Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1117 of 2001
PETITIONER:
SANTOSH HAZARI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PURUSHOTTAM TIWARI (DEAD) BY LRS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/02/2001
BENCH:
CJI, R.C. Lahoti, & Briijesh Kumar.
JUDGMENT:
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R.C. Lahoti, J.
Leave granted.
On 4.3.1983, the plaintiff-appellant filed a suit for
declaration of title and recovery of possession and issuance
of permanent preventive injunction restraining the defendant
from interfering with the possession of the plaintiff over
the suit property described as khasra No.41/1 area 1.09
acres (0.441 hectares) situated in Village Patharia,
District Damoh. According to the plaintiff, the defendant
had illegally dispossessed the plaintiff from his possession
over 110x80 ft. area of land out of the suit property on
20.8.1981. The defendant in his written statement denied
all material averments and in addition submitted that the
defendant has been in possession of the suit property since
1940-41, i.e. since the times of his grand father. The
suit filed by the plaintiff was alleged to have been barred
by limitation in view of the same having been filed more
than 12 years after the date of dispossession of the
plaintiff. A plea of the defendant having acquired title by
adverse possession was also raised in the written statement.
The trial Court, on an evaluation of oral and
documentary evidence adduced by the parties, found that
ownership in the suit property vested in the plaintiff and
the defendant had forcibly occupied the disputed area of
110x80 ft. sometime in the year 1980-81. The defendants
plea of adverse possession was negatived and the suit filed
by the plaintiff was held to have been filed within the
period of limitation. On these findings the suit was
decreed in its entirety.
The defendant preferred an appeal. The learned
additional district Judge held that in so far as ownership
over the suit land is concerned, the same vested in the
plaintiff. However, he found that the possession of the
land was given to the plaintiff by the State Government on
6.11.68 but the plaintiff has not shown to have taken any
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steps for dispossessing the defendant and the plea raised by
the plaintiff of the defendant having forcibly occupied the
land in dispute on 20.8.1981 did not appear to be tenable.
On these findings the appeal was allowed and in reversal of
the judgment and decree of the trial Court the suit was
directed to be dismissed.
The plaintiff preferred a second appeal which has been
dismissed in limine by the High Court passing a brief order
that the matter stood concluded by findings of fact and no
substantial question of law arose for determination. The
aggrieved plaintiff has filed this appeal by special leave.
On 4.5.1999 this Court directed a notice to be issued to
the defendant-respondent on the limited question as to why
the matter should not be remanded to the High Court for
deciding the appeal after framing the question of law.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties and
perused the judgments of the trial Court and the first
appellate Court. We have also perused the application dated
12.1.2001 filed in this Court on behalf of the
plaintiff-appellant setting out the substantial questions of
law which in his submission arose in the case and on which
the High Court ought to have heard the appeal.
What is a substantial question of law involved in the
case? Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
(hereinafter, the code, for short) as substituted by the
Code of Civil Procedure Amendment Act, 1976 (104 of 1976)
w.e.f. 1.2.1977 reads as under:-
100. Second Appeal.
(1) Save as otherwise expressly provided in the body of
this Code or by any other law for the time being in force,
an appeal shall lie to the High Court from every decree
passed in appeal by any Court subordinate to the High Court,
if the High Court is satisfied that the case involves a
substantial question of law.
(2) An appeal may lie under this section from an
appellate decree passed ex parte.
(3) In an appeal under this section, the memorandum of
appeal shall precisely state the substantial question of law
involved in the appeal.
(4) Where the High Court is satisfied that a substantial
question of law is involved in any case, it shall formulate
that question.
(5) The appeal shall be heard on the question so
formulated and the respondent shall, at the hearing of the
appeal, be allowed to argue that the case does not involve
such question:
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall be
deemed to take away or abridge the power of the Court to
hear, for reasons to be recorded, the appeal on any other
substantial question of law, not formulated by it, if it is
satisfied that the case involves such question.
The High Court cannot proceed to hear a second appeal
without formulating the substantial question of law involved
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in the appeal and if it does so it acts illegally and in
abnegation or abdication of the duty cast on Court. The
existence of substantial question of law is the sine qua non
for the exercise of the jurisdiction under the amended
Section 100 of the Code. [See Kshitish Chandra Purkait Vs.
Santosh Kumar Purkait & Ors., (1997) 5 SCC 438, Panchugopal
Barua Vs. Umesh Chandra Goswami, (1997) 4 SCC 713 and
Kondila Dagadu Kadam Vs. Savitribai Sopan Gujar & Ors.,
(1999) 3 SCC 722].
At the very outset we may point out that the memo of
second appeal filed by the plaintiff-appellant before the
High Court suffered from a serious infirmity. Section 100
of the Code, as amended in 1976, restricts the jurisdiction
of the High Court to hear a second appeal only on
substantial question of law involved in the case. An
obligation is cast on the appellant to precisely state in
the memorandum of appeal the substantial question of law
involved in the appeal and which the appellant proposes to
urge before the High Court. The High Court must be
satisfied that a substantial question of law is involved in
the case and such question has then to be formulated by the
High Court. Such questions or question may be the one
proposed by the appellant or may be any other question which
though not proposed by the appellant yet in the opinion of
the High Court arises as involved in the case and is
substantial in nature. At the hearing of the appeal, the
scope of hearing is circumscribed by the question so
formulated by the High Court. The respondent is at liberty
to show that the question formulated by the High Court was
not involved in the case. In spite of a substantial
question of law determining the scope of hearing of second
appeal having been formulated by the High Court, its power
to hear the appeal on any other substantial question of law,
not earlier formulated by it, is not taken away subject to
the twin conditions being satisfied: (i) the High Court
feels satisfied that the case involves such question, and
(ii) the High Court records reasons for its such
satisfaction.
Even under the old Section 100 of the Code (pre-1976
amendment), a pure finding of fact was not open to challenge
before the High Court in second appeal. However the Law
Commission noticed a plethora of conflicting judgments. It
noted that in dealing with second appeals, the Courts were
devising and successfully adopting several concepts such as,
a mixed question of fact and law, a legal inference to be
drawn from facts proved, and even the point that the case
has not been properly approached by the Courts below. This
was creating confusion in the minds of the public as to the
legitimate scope of second appeal under S.100 and had
burdened the High Courts with an unnecessarily large number
of second appeals. Section 100 was, therefore, suggested to
be amended so as to provide that the right of second appeal
should be confined to cases where a question of law is
involved and such question of law is a substantial one.
(See Statement of Objects and Reasons). The Select
Committee to which the Amendment Bill was referred felt that
the scope of second appeals should be restricted so that
litigations may not drag on for a long period. Reasons, of
course, are not required to be stated for formulating any
question of law under sub-section(4) of Section 100 of the
Code; though such reasons are to be recorded under proviso
to sub-section (5) while exercising power to hear on any
other substantial question of law, other than the one
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formulated under sub- section(4).
The phrase substantial question of law, as occurring
in the amended Section 100 is not defined in the Code. The
word substantial, as qualifying question of law, means -
of having substance, essential, real, of sound worth,
important or considerable. It is to be understood as
something in contradistinction with - technical, of no
substance or consequence, or academic merely. However, it
is clear that the Legislature has chosen not to qualify the
scope of substantial question of law by suffixing the
words of general importance as has been done in many other
provisions such as Section 109 of the Code or Article
133(1)(a) of the Constitution. The substantial question of
law on which a second appeal shall be heard need not
necessarily be a substantial question of law of general
importance. In Guran Ditta & Anr. Vs. T. Ram Ditta, AIR
1928 Privy Council 172, the phrase substantial question of
law as it was employed in the last clause of the then
existing Section 110 of the C.P.C. (since omitted by the
Amendment Act, 1973) came up for consideration and Their
Lordships held that it did not mean a substantial question
of general importance but a substantial question of law
which was involved in the case as between the parties. In
Sir Chunilal V. Mehta & Sons Ltd. Vs. The Century
Spinning and Manufacuring Co., Ltd., (1962) Supp.3 SCR 549,
the Constitution Bench expressed agreement with the
following view taken by a Full Bench of Madras High Court in
Rimmalapudi Subba Rao Vs. Noony Veeraju, ILR 1952 Madras
264:-
..when a question of law is fairly arguable, where
there is room for difference of opinion on it or where the
Court thought it necessary to deal with that question at
some length and discuss alternative view, then the question
would be a substantial question of law. On the other hand
if the question was practically covered by the decision of
the highest Court or if the general principles to be applied
in determining the question are well settled and the only
question was of applying those principles to the particular
fact of the case it would not be a substantial question of
law.
and laid down the following test as proper test, for
determining whether a question of law raised in the case is
substantial:-
The proper test for determining whether a question of
law raised in the case is substantial would, in our opinion,
be whether it is of general public importance or whether it
directly and substantially affects the rights of the parties
and if so whether it is either an open question in the sense
that it is not finally settled by this Court or by the Privy
Council or by the Federal Court or is not free from
difficulty or calls for discussion of alternative views. If
the question is settled by the highest Court or the general
principles to be applied in determining the question are
well settled and there is a mere question of applying those
principles or that the plea raised is palpably absurd the
question would not be a substantial question of law.
In Deputy Commr., Hardoi, in charge Court of Wards,
Bharawan Estate Vs. Rama Krishna Narain & Ors., AIR 1953 SC
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521, also it was held that a question of law of importance
to the parties was a substantial question of law entitling
the appellant to certificate under (the then) Section 110 of
the Code.
A point of law which admits of no two opinions may be a
proposition of law but cannot be a substantial question of
law. To be substantial, a question of law must be
debatable, not previously settled by law of the land or a
binding precedent, and must have a material bearing on the
decision of the case, if answered either way, in so far as
the rights of the parties before it are concerned. To be a
question of law involving in the case there must be first
a foundation for it laid in the pleadings and the question
should emerge from the sustainable findings of fact arrived
at by court of facts and it must be necessary to decide that
question of law for a just and proper decision of the case.
An entirely new point raised for the first time before the
High Court is not a question involved in the case unless it
goes to the root of the matter. It will, therefore, depend
on the facts and circumstance of each case whether a
question of law is a substantial one and involved in the
case, or not; the paramount overall consideration being the
need for striking a judicious balance between the
indispensable obligation to do justice at all stages and
impelling necessity of avoiding prolongation in the life of
any lis.
A perusal of the judgment of the trial Court shows that
it has extensively dealt with the oral and documentary@@
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evidence adduced by the parties for deciding the issues on@@
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which the parties went to trial. It also found that in
support of his plea of adverse possession on the disputed
land, the defendant did not produce any documentary evidence
while the oral evidence adduced by the defendant was
conflicting in nature and hence unworthy of reliance. The
first appellate Court has, in a very cryptic manner,
reversed the finding on question of possession and
dispossession as alleged by the plaintiff as also on the
question of adverse possession as pleaded by the defendant.
The appellate Court has jurisdiction to reverse or affirm
the findings of the trial Court. First appeal is a valuable
right of the parties and unless restricted by law, the whole
case is therein open for rehearing both on questions of fact
and law. The judgment of the appellate Court must,
therefore, reflect its conscious application of mind, and
record findings supported by reasons, on all the issues
arising along with the contentions put forth, and pressed by
the parties for decision of the appellate Court. The task
of an appellate Court affirming the findings of the trial
Court is an easier one. The appellate Court agreeing with
the view of the trial Court need not restate the effect of
the evidence or reiterate the reasons given by the trial
Court; expression of general agreement with reasons given
by the Court, decision of which is under appeal, would
ordinarily suffice (See Girijanandini Devi & Ors. Vs.
Bijendra Narain Choudhary, AIR 1967 SC 1124). We would,
however, like to sound a note of caution. Expression of
general agreement with the findings recorded in the judgment
under appeal should not be a device or camouflage adopted by
the appellate Court for shirking the duty cast on it. While
writing a judgment of reversal the appellate Court must
remain conscious of two principles. Firstly, the findings
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of fact based on conflicting evidence arrived at by the
trial Court must weigh with the appellate Court, more so
when the findings are based on oral evidence recorded by the
same presiding Judge who authors the judgment. This
certainly does not mean that when an appeal lies on facts,
the appellate Court is not competent to reverse a finding of
fact arrived at by the trial Judge. As a matter of law if
the appraisal of the evidence by the trial Court suffers
from a material irregularity or is based on inadmissible
evidence or on conjectures and surmises, the appellate Court
is entitled to interfere with the finding of fact (See
Madhusudan Das Vs. Smt. Narayani Bai & Ors., AIR 1983 SC
114). The rule is __ and it is nothing more than a rule of
practice __ that when there is conflict of oral evidence of
the parties on any matter in issue and the decision hinges
upon the credibility of witnesses, then unless there is some
special feature about the evidence of a particular witness
which has escaped the trial Judges notice or there is a
sufficient balance of improbability to displace his opinion
as to where the credibility lies, the appellate Court should
not interfere with the finding of the trial Judge on a
question of fact.(See Sarju Pershad Ramdeo Sahu Vs.
Jwaleshwari Pratap Narain Singh & Ors., AIR 1951 SC 120).
Secondly, while reversing a finding of fact the appellate
Court must come into close quarters with the reasoning
assigned by the trial Court and then assign its own reasons
for arriving at a different finding. This would satisfy the
Court hearing a further appeal that the first appellate
Court had discharged the duty expected of it. We need only
remind the first appellate Courts of the additional
obligation cast on them by the scheme of the present Section
100 substituted in the Code. The first appellate Court
continues, as before, to be a final Court of facts; pure
findings of fact remain immune from challenge before the
High Court in second appeal. Now the first appellate Court
is also a final Court of law in the sense that its decision
on a question of law even if erroneous may not be vulnerable
before the High Court in second appeal because the
jurisdiction of the High Court has now ceased to be
available to correct the errors of law or the erroneous
findings of the first appellate Court even on questions of
law unless such question of law be a substantial one.
Reverting back to the facts of the case at hand, prima
facie we find the first appellate Court did not discharge
the duty cast on it as a Court of first appeal. The High
Court having noticed failure on the part of the appellant in
not discharging the statutory obligation cast on him by
sub-section (3) of Section 100 of the Code, on account of
the substantial question of law involved in the appeal
having not been stated, much less precisely, in the
memorandum of second appeal, ordinarily an opportunity to
frame such question should have been afforded to the
appellant unless the deficiency was brought to the notice of
the appellant previously by the High Court Registry or the
court and yet the appellant had persisted in his default.
That was not done. In our opinion, the following
substantial question of law does arise as involved in the
case and worth being heard by the High Court:-
Whether on the pleadings and the material brought on
record by the defendant, the first appellate Court was right
in holding that the case of adverse possession was made out
by the defendant and the suit filed by the plaintiff was
liable to be dismissed as barred by time under Article 65 of
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the Limitation Act, 1963, more so when such finding was
arrived at in reversal of the findings of the trial Court?
The appeal is allowed. The case is remitted back to the
High Court for hearing and deciding the second appeal
afresh. We make it clear that we have not expressed any
opinion either way on any of the issues arising for decision
in the case. We also make it clear that our framing the
question of law involved in the appeal shall not take away
the jurisdiction of the High Court vesting in it under
provisio to sub-section(5) of Section 100 of the C.P.C. to
formulate any other question of law involved in the case The
second appeal shall be decided by the High Court
uninfluenced by any of the observations made hereinabove
which have been made solely to support our opinion that the
appeal did not merit a summary dismissal by the High Court.
The appeal stands disposed of in the terms stated
hereinabove. No order as to the costs.@@
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