Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJABHAI ABDUL REHMAN MUNSHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VASUDEV DHANJlBHAI MODY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/05/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 345 1964 SCR (3) 480
CITATOR INFO :
R 1969 SC1273 (3)
F 1973 SC2056 (15)
R 1974 SC 950 (7)
R 1978 SC 765 (10)
ACT:
Special Leave- Revocation -Jurisdiction of Supreme
Court False Statement made in Special Leave Petition-
Constitution of India. Art, 136.
HEADNOTE:
In a suit filed in 1954 the tenant deposited in Court
Rs. 400/- on October 1, 1954 The deposit remained in Court
upto january 19, 1957, when it was withdrawn. A fresh suit
was filed in September, 1955, for ejectment of the tenant.
On January 10,1957, the tenant deposed about the deposit of
Rs. 400 but withdrew it after nine days. The suit was dis-
missed by the trial court on February 26, 1957, on the
ground that the amount required had been deposited by the
tenant in Court. The lower appellate court accepted the
appeal and ordered ejectment on the ground that the amount
deposited
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was not sufficient as Rs. 400/- bad already been withdrawn.
In a revision petition filed in High Court, it was contended
that the amount of Rs. 400/- was in deposit and at the
disposal of the landlord. The High Court accepted this fact
but in spite of that refused to interfere in the matter and
dismissed the revision petition.
In the petition for Special Leave to appeal, the tenant
quoted a long extract from the judgment of High Court regar-
ding the deposit of Rs. 400/- in court and submitted that
the High Court was correct in coming to the conclusion that
as there was nothing on record to show that the petitioner
had withdrawn the sum of Rs. 400/- the petitioner was not in
arrears of rent. Special Leave to appeal was granted,
Held that the, special leave to appeal granted by this
court must be vacated because it had been procured by the
appellant without disclosing all the material facts. A
deliberate attempt had been made in the petition for special
leave to appeal not only to withhold from the court the
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information that the amount of Rs. 400/- originally
deposited in court was subsequently withdrawn by him, but a
serious attempt was also made to create an impression that
the finding of the High Court concerning withdrawal was
correct.
Per Sarkar and Shah jj.-The exercise of jurisdiction
under Art. 136 of the Constitution is discretionary. It is
exercised sparingly and in exceptional cases when a
substantial question of law falls to be determined or where
it appears to the our that interference by this court is
necessary to remedy serious injustice. A party who
approaches this court invoking tile of this over-riding
discretion must come with clean hands If there appears on
his part any attempt to overreach or mislead the court by
false or untrue statements or by withholding true
information which would have a bearing on the question, of
exercise of the discretion, the court would be justified in
refusing to exercise the discretion or if the discretion has
been exercised in revoking the leave to appeal granted even
at the time of hearing of the appeal,,
Per Hidavatullah j--The powers exercisable by this
court under Art: 136 of the Constitution are not in the
nature of a general appeal. They enable this court to
interfere in cases where an irreparable injury has been
caused by reason of a miscarriage (if justice due to a gross
neglect of law or procedure or otherwise and there is no
other adequate remedy. The Article is hardly meant to
afford relief in a case where a party
482
is in default of rent because he withdrew a deposit lying in
court but who cannot, on the record of the case, be shown to
have withdrawn the amount. The present case is not one of a
mere error in the narration of facts or of a bona fide error
of Judgment. It is a case of being disingenuous with the
Court by making out a point of law on a suppositions state
of facts which facts, if told candidly, leave no room for
discussion of law. The appellant, by dissembling in this
court, induced it to grant special leave in a case which did
not merit It and hence the leave should be recalled.
Har Narain v. Badri Das. [1964] 2 S. C. R. 203 and S.
B. Shetty v. Phirozeshah Nursservanji Colobawalla and
Another C. A. No. 155 of 1963 decided on April 5, 1963,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLANT JURISDICTION : Civil -Appeal No. 692 of
1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree
dated January 20, 1960 of the Bombay High Court in Civil
Revision Application No. 139 of 1958.
J. P. Mehta, Aziz Mushabber Ahmadi, J. B. Dadachanji,
O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the appellant.
Vithal B. Patel and 1. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
1963. May I - The judgment of Sarkar and Shah jj. was
delivered by shah J., Hidayatullah, J. delivered a separate
judgment.
SHAH. J. -For reasons which we will presently set out,
special leave to appeal against the judgment of the High
Court of Bombay granted by this Court must be vacated
because it had been procured by the appellant without
disclosing all the material facts.
Rajabhai Munshi who will hereinafter be referred to as
’the defendant’ is since 1935 a tenant
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483
of Vasudev Mody-hereinafter called ’the planitiff’-in
respect of a piece of land situate in the town of Ahmedabad.
The rent of the land as originally stipulated was Rs. 411/-
per annum, and it was by mutual agreement enhanced to Rs.
851/- per annum in 1948. The plaintiff filed suit No. 2014
of 1952 against the defendant in the Court of Small Causes
exercising jurisdiction under s. 28 of the Bombay Rents and
Lodging House Rates (Control) Act, 1947 (Act 57 of 1947) for
an order in ejectment against the defendant on the plea
amongst others that the latter had made default in payment
of rent due by him. The defendant contended inter alia that
the rent stipulated was in excess of the standard rent
payable by him. The Trial Court assessed the standard rent
payable by the defendant at Rs. 446/per annum and holding
that the defendant had not made default in paying rent,
dismissed the plaintiff’s suit. Against that decree the
plaintiff-preferred Appeal No. 450 of 1953 to the District
Court at Ahmedabad. On October 1, 1954 the defendant
deposited in the District Court Rs. 400/- to the credit of
the plaintiff. The appeal instituted by the plaintiff was
not prosecuted, and the amount of Rs. 400/deposited to the
credit of the plaintiff remained deposited in Court.
The plaintiff commenced another action (Suit No. 3434
of 1955) against the defendant on the plea that the
defendant had committed fresh defaults in Payment of rent.
The defendant deposited in Court from time to time between
November 22, 1955 and January 16, 1957 Rs. 2,126/8/- towards
rent due by him and costs of the suit. The learned Trial
judge by this order dated February 26, 1957 held that taking
into account Rs. 400/- lying to the credit of the plaintiff
in Appeal No. 450 of 1953 the defendant had deposited in
Court Rs.2,526/8/-, and that amount was sufficient to
satisfy the arrears of rent due by the defencent and also
the costs of the suit, and therefore
484
no decree in ejectment could, in view of s. 12 (3) (b) of
Bombay Act 57 of 1947 be granted.
In appeal the Extra Assistant judge, Ahmedabad,
reversed the decree of the Trial Court. In his view the
defendant had failed to deposit the full amount of rent due
and costs of the suit as required by s. 12 (3) (b) and
therefore a decree in ejectment must issue against the
defendant. In making up the account of the rent due by the
defendant, the learned judge excluded the amount of Rs.
400/- deposited in Appeal No. 450 of 1953 on October 1,
1954, because the defendant had withdrawn that amount before
the suit was disposed of by the Trial Court. Against the
decree in ejectment the defendant invoked the revisional
jurisdiction of the High Court of judicature at Bombay.
Before the High Court, the advocate for the defendant
contended that there was no evidence in support of the
finding of the appellate Court that the amount of Rs. 400/-
deposited by the defendant in Appeal No. 450 of 1953 stood
withdrawn by the defendant. The High Court upheld the
contention but proceeded to dismiss the petition filed by
the defendant because the case did not fall strictly within
s. 12 (3) (b) of Bombay Act 57 of 1947 and the Court had
jurisdiction, having regard to the circumstances and the
conduct of the tenant, to refuse relief to him, and that the
record showed that the defendant had by his conduct
disentitled himself to discretionary relief. Against the
order passed by the High Court, a petition for special leave
to appeal to this Court was granted.
Section 12 (1) of Act 57 of 1947 provides:
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"A landlord shall not be entitled to the reco-
very of possession of any premises so long as
the tenant pays, or is ready and willing to
pay, the amount of the standard rent and
permitted increases, if any, and observes and
performs the other conditions of the tenancy,
in so far as
485
they are consistent with the provisions of
this Act ;"
and sub-s. (3) cl. (b) provides that
"In any other case, no decree for eviction
shall be passed in any such suit, if, on the
first day of hearing of the suit, or on or
before such other date as the Court may fix,
the tenant pays or tenders in Court the
standard rent and permitted increases then due
and thereafter continues to pay or tender in
Court regularly such rent and permitted
increases till the suit is finally decided and
also pays costs of the suit as directed by the
Court."
It is common ground that the claim made by the
plaintiff falls within the description -’In any other case".
The High Court assumed that even if the tenant has not paid
into court the standard rent and permitted increases due on
the first day of hearing of the suit, the-Court may still in
the exercise of its discretion refuse a decree to the
landlord in ejectment, provided all the arrears of rent and
costs of the suit are paid into Court by the tenant at any
time before the suit is disposed of The assumption so made
at once raised a question of some nicety as to the true
interpretation of s. 12 (3) (b). This question may however
fall to be determined only if the conclusion of the High
Court that the defendant had deposited the rent due and the
costs of the suit before the date of the decree passed in
the Trial Court be correct. The Appellate Court had
recorded that the rent due and costs of the suit were not
deposited by the defendant, and therefore the defendant
could not be relieved against the consequences of his
default. In taking account of the amounts deposited the
learned judge excluded the amount of Rs. 400/- deposited in
Appeal No. 450 of 1953 which had been withdrawn by the
defendant on
486
January 19, 1957. It is common ground before us, that Rs.
400/ deposited by the defendant in Appeal No. 450 of 1953
had in fact been withdrawn by him before the date of decree
of the Trial Court. Counsel for the defendant admits that
fact, and it is supported by a certified extract from the
file of the District Court. At the hearing before the High
Court, the advocate for the defendant pleaded that the
finding of the Extra Assistant judge that the amount of Rs.
400/- was withdrawn before the decree of the Trial Court was
not supported by evidence. We are prepared to hold that the
advocate was not instructed about the withdrawal of the
amount, and no attempt was made by him to mislead the Court,
and no blame need attach in this matter to the advocate in
that behalf But the defendant was guilty of withholding
information from the Court as well as his advocate.
In the petition for special leave, which is sworn by
the defendant a deliberate attempt has been made not merely
to withhold from the Court the information that the amount
of Rs. - 400/- originally deposited by the defendant was
withdrawn by him, but sedulously attempt is made to create
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an impression that the finding -of the High Court concerning
the withdrawal was correct, and of the Extra Assistant judge
wrong, and to argue that because of the amounts deposited by
him inclusive of Rs. 400/- the defendant was entitled to the
protection of sub-ss. (1) & (3) (b) of s. 12. A bare
perusal of paragraphs 14, 19, 20, 23 and 25 of the petition
for special leave, leaves no room for doubt that this was
the objcct of the defendant. It was submitted in the
petition that the defendant’s case fell strictly within the
terms of s. 12(3) (b) and that the High Court was in error
in holding that it had any discretion to refuse relief to
the defendant, after the defendant complied with the terms
of that sub-section in the matter of deposit. The petition
was sworn by the defendant. He has affirmed
487
that the facts stated in paragraphs I to 32 were true to his
own knowledge an& the submissions made therein were believed
by him to be true, and that the petition concealed nothing
nor was any part of it false or untrue. He also affirmed in
his affidavit, that he had "-instructed counsel in the
Courts below and that" he was "instructing counsel in this
Court in respect of the special leave petition". The
finding of the High Court, on a question of fact which to
the knowledge of the defendant was erroneous, was made the
foundation of what was asserted to be a substantial question
of law of general or public importance. If the High Court
was not persuaded to take the view which it did in the
matter of the deposit of Rs. 4001- no further question would
have survived; at least n3one such appears to have been
argued.
Counsel for the plaintiff has urged that this Court
would not have granted special leave to appeal if the
defendant had informed the Court that the amount of Rs.
400/- which was represented to be lying to the credit of the
plaintiff was not in fact available at the date of the
decree in the Trial Court, because the question as to the
interpretation of s. 12(3)(b) would not on the true facts
fall to be determined, and special leave should be revoked
because it has been procured by deliberately misleading the
Court on a matter of importance.
There is a restricted right of appeal to this Court
conferred by the Constitution Upon litigants in civil cases.
Where the amount or value of the subject-matter in dispute
in the Court of the First Instance and in appeal to this
Court is not less than Rs. 20,000/-, or where the judgment,
decree or final order involves directly or indirectly some
claim or question respecting property of like amount or
value, and the judgment, decree or final order made by a
Division Bench of the High Court does not affirm the
judgment of the court immediately below, the
488
party aggrieved is entitled as of right to appeal. An
appeal may also lie in civil disputes with certificate by
the High Court under Art. 133(1)(c) that the case is a fit
one for appeal, or with leave under Art. 136 of the
Constitutional The High Court has not granted certificate
under Art. 133(1)(c)as it could not in view of the
Coustitutional prohibition in cl. (3) of Art. 133.
Excercise of the jurisdiction of the Court under Art.133 of
the Constitution is discretionary: it is exercised sparingly
and in exceptional cases, when a substantial question of law
falls to be determined or where it appears to the Court that
interference by this Court is necessary to remedy serious
injustice. A party who approaches this Court invoking the
exercise of this overriding discretion of the Court must
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come with clean hands. If there appears on his part any
attempt to overreach or mislead the Court by false or untrue
statements or by with holding true information which would
have a bearing on the question of exercise of the dis-
cretion, the Court would be justified in refusing to ex-
ercise the discretion or if the discretion has been ex-
ercised in revoking the leave to appeal granted even at the
time of hearing of the appeal. In Har Narain v. Badri Das
(1), Gajendragadkar J. speaking for the. Court observed:
"It is of utmost importance that in making material
statements and setting forth grounds in applications for
special leave, care must be taken not to make any statements
which are inaccurate, untrue or misleading."
In that case the Court revoked the leave granted because the
appellant had made certain inaccurate and misleading
statements in his petition for leave to appeal to this
Court. Those statements were, in the view of the Court,
misrepresentations of fact and the Court being satisfied
that the appellant had deliberately made those misleading
and untrue statements
(1) [1964] 2 S. C. R. 203.
489
revoked the leave. In another case which was brought to
this Court with special leave S. R. Shetty v. Phirozeshah
Nursservanji Colabawalla (1), an attempt was made by the
appellant in the petition for special leave to value the
property in dispute at more than Rs. 20,00O/’- when in fact
he had valued the same property in another litigation at Rs.
500/-. The Court in revoking the leave observed:
"The appellant deliberately chose to inflate
the valuation of the property so as to obtain
the special leave. We have no doubt that if
this Court had been apprised of the true
valuation, which according to the appellant
himself was only Rs. 500/-, this Court would
not have granted the special leave. We
cannot, therefore, condone this deliberate
attempt to mislead the Court in respect of a
very material question, namely, the value of
the property in dispute."
Counsel for the defendant has conceded that the amount
of Rs. 400/- which was deposited on October 1, 1954 had been
withdrawn by the defendant before the date of judgment in
the Trial Court. He, however, contended that the defendant
had not instructed his advocate in the High Court to raise
the contention about the availability of Rs. 400/to the
plaintiff, which met with the approval of the High Court and
the contention was raised by the advocate on his own
initiative Counsel further submitted that a party applying
to this Court for special leave is entitled to restrict
himself to what appears on the record and in the present
case the defendant has correctly set out the finding of the
High Court and has founded an argument on that finding Im-
plicit in the submission of counsel for the defendant is the
suggestion that it is open to a party to mislead the High
Court or the subordinate Court and thereafter approach this
Court after withholding material information within his
knowledge which would have
(1) C. A. No. 155 of 1963 decided on April 5, 1963
490
seriously affected his right to move this Court, for the
exercise of discretion in his favour. We cannot over-
emphasize the fact that the jurisdiction of this Court is
discretionary. This Court is not bound to grant special
leave merely because it is asked for A party who approaches
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the Court knowing or having reason to believe that if the
true facts were brought to its notice this Court would not
grant special leave, with holds that information and
persuades this Court to grant leave to appeal is guilty of
conduct forfeiting all claims to the exercise of discretion
in his favour. It is his duty to state facts which may
reasonably have a bearing on the exercise of the dis-
cretionary powers of this Court Any attempt to withhold
material information would result in revocation of the
order, obtained from this Court. We arc unable to agree
with counsel for the defendant that the duty of an applicant
for special leave to this Court is discharged when he merely
summarises the judgment of the Courts below and claims
relief on the footing that the findings are correct, when to
his knowledge the findings cannot be sustained and the
findings have been so recorded because the Courts below have
been misled on account of representations for the making of
which he was either directly or indirectly responsible. In
our judgment the petition filed before this Court was
misleading.
Counsel for the defendant also submitted that be was
prepared to argue the appeal on the footing that the High
Court was in error in reversing the judgment of the District
Court on the question about the withdrawal of Rs. 4001-.
If, however, the defendant has by misleading the Court
obtained an order granting special leave and has under the
protection of that order remained in possession of the
property in dispute for a period of three years, it would be
putting a premium upon the unfair conduct of the defendant
to permit him to argue the appeal on some footing other than
that on which the case was argued
491
in the High Court, and to argue which presumably no special
leave would have been granted.
Special leave to appeal is therefore revoked. The
appellant will pay costs of the appeal to the respondent.
HIDAYATULLAH J.---I agree that we should recall the
special leave. As this is the second case in a few days, I
wish to say a few words. The appellant before us is the
tenant and the respondent is the landlord. One of the of
questions in the case was whether the tenant was in default
of rent and revenue tax specially payable by him. It
appears that litigation between the parties has been going
on for years. The landlord was forced to file suits for
ejectment on the ground that the tenant had not paid the
rent. The tenant also never paid rent except in court. In
the earlier rounds, the tenant has succeeded bymaking
deposits of rent and costs at the last moment, thus, taking
advantage of the Bombay Act LVII of 1947.
It appears that one such suit of the landlord was No.
2014 of 1952. During the appeal arising from the decree in
that suit, the tenant had deposited on October 1, 1954, a
sum of Rs. 400/- in the appeal court and had sent a notice
to the landlord about this deposit. This deposit lay in
court till January 19, 1957, when it was withdrawn. The
last date is important.
The present suit was filed on September 8, 1955, for
eviction of the tenant on the ground that he was in arrears
from June 9, 1953. On january 10, 1957, the tenant deposed
about the deposit and questioned the landlord about the
notice, but before the case was over, he withdrew the
deposit. The learned judge, Small Causes Court, Ahmedabad,
held the point of sub-letting against the landlord, and
holding further
492
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that the deposit of Rs. 2126/8/- made by the tenant in his
court was sufficient to cover the arrears, and that taken
with the deposit of Rs. 4001., the amount came to Rs.
2516/8/- dismissed the suit. This was on February 26, 1957.
In the appeal filed by the landlord, the accounts
between 9-6-1953 add 26-2-1957 were recast. It seems that
it was pointed out to the appeal court that the tenant had
withdrawn the deposit of Rs. 400/-. The judgment took this
fact into consideration and held the tenant to be in arrears
and ordered his eviction. The tenant filed a revision
application in the High Court and claimed that as the amount
of Rs. 400/- was in deposit and at the landlord’s disposal,
he could not be held to be in default. His counsel made the
point that there was nothing on the record to prove that the
amount was withdrawn. The High Court held that this was so
but held that it had a discretion in the matter and the
tenent by his conduct over the years had deprived himself of
any consideration. The application for revision was
dismissed.
In applying for special leave against the order of the
High Court, the tenant quoted a long extract from the
judgment of the High Court where it spoke of this deposit,
and then went on to say :
"The petitioner submits that the High
Court was correct in coming to the conclusion
that as there was nothing on record to show
that the petitioner had withdrawn the sum of
Rs. 400/deposited by him in the earlier
appeal, the petitioner was not in arrears of
rent and had paid the costs at the date of the
judgment.’
This allegation was supported by the usual affidavit which
stated that the facts in the petition were true and that the
petition concealed nothing. Strictly
493
speaking, the facts were as they were pleaded in the
petition, but there was more. There was one fact
particularly within the knowledge of the tenant and it was
that he had withdrawn the amount on January 19, 1957, and he
was in default even before the judgment of the court of
first instance was given on February 26, 1957. This fact
was, however, not proved on the record of the case. It was,
however, mentioned in the judgment of the appeal court. In
the petition for special leave, no reference to this fact
was made. Whether the High Court was right in a case of
this kind to go by the record, or in view of what the appeal
court below had said, might have called for an affidavit, it
is not necessary to decide and I express no opinion about
it. It is, however, a very different matter when we come to
proceedings in this Court. The tenant was seeking special
leave against the order of the High Court. At the forefront
of this petition, he had mentioned the fact that the High
Court having held that there was no proof of the withdrawal
of the amount by the tenant or that the petitioner was in
arrears. should have exercised the discretion, which the
High Court held was possessed by it, in his favour.
The tenant hid the fact that even before the decision
in the court of first instance’ he was in arrears as he had
withdrawn the amount of Rs. 400/-. He was thus taking
advantage of a fictional deposit in court which in point of
fact was not in existence. Whatever may be said about the
ordinary course of litigation in which parties succeed or
fail on the sufficiency or otherwise of proof on the record,
it appears to me that when a party approaches this Court
under Art. 136, there must be full candour on his part. The
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powers exercisable by this Court under Art. 136 of the
Constitution are not in the nature of a general appeal.
They enable this Court to interfere in cases where an
irreparable injury has been caused by reason of a
miscarriage of justice due to
494
a gross neglect of law or procedure or otherwise and there
is no other adequate remedy. The article is hardly meant to
afford relief in a case of this type Where a party is in
default of rent because he withdrew a deposit lying in court
but who cannot, on the record of the case, be shown to have
withdrawn the amount. If the petition had mentioned that
the decision of the appeal court had proceeded on the ground
that’ the amount was taken out, it is difficult to imagine
that this Court would have given special leave to decide a
question of discretion.
I have considered the matter carefully. This is not a
case of a mere error in the narration of facts or of a bona
fide error of judgment which in certain circumstances may be
considered to be venial faults. This is a case of being
disingenuous with the Court by making out a point of law on
a suppositions state of facts, which facts, if told
candidly, leave no room for the discussion of law. The
appellant has by dissembling in this Court induced it to
grant special leave in a case which did not merit it. I
agree, therefore, that this leave should be recalled and the
appellant, made to pay the costs of this appeal.
Special Leave revoked.
495