Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 51
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 689 of 1998
PETITIONER:
P.S. Sathappan (Dead) by Lrs.
RESPONDENT:
Andhra Bank Ltd. & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/10/2004
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & S. N. Variava & B. P. Singh & H. K. Sema & S.B. Sinha
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
W I T H
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5385 OF 1998
AND
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 5389-90 OF 2002
Delivered by
S.B. SINHA, J
S. N. VARIAVA, J,
S.B. SINHA, J
Interpretation of Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for
short, ’the Code’) vis-‘-vis Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the High Court
of Madras is in question in these appeals.
BACKGROUND FACTS :
Although these appeals involve common questions of law, the factual
matrix of the matter would be noticed from Civil Appeal No.689 of 1998.
The First Respondent herein filed a suit against the Appellant herein
in the Court of II Addl. Subordinate Judge, Coimbatore which was marked
as O.S. No.403 of 1974. The said suit was decreed on or about 15.4.1976.
An execution petition was filed by the First Respondent-decree holder for
executing the said decree. In the said execution proceeding for realization of
the decretal amount the property belonging to the Appellant herein was put
to auction. The validity of the said auction came to be questioned by the
Appellant by filing an Execution Application on or about 8.10.1979 praying
therein for setting aside the court auction sale held on 26.9.1979 in respect
of Ginning factory situate at Tirurppur named and styled Sree Krishna
Ginning Factory. The said application was marked as Executive Application
No. 419 of 1979. The said application was dismissed by the Execution
Court on 10.10.1985 against which an appeal was preferred by the Appellant
which was also dismissed by a learned Single Judge of the Madras High
Court by a judgment and order dated 8.10.1990. A Letters Patent Appeal
thereagainst purported to be in terms of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of
the Madras High Court was filed by the Appellant which was dismissed by a
Full Bench of the Madras High Court by a judgment and order dated
22.8.1998 holding that in terms of sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the
Code, an appeal against an order passed by the Appellate Court under Order
XVIII Rule 1 read with Section 104 of the Code, was not maintainable. A
certificate of fitness, however, in terms of Article 133 of the Constitution of
India was prayed for by the Appellant and granted by the said Full Bench.
When the matter was placed before a Division Bench of this Court, it
noticed a conflict of opinion between a decision of a 3-Judge Bench of this
Court in New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. vs. Orissa State Finance
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 51
Corporation and Others [(1997) 3 SCC 462] and a two Judge-Bench in
Resham Singh Pyara Singh vs. Abdul Sattar [(1996) 1 SCC 49], on the one
hand, and a Constitution Bench decision in Gulab Bai and Another vs.
Puniya [1966 (2) SCR 102], on the other; and referred the matter to a
Constitution Bench observing :
"We are aware of the fact that Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent applicable to Madras High Court was
similar to Clause 10 applicable to Orissa High Court
which was construed in the case of New Kenilworth
(supra). This Court did not, in New Kenilworth’s case,
consider the effect of the decision in Gulab Bai’s case
(supra). Furthermore, reference in Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent which excludes the applicability of the
same in relation to a judgment passed in exercise of
appellate jurisdiction in respect of a decree or order made
in exercise of appellate jurisdiction by a court
subordinate to the superintendence of the High Court
would prima facie indicate that it is only where the
Single Judge is hearing an appeal from an appellate order
of the court subordinate to it that the said clause 15
would not apply.
In our opinion, the matter is not free from doubt,
especially in view of the decision of the Constitution
Bench in Gulab Bai’s case [1966 (2) SCR 102] and it
would be appropriate therefore that the papers are placed
before Hon’ble the Chief Justice for referring the case to
a larger Bench, in view of not only the conflict in
decisions which is stated to be there but also in view of
the importance of the point in issue, namely, the effect of
the provisions of Section 104(2) vis-‘-vis Clause 15 of
the Letters Patent.
That is how the matter is before us.
SUBMISSIONS :
Mr. R. Sundravardhan, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of
the Appellant, would submit that the Letters Patent of a High Court setting
out the constitutional power of the court must be held to be a special statute
and, thus, in case of a conflict between the provisions thereof and the Code
of Civil Procedure, the former would prevail. The learned counsel would
contend that the Letters Patent being a special statute, the right to appeal
contained in Clause 15 thereof cannot be taken away by reason of sub-
section (2) of Section 104 of the Code which is general in nature.
Drawing our attention to the Constitution Bench decision of this Court
in Gulab Bai (supra), the learned counsel would contend that therein several
decisions including the decision of the Full Bench of the Allahabad High
Court L. Ram Sarup vs. Mt. Kaniz Ummehani [AIR 1937 (Allahabad) 165]
having been approved, it is beyond any pale of doubt that a right of appeal
under clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Madras High Court would be
available to a suitor irrespective of the provisions contained in sub-section
(2) of Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Mr. Sundravardhan would urge that the nature and character of a
Letters Patent being distinct and different from the Code of Civil Procedure,
a right of appeal conferred upon the suitor by reason thereof cannot be taken
away. In support of the said contention, the learned counsel has relied upon
Union of India vs. Mohindra Supply Company [1962 (3 ) SCR 497], Gulab
Bai (supra), Vinita M. Khanolkar vs. Pragna M. Pai and Others [(1998) 1
SCC 500], Central Mine Planning and Design Institute Ltd. vs. Union of
India and Another [(2001) 2 SCC 588], Chandra Kanta Sinha vs. Oriental
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 51
Insurance Co. Ltd. and Others [(2001) 6 SCC 158], Sharda Devi vs. State
of Bihar [(2002) 3 SCC 705], and Subal Paul vs. Malina Paul and Another
[(2003) 10 SCC 361].
The decisions of this Court in Resham Singh Pyara Singh (supra) and
New Kenilworth Hotel (supra) do not lay down the correct law, Mr.
Sundravardhan would submit, having regard to the aforementioned
decisions. The learned counsel would argue that once the appellate
jurisdiction is exercised by the High Court, Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
of the Madras High Court would govern the forum for a second appeal
therefrom; the only restriction being that such an order must be a
’judgment’. Strong reliance in this behalf has been placed on Radhy Shyam
vs. Shyam Behari Singh [1971 (1) SCR 783].
Mr. Sundravardhan would contend that had the intention of the
Parliament been to take away the appellate forum created under Clause 15 of
the Letters Patent, it would have expressly been stated in Sub-Section (2) of
Section 104 of the Code as has been done by the Parliament while inserting
Section 100A in the Code by reason of Code of Civil Procedure amendment
Act, 1976 or Code of Civil Procedure Amendment Act, 2002. In any event,
the provision of Section 100-A of the Code being not retrospective in
operation, the right of the Appellant to prefer an appeal cannot be said to
have been taken away. Strong reliance, in this connection, has been placed
on Garikapatti Veeraya vs. N. Subbiha Choudhury [1957 SCR 488].
Mr. C.S. Vaidyanathan, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of
the respondents, on the other hand, would contend that having regard to
Clause 44 of the Letters Patent of the Madras High Court, it is beyond any
doubt or dispute that the provisions thereof are subject to statutory
provisions framed by the State Legislature or the Parliament. It was urged
that as an order passed under Order XXI, Rule 90 of the Code can be
appealed against only in terms of sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code,
the restrictions by way of a further appeal placed in terms of sub-section (2)
of Section 104 would automatically operate. In other words, Mr.
Vaidyanathan would submit that sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code
applies when an order is appealable in terms of sub-section (1) thereof.
Drawing our attention to a decision of a 4-Judge Bench of this Court in
South Asia Industries Private Ltd. vs. S.B. Sarup Singh and Others [1965
(2) SCR 756], the learned counsel would argue that a right of appeal
conferred by reason of Letters Patent can be taken away by a statute either
expressly or by necessary implication and in that view of the matter having
regard to the legislative scheme contained in Section 104 of the Code, it was
not necessary for it to expressly mention that such appeal would not be
maintainable irrespective of the fact that the same is provided for under the
Letters Patent of different High Courts.
Mr. Vaidyanathan would contend that the decisions of this Court in
Mohindra Supply Company (supra) and South Asia Industries Private Ltd.
(supra) do not lay down any law contrary to or inconsistent with the decision
of this Court in Gulab Bai (supra).
It was urged that while enacting Section 100-A of the Code, the
Parliament specifically referred to the Letters Patent of the High Court
keeping in view the fact that by reason thereof all appeals provided for
thereunder became barred whether under the Letters Patent or special statute.
STATUTORY PROVISIONS :
Clauses 15 and 44 of the Letters Patent of the Madras High Court read
as under :
"15. Appeal from the courts of original jurisdiction
to the High Court in its appellate jurisdiction.-And
we do further ordain that an appeal shall lie to the
said High Court of Judicature at Madras, Bombay,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 51
Fort William in Bengal from the judgment (not
being a judgment passed in the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction in respect of a decree or
order made in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction
by a court subject to the superintendence of the
said High Court and not being an order made in the
exercise of a revisional jurisdiction, and not being
a sentence or order passed or made in exercise of
the power of superintendence under the provisions
of Section 107 of the Government of India Act, or
in the exercise of criminal jurisdiction) of one
Judge of the said High Court or one Judge of any
Division Court, pursuant to Section 108 of the
Government of India Act, and that notwithstanding
anything hereinbefore provided, an appeal shall lie
to the said High Court from a judgment of one
Judge of the said High Court or one Judge of any
Division Court, pursuant to Section 108 of the
Government of India Act, on or after the first day
of February 1929 in the exercise of appellate
jurisdiction in respect of a decree or order made in
the exercise of appellate jurisdiction by a court
subject to the superintendence of the said High
Court where the Judge who passed the judgment
declares that the case is a fit one for appeal; but
that the right of appeal from other judgments of
Judges of the said High Court or of such Division
Court shall be to us, our heirs or successors in our
or their privy council as hereinafter provided."
"44. Powers of the Indian Legislature preserved.-
And we do further ordain and declare that all the
provisions of these Our Letters Patent are subject
to the Legislative powers of the Governor-General
in Legislative Council, and also of the Governor-
General in Council under section 71 of the
Government of India Act, 1915; and also of the
Governor-General, in cases of emergency under
Section 72 of the Act, and may be in all respects
amended and altered thereby."
Sections 4(1), 100A, 104 and 117 of the Code read as under :
"4. Savings.-(1) In the absence of any specific
provision to the contrary, nothing in this Code
shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect any
special or local law now in force or any special
jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special
form of procedure prescribed, by or under any
other law for the time being in force."
"100A. (as inserted in 1976) Notwithstanding
anything contained in any Letters Patent for any
High Court or in any other instrument having the
force of law or in any other law for the time being
in force, where any appeal from an appellate
decree or order is heard and decided by a single
Judge of a High Court, no further appeal shall lie
from the judgment, decision or order of such single
Judge in such appeal or from any decree passed in
such appeal."
"100A. (as substituted in 2002) No further
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 51
appeal in certain cases. \026 Notwithstanding
anything contained in any Letters Patent for any
High Court or in any other instrument having the
force of law or in any other law for the time being
in force, where any appeal from an original or
appellate decree or order is heard and decided by a
single Judge of a High Court, no further appeal
shall lie from the judgment and decree of such
single Judge."
"104. Orders from which appeal lies \026 (1) An
appeal shall lie from the following orders, and save
as otherwise expressly provided in the body of this
Code or by any law for the time being in force,
from no other orders :-
[*}
(ff) an order under section 35A;
(i) any order made under rules from which an
appeal is expressly allowed by rules:
Provided that no appeal shall lie against any
order specified in clause (ff) save on the ground
that no order, or an order for the payment of a less
amount, ought to have been made.
(2) No appeal shall lie from any order
passed in appeal under this section."
"117. Application of Code to High Court.-Save
as provided in this Part or in Part X or in rules, the
provisions of this Code shall apply to such High
Courts."
Order XLIII, Rule 1 and Order XLIX , Rules 1, 2 and 3 of the
Code read as under
"1. Appeal from orders.- An appeal shall lie from
the following orders under the provisions of
section 104, namely :-
\005 \005 \005"
(j) an order under rule 72 or rule 92 of
Order XXI setting aside or refusing to set aside a
sale;"
"Order XLIX of the Code of Civil Procedure
Chartered High Courts
1. Who may serve processes of High Court.-Notice
to produce documents, summons to witnesses, and
every other judicial process, issued in the exercise
of the original civil jurisdiction of the High Court,
and of its matrimonial, testamentary and intestate
jurisdictions, except summonses to defendants
writs of execution and notice to respondents may
be served by the attorneys in the suits or by
persons employed by them, or by such other
persons as the High Court, by any rule or order,
directs."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 51
2. Savings in respect of Chartered High Courts.-
Nothing in this Schedule shall be deemed to limit
or otherwise affect any rules in force at the
commencement of this Code for the taking of
evidence or the recording of judgments and orders
by a Chartered High Court.
3. Application of rules.- The following rules shall
not apply to any Chartered High Court in the
exercise of its ordinary or extraordinary original
civil jurisdiction, namely :-
(1) rule 10 and rule 11, clauses (b) and
(c), of Order VII;
(2) rule 3 of Order X;
(3) rule 2 of Order XVI;
(4) rules 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15 and
16 (so far as relates to the manner of
taking evidence) of Order XVIII;
(5) rules 1 and 8 of Order XX; and
(6) rule 7 of Order XXXIII (so far as
relates to the making of a
memorandum); and rule 35 of Order
XLI shall not apply to any such High
Court in the exercise of its appellate
jurisdiction."
ANALYSIS :
The Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Code) was enacted to consolidate
and amend the laws relating to the procedure of the Courts of Civil
Jurisdiction. The Code includes rules contained in the Schedule appended
thereto. Section 3 provides for the hierarchy of the courts for the purposes
of the said Code stating that the District Court is subordinate to the High
Court, and every Civil Court of a grade inferior to that of a District Court
and every Court of Small Causes is subordinate to the High Court and
District Court. Sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the Code provides for
savings, which is subject to any provisions to the contrary.
By Section 4 of the Code it is not to be inferred that the provisions
thereof do not apply to proceedings under special or local laws, but only
points out that where there is inconsistency, the rules of the Code shall not
prevail.
Section 104 of the Code which occurs in Part VII of the Code
provides for appeals from original decrees and orders. Sections 96 to 103
provide for appeals from original and appellate decrees whereas Sections
104 and 105 provide for appeals from orders.
It is not in dispute that an appeal refusing to set aside a court auction
sale in terms of Order XXI Rule 92 of the Code would be appealable under
Order XLIII, Rule 1 read with Section 104(1)(i) thereof. The special or local
law, the provisions whereof may be in conflict with the Code of Civil
Procedure as stated in Section 4 is subject to "in the absence of any specific
provision to the contrary" which would mean "in the absence of any specific
provision to the contrary contained in the Code". Such a provision contrary
to the Code may be found in another statute, be it a special or a local law.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 51
Section 104 of the Code has to be read as a whole. Sub-section (1) of
Section 104 provides for appeals from the orders specified therein and from
no other; save as otherwise expressly provided in the body of the said Code
or any law for the time being in force. When the special statute confers a
right of appeal, such right is saved, but by reason thereof no right of appeal
is created under Section 104 of the Code.
When a right of appeal is conferred under a special statute, the bar
contained in sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code would not operate
and a right of intra-court appeal provided for in the Letters Patent of the
High Court subject to any statutory embargo would, thus, be saved. To put
the matter differently, if a right of appeal is created by a statute, the same
would be governed by the terms thereof. The question as to whether any
appeal governed by Clause 15 of the Letters Patent is maintainable or not
will have to be judged having regard to the provisions contained therein as
also the scheme thereof.
It is not in dispute that an appeal under Order XLIII, Rule 1 of the
Code may either lie before the District Court or the High Court. An
appealable order may also be passed by a High Court in its original
jurisdiction. A right to maintain an appeal indisputably would depend upon
the subject matter thereof. Having regard to Section 4 read with Order 49
of the Code only certain provisions of the Code as specified therein would
have no application on the original side of the High Court. In the event, an
appealable order is passed by the High Court in its original jurisdiction, an
appeal may be maintainable both under Section 104 of the Code as also
under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent, although the said right arises from
two different sources, but as at present advised we need not advert to the
effect thereof.
Sections 104 and 105 provide for an integrated scheme. The
provisions contained therein must be read as a whole. By reason of sub-
section (1) of Section 104, a limited right of appeal has been conferred in
relation to the categories of cases specified therein. However, if an order is
passed which does not come within the purview of sub-section (1) of Section
104, the right of appeal must be referable to any other provision of the Code,
as for example, Section 96 or Section 100 or any other special statute.
Section 104 provides for an appeal from an order passed by an appropriate
court. Section 104 and Order XLIII of the Code contain provisions as
regard appealability of the orders in the cases specified therein and in that
view of the matter they must be invoked in their entirety and not in isolation.
A right of appeal is a creature of statute and the said right, thus, can
only be enjoyed if law confers the same. The Legislature thought it fit to
confer such a right upon the suitor by reason of Section 104 of the Code read
with Order XLIII thereof. When a right is granted under a statute, a further
right of appeal must receive such construction which would give effect to
the plain meaning of the words emphasized in the section.
By reason of sub-section (1) of Section 104, apart from the orders
made appealable therein, the Code recognizes that there may be other orders
appealable under any other law for the time being in force and further
provides that other orders save as otherwise expressly provided in the body
of the Code or by any law for the time being in force, would not be
appealable ones.
Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code provides for an appeal
from the original order whether passed by a subordinate court or High Court
exercising an original jurisdiction and not from an appellate order. In other
words, it provides for a first appeal. An appeal under Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent is saved under Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code
when a right of appeal is required to be exercised in relation to an original
order. An appellate order is not contemplated by Sub-section (1) of Section
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 51
104 of the Code. Letters Patent of a High Court or a special statute also in
the context of Section 104(1) of the Code do not speak of an appellate order.
Thus, when an appeal under Section 104(1) or the Letters Patent of the High
Court is availed of, there is no question of any further appeal unless the same
is provided for under the statute itself.
Sections 4 and 104 of the Code, furthermore, must be read together.
Appeals under the special statute is saved only to the extent a contrary
provision is not contained in other provision thereof.
Confusion in judicial mind has arisen as to whether an appellate order
passed by the High Court is also saved in terms of sub-section (1) of Section
104 of the Code of Civil Procedure. As noticed hereinbefore, sub-section
(1) of Section 104 provides for an appeal from an original order; but saving
clause contained in sub-section (1) of Section 104 postulates that an appeal
from an order other than those specified in sub-section (1) thereof shall be
maintainable provided a provision therefor exists in the said statute. An
appeal under the Letters Patent may, therefore, be availed of in relation to
an order which has not been specifically provided for under sub-section (1)
of Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is otherwise a
judgment within the meaning thereof. The saving clause contained in sub-
section (1) of Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not go further
and say that even an order passed in appeal from an order specified under
sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure would stand
saved.
By reason of Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code, appeals
provided for under the statutes including Letters Patent might have been
saved but that became necessary only because of appeals irrespective of the
source of appeal whether accruing from the Code or any other statute were
treated alike. What is, thus, saved is the right of appeal conferred under
special statutes. By reason of such saving clause per se a right of appeal is
not conferred nor such appeal can be said to have been preferred in terms of
Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code. In case a right of appeal is
limited or circumscribed by any condition under any special statute, the
same would prevail over Sub-section (1) of Section 104 because saving of
such right would be subject to such limitations or conditions.
Let us consider this from a slightly different angle.
Sub-section (1) of Section 104 saves Letters Patent Appeal. The
remedy of appeal under Letters Patent may be availed of in relation to an
order passed by a court other than those enumerated under Sub-section (1) of
Section 104 of the Code subject to the condition that the same must be a
’judgment’.
Once, however, a right of appeal either in terms of Sub-section (1) of
Section 104 or Letters Patent is availed of, there would not be any further
right of appeal from the appellate order in view of Sub-section (2) of Section
104, for the simple reason, that Letters Patent also provides for only one
appeal, i.e., from a Single Judge of a High Court to a Division Bench. It
may be true that in certain cases, Letters Patent Appeals are available even
from an appellate order passed by a learned Single Judge of the High Court
to a Division Bench but the same was permissible only when there was no
bar thereto and subject to the condition laid down in clause 15 itself. We
may notice that when a first appeal or second appeal was disposed of by a
Single Judge, a Letters Patent Appeal had been held to be maintainable
therefrom only because there existed no bar in relation thereto. Such a bar
has now been created by reason of Section 100-A of the Code. No appeal
would, therefore, be maintainable when there exists a statutory bar. When
the Parliament enacts a law it is presumed to know the existence of other
statutes. Thus, in a given case, bar created for preferring an appeal expressly
cannot be circumscribed by making a claim by finding out a source thereof
in another statute.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 51
For proper construction of Section 104 of the Code, vis-‘-vis Clause
15 of the Letters Patent, it is necessary to ascertain the intention of the
Parliament. If a right of appeal, it is trite, is a creature of statute, it must be
governed thereby. Sub-section (2) of Section 104 clearly states that no
appeal from an order passed under sub-section (1) thereof would be
maintainable. Proviso appended to Section 104 of the Code provides for a
limited right of appeal in respect of clause (ff) of sub-section (1) of Section
104 of the Code which is an indicia of the fact that such a right may be
circumscribed. The statute has used the language in the negative and, thus
must be construed as mandatory. In view of the fact that an appeal from an
order specified in Section 104 of the Code is maintainable only thereunder
and from no other it leads to incongruity that in the event the forum is the
High Court the appellate judgment would be governed by Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent, but in the event the forum is the District Judge, the judgment
would be governed by sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code. If such a
contention is accepted, the same would not only give rise to an anomalous
situation which may be culled out from a plain reading of the said provision
but also would give rise to different treatment to different classes of litigants,
although a right of appeal is available to both the classes from orders of
similar nature which possibility should, as far as possible, be avoided. The
wordings of Section 104(2) of the Code, in our opinion, do not call for more
than one interpretation. Liberal interpretation, as is well known, is the rule.
Furthermore, it is now well-settled that when two interpretations of a
statute are possible, the court may prefer and adopt the purposive
interpretation having regard to object and intent thereof. [See Swedish
Match AB & Anr. Vs. Securities & Exchange Board, India & Anr., 2004 (7)
SCALE 158]
The purport and object of enacting sub-section (2) of Section 104 of
the Code is to avoid delay in disposal of the matter. When the statutory
intention of minimizing the delay in the finality of the decision is manifest,
the Court must interpret the provisions accordingly. [See Municipal
Corporation of Brihanmumbai and Another vs. State of Bank of India \026
(1999) 1 SCC 123]. Appeals under the aforementioned provision as also
under Order LXIII of the Code relate to interlocutory orders. By reason of
an order passed thereunder the matter may not be finally disposed of. If the
Parliament in the aforementioned situation thought it fit to cut down a
further appeal, no exception thereto can be taken. In any event, even if it be
held that by reason of Sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code a party
may be deprived of a Letters Patent Appeal in terms of Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent, he would be at liberty to file, in an appropriate case, an
application under Article 136 of the Constitution of India before this Court.
Even, in a case where the remedy under Section 104(1) is not availed of, in
an appropriate case the order may be questioned in the appeal against the
ultimate decree in terms of Section 105 thereof.
NATURE AND EXTENT OF POWER OF THE HIGH COURT
UNDER LETTERS PATENT :
Letters Patent is a special statue but in the event of a conflict, as
would appear from the discussions made hereinafter, the provisions of the
Code shall prevail. The power under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent is not a
constitutional power of a High Court. Reliance placed on Vinita M.
Khanolkar (supra) and Sharda Devi (supra) in which one of us (Variava,
J.) was a member is misplaced. This Court in the aforementioned decisions
did not lay down a law that the statutory provision providing for an appeal
under the Letters Patent was in terms of the constitutional power of a High
Court.
The British Parliament passed Indian High Courts Act in August,
1861. The Act of 1861 empowered the crown to establish, by Letters
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 51
Patent, High Courts of Judicature at Calcutta, Madras and Bombay. The
jurisdiction and powers of the High Courts were to be fixed by Letters
Patent. Letters Patent, therefore, is a subordinate legislation.
For history of the establishment of the High Courts of India, reference
may be made to Her Majesty the Queen Vs. Burah [(1878) 3 PC 889] and
Chunial Basu and Another vs. The Hon’ble Chief Justice of the High Court
at Calcutta and Others [AIR 1972 Calcutta 470]
The Letters Patent although is a subordinate legislation but
nevertheless would be a law within the meaning of Articles 225 and 372 of
the Constitution of India, but the same cannot prevail over a Legislative Act,
if clause 44 of the Letters Patent is to be given a proper meaning. The
provisions of Letters Patent despite attainment of independence by India are
saved by Section 106 of the Government of India Act, 1919, Section 223 of
the Government of India Act, 1935, Clause 2(1) of India (Adaptation of
Existing Laws) Order, 1949 and Section 18(3) of the Independence Act,
1947. Letters Patent, thus, would undoubtedly come within the meaning of
existing law but the status thereof cannot be higher than that of the statute
made law. Not only in terms of Clause 44 of the Letters Patent, but having
regard to the fact that the same is a subordinate legislation, it would be
subject to laws made by a competent legislature.
The Letters Patent is not a statutory enactment although it has the
force of law. Clause 44 of the Letters Patent in no uncertain terms states that
the provisions thereof would be subject to the legislative powers of the
Governor-General in Legislative Council, and also of the Governor General-
General in Council under Section 71 of the Government of India Act, 1915.
In Black’s Law Dictionary, Fifth Edition at page 1278 the expression
"Subject to" has been defined as under :
"Liable, subordinate, subservient, inferior,obedient to;
governed or affected by; provided that; provided,
answerable for. Homan v. Employers Reinsurance Corp,.,
345 Mo. 650, 136 S.W. 2d 289, 302"
[See Printers (Mysore) Ltd. vs. M.A. Rasheed and Others \026 (2004) 4
SCC 460]
The provisions of the Letters Patent are also in all respects amenable
to amendments and alterations by any Legislative or Parliamentary Acts.
The Code of Civil Procedure is a Parliamentary Act. Section 4 of the Code
saves only such provisions in relation whereto there does not exist any
provision contrary thereto in the Code. The said clause would, thus, apply
only when there is no specific provision in the Code to the contrary or in any
other provision contained in any other special statute. We have, thus, no
hesitation in coming to the conclusion that when an appeal is maintainable
only in terms of sub-section (1) of Section 104, sub-section (2) thereof
would control such appeal and the limitation provided thereunder on further
appeal shall be fully applicable.
The Letters Patent under the seal may be issued for various purposes,
but primarily by way of executive function. The Letters Patent, however,
may be issued also on the advice of the Privy Council or under a Statute.
(See Halsbury’s Laws of England, Fourth Edition, Vol. 8, page 677).
In Law Lexicon cum Digest by N.M. Mulchandani, Vol. A to L, at
page 932 ’Letters Patent’ has been defined to mean ’Letters by which the
King/ Sovereign makes his grants, whether of lands, honours, franchise or
anything else’.
If Letters Patent was to prevail over the Code, no appeal may lie from
a judgment of Single Judge to Division Bench in relation to orders specified
in Section 104. Conflict in this behalf is sought to be resolved in Shah
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 51
Babulal Khimji (supra)
Before adverting further as regard this question, we may notice that in
Shah Babulal Khimji Vs. Jayaben D. Kania and Another [(1981) 4 SCC 8],
it is stated :
"\005In fact, the question of application of the Code of
Civil Procedure to internal appeals in the High Court
does not arise at all because the Code of Civil Procedure
merely provides for a forum and if Order 43 Rule 1
applies to a Trial Judge then the forum created by the
Code would certainly include a forum within the High
Court to which appeals against the judgment of a Trial
Judge would lie\005"
In Shah Babulal Khimji (supra), Mohd Naimullah Khan Vs. Ihsan
Ullah [1892 ILR 14 All 226] and Piarilal Vs. Madanlal [1917 ILR 39 All
191 : AIR 1917 All 325] were approved whereas Ramsarup (supra) and
Vaman Ravji Kulkarni Vs. Nagesh Vishnu Joshi and Ors. [AIR 1940 Bom.
216] were expressly overruled.
Unfortunately, before us the overruled decisions in Ram Sarup (supra)
and Vaman Ravji (supra) were relied upon. We may notice that recently a
Bench of this Court expressed its anguish when an overruled decision was
cited. [See State of Orissa Vs. Nalinikanta Muduli [2004 AIR SCW 4713.
It is, therefore, clear that no Letters Patent Appeal would lie against
the orders passed in appeals disposed of by a learned Single Judge of the
High Court in appeals preferred thereto under Order XLIII Rule 1 read with
Section 104 of the Code against the order passed by the subordinate court or
district courts.
SCHEME OF THE STATUTE:
The question as to whether a Letters Patent Appeal would be
maintainable or not would also depend upon the scheme of the statute.
Such a scheme barring a Letters Patent Appeal is found to be existing
in Representation of the People Act. Under Article 329(b) of the
Constitution, a Single Judge of a High Court exercises a jurisdiction to hear
an election dispute. While doing so he exercises a special jurisdiction.
Having regard to the history thereof as also the limited nature of appeal from
judgment disposing of an election petition expressly provided under Section
116-A of the Representation of the People Act, it will be evident that a right
of appeal under the Letters Patent had been held to have been taken away by
necessary implication. . (See N.P. Ponnuswami Vs. Returning Officer,
Namakkal Constituency and Ors. 1952 SCR 218, Upadhyaya Hargovind
Devshanker Vs. Dhirendrasinh Virbhadrasinhji Solanki and Others, (1988) 2
SCC 1 and Dipak Chandra Ruhidas Vs. Chandan Kumar Sarkar, (2003) 7
SCC 66)
Even in the aforementioned cases also, it has been held that a Letters
Patent appeal may be barred by implication.
APPEAL UNDER SPECIAL STATUTE :
The question, however, may be different when an appeal is provided
for under a special statute. It is trite that Section 104(1) of the Code saves
such an appeal. Section 104, therefore, saves such appeal in view of the
appeals provided under the special statute but it does not create a right of
appeal as such, and it does not, therefore, bar any further appeal also, if the
same is provided for under any other Act for the time being in force which
would include a Letters Patent. Whenever the statute provides such a bar, it
is so stated either expressly or by necessary implication.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 51
It is true that Section 100A of the Code contains a non-obstante clause
as regard the overriding effect of the said provision over the Letters Patent of
the High Court but the same, in our considered opinion, was done by way of
ex abundanti cautela. Furthermore, the Code of Civil Procedure
(Amendment) Act, 1976 and the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act,
2002 being subsequent statutes, the same may not have any application in
relation to the interpretation of sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code.
It is not necessary, in my considered opinion, that the provision
restricting a further right of appeal must specifically mention the provisions
of the Letters Patent of the High Courts or any other statute inasmuch as the
same has to be construed having regard to the scheme thereof. What is
recognized under Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code following the
decisions of the Calcutta, Madras and Bombay High Courts in Toolsee
Money Dassee & Others Vs. Sudevi Dassee & Others [(1899) 26 Cal. 361],
Sabhapathi Chetti and Others Vs. Narayanasami Chetti [(1902) 25 Mad.
555] and the Secretary of State for India in Council Vs. Jehangir Maneckji
Cursetji [(1902) 4 Bom. L.R. 342] respectively, are those appeals which are
provided for under special statute and not an appeal from the appellate order
therein. Let us at this juncture notice as to what had been decided in those
cases although the position in law is, to some extent, sought to be clarified in
Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) which would fall for discussions hereinafter at
some details.
In Toolsee Money Dassee (supra), the question which arose for
consideration was whether refusing to set aside an award against an order by
a Single Judge of the High Court in the original side of the appeal would be
governed by Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1861. The said
contention was rejected on the premise that Section 588 of the Code does not
control appeals under special statute. The Court followed Hurrish Chunder
Chowdhry Vs. Kali Sunderi Debi [10 IA 4].
In Sabhapathi Chetti(supra), the question which arose for
consideration was as to whether an order passed by a judge sitting on the
Original Side of the Court dismissing a claim preferred under Sections 278
and 282 of the Code of Civil Procedure by the mortgagees of immovable
property which had been attached in execution of a decree is subject to
appeal. It was held that Article 15 of the Letters Patent is not restricted by
Sections 588 and 591 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
In Jehangir Maneckji Cursetji (supra), the question which arose for
consideration was as to whether an order under Section 135 of the Code of
Civil Procedure is a judgment within the meaning of Clause 15 of the Letters
Patent. It was opined that the same is not a judgment but while doing so an
observation was made that Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure has
not taken away the right of appeal given by Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
having regard to the decisions prevailing at the relevant time.
Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure requires appeals preferred
under the special statute having regard to the aforementioned decisions. The
decisions of the Calcutta High Court and the Bombay High Court would
indicate that a right of appeal under a special statute was not held to be
barred. The Bombay High Court merely held that even though an order
under Section 135 although is not an order against which an appeal would lie
under Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure, still it proceeded to hold
that if such an order was a judgment, an appeal under Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent would be maintainable. In Jehangir Maneckji Cursetji
(supra), as noticed hereinbefore, it was held that an order under Section 135
would be a judgment within the meaning of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
and only in that context it was held that Section 588 of the Code does not
govern the Letters Patent Appeal.
Section 104 of the Code opens with the words "an appeal shall lie
from the following orders and \005from no other orders". What is, thus, saved
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 51
is an appeal which is expressly provided for under any other statute
including the Letters Patent of the High Court. The saving clause contained
in Section 104(1) of the Code must be literally construed having regard to
the fact that the provisions other than specifically mentioned in Order 49 of
the Code the other provisions of the Code are applicable even on the original
side of the High Court.
To put it pithily, if there is a conflict between an appeal under the
Code and the Letters Patent both the provisions have to be read
harmoniously so as to save an appeal which is not otherwise provided for.
By way of example it may be noticed that when an appeal is maintainable
under the Letters Patent by reason of its being a ’judgment’ within the
meaning of Letters Patent such an appeal would be maintainable despite the
fact that no provision therefor has been made in Section 104 thereof. In a
case, however, where an appeal may be maintainable both under Sub-section
(1) of Section 104 as also the Letters Patent a difficulty may arise to the
extent that where the orders sought to be appealed against is not a
’judgment’ whether Order XLIII Rule 1 would come into play. But if both
the provisions are read together, it may be held that Order XLIII Rule 1
provides for an additional right. So construed, a harmonious meaning can be
attributed both to Section 104 of the Code and to Letters Patent but we have
no doubt in our mind that if a right of appeal is availed under Sub-section (1)
of Section 104 of the Code, no further appeal would be maintainable.
We may notice that sub-section (2) of Section 39 of the Arbitration
Act, 1940 does not contain any non-obstante clause. The said provision
does not refer to the Letters Patent of the High Court or any other special
Act. Despite the same, it was held in Mohindra Supply Company (supra)
that a Letters Patent Appeal would be barred by necessary implication.
The point at issue is no longer res integra in view of several decisions
of this Court in National Sewing Thread Co. Ltd. vs. James Chadwick and
Bros Ltd. [AIR 1953 SC 357], Maharashtra State Financial Corporation vs.
Jaycee Drugs and Pharmaceuticals (P) Ltd. and Ors. [(1991) 2 SCC 637],
Union of India vs. Aradhana Trading Co. and Ors. [(2002) 4 SCC 447],
Sharda Devi (supra), Subal Paul (supra) and Liverpool & London S.P. & I
Association Ltd. Vs. M.V. Sea Success I and Another [(2004) 9 SCC 512].
SECTION 104 OF THE CODE \026 WHETHER APPLIES TO
ORIGINAL SIDE :
The Code indisputably applies to the original side of the High Court.
Section 117 and Order XLIX specifically exclude only such provisions of
the Code which would not apply to the original side of the High Court. [See
Mt. Sabitri Thakurain vs. Savi and Another \026 AIR 1921 PC 80]. Thus, the
rest of the code applies.
Although there is a divergence of opinion on this point but it is useful
to note that in a 3-Judge Bench decision of this Court in Shah Babulal
Khimji (supra), it was held to be applicable. Therein the following questions
were raised:
"1) Whether in view of clause 15 of the Letters
Patent an appeal under section 104 of the Code of
Civil Procedure would lie? 2) Whether clause 15
of the Letters Patent supersedes Order 43 Rule 1 of
the Code of Civil Procedure? 3) Even section 104
of the CPC has no application, whether an order
refusing to grant injunction or appoint a receiver
would be a judgement within the meaning of
clause 15 of the Letters Patent?"
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 51
The answers thereto were rendered from different angles stating :
a) Section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure
read with Order 43 Rule 1 expressly authorizes a
forum of appeal against orders falling under
various clauses of Order 43 Rule 1 to a Larger
Bench of a High Court without at all disturbing
interference with or overriding the Letters Patent
jurisdiction.
b) Having regard to the provisions of section
117 and Order 49 Rule 3 of the Code of Civil
Procedure which excludes various other provisions
from the jurisdiction of the High Court, it does not
exclude Order 43 Rule 1 of the CPC.
c) There is no inconsistency between section
104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 and the appeals
under Letters Patent, as Letters Patent in any way
does not exclude or override the application under
section 104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 which
shows that these provisions would not apply in
internal appeals within the High Court."
However, this Court in Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) had not adverted
to various questions; but therewith we need not deal with at present.
We may notice that the decision of the Allahabad High Court in L.
Ram Sarup (supra) was not approved by this Court in Shah Babulal Khimji
(supra), stating :
"With due deference to the Hon’ble Judges we are
of the opinion that the decision of the Allahabad
High Court on this point is based on a serious
misconception of the legal position. It is true that
Section 104 was introduced by the code of 1908
and the aforesaid section, as we have already
indicated clearly saved the Letters Patent
jurisdiction of the High Court. From this, however,
it does not necessarily follow that the restriction
that there is no further appeal from the order of a
Trial Judge to a larger Bench would be
maintainable or permissible. In the first place, once
Section 104 applies and there is nothing in the
Letters Patent to restrict the application of Section
104 to the effect that even if one appeal lies to the
Single Judge, no further appeal will lie to the
Division Bench. Secondly, a perusal of Clause 15
of the Letters Patent of the Presidency High Courts
and identical clauses in other High Courts,
discloses that there is nothing to show that the
Letters Patent ever contemplated that even after
one appeal lay from the subordinate court to the
Single Judge, a second appeal would again lie to a
Division Bench of the Court. All that the Letters
Patent provides for is that where the Trial Judge
passes an order, an appeal against the judgment of
the said Trial Judge would lie to a Division Bench.
Furthermore, there is an express provision in the
Letters Patent where only in one case a further or a
second appeal could lie to a Division Bench from
an appellate order of the Trial Judge and that it is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 51
in cases of appeals decided by a Single Judge
under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Such a further appeal would lie to a Division
Bench only with the leave of the court and not
otherwise\005"
(Emphasis supplied)
Referring to Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High
Court, it was observed :
" A perusal of the Letters Patent would clearly reveal two
essential incidents - (1) that an appeal shall lie against
any order passed by the Trial Judge to a larger Bench of
the same High Court, and (2) that where the Trial Judge
decides an appeal against a judgment or decree passed by
the district courts in the mofussil, a further appeal shall
lie only where the judge concerned declares it to be a fit
one for appeal to a Division Bench. Thus, the special law,
viz., the Letters Patent, contemplates only these two kinds
of appeals and no other. There is, therefore, no warrant
for accepting the argument of the respondent that if
Order 43 Rule 1 applies, then a further appeal would
also lie against the appellate order of the Trial Judge to
a Division Bench. As this is neither contemplated nor
borne out by the provisions of the Letters Patent
extracted above, the contention of the respondent on this
score must be overruled.
A further second appeal lying to a Division Bench from
an appellate order of the Trial Judge passed under Order
43 Rule 1 is wholly foreign to the scope and spirit of the
Letters Patent. Unfortunately, however, the Allahabad
High Court in Ram Sarup’s case [ILR 1937 All 386 : AIR
1937 All 165] refused to follow a Division Bench
decision in Piare Lal v. Madan Lal [AIR 1917 All 325 :
ILR (1917) 39 All 191] and also tried to explain away the
Full Bench decision in Muhammad Naimul Khan case
[ILR (1892) 14 All 226 : 1892 AWN 14 (FB)] where it
was clearly pointed out that in such cases no further
appeal would lie to the Division Bench under the Letters
Patent\005"
The Court referred with approval the decisions of Mathura Sundari
Dassi vs. Haran Chandra Shaha [AIR 1916 Cal 361] and Lea Badin vs.
Upendra Mohan Roy Choudhury [AIR 1935 Cal. 35] to hold hat that Order
XLIII Rule 1 of the Code will also apply to the proceedings before the
original side of the High Court.
The views taken contrary thereto by the other High Courts had been
expressly overruled. If the provisions of Section 104 read with Order XLIII
Rule 1 of the Code are applicable as regard appealability of the orders in the
matters specified therein, the said provisions must be invoked in their
entirety and not in isolation. An appeal is the right of entering a superior
court and invoking its aid and interposition to redress an error of the Court
below. An appeal when expressly provided can be filed as a matter of right
and in no other situation. No right of appeal can be inferred by implication
or otherwise.
In Shah Babulal Khimji (supra), the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Waman Ravji (supra) also did not find favour. [See para 147].
Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) has brought about a synthesis of the
Code of Civil Procedure vis-‘-vis the Letters Patent. It lays down that an
appeal from an order envisaged under Section 104(1) would be
maintainable, even if it is not a judgment within the meaning of Clause 15 of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 51
the Letters Patent. An attempt has been made therein to harmonize the Code
of Civil Procedure and the Letters Patent. It implies that the Code shall
prevail over the Letters Patent if a harmonious construction is out of place.
In Shah Babulal Khimji (supra), it is stated :
"Thus, a combined reading of the various provisions of
the Code of Civil Procedure referred to above lead to the
irresistible conclusion that Section 104 read with Order
43 Rule 1 clearly applies to the proceedings before the
Trial Judge of the High Court. Unfortunately, this fact
does not appear to have been noticed by any of the
decisions rendered by various High Courts."
In Waman Ravji Kulkarni (supra), a learned Judge of the High Court
construing Section 4 vis-‘-vis Section 104 of the Code proceeded to hold
that unless an appeal under the Letters Patent is specifically excluded, sub-
section (2) of Section 104 cannot be read to create a bar as regard
maintainability of the appeal under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent. Section
4 of the Code therein, in our opinion, has not been construed in its proper
perspective. The said decision also does not lay down a good law.
GULAB BAI:
In Gulab Bai (supra), this Court was concerned with the provisions of
appeal specially conferred under Sections 47 and 48 of the Guardians and
Wards Act. Such provisions providing for appeal under the Special Act are
saved both by reasons of Sections 4 as also 104 of the Code. Section 47 of
the said Act provided for an appeal to the High Court from an order made by
a court including an order passed under Section 25 (c) making or refusing to
make an order for the return of a ward to the custody of his guardian. A
question arose as to whether a further appeal would be maintainable in terms
of Clause 18(1) of the Rajasthan High Court Ordinance, 1949. It was held
that as no finality clause has been attached to the appellate order, such
appeal would be maintainable. Gajendragadkar, CJ, speaking for the
Constitution Bench pointed out that the finality clause is attached only to
Section 47 of the said Act and not to the appellate order stating :
"It is clear that what is made final by s. 48 is an
order made under this Act; and the context shows
that it is an order made by the trial Court under one
or the other provision of the Act. This position is
made perfectly clear if the first part of s. 48 is
examined. The finality prescribed for the order
made under this Act is subject to the provisions of
s. 47 and s. 622 of the earlier Code which
corresponds to s. 115 of the present Code. In other
words, the saving clause unambiguously means
that an order passed by the trial Court shall be
final, except in cases where an appeal is taken
against the said order under s. 47 of the Act, or the
propriety, validity, or legality of the said order is
challenged by a revision application preferred
under s. 115 of the Code. It is, therefore, essential
to bear in mind that the scope and purpose of s. 48
is to make the orders passed by the trial Court
under the relevant provisions of the Act final,
subject to the result of the appeals which may be
preferred against them, or subject to the result of
the revision applications which may be filed
against them. In other words, an order passed on
appeal under s. 47 of the Act, or an order passed in
revision under s. 115 of the Code, are, strictly,
speaking, outside the purview of the finality
prescribed for the orders passed under the Act,
plainly because they would be final by themselves
without any such provision, subject, of course, to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 51
any appeal provided by law or by a constitutional
provision, as for instance, Art. 136. The
construction of s. 48, therefore, is that it attaches
finality to the orders passed by the trial Court
subject to the provisions prescribed by s. 47 of the
Act, and s. 115 of the Code. That is one aspect of
the matter which is material."
A bare perusal of the said judgment would clearly show that had such
finality clause been attached to the appellate order, this Court would have
come to the conclusion that an appeal thereagainst would also be barred. It
is worth noticing that even in Gulab Bai (supra) no law has been laid down
to the effect that a right of further appeal can be barred only expressly and
not by necessary implication. If a finality clause bars an appeal, the same
would be by way of necessary implication only.
Gulab Bai (supra) significantly has not been noticed in any other
subsequent decision.
As regard another aspect of the matter, namely, that the provisions of
Section 47 of the said Act are expressly saved by Section 48 and which
would mean that Section 47 will work out in an ordinary way without any
restriction imposed by Section 48; it was observed :
"\005The competence of an appeal before the
Division Bench will have to be judged by the
provisions of cl. 18 itself. Section 48 saves the
provisions of s. 47, and as we have already
indicated, considered by themselves the provisions
of s. 47 undoubtedly do not create any bar against
the competence of an appeal under cl. 18(1) of the
Ordinance where the appeal permitted by s. 47 is
heard by a learned single Judge of the High Court.
Therefore, we are satisfied that the High Court was
in error in coming to the conclusion that an appeal
before a Division Bench of the said High Court
under clause 18(1) of the Ordinance was
incompetent."
It will, thus, be safe to arrive at the conclusion that had the finality
clause been attached to Section 48 of the said Act, no further appeal would
have been held to be maintainable.
The said decision, therefore, is an authority for the proposition that
when a finality clause is not attached to an appellate order, the right of
appeal expressly provided for by a statute cannot be held to be taken away,
but the converse may not be true.
Therein the Bench although noticed the consensus of judicial opinion
to the effect that despite finality clause contained in sub-section (2) of
Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1877, a Letters Patent Appeal
would be maintainable but there are no discussion as regard the
interpretation of sub-section (2) of Section 104 of the Code. It was
furthermore not necessary for the Constitution Bench to consider the said
aspect of the matter having regard to its earlier findings that the appellate
order contained in Section 47 of the Guardians and Wards Act did not
contain any finality clause, as would appear from the following :
"We have referred to these decisions to
emphasize the fact that even where the relevant
provision of s.588 of the earlier Code made certain
appellate orders final, the consensus of judicial
opinion was that the said provision did not
preclude an appeal being filed under the relevant
clause of the Letters Patent of the High Court. In
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 51
the present case, as we have already indicated, s.
48 in terms saves the provisions of s.47 of the Act
as well as those of s.115 of the Code, and that
gives full scope to an appeal under clause 18 of
the Ordinance which would be competent when we
deal with the question about appeals under s. 47 of
the Act considered by itself."
The Constitution Bench, therefore, did not decide the questions raised
herein nor was there any occasion for it to do so. No reliance, therefore, can
be placed on certain observations made therein as regard the legal position,
as it then stood. It is well known that a judgment is an authority for what it
decides and not what may even logically be deduced therefrom.
SOUTH ASIA INDUSTRIES PRIVATE LTD. :
In South Asia Industries Private Ltd. (supra), this Court referring to a
large number of decisions enumerated the legal position stating :
"\005A statute may give a right of appeal from an order of
a tribunal or a Court to the High Court without any
limitation thereon. The appeal to the High Court will be
regulated by the practice and procedure obtaining in the
High Court. Under the rules made by the High Court in
exercise of the powers conferred on it under section 108
of the Government of India Act, 1915, an appeal under
section 39 of the Act will be heard by a single Judge.
Any judgment made by the single Judge in the said
appeal will, under cl. 10 of the Letters Patent, be subject
to an appeal to that Court. If the order made by a single
Judge is a judgment and if the appropriate Legislature
has, expressly or by necessary implication, not taken
away the right of appeal, the conclusion is inevitable that
an appeal shall lie from the judgment of a single Judge
under cl. 10 of the Letters Patent to the High Court. It
follows that, if the Act had not taken away the Letters
Patent appeal, an appeal shall certainly lie from the
judgment of the single Judge to the High Court."
(Emphasis Supplied)
This Court referring to the provision contained in Section 39 of the
Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 noticed the scheme of the statute and observed
that as finality clause has been attached therein, a further appeal would not
be entertained stating :
"\005The Act is a self-contained one and the intention of
the Legislature was to provide an exhaustive code for
disposing of the appeals arising under the Act. The
opening words of section 43 of the Act "save as
otherwise expressly provided in this Act" emphasize the
fact that the finality of the order cannot be questioned by
resorting to something outside the Act\005"
It is, therefore, also an authority for the proposition that a Letters
Patent appeal can be held to be barred by necessary implication having
regard to the scheme of the statute.
MOHINDRA SUPPLY COMPANY :
In Mohindra Supply Company (supra) the Court upon considering the
scope of Section 39 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, held that sub-section (2)
thereof prohibits a Second Appeal from an order passed in appeal
thereunder. It rejected the contention that despite such bar of appeal, a
Letters Patent would be maintainable. Stating that Section 39(2) expressly
prohibits a Second Appeal from an order under Section 39(1), it was held :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 51
"The two sub-sections of s. 39 are manifestly part
of a single legislative pattern. By sub-s. (1), the
right to appeal is conferred against the specified
orders and against no other orders; and from an
appellate order passed under sub-s.(1) no second
appeal (except an appeal to this Court) lies\005"
Section 39 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, it is interesting to note, does
not contain a non-obstante clause.
Noticing that there had been a divergence of opinion as regard intra-
court appeal, it was opined :
"\005There is clear indication inherent in sub-s.(2)
that the expression "second appeal" does not mean
an appeal under s. 100 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. To the interdict of a "second appeal",
there is an exception in favour of an appeal to this
Court; but an appeal to this Court is not a second
appeal. If the legislature intended by enacting s.
39(2) merely to prohibit appeals under s. 100 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, it was plainly
unnecessary to enact an express provision saving
appeals to this Court. Again an appeal under s.
39(1) lies against an order superseding an award or
modifying or correcting an award, or filing or
refusing to file an arbitration agreement or staying
or refusing to stay legal proceedings where there
is an arbitration agreement or setting aside or
refusing to set aside an award or on an award
stated in the form of a special case. These orders
are not decrees within the meaning of the Code of
Civil Procedure and have not the effect of decrees
under the Arbitration Act. Section 100 of the Code
of Civil Procedure deals with appeals from
appellate decrees and not with appeals from
appellate orders. If by enacting s.39(2) appeals
from appellate decrees were intended to be
prohibited, the provision was plainly otiose; and
unless the context or the circumstances compel the
Court will not be justified in ascribing to the
legislature an intention to enact a sterile clause. In
that premise the conclusion is inevitable that the
expression ’second appeal’ used in s.39(2) of the
Arbitration Act means a further appeal from an
order passed in appeal under s.39(1) and not an
appeal under s.100 of the Civil Procedure Code\005"
This Court upon further noticing that the Letters Patent is subject to
the legislative power of the Governor-General in Council, held :
"\005If by the express provision contained in
s.39(1), a right to appeal from a Judgment which
may otherwise be available under the Letters
Patent is restricted, there is no ground for holding
that clause (2) does not similarly restrict the
exercise of appellate power granted by the Letters
Patent. If for reasons aforementioned the
expression "second appeal" includes an appeal
under the Letters Patent, it would be impossible to
hold that notwithstanding the express prohibition,
an appeal under the Letters Patent from an order
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 51
passed in appeal under sub-s.(1) is compeent."
Tracing the history of the Arbitration Act vis-‘-vis the provisions of
Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1877 and Section 104 of the
Code, it was held that under Arbitration Act there does not exist any
provision similar to Section 4 of the Code of Civil Procedure which would
save an appeal under a special statute, opining :
"Under the Code of 1908, the right to appeal
under the Letters Patent was saved both by s.4 and
the clause contained in s.104(1), but by the
Arbitration Act of 1940, the jurisdiction of the
Court under any other law for the time being in
force is not saved; the right of appeal can therefore
be exercised against orders in arbitration
proceedings only under s.39, and no appeal (except
an appeal to this Court) will lie from an appellate
order.
There is no warrant for assuming that the
reservation clause in s.104 of the Code of 1908
was as contended by counsel for the respondents,
"superfluous" or that its "deletion from s.39(1) has
not made any substantial difference" : the clause
was enacted with a view to do away with the
unsettled state of the law and the cleavage of
opinion between the Allahabad High Court on the
one hand and Calcutta, Bombay and Madras High
Courts on the other on the true effect of s.588 of
the Code of Civil Procedure upon the power
conferred by the Letters Patent. If the legislature
being cognizant of this difference of opinion prior
to the Code of 1908 and the unanimity of opinion
which resulted after the amendment, chose not to
include the reservation clause in the provisions
relating to appeals in the Arbitration Act of 1940,
the conclusion is inevitable that it was so done
with a view to restrict the right of appeal within the
strict limits defined by s.39 and to take away the
right conferred by other statutes\005"
The Court was, thus, concerned with the saving clause contained in
Section 4 of the Code vis-‘-vis sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code
and not sub-section (2) thereof.
It is true that some stray observations had been made therein to the
effect that under the Code of 1908, an appeal did lie under the Letters Patent
from an order passed by a Single Judge of a Chartered High Court in an
arbitration proceedings even if the order was passed in exercise of appellate
jurisdiction, but that was so, because the power of the Court to hear appeals
under a special law for the time being in operation was expressly preserved.
Furthermore, as has been noticed in Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) that in
terms of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent a second appeal could have been
maintained only subject to leave granted by the appellate court therefor. No
such leave has been taken in this case. The said observation would not mean
in absence of any detailed discussion as regard interpretation of the
provisions of the Code, that despite bar created thereunder, an appeal would
still be maintainable under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent.
Such observations were not only wholly unnecessary but the same did
not arise for consideration directly. Furthermore, the questions raised herein
were not raised at the Bar nor the Bench had any occasion to consider the
same in details. The said decision is also an authority for the proposition
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 51
that a Letters Patent Appeal can be barred by necessary implication.
RESHAM SINGH :
The issue which is involved in these appeals was also involved
therein. The question which arose for consideration as to whether if a right
of appeal is provided under Sub-section (1) of Section 104 of the Code
whether a further appeal is barred under Sub-section (2) thereof. Therein,
the said question was answered in the affirmative holding:
"5. Section 104 CPC provides for an appeal from
the orders provided in Order 43 save as otherwise
expressly provided in the body of this Code or by
any law for the time being in force and from no
other orders. Sub-section (2) envisages that
"(2) No appeal shall lie from any order
passed in appeal under this Section".
6. It would, therefore, be clear that when an appeal
was filed against the order of the City Civil Court,
Bombay to the learned Single Judge under Order
43 Rule 1(r) as provided in sub-section (1) of
Section 104 by operation of sub-section (2) of
Section 104, no further appeal shall lie from any
order passed in appeal under this section\005."
NEW KENILWORTH HOTEL (P) LTD. :
In New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. (supra) also the question which
arose for consideration was as to whether Subs-section (2) of Section 104 of
the Code bars an appeal against an order passed by the appellate court in
terms of Sub-section (1) of Section 104 thereof following Resham Singh
(supra). The answer thereto was rendered in the affirmative. Therein it was
noticed that Clause 10 of the Letters Patent of the Orissa High Court was in
pari materia with Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Madras High Court.
It was held :
"9. The question, therefore, was whether it was
appealable. Since the learned Judge had exercised
the original jurisdiction and an appeal would lie to
the Division Bench under Order 43, Rule 1, this
Court considered that the order of the learned
Single Judge was a judgment within the meaning
of Section 2(9) of the Code and, therefore, it was
appealable. It is seen that the exercise of power by
the learned Single Judge was as a first Judge under
the Code and, therefore, the order, though it is one
passed under Order 43, Rule 1, since it gives a
finality as regards that Court is concerned, was
held to be a judgment within the meaning of
Section 2(9) of the Code. Section 4(1) of the Code
does not apply because it envisages that :
"In the absence of any specific provision to
the contrary, nothing in this Code shall be
deemed to limit or otherwise affect any
special or local law now in force or any
special jurisdiction or power conferred, or
any special form of procedure prescribed, by
or under any under any other law for the
time being in force."
Since Section 104(2) expressly prohibits an appeal,
against an order passed by the appellate court
under Order 43, Rule 1 read with Section 104(1)
no ... appeal would lie. As a consequence no letters
patent appeal would lie. The view taken in
Madhusudan Vegetable Products Co. Ltd. v. Rupa
Chemicals [AIR 1986 Guj 156 : (1986) 27 Guj LR
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 51
101 : 1986 Guj LH 93] and Firm Chhunilal
Laxman Prasad v. Agarwal and Co. [AIR 1987 MP
172 : 1987 MPLJ 165] by the two High Courts is
correct in law. The view of the Division Bench in
Sashikala Padhi v. Hiren Ghosh [(1991) 71 Cut LT
197] is correct in law. Sukuri Dibya case [(1990)
32 OJD 431 (Civil)] and the Birendra case [(1992)
34 OJD 473 (Civil)] are not good law.
10. It is seen that the very object of introducing
these amendments was to cut down the delay in
disposal of suits and to curtail the spate remedial
steps provided under the Code. As held earlier, the
right of appeal is a creature of the statute and the
statute having expressly prohibited the filing of
second appeal under sub-section (2) of Section
104, the right of appeal provided under clause 10
of the letters patent would not be available. As
already noted, the main part of clause 10 clearly
indicates that "an appeal would lie from the
judgment not being a judgment passed in exercise
of appellate jurisdiction". Thereby the judgment
from an appellate jurisdiction stands excluded
under the first part of clause 10 of the letters patent
itself. Therefore, the Division Bench of the High
Court was right in holding that the letters patent
appeal would not lie against an order of the learned
Single Judge."
The aforementioned decisions meet our approval.
SOME OTHER CASE LAWS :
Mr. Sundravardhan had placed reliance on L. Ram Sarup (supra)
which has been referred to in Gulab Bai (supra) for the proposition that
when a matter comes before the High Court even on the appellate side, the
appeal from a judgment passed shall be governed by the Letters Patent. We
do not agree with the said view and are of the opinion that the decision in
Gulab Bai (supra) must be read in the context in which it was rendered.
In the said case, the court was concerned with the construction of sub-
section (2) of Section 588 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1877 which
provided for finality clause. Having held that despite such finality clause, as
an appeal thereagainst in terms of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent had not
been expressly prohibited, the same was maintainable.
We have noticed hereinbefore that in South Asia Industries Private
Ltd. (supra), it has clearly been held that filing of appeal may be barred by
the Legislature either expressly or by necessary implication.
In Chandra Kanta Sinha (supra), New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd.
(supra) was distinguished stating :
"12. Learned counsel for the respondents,
however, argued that clause 10 provides that an appeal
shall lie to the said High Court only from "a judgment
passed in exercise of the appellate jurisdiction not being a
judgment passed in the exercise of the appellate
jurisdiction" and as the judgment of the learned Single
Judge was passed in the appellate jurisdiction, a letters
patent appeal was not maintainable. In our view, the
contention of the learned counsel is based on a
misreading of clause 10. He has overlooked the vital
words, namely, "in respect of a decree or order made in
exercise of appellate jurisdiction by a court subject to the
superintendence of the said High Court" in the first limb
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 51
of clause 10. If those words are also read along with the
words relied upon by the learned counsel, it becomes
clear that the appellate jurisdiction mentioned therein
refers to a second appeal under Section 100 CPC (or
under any provision of a special Act) which is in respect
of a decree or order made in exercise of appellate
jurisdiction in the first appeal, filed under Section 96
CPC (or under any provision of a special Act) by a court
subject to the superintendence of the High Court. In
other words, from a judgment passed by one Judge in
second appeal, under Section 100 CPC or any other
provision of a special Act no letters patent appeal will lie
to the High Court provided the second appeal was against
a decree or order of a District Judge or a Subordinate
Judge or any other Judge subject to the superintendence
of the High Court passed in a first appeal under Section
96 CPC or any other provision of a special Act."
It was further held :
"13. In New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. case
aggrieved by the order of the trial court passed under
Order 39 Rules (1) and (2), an appeal under Section
104(1) CPC read with Order 43 Rule 1(r) was filed
before the High Court which was disposed of by one
Judge of the High Court. From the order/judgment of
one Judge, a letters patent appeal (second appeal) was
filed before the Division Bench under Clause 10 of the
Letters Patent of the Orissa High Court. The Division
Bench of the High Court held that the letters patent
appeal was not maintainable. Having regard to the
provision of Section 104(2), the appeal before the
Division Bench was barred. On appeal to this Court it
was held : (SCC p.466, para 10)
"As held earlier, the right of appeal
is a creature of the statute and the statute
having expressly prohibited the filing of
second appeal under sub-section (2) of
Section 104, the right of appeal provided
under clause 10 of the Letters Patent would
not be available."
Therefore, reliance on the judgment of this Court
in New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. case will be of no avail
to the respondents."
In Subal Paul (supra), it was held :
"46. We may notice that even in Municipal
Corporation of Brihanmumbai and Another vs. State
Bank of India [(1999) 1 SCC 123], this Court while
interpreting the provisions of Section 218-D and 217(1)
of the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act, 1888, held
that when an appeal is in the form of second appeal
having regard to the bar contained in Section 100A of the
Code of Civil Procedure, no further appeal shall lie. It
was observed :
"This section has been introduced to
minimize the delay in the finality of a
decision. Prior to the enactment of the
above provision, under the letters patent, an
appeal against the decision of a Single Judge
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 51
in a second appeal was, in certain cases,
held competent, though under Section 100
of the Code of Civil Procedure, there was
some inhibition against interference with the
findings of fact. The right of taking
recourse to such an appeal has now been
taken away by Section 100-A of the Code of
Civil Procedure (supra). Since an appeal
under Section 217(1) of the Act is a first
appeal in a second forum/court and an
appeal under Section 218-D of the Act is the
second appeal in the third forum/court, no
further appeal would be competent before
the fourth forum/court in view of Section
100-A of the Code of Civil Procedure
(supra)."
In Prataprai N. Kothari vs. John Braganza [(1999)
4 SCC 403], even in a suit for possession only not based
on title, a letters patent appeal was held to be
maintainable."
In this case, we are not concerned with such a situation, as sub-section
(2) of Section 104 of the Code would clearly bar such appeals.
In Central Mine Planning and Design Institute Ltd. (supra), the
question which falls for our consideration did not fall therein. The only
question which was raised was as to whether an order passed under Section
17-B of the Industrial Disputes Act is a judgment within the meaning of
Clause 10 of the Letters Patent of Patna High Court.
In Madhusudan Vegetable Products Co. Ltd., Ahmedabad vs. Rupa
Chemicals Vapi and Others [AIR 1986 Guj. 156], Majmudar, J. (as His
Lordship then was) speaking for a Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court
inter alia analyzing the provisions of Section 104 of the Code observed :
"11\005All further appeals from appellate orders
under S.104(1) read with O.43, R.1 are expressly
barred by S. 104, sub-sec. (2) and S. 105 of the
Civil P.C. If any lower appellate Court decides a
miscellaneous appeal under O. 43, R.1, only
revision lies before High Court. There is no
occasion for the High Court to exercise second
appellate jurisdiction against appellate orders
passed by subordinate Courts. Second appeal lies
only against appellate decrees of subordinate
Courts as per S. 100, Civil P.C. Hence the words
"appellate decree or order" must mean appeal
before learned single Judge of the High Court
either against appellate decree as per S. 100, Civil
P.C. or against original order of subordinate Court
under O. 43, Rule 1, Civil P.C."
Yet again in Firm Chhunilal Laxman Prasad vs. M/s Agarwal and Co.
and Others [AIR 1987 M.P. 172] , N.D. Ojha, J. (as His Lordship then was)
opined :
"5. The effect of the aforesaid decision is that if an
order has been passed by a learned single Judge of
the High Court either appointing a receiver or
granting or refusing injunction under O.39 Rules 1
and 2 in some original proceedings, letters patent
appeal would lie against that order treating it to be
a judgment. The Supreme Court, however, does
not go a step further and say that if the order
passed by the High Court was not an original
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 51
order, but had been passed in exercise of its
appellate jurisdiction u/s. 104 read with O.43 Rule
1 C.P.C., even then a letters patent appeal would
lie. Indeed such an argument is not open on the
clear language of sub-section (2) of S. 104 C.P.C.,
which has been held by the Supreme Court to be
applicable to a letters patent appeal. Sub-section
(2) of Section 104 provides that no appeal shall lie
from any order passed in appeal under this
section."
The aforementioned two decisions have expressly been approved by
this Court in New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. (supra).
Law in this country, which is prevailing since 1986, has been
consistent and we do not see any reason to depart from the said view.
PRECEDENT:
While analyzing different decisions rendered by this Court, an attempt
has been made to read the judgments as should be read under the rule of
precedents. A decision, it is trite, should not be read as a statute.
A decision is an authority for the questions of law determined by it.
While applying the ratio, the court may not pick out a word or a sentence
from the judgment divorced from the context in which the said question
arose for consideration. A judgment, as is well-known, must be read in its
entirety and the observations made therein should receive consideration in
the light of the questions raised before it. (See Haryana Financial
Corporation & Anr. v. M/s. Jagdamba Oil Mills & Anr.[JT 2002(1)SC 482],
Union of India & Ors. v. Dhanwanti Devi & Ors[(1996) 6 SCC 44], Dr.
Nalini Mahajan v. Director of Income Tax (Investigation) & Ors(2002) 257
ITR 123, State of UP & Anr. v. Synthetics and Chemicals Ltd. & Anr.
(1991) 4 SCC 139, A-One Granites v. State of U.P. & Ors. 2001 (1) AIR
SCW 848 and Bhavnagar University Vs. Palitana Sugar Mill (P) Ltd. and
Others [(2003) 2 SCC 111]
Although, decisions are galore on this point, we may refer to a recent
one in State of Gujarat and Others Vs. Akhil Gujarat Pravasi V.S.
Mahamandal and Others [AIR 2004 SC 3894] wherein this Court held:
"\005It is trite that any observation made during the
course of reasoning in a judgment should not be
read divorced from the context in which they were
used."
It is further well-settled that a decision is not an authority for the
proposition which did not fall for its consideration.
CONCLUSION :
The upshot of our decision would be :
(1) Finality clause contained in a statute, unless attached to an
order passed in appeal, would not take away the right of appeal expressly
provided for under the special statute;
(2) Letters Patent being a subordinate legislation has the force of
law but the same is subject to an Act of Parliament;
(3) If an appeal is maintainable under sub-section (1) of Section
104 of the Code, no further appeal threfrom would be maintainable in terms
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 51
of sub-section (2) thereof.;
(4) A right of appeal being creature of a statute, it may provide for
a limited right of appeal or limiting the applicability thereof.
(5) Clause 15 of the Letters Patent cannot override the bar created
under Section 104 of the Code. Section 104 (1) of the Code must be read
with sub-section (2) of Section 104; and by reason thereof saving clause in
relation to the Letters Patent would not be attracted. An attempt should be
made to uphold a right of appeal only on harmonious construction of
Sections 4, 104 and other provisions of the Code.
(6) However, when an appeal is provided for under a Special Act,
Section 104 of the Code shall have no application in relation thereto as it
merely recognizes such right but does not provide for a right of appeal.
(7) If a higher status is given to a Letters Patent over a law passed
by the Parliament including the Code of Civil Procedure, the same would
run contrary to the history of the Letters Patent as also the Parliamentary
Acts.
(8) The judgment of this Court must be read as a whole and the
ratio therefrom is required to be culled out from reading the same in its
entirety and not only a part of it;
In view of our foregoing findings, it is not necessary to consider the
other submissions made at the Bar.
For the reasons aforementioned, there is no merit in these appeals
which are dismissed accordingly. No costs.
=============================================================
S. N. VARIAVA, J.
We have had the benefit of reading the Judgment of
Brother Sinha, J. With the greatest of respect to him we are
unable to agree with his view for the following reasons. Facts
have been set out in detail by Brother Sinha, J. and need not be
repeated here except to state that this Appeal is against the
Judgment of the High Court of Madras dated 22nd August, 1997,
by which it has been held that a Letters Patent Appeal is not
maintainable against an Order passed by a single Judge of the
High Court sitting in Appellate Jurisdiction.
Because of the importance of the question involved,
this Court by an Order dated 9th August, 2001 referred the
matter to a larger Bench. The Order reads as follows:
"Against an application filed before the
executing court for setting aside the court auction
which was dismissed, an appeal was filed before the
High Court. On the dismissal of the same by the
Single Judge, a letters patent appeal was filed. A
Full Bench relying upon a decision of this Court in
New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. vs. Orissa State
Financial Corporation and Others, 1997 (3) SCC 462
came to the conclusion that in view of the provisions
of Section 104(2), C.P.C., appeal to the Division
Bench was not maintainable. To the same effect are
two other decisions of this Court in Resham Singh
Pyara Singh vs. Abdul Sattar [1996 (1) SCC 49] and
Vinita M. Khanolkar vs. Pragna M. Pai and Others,
1998 (1) SCC 500.
Learned senior counsel for the appellant has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 51
drawn our attention to a decision of the Constitution
Bench in Gulab Bai and Anr. vs. Puniya, 1966 (2)
SCR 102 and has contended that the observations in
the said judgment clearly support his contention that
by virtue of provisions similar to Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent an appeal could be filed against he
judgment of the Single Judge.
We are aware of the fact that Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent applicable to Madras High Court was
similar to Clause 10 applicable to Orissa High Court
which was construed in the case of New Kenilworth
(supra). This Court did not, in New Kenilworth’s
case, consider the effect of the decision in Gulab
Bai’s case (supra). Furthermore, reference in
Clause 15 of the Letters Patent which excludes the
applicability of the same in relation to a judgment
passed in exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect
of a decree or order made in exercise of appellate
jurisdiction by a court subordinate to the
superintendence of the High Court would prima facie
indicate that it is only where the Single Judge is
hearing an appeal from an appellate order of the
court subordinate to it that the said clause 15 would
not apply.
In our opinion, the matter is not free from
doubt, especially in view of the decision of the
Constitution Bench in Gulab Bai’s case [1966 (2) SCR
102] and it would be appropriate therefore that the
papers are placed before Hon’ble the Chief Justice for
referring the case to a larger Bench, in view of not
only the conflict in decisions which is stated to be
there but also in view of the importance of the point
in issue, namely, the effect of the provisions of
Section 104(2) vis-‘-vis Clause 15 of the Letters
Patent."
The Chief Justice has since placed this matter before
a Constitution Bench.
Before us, it has not been disputed that if Section
104 of the Civil Procedure Code did not provide a bar, then in
this case a Letters Patent Appeal would be maintainable. It is
also not disputed that at the relevant time Section 100A C.P.C.
did not bar such an Appeal in this case.
In order to decide whether Section 104(2) C.P.C.
would bar a Letters Patent Appeal, one has to first notice the
history and the view taken by various Courts in India on this
aspect. In the Civil Procedure Codes of 1877 and 1882 the
equivalent to Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule I was Section
588. It reads as follows:
"588 \026 An appeal shall lie from the following orders
under this Code and from no other such orders:-
\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005..
The orders passed in appeals under this section shall
be final"
To be noted that Section 588 did not contain words to the effect
"under a law for the time being in force". However, Section 588
did provide that "an appeal shall lie from the following orders
and no other such orders". It also provided that "orders passed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 51
in Appeal under that Section shall be final". These words have
the same meaning and effect as the words "no Appeal shall lie
from any Order passed in Appeal under this Section". Section
588 by giving a finality to orders passed under that Section
precluded further appeals. The question was whether Section
588 also barred a Letters Patent Appeal.
There was a divergence of opinion amongst the High
Courts on this point. This question then came up before the Privy
Council in the case of Hurrish Chunder Chowdhry vs. Kali
Sundari Debia reported in 10 I.A. Pg. 4. The Privy Council held
as follows:
"It only remains to observe that their Lordships do
not think that section 588 of Act X of 1877, which
has the effect of restricting certain appeals, applies
to such a case as this, where the appeal is from one
of the Judges of the Court to the Full Court."
These observations of the Privy Council again led to a conflict of
decisions amongst various High Courts. The Bombay, Calcutta
and Madras High Courts held that Section 588 did not take away
the right of Appeal given under the Letters Patent. On the other
hand, the Allahabad High Court took a different view and held
that a Letters Patent Appeal was barred under Section 588
C.P.C. In view of this conflict of views the Legislature stepped
in and amended the law. It introduced Section 4 and also
introduced Section 104 C.P.C., which read as follows:
"4. Savings.- (1) In the absence of any
specific provision to the contrary, nothing in this
Code shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect any
special or local law now in force or any special
jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special form
of procedure prescribed, by or under any other law
for the time being in force.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the proposition contained in sub-section
(1), nothing in this Code shall be deemed to limit or
otherwise affect any remedy which a landholder or
landlord may have under any law for the time being
in force for the recovery of rent of agricultural land
from the produce of such land.
104. Orders from which appeal lies.- (1)
An appeal shall lie from the following orders, and
save as otherwise expressly provided in the body of
this Code or by any law for the time being in force,
from no other orders -
\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005
Provided that no appeal shall lie against any
order specified in clause (ff) save on the ground that
no order, or an order for the payment of a less
amount, ought to have been made.
(2) No appeal shall lie from any order passed
in appeal under this section."
To be immediately noted that now the Legislature provides that
the provision of this Code will not affect or limit special law
unless specifically excluded. The Legislature also simultaneously
saves, in Section 104(1), appeals under "any law for the time
being in force". These would include Letters Patent Appeals.
After this amendment, even the Allahabad High Court changed
its view. In the case of L. Ram Sarup vs. Mt. Kaniz Ummehani
reported in AIR 1937 Allahabad 165 the earlier view was noted
and it was thereafter observed as follows:
"There is however one material distinction between
the provisions of the old Code and those of the new
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 51
Code. In the Code of 1882 there was no exemption
as regards any special law that may be in force for
the time being and the Code of Civil Procedure,
except as regards certain enactments mentioned in
S. 4 and other similar sections, would supersede all
such laws. In Cl.35 of the Letters Patent, there was
a clear provision that the Letters Patents are subject
to the legislative powers of the Governor-General in
Council. It was accordingly thought that the Code of
Civil Procedure would prevail against the provisions
of the Letters Patent. In the new Code of 1908 there
is a special provision in S. 4 to the effect that:
In the absence of any specified provision
to the contrary, nothing in this Code shall be
deemed to limit or otherwise affect any special
or local law now in force or any special
jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special
form of procedure prescribed by or under any
other law for the time being in force.
It follows that unless there is any specific
provision to the contrary in this Code of Civil
Procedure, it cannot affect any special law or special
jurisdiction or power which is conferred on the High
Court. The Letters Patent undoubtedly confers such
special jurisdiction and power. It would therefore
follow that the provisions of the Letters Patent are
saved by virtue of S. 4, unless there is specific
provision to the contrary. We do not find any
specific provision in S. 104 showing that that section
is intended to apply to Letters Patent appeals as
well. The opinion expressed by the Division Bench in
Piare Lal’s case [AIR 1917 All. 325] has not been
followed in other High Courts. It seems to us that it
is not necessary to refer this point to a Full Bench
because of one important circumstance. At the time
when the case of Piare Lal was decided the new Code
of Civil Procedure had come into force and its
provisions could be considered by the Bench to
supersede the provisions of the Letters Patent.
Thereafter Cl. 10, Letters Patent, was amended in
1929 when a right of appeal has been allowed from
every judgment of a Single Judge where leave is
granted. At this latest provision in the Letters
Patent has not been superseded by any provision of
the Code of Civil Procedure, we think that it must
prevail.
It may further be pointed out that Sec. 104(1),
C.P.C., itself provides "save as otherwise expressly
provided. . . by any law for the time being in force."
Accordingly the prohibition contained in that sub-
section that an appeal shall not lie from any other
order, would not apply to a case where an appeal is
provided for under the Letters Patent. It may
however be conceded that this saving clause does
not occur in sub-s. (2), S. 104. But under the
corresponding S. 588 of the old Code where the
words were "orders passed in appeal under this
section shall be final," their Lordships of the Privy
Council in 9 Cal 482, at p. 492, observed that S.
588, which has the effect of restricting certain
appeals, does not apply to a case where the appeal
is from one of the Judges of the High Court to the
full Court. Obviously S. 104(2) was intended to
apply to appeals where allowable under the Code of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 51
Civil Procedure. In any case S. 104(2) does not
contain any express provision which would suggest
that the provisions of the Letters Patent have been
abrogated. We accordingly hold that under Cl. 10,
Letters Patent, an appeal lies from the order of a
Single Judge passed in appeal."
Thus now all High Courts in India were unanimously of the view
that Section 104 C.P.C. did not prohibit a Letters Patent Appeal.
At this stage it must be mentioned that the abovementioned
authority of the Allahabad High Court has been overruled by this
Court in Shah Babulal Khimji vs. Jayaben D. Kania reported in
(1981) 4 SCC 8. But, as is set out in greater details hereafter,
the view that a Letters Patent Appeal is maintainable is
specifically approved. The overruling is on another aspect set out
hereinafter.
In National Sewing Thread Co. Ltd., Chidambaram vs.
James Chadwick and Bros. Ltd. (AIR 1953 SC 357) the question
arose whether a Letters Patent appeal under Clause 15 of the
Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court was maintainable
against the Judgment of a single Judge exercising appellate
jurisdiction under Section 76 of the Trade Marks Act, 1940.
Holding that such an appeal was maintainable, this Court
observed:
"Section 76, Trade Marks Act confers a right of
appeal to the High Court and says nothing more
about it. That being so, the High Court being seized
as such of the appellate jurisdiction conferred by
S.76 it has to exercise that jurisdiction in the same
manner as it exercises its other appellate jurisdiction
and when such jurisdiction is exercised by a single
Judge, his judgment becomes subject to appeal
under Cl. 15 of the Letters Patent there being
nothing to the contrary in the Trade Marks Act."
Referring to Clause 44 of the Letters Patent, it was held
that the provisions of the Letters Patent were subject to the
legislative powers of the Governor General in Legislative Council,
and therefore, in the present day context, subject to the
legislative power of the appropriate legislature. But this Court
found nothing in the Trade Marks Act restricting the right of
appeal under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent.
This question was also considered by a four Judges Bench
of this Court in the case of Union of India vs. Mahindra Supply
Company reported in (1962) 3 SCR 497. In this case, a dispute
between the parties was referred to Arbitration. The Arbitrator
gave an award. An application was made for setting aside the
award. That application was rejected. Against that order an
Appeal was preferred to the High Court under Section 39(1) of
the Indian Arbitration Act, 1940. A single Judge of the High
Court allowed the Appeal and set aside the award. Thereupon a
Letters Patent Appeal was filed. The question was whether a
Letters Patent Appeal was barred. Section 39 of the Indian
Arbitration Act reads as follows:
"(1) An appeal shall lie from the following
orders passed under this Act (and from no others) to
the Court authorized by law to hear appeals from
original decrees of the Court passing the order:
An order \026
(i) superceding an arbitration;
(ii) on an award stated in the form
of a special case;
(iii) modifying or correcting a
award;
(iv) filing or refusing to file an
arbitration agreement
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 51
(v) staying or refusing to stay legal
proceedings where there is an
arbitration agreement;
(vi) setting aside or refusing to set
aside an award:
Provided that the provisions of this section
shall not apply to any order passed by a Small Cause
Court.
(2) No second appeal shall lie from an order
passed in appeal under this section, but nothing in
this section shall affect or take away any right to
appeal to the Supreme Court."
It is thus to be seen that Section 39 specifically barred a second
Appeal. Also to be noticed that in Section 39 there is no saving
clause similar to that in Section 104(1) C.P.C. Further, in the
Arbitration Act there is no provision similar to Section 4 C.P.C.
It was submitted that, even though Section 39 barred a second
Appeal, an analogy should be taken from Section 104 C.P.C. and
it must be held that a Letters Patent Appeal was maintainable.
In considering this submission the conflict of opinions amongst
the various High Courts regarding maintainability of a Letters
Patent Appeal, in spite of Section 104 C.P.C., was set out and
this Court then held as follows:
"The legislature in this state of affairs
intervened, and in the Code of 1908 incorporated s.
4 which by the first sub-section provided:
"In the absence of any specific provision
to the contrary, nothing in this Code shall be
deemed to limit or otherwise affect any special
or local law now in force or any special
jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special
form of procedure prescribed, by or under any
other law for the time being in force:;
and enacted in s. 104(1) that an appeal shall be
from the orders set out therein and save as
otherwise expressly provided, in the body of the
Code or by any law for the time being in force, from
no other orders. The legislature also expressly
provided that "no appeal shall lie from any order
passed in appeal under this section."
Section 105 was substantially in the same
terms as s. 591 of the earlier Code.
The intention of the legislature in enacting sub-
s. (1) of s. 104 is clear: the right to appeal conferred
by any other law for the time being in force is
expressly preserved. This intention is emphasized
by s. 4 which provides that in the absence of any
specific provision to the contrary, nothing in the
Code is intended to limit or otherwise affect any
special jurisdiction or power conferred by or under
any other law for the time being in force. The right
to appeal against judgments (which did not amount
to decrees) under the Letters Patent, was therefore
not affected by s. 104(1) of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908."
Thus a four Judges Bench of this Court, as early in 1962,
recognized that the Legislature had now specifically saved a
Letters Patent Appeal. This Court then went on to hold that
Section 4 C.P.C. provided as follows:
"By this clause, a right to appeal except in the cases
specified, from one Judge of the High Court to a
Division Bench is expressly granted. But the Letters
Patent are declared by Cl. 37 subject to the
legislative power of the Governor-General in Council
and also of the Governor-in-Council under the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 51
Government of India Act, 1915, and may in all
respects be amended or altered in exercise of
legislative authority. Under S. 39(1), an appeal lies
from the orders specified in that sub-section and
from no others. The legislature has plainly
expressed itself that the right of appeal against
orders passed under the Arbitration Act may be
exercised only in respect of certain orders. The right
to appeal against other orders is expressly taken
away. If by the express provision contained in
S.39(1), a right to appeal from a judgment which
may otherwise be available under the Letters Patent
is restricted, there is no ground for holding that
cl.(2) does not similarly restrict the exercise of
appellate power granted by the Letters Patent. If for
reasons aforementioned the expression "second
appeal" includes an appeal under the Letters Patent,
it would be impossible to hold that notwithstanding
the express prohibition, an appeal under the Letters
Patent from an order passed in appeal under sub-s.
(1) is competent."
This Court however noticed that in the Arbitration Act,
there was no provision similar to Section 4 of the Code of Civil
Procedure which preserved powers reserved to Courts under
special statutes. Under the Code of Civil Procedure, the right to
appeal under the Letters Patent is saved both by Section 4 and
the clause contained in Section 104(1), but by the Arbitration
Act, 1940, the jurisdiction of the Courts under any other law for
the time being in force is not saved. The right of appeal could
therefore be exercised against orders in arbitration proceedings
only under Section 39, and no appeal lay from the appellate
order (except an appeal to this Court). The provisions in the
Letters Patent providing for appeal, in so far as they related to
orders passed in Arbitration proceedings, were held to be subject
to the provisions of Section 39(1) and (2) of the Arbitration Act,
as the same is a self contained Code relating to arbitration.
The aforesaid two decisions were noticed in South Asia
Industries (P) Ltd. vs. S.B. Sarup Singh & Ors. (AIR 1965 SC
1442). This Court was called upon to interpret the provisions of
Sections 39 and 43 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 with a
view to answer the question whether an appeal was competent
under Clause 10 of the Letters Patent of the High Court of
Lahore against the judgment of a single Judge in a second
appeal under Section 39 of the aforesaid Act.
Section 39 provided an appeal to the High Court against
the judgment of the Tribunal only on a substantial question of
law. Section 43 read as under:
"Save as otherwise expressly provided under this
Act, every order made by the Controller or an order
passed an appeal under this Act shall be final and
shall not be called in question in any original suit,
application or execution proceeding."
It was not even disputed before this Court that the right of
appeal conferred by Clause 10 of the Letters Patent could be
taken away by law made by the appropriate legislature. Under
the Rules an appeal under Section 39 was to be heard by a
Single Judge, and under Clause 10 of the Letters Patent an
appeal to the High Court lay against the judgment of a single
Judge. This Court held that unless the right of appeal was taken
away by the appropriate legislature either expressly or by
necessary implication, an appeal was competent under Clause 10
against the judgment of the single Judge to the High Court.
However, on an interpretation of Section 43 of the Act, this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 51
Court held that the expression "final" put an end to a further
appeal and the section imposed a total bar.
The question whether a Letters Patent Appeal would be
barred was considered by a Constitution Bench of this Court in
the case of Gulab Bai vs. Puniya reported in (1966) 2 SCR 102.
In this case, an application under Section 25 of the Guardians
and Wards Act was rejected by a Civil Court. This decision was
reversed in Appeal by a single Judge of the Rajasthan High
Court. Against the decision of the single Judge an Appeal under
Clause 18 of Rajasthan High Court Ordinance was filed. The
question was whether such an Appeal was maintainable. It was
submitted that such an Appeal was not maintainable by virtue of
Sections 47 and 48 of the Guardians and Wards Act. Sections 47
and 48 read as follows:
"47. Orders appealable.- An appeal shall lie
to the High Court from an order made by a Court,-
(a) under section 7, appointing or declaring
or refusing to appoint or declare a guardian; or
(b) under section 9, sub-section (3), returning
an application; or
(c) under section 25, making or refusing to
make an order for the return of a ward to the
custody of his guardian; or
(d) under section 26, refusing leave for the
removal of a ward from the limits of the jurisdiction
of the Court, or imposing conditions with respect
thereto; or
(e) under section 28 or section 29, refusing
permission to a guardian to do an act referred to in
the section; or
(f) under section 32, defining, restricting or
extending the powers of a guardian; or
(g) under section 39, removing a guardian; or
(h) under section 40, refusing to discharge a
guardian; or
(i) under section 43, regulating the conduct or
proceedings of a guardian or settling a matter in
difference between joint guardians, or enforcing the
order; or
(j) under section 44 or section 45, imposing a
penalty.
48. Finality of other orders.- Save as
provided by the last foregoing section and section
622 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1882, an order
made under this Act shall be final, and shall not be
liable to be contested by suit or otherwise."
Thus Section 47 permitted "an appeal" to the High Court whilst
Section 48 gave a finality. The Constitution Bench, inter alia,
held as follows:
"Before dealing with this point, two relevant
facts ought to be mentioned. The Act was extended
to Rajasthan by the Part B States (Laws) Act, 1951
(Act III of 1951) on the 23rd February; 1951; but
before the Act was thus extended to Rajasthan, the
Ordinance had already been promulgated. Clause
18(1) of the Ordinance provides, inter alia, that an
appeal shall lie to the High Court from the Judgment
of one Judge of the High Court; it accepts from the
purview of this provision certain other judgments
with which we are not concerned. It is common
ground that the judgment pronounced by the learned
single Judge of the High Court on the appeal
preferred by the respondent before the High Court,
does not fall within the category of the exceptions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 51
provided by clause 18(1) of the ordinance; so that if
the question about the competence of the appeal
preferred by the appellants before the Division Bench
of the High Court had fallen to be considered solely
by reference to clause 18(1), the answer to the point
raised by the appellants before us would have to be
given in their favour. The High Court has, however,
held that the result of reading ss. 47 and 48 together
is to make the present appeal under clause 18(1) of
the Ordinance incompetent. The question arises
before us is: is this view of the High Court right?"
This Court then considered the effect of Sections 47 and 48 of
the Guardians and Wards Act and held as follows:
"The finality prescribed for the order made under this
Act is subject to the provisions of S.47 and S.622 of
the earlier Code which corresponds to S.115 of the
present Code. In other words, the saving clause
unambiguously means that an order passed by the
trial Court shall be final, except in case where an
appeal is taken against the said order under S.47 of
the Act, or the propriety, validity, or legality of the
said order is challenged by a revision application
preferred under S.115 of the Code. It is, therefore,
essential to bear in mind that the scope and purpose
of S.48 is to make the orders passed by the trial
Court under the relevant provisions of the Act, final,
subject to the result of the appeal which may be
preferred against them, or subject to the result of
the revision applications which may be filed against
them. In other words, an order passed on appeal
under S.17 of the Act, or an order passed in revision
under S.115 of the Code, are, strictly speaking,
outside the purview of the finality prescribed for the
orders passed under the Act, plainly because they
would be final by themselves without any such
provisions, subject, of course, to any appeal
provided by law or by a constitutional provision, as
for instance, Art. 136. The construction of S.48,
therefore, is that it attaches finality to the orders
passed by the trial Court subject to the provisions
prescribed by S.47 of the Act, and S.115 of the
Code."
Thus even though Section 48 provided for a finality it still saved
appeals permitted by Section 47 and revisions under Section 622
of the then Civil Procedure Code (Section 115 of the present Civil
Procedure Code). This Court then went on to hold as follows:
"The question as to whether an appeal
permitted by the relevant clause of the Letters
Patent of a High Court can be taken away by
implication, had been considered in relation to the
provisions of s. 588 of the Codes of Civil Procedure
of 1877 and 1882. The first part of the said section
had provided for an appeal from the orders specified
by clauses (1) to (29) thereof, and the latter part of
the said section had laid down that the orders passed
in appeals under this section shall be final. Before
the enactment of the present Code, High Courts in
India had occasion to consider whether the provision
as to the finality of the appellate orders prescribed
by s. 588 precluded an appeal under the relevant
clauses of the Letters Patent of different High Courts.
There was a conflict of decisions on this point. When
the matter was raised before the Privy Council in
Hurrish Chunder Chowdhry v. Kali Sundari Debia (10
I.A. 4 at p. 17.); the Privy Council thus tersely
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 51
expressed its conclusion:
"It only remains to observe that their
Lordships do not think that section 588
of Act X of 1877, which has the effect of
restricting certain appeals, applies to
such a case as this, where the appeal is
from one of the Judges of the Court to
the Full Court".
Basing themselves on these observations, the High
Courts of Calcutta, Madras, and Bombay had held
that s. 588 did not take away the right of appeal
given by clause 15 of the Letters Patent, vide
Toolsee Money Dassee & Others v. Sudevi Dassee &
Others ((1899) 26 Cal. 361.), Sabhapathi Chetti and
others v. Narayanasami Chetti ((1902) 25 Mad.
555.), and The Secretary of State for India in Council
v. Jehangir Maneckji Cursetji ((1902) 4 Bom. L.R.
342.) respectively. On the other hand, the Allahabad
High Court took a different view, vide Banno Bibi and
others v. Mehdi Husain and Others ((1889) 11 Alld.
375.), and Muhammad Naim-ul-Lah Khan v. Ihsan-
Ullah Khan ((1892) 14 Alld. 226 (F.B.)). Ultimately,
when the present Code was enacted, s. 104 took the
place of s. 588 of the earlier Code. Section 104(1)
provides that an appeal shall lie from the following
orders, and save as otherwise expressly provided in
the body of this Code or by any law for the time
being in force, from no other orders. It will be
noticed that the saving clause which refers to the
provisions of the Code, or to the provisions of any
law for the time being in force, gives effect to the
view taken by the Calcutta, Madras and Bombay
High Courts. In fact, later, the Allahabad High Court
itself has accepted the same view in L. Ram Sarup v.
Mt. Kaniz Ummehani (A.I.R. 1937 Alld. 165.)."
The above observations are in context of the matter before it.
The Constitution Bench was considering whether Letters Patent
Appeals can be barred. The observations were necessitated and
have been made to emphasize that Letters Patent cannot be
excluded by implication. This is clear from the following
observations:
"We have referred to these decisions to
emphasize the fact that even where the relevant
provision of s. 588 of the earlier Code made certain
appellate orders final, the consensus of judicial
opinion was that the provisions did not preclude an
appeal being filed under the relevant clause of the
Letters patent of the High Court"
Thus, a Constitution Bench of this Court has held that the words
"under any law for the time being in force" in Section 104(1)
saves Letters Patent Appeals. This decision is binding on this
Court.
Faced with the situation it was submitted that the above
observations have been made only in the context of Sections 47
and 48 of the Guardians and Wards Act. It was submitted that
therefore these observations cannot be applied to a case where
an Appeal is under Section 104 itself. This argument overlooks
sub-clause (1) of Section 104 C.P.C. which now categorically
saves Appeals under any law for the time being in force. Thus if
any other law for the time being in force permits an appeal the
same would be maintainable irrespective of Section 104(2)
C.P.C. As stated above, this would include a Letters Patent
Appeal. Also, the observations quoted above are not in the
context of Sections 47 and 48 of the Guardians and Wards Act,
but in the context of whether a Letters Patent Appeal can be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 51
barred. That was the question before the Court. The
Constitution Bench was considering whether a Letters Patent
Appeal was maintainable. It was then submitted that this
authority does not take into consideration and does not refer to
sub-clause (2) of Section 104. It was submitted that as sub-
clause (2) of Section 104 was not considered a fresh look is
required. Once it is noted that Section 104(1) saves such
Appeals there is no need to refer to or mention Section 104(2).
Section 104(2) cannot lay down anything contrary to Section
104(1). To be remembered that Legislature has now put in the
saving clause in order to give effect to the Bombay, Madras and
Calcutta views. If an interpretation, as sought to be given by Mr.
Vaidyanathan, is accepted then there would be a conflict
between sub-clause (1) and sub-clause (2) of Section 104. Sub-
clause (1) would save/permit a Letters Patent Appeal whereas
sub-clause (2), on this interpretation, would bar it. In our view,
there is no such conflict. As seen above, Section 104(1)
specifically saves a Letters Patent Appeal. Sub-clause (2) can
thus only apply to such appeals as are not saved by sub-clause
(1). In other words sub-clause 2 of Section 104 can have no
application to appeals saved by Section 104(1). Also it is well
established rule of interpretation that if one interpretation leads
to a conflict whereas another interpretation leads to a
harmonious reading of the Section, then an interpretation which
leads to a harmonious reading must be adopted. In the guise of
giving a purposive interpretation one cannot interpret a Section
in a manner which would lead to a conflict between two sub-
sections of the same Section. We clarify that, as stated above,
there is no conflict, but if the interpretation, suggested by Mr.
Vaidyanathan, were to be accepted then there would clearly be a
conflict. The only way a conflict can be avoided is to hold that
sub-clause (2) only bars such Appeals as are not saved by sub-
clause (1) of Section 104.
In the case of Shah Babulal Khimji (supra) a suit for
specific performance was filed. Interim reliefs of appointment of
Court Receiver and injunction were refused by a single Judge of
the High Court. The Appeal preferred before the Division Bench
was dismissed as not maintainable on the ground that the
impugned Order of the Single Judge was not a Judgment as
contemplated by Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the High
Court. It was also held that Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule
1 only applied to appeals from Subordinate Courts to the High
Court.
Thus in Shah Babulal Khimji’s case (supra) this Court was
concerned with an order passed by a single Judge on the original
side of the High Court, which, if it amounted to a judgment, was
admittedly appealable under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent.
The only question, therefore, which arose before this Court was
whether the order of the learned single Judge refusing to grant
an injunction or appoint a receiver on the Interlocutory
Application of the appellant was a judgment, and consequently
whether an appeal against the order of the learned single Judge
to the Division Bench of the High Court was competent and
maintainable under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent. This Court
took the view that the word ’judgment’ in the Letters Patent
should receive a much wider and more liberal interpretation than
the word ’judgment’ used in the Code of Civil Procedure. It was
held that the word ’judgment’ has undoubtedly a concept of
finality in a broader and not a narrower sense. Their Lordships
came to the conclusion that the order passed by a single Judge
on the original side refusing to appoint a receiver and grant an
injunction amounted to a judgment and was therefore
appealable under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent.
Though the question did not directly arise for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 51
consideration, in the Judgment of Fazal Ali, J. there is a
discussion on the interplay of Section 104 and Letters Patent.
The relevant portions read as follows:
"15. We would first deal with the point relating
to the applicability of Section 104 read with Order 43
Rule 1 of the Code of 1908 because it seems to us
that the arguments of Mr. Sorabjee on this score are
well-founded and must prevail. Moreover, some of
the decisions of this Court, those of the Privy Council
and other High Courts support the propositions
adumbrated by Mr. Sorabjee.
16. In order, however, to appreciate the
applicability of Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule
1, it may be necessary to examine some important
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure as also the
previous history which led to the enactment of
Section 104 by the Code of 1908. It appears that
prior to the Code of 1908 in the earlier Code of Civil
Procedure there were two kinds of appeals to the
High Court : (1) appeals against judgments and
decrees of the Trial Judge, and (2) appeals against
orders, either interlocutory or quasi-final, passed by
the court during the pendency of the suit or
proceedings. In the Civil Procedure Code of 1877 the
section corresponding to Order 43 Rule 1 of the Code
of 1908 was Section 588 which provided for
appealable orders under clauses (a) to (t). Section
588 of the Code of 1877 provided that an appeal
from any order specified in Section 588 shall lie to
the High Court or when an appeal from any other
order is allowed by the Chapter it would lie to the
court to which an appeal would lie from the decree in
the suit in respect of which such order was made or
when such order is passed by a court other than the
High Court, then to the High Court. A perusal of
Sections 588 and 589 of the Code of 1877 would
clearly show that the statute made no distinction
between appeals to the High Courts from the district
courts in the mofussils or internal appeals to the
High Courts under the Letters Patent. Section 591
clearly provided that except the orders mentioned in
Section 588 no further appeal could lie from any
order passed by any court in exercise of its original
or appellate jurisdiction. Section 591 may be
extracted thus:
591. No other appeal from orders; but
error therein may be set forth in memorandum
of appeal against decree. - Except as provided
in this chapter, no appeal shall lie from any
order passed by any court in the exercise of its
original or appellate jurisdiction but if any
decree be appealed against, any error, defect
or irregularity in any such order, affecting the
decision of the case, may be set forth as a
ground of objection in the memorandum of
appeal.
17. In other words, the position was that while
the statute provided only for appeals against orders,
all other appeals could only be against a decree
passed by the court concerned. The statute,
therefore, did not contemplate any other appeal
except those mentioned in Sections 588 and 591.
18. The Code of 1877 was later on replaced by
the Code of 1882 but the provisions remained the
same. In view of the rather vague and uncertain
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 51
nature of the provisions of Sections 588 to 591 a
serious controversy arose between the various High
Courts regarding the interpretation of Section 588.
The Bombay and Madras High Courts held that under
Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the said High
Courts, an appeal could lie only from orders passed
under Section 588 and not even under the Letters
Patent. In Sonba’i v. Ahmedbha’i Habibha’i [(1872) 9
Bom HCR 398] a Full Bench of the Bombay High
Court held that under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
an appeal to the High Court from an interlocutory
order made by one of the Judges lies only in those
cases in which an appeal was allowed under the
Code of Civil Procedure, that is to say, under Section
588 and 591 of the Code of 1877. The Madras High
Court in Rajgopal (In re L.P.A. No. 8 of 1886 [ILR 9
Mad 447]) took the same view. Then came the
decision of the Privy Council in the case of Hurrish
Chunder Chowdry v. Kali Sundari Debia [10 IA 4 :
ILR (1883) 9 Cal 482] which while considering
Section 588 made the following observations :
It only remains to observe that their
Lordships do not think that Section 588 of Act
X of 1877, which has the effect of restricting
certain appeals is from one of the Judges of
the Court to the Full Court.
This judgment gave rise to a serious conflict of
opinions in the High Courts in India. The High Courts
of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras held that in view of
the decision of the Privy Council in the aforesaid
case, even though an order may not have been
appealable under Section 588 it could be appealable
provided it was a judgment within the meaning of
Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the respective
High Courts (Toolsee Money Dassee v. Sudevi
Dassee [ILR (1899) 26 Cal 361]; Secretary of State
v. Jehangir [(1902) 4 Bom LR 342]; Chappan v.
Moidin Kutti [ILR (1899) 22 Mad 68]). However, the
Allahabad High Court in Banno Bibi v. Mehdi Husain
[ILR (1889) 11 All 375] held that if an order was not
appealable under Sections 588 and 591 of the Code
of 1877 it could not be appealable against even
under the Letters Patent of the High Court. This view
was affirmed by a later decision of the same High
Court in Muhammad Naim-ul-Lah Khan v. Ihsan-ul-
Lah Khan [ILR (1892) 14 All 226 : 1892 AWN 14
(FB)].
19. With due respect we would like to point out
that the pointed and terse observations of the Privy
Council did not leave any room for any doubt or
speculation in the matter. While construing Section
588, the Judicial Committee in Hurrish Chunder
Chowdry’s case [10 IA 4 : ILR (1883) 9 Cal 482] had
made it clear that appeals would lie under Section
588 to the High Court and the section did not contain
any restriction to the effect that appeal against the
orders of the Trial Judge mentioned in Section 588
would not lie to a larger Bench of the High Court. In
other words, the Privy Council intended to lay down
clearly that Section 588 did not affect nor was it
inconsistent with the provisions of the Letters Patent
and hence those orders of the Trial Judge which fell
beyond Section 588 could be appealable to a larger
Bench under the Letters Patent if those orders
amounted to judgment within the meaning of Clause
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 51
15 of the Letters Patent. Therefore, the views taken
by the Calcutta, Bombay and Madras High Courts,
referred to above, were undoubtedly correct. At any
rate, since a fresh controversy had arisen, the
legislature stepped in to settle the controversy by
enacting the new Section 104 in the Code of 1908.
Section 104 made it clear that appeals against
orders mentioned in Order 43 Rule 1 were not in any
way inconsistent with the Letters Patent and merely
provided an additional remedy by allowing appeals
against miscellaneous orders passed by the Trial
Judge to a larger Bench. In other words, the
legislature gave full statutory effect to the views of
the Calcutta, Bombay and Madras High Courts. Even
after the introduction of Section 104, the conflict
between the various High Courts still continued as to
whether or not Section 104 would apply to internal
appeals in the High Court. That is the question,
which we shall now discuss."
(emphasis supplied).
The Court then went on to consider whether Section 104 applied
to internal appeals in the High Court. The Court considered
various provisions to conclude that Section 104 applied even to
internal appeals in the High Court. The entire discussion is
lengthy and not relevant for our purposes. But during the course
of that discussion at a number of places the interplay of Letters
Patent and Section 104 was considered. To that extent, the
observations are relevant for our purpose and are accordingly
set out:
"A bare perusal of this section would clearly
reveal that excepting Revenue Courts all other civil
courts would normally be governed by the provisions
of the Code of Civil Procedure in the matter of
procedure. Section 4(1) of the Code of 1908 which is
a saving provision clearly provides that in the
absence of any specific provision to the contrary the
provisions of the Code does not limit or affect any
special or local law. Thus, the test contained in
Section 4 is not applicable in the instant case
because even if the Letters Patent of the High Court
be deemed to be a special law as contemplated by
Section 4, the provisions of Section 104 do not seek
to limit or affect the provisions of the Letters
Patent."
\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005
28. We find ourselves in complete agreement
with the arguments of Mr. Sorabjee that in the
instant case Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule 1
does not in any way abridge, interfere with or curb
the powers conferred on the Trial Judge by Clause 15
of the Letters Patent. What Section 104 read with
Order 43 Rule 1 does is merely to give an additional
remedy by way of an appeal from the orders of the
Trial Judge to a larger Bench."
\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005\005.
"30. We have already shown that a perusal of
these observations leaves no room for doubt that the
Privy Council clearly held that Section 588
undoubtedly applied to appeal from one of the
Judges of the High Court to the Full Court, which
really now means the Division Bench constituted
under the Rules. In spite of the clear exposition of
the law on the subject by the Privy Council it is
rather unfortunate that some High Courts have
either misinterpreted these observations or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 40 of 51
explained them away or used them for holding that
Section 588 does not apply to High Courts. We shall
deal with those judgments and point out that the
view taken by the High Courts concerned is not at all
borne out by the ratio decidendi of the Privy Council.
So far as the applicability of Section 588 to
proceedings in the High Courts is concerned, in a
later decision the Privy Council reiterated its view in
unmistakable terms. In Mt. Sabitri Thakurain v. Savi
[AIR 1921 PC 80], their Lordships observed as
follows:
Section (sic Clause) 15 of the Letters
Patent is such a law, and what it expressly
provides, namely an appeal to the High Court’s
appellate jurisdiction from a decree of the High
Court in its original ordinary jurisdiction, is
thereby saved. Thus regulations duly made by
Orders and Rules under the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, are applicable to the
jurisdiction exercisable under the Letters
Patent, except that they do not restrict the
express Letters Patent appeal.
31. Though not directly, some observations
made by this Court also support the consistent view
taken by the Privy Council that Order 43 Rule 1
applies to the original proceedings before the Trial
Judge. In Union of India v. Mohindra Supply Co.
[(1962) 3 SCR 497 : AIR 1962 SC 256], this Court
made the following observations :
The intention of the legislature in
enacting sub-section (1) of Section 104 is
clear: the right to appeal conferred by any
other law for the time being in force is
expressly preserved. This intention is
emphasised by Section 4 which provides that
in the absence of any specific provision to the
contrary nothing in the Code is intended to
limit or otherwise affect any special jurisdiction
or power conferred by or under any other law
for the time being in force. The right to appeal
against judgments (which did not amount to
decrees) under the Letters Patent, was
therefore not affected by Section 104(1) of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.
32. Thus, this Court has clearly held that the
right to appeal against judgments under the Letters
Patent was not affected by the Section 104(1) of the
Code of 1908 and the decision therefore fully
supports the argument of Mr. Sorabjee that there is
no inconsistency between the Letters Patent
jurisdiction and Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule
1 of the Code of 1908." Similarly, in Shankarlal
Aggarwal’s case [(1964) 1 SCR 717 : AIR 1965 SC
507] this Court while construing the provisions of
Section 202 of the Indian Companies Act observed
as follows :
There was no doubt either that most of
the orders or decisions in winding up would not
be comprehended within the class of
appealable orders specified in Section 104 or
Order 43, Rule 1. If therefore the contention of
the respondent were accepted it would mean
that in the case of orders passed by the
District Courts appeals would lie only against
what would be decrees under the Code as well
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 41 of 51
as appealable orders under Section 104 and
Order 43, Rule 1 and very few of the orders
passed in the courts of the winding up would
fall within these categories. On the other hand,
the expression "judgment" used in Clause 15 is
wider..... The learned Judge therefore rejected
a construction which would have meant that
the same orders passed by District Courts and
by a Single Judge of a High Court would be
subject to different rules as to appealability.
33. There is yet another aspect of the matter which
shows that Section 104 merely provides an additional or
supplemental remedy by way of appeal and, therefore,
widens rather than limits the original jurisdiction of the
High Court. For instance, in this very case with which this
Court was dealing, an order passed under Section 202 of
the Companies Act was appealable to a larger Bench and
yet it was argued that the order being of an interlocutory
nature would not be a judgment and therefore no appeal
would lie to the Division Bench. This contention was
negatived by the Supreme Court and it was held that
against the order passed by a Trial Judge under the
Companies Act, an appeal would lie to the Division Bench.
On a parity of reasoning, therefore, Section 104 read with
Order 43 Rule 1 expressly authorises and creates a forum
for appeal against orders falling under various clauses of
Order 43 Rule 1, to a larger Bench of the High Court
without at all disturbing, interfering with or overriding the
Letters Patent jurisdiction. There are a number of other
Acts also which confer additional powers of appeal to a
larger Bench within the High Court against the order of a
Trial Judge."
It now remains to be shown why the case of Ram Sarup (supra) was
overruled. The relevant portion reads as follows:
"38. The Lahore High Court relied on the
decision of the Privy Council in Hurrish Chunder
Chowdry’s case [10 IA 4 : ILR (1883) 9 Cal 482].
The High Court further held that Section 104 does
not in any way take away the right of appeal
conferred by the Letters Patent of the High Court but
merely bars a second appeal from orders passed
under Order 43 Rule 1 to Division Bench. A contrary
view was taken by the Allahabad High Court in Ram
Sarup v. Kaniz Ummehani [ILR 1937 All 386 : AIR
1937 All 165] where the following observations were
made :
It may, however, be conceded that this
saving clause does not occur in sub-section (2)
of Section 104. But under the corresponding
Section 588 of the old Code, where the words
were "orders passed in appeal under this
section shall be final," their Lordships of the
Privy Council in Hurrish Chunder Chowdry v.
Kali Sundari Debia [10 IA 4 : ILR (1883) 9 Cal
482] observed that Section 588, which has the
effect of restricting certain appeals, did not
apply to a case where the appeal is from one
of the Judges of the High Court to the Full
Court.... In any case Section 104(2) does not
contain any express provision which would
suggest that the provisions of the Letters
Patent have been abrogated. We accordingly
hold that under Clause 10 of the Letters Patent
an appeal lies from the order of a Single Judge
passed in appeal.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 42 of 51
39. With due deference to the Hon’ble Judges
we are of the opinion that the decision of the
Allahabad High Court on this point is based on a
serious misconception of the legal position. It is true
that Section 104 was introduced by the code 1908
and the aforesaid section, as we have already
indicated clearly saved the Letters Patent jurisdiction
of the High Court. From this, however, it does not
necessarily follow that the restriction that there is no
further appeal from the order of a Trial Judge to a
larger Bench would be maintainable or permissible.
In the first place, once Section 104 applies and there
is nothing in the Letters Patent to restrict the
application of Section 104 to the effect that even if
one appeal lies to the Single Judge, no further
appeal will lie to the Division Bench. Secondly, a
perusal of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the
Presidency High Courts and identical clauses in other
High Courts, discloses that there is nothing to show
that the Letters Patent ever contemplated that even
after one appeal lay from the subordinate court to
the Single Judge, a second appeal would again lie to
a Division Bench of the Court. All that the Letters
Patent provides for is that where the Trial Judge
passes an order, an appeal against the judgment of
the said Trial Judge would lie to a Division Bench.
Furthermore, there is an express provision in the
Letters Patent where only in one case a further or a
second appeal could lie to a Division Bench from an
appellate order of the Trial Judge and that it is in
cases of appeals decided by a Single Judge under
Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Such a
further appeal would lie to a Division Bench only with
the leave of the court and not otherwise. The
relevant portion of Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
may be extracted thus:
And we do further ordain that an appeal
shall lie to the said High Court of Judicature at
Madras, Bombay, Fort William in Bengal from
the judgment....of one Judge of the said High
Court or one Judge of any Division Court,
pursuant to Section 108 of the Government of
India Act, and that notwithstanding anything
hereinbefore provided, an appeal shall lie to
the said High Court from a judgment of one
Judge of the said High Court or one Judge of
any Division Court, pursuant to Section 108 of
the Government of India Act, made (on or
after the first day of February 1929) in the
exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect of a
decree or order made in the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction by a court subject to the
superintendence of the said High Court where
the Judge who passed the judgment declares
that the case is a fit one for appeal.
40. A perusal of the Letters Patent would clearly
reveal two essential incidents \026 (1) that an appeal shall lie
against any order passed by the Trial Judge to a larger
Bench of the same High Court, and (2) that when the Trial
Judge decides an appeal against a judgment or decree
passed by the district courts in the mofussil, a further
appeal shall only lie where the judge concerned declares it
to be a fit one for appeal to a Division Bench. Thus the
special law, viz, the Letters Patent, contemplates only
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 43 of 51
these two kinds of appeals and no other. There is,
therefore, no warrant for accepting the argument of the
respondent that if Order 43 Rule 1 applies, then a further
appeal would also lie against the appellate order of the
Trial Judge to a Division Bench. As this is neither
contemplated nor borne out by the provisions of the
Letters Patent extracted above, the contention of the
respondent on this score must be overruled.
41. A further second appeal lying to a Division Bench
from an appellate order of the Trial Judge passed under
Order 43 Rule 1 is wholly foreign to the scope and spirit of
the Letters Patent. Unfortunately, however, the Allahabad
High Court in Ram Sarup’s case [ILR 1937 All 386:AIR
1937 All 165] refused to follow a Division Bench decision in
Piare Lal v. Madan Lal [AIR 1917 All 325:ILR (1917) 39 All
191] and also tried to explain away the Full Bench decision
in Muhammad Naimul Khan case [ ILR (1892) 14 All 226:
1892 AWN 14 (FB)] where it is clearly pointed out that in
such cases no further appeal would lie to the Division
Bench under the Letters Patent. The distinction drawn by
the Allahabad High Court regarding the application of
Section 104 is a distinction without any difference"
Much emphasis is sought to be put on the sentence, i.e.
"Once Section 104 applies and there is nothing in the Letters
Patent to restrict the application of Section 104 to the effect that
even if one appeal will lie to the Single Judge, no further appeal
will lie to the Division Bench" and it is submitted that the Court
was laying down that a further appeal will not lie even if Letters
Patent permitted. The sentence cannot be read in isolation. It
must be read in the context of all that is stated before it. It is
already held that Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 C.P.C.
confers additional powers of appeal to a larger Bench within the
High Court. When read in context the sentence only means that
in case of Orders not covered by Letters Patent a further appeal
will not lie. This is also clear from the subsequent sentence that
there is nothing else in Letters Patent which permits a further
appeal barred by Section 104(2) C.P.C. As set out above,
Section 104(2) only bars appeals against Order passed in appeal
under the Section. Thus Section 104(2) does not bar appeals
permitted by any law in force. Also to be noted that principle in
Ram Sarup’s case (supra), that Section 104 did not bar a Letters
Patent appeal was specifically accepted. It is also accepted that
Letters Patent is a special law. However on the wordings of the
concerned Letters Patent as noticed, it was held that the Letters
Patent did not permit a second appeal. Had the Letters Patent
permitted a second appeal, on the ratio laid down earlier, a
Letters Patent Appeal would have been held to be maintainable.
In our case it is an admitted position that the concerned Letters
Patent permits an appeal.
It must also be mentioned that, as set out hereinabove,
their Lordships considered the relevant portion of Clause 15 of
the Letters Patent which has been extracted in the judgment,
but unfortunately another relevant portion of Clause 15 has been
missed. If Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High
Court is read in its entirety it leaves no manner of doubt that it
provides for an appeal to the said High Court from the judgment
of one Judge of the said High Court, subject to certain
exceptions enumerated therein. The first part of Clause 15
contemplates two types of orders passed by a Single Judge of
the High Court against which an appeal shall lie to the High
Court \026 First an order of the Single Judge exercising Original
Jurisdiction which amounted to judgment; and second, orders of
a Single Judge of the High Court exercising appellate jurisdiction
subject to the orders specified, which were excepted, such as a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 44 of 51
judgment passed in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction in
respect of a decree or order made in the exercise of appellate
jurisdiction by a Court subject to the superintendence of the
High Court, or an order made in the exercise of revisional
jurisdiction etc. etc. Clearly, therefore, Clause 15 of the Letters
Patent contemplates an appeal against the judgment of a Single
Judge of the High Court exercising appellate jurisdiction,
provided the judgment appealed against is not one which was
preferred against an appellate order, meaning thereby that no
Letters Patent Appeal would lie against an order passed by a
Single Judge in Second Appeal, or an order passed in revisional
jurisdiction, The latter part of Clause 15, however, provides
that an appeal shall lie to the High Court from a judgment of the
Single Judge in exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect of a
decree or order made in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction by
a Court subject to superintendence of the said High Court, where
the Judge who passed the judgment declares that the case is a
fit one for appeal. Thus under Clause 15 a Letters Patent Appeal
is competent even against an order passed by the High Court in
Second Appeal provided the Judge deciding the case declares
that the case is fit for appeal. In substance, therefore, Clause
15 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court provided for
an appeal \026 (1) against a judgment of a Single Judge of the High
Court ; (2) against a judgment of a Single Judge of the High
Court exercising appellate jurisdiction, except in cases where the
Single Judge is sitting in Second Appeal or where he exercises
the revisional jurisdiction; and (3) judgment of the High Court
even if passed in Second Appeal provided the Judge certifies it
as fit for appeal to a Division Bench. Since the relevant portion
of the Letters Patent was not extracted in the judgment, Their
Lordships came to the conclusion set out above viz.:
"40. A perusal of the Letters Patent would clearly reveal
that essential incidents \026 (1) that an appeal shall lie
against any order passed by the Trial Judge to a larger
Bench of the same High Court, and (2) that where the Trial
Judge decides an appeal against a judgment or decree
passed by the district courts in the mofussil, a further
appeal shall lie only where the judge concerned declares it
to be a fit one for appeal to a Division Bench. Thus the
special law, viz., the Letters Patent, contemplates only
these two kinds of appeals and no other. There is,
therefore, no warrant for accepting the argument of the
respondent that if Order 43 Rule 1 applies, then a further
appeal would also lie against the appellate order of the
Trial Judge to a Division Bench. As this is neither
contemplated nor borne out by the provisions of the
Letters Patent extracted above, the contention of the
respondent on this score must be overruled."
We are of the opinion that in reaching this conclusion the
Court missed the relevant portion of Clause 15 of the Letters
Patent of the Bombay High Court. Reliance cannot, therefore, be
placed on this judgment for the proposition that under Clause 15
of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High Court no appeal to a
Division Bench from the order of the Single Judge in exercise of
appellate jurisdiction is maintainable.
Thus the unanimous view of all Courts till 1996 was that
Section 104(1) C.P.C. specifically saved Letters Patent Appeals
and the bar under 104(2) did not apply to Letters patent
Appeals. The view has been that a Letters Patent Appeal cannot
be ousted by implication but the right of an Appeal under the
Letters Patent can be taken away by an express provision in an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 45 of 51
appropriate Legislation. The express provision need not refer to
or use the words "Letters Patent" but if on a reading of the
provision it is clear that all further Appeals are barred then even
a Letters Patent Appeal would be barred.
For the first time in the case of Resham Singh Pyara Singh
vs. Abdul Sattar reported in (1996) 1 SCC 49 a contrary view
was adopted by a 2 judge bench of this Court. In this case there
was an Appeal, before a Single Judge of the High Court, against
an order of the City Civil Court granting an interim injunction.
The question was whether a Letters Patent Appeal was
maintainable against the order of the Single Judge. This Court,
without considering any of the other previous authorities of this
Court, without giving any reasons whatsoever, did not follow the
ratio laid down in Shah Babulal Khimji’s case, (which was binding
on it) held as follows:
"6. It would, therefore, be clear that when an
appeal was filed against the order of the City Civil
Court, Bombay to the learned Single Judge under
Order 43 Rule 1(r) as provided in sub-section (1) of
Section 104 by operation of sub-section (2) of
Section 104, no further appeal shall lie from any
order passed in appeal under this section. In Khimji
case [(1981) 4 SCC 8] the suit was filed on the
original side of the High Court and the learned Single
Judge on the original side passed an interlocutory
order. Against the orders of the learned Single
Judge, though it was an interlocutory order, since
the appeal would lie to the Division Bench under the
Letters Patent, this Court held that against the
interlocutory orders passed by the Single Judge,
Letters Patent Appeal would be maintainable. That
ratio, therefore, is clearly inapplicable to the facts in
this case."
Then in the case of New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. vs.
Orissa State Finance Corporation and Ors. reported in (1997) 3
SCC 462 the question, whether a Letters Patent Appeal was
maintainable, again arose. In this case a status quo order was
passed by the trial Court. In Appeal, a single Judge of the High
Court, vacated the Order of status quo. Attention of this Court
was drawn to the 3 Judge Bench decision in the case of Shah
Babulal Khimji (supra) and to the 2 Judge Bench decision in the
case of Resham Singh Pyara Singh (supra). Shah Babulal
Khimji’s case being a 3 Judge Bench decision would prevail over
Resham Singh Pyara Singh’s case. It was also a binding decision
on this Bench yet surprisingly the Court followed Resham Singh
Pyara Singh’s case. Of course the other decisions of this Court do
not appear to have been brought to the attention of the Court.
In this case it was also held that the concerned Order was not
covered by Clause 10 of the Letters Patent. The following
observations make this clear:
"It would, thus, be seen that clause 10 of the Letters
Patent consists of only two parts. In the first part,
an appeal shall lie from a judgment of a learned
Single Judge to the Division Bench not being a
judgment passed in exercise of the appellate
jurisdiction or revisional jurisdiction. In other cases,
where the learned Single Judge exercises the
appellate jurisdiction, if he certifies that it is a fit
case for an appeal to the Division Bench.
Notwithstanding the prohibition contained in the
latter part of clause 10, an appeal would lie."
With greatest of respect to the learned Judges it must be
mentioned that it has been omitted to be noticed that the
concerned Letters Patent had three limbs as set out in Central
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 46 of 51
Mine Planning & Design Institute Ltd. vs. Union of India reported
in (2001) 2 SCC 588. In this case the three limbs have been
noted. It is held as follows:
"8. A close reading of the provision, quoted
above, shows that it has three limbs : the first limb
specifies the type of judgments of one Judge of the
High Court which is appealable in that High Court
and the categories of judgments/orders which are
excluded from its ambit; the second limb provides
that notwithstanding anything provided in the first
limb, an appeal shall lie to that High Court from the
judgment of one Judge of the High Court or one
Judge of any Division Court, pursuant to Section 108
of the Government of India Act (now Article 225 of
the Constitution of India), on or after 1-2-1929
passed in exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect
of a decree or order made in exercise of appellate
jurisdiction by a court subject to the superintendence
of the said High Court where the Judge who passed
the judgment declares that the case is a fit one for
appeal; and the third limb says that the right of
appeal from other judgments of Judges of the said
High Court or such Division Court shall be to "us, our
heirs or successors in our or their Privy Council, as
hereinafter provided."
Thus it is clear that the cases of Resham Singh Pyara Singh and
New Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. lay down wrong law and are
overruled.
It must now be noticed that even after the aforementioned
two decisions this Court has continued to hold that a Letters
Patent Appeal is not affected.
In the case of Vinita M. Khanolkar vs. Pragna M. Pai
reported in (1998) 1 SCC 500 an Appeal had been filed against
an Order passed under Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act. It
was contended that such an Appeal was barred by sub-section
(3) of Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act. This Court agreed that
Section 6(3) of the Specific Relief Act barred such an Appeal but
went on to consider whether Section 6(3) could bar a Letters
Patent Appeal. In this context this Court held as follows:
"3. Now it is well settled that any statutory
provision barring an appeal or revision cannot cut
across the constitutional power of a High Court. Even
the power flowing from the paramount charter under
which the High Court functions would not get
excluded unless the statutory enactment concerned
expressly excludes appeals under letters patent. No
such bar is discernible from Section 6(3) of the Act.
It could not be seriously contended by learned
counsel for the respondents that if clause 15 of the
Letters Patent is invoked then the order would be
appealable. Consequently, in our view, on the clear
language of clause 15 of the Letters Patent which is
applicable to Bombay High Court, the said appeal
was maintainable as the order under appeal was
passed by learned Single Judge of the nigh Court
exercising original jurisdiction of the court. Only on
that short ground the appeal is required to be
allowed."
The question whether a Letters Patent Appeal was maintainable
against the Judgment/Order of a single Judge passed in a First
Appeal under Section 140 of the Motor Vehicles Act was
considered by this Court in the case of Chandra Kanta Sinha vs.
Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd. reported in (2001) 6 SCC 158. In
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 47 of 51
this case, it was held that such an Appeal was maintainable. It
is held that the decision of this Court in the case of New
Kenilworth Hotel (P) Ltd. (supra) was inapplicable.
Thereafter in the case of Sharda Devi vs. State of Bihar
reported in (2002) 3 SCC 705 the question again arose whether
a Letters Patent Appeal was maintainable in view of Section 54
of the Land Acquisition Act. A three Judges Bench of this Court
held that a Letters Patent was a Charter under which the High
Courts were established and that by virtue of that Charter the
High Court got certain powers. It was held that when a Letters
Patent grants to the High Court a power of Appeal, against a
Judgment of a single Judge, the right to entertain such an
Appeal does not get excluded unless the statutory enactment
excludes an Appeal under the Letters Patent. It was held that as
Section 54 of the Land Acquisition Act did not bar a Letters
Patent Appeal such an Appeal was maintainable. At this stage it
must be clarified that during arguments, relying on the sentence
"The powers given to a High Court under the Letters patent are
akin to the constitutional powers of a High Court" in para 9 of
this Judgment it had been suggested that a Letters Patent had
the same status as the Constitution of India. In our view these
observations merely lay down that the powers given to a High
Court are the powers with which that High Court is constituted.
These observations do not put Letters Patent on par with the
Constitution of India.
In the case of Subal Paul vs. Maline Paul reported in
(2003) 10 SCC 361, the question was whether a Letters Patent
Appeal was maintainable against an Order passed by a single
Judge of the High Court in an Appeal under Section 299 of the
Succession Act, 1925. It was held that an Appeal under Section
299 was permitted by virtue of Section 299 and not under
Section 104 C.P.C. Section 299 of the Indian Succession Act,
1925 reads as follows:
"299. Appeals from orders of District Judge.\027
Every order made by a District Judge by virtue of
the powers hereby conferred upon him shall be
subject to appeal to the High Court in accordance
with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (5 of 1908), applicable to appeals."
Thus Section 299 permitted an Appeal to the High Court in
accordance with the provision of CPC. That provision was
Section 104. The Order passed by the Single Judge was an
Order under Section 104. The further Appeal was under Letters
Patent only. Section 299 of the Indian Succession Act did not
permit it. The Letters Patent Appeal was saved/permitted by the
words "any other law for the time being in force" in Section
104(1). It was thus held that Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
permitted a right of Appeal against Order/Judgment passed
under any Act unless the same was expressly excluded. It was
held that the bar under Section 104 (2) would not apply if an
Appeal was provided in any other law for the time being in force.
Thus this authority also recognizes that an appeal permitted by
"any other law for the time being in force" will not be hit by
Section 104(2).
Thus, the consensus of judicial opinion has been that
Section 104(1) Civil Procedure Code expressly saves a Letters
Patent Appeal. At this stage it would be appropriate to analyze
Section 104 C.P.C. Sub-section (1) of Section 104 CPC provides
for an appeal from the orders enumerated under sub-section (1)
which contemplates an appeal from the orders enumerated
therein, as also appeals expressly provided in the body of the
Code or by any law for the time being in force. Sub-section (1)
therefore contemplates three types of orders from which appeals
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 48 of 51
are provided namely,
1) orders enumerated in sub-section (1).
2) appeals otherwise expressly provided in the body of the Code
and
3) appeals provided by any law for the time being force. It is
not disputed that an appeal provided under the Letters Patent of
the High Court is an appeal provided by a law for the time being
in force.
As such an appeal is expressly saved by Section 104(1).
Sub-clause 2 cannot apply to such an appeal. Section 104 has to
be read as a whole. Merely reading sub-clause (2) by ignoring
the saving clause in sub-section (1) would lead to a conflict
between the two sub-clauses. Read as a whole and on well
established principles of interpretation it is clear that sub-clause
(2) can only apply to appeals not saved by sub-clause (1) of
Section 104. The finality provided by sub-clause (2) only
attaches to Orders passed in Appeal under Section 104, i.e.,
those Orders against which an Appeal under "any other law for
the time being in force" is not permitted. Section 104(2) would
not thus bar a Letters Patent Appeal. Effect must also be given
to Legislative intent of introducing Section 4 C.P.C. and the
words "by any law for the time being in force" in Section 104(1).
This was done to give effect to the Calcutta, Madras and Bombay
views that Section 104 did not bar a Letters Patent. As Appeals
under "any other law for the time being in force" undeniably
include a Letters Patent Appeal, such appeals are now
specifically saved. Section 104 must be read as a whole and
harmoniously. If the intention was to exclude what is specifically
saved in sub-clause (1), then there had to be a specific
exclusion. A general exclusion of this nature would not be
sufficient. We are not saying that a general exclusion would
never oust a Letters Patent Appeal. However when Section
104(1) specifically saves a Letters Patent Appeal then the only
way such an appeal could be excluded is by express mention in
104(2) that a Letters Patent Appeal is also prohibited. It is for
this reason that Section 4 of the Civil Procedure Code provides
as follows:
"4. Savings.- (1) In the absence of any
specific provision to the contrary, nothing in this
Code shall be deemed to limit or otherwise affect any
special or local law now in force or any special
jurisdiction or power conferred, or any special form
of procedure prescribed, by or under any other law
for the time being in force.
(2) In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the proposition contained in sub-section
(1), nothing in this Code shall be deemed to limit or
otherwise affect any remedy which a landholder or
landlord may have under any law for the time being
in force for the recovery of rent of agricultural land
from the produce of such land."
As stated hereinabove, a specific exclusion may be clear from
the words of a statue even though no specific reference is made
to Letters Patent. But where there is an express saving in the
statute/section itself, then general words to the effect that "an
appeal would not lie" or "Order will be final" are not sufficient.
In such cases, i.e., where there is an express saving, there must
be an express exclusion. Sub-clause (2) of Section 104 does not
provide for any express exclusion. In this context reference
may be made to Section 100A. The present Section 100A was
amended in 2002. The earlier Section 100A, introduced in 1976,
reads as follows:
"100A. No further appeal in certain cases.-
Notwithstanding anything contained in any Letters
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 49 of 51
Patent for any High Court or in any other instrument
having the force of law or in any other law for the
time being in force, where any appeal from an
appellate decree or order is heard and decided by a
single Judge of a High Court, no further appeal shall
lie from the judgment, decision or order of such
single Judge in such appeal or from any decree
passed in such appeal."
It is thus to be seen that when the Legislature wanted to exclude
a Letters Patent Appeal it specifically did so. The words used in
Section 100A are not by way of abundant caution. By the
Amendment Acts of 1976 and 2002 a specific exclusion is
provided as the Legislature knew that in the absence of such
words a Letters Patent Appeal would not be barred. The
Legislature was aware that it had incorporated the saving clause
in Section 104(1) and incorporated Section 4 in the C.P.C. Thus
now a specific exclusion was provided. After 2002, Section 100A
reads as follows:
"100A. No further appeal in certain cases.-
Notwithstanding anything contained in any Letters
Patent for any High Court or in any other instrument
having the force of law or in any other law for the
time being in force, where any appeal from an
original or appellate decree or order is heard and
decided by a single Judge of a High Court, no further
appeal shall lie from the judgment and decree of
such single Judge."
To be noted that here again the Legislature has provided for a
specific exclusion. It must be stated that now by virtue of
Section 100A no Letters Patent Appeal would be maintainable.
However, it is an admitted position that the law which would
prevail would be the law at the relevant time. At the relevant
time neither Section 100A nor Section 104(2) barred a Letters
Patent Appeal.
Applying the above principle to the facts of this case, the
appeal under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent is an appeal
provided by a law for the time being in force. Therefore, the
finality contemplated by Sub-section (2) of Section 104 did not
attach to an Appeal passed under such law.
It was next submitted that Clause 44 of the Letters Patent
showed that Letters Patent were subject to amendment and
alteration. It was submitted that this showed that a Letters
Patent was a subordinate or subservient piece of law.
Undoubtedly, Clause 44 permits amendment or alteration of
Letters Patent but then which legislation is not subject to
amendment or alteration. CPC is also subject to amendments
and alterations. In fact it has been amended on a number of
occasions. The only unalterable provisions are the basic
structure of our Constitution. Merely because there is a provision
for amendment does not mean that, in the absence of an
amendment or a contrary provision, the Letters Patent is to be
ignored. To submit that a Letters Patent is a subordinate piece of
legislation is to not understand the true nature of a Letters
Patent. As has been held in Vinita Khanolkar’s case (supra) and
Sharda Devi’s case a Letters Patent is the Charter of the High
Court. As held in Shah Babulal Khimji’s case (supra) a Letters
Patent is the specific law under which a High Court derives its
powers. It is not any subordinate piece of legislation. As set out
in aforementioned two cases a Letters Patent cannot be excluded
by implication. Further it is settled law that between a special
law and a general law the special law will always prevail. A
Letters Patent is a special law for the concerned High Court. Civil
Procedure Code is a general law applicable to all Courts. It is well
settled law, that in the event of a conflict between a special law
and a general law, the special law must always prevail. We see
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 50 of 51
no conflict between Letters Patent and Section 104 but if there
was any conflict between a Letters Patent and the Civil
Procedure Code then the provisions of Letters Patent would
always prevail unless there was a specific exclusion. This is also
clear from Section 4 Civil Procedure Code which provides that
nothing in the Code shall limit or affect any special law. As set
out in Section 4 C.P.C. only a specific provision to the contrary
can exclude the special law. The specific provision would be a
provision like Section 100A.
It was also sought to be argued that if such be the
interpretation of Section 104 CPC, it may create an anomalous
situation and may result in discrimination in as much as an
appeal under the Letters Patent will be available against an order
passed by the High Court on its original side, whereas such an
appeal will not be available in a case where the order is passed
by the High Court in its appellate jurisdiction. A similar
argument was urged before this Court in South Asia Industries
(P) Ltd. (supra) but the same was repelled in the following
words:-
"The arguments that a combined reading of
cls. 10 and 11 of the Letters Patent leads to the
conclusion that even the first part of cl.10 deals only
with appeals from Courts subordinate to the High
Court has no force. As we have pointed out earlier,
cl.11 contemplates conferment of appellate
jurisdiction on the High Court by an appropriate
Legislature against orders of a Tribunal. Far from
detracting from the generality of the words
"judgment by one Judge of the said High Court", cl.
11 indicates that the said judgment takes in one
passed by a single Judge in an appeal against the
order of a Tribunal. It is said, with some force, that if
this construction be accepted there will be an
anomaly, namely that in a case where a single Judge
of the High Court passed a judgment in exercise of
his appellate jurisdiction in respect of a decree made
by a Court subordinate to the High Court, a further
appeal to that Court will not lie unless the said Judge
declares that the case is a fit one for appeal,
whereas, if in exercise of his second appellate
jurisdiction, he passed a judgment in an appeal
against the order of a Tribunal, no such declaration
is necessary for taking the matter on further appeal
to the said High Court. If the express intention of
the Legislature is clear, it is not permissible to
speculate on the possible reasons that actuated the
Legislature to make a distinction between the two
classes of cases. It may, for ought we know, the
Legislature thought fit to impose a limitation in a
case where 3 Courts gave a decision, whereas it did
not think fit to impose a limitation in a case where
only one Court gave a decision".
We find ourselves in respectful agreement with the
reasoning of this Court in the aforesaid decision. The same
reasoning would apply in respect of the submission that if it is
held that Section 104(2) did not bar a Letters Patent Appeal an
anomalous situation would arise in as much as if the matter were
to come to the High Court a further Appeal would be permitted
but if it went to the District Court a further Appeal would not lie.
An Appeal is a creature of a Statute. If a Statute permits an
Appeal, it will lie. If a Statute does not permit an Appeal, it will
not lie. Thus for example in cases under the Land Acquisition
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 51 of 51
Act, Guardian and Wards Act and the Succession Act a further
Appeal is permitted whilst under the Arbitration Act a further
Appeal is barred. Thus different statutes have differing
provisions in respect of Appeals. There is nothing anomalous in
that. A District Court cannot be compared to a High Court which
has special powers by virtue of Letters Patent. The District Court
does not get a right to entertain a further Appeal as it does not
have "any law for the time being in force" which permits such an
Appeal. In any event we find no provisions which permit a larger
Bench of the District Court to sit in Appeal against an order
passed by a smaller Bench of that Court. Yet in the High Court
even, under Section 104 read with Order 43 Rule 1 C.P.C., a
larger Bench can sit in Appeal against an order of a Single Judge.
Section 104 itself contemplates different rights of Appeals.
Appeals saved by Section 104(1) can be filed. Those not saved
will be barred by Section 104(2). We see nothing anomalous in
such a situation. Consequently the plea of discrimination urged
before us must be rejected.
Under these circumstances, the Order of the High Court
cannot be sustained. It is hereby set aside. The appeals are
accordingly allowed with no order as to costs. The matters are
remitted back to the High Court for decision on merits.