Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NATHU RAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/05/1961
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 89 1962 SCR (2) 636
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC1901 (15)
R 1964 SC 215 (10)
D 1965 SC1049 (10)
R 1965 SC1531 (16)
F 1966 SC1427 (7,8)
R 1972 SC1181 (16,26,30)
R 1973 SC 655 (7)
R 1975 SC 733 (30)
E 1979 SC1393 (3,21,22,23)
RF 1990 SC 723 (12)
ACT:
Abatement of appeal-joint decree in favour of respondents-
Death of one of the respondents in appeal-Failure to bring,
legal representative on record-Whether the appeal abates as
a whole-Test-Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (V of 1908), 0.
22, r. 4.
HEADNOTE:
The Punjab Government acquired certain parcels of land
belonging to two brothers Land N who refused to accept the
compensation offered to them and applied to the Government
of Punjab under r. 6 of the Punjab Land Acquisition (Defence
of India) Rules, 1943, to refer to arbitration their joint
claim based on the allegation that the land belonged to them
jointly. The State Government referred the matter to an
arbitrator as required under r. 10 who passed an award in
favour of both L and N ordering inter alia payment of an
amount higher than what was offered to them by the
Government. The Government appealed against the said award
to the High Court. During the pendency of the appeal before
the High Court respondent L died and as no application for
bringing on record his legal representative had been made
within the time limit, the High Court dismissed the appeal
holding that the appeal had abated against L and that its
effect was that the appeal against N also abated.
Held, that there can be no question of abatement of appeal
against the correspondents of the deceased respondent as
Order 22 Rule 4 of the Code of Civil Procedure does not
provide for the same but in certain circumstances the appeal
cannot proceed against them and such a result depends on the
nature of the relief sought in the appeal.
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If the Court can deal with the matter in controversy so far
as regards the rights and interest of the appellant and the
respondents other than the deceased respondent, it has to
proceed with the appeal and decide it; otherwise it will
have to refuse to proceed further with the appeal and
therefore dismiss it. Ordinarily, the consideration which
will weigh with the court in deciding upon the question
whether the entire appeal had abated or not will be whether
the appeal between the appellants and the respondents other
than the deceased respondent can be said to be properly
constituted or can be said to have all the necessary parties
for the decision of the controversy before the court and the
tests to determine this have been described thus: (a) when
the success of the appeal may lead to the court’s coming to
a decision which will be in conflict with the decision
between the appellant and the deceased respondent and
therefore which would lead to the court’s passing a decree
which will be contradictory to the decree which had become
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final with respect to the same subject matter between the
appellant and the deceased respondent; (b) when the
appellant could not have brought the action for the
necessary relief against those respondents alone who are
still before the court and (c) when the decree against the
surviving respondents, if the appeal succeeds, be
ineffective that is to say it could not be successfully
executed.
The abatement of an appeal against the deceased respondent
means not only that the decree between the appellant and the
deceased respondent has become final but also as a necessary
corollary that the appellate court cannot in any way modify
that decree directly or indirectly.
When the decree in favour of the respondents is joint and
indivisible, the appeal against the respondents other than
the deceased respondent cannot be proceeded with if the
appeal against the deceased respondent has abated.
In the present case the appeal against N alone was not pro-
perly constituted when the appeal against L had abated and
the State appeal against N alone could not proceed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 635 to 641
of 1957.
Appeals from the judgment and decree dated September 8,
1954, of the Punjab High Court in Regular First Appeals Nos.
42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47 and 48 of 1949.
R. Gopalakrishnan, T. M. Sen and R. H. Dhebar, for the
appellants.
Darya Dutt Chawla, for the respondents.
1961. May 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-Civil Appeal No. 635 of 1957 is an
appeal, by certificate, and raises the question regarding
the effect of the abatement of the appeal, by the State of
Punjab, against Labhu Ram, one of the respondents, on the
State appeal against Nathu Ram, co-respondent.
Civil Appeals Nos. 636 to 641 of 1957 also raise the same
question between the same parties.
The facts leading to the appeal are that the Punjab
Government acquired on lease certain parcels of land
belonging to Labhu Rain and Nathu Ram, for different
military purposes, under the Defence of India Act,
81
638
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1939 (XXXV of 1939). Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram, brothers,
refused to accept the compensation offered to them by the
Collector and applied to the Punjab Government, through the
Collector, under r. 6 of the Punjab Land Acquisition
(Defence of India) Rules, 1943, hereinafter called the
Rules, as amended by the Notification of the Punjab
Government No. 1444-HM44/19124, dated 10th March, 1944, and
published in the Punjab Gazette, Part 1, dated 17th March,
1944 (Home Department). The State Government referred the
matter to an arbitrator as required under r. 10, who, after
enquiry, passed an award ordering the payment of an amount
higher than what was offered by the Collector and also
ordered the payment of certain amount on account of income-
tax which would be paid on the compensation received. The
State Government appealed against the award to the High
Court of Punjab. During the pendency of the appeal, Labhu
Ram, one of the respondents, died. The High Court, holding
that the appeal abated against Labhu Ram and that its effect
was that the appeal against Nathu Ram also abated, dismissed
the appeal. It also dismissed the cross-objections. The
State Government applied for a certificate of fitness of the
case for appeal to this Court and the High Court granted it,
as questions of great private and public importance were
involved.
It is not disputed that in view of 0. XXII, r. 4, Civil
Procedure Code, hereinafter called the Code, the appeal
abated against Labhu Ram, deceased, when no application for
bringing on record his legal representatives had been made
within the time limited by law. The Code does not provide
for the abatement of the appeal against the other
respondents. Courts have held that in certain
circumstances, the appeals against the co-respondents would
also abate as a result of the abatement of the appeal
against the deceased respondent. They have not been always
agreed with respect to the result of the particular cir-
cumstances of a case and there has been, consequently,
divergence of opinion in the application of the principle.
It will serve no useful purpose to consider the cases.
Suffice it to say that when 0. XXII, r. 4 does
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not provide for the abatement of the appeals against the co-
respondents of the deceased respondent, there can be no
question of abatement of the appeals against them. To say
that the appeals against them abated in certain
circumstances, is not a correct statement. Of course, the
appeals against them cannot proceed in certain circumstances
and have therefore to be dismissed. Such a result depends
on the nature of the relief sought in the appeal.
The same conclusion is to be drawn from the provisions of 0.
1, r. 9, of the Code which provides that no suit shall be
defeated by reason of the misjoinder or non-joiner of
parties and the Court may, in every suit, deal with the
matter in controversy so far as regards the rights and
interests of the parties actually before it. It follows,
therefore, that if the Court can deal with the matter in
controversy so far as regards the rights and interests of
the appellant and the respondents other than the deceased
respondent, it has to proceed with the appeal and decide it.
It is only when it is not possible for the Court to deal
with such matters, that it will have to refuse to proceed
further with the appeal and therefore dismiss it.
The question whether a Court can deal with such matters or
not, will depend on the facts of each case and therefore no
exhaustive statement can be made about the circumstances
when this is possible or is not possible. It may, however,
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be stated that ordinarily the considerations which weigh
with the Court in deciding upon this question are whether
the appeal between the appellants and the respondents other
than the deceased can be said to be properly constituted or
can be said to have all the necessary parties for the
decision of the controversy before the Court. The test to
determine this has been described in diverse forms. Courts
will not proceed with an appeal (s) when the success of the
appeal may lead to the Court’s coming to a decision which be
in conflict with the decision between the appellant and the
deceased respondent and therefore which would lead to the
Court’s passing a decree which will be contradictory to the
decree which had become final with respect to
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the same subject matter between the appellant and the
deceased respondent; (b) when the appellant could not have
brought the action for the necessary relief against those
respondents alone who are still before the Court and (c)
when the decree against the surviving respondents, if the
appeal succeeds, be ineffective, that is to say, it could
not be successfully executed.
There has been no divergence between the Courts about the
Court’s proceeding with the appeal between the respondents
other than the deceased respondent, when the decree in
appeal was not a joint decree in favour of all the
respondents. The abatement of the appeal against the
deceased respondent, in such a case, would make the decree
in his favour alone final, and this can, in no
circumstances, have a repercussion, on the decision of the
controversy between the appellant and the other decree-
holders or on the execution of the ultimate decree between
them.
The difficulty arises always when there is a joint decree.
Here again, the consensus of opinion is that if the decree
is joint and indivisible, the appeal against the other
respondents also will not be proceeded with and will have to
be dismissed as a result of the abatement of the appeal
against the deceased respondent. Different views exist in
the case of joint decrees in favour of respondents whose
rights in the subject matter of the decree are specified.
One view is that in such cases, the abatement of the appeal
against the deceased respondent will have the result of
making the decree affecting his specific interest to be
final and that the decree against the other respondents can
be suitably dealt with by the appellate Court. We do not
consider this view correct. The specification of shares or
of interest of the deceased respondent does not affect the
nature of the decree and the capacity of the joint decree-
holder to execute the entire decree or to resist the attempt
of the other party to interfere with the joint right decreed
in his favour. The abatement of an appeal means not only
that the decree between the appellant, and the deceased
respondent has become final, but also, as a necessary
corollary,
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that the appellate Court cannot, in any way, modify that
decree directly or indirectly. The reason is plain. It is
that in the absence of the legal representatives of the
deceased respondents, the appellate Court cannot determine
anything between the appellant and the legal representatives
which may affect the rights of the legal representatives
under the decree. It is immaterial that the modification
which the Court will do is one to which exception can or
cannot be taken.
It is therefore necessary to determine, on the facts of this
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case, whether the State appeal could proceed against Nathu
Ram. The award of the arbitrator in each of these cases was
a joint one, in favour of both the respondents Labhu Ram and
Nathu Ram. To illustrate the form of the award, we may
quote the award for the year 1945-46 in the proceedings
leading to Civil Appeal No. 635 of 1957. It is:
"On the basis of the report of S. Lal Singh,
Naib Tehsildar (Exhibit P. W. 9/1) and Sheikh
Aziz Din, Tehsildar, Exhibit P. W. 9/2, the
applicants are entitled to a sum of Rs. 4,140
on account of rent, plus Rs. 3,872-8-0 on
account of Income-tax etc., due to the
inclusion of Rs. 6,193-8-0 in their total
income, plus such sum as the petitioners have
to pay to the Income-tax Department on account
of the inclusion of Rs. 4,140 in their income
as awarded by this award."
The result of the abatement of the appeal against Labhu Ram
is therefore that his legal representatives are entitled to
get compensation on the basis of this award, even if they
are to be paid separately on calculating their rightful
share in the land acquired, for which this compensation is
decreed. Such calculation is foreign to the appeal between
the State of Punjab and Nathu Ram, The decree in the appeal
will have to determine not what Nathu Ram’s share in this
compensation is, but what is the correct amount of
compensation with respect to the land acquired for which
this compensation has been awarded by the arbitrator. The
subject matter for which the compensation is to be
calculated is one and
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the same. There cannot be different assessments of the
amounts of compensation for the same parcel of land. The
appeal before the High Court was an appeal against a decree
jointly in favour of Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram. The appeal
against Nathu Ram alone cannot be held to be properly
constituted when the appeal against Labhu Ram bad abated.
To get rid of the joint decree, it was essential for the
appellant, the State of Punjab, to implead both the joint-
decree holders in the appeal. In the absence of one joint-
decree holder, the appeal is not properly framed. It
follows the that State appeal against Nathu Ram alone cannot
proceed.
It is however contended for the State that according to the
entries in the village records, Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram had
equal shares in the land acquired and that therefore the
appeal against Nathu Ram alone can deal with half the amount
of the award. We do not agree. The mere record of specific
shares in the revenue records is no guarantee of their
correctness. The appellate Court will have to determine the
share of Nathu Ram and necessarily the share of Labhu Ram in
the absence of his legal representatives. This is not
permissible in law. Further, the entire case of Labhu Ram
and Nathu Ram, in their application to the Government for
the appointment of an arbitrator, was that the land jointly
belonged to them and had been acquired for military
purposes, that a certain amount had been paid to them as
compensation, that they received that amount under protest
and that they were entitled to a larger amount mentioned in
the application and also for the income-tax they would have
to pay on account of the compensation received being added
to their income. Their claim was a joint claim based on the
allegation that the land belonged to them jointly. The
award and the joint decree are on this basis and the
appellate Court cannot decide on the basis of the separate
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shares.
The State objected before the arbitrator, and urges before
us, that under the rules, the joint application of Labhu Ram
and Nathu Ram should have been
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treated as separate applications with respect to the
correctness of the compensation payable to each of them
respectively and that the arbitrator should have made
separate awards with respect to such separate claims of
Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram. The necessary corollary of such a
contention for the State is that the abatement of the appeal
against Labhu Ram will not make infructuous the appeal
against Nathu Ram.
The respondent urges that the Punjab Land Acquisition
(Defence of India) Rules, do not contemplate separate
applications by the persons interested in the compensation
on account of the acquisition of a particular parcel of
land.
The arbitrator did not agree to deal with the claims of
Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram separately. He, however, did not
decide the question on the basis of the land belonging
jointly to the two brothers as members of the joint Hindu
family. He however held that the expression ’a person
interested’ in r. 3, included all persons claiming an
interest in the compensation to be paid on account of the
acquisition of the land and that r. 18 permitted the joinder
of applications for joint enquiry when each case rested on
the same and similar basis and each of the applications
included land included in a larger part of land acquired at
one time. He also took into consideration that the
separation of the applications of Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram
would involve various difficulties in matters of income-tax.
He therefore used his discretion and ordered the application
to be proceeded with jointly.
In view of our opinion on the main point, we do not consider
it necessary to interpret the rules and decide whether the
joint application was maintainable or not. The fact remains
that Labhu Ram and Nathu Ram made a joint claim and got a
joint decree against the State for compensation. The frame
of the appeal is to be with reference to the nature of the
decree challenged.
We therefore see no force in this appeal and dismiss it with
costs. This order will govern the other
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connected appeals, viz., Civil Appeals Nos. 636 to 641 of
1957.
Appeal dismissed.