rules and orders, Vol. 5, Chap 2-C by the Full Bench
in Bikram Dass (supra). What is pressed before us is that
r. 3 which requires, in terms, that three typed copies of
(a) the memorandum of appeal, (b) judgment appealed from,
and (c) the paper book which was before the Judge from whose
judgment the appeal is preferred, is not mandatory, although
the Full Bench has chosen to hold that it is obligatory to
comply with them if the appeal is to be entertained at all.
We do not agree that this fatal consequence should
necessarily follow even if there is a minor deviation in
fulfilling the requirements of r. 3.
It is appropriate at this stage to extract r. 3 which
runs as follows:-
"3. No appeal under clause 10 of the Letters
Patent will be received by the Deputy Registrar unless
it is accompanied by three typed copies of the
following:-
(a) Memorandum of appeal;
(b) Judgment appealed from, and
(c) Paper book which was before the Judge from
hose judgment the appeal is preferred."
It is true that, in form, the rule strikes a mandatory
note and, in design, is intended to facilitate a plurality
of judges hearing the appeal, each equipped with a set of
relevant papers. May be, there is force in the view taken by
the Full Bench that certain basic records must be before the
Court along with the appeal if the Court is to function
satisfactorily in the exercise of its appellate power. In
this sense, the needs of the rule transcend the directory
level and may, perhaps, be considered a mandatory need. The
use of ’’shall’ -a word of slippery semantics-in a rule is
not decisive and the context of the statute the purpose of
the prescription, the public injury in the event of neglect
of the rule and the conspectus of the circumstances bearing
on the importance of the condition, have all to be
considered before condemning a violation as fatal.
It is obvious that even taking a stern view, every
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minor detail in r. 3 cannot carry a compulsory or imperative
import. After all what is required for the Judges to dispose
of the appeal is the memorandum of appeal plus the judgment
and the paper book. Three copies would certainly be a great
advantage, but what is the core of the matter is not the
number but the presence, and the over-emphasis laid by the
Court on three copies is, we think, mistaken. Perhaps, the
rule requires three copies and failure to comply therewith
may be an irregularity. Had no copy been furnished of any
one of the three items, the result might have been
different. In the present case, copies of all the three
documents prescribed, have been furnished but not three
copies of each. This omission or default is only a breach
which can be characterised as an irregularity to be
corrected by condonation on application by the party
fulfilling the condition within a time allowed by the Court.
We must always remember that processual law is not to be a
tyrant but a servant, not an obstruction but an aid to
justice. It
86
has been wisely observed that procedural prescriptions are
the handmaid and not the mistress, a lubricant, not a
resistant in the administration of justice. Where the non-
compliance, tho’ procedural, will thwart fair hearing or
prejudice doing of justice to parties, the rule is
mandatory. But, grammar apart, if the breach can be
corrected without injury to a just disposal of the case, we
should not enthrone a regulatory requirement into a dominant
desideratum. After, all Courts are to do justice, not to
wreck this end product on technicalities. Viewed in this
perspective, even what is regarded as mandatory
traditionally may, perhaps, have to be moderated into
wholesome directions to be complied with in time or in
extended time. Be that as it may, and ignoring for a moment
the exploration of the true office of procedural conditions,
we have no doubt that what is of the essence of r. 3 is not
that three copies should be furnished, but that copies of
all the three important documents referred to in that rule,
shall be produced. We further feel that the Court should, if
it thinks it necessitous, exercise its discretion and grant
further time for formal compliance with the rule if the
copies fall short of the requisite Number. In this view and
to the extent indicated, we over-rule the decision in Bikram
Dass’s(supra) case.
The State has yet another hurdle in its way. In the
present case, an application for condonation of delay in
filing the three copies re queried by r. 3 was made and the
Court, in the exercise of its discretion, held that such
condonation should not be granted. Discretionary exercise of
power by a Court cannot be lightly interfered with by a
Court of appeal, and we are loathe, therefore, to upset the
order of the High Court declining to condone the delay,
there being nothing perverse or irrational in the exercise.
In this view also, the appellant has to lose. For these
reasons, the appeal fails and is dismissed. There will be no
order as to costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
87