Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R. VISWANATHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RUKN-UL-MULK SYED ABDUL WAJID
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1962
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1 1963 SCR (3) 22
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 414 (12)
RF 1975 SC 105 (51)
RF 1990 SC1480 (54)
ACT:
Foreign Judgment How far binding-If affects properties
outside jurisdiction of foreign Court-Proceedings in foreign
Court-Natural justice, violation of-Proof-If "coram non
judice"-Scope of enquiry-Hindu Law--Joint family property-
Disposal by Will-Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of
1908), s. 13.
HEADNOTE:
One Ramalingam died at Bangalore leaving a will whereby he
devised considerable immovable and movable properties in the
States of Mysore and Madras. The executors applied for
probate of the will and it was granted by the District
judge, Bangalore, Shri P. Medappa. Thereupon the sons of
Ramlingam instituted two suits in the District Court,
Bangalore and the District Court Civil and Military Station
for possession of the immovable properties in Mysore and the
movable properties devised by the will and a suit in the
Madras High Court for possession of movable and immovable
properties in Madras devised by the will The movable
included certain shares of the India Sugars and Refineries
Ltd., a company with its registered office at Bellary in
the State of Madras. The suits were based on the ground
that all the properties were joint family properties and
Ramalingam had no power to dispose of the property by his
will. The Madras suit was stayed pending the disposal of
the Bangalore Suits. The District judge, Bangalore who
tried the suit after the retrocession of the Civil and
Military Station Bangalore, decreed the suit holding that
the property devised by the will was of the joint family of
Ramalingam and his sons and the will was on that account
inoperative. The executors preferred appeals to the Mysore
High Court which were heard by a Bench consisting of
Balakrishanaiya and Kandaswami Pillai,JJ, Balakrishanaiy a
J., delivered a judgment allowing the appeals and Pillai J.,
delivered a judgment dismissing the appeals. Thereupon
Balakrishanaiya J. referred the appeals to a Full Bench.
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The Full Bench consisting of P. Medappa, Acting C. J.,
Balakrishanaiya and Mallappa, jj., allowed the appeals and
dismissed the suit holding that the property was the self
acquired property of Ramalingam and lie could dispose it
23
of by his will. Thereafter, in the Madras suit the
executors urged that the judgment of the Mysore High Court
was binding upon the parties and the suit was barred as res
judicata. The plaintiff contended that as to the immovables
in Madras the Mysore Court could not and did not adjudicate
upon their claim and that in any event the Mysore judgment
which was a foreign judgment was not conclusive as the
proceedings in the Mysore High Court were opposed to natural
justice within the meaning of s. 13 of the Code of Civil
Procedure because Medappa, Acting C. J., and Bala-
krishanaiya, J., showed bias before and during the hearing
of the appeals and were incompetent to sit on the Full Bench
and their judgment was coram non judice. The Trial judge
held that the judgment of Mysore High Court was coram non
judice and was nonconclusive under s. 13 of the Code and
that all the properties movable and immovable disposed of by
Ramalingam belonged to the joint family and he accordingly
decreed the suit. On appeal the High Court held that it was
not established that the Mysore Full Bench was coram non
judice, that the properties in suit were joint family
properties which Ramalingam was incompetent to dispose of by
his will, that the Mysore judgment did not effect the
immovable in Madras but it was conclusive with respect to
the movables even outside the State of Mysore and
accordingly modified the decree of the trial Court by
dismissing the suit with respect to the movables which
consisted mainly of shares of the India Sugars & Refineries
Ltd.
Held (per Das and Shah, jj.), that the Madras High Court was
right in decreeing the plantiffs’ suit for possession with
respect to the immovable property in Madras and dismissing
it with respect to the movable property.
The judgment of the Mysore High Court was not conclusive
between the parties in the Madras suit with respect to the
immovable properties in Madras but was conclusive with
respect to the shares of the Company in the State of Mad-as.
A foreign Court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in
rem which may be enforced or recognised in an Indian Court
provided that the subject matter of the action is property,
whether movable or immovable within the jurisdiction of that
Court. The Mysore Courts were not competent to give a
binding judgment in respect of the immovable property
situate in the State of Madras nor did they in fact give any
judgment with respect to immovable property outside Mysore.
But there is no general rule of private international law
that a court can in no event exercise jurisdiction in
relation
24
to persons, matters or property outside its jurisdiction.
The Mysore Courts were competent to give a binding judgment
in respect of the shares. The claim in the Mysore suit was
for the adjudication of title of the plaintiffs against the
executors who had wrongfully possessed themselves of the
shares. Though in dispute between the company and the
share-holders the situs of the shares was the registered
office of the Company in Bellary (outside the State of
Mysore) the share certificates must be deemed to be with the
executors. A decree could properly be passed by the Mysore
Courts against the executors for the retransfer of the
shares. The Mysore Courts were not incompetent to grant a
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decree directing the transfer of the shares and such decree
was binding on the parties for the Madras suits.
It is not necessary for the conclusiveness of a foreign
judgment that that judgment should have been delivered
before the suit in which it is pleaded, is instituted.
The Madras High Court could not investigate the property of
the procedure followed in the Mysore High Court in referring
the case to the Full Bench and the judgment of the Full
Bench was not exposed to the attack of want of competence
because the case was referred after the two judges
constituting the Bench. had delivered separate and final
opinions of the points in dispute. Whether the procedure or
a foreign Court which does not offend rules of natural
justice is proper, is for the foreign court to decide and
not for the court in which the foreign judgment is pleaded
as conclusive.
To be conclusive a foreign judgment must be by a Court
competent both by the law of the State which has constituted
it and in an international sense, and it must have directly
adjudicated upon the "matter" which is pleaded as
res judicata. The expression "matter" is not equivalent to
subject matter : it means the right claimed. To be conclu-
sive the judgment of the foreign Court must directly adjudi-
cate upon the matter. The Mysore judgment was conclusive
only with respect to the matters actually decided by it.
The suit as framed did not relate to succession to the
estate of Ramalingam, nor did it relate to the personal
status of Ramaligam and his sons. The dispute related
primarily to the character of the property devised by the
will and the Mysore Court held that the property devised
under the will was self acquired property ; it did not
purport to adjudicate on any question of personal status of
the parties to the dispute before it.
25
It was not established that the judgment of the Mysore Full
Bench was croam non judice. In view of cl. (d) of s. 13 a
foreign judgment is not conclusive if the proceedings in
which it was obtained are opposed to natural justice. A
judgment which is the result of bias or of impartiality on
the part of a judge, will be regarded as a nullity and the
trial as coram non Judice.
The Court will always presume, in dealing with the judgment
of a foreign courts, that the procedure followed by that
court was fair and proper and that it was not biased, that
the court consisted of Judges who acted honestly and however
wrong the decision of the Court on the facts or law appear
to be, an inference of bias, dishonesty or unfairness will
not normally be made from the conclusions recorded by the
Court upon merits.
The estate devised under the will was the estate of the
joint family of Ramalingam and his sons. The finding of the
Madras High Court to this effect was supported by the
evidence on the record. Prima facie the findings of the
High Court, are findings of fact, and the Supreme Court
normally does not enter upon a reappraisal of the evidence,
but in this case it entered upon a review of the evidence on
which they were founded as the Mysore High Court bad on the
identical issue about the character of the property devised
under the will of Ramalingam arrived at a different
conclusion.
Per Hidayatullah, J.-The judgment of the Full Bench of the
Mysore High Court was not coram non Juice and was binding on
the Madras High Court in so far as it negatives the right,
of the coparcenary in the Kolar Cold field business and held
it to be separate property of Ramalingam.
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The question whether the Full Bench of the Mysore High Court
had violated principles of natural justice during the
hearing of the appeal, could not be considered by the Madras
High Court as if it was sitting in an appeal over the Mysore
High Court, and the refusal of the Mysore High Court to
adjourn the hearing to enable the appellants to bring an
outside counsel did not violate any principle of natural
justice, as they had already three other counsel briefed in
the appeals. In accordance with the practice of the Mysore
High Court, the appeals had been properly referred ’to the
full Bench by the Division Bench. A foreign Court will not
lightly hold that the proceedings in another court were
opposed to natural justice.
26
The rule of law about judicial conduct is as strict as it
is old. No judge can be considered to be competent to hear
a case in which is directly or indirectly interested. A
proved interest in a judge not only disqualifies him but
renders his judgment a nullity. But nothing has been proved
in the present case to establish this interest.
The objection to the jurisdiction of the’ Court in a foreign
country on other than international considerations must be
raised in the country where the trial took place.
Objections to it internationally can be raised in, the Court
in which the judgment is produce. But, even if the
objection to the jurisdiction be raised in the court where
the judgment is produced, that court will consider in action
in rem, whether the court has jurisdiction over the subject
matter and the defendant and also in actions in personam,
whether the jurisdiction was possessed over the subject
matter and the parties. In dealing with the question of
foreign judgments, Indian Courts have to be guided by the
law as codified in this country. Section 13 of the Civil
Procedure Code make a judgment conclusive as to any matter
directly adjudicated between the same parties or between the
parties under whom they or any of them claim litigating
under the same title. There is no real difference in so
far as competency of a foreign court goes between action in
rem actions in personam. The subject matter of controversy
in the Mysore Courts was the status of Ramalingam who was a
subject and resident of Mysore State. His will made in that
jurisdiction was admitted to probate there. His sons and
other relatives who figured as parties and those in
possession of the property were in that State. It is clear
that the Mysore Courts were competent internally as well as
internationally to decide about the status of Ramalingam or
the rights in the Kolar Gold Fields business between these
parties. The same questions were raised in the Madras suit.
The question for determination was the effect of the Mysore
judgment upon the suit in Madras in view of s. 13 of the
Code. Section 13 of the Code contemplates both judgments in
rem and Judgments in personam. The matter relating to Hindu
co-parcenary and the. position of Ramalingam were really
question of status. The Mysore Courts had directly
adjudicated that Ramalingam was not carrying on the Kolar
Gold Fields business as co-parcener but as his. own separate
business and this adjudication was binding on the parties in
the suit at Madras. The decision of the Mysore High Court
with respect of the status of Ramalingam vis a vis the Kolar
Gold Field business must be regarded in the Madras suit as a
conclusive adjudication. The Madras
27
Court could not try the question of Ramalingam’s status de
novo and that part of its decision, which went behind the
adjudication of the Mysore High Court, was without juris-
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diction. On this finding the immovable properties in Madras
were also the separate properties of Ramalingam which he
could dispose of by will, if they were the product of the
Kolar Gold Field business. The only question that could be
tried at Madras was whether they were. The Mysore Courts
were competent to order the share scrips to be handed over
to the successful party and if necessary to order transfer
of the shares and its judgment in regard to them was binding
in the Madras Courts.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 277 to 283
of 1958.
Appeals by certificate from the judgment and decrees dated
December 15, and October 20, 1954, of the Madras High Court
in Original Side Appeals Nos. 127, 1.53, 156 and 158 of
1953.
S. T. Desai and B. R. L. Iyengar, for the appellants in C.
As’ Nos. 277, 279, 281 and 282/58 and respondents Nos. 1 to
3 in C. A. No. 278/58.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, M.K. Nambiar,
E. V. Mathew, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath
and P. I,. Vohra, for the appellants in C. As. Nos. 278,
280 and 283/58 and respondents in C. A. Nos. 277, 279, 281
and 282/58.
Ratna Rao and K. R. Choudhry, for the respondent No. 6 in C.
A. No. 278/58.
B. R. L. Iyengar, for respondents in C. A. No. 280/58 and
respondent No. 1 in C. A. No. 283/58.
S. Venkatakrishnan, for respondent No. 2 in C. A. No.
283/58.
1962. May 4. The Judgment of Das and Shah, JJ. was
delivered by Shah, J., Hidayatullah, delivered a separate
judgment.
SHAH, J.--Ramalingam Mudaliar-a resident of Bangalore (in
the former Indian State of
28
Mysore)-started life as a building contractor. He prospered
in the business and acquired an extensive estate which
included many houses in the Civil and Military station at
Bangalore, in Bangalore city and also in the towns of
Madras, Hyderabad and. Bellary. He dealt in timber,
established cinematograph theatres, obtained a motor-car
selling Agency and made investments in plantations and
coffee estates. He set up a factory for manufacturing
tiles, and later floated a sugar company. The Indian Sugars
& Refineries Ltd., of which he became the Managing Agent
and purchased a large block of shares. For some years
before his death Ramalingam had taken to excessive drinking,
and was subject to frequent coronary attacks. He became
peevish and easily excitable and his relations with his wife
and children were strained. Ramalingam felt great
disappointment in his eldest son Vishwanatha who borrowed
loans from money-lenders at exorbitant rates of interest,
attempted to evade payment of customs duty, failsified
accounts and otherwise exhibited utter lack of business of
capacity."’ Ramalingam had developed a violent antipathy
towards a sadhu named Ramaling swami, but his wife Gajambal
and his children persisted in attending upon the sadhu and
visited him frequently. This led to frequent quarrels
between Ramalingam and his wife and children. Ramalingam
stopped the allowance for household expenses, and cancelled
the power which he had given to his son Vishwanath to
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operate on the joint Bank account. Shortly thereafter, he
left the family house. On June 2, 1942, his wife Gajambal
presented a petition before the District Judge, Civil
Station Banglore, for an order against Eamalingam for
inquisition under the Indian Lunacy Act. On that
application evidence was directed to be recorded and the
District Judge called for a medical report as to Abe mental
condition of Ramalingam.
29
In the meanwhile, Ramalingam executed his will dated
September 10, 1942. By this will he made no provision for
his eldest son Vishwanath, to each of other two sons and to
Thygaraja, son of Viahwanath be gave immovable property
valued at Rs. 55,000/-and shares of the value of Rs.
20,000/in the Indian Sugars & Refineries Ltd. To his wife
Gajambal he gave life interest in three houses then under
construction with remainder in favour of Thygaraja, son of
Vishwanath, and till the construction was completed a
monthly allowance of Rs. 150/-. To five out of his nine
daughters he gave cash and immovable property approximately
of the value of Rs. 25,000/- each and to three others cash
amounts varying between Rs. 5,000/- to Rs. 7,500/ and
excluded Bhagirathi, his daughter, altogether from the
benefit under the will. He also made provision for the
marriage expenses for his unmarried daughters and provided
for payment of Rs. 5,000/- to Mukti, daughter of Bhagirathi.
Out of the remaining estate, he directed that Rs. 50,000/-
be spent in erecting a Gynaecological ward in the Vani Vilas
Hospital, Bangalore, and stop the balance of the estate be
invested in a fund, the income whereof be applied "for
encouragement and development of industries, education or
medical research, diffusion of medical knowledge, including
work in nutrition and dietry by the grant of scholarship
etc." The executors of the will were A. Wajid (retired
Revenue Commissioner of the Mysore State), Narayanaswamy
Mudaliar and S. L. Mannaji Rao. Ramalingam died on
December 18 1942, leaving him surviving three
sons-Vishwa-nath, Swaminath and Amarnath-his widow Gajambal
and nine daughters. The executors applied to the District
Court, Civil & Military Station, Bangalore, for probate of
the will dated September 10, 1942. The widow and, children
of Ramalingam entered caveat and the application ’was
30
registered as Original Suit No. 2 of 1943. Mr. P. Medappa,
who was then the District Judge dismissed the caveat and by
his order dated Nov. 27 1943, granted probate of the will.
An appeal against the order to the Court of the Resident in
Mysore, was dismissed on July 5, 1944. Leave to appeal
against that order to the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council was granted and a petition of appeal was lodged.
But by order dated December 12, 1949, the Judicial Committee
declined to consider the appeal on the merits, for, in the
view of the Board, since the Civil & Military Station of
Bangalore was before the bearing of the appeal retroceded to
H. H, the Maharaja of .Mysore and was within the
jurisdiction of his State at the date of the hearing of the
appeal. His Majesty-in-Council could not effectively
exercise jurisdiction which was expressly surrendered and
renounced. The order passed by the District Court granting
probate accordingly became final and the validity of the
will in so far as it dealt with property in the Civil &
Military Station, Bangalore, is not liable to be challenged
on the ground of want of due execution. Applications for
probate of the will limited to property within the
jurisdiction of the District Court, Bangalore and the Madras
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High Court were also filed and orders granting probate
subject to the result of the proceedings before the Privy
Council were made.
During the pendency of the probate proceeds., the sons of
Ramalingam-who will hereinafter be collectively referred to
as the plaintiffs-instituted three actions against the
executors and other persons for establishing their title to
and for possession of the estate disposed of by the, will of
Ramalingam. These actions were :
(1) Suit No. 56 of 1942/43 of the file of
the District Court, Bangalore for possession
of immovable properties in Bangalore and the
31
business carried on in the name of Ramalingam
and also movables such as shares together with
the profits and income accrued therefrom since
December 18, 1942.
(2) Suit No. 60 of 1944 in the District
Court, Bangalore Civil & Military Station for
a decree for possession against the executor,%
of immovable property within the territorial
jurisdiction of that Court, and
(3) Suit No. 214 of 1944 in Madras High
Court on its original side for a decree for
possession of immovable properties in the town
of Madras and also for a decree for a
possession of "certain business" and movables
in Madras including the shares of the India
Sugars Refineries Ltd.
After the retrocession of the Military Station Bangalore in
1947 to the Mysore State, Suit No. 56 of 1942/43 was
renumbered 61A. of 1947 and was consolidated for a trial
with Suit No. 60 of 1944. Hearing of Suit No. 214 of 1944
on the Original side of the Madras High Court was ordered to
be stayed pending the hearing and disposal of the Mysore
suits. In the three suits the plaintiffs claimed possession
of the property devised under the will of Ramalingam dated
September 10, 1942, on the plea that the property belonged
to the jointfamily of the plaintiffs and the testator, and
the executors acquired under the will no title thereto
because the will was inoperative. The suits were resisted
by the executors principally on the ground that Ramalingam.
was competent to dispose of the estate by his will, for it
was his self-acquisition. In the suit in the District Court
at Bangalore they also contended that the Court had no
jurisdiction to grant relief in respect of any property
moveable or immovable outside the Mysore State. This plea
was raised because in the plaint as originally filed the
32
plaintiffs had claimed’ a decree for possession of the
immovable property in the Province of Madras and also on
order for retransfer of the shares which were originally
held by Ramalingam in the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd.,
and which were since the death of Ramalingam transferred to
the names of the executors. By an amendment of the schedule
to the plaint, claim for possession of immovables situate
within the jurisdiction of the Madras High Court but not the
relief relating to the shares was deleted. The plea that
the claim for possession of moveables outside the State of
Mysore was not maintainable was apparently not persisted in
before the District Court. The District Judge, Bangalore,
held that the property devised by the will dated September
10, 1942, was of the jointfamily of Ramalingam and his sons
and the will was on that account inoperative. He
accordingly decreed the suit for possession of the
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properties set out in the schedules and within his
jurisdiction, and directed that a preliminary decree be
drawn up for account of the management of the properties
since the death of Ramalingam by the executors.
Appeals preferred by the executors against the decrees of
the District Judge in the two suits to the High Court of
Mysore were heard by Paramshivayya, C.J., and
Balakrishanaiya, J. After the appeals were heard for some
time, the hearing was adjourned for six weeks to enable the
parties to negotiate a compromise. The plaintiff,,; say
that it was agreed between them and the executors that the
widow and the children of Ramalingam should take 3/5th of
the estate covered by the will of Ramalingam executed on
September 10, 1942, and that the remaining 2/5th should go
to charity mentioned in the will and that in the event of
the sons and widow of Ramalingam succeeding in the pending
appeal in the Probate Proceedings before the Privy
33
Council, the 2/5th share should also be surrendered by the
executors.
The appeals were then posted before a Division Bench of
Balakrishanaiya and Kandaswami Pillai, JJ. Before this newly
constituted Division Bench, a decree in terms alleged to be
settled between the parties was claimed by the widow and
sons of Ramalingam, but the Court by order dated March 15,
1949, declined to enter upon an enquiry as to the alleged
compromise, because in their view the compromise was not in
the interest of the public trust created by the will of
Ramalingam. The appeals were heard and on April 2, 1949,
the two Judges constituting the Bench differed.
Balakrishanaiya, J., in exercise of the powers under s.
15(3) of the Mysore High Court Regulation 1884 referred the
appeals to "a Full Bench for decision under section 15(3) of
the High Court Act." The appeals were then heard by a Full
Bench of Medappa, Acting C.J., Balakrishanaiya and Mallappa,
JJ. For reasons which will be set out in detail hereafter,
no arguments were advanced on behalf of the plaintiffs in
support of the decree, of the District Judge, and the
appeals were allowed, and the plaintiff’s suits were
dismissed. An application for review of judgment was
submitted by the plaintiffs on diverse grounds, but that
application was also dismissed.
After the disposal of the suits in the Bangalore Court, in
suit No. 214 of 1944 it was submitted before the Madras High
Court by the executors that the judgment of the Mysore High
Court dismissing plaintiffs" suit for possession of
immovable properties and for an order for retransfer of
shares of the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd., was
res judicata between the parties and accordingly the suit
held by the plaintiffs in the Madras High Court be dismiss-
ed. The plaintiffs contended that as to immovables in
Madras, the Mysore judgment was not conclusive because the
Mysore Court was not competent to
34
adjudicate upon the title of the plaintiffs to the Madras
properties and that the Court did not, in fact, adjudicate
upon the claim of the plaintiffs, and that, in any event,
the judgment was not conclusive because Medappa, C.J., and
Balakrishanayia, J., showed bias before and during the
hearing of the appeals they were incompetent to sit in the
Full Bench, and "their judgment was coram non judice".
On "the preliminary issue of res judicata" Rajagopalan, J.,
held that the Full Bench judgment of the Mysore High Court
did not bar the hearing of the suit in regard to the
immovable properties in Madras claimed by the plaintiffs for
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two resons (1) that the title to those properties was not,
in fact, adjudicated upon by the Mysore Court, and (2) that
the lex situs governed the immovable properties in Madras.
The learned Judge also indicated the scope of the enquiry on
the plea of conclusiveness of the foreign judgment raised by
the executors. He observed that the Madras High Court not
investigate the allegations made against the Judges of the
Mysore High Court in the conduct of the appeal itself, or of
the property or correctness of their decisions in the
appeals or in the legal proceedings connected therewith, but
two questions fell outside the purview of that rule; (a)
whether Mr. Medappa had been and was using a motor car
belonging to the estate in the hands of ’the executors, and
(b) whether Mr. Medappa sent for L.S. Raju who was engaged
to appear as counsel for the plaintiffs and attempted to
dissuade him from conducting the case for the ",plaintiffs’
family". If these two allegations were established,
observed Rajagopalan, J., they might possibly furnish proof
that one of the Judges of the Mysore High Court who had
heard the appeals was "interested" in the subject matter of
suit itself and that would be a ground falling within the
scope of exception (d) to s. 13 Civil Procedure Code. He
accordingly ruled that the plaintiffs may
35
lead evidence on those two allegations but not as to the
rest. Against the order, two appeals were preferred to the
High Court under the Letters Patent, one by the plaintiffs
and the other by the executors. The plaintiffs submitted
that Rajagopalan, J., was in error in restricting the scope
of the enquiry into the allegations of bias, interest and
partiality. The executors contended that the judgment of
the Mysore High Court was conclusive as to title to all
properties movable and immovable belonging to the estate of
Ramalingam and disposed of by the will and that no enquiry
at all as to the allegation of bias and proof of interest,
about the use by Mr. Medappa of a motor car belonging to the
estate and the dissuasion by Mr. Medappa of Raju should be
permitted. The High Court of Madras held that evidence
about the attempts made to dissuade Raju from appearing for
the plaintiffs was admissible, but not evidence relating to
the use by Mr. Medappa of a motor car belonging to the
estate. They observed that even if the "Mercedes car" of
’the estate was used by Mr. Medappa, the user was before he
was appointed Judge of the Mysore High Court and the motor
car had been sold away more than three years before the date
on which Mr. Medappa sat in the Full Bench and it could not
therefore be said that because he had used the car some
years before the date on which he sat in the Fall Bench, "he
had so identified himself with the executors that in taking
part in the hearing before the Full Bench," the proceeding
was contrary to natural justice. They also held that the
judgment of the Mysore High Court, unless the "plea coram
non judice" was established, was conclusive as to all items
of property in dispute in the suit, except as to the four
items of immoveable property in Madras.
The suit was thereafter allotted to the file of Ramaswami,
J., for trial was heard together with
36
five other suits-Suits Nos. 91 of 1944, 200 of 1944, 251 of
1944, 274 of 1944 and 344 of 1946 all of which directly
raised questions relating to the interest which the
plaintiffs claimed in the estate devised under the will as
members of a joint- family. By consent of parties, the
evidence recorded in Suit No. 60 of 1944 and Suit No. 61A of
1947 of the file of the District Judge, Bangalore, was
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treated as evidence in these suits and proceedings and the
record of the Mysore High Court in the civil suits and the
printed record of the Privy Council in the probate
proceedings and the record in the petition for a writ of
prohibition filed in this Court restraining enforcement of
the judgment of the Mysore Court were treated as part of the
record of the suit.
In Suit No. 214 of 1944, three principal questions fell to
be determined :
(1) whether the judgment of the Mysore High
Court holding that the estate devised by
Ramalingam by his will was his selfacquired
property was conclusive as to title to
properties movable and immovable, situate
without the jurisdiction of the Mysore State;
(2) whether the proceeding in the Mysore
High Court in which the judgment pleaded as
conclusive was rendered, was vitiated because
it was opposed to natural justice and
(3) whether by his will dated September 10,
1942, Ramalingam attempted to dispose of the
estate which belonged to the jointfamily of
himself and his sons, the plaintiffs.
Ramaswami, J, did not expressly deal with the
first question, presumably because (so far as
he was concerned it was concluded by the
judgment
37
of the Division Bench in appeals against the,
interlocutory order relating to the scope of
the enquiry in the suit, but on the second and
the third questions he held in favour of the
plaintiffs. He held that for diverse reasons
the "Full Bench judgment of the High Court was
coram non judice" and therefore not conclusive
within the meaning of s. 13 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, and that the evidence
disclosed that the property movable and
immovable set out in the scheduled to the
plaint and the business conducted by
Ramalingam belonged to the joint family of
Ramalingam and his sons. He accordingly
decreed the claim of the plaintiffs for
possession of the property movable and
immovable), set out in the Schedule to the
plaint (except 1650 shares of the India Sugars and R
efineries Ltd.) and directed an
account of the management by the executors of
the properties from the date of Ramalingam’s
death till delivery of possession of the
properties to the plaintiffs. He also
declared that the business carried on in the
name of Oriental Films at 9 Stringers St., G.
T. Madras, was the sole proprietary concern of
the joint family and the profits realised from
"Palmgrove" and Vegetable Oil Factory
constituted the assets of the estate of
Ramalingam subject to such equities as might
arise in favour of Narayanaswami Mudaliar on
the footing of the doctrine of Quantam Meruit
to be determined by the final decree or
execution proceedings."
Against the judgment of Ramaswami, J. the executors appealed
to the High Court. The High Court observed that the
decision of the Mysore High Court could not "take effect in
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respect of the immovable properties situate in the State of
Madras ; but it could naturally affect the moveables situate
there. In fact, the immovable properties in Madras State
were not included in Mysore suits. It is therefore
necessary for the members of
38
Ramalingam’s family to get rid of the decision of the Mysore
High Court before they can have any chance of obtaining the
movable properties of Ramalingam situate in the State." The
High Court after an elaborate review of the evidence held
that the estate which Ramalingam sought to dispose of by his
will was joint-family estate, and he was on that account
incompetent to dispose of the same, and the plaintiffs were
entitled to the immovables in Madras, but as to movables the
judgement of the Mysore High Court was conclusive there
being no reliable evidence to establish the plea of "coram
non judice". The High Court accordingly modified the decree
of the trial Court. They confirmed the decree in so far as
it related to immovables in Madras and dismissed it as to
the rest. They further declared that the sale proceeds of a
property called "Palmgrove"--which was execluded from the
Schedule to the plaint in the Bangalore suit-,,constituted
the assets of the said joint family" and on that footing
gave certain directions.
Against the judgment of the High Court modifying the decree
of Mr. Justice Ramaswami two appeals-Nos. 277 and 278 of
1958-are preferred : Appeal No. 277 is by the plaintiffs,
and Appeal No. 278 of 1858 is by the executors. The
plaintiffs contend that the judgment of the Mysore Fall
Bench is not conclusive between parties in the Madras suit,
for the Mysore Court was not a court of competent
jurisdiction as to property movable and immovable outside
the territory of the Mysore State, that the judgment was not
binding because the Judges who presided over the Full Bench
were not competent by the law of the Mysore State to decide
the dispute and that in any event it "was coram non judice"
because they were interested or biased and the proceedings
before them were conducted in a manner opposed to
39
natural justice. On behalf of the executors, it is
submitted that the judgment was conclusive as to the nature
of "the Kolar Gold Fields business", which was found to be
the separate business of, Ramalingam, and the Madras High
Court was only competent to decide whether the immovables in
Madras were not acquired out of the earnings of that
business.
Section 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Act V of 1908,
provides :
"13. A foreign judgment shall be conclusive
as to any matter thereby directly adjudicated
upon between the same parties or between
parties under whom they or any of them claim
litigating under the same title except-
(a) where it has not been pronounced by a
Court of competent jurisdiction
(b) where it has not been given on the
merits of the case ;
(c) where it appears on the face of the
proceedings to be founded on an incorrect view
of international law or a refusal to recognise
the law of India in cases in which such law is
applicable.
(d) where the proceedings in which the
judgment was obtained are opposed to natural
justice ;
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(e) where it, has been obtained by fraud
(f) where it sustains a claim founded on a
breach of any law in .force ill India.
40
By that enactment a foreign judgment is made conclusive as
to all matters directly adjudicated upon between the
parties, except as to cases set out in cls.(a) to (f). The
judgment of the Mysore High Court is, it is claimed by the
plaintiffs not conclusive because-
(1) it has not been pronounced by a court of
competent jurisdiction,
(2) that on the face of the proceeding it
was founded on incorrect view of the
international law, and
(3) that the proceeding in which the
judgment was pronounced was opposed to natural
justice.
The dispute in the appeal filed by the plaintiffs primarily
relates to the shares of the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd,
and movables in Madras. The judgment of the Mysore Court
qua the immovables in Mysore has become final and is not and
cannot be challenged in this Court. The Mysore High Court
was competent to adjudicate upon title to immovables within
the territory of the State of Mysore, in the suits
instituted by the plaintiffs against the executors. In
considering whether a judgment of a foreign Court is
conclusive, the courts in India will not inquire whether
conclusions recorded thereby are supported by the evidence,
or are otherwise correct, because the binding character of
the judgment may be displaced only by establishing that the
case falls within one or more of the six clauses of s. 13,
and not otherwise. The registered office of the India
Sugars & Refineries Ltd., was in Bellary in the Province of
Madras, and the situs of the shares which are movables-may
normally be the place where they can be effectively’ dealt
with (see Erie Beach Co. v. Attorney-General for Ontario(1)
and Brasssard v. Smith(2). The situs of the
(1) [1930] A.C. 161.
(2) [1925] A.C. 372,
41
shares of the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd. may therefore
be properly regarded as without the territorial’
jurisdiction of the Mysore Court at the date of the
institution of the suit by the plaintiffs. Counsel for the
plaintiffs submitted that the Courts in the Indian St-ate of
Mysore which qua the Courts in the Province of Madras prior
to the enactment, of the Constitution, were foreign Courts
bad no jurisdiction to adjudicate upon title to movables
outside their territory, for the action to declare title to
such movables and order for possession thereof was by the
rules of private international law an action in rem, and the
judgment of the Mysore Court was on that account a nullity.
Counsel urged that the principle of submission to
jurisdiction has no application in actions in rem, because
jurisdiction in rem, rests entirely upon presence actual or
national of the res within the territory over which the
Court has power. Counsel also urged that recognition of
jurisdiction in transactions involving a foreign element
depends upon the doctrine of effectiveness of judgments, and
willingness of parties to submit to jurisdiction in actions
in rem is irrelevant. Enlarging upon this theme,. it was
submitted that the shares of the India Sugars & Refineries
Ltd. had at the material time a situs outside the
jurisdiction of the courts of the Mysore State and by the
rules of private international law, an action for
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adjudication of title to the shares being an action in rem
the courts of the State of Mysore were incompetent to
entertain a suit in which title to the shares was involved
because they could not render an effective judgment for
possession of those shares. On the assumption that in an
international sense the Court of the District Judge,
Bangalore, was incompetent to adjudicate upon title to the
shares and the movables and to award possession thereof, it
was urged that a suit for determination of title to and for
possession of the shares and movables could be instituted in
the Madras High Court alone and by
42
their submission the plaintiffs could not invest the Court
of the District Judge. Bangalore, with jurisdiction to
adjudicate upon the conflicting c1aims of title to the
shares. The argument therefore is that the action
instituted by the plaintiffs in the District Court of
Bangalore being an action in rem ’that Court was by the
rules of private international law universally recognised,
competent to adjudicate upon title only to property
regarding which it could render an effective judgment, and
as the plaintiffs claimed title to and possession of shares
of the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd. and other movables
outside the territory of Mysore the judgment of the Mysore
High Court that the shares and the movable property were the
self-acquisition of Ramalingam was not binding upon the
parties, because the Mysore Court was not a Court of
competent jurisdiction within the meaning of s. 13, Civil
Procedure Code,1908.
A judgment of a foreign court to be conclusive between the
parties must be a judgment pronounced by a court of
competent jurisdiction; and competence contemplated by s. 13
of the Code of Civil Procedure is in an international sense,
and not merely by the law of foreign State in which the
Court delivering judgment functions Chormal Balchand v.
Kasturhand (1), Panchapakesa v. Hussim(2) and Pemberton v.
Highes (3). It is necessary to emphasize that what is
called private international law is not law governing
relations between independent States : private international
law, or as it is sometimes called "Conflict of Laws", is
simply a branch of the civil law of the State envolved to do
justice between litigating parties in respect of
transactions or personal status involving a foreign element.
The rules of private international law of each State must
therefore in the very nature
(1) [1936] I.L.R. 63 Cal. 1083
(2) A.I.R. 1234 Mad. 145.
(3) [1899] Cb. 781.
43
of things differ, but by the comity of nations certain rules
are recognised as common to civilised jurisdictions.
Through part of the judicial system of each State these
common rules have been adopted to adjudicate upon disputes
involving a foreign element and to effectuate judgments of
foreign courts in certain matters, or as a result of
international conventions.
Roman lawyers recognised a right either as a jus in rem or a
jus in personam. According to its literal meaning "jus in
rem" is right in respect of a thing, a us in personam" is a
right against or in respect of a person. In modern
legal terminology a right in rem, postulates a duty to
recognise the right imposed upon all persons generally, a
right in personam postulates a duty imposed upon a deter-
minate person or class of persons. A right in rem is
therefore protected against the world at large; a right in
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personam against determinate individuals or persons. An
action to enforce a jus in personam was regarded as an
action in rem. But in course of time, actions in rem and
actions in personam acquired different content. When in an
action ’the rights and interest of the parties themselves in
the subject matter are sought to be determined, the action
is in personam. The effect of such an ’action is therefore
merely to bind the parties thereto. Where the intervention
of the Court is sought for the adjudication of a right or
title to property, not merely as between the parties but
against all persons generally, the action is in rem. Such
an action is one brought in the Admiralty Division of the
High Court possessing Admiralty jurisdiction by service of
process against a ship or cargo within jurisdiction. There
is another sense in which an action in rem is understood. A
proceeding in relation to personal status is also treated as
a proceeding in rem, for the judgment of the proper court
within the jurisdiction of which the parties are domiciled
is by comity of
44
nations admitted to recognition by other courts. As
observed by Cheshire in his "Private International Law",
Sixth Edition at page 109, "In Roman law an action in rem
was one brought in order to vendicate a jus in rem, i.e., a
right such as ownership available against all persons, but
the only action in rem known to English law is that which
lies in an Admiralty court against a particular res, namely,
a "hip or some other res, such as cargo,associated with the
ship." Dealing with judgment in rem and judgments in
personam, Cheshire observes at page 653, It (judgment in
rem) has been defined as a judgment of a court of competent
jurisdiction determining the status of a person or thing (as
distinct from the particular interest in it of a party to
the litigation); and such a judgment is conclusive evidence
for and against all persons whether parties, privies or
strangers of the matter actually decided .......... A
judgment in rem settles the destiny of the res itself land
binds all persons claiming an interest in the property
inconsistent with the judgment even though pronounced in
their absence’ ; a judgment in personam, although it may
concern a res, merely determines the rights of the litigants
inter se to the res. The former looks beyond the individual
rights of the parties, the latter is directed solely to
those rights A foreign judgment which purports to operate
in rem will not attract extraterritorial recognition unless
it has been given by a court internationally competent in
this respect. In the eyes of English law,, the adjudicating
court must have jurisdiction to give a judgment binding all
persons generally. If the judgment relates to immovables,
it is clear that only the court of the situs is competent.
In the case of movables, however, the question of competence
is not so simple, since there would appear to be at least
three classes of judgments in rem:
(a) Judgments which immediately vest
45
the, property in a certain person as against
the whole world.
These occur, for instance, ",here a foreign
court of Admiralty condemns a vessel in prize
proceedings.
(b) Judgments which decree the sale of a
thing in satisfaction of a claim against the
thing itself.
and (c) Judgments which order movables be sold
by way of administration."
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An action in personam lies normally where the defendant is
personally within the jurisdiction or submits to the
jurisdiction or though outside the jurisdiction may be
reached by an order of the court. By s. 20 of the’ Mysore
Code of Civil Procedure a general jurisdiction (subject to
es. 16 to 19 which deal with suits relating to immovable
property and movable property under distraint and certain
incidental matters) was conferred on Courts in respect of
suits instituted within the local limits of whose
jurisdiction-
(a) the defendant, or each of the defen-
dants, were there are more than one, at the
time of the commencement of the suit, actually
and voluntarily resides, or carries on
business or personally works for gain; or
(b) any of the defendants, where there are
more than one, at the time of the commencement
of the suit, actually and voluntarily resides,
or carries on.business, or personally works
for gain, provided that in such case either
the leave of the Court is given or the
defendants who do not reside, or carry on
business, or personally work for gain, as
aforesaid, acquiesce in such institution; or
46
(c) the cause of action, wholly or in part
arises,
These rules deal with the territorial jurisdiction of courts
in respect of all suits other than those relating to
immovable property or for recovery of movable property under
distraint or attachment. But in their application they
extend to all per sons whether domiciled or not within
jurisdiction. Section 20 of the Code extends the
jurisdiction of the courts to persons or transactions beyond
the territorial limits of the courts. Such jurisdiction in
personam which transcends territorial limits is conferred on
the courts by the law making authority of many States. In
England, by Order XI, r. 1 of the Rules of the Supreme
Court, discretionary jurisdiction in personam is exercisable
by the courts by effecting service outside the jurisdiction
of a writ of summons or notice of a writ of summons against
an absent defendant in the classes set out therein.
A court of a foreign country has jurisdiction to deliver a
judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognised in an
Indian Court, provided that the subject matter of the action
is property whether movable or immovable within the foreign
country. It is also well settled that a court of a foreign
country has no jurisdiction to deliver a judgment capable of
enforcement or recognition in another country in any
proceeding the subject matter of which is title to immovable
property outside that country.
But there is no general rule of private international law
that a court can in no event exercise jurisdiction in
relation to persons, matters or property outside
jurisdiction. Express enactment of provisions like s. 20,
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (V of 1908) and 0. XI, r. 1 of
the Supreme Court Rules in England, negative such an
assumption.
47
The courts of a country generally impose a threefold
restriction upon the exercise of their jurisdiction (1)
jurisdiction in rem (binding not only the parties but the
world at large) by a court over res outside the jurisdiction
will not be exercised, because it will not be recognised by
other courts; (2) The court will not deal directly or
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indirectly with title to immovable property outside the
jurisdiction of the State from which it derives its autho-
rity; and (3) Court will not assist in the enforcement
within its jurisdiction of foreign penal or revenue laws.
The suit filed by the plaintiffs was for possession of the
estate disposed of by the will of Ramalingam. In paragraph
3 of the plaint in the Bangalore District Court suit (and
that is the only foreign suit to which we will refer,
because it is common ground that the averments in the two
plaints-in the District Court at Bangalore and in the
District Court, Civil Station Bangalore, which was conso-
lidated for bearing with the Bangalore suit, were the same)
it was averred "The plaintiffs and their father, the late V.
Ramalinga Mudaliar, were members of the undivided Hindu
joint family and the properties set out in the schedule
among others belong to the said joint family. The said
Ramalinga Mudaliar died on the 18th of December, 1942, and
on his death the three plaintiffs herein have become
entitled by survivorship to all the said properties." In
paragraph 11, it was averred, "The plaintiffs state that as
the properties set out are joint family properties the late
Ramalingam had no disposing power in respect of them and any
will alleged to have been executed by him is in any event
void and inoperative in law, and not binding on the
plaintiffs. It was then averred in paragraph 13, that the
executors under the will of Ramalingam had entered upon the
properties and business set out in the schedule purporting
to be the executors
48
under an alleged will of the said Ramalingam, and as the
said will was, in any event invalid the defendants were in
wrongful possession of the said properties and businesses
and the plaintiffs were en, titled to recover the same from
the executor a as the surviving members of the joint family
consisting of themselves and their deceased father
Ramalingam. By paragraph 22 they claimed among other
reliefs, the following:
(a) that the executors be ordered to deliver
possession of all the properties and busin-
esses in their possession, management and
control together with the profits and income’
accrued therefrom since 18th December, 1942,
(b) that defendants 17 and 18 (employees of
Ramalingam) be ordered to deliver possession
of the assets and capital together .With the
profits of the businesses of Kolar Gold Field
contracts, military contracts and cinema
business.,
(c) that the executors and defendant 15 who
are alleged to hold shares of the India Sugars
& Refineries be ordered to retransfer the
shares to the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs in paragraph 19 averred, in impleading the
India Sugars & Refineries Ltd., Bellary as Defendant No. 16
in the suit, that the company was impleaded "so give effect
to an order of transfer of at least 19,000 shares from the
names of defendantes 1 to the plaintiffs.
The claim in suit was clearly for adjudication of title of
the plaintiffs against persons who had wrongfully possessed
themselves of their property. Manifestly, an action in
personam is one brought in order to settle the rights of the
parties as between
49
themselves and only between themselves and persons claiming
through or under them whether it relates to an obligation
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or, as in the case of detinue, to chattels. A decision
obtained in this suit is effective only as between the
parties. By the Mysore Code of Civil Procedure the District
Court of Bangalore was competent to entertain the suit for
possession of immovable properties within the jurisdiction
of that court and also for an order against the executors to
retransfer the shares of the India Sugars & Refineries Ltd.,
to the plaintiff. The situs of the shares in any question
between the Company and the holders thereof was the regi-
stered office of the Company in Bellary (outside the State
of Mysore), but the share certificates must, on the case of
the plaintiffs as set out in the plaint, be deemed to be
with the executors and compliance with the decree, if any,
passed against the executors for an order of retransfer
could be obtained under the Code of Civil Procedure (’see
Order XXI, rr. 31 and 32 Mysore Civil Procedure Code).
There is no rule of private international law recognised by
the courts in India which renders the Bangalore Court
incompetent to grant a decree directing retransfer of the
shares merely because the shares have a situs in a dispute
between. the Company and the shareholders outside the
jurisdiction of the foreign court: Counsel for the
plaintiffs submitted that the Mysore Court was incompetent
to deliver an effective judgment in respect of the shares,
but by personal compliance with an order for retransfer
judgment in favour of the plaintiffs could be rendered
effective.
It is in the circumstances not necessary to express any
opinion on the question whether on the principle of
effectiveness is founded the conclusive character of a
foreign judgment. On this question text book writers
disagree, and there is singular absence of even persuasive
authority. Dicey maintained (see Dicey’s Conflict of Laws,
7th Edition
50
p. 17 Introduction) that the jurisdiction in personam of
English courts rests upon the principle of effectiveness
which he defined as follows:-
"The courts of any country are considered by
English law to have jurisdiction over (i. e.,
to be able to adjudicate upon) any matter with
regard to which they can give an effective
judgment, and are considered by English law
not to have jurisdiction over (i. e., not to
be able to adjudicate upon) any matter with
regard to which they cannot give an effective
judgment."
This principle received apparent approval in a dictum of
Lord Merrivale, President of the Matrimonial Court in
Tallack v. Tallack (1) wherein it was observed at p. 221:
"It is not clear that the judicial tribunals of the
Netherlands are able to give effect at all to judgements of
foreign courts even in personal actions’ against defendants
living in Holland. But having regard to the terms of the
Civil Code, and the evidence of Dr.- Bisschop, I am
satisfied that a decree of this Court purporting to
partition the property of the respondent would be an idle
and wholly ineffectual process." In Tallack8 case, the court
refused the petition of the husband for an order for
settlement of the estate of the wife upon the children of
the marriage after a decree for dissolution was passed, on
the ground that to accede to it would be to extend the
jurisdiction of the English Court against a defendent who
was not at the material time domiciled within its jurisdic-
tion, and who had appeared only to dispute the exercise of
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jurisdiction beyond territorial limits. This ground was
sufficient to support the decision of the court and the
observation about the principle of effectiveness were
plainly unnecessary.
(1) (1927) P. D. 211.
51
Schmitthoff in "The English Conflict of Laws" 3rd Edition at
page 425 observes:
".............................. the
jurisdiction of the courts is not based upon
considerations of actual or probable effect of
their dicision. The argument from the effect
of the judgment to the jurisdiction of the
court represents an approach to the problem
under investigation from the wrong end, in the
same way as the argument from the effect of
the choice of law to the choice itself is, in
the words of Lord Russel, founded upon a
fallactious basis."
Graveson in his "The Conflict of Laws" 4th Edition at p. 338
observes :
"In the doctrine of effectiveness English
jurists have sought to provide for the courts
a reasonable and adequate theory to determine
the exercise of jurisdiction. The reason-
ableness of the theory is assured by its prac-
tical basis; but its complete adequacy is
refuted by the existence of English
jurisdiction over defendants outside the
jurisdiction in cases falling within Order 11
of the Rules of the Supreme
Court....................... The basis of
jurisdiction in the English conflict of laws
is wider than, though it comprehends, the
principle of effective enforcement of
judgments. It lies in the administration of
justice."
In an action in personam the court has jurisdiction to make
an order for delivery of movables’ where the parties submit
to the jurisdiction. A person who institutes a suit in a
foreign court and claims a decree in personam cannot after
the judgment is pronounced against him, say that the court
had no jurisdiction which he invoked and which the court
exercised, for it is well recognised that a party who is
present within or who had submitted to jurisdiction cannot
after wards question it.
52
We may briefly refer to cases on which counsel for the
plaintiffs relied in support of his plea that the judgment
of the Mysore High Court in so far as it relates to movables
outside the State of Mysore was not conclusive between the
parties in the Madras suit.
In Messa v. Messa (1) the judgment of the Alexandria Supreme
Court relating to the validity of a will executed by one
Bunin Menahim Messa was held not binding as a judgment in
rem upon the parties to a litigation in Aden in which the
defendants claimed to be executors under the will of the
testator. The testator was not domiciled within the
territory over which the Supreme Court of Alexandria
exercised jurisdiction, and therefore the judgment though in
rem was not held binding upon the executors. That case has
no bearing on the contention raised by the plaintiffs. Nor
is the opinion of the Judicial Committee in Sardar Gurdayal
Singh v. Rajah of Faridkote (2) of any assistance to the
plaintiff;. In that case it was observed that a money
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decree passed by a foreign court against an absent foreigner
was by international law a nullity. Lord Selborne in that
case at p. 185 observed :
"Territorial jurisdiction attaches (with
special exceptions) upon all persons either
permanently or temporarily resident within the
territory while they are within it; but it
does not follow them after they have withdrawn
from it, and when they are living in another
independent country. It exists always as to
land within the territory, and it may be
exercised over movables within the territory;
and in question of status or succession
governed by domicil, it may exist as to
persons domiciled, or who when living were
domiciled, within the territory. As between
different
(1) I. L. R. (1938) Bom. 529.
(2) [1894] L. R. 21 I. R. 171 .
53
provinces under the sovereignty (a. g., under
the Roman Empire) the. legislation of the
sovereign may distribute and regulate juris-
diction; but no territorial legislation can
give jurisdiction which any foreign Court
ought to recognise against foreigners, who.
owe no allegiance or obedience to the Power
which so legislates.
In a personal action, to which none of these
causes of jurisdiction apply, a decree pro-
nounced in absentem by a foreign Court, to the
jurisdiction of which the Defendant has not in
any way submitted himself, is by international
law an absolute nullity. He is under no
obligation of any kind to obey it; and it must
be regarded as a mere nullity by the Courts of
every nation except (when authorised by
special local legislation) in the country of
the forum by which it was pronounced."
In Castrique v. Imri (1) a bill issued by the master of a
British ship on the owner for costs of repairs and
necessaries supplied, was dishonoured, and the endorsee a
French subject sued the master in the Tribunal de Commerce
at Havre. In meantime, the owner mortgaged the ship and
became bankrupt. The Tribunal ordered the master to pay the
sum due which was "’privileged on the ship." In default of
payment the ship was seized and detained. The judgment of
the Tribunal was by the French law required to be confirmed
by the Civil court of the District and accordingly the Civil
Court summoned the owner and the assignee in bankruptcy ,
but not the mortgagee and his assignee and in default of
appearance decreed sale of the ship by auction. The
consignee of the mortgagee Castrique then commenced an
action in the "nature of replevy" of the ship and the court
of appeal held--though erroneously-that the bill of the sale
to
(1) (1870) 4 H. L. 414.
54
Castrique not having been registered was invalid and he had
no locus standi to maintain the action. The ship was then
sold to a British subject, who brought it to Liverpool and
registered it in his own name. Castrique then commenced an
action in the Court of Common Pleas in conversion against
the purchaser pleading that the sale in France was void.
The House of Lord 3 held that there was a judgment in rem in
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the French Court and the title of the purchaser to the ship
could not be reagitated in the courts in England.
The proceeding in the French Court was manifestly one in
rem, for it was to enforce a maritime lien, which by the
French law was a proceeding in rem, and as the ship was in
the French territorial waters, it must in the English Court
be so treated and held. These oases do not support the plea
that the judgment of a foreign court qua movables out side
its jurisdiction will not be conclusive between the same
parties in an action relating to those movables in an Indian
Court.
The plea that conclusiveness of a foreign judgment set up as
a bar where that judgment was delivered after the suit in
which it is pleaded was instituted is without substance.
The language of a.3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, is
explicit:a foreign judgment is made hereby conclusive
between the parties as to any matter directly adjudicated
and it is not predicated of the judgment that it must be
delivered before the suit in which it is set up was
instituted. Section 13 incorporates a branch of the
principle of res judicata, and extends it within certain
limits to judgments of foreign courts if competent in an
international sense to decide the dispute between the
parties. The rules of res judica applies to all
adjudications in a "former suit", which expression by the
Explanation 1 to s. II of the Code of Civil Procedure
denotes a "suit which has been decided prior to
55
the suit in question whether or not it was instituted prior
thereto. This explanation is merely declaratory of the law:
the decisions of the Courts in India prior to its enactment
establish that proposition conclusively. (Balkishan v.
Kishan Lal (1) Beni Madho v. Inder Shahi(2) ). The dictum to
the contrary in The Delta : "The Erminia Foscolo (3)" is not
sufficient to justify a departure from the plain words of
the Indian Statute.
One more ground of incompetence of the Mysore High Court to
deliver the judgment set up as a bar to the trial of the
Madras suit in so far as it relates to movable needs to be
adverted to. It was submitted that Balakrishnaiya, J., was
not competent to refer to a Full Bench the appeals for
hearing, after judgments recording final opinions were
delivered by him and by Kandaswami Pillai, J. To
recapitulate the facts which are material on this plea:
Appeals Nos. 104 and 109 of 1947-48 against the judgment of
the District Judge, Bangalore, filed by the executors were
heared by Balakrishanaiya and Kandaswami Pillai, JJ. The
Judges after hearing arguments differed on almost every
question raised in the appeals. Balakrishanaiya, J. was for
reversing the judgment of the trial Court and Kandaswami
Pillai, J., was for affirming the same. Balakrishanaiya J.,
observed in the concluding part of his judgment "In the
result, I am of opinion that the judgments and decrees of
the learned District Judge cannot be sustained and are
liable to be set aside by dismissing the suits with costs
throughout." After the opinion of Balakrishanaiya, J., was
delivered Kandaswami Pillai, J., delivered his opinion. He
observed, "In the result, the judgment and the decree in the
suits have to be confirmed, and regular Appeals Nos. 104 and
109 of 1947-48 have
(1) (1888) I. L R . 11 All. 148.
(2) (1909) I.L.R. 32 All. 67.
(3) L. R. (1876) P.D. 393, 404.
56
to be dismissed with costs to be borne by appellants
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(defendants 1 to 3) from the estate of Ramalingam."
Thereafter, Balakrishnaiya, J., referred the case to a Full
Bench under s. 15(3) of the Mysore High Court Regulation of
1884, and signed his "judgment". The relevant, statutory
provisions then in operation relating to the procedure to be
followed in the event of a difference between Judges
constituting a Bench were these: Section 98 of the Mysore
Civil Procedure Code provided:
(1) Where an appeal is heard by a Bench of
two or more Judges the appeal shall be decided
in accordance with the opinion of such Judges
or of the majority (if any) of such Judges.
(2) Where there is no such majority which
concurs in ’a Judgment varying or reversing
the decree appealed from such decree shall be
confirmed.
Section 15 (3) of the Mysore, High Court Regulation, 1884,
as amended by Act XII of 1930, provided:
"The decision of the majority of Judges
comprising any Full Bench of the High Court or
other Bench of the said Court consisting of
not less than three Judges shall be the
decision of the Court.
When a Bench of the High Court consists of
only two Judges and there is a difference of
opinion between such Judges on any material
question pending before it, such question
shall be disposed of in the manner prescribed
by Section 98 Civil Procedure Code or s. 429
of the Criminal Procedure Code as the case may
be or at the discretion of either of the
Judges composing the Bench it shall be
57
referred to a Fall Bench and the decision ’of
the majority of the Judges on such Full Bench
shall be the decision of the High Court."
If Judges constituting the Bench differed and there was no
majority concurring in varying or reversing the decree
appealed from, the judgment had to be affirmed. But it was
open to the Judges or either of them to refer under s. 15(3)
of the Mysore High Court Regulation the questions on which
there was a difference to a Full Bench. The true rule envi-
saged by s. 15(3) of the Mysore High Court Regulation is
that the Court or the referring Judge shall set out the
material questions on which there is a difference of opinion
without expressing any opinion on the result of the appeal.
The two Judges did disagree: they disagreed on almost every
question which had a bearing on the claim made by the
plaintiffs, and they delivered their separate opinions
expressing their mutual dissent, and even incorporated in
their respective opinions the final orders to be passed on
their respective views in the appeals. In. so doing the
Judges committed a procedural irregularity; but, in our
judgment, this procedural irregularity does not affect the
competence of the Fall Bench constituted to hear the
reference under s. 15 (3). Balakrishanaiya, J., and
Kandaswami Pillai, J., did deliver separate and self-
contained opinions, setting out the final orders which in
their respective opinions should be made in the appeals, but
their intention was clear: they intended that in view of the
difference of opinion (so expressed the case should go
before a Fall Bench, and Balakrishanaiya, J., passed an
order for reference presumable with the concurrence of
Kandaswami Pillai, J.
The decision of. the Allahabad High Court in Lal Singh v.
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Ghansham Singh (1) does not assist the
(1) (1857) I.L.R. 9 All. 625 F.B.
58
plaintiffs in support of the plea that the reference the
Full Brench was invalid and the Mysore High Court was
incompetent to hear the reference. In Lal Singh’s case %,be
majority of the Court held that "Where a Bench of two Judges
hearing an appeal and differing in opinion have delivered
judgments on the appeal as judgments of the Court without
any reservation, they are not competent to refer the appeal
to other Judges of the Court under s. 575 of the Civil Pro-
cedure Code of 1882)." In that case, a reference was made on
a difference of opinion between two Judges, but not a
question of law. By a. 575(2), Civil Procedure Code, 1882,
difference on a question of law being a condition of
reference, the reference was manifestly incompetent; it was
so pointed out by Brodhust, J., who was one of the Judges
composing the original Bench of Judges who differed. There
is, however, no such restriction in s. 15(3) of the Mysore
High Court Regulation, 1884. Again, the principle of Lal
Singh’s case as broadly enunciated by the majority of the
Court has not been approved in man, later cases in other
High Courts; for instance, Karali Charan Sarma v. Apurba
Krishna Bajpeyi (1), Umar Baksh v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Punjab (2) and Jehangir v. Secretary of State (3). In
these cases it was held that in each case the question is
one of intention of the Judges differing in their opinions.
The Mysore High Court held in Nanjamma v. Lingappa (4) that
it is not illegal to refer a case under s. 15(3) of the
Mysore High Court Regulation, 1884, after the Judges
differing have recorded judgments including the final orders
they are to make, and without any reservations. It was
observed in the judgment of the Court ",The long standing
practice of this Court Is that one of the Judges makes a
reference by a mere record in the order
(1) (1930) I L.R. 58 Cal. 549.
(2)(1931) I.L.R. 12 Lah. 725.
(3) (1903) 6 Bom. L.R. 131, 206.
(4) 4 L.R. Mys. 118.
59
sheet after the judgements are separately pronounced." It
appears therefore that there was a settled practice in the
Mysore High Court to refer cases under s. 15(3) after
delivering differing opinions including the final orders to
be passed in the appeal on such opinions. In adjudging the
competence of the foreign court it would not be open to us
to ignore the course of practice in that court even if it be
not strictly warranted by the procedural law of that State.
Whether the procedure of the foreign court which does not
offend natural justice is valid is for the foreign court to
decide and not the court in which the foreign judgment is
pleaded as conclusive. In Brijlal Ramjidas v. Govindram
Gordhandas Seksaria (1) the judicial Committee in dealing
with the authority of the Indore High Court to transfer
proceedings from the District Court of Indore observed :
"the question whether-a foreign Court is the "proper Court"
to deal with a particular matter according to the law of the
foreign country is a question for the Courts of that
country. There is no doubt that some Court in Indore was "a
Court of competent jurisdiction." It was for the High Court
of Indore to interpret its. own law and rules of procedure,
and its decision that the High Court was the "proper" Court
must be regarded as conclusive." The Madras High Court could
not therefore investigate the propriety of the procedure
followed by the Mysore High Court referring the case to the
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Full Bench and the judgment of the Mysore Full Bench was
therefore not exposed to the attack of want of competence
because the case was referred after the two Judges
constituting the Beach had delivered separate and complete
opinions expressing their views on the points in dispute.
In the plaint in the Bangalore District Court suit the
plaintiffs claimed possession of the proper
(1) (1947) L.R. 74 I.A. 203.
60
ties set out in the schedule on the ground that those and
other properties belonged to the joint family of which they
and their father Ramalingam Mudaliar were members, and to
which they were entitled by survivorship on the death of
Ramalingam. In Schedule ’B’ to the plaint the first item
was the business at Kolar Gold Fields. The claim was
decreed by the trial court but the High Court reversed the
decree and dismissed the suit. The Attorney-General submits
that the judgment of the Mysore High Court was conclusive
between the parties in respect of all matters adjudicated
thereby and the Madras High Court in considering the claim
of the plaintiffs in the suit before it was debarred from
investigating whether the Kolar Gold Fields business was the
separate property of Ramalingam. The issue as to the
ownership of the Kolar Gold Fields business being directly
adjudicated upon by the Mysore High Court, which was
competent in an international sense as well as according to
the municipal law of Mysore in that behalf, it was
submitted, that adjudication was conclusive between the
parties in the Madras suit. Reliance in support of this
submission was placed upon the definition of foreign
judgment’ in s. 2 (9) of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908, and
the use of the expression ,’matter’ in s. 13 of the Code.
A foreign judgment is conclusive as to any matter directly
adjudicated upon thereby; but it does not include the
reasons for the judgment given by the foreign court. What
is conclusive under s. 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
the judgment, i.e., the final adjudication, and not the
reasons Brijlal Ramjidas v. Govindram Gordhandas. (1).
Section 13 in essence enacts a branch of the rule of res
judicata in its relation to foreign judgments, but not every
foreign judgment is made conclusive in the Indian Courts by
s. 13. To be conclusive,
(1) (1947) L.R. 74 I.A. 203.
61
a foreign judgment must be by a court competent both by the
law of the State which has constituted it and in an
international sense, and it must have directly adjudicated
upon the "matter" which is pleaded as res judicata. The
expression "matter" in s. 13 is not equivalent to subject
matter; it means the right claimed. To be conclusive the
judgment of the foreign Court must have directly adjudicated
upon a matter, the adjudication must be between the same
parties, and the foreign Court must be a court of competent
jurisdiction. Story in his "Conflict of Laws", Eighth
Edition at p. 768 s. 551 says "In respect to immovable
property every attempt of any foreign tribunal to found a
jurisdiction over it must be from the very nature of the
case, utterly nugatory, and its decree must be for ever
incapable of execution in rem." Similarly, Dicey in his
"Conflict of Laws" 7th Edition, Rule 85, enunciates the rule
as follows: "All rights over or in relation to an immovable
(land) are (subject to the exceptions hereinafter mentioned)
governed by the law of the country where the immovable is
situate (ex situs)." The-exceptions for the purpose of the
present case are not material. In the comments under the
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Rule, Dicey states at p. 513:
"The sovereign of the country where land is
situate has absolute control over the land
within his dominion: he alone can bestow
effective right over it; his courts alone are
as a rule, entitled to exercise jurisdiction
over such land. Consequently, any decision by
an English Court which ran counter to what the
lex situs had decided or would decide would
be, in most cases a brutum fulmen."
In Compandia de Mocambique v. British, South C. De Souza v.
Samb (1) Wright, J., observed at p. 366: "The proper
conclusion appears to be that,
(1) [1891] 2 Q.B. 358.
62
speaking general, subject to qualifications depending on
personal obligation, it is a general principal of
jurisdiction that title to land is to be directly
determined, not merely according to the law of the country,
where the land is situate, but by the Court, of that
country, and this conclusion is in accordance with the rule
ordinarily adopted by the jurisprudence of other countries".
Title to immovable property may therefore be determined
directly or indirectly only by the law of the State, and by
the courts of the State in which it is situate. A decision
of a foreign Court directly relating to title to immovable
property within its jurisdiction will of course be regarded
between the same parties as conclusive by the Courts in
India: but that decision is ineffectual in the adjudication
of claims to immovables without the jurisdiction of that
foreign Court, even if the foundation of title in both the
jurisdictions is alleged to be identical. A foreign Court
being incompetent to try a suit relating to immovable
property not situate within its jurisdiction, the grounds on
which its decision relating to title to immovable property
within its jurisdiction is founded will not debar
investigation into title to other property within the
jurisdiction of the municipal courts, even if the latter
properties are alleged to be held on the same title. Every
issue and every component of the issue relating to title to
immovable property must be decided by the Court within whose
jurisdiction it is situate: to recognise the authority of a
foreign court to adjudicate upon even a component of that
issue would be to recognise the authority of that Court to
decide all the components thereof.
In Boyse. v. Colclough (1) the Court of Chancery in England
was called upon to consider the effect to be given to a
decree of an Irish Court determining the validity of a will
of one Colclough who died
(1) [1855] K. & J. 124: 69 E.R. 396.
63
leaving lands in England and Ireland. The Court in Ireland
in a proceeding relating to the will declared it invalid.
The plaintiff to whom the estate was devised under the will
by Colclough, thereafter filed a bill in the Court of
Chancery in England insisting upon the validity of the
will,, and for a declaration that the immovables in England
passed under and as devised by the will. The defendant
insisted that the decree of the Court in Ireland was in
regard to the validity of the will conclusive as the judg-
ment was of a court of competent jurisdiction between the
parties. page Wood V. C. rejected the defendant’s plea. He
observed ",The foreign Court in this case did not try and
could not try the effect of the will of the testator on land
in England. It is impossible that the question could even,
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in any shape be raised before that Court in that suit, or,
apprehend, in any suit. The Court had before it a certain
alleged will, purporting to devise certain Irish estates,
and it directed an issue to try the validity of that will.
The issue was founded against the validity of the will and
the Court then decided upon the only thing upon which it
could decide, namely, that that instrument was not an
operative devise of the Irish estates." This case was again
brought before the Court, and the judgment is reported in
(1855) K. & J. 502--69 E. R. 557. It was directed that to
prevent misconception an order of the Court of Chancery in
England, establishing the will should be expressly limited
to the extent of the jurisdiction. In Chockalinga v.
Doraiswamy(1) a dispute arose between two persons each of
whom claimed the right to trusteeship of three religious
endowments known as Chidambaram, Mailam and Alapakkam
charities. Of the Chidambaram charities all the lands were
in British Tndia and the charities were to be carried out
also in British India. In the Mailam charities the
performance was to be in British India and Pondicherry
(French
(1) (1927) I.L.R. 51 Mad. 720.
64
territory), and a large majority of the immovable properties
were in Pondicherry and only one in British India. In a
suit filed in the Subordinate Judge ’s court at Pondicherry,
the trial court held that the first defendant Doraiswamy
could not act as trustee because the original trustee
Murugayya had no power to appoint him. The Appellate Court
reversed the decision and held that Doraiswamy was properly
appointed. A suit was then instituted in the British Indian
Court in which the question as to the right of Doraiswamy to
function in respect of immovable property_ in British India
was questioned. The Court held that to Alapakkam charities,
neither the plaintiff nor the 1st defendant had any rights
because by the deed of settlement the right of trusteeship
descended to the sons of Mtirugayya. About the Chidambaram
charities it was hold by the court that the Pondicherry
court had no jurisdiction as all the properties were situate
in British India and "Charities were to be performed" in
British India. About the Mailam charity, Kumaraswami
Sastri, J., held that in respect of the property in British
India the order was not binding, but having regard to the
nature of the trust and the inexpediency of having separate
management and appropriation of the income of the trust the
British Indian Courts would be justified in upholding the
claim of the trustee appointed by the Pondicherry court in
respect of that charity. Srinivasa Aiyangar, J., held that
as the Mailam charity had its "domicile" in the French
territory, the decision of the French Court with regard to
the appointment of the trustee, and recovery by him of the
office of trustee was a decision of a Court of competent
jurisdiction within the meaning of s. 13, Code of Civil
Procedure. The judgment proceeded upon the theory of
"domicil" of the trust which the learned Judge himself
characterised as "inappropriate" but he held that "on a
proper application and appreciation of principles of Private
International Law" in disputes
65
relating to the office of trusteeship the court of competent
jurisdiction within the meaning of s. 13 is the court which
can be regarded as court of the situs of the trust. It is
difficult to accept this view expressed by Srinivasa
Aiyangar, J. It is, however, noteworthy that both the
learned Judges held that the decision of the foreign court
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qua the Chidambaram and the Alapakkam trust was not binding
on the Indian Courts.
The decisions in Samson Ricardo and Johan Lewis Ricardo v.
Garcias (1), Elizabeth Hendren v. Bathal Hendren (2) and
Bank of Australia v. Nios (3) on which the executors rely
are not of cases in which an issue decided by the foreign
court was regarded as conclusive in the trial of a suit
relating to title to immovable property in England. The
decision in. Dogliani v. Crispin (4) also does not support
the plea of the executors. In that case the judgment of a
Portuguese Court holding that the defendant was the
illegitimate son of one Henry Crispin and entitled according
to the law of Portugal to inherit the property of Henry
Crispin who was of a particular station in society (a
plebian and not noble), and was domiciled in Portugal was
held binding between the parties in an administration action
in the Court of Probate in England between the same parties
relating to Government of England Stock. The Court in that
case was not called upon to decide any question of title to
immoveables in England.
The rule of conclusiveness of a foreign judgment as enacted
in s. 13 is somewhat different in its operation from the
rule of res judicata. Undoubtedly both the rules are
founded upon the Principle of sanctity of judgments
competently rendered. But the rule of res judicata applies
to all matters
(1) (1845) 12 Clark & Finnolly 367 : 8 E. R. 1450.
(2 ) (1844) 6 Q. B 287 : 115 E R. 311.
(3) [1851] 16 Q. B. 717 : 117 E. R. 1055
(4) L. R. (1810)1. English & Irish Appeal Cases 30’.
66
in issue in a former suit which have been heard and finally
decided between the parties, and includes matters which
might and ought to have been made ground of attack or
defence in the former suit. The rule of conclusiveness of
foreign judgments applies only to matters directly
adjudicated upon. Manifestly, therefore, every issue heard
and finally decided in a foreign court is not conclusive
between the parties. What is conclusive is the judgment.
Again, the competence of a Court for the application of the
rule of res judicata falls to be determined strictly by the
municipal law; but the competence of the foreign tribunal
must satisfy a dual test of competence by the laws of the
State in which the Court functions, and also in an
international sense.
The submission of the Attorney-General that the claim made
by the plaintiffs in the Mysore suits was one relating to
succession to the estate of Ramalingam, and the decision of
the Mysore Court which adjudicated upon the question as to
the right to succession was conclusive as to all property-
whether within or without jurisdiction-need not detain us.
The suit as framed did not relate to succession to the
estate of Ramalingam: the plaintiffs claimed that they had
acquired according to the well-recognised rule relating to
coparcenary property, an interest therein by birth, and that
Ramalingam’s interest in the property was on his death
extinguished. Succession to the estate of a person is
governed by the lex situs in the case of immovables, and in
the case of movables by the law of his domicile, but these
appeals raise questions not about the law applicable to the
devolution of the, estate, but about title which the
testator could devise by his will. That title must be
adjudicated upon in the case of immovables by the Courts of
the country in which such immovables are situate and on
evidence led in that court.
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67
In considering whether the suit filed by the plaintiffs was
one relating to succession, cases like in the matter of the
Hindu Womens’ right to Property Act, 1937(1), and in the
matter of the Federal Legislature to provide for the Levy of
an Estate Duty in respect of property other than
agricultural land, passing upon the death of any person (2)
which deal primarily ’with. questions as to the power to
legislate in respect of interest of a co-parcener in a joint
Hindu family have little relevance.
The suits also did not relate to the personal status of
Ramalingam and his sons. The plaintiffs claimed in the
Mysore High Court that the will of Ramalingam was invalid,
because be was under the Hindu Law, by which he was
governed, incompetent to dispose of thereby the property of
the joint family. The dispute related primarily to the
character of the property devised by the will, and the
Mysore High Court held that the property devised under the
will was his self-acquired property: it did not purport to
adjudicate upon any question of personal status of the
parties to the dispute before it.
We may now consider the plea that "the judgment of the
Mysore High Court was coram non judice." It was urged that
the Judges of the Mysore Court who constituted the Full
Bench, were biased against the plaintiffs, that they were
interested in the dispute before them and that they denied
opportunity to the, plaintiffs to defend the appeals. It
was urged by the plaintiffs that Mr. Medappa who presided
over the Full Bench had tried the probate proceeding in
which the will of Ramalingam was upheld and in the judgment
in that case bad made severe strictures against ",the family
of the plaintiffs", and the witnesses appearing in support
of the caveators’ case, that Mr. Medappa was a close friend
(1) [1941] F. C. R. 12.
(2) (1944) F. C. R. 317.
68
of A. Wajid, the first executor under the will, that be had
for many years before and after he became a Judge of the
High Court used a motor car belonging to the estate in
dispute and had attempted to dissuade Raju, advocate of the
plaintiffs, from appearing for them in the suit relating to
thee-state. Against Mr. Balakrishanaiya, it was urged that
he should not have Fat on the Full Bench as he was to be
examined as a witness in the matter relating to proof of the
settlement of the dispute between the parties, that he bad
made up his mind and had delivered a judgment expressing a
final opinion on the merits of the appeal and on that
account was biased against the plaintiffs, and that he bad
in the course of the hearing of the appeals sitting with
Kandaswami Pillai, J., made diverse observations indicating
that he was not open to argument, reconsideration and
independent conviction on the merits of the dispute. It was
also urged that the proceedings in the Mysore High Court
were conducted in an atmosphere of vindictiveness towards
the plaintiffs and that observations made and orders were
passed from time to time by Mr. Medappa and Mr.
Balakrishnaiya at diverse stages of the hearing of the
appeal which left no room for doubt that the two Judges were
biassed against the plaintiffs and that they by their orders
denied to the plaintiffs an opportunity of presenting their
case before the Court.
Before we deal with the contentions it may be necessary to
dispose of the contention advanced by the executors that it
is not open in this suit to the plaintiffs to raise a
contention about bias prejudice, vindictiveness or interest
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of the Judges constituting the Bench. They submitted that
according to recent trends in the development of Private
International law a plea that a foreign judgment is contrary
to natural justice is admissible only if the party setting
up the plea is not duly
69
served, or has not been given an opportunity of being head.
In support of that contention counsel for the executors
relied upon the statement made by the Editors of Dicey’s
"Conflict of Laws", 7th Edition Rule 186 at pp. ’1010-1011
and submitted that a foreign judgment is open to challenge
only on the ground of want of competence and not on the
ground that it is vitiated because the proceeding
culminating in the judgment was conducted in a manner
opposed to natural justice. The following statement made in
"Private International Law" by Chesire, 6th Edition pp. 675
to 677 was relied upon:
"The expression ’contrary to natural justice
has, however, figured so prominently in
judicial statements that it is essential to
fix, if possible, its exact scope. The only
statement that can be made with any approach
to accuracy is that in the present context the
expression is confined to something-glaringly
defective in the procedural rules of the
foreign law. As Denman, C. J., said in an
early case:
"That injustice has been done is never
presumed, unless we see in the clearest light
that the foreign law, or at least some part of
the proceedings of the foreign court, are
repugnant to natural justice: and this has
often been made the subject of inquiry in our
courts."
In other words, what the courts are vigilant
to watch is that the defendant has not been
deprived of an opportunity to present his
sides of the case. The wholesome maxim audi
alteram partem is deemed to be of universal,
not merely of domestic, application. The
problem, in fact, has been narrowed’ down to
two cases.
The first is that of assumed jurisdiction over
absent defendants
a ...........................
70
Secondly, it is a violation of natural justice
if a litigant, though present at the
proceedings, was unfairly prejudiced in the
presentation .of his case to the Court."
It is unnecessary to consider whether the passages relied
upon are susceptible of the interpretation suggested, for
private international law is but a branch of the municipal
law of the State in which the court which is called upon to
give effect to a foreign judgment functions and by s. 13 of
the Civil Procedure Code (Act V of 1908) a foreign judgment
is not regarded as conclusive if the proceeding in which the
’judgment was obtained is opposed to natural justice. What-
ever may be the content of the rule of private international
law relating to "Natural justice" in England or elsewhere
(and we will for the purpose of this argument assume that
the plea that a foreign judgment is opposed to natural
justice is now restricted in other jurisdictions only to two
grounds- want of due notice and denial of opportunity to a
party to present case) the plea has to be considered in the
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light of the statute law of India; and there is nothing in
s. .13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, which warrants
the restriction of the nature suggested.
By s. 13 of the Civil Procedure Code a foreign judgment is
made conclusive as to any matter thereby directly
adjudicated upon between the same parties. But it is the
essence of a judgment of a Court that it must be obtained
after due observance of the judicial process, i.e., the
Court rendering the judgment must observe the minimum
requirements of natural justice-it must be composed of
impartial persons, acting fairly, without bias, and in good
faith, it must give reasonable notice to the parties to the
dispute and afford each party adequate opportunity of
presenting his case. A foreign judgment of a competent
court is conclusive even if it proceeds on an erroneous view
of the evidence or the law, if the minimum requirements of
the judicial
71
process are assured : correctness of the judgment in law or
on evidence is not predicated as a condition for recognition
of its conclusiveness by the municipal court. Neither the
foreign substantive law, nor even the procedural law of the
trial need be the same or similar as in the municipal court.
As observed by Charwell, J , in Robinson v. Fenner(1) "’In
any view of it, the judgment appears, according to our law,
to be clearly wrong, but that of course is not enough :
Godard v. Gray (2) and whatever the expression "contrary to
natural justice", which is used in so many cases, means (and
there really is very little authority indeed as to what it
does mean), I think that it is not enough to say that a
decision is very wrong, any more than it is merely to say
that it is wrong. It is not enough, therefore, to say that
the result works injustice in the particular case, because a
wrong decision always does." A judgment will not be
conclusive, however, if the proceeding in which it was
obtained is opposed to natural justice. The words of the
statute make it clear that to exclude a judgment under el.
(d) from the rule of conclusiveness the procedure must be
opposed to natural justice. A judgment which is the result
of bias or want of impartiality on the part of a Judge will
be regarded as a nullity and the "trial coram non judice"
(Vassilades v. Vassilades and Manik Lal v.Dr.Prem chand
(4)).
We may now deal with the diverse objections raised against
the two Judges-Mr. Medappa and Mr. Balakrishanaiya-
alleging bias and partiality against them and also against
the court collectively. In proceeding to deal with
evidence, it has to be remembered that we are dealing with
the judgment of a foreign tribunal constituted according to
the laws of the foreign State for hearing the appeal. We
also cannot forget that the conduct of the plaintiffs and
their. lawyer may have
(1) [1913] 3. K. B. 835, 842.
(2) [1870] L.R. 6 Q. B. 139.
(3) A.I R. 1945 P.C. 33,40.
(4) [1957] S. C. R. 575.
72
appeared to the learned Judges as asking for unreasonable
indulgence if not offering deliberate obstraction, and that
the Judges in passing the diverse orders on which the plea
of bias, prejudice and interest were sought to be founded
were primarily concerned with effective progress and
disposal of the appeals.
It is somewhat unfortunate that all the material evidence
which had bearing on the case as to the allegations of bias,
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prejudice interest and hostility has because of certain
orders passed by the Madras High Court not came on. the
record. Again Raju, the advocate of the plaintiff could not
be examined at the hearing of the suit as he was undergoing
a long term of imprisonment and the commission issued by the
Madras High Court to examine him as a Witness could not be
executed owing to, what Ramaswamy, J., in his characteristic
style states, "interminable legal obstacles and conundrums
which arose." For the examination of Mr. Medappa an order
was made and commission was issued but the executors did
not ultimately examine him. Mr.Balakrishanaiya was examined
in Court but even his evidence was not full because of the
order passed by Rajagopalan, J. restricting the scope of
enquiry of conclusiveness laid down by him on the issue and
which was confirmed by the Appellate Court. It may be
recalled that the executors applied to the learned Judge for
an order that the suit be heard on the preliminary issue,
that it was "barred as res judicata because of the judgment
of the Mysore High Court" and for examination of witnesses
in Bangalore on the plea set up by the plaintiffs of
pronounced hostility and bias on the part of Mr. Medappa,
and Mr. Balakrishanaiya. The learned Judge passed an order
that on the allegation that had been made on the application
against the two Judges of the Mysore High Court it was not
permissible to embark upon an investigation relating to the
manner in which the appeals were conducted
73
or with reference to their decisions in other legal
proceedings connected or otherwise with the appeals that
they eventually heard. But on the plea of bias, prejudice
and hostality the evidence relating, to the manner in which
the proceedings were conducted by the Judges and various
orders made were, in our judgment, material. Rajagopalan J.
permitted evidence to be led on two matters only (1) that
Mr. Medappa was using a motor car belonging to the estate of
the deceased, and (2) that Mr. Medappa had sent for Raju,
counsel for the plaintiffs and bad attempted to dissuade him
from taking Up the case of the plaintiffs and appearing for
the plaintiffs’ family. In appeal against the order of
Rajagopalan, J., the High Court of Madras held that the
enquiry into the use of the "Mercedes car" belonging to the
estate by Mr. Medappa was not permissible. The learned
Judges observed: "It is not as if the plaintiffs have
alleged that Medappa, C.J. had claimed the Mercedes car to
be his own and was therefore, not a person competent to
decide on the title to the properties under a. 13 (a). It
was merely alleged that he used the car for himself and his
wife and children. It was not even stated whether he had
used the oar free or for hire. There was no claim by the
plaintiffs or others on Medappa, C.J., for any dues in
respect, of the alleged use of the car. The car itself was
alleged to have been used in 1943-45 when Medappa, C. J.,
was District Judge, Bangalore Cantonment, and was hearing
the probate application. It was sold away in 1945 or 1946,
long before Medappa, C. J., sat on this Full Bench. It is
too much to say that, from these facts C. J., would be coram
non judice, or he had identified himself with the executors,
and that his taking part in the Full Bench would, be opposed
to natural justice." These observations contained certain
statements which are either in exact or not supported by
evidence. According to the plaintiffs, Mr. Medappa because
a Judge of the High Court at
74
Mysore in 1944 and that is amply supported by evidence on
the record. Against, our attention has not been invited to
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anything on the record that the Merceds-car" was disposed of
in the year 1915-46. But the evidence relating to the use
of the motor car was-excluded by this order.
About the attempts made by Mr Medappa to persuade Raju not
to appear for the plaintiffs in the District Court, no
direct evidence was led. The direct evidence about the
alleged dissuasion of Raju could only be of Raju and Mr.
Medappa, but this evidence has, because the parties did not
choose to examine them, not come on the record. But some
indirect evidence was sought to be led before the High Court
about the alleged dissuasion. Raju had made an affidavit in
June 1950 in this Court in certain proceedings taken by the
plaintiffs for the issue of a writ of prohibition
restraining execution of the decree passed in Appeals Nos.
104 and 109 of 1947-48 of the file of the High Court of
Mysore on the ground that because Mr. Medappa and Mr.
Balakrishanaiya who were members of the Bench were
incompetent for diverse reasons to hear and decide the
appeals, the judgment of the High Court was a nullity. In
that affidavit Raju stated that he was an Advocate for the
plaintiffs who had filed two suits against the executors of
the estate of Ramalingam and that "during the later part of
1945 and the beginning of 1946," Mr. P. Medappa who was.
then a Puisne Judge of the High Court of Mysore, Bangalore,
tried to dissuade him from appearing for the family of
Ramalingam and vehemently criticised the family members.
This was not evidence on which the Court could act. Raju
was alive and could be examined : the Court had not directed
proof of any facts by affidavits, and the executors had no
opportunity to cross-examine Raju on the statements made in
the affidavit. Vishwanath the first plaintiff deposed
75
that sometime before the hearing of the appeals before the
Fall Bench of the Mysore High Court he was told by Raju that
Mr. Medappa had tried to dissuade him from appearing for the
plaintiffs in the District Court of Bangalore. He further
stated that on July 25, 1949, during the course of the
hearing of the appeals before the Full Bench Raju had stated
in open Court that "he was not competent to take up the case
on account of the dissuasion by the Chief Justice" and that
"Chief Justice Medappa had ’sent for him and dissuaded him
from appearing on behalf of Ramalinga’s family. Thereupon
Chief Justice Medappa felt upset and refused to hear" Raju.
He also deposed that Mr. Puttaraj Urs (who was for some time
a Judge of the Mysore High Court had told him that Raju had
told Urs that Medappa had asked him Raju not to appear for
the "plaintiffs" "family" and had sent for him and dissuaded
him from appearing for Ramalinga’s family. Elaborate
argument were advanced before us as to the truth of the statements
made by Vishwanatha and Puttaraj Urs. It was urged that the
statement about the dissuasion of Raju was made for the
first time in the Madras High Court on April 7, 1950, and
that it was not made by Vishwanath in the Mysore Court or in
the petitions to H. H. The Maharaja of Mysore for
constituting "an ad hoc Bench" for hearing the appeals. It
was pointed out that there were atleast two earlier
occasions in the Madras High Court in which Vishwanath could
have made the allegations relied upon by him in his affi-
davit dated April 7, 1950. Strong reliance was also placed
upon a letter dated August 21, 1952, addressed by the 1st
plaintiff Vishwanatba to the executor Abdul Wajid that the
allegations made in Application No. 444 of 1950 and the
affidavit filed in the Madras High Court that the Judges of
the Mysore High Court were prejudiced and that Mr. Medappa
had used the "estate
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76
motor-car" and bad asked Raju not to appear for the
plaintiffs had been put forth by him as their advocates told
him that they were the only method of challenging the
judgment of the Full Bench and that he had been assured that
those allegations were true and that they would supply the
evidence in support of these allegations and it was at their
instance and believing their assurances that he incorporated
the allegations in his affidavit. It was further stated
that he was not able to find any credible evidence at that
time to support these allegations and hence withdrew them
all and proposed to lot in no evidence on those allegations
for the decision of the preliminary issue.
This question does not call for any detailed examination.
There is no direct evidence about the alleged dissuasion of
Raju by Mr. Medappa during the course of the hearing in the
trial Court, and the indirect evidence is mostly hearsay and
otherwise infirm. The evidence of Puttaraj Urs has little
value he has no personal knowledge about the attempted
dissuasion of Raju by Mr. Medappa. He only relates what
he heard from Raju. But the truth of the statement cannot
be established by this indirect method. The evidence of
Vishwanath as to what Raju told him before the hearing of
the appeals is also of no value. About the incident which
took place in the Court on July 25, 1949, there is the
statement of Vishwanatha on the one hand which is
contradicted by Abdul Wajid and Narayanaswamy, the two
executors, and no questions in that behalf were asked to Mr.
Balakrishanaiya. In this state of the record we do not
think that we would be justified in disagreeing with the
High Court that the case that Mr. Medappa persuaded Raju,
counsel for the "plaintiffs, family" has not been proved.
We may, however, state that we are unable to accede to the
contention raised on behalf of the
77
executors that the letter dated August 21, 1952, furnishes
evidence that the allegation regarding dissuasion of Raju
and about the use of the motor car of the estate was an
after-thouht and made by Vishwanatha at the instance of his
advocate. This letter was written when Suit No. 214 of 1944
was pending in the High Court at Madras. In that suit the
judgment of the Mysore High Court was challenged on the
ground that the Judges who heard the appeals were interested
and biassed, and liberty was reserved by Rajagopalan, J., to
the plaintiffs to lead evidence on those two matters only.
We are unable to believe that of his own accord Vishwanatha
would address a letter to the executor Wajid and
substantially destroy his case for setting aside the
judgment of the Mysore High Court. Vishwanatha has stated
in his evidence that he prepared the letter at the instance
of Wajid to "prove his bona fides with Medappa." He stated
that the letter was written at Bangalore, in the office of
one Subramaniam brother of the executor Narayanaswami in the
presence of Wajid about 2 or 3 months prior to August, 1952,
and that about that time there were "meetings and talks of
commissioner and that Wajid had told him that the letter
"was necessary to prove the bona .fides with Medappa before
reaching the compromise." Wajid has denied that he had
persuaded Vishwanatha to write the letter. But the story
about delivery of the letter at the residence of Wajid is
highly improbable. Wajid says that the letter was delivered
by hand by some unknown person at his place in his absence.
This letter was followed by another letter addressed to
Subramaniam brother of the executor Narayanaswami dated
August 25, 1952, in which there is a reference to the letter
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dated August 21, 1952. This letter was addressed to S. N.
Subramaniam, brother of Narayanaswami, and recites that a
copy of the letter addressed to Wajid dated
78
August 21 1952, was sent to Subramaniam By that letter
Viswanatha requested Subramaninm as "well-wisher of the
family" and a friend of his father "to take into
consideration the plight in which the family was and to
intercede" on their behalf "with the executor to secure as
much benefit as possible by way of compromise." A photostat
copy of this letter has also been produced by Wajid.
Vishwanatha stated that even this letter was prepared at the
instance of Wajid. He asserted that the first letter was
prepared on the representation that it was to be shown to
Mr. Medappa, and the second letter was composed by Wajid.
Wajid, bad denied the allegations. We do not think that
Vishwanatha voluntarily wrote the two letters admitting that
the allegations that Medappa was biassed against him and the
ground for such allegations were invented shortly before
April 7, 1950, at the instance of the lawyers of the
plaintiffs.
Mr. Medappa did try the probate proceeding and dismissed the
caveat filed by The plaintiffs but on that account we are
unable to hold that be had any interest in the subject
matter of the appeals or was biased against the plaintiffs.
Our attention has not been invited to any part of the
judgment in the probate proceeding which might. supply any
ground for inferring bias. Even though some of the
witnesses in the probate proceeding and in the suit for
declaration of title of the plaintiffs to the properties
were common it would not be possible to infer bias merely
from the circumstances that Mr. Medappa as District Judge
tried the earlier suit in which the enquiry was strictly
restricted to the validity of the *ill and be subsequently
was a member of the Full Bench of the Mysore High Court
which decided the question of title set up by the
plaintiffs.
79
The plea that Mr. Medappa and Wajid were close friends does
not appear to have been denied by the executors. In his
affidavit filed in June, 1950, the first plaintiff
Vishwanath alleged that Mr. Medappa was a friend of the
executors, and that Mr. Medappa was the Chief Steward of the
Trurf Club and the first executor Wajid was the Secretary
and that they were "intimate and bosom friends," Wajid did
not deny these allegations. He merely stated that he "was
once the Hony. Secretary of the Bangalore Race Club for
about three months on account of the removal of the
permanent secretary. As a Stop-gap arrangement, (he) being
a Committee Member was appointed to act as secretary for
this short period. Mr. Justice P. Medappa was appointed by
His Highness the Maharaja as a steward of the club", and
submitted that "it was insulting and improper to suggest
that a Judge was biassed because he came into social contact
with other gentlemen of the State in the course of his
public and social activities. In his affidavit dated July
5, 1950, Vishwanath stated that Mr. Medappa and Abdul Wajid
have "been very intimate friends, and chums for over a
decade."
Mr. Balakrishanaiya, it is true, did hear the appeals
sitting with Chief Justice Paramsbivayya. It is the
plaintiffs’ case that after hearing arguments for over a
fortnight, Mr. Balakrishanaiya suggested that the parties
should compromise the dispute. Mr. Balakrishanaiya has
denied this statement ; be stated that the parties
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themselves decided to negotiate a compromise. Even if it be
true that be suggested that the possibility of a compromise
of the dispute be explored, bias on his part from that
suggestion cannot be inferred. It is also true that sitting
with Kandaswami Pillai, J., on March 15,1949, he declined to
order an enquiry into the compromise set up by the
plaintiffs on the ground that to record the compromise would
"result in the entire
80
intention of the testator being completely negatived."
Assuming that the order was, in law, incorrect-on that
question we cannot express any opinion-the making of this
order will not justify an inference of bais on the part of
Mr.Balakrishanaiya. It was also alleged against him that he
bad never "disguised his hatred" of the "widow and children
of Ramalingam" and had "openly declared it by his frequent
observations and interruptions in the course of the
plaintiffs’ counsel’s arguments" (vide affidavit field in
June 1950, in the proceedings in this Court for a writ of
prohibition). It was further alleged in the affidavit of
Vishwanath dated April 7, 1949, that Mr. Balakrishanaiya had
from the beginning become ,"openly hostile and his hostility
had become pronounced after the retirement of Chief Justice
Paramshivayya." In the course of his cross-examination Mr.
Balakrishatiaiya denied the suggestion that he was hostile
to the members of "the plaintiffs’ family". As no enquiry
was permitted to be made on these matters by the order of
Rajagopalan, J., evidently all the material evidence is not
before the Court. Vishwanath in his evidence has not spoken
about the statements alleged to have been made by Mr.
Balakrishanaiya from which bias may be inferred. We are
unable to hold, therefore, on the plea of the plaintiffs
that the conduct of Mr. Balakrishanaiya at the hearing of
the appeal sitting with Kandaswami Pillai, J., supports the
plea that he was biassed. The contention that after the
plaintiffs had informed the Court Mr. Balakrishanaiya was to
be examined as a witness in the compromise petition, the
latter should not have set in the Fall Bench has, in our
judgment, no substance. The application for recording the
compromise was disposed of on March 15, 1949, and the Court
without enquiring into the truth or otherwise of the
compromise set up, declined to permit such a compromise to
be made a decree of the Court of the sole ground that it was
"contrary
81
to the intention of the testator." There could, thereafter,
be no scope for any enquiry into the truth of the plea set
up by the plaintiffs about the compromise between them and
the executors.
It would have been more consonant with justice if the
application for recording a compromise was posted for
hearing before a Bench of which Mr. Balakrishanaiya was not
a member especially when the plaintiffs formally ;objected
to him, but from the circumstance that of the bench as
constituted he was a member, an inference of bias cannot be
raised. Even according to Vishwanath, Mr. Balakrishanaiya
stated that he was "sitting for hearing the appeals" with
Kandaswami Pillai, J., because he was so directed by the
Chief Justice, and that Mr. Balakrishanaiya gave Vishawanath
liberty to move the Chief Justice for an order for
constituting another Bench. Vishwanath says that he did go
to see the Chief Justice but the Chief Justice ordered him
out of his Chamber.
The last ground on which the plea of bias is set up is that
Mr. Balakrishanaiya had delivered a judgment on the merits
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of the dispute and had incorporated therein the final order
to be passed in the appeal, and thereafter he referred the
case to the Full Bench and sat as a member of the Full bench
after making up his mind on the merits of the appears.
This, it is contended, is opposed to natural justice. It
was submitted that it is of the essence of a judicial trial
that the Judge should be unbiassed and must have no
predilections for either side, but Mr. Balakrishanaiya
having made up his mind on the merits of the dispute of
which fact the judgment delivered by him is strong evidence,
be was incompetent to sit in the Full Bench for hearing the
appeals.
Our attention was invited by the Attorney--General to a
large number of decisions of the Courts
82
in India and England in support of his plea that in the
absence of a statutory provision a Judge is not prohibited
from sitting in an a appeal or in an application against his
judgment. Our attention was also invited to a number of
decisions of the Allahabad High Court in which it was held
that in reference under s. 575 of the Code of Civil
Procedure 1882, the Judges differing should sit on the Bench
together with other Judges and decide the appeal (e.g.,
Rohilkhand and Kumaon Bank Ltd. v. Row and also to the
practice prevailing in certain Chartered High Courts of
Judges presiding at the Sessions trial being associated at
the hearing oil a certificate granted by the Advocate-
General under el. 26 of the Letters Patent, e.g., The King
Emperor v. Barendra Kumar Ghosh (2) and Emperor v. Fateh
Chand Agarwalla (3), and to cases in which in appeals under
cl. 10 of the Letters Patent of the Allahabad High Court
Judges who decided the proceeding in the first instance sat
in the Court of Appeal, e.g., Lyell v. Ganqa Dai (4), Daia
Chand v. Sarfraz (5), Imam Ali v. Dasaundhi Ram (6), Nanak
Chand v. Ram Narayan (7), Rup Kuari v. Ram Kirpa Shukul(8)
and Kallu Mal v. Brown(9), and also to the statutory
provision of O.XLVII of the Civil Procedure Code of 1908
permitting review before the Judge who decides a suit or
appeal. Reliance was also placed upon R. v. Lovegrove (10)
in which it was held that on an application or appeal to the
Court of Criminal Appeal (in England) there is a general
rule no object on to the trial Judge sitting as a member of
the Court to hear the application or appeal. It may appear,
that in the absence of a statutory provision the fact that a
judge sits in appeal or in an application against a judgment
after
(1) [1884] I.LR.6 All. 468 (2)A.I.R. 1924 Cal. 75 257.
(3, (1916) I.L.R. 44 Cal. 477. (4)(1875)I.L.R. I All 60.
(5) (1875) I.L.R. 1 All. 117. (6)(1877) I.L.R. I All. 508.
(7) (1879) I.L.R. 2 All. 181. (8)(1880) T.L,R. 3 All. T41.
(9) (1881) I. L.R. 3 All. 504. (10)(1951) I All. E.R 804.
83
he has decided the case would not by itself render the
judgment of the Court invalid. In a strictly technical
sense therefore it is true to say that a Judge is not
incompetent to sit in an appeal or application against his
own judgment. But the courts are not merely concerned to
deal with cases in a rigid spirit of legalism. It is of the
essence of a judicial trial that the atmosphere in which it
is hold must be of calm detachment and dispassionate and
unbiassed application of the mind. It may be pertinent to
observe that since the Federal Court was constituted and
after this Court was invested with jurisdiction to try
appeals there has occurred no case-our attention has not
been invited to any-in which a Judge who bad tried a case in
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the High Court or elsewhere sat in appeal against his own
judgment sitting in the Federal Court or in this Court. The
practices prevailing in the High Courts of including a Judge
against whose judgment an appeal or proceedings in the
nature of an appeal is filed, appears to have also fallen
into desuetude and it is proper that it should. Whatever
may have been the historical reasons in England and whatever
may be the technical view as to the constitution of a Bench
in which one or more Judges sit after they have expressed
their opinion-not tentative but final,-the practice which
permits a Judge to sit in appeal against his own judgment or
in cases in which he had an opportunity of making up his
mind and to express his conclusion on the merits of the
dispute has little to commend itself for acceptance. We are
therefore unable to agree that the circumstance that Mr.
Balakrishanaiya delivered a final opinion in the appeals
filed by the plaintiffs and thereafter sat in the Full Bench
even after objection was raised by the plaintiffs to his
participation may be discarded altogether from consideration
in deciding whether in the light of other
84
circumstances the plaintiffs had a fair trial and they were
afforded an adequate opportunity of presenting their case
before an unbiassed court. If the circumstances established
by the other evidence disclose a prima facie case of bias,
the fact that Mr. Balakrishanaiya notwithstanding the
objection raised by the plaintiffs sat in the Full Bench,
after expressing his final opinion may have to be taken into
account.
We may now proceed to deal with the grounds on which it is
claimed on behalf of the plaintiffs they had no opportunity
of being heard before the Full Bench of the Mysore High
Court consisting of unbiassed Judges. The plaintiffs
succeeded before the District Judge in establishing that the
property disposed of by Ramalingam by his will dated
September 10, 1942, was joint-family property. Against that
decision appeals were filed in December 1947. The appeals
were taken up for hearing in September 1948: and the hearing
lasted more than a fortnight. On September 20, 1948, the
Court adjourned the proceeding to enable the parties to
negotiate a compromise. It is the plaintiffs’ case that the
dispute was settled, but that is denied by the executors.
On November 22, 1948, according to the plaintiffs, the terms
of compromise were to be filed in Court, but on that date
one of the Judges-Mr. Paramshivayya did not sit in Court
because he was "compulsorily retired". Mr Medappa who was
appointed Acting Chief Justice was admittedly a friend of
Wajid, the principal executor under the will of Ramalingam,
The plaintiffs say that Mr. Medappa was biassed against the
members of their. family and they were unwilling to have the
appeal heard by Judges who had dealt with the case or were
close friends of one of the parties. On January 5, 1949,
the plaintiffs submitted an application requesting the Court
to move the Government of Mysore to
85
constitute a special Bench. It was stated in that
application that Mr. Balakrishanaiya would have to be a
witness in the compromise petition; Mr Kandaswami Pillai had
delivered a judgment in a connected proceeding; and that
other Judges had ,,,dissociated themselves" from the case.
This application was rejected on January 10, 1949, by Acting
Chief Justice. Another application dated January 29, 1949,
stating that the plaintiffs had approached the Government of
Mysore to constitute an ad hoc special Bench to hear the
appeals and praying that the hearing may be postponed was
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rejected on February 7, 1949, as ",not maintainable". The
appeals were then posted for hearing on February 14, 1949),
but at the request of the executors the hearing was
adjourned, the ground for adjurnment being that their
counsel was busy in a case posted on that date for hearing
in a Court in Orissa. Another application dated ’March 7,
1949 for adjournment to enable the Government to consider
the application for constituting a special ad hoc, Bench wag
also rejected by order of the Acting Chief Justice on March
12, 1949. On March 15, 1949 the Court consisting of Mr.
Balakrishanaiya and Mr. Kandaswami Pillai rejected the
application for recording compromise set up by the
plaintiffs. The appeals were then taken up for hearing. At
that time another application for adjournment was made by
counsel for the plaintiffs stating that the appeal against
the order in the probate proceeding was pending before the
Judical Committee and the decision in that appeal may be
awaited : this application was rejected on the ground that a
similar application previously made had been dismissed. It
is the plaintiffs’ case that Mr. Balakrishanaiya during the
course of the hearing made observations from time .to time
that in his opinion there was no substance in the
plaintiffs’ case. Vishwanath in his affidavit dated April
7, 1950, hat; stated what according to him transpired in the
Court
86
"9. Finding that any further argument before
Mr. Justice Balakrishanaiya was practically
unless, my counsel Mr. N. R. Raghavachariar
left for Madras and my counsel Sri L.S. Raju
filed a memo seeking for permission to retire
as he could do no useful service to his
clients in further addressing the Court in the
circumstances mentioned."
"10. Objection was taken to this retirement
by the other’ side and my counsel Sri L.S.
Raju who bad by that time discontinued
addressing further arguments was asked whether
he had my consent to retire. ’I was then
present in Court and Sri L.S. Raju said that
it is only at my instance, he was retiring."
"11. At this stage, Justice V. Kandaswami
Pillai intervening stated that he was new to
the case and that he has not made up his mind
and requested my counsel Sri L.S. Raju to
give the benefit of his arguments."
Vishwanath in the same affidavit also stated that Mr.
Balakrishanaiya had been "openly hostile" to the plaintiffs.
On this part of the case, by the order ,of Rajagopalan, J.,
no evidence was permitted to be given. The record,
therefore, contains merely an assertion made by the
plaintiffs and denial by the executors. After the judgment
was delivered by the Court on April 2, 1949, Judges having
differed the case was referred to a larger Bench. On June
23, 1949, the Registrar of the High Court notified that the
appeals will be posted for hearing in the last week of July.
It appears that on July 4, 1949, the plaintiffs submitted an
application for adjournment stating that Sir Alladi
Krishnaswami Ayyar, a leading member of the Madras Bar, who
had argued the appeals at the earlier hearing and who was
engaged to argue the appeals was unable to attend the Court
87
in the month of July, 1949, and requesting that adjournment
be granted to enable him to appear and argue the appeals.
This application was rejected by the Registrar of the High
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Court on some technical ground precise nature whereof it is
not possible to ascertain from the record. Another
application was submitted on July 18, 1949, accompanied by a
letter from Sir Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar stating that he
was proceeding to Delhi to attend the meetings of the
Constituent Assembly (of which he was a member) and was on
that account unable to attend the hearing of the appeals in
July 1949 : it was also stated in the application that the
plaintiffs "were engaging" Mr. Sarat Chandra Bose-a member
of the Calcutta Bar-to appear in the appeals, but he ",found
September convenient". This application was rejected as
"belated", and also because the parties had been litigating
ever since December 1942 and the objections of the executors
Were "entitled to consideration." On July 25, 1949, another
application supported’ by an affidavit was filed for
adjournment of the case and that an ad hoc Bench in which
the Chief Justice and Mr-. Justice Balakrishanaiya were not
included be constituted. It appears that at the hearing of
this application there were "angry scenes in Court between
the Acting Chief Justice and L. S. Raju". In this affidavit
dated April 7, 1950, Vishwanath has stated in paragraph 28,
"...... the Officiating Chief Justice Mr. P. Medappa was
very wild with me and rude. He threatened me and said that
I should disclosed to him as to whom I consulted regarding
this affidavit and if I did not do so, I will be sent to
fail. I was in a fix an in a state of terror and, when I
said that’ among other counsels’ I consulted Sri L. S. Raju
also, Sri P. Medappa turned round and said, "I am glad you
mentioned it, I know what to do for him." In paragraph 29
Vishawanath stated : "Later on, the same day he asked
Messrs. N. R. Raghavachariar and L. S. Raju
88
to disclose what transpired between me and them in
connection with the filing of the affidavit and they
declined to do so on the ground that. it would be breach of
professional Confidence." Then in paragraph 30, he stated.
"In disgust and as he had other business, Mr. N. R.
Raghavachariar left for Madras the same day filing a memo of
retirement. Sri L. S. Raju also filed a memo of
retirement." The order rejecting this application was
pronounced in the afternoon of July 25, 1949, but the
hearing of the appeal was taken up in the afternoon of July
25, 1949. In the affidavit dated April 11, 1950 filed in
the Madras High Court by the executors in reply to the
affidavit dated April 7, 1920, there was no denial of the
allegations relating to what transpired in Court on July 25,
1949. The evidence of Mr. Balakrishanaiya-though the
replies given are somewhat vague-gives some support to the.
story of what is described as "a stormy session" on July 25,
1949. Mr. Balakrishanaiya was asked by the plaintiffs
whether he remembered that on the first day, i e., July 25,
1949, it was a ’very stormy .session". The answer given was
that he did "not understand". To the question whether
"Medappa threatened the respondent to tell him the name of
the advocate who drafted the affidavit", be answered "There
was a question whether it was drafted by the party or with
the aid of Counsel". The witness was then asked a composite
question-,’Did Medappa threaten him to put him in Jail?.
The storm means the storm of the session-the other
colleagues were so distracted that they could not hear what
was passing between Medappa and others?" No reply to first
part of the question was apparently given. The answer
recorded is, "So far we were concerned we were never
distracted." It is true that the witness denied that Mr.
Medappa had told the first plaintiff Visbwanath that when it
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was disclosed that Raju had drafted the affidavit Mr.
Medappa stated he knew I ’what to do When
89
the Court insisted on hearing the appeal on July 25, 1949,
it appears, that Raju and N. R. Raghavachariar (who belonged
to the Madras Bar) applied for leave to withdraw. On that
application an order refusing leave to. withdraw was, it
appears, immediately recorded. The order declaring permis-
sion to retire from the case bears the date July 25, 1949,
but for some reason not apparent from the record, it was
pronounced on July 27, 1949. Arguments were heard on the
25th of July, 26th of July and 27th of July, 1919, and the
Advocates of the plaintiffs were in the singular position of
not knowing whether they did or did not continue to remain
advocates for the plaintiffs. After the arguments of the
executors, an application to enable the plaintiffs to secure
the presence of Sir Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar was made and
was rejected, and "judgment was reserved" without hearing
any arguments on behalf of the plaintiffs. Judgment of the
Court which runs into thirty closely printed pages was
delivered on July 29, 1949, at 4 p.m.
From a resume of what transpired since Mr. Medappa was
appointed the Acting Chief Justice, it cannot be doubted
that the Judges of the Mysore High Court were not willing to
consider any request of the plaintiffs for formation of a
Bench which did not include Mr. Medappa and Mr.
Balakrishanaiya. Nor did they Consider his applications for
adjournment with sympathy. The attitude may appear to be
somewhat rigid, but that attitude by itself may not justify
an inference of bias.
The plaintiffs were since the appointment of Mr. Medappa as
Acting Chief Justice making application after application
for the constitution of a Bench in which Mr. Medappa and
other Judges who bad been at some time concerned with this
case be excluded. ’But a litigant is not entitled to
choose’
90
the personnel of the Court to hear his case, nor can he
insist upon an adjournment of the case because the date
fixed for hearing is not convenient to his counsel
Convenience of counsel must subserve the larger interest of
the administration of justice. It is true that where by a
too strict observance of legal forms injustice has been
done, by an apparently biassed tribunal, the decision may be
declared ’coram non judice" whether the decision is of the
tribunal subordinate to the appellate jurisdiction of the
court or of a foreign tribunal. But only facts proved in
this case in support of the plea of bias are that Mr.
Medappa was a close friend of the executor Syed Abdul Wajid,
and Mr. Balakrishanaiya bad expressed his view on the merits
of the plaintiffs case. It would have been consistent with
the dignity of the Court if Mr. Medappa and Mr. Bala-
krishanaiya bad not sat in the Full Bench. But it cannot be
forgotten that unless the Government of Mysore agreed to
constitute an ad hoc Bench, there were no Judges in the
Court who could form a Full Bench to hear the appeals. Mr.
Puttraj Urs bad recorded evidence in the suits out of which
the appeals arose: Mr. Malappa was also concerned with some
proceedings connected with the litigation and Mr.
enkataramaiya the only remaining Judge bad appeared as an
Advocate for the plaintiffs. Mr. K. Kandaswami Pillai bad
retired. We may certainly not approve if we are called upon
to do so-of the incidents in Court at and before the
hearing. But these incidents may very well be the result of
deliberate provocation given by the plaintiffs and their
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lawyer Raju, who appears to have attempted frequently to
thwart the effective hearing of the appeals.
The High Court has carefully weighed the circumstances and
has held that from the various pieces of conduct attributed
to Mr. Medappa and Mr. Balakrishanaiya, an inference of bias
may not
91
be made. We are dealing with the judgment of a foreign
tribunal: however much we may regret the pronouncement of
certain orders, especially orders declining to grant a
reasonable adjournment to enable the plaintiffs’ counsel to
appear and argue the case, the constitution of the Bench and
the manner in which the appeals were heard, it is difficult
for us to disagree with the High Court and to attribute bias
to the Judges, who constituted the Full Bench.
The plea of bias, of a foreign Court is indeed difficult to
make out. The court will always presume, in dealing with
the judgment of a foreign Court that the procedure followed
by that Court was fair and proper, that it was not biassed,
that the Court consisted of Judges who acted honestly, and
however wrong the decision of the Court on facts or law may
appear to be, an inference of bias, dishonesty or unfairness
will not normally be made from the conclusion recorded by
the Court on the merits. The party setting up a case that
the judgment of a foreign court is not conclusive, because
its proceeding was contrary to natural justice, must
discharge this burden by cogent evidence, and we do not
think that in this case such evidence has been led. The
Judges had no pecuniary interest in the dispute. Bias in
favour of the executors is sought to be inferred from close
friendship of the Chief Justice with one of the defendants,
and the expression of opinion by the other Judge on the
merits-such expression of opinion being consistent with the
practice prevailing in the Court-and refusal to grant
facility to the plaintiffs to secure the presence of their
chosen counsel. These grounds either individually or
collectively do not justify us in inferring contrary to the
view of the High Court that the Judges had forfeited their
independence and impartiality and had acted not judicially
but with bais.
92
The last question which falls to be determined is whether
the estate devised under ’the will dated September 10, 1942,
was the joint family estate of Ramalingam and his sons. If
the estate belonged to the joint-family, the will was
undoubtedly inoperative. Certain facts which have a bearing
on this question and which are mainly undisputed may be set
out. Vydialingam was an employee in the Mysore Subordinate
Judicial service and drew a monthly salary rising from Rs.
75/- to Rs. 125/-. He worked fir,.it as a translator in the
Mysore Chief Court. In 1898 he was appointed Sheristedar of
the District Court at Shimoga and was later transferred to
Bangalore. One Loganathan Mudaliar, a building contractor
carrying on business at Kolar Gold Fields, was a close
friend of Vydialingam. In 1896, Loganathan fell ill and
after his illness took a serious turn in, 1898, he was
unable to attend his business. Loganathan executed a will
appointing Vydialingam and others as guardians of his
children and also executors under his will, and died in
1900. Vydialingam was maintaining an account with the
Cavalry Road Bank at Kolar Gold Fields since 1891. By 1895
substantial amounts were credited in that account of which
the source could not be the meagre salary of Vydialingam.
In the years 1896 and 1897, diverse amounts aggregating to
the more than rupees one lakh were credited in that account.
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In May 1898 Vydialingam borrowed on his personal security
from the Bank Rs. 2,000/- and gave it to Shanmugam, his
eldest son. Shanmugam opened an account with the Cavalry
Road Bank in October, 1899, by borrowing Rs. 25/-, but the
entries in this account are few and for very small amounts.
From the account maintained by the Mining Company it appears
that the building construction work which was originally
done by Loganathan. was later done by Shanmugani and since
1901 large amounts were paid to Shanmugam some of which were
credited into the Cavalry Road Bank
93
account. Since July 1904, some books of account maintained
in the name of Shanmugam for business, household and, other
expenses are available. About ;the year 1904, Devraj, the
second son of Vydieolingam, started attending to a building
contractor’s business at Gadag. Ramalingam after
,.completing, his training in the Victoria Jubilee Technical
Institute at Bombay also took to that business. Vydialingam
died in May 1905. He was then possessed of two houses which
were orally directed by him to be given to Ramalingam. The
three brothers continued to live jointly even after the
death of Vydialingam and the household expenses were
jointly incurred. In 1910 Ramalingam sold one of the two
houses and received Rs. 4,000/-. ’On March 30, 1912, a deed
of release was executed by Ramalingam and Devraj under which
Devraj and Ramalingam each .received Rs. 2,5001- and the
Kolar Gold Fields business was thereafter carried on
apparently as a partnership business between Shanmugam and
Ramalingam. Manavalem father-in-law of Devraj died in 1910,
and Devra migrated to Madras and settled down, in that tow
to attend to the business of his father-in-law Shortly after
April 1912, Shanmugam proceeded ,to the United Kingdom.
There is no clear evidence ’Whether he took part in; the
business after he returned from his journey abroad. He
continued to make withdrawals from his account in the
business By 1961, he had overdrawn an amount exceeding Rs.
35,000/- which was written off. Thereafter he ceased to
have any interest in the business Shanmugam died in 1924 and
Devraj died in 1936.
It is the plaintiffs’ ease that, Vydialingam was carrying on
the business of a building contractor since about the year
1895 or 1896: into this business Shanmugam was first
introduced and thereafter Devraj and Ramalingam. After the
death Vydialingam, according to the plaintiffs, this busi-
ness was carried on by the three brothers till the
94
year 1910 at different places. Devraj was attending to a
Iran oh of the business at Gadag: Ramalingam attended to the
business at Kolar Gold Field,,; and also at Gadag. The
plaintiffs claim that the business which was carried on by
Ramalingam since the year 1916, was directly connected with
the business which was inherited from Vydialingam by his
sons and being in his hands ancestral business, the
acquisitions. out of the same were impressed with the
character of joint-family property. They also claimed that
Ramalingam disposed of two ancestral houses which he
received and used the sale proceeds in conducting, his
business and also Rs. 12,500/ received from the
Administrator-General as the Share, out of the estate of
Loganathan, of his wife Gajambal who was the daughter of
Loganatban. With this fund Ramalingam carried on the
business of a building contractor in the conduct of which he
was assisted by his sons and he acquired the estate in
dispute. The case of the plaintiffs therefore was that
Vydialingam was carrying on the business, of a building
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contractor, that his sons assisted him in carrying on the
business, that after his death the business which devolved
upon his sons was carried on by them till 1910 when Devraj,
the second son ceased to be. interested therein. Then
Shanmugam, the oldest, son severed his connection in 1916
leaving Ramalingam to conduct the ancestral business alone.
The executors contended that Vydialingam did not carry on
business of a building contractor, that Shanmugam started
his own business as a building contractor sometime in 1898
and neither his father nor his brothers had any. interest
therein, and that for the first time, in 1912, in view of
his impending departure for the United Kingdom, Shanmugam
admitted Ramalingam into his business as a partner and
ultimately in 1916, Ramalingam became the sole owner of the
business, because
95
Shanmugam severed his interest therein. The case of the
executors, therefore was that the business in the hands of
Ramalingam had no conviction with any ancestral business or
estate received by Ramalingam from his father.
The trial Judge dealt with the question under
five heads:--
Firstly, that Vydialingam carried on the
business of a building contractor. He had
left. two houses which were unencumbered, and
the contractor’s business: these became joint-
family estate in the hands of his son, and out
of this estate Ramalingam’s fortune was built:
Secondly, that after the death of Rawalingain,
his three sons carried on a joint family
business. This joint-family business was
attended to by the three brothers at different
places and that the joint acquisitions were
divided sometime in the year 1910 and each
brother received a share of Rs. 34,000/- odd,
and out of the share received by Ramalingam,
estate devised by the will was acquired
Thirdly, that Ramalingam received a share of
the ancestral estate of the value of Rs.
40,000/- and also Rs. 12,500 as share of his
wife out of the estate of Loganathan and the
entire amount was invested in his business as
a building contractor and out of this the
estate in dispute was acquired :
Fourthly, that Ramalingam and his eldest son
Vishwanath were actively associated in
carrying on the building contractor’s business
and the acquisitions out of
96
the business were joint-family estate: and
Fifthly, that Ramalingam had by his decl-
arations impressed his acquisitions with the
character of joint-family property and
therefore the property was jointfamily
property.
He held on all the five heads that the property devised
under the will of Ramalingam was jointfamily property. in
appeal, the High Court held that the case of the plaintiffs
under the 4th and the 5th heads was not established. About
the 3rd head the High Court held that there was no clear
evidence that Ramalingam had received an ancestral fortune
of Rs. 40,000/- or Rs. 12,500/- on behalf of his wife
Gajambal from the estate of Loganathan. But the High Court
held that Vydialingam was carrying on the business of a
building contractor since the year 1896 and that in this
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business were associated his sons as they grew up; that the
business was carried on in the name of Shaumugam because
Vydialingam being a public servant could not carry it on in
his own name; that after the death of Vydialingam this
business was conducted as a joint-family business; that in
the year 1910, Devraj who was attending to the Gadag Branch
of the business left the family and commenced attending at
Madras to the business of his father in-law who died about
that time; and that Shanmugam ceased to have any connection
with the. business in 1916. The High Court summarised the
conclusion as follows:--
"The business which Ramalingam subsequently
extended was a business which-descended to him
from his father, his two brothers having
successively left it. It is probable though
is, not clearly proved-that Ramalingam put the
money which is obtained by sale
97
of the house in Bangalore into business. He
also put in the money he was paid under the
release deed of 1912. Into the nominal
partnership which he entered into with
Shanmugam, he brought in as his capital a sum
of Rs. 5,000/representing a fragment of the
old business. No less important, he also
brought in the goodwill of the old business.
At no time before the final few months
preceding his death, when he had quarrelled
with the members of his family, did
Ramalingam, notwithstanding the claims he made
in his will, and other documents, seek to
exclude the members of family. He made no
effort to keep distinct what were acquired
with the aid of indubitably joint-family
nucleus from what it might have been possible
to contend were the result of his own
unassisted exertions. Taking all the
circumstances into account, we are of the
opinion that the learned trial Judge was right
in concluding that the properties which Ram-
alingam left behind must be treated as joint-
family properties."
To establish their case the plaintiffs relied upon the
evidence of five witnesses-Kuppuswamy Mudaliar, Sitharain
Naidu, Varadaraja Mudaliar, Venugopala Mudaliar and
Dharmalingam, some of whom had been examined before the
Court of the District Judge, Bangalore. By their evidence
it was sought to prove that Vydialingarn did carry on in and
before 1898 business as a building contractor at Kolar Gold
Fields and that this business had on his death descended, to
his sons. The plaintiffs also relied upon extracts from the
accounts of Ramalingam and Shanmugam with the Cavalry Road
Bank at Nandidurg, and the extracts from the accounts of the
Nandidurg_ Mining Company recording payments made from time
to time to Shanmugam some of which were credited in the
account of Vydialingam
98
with the Cavalry Road Bank. Reliance was also placed upon
the entries in the books of account maintained in the name
of Shanmugam from the year 1904 showing receipts from Davraj
at Gadag and amounts debited as sent to Devraj at Gadag,
collection of rent from the houses credited in that account,
expenses debited for purposes connected with building
construction’ items showing that Devraj or Vydialingam had
participated in those transactions and other entries of
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house-hold expenses showing that the account maintained in
the name of Shanmugam was in truth the account of the joint-
family. ’rho plaintiffs also relied upon certain letters
written by Ramalingam and Devraj which from their terms
evidenced their case’ that they were not acting merely as
agents of Shanmugam but as owners of the business. Reliance
was also placed upon the testimony of one Masilamay Pillai,
an Advocate (who later acted as a Judge of the Madras High
Court), that in the arrangements made a few months before
March 30, 1912, it was agreed that the goodwill of the Kolar
Gold Fields business was allotted to Ramalingam. The
learned trial Judge accepted the evidence of all the witness
whose testimony was relied upon by the plaintiffs and held
that the extracts Vydialingam’s account established that he
was carrying on business as a building contractor, and the
books of account maintained in the name of Shanmugam were
family accounts.
In appeal, the High Court relied upon the evidence of only
two of the five witnesses who deposed that Vydialingam was
working as a building contractor. In the view of the High
Court the evidence of Varadaraja Mudaliar and Sitharam Naidu
but not of other witnesses was reliable. Witness Sitharam
Naidu deposed that he was working as a building contractor
since the year 1898 at
99
Kolar Gold Fields, that he had taken up a ",tenement in the
compound of Loganatha Mudaliar" and that he knew that
Vydialingam was looking after the contract work of Loganath,
that Vydialingam was assisted by his three sons, that
Shamingam was doing business of a building contractor and
was also helping his father Vydialingam. The witness was
described by the High Court as a respectable person "’not
readily corruptible" and who "had no ascertainable motive
for giving false evidence". Varadaraja Mudaliar deposed
that he used to see Vydialinga Mudaliar when he (the
witness) went to Oorgaum in 1898 to see his father-in-law
who was a Mistry in the Oorgaum mines working under Loganath
Mudaliar, that his father-in-law at first worked under
Loganath and later under Vydialingam. The evidence of this
witness was also accepted by High Court. The evidence of
these two witnesses establishes that Vydialingam Mudaliar
was conducting the business of a building contractor. There
is also evidence that since the year 1898 Loganath was too
ill to attended to his business and that he died in 1900.
The testimony of the two witnesses Sitharam and Varadaraj is
supported by entries in the account of Vydialing ,am with
the Cavalry Road Bank. The account of Vydialingam with the
Cavalry Road Bank was opened in 1891. Vydialingam was an
Employee of the State of Mysore and the maximum salary that
he ever drew was Rs. 125/- p.m. Between the years 1891 and
1894 the entries in the bank account were for small amounts,
the largest being Rs. 478/4/-. In the year 1895, there were
two items each exceeding Rs. 1,000/- credited in that
account, but in 1896, the items of credit and disbursement
were very large : it appears from the entries in that
account that in the years 1896-1897, amounts aggregating to
Rs. One lakh and more were credited in the account of
Vydialingam and large disbursements were also made from that
account. The High Court observed, and in our judgment the
100
High Court was right in its view that the transactions in
the books were "to large to be referred to the emoluments of
Vydialingam as Sheristedar. It is legitimate inference that
he has been engaged in other business. The executors did
not, deny that an inference that Vydialingam was carrying on
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some business clearly arose from the entries in the books of
account. But it was suggested that Vydialingam may have
carried on the business of a money-lender and for that
purpose he may have withdrawn funds from the Cavalry Road
Bank and utilized them as his circulating capital for his
money-lending transactions. It was asserted that
Vydialingam was a Director of the Cavalry Road Bank and was
on the account able to help himself to the funds of the Bank
for his private business. But our attention has not been
invited to any evidence on the record that Vydialingam was a
director of the Cavalry Road Bank. The entries are of such
large amounts and the credit and debit entries are so
frequent that the inference that were made in the course of
a money-lending business would be difficult to make. It
also appears that Vydialingam had mortgaged his house in
1892 for Rs. 25,000/- in favour of Thirunaglingam Pillai and
he discharged this mortgage by borrowing a loan of Rs.
3,000/- on the security of the house from Loganathan on
August 31, 1892. The amount was repayable in monthly
instalments of Rs. 50/-. Another deed encumbering his house
was executed by Vydialingam in 1894 for repayment of Rs.
2,000/These two mortgages remained outstanding till 1903.
We are unable to accept the theory that Vydia. lingam
carried on money-lending business when his own house was
mortgaged, and he had agreed to pay the dues by instalments.
The Cavalry Road Bank account also shows entries for amounts
brought from the Madras Bank. These show that Vydialingam
had received cheques which were encashed with the Madras
Bank and the amounts were received by him. These entries
render the theor of a money-lendin business improbable.
101
The entries in the bank account of Vydialingam support the
case that he was carrying on a business, and the testimony
of two witnesses Sitbaram Naidu and Varadaraja Mudaliar
clearly shows that this business was of a building
contractor.
Before 1898, even according to the case of the executors,
Shanmugam was not employing himself as a building
contractor. The entries in his account with the Cavalry
Road Bank are for very small amounts till April 1901, when,
for the first time, Shanmugam borrowed Rs. 800/- on the
security of jewels. In the account of the Mining Company
also, there are no entries for any payments made to
Shanmugam till 1901 for work done by him. The entries in
the Cavalry Road Bank account therefore support the
inference that Vydialingam was carrying on business and
Shanmugam had no business of his own atleast till 1900.
The entries in the Cavalry Road Bank account for the period
subsequent to 1900 also suggest that Vydialingam operated
the account of Shanmugam. Part of the amounts received from
the Mining Company account by Shanmugam for the work done
was applied for satisfying loans borrowed by Vydialingam.
It has also to be noted that in Shanmugam’s account till
1901 no large amounts were credited. It appears from the
account of the Mining Company that on January 18, 1901, he
received Rs. 5,000/by cheque and other large amounts within
the next three months aggregating to nearly Rs. 7,500/- in
cash and cheques. But the account of Shanmugam with the
Cavalry Road Bank shows only a total credit of Rs. 780/-
between October 1899 and April 1901 in the suspense account.
No books of account about the construction work done in the
name of Shanmugam are available for the period.
There are certain entries in the accounts of Vydialingam and
Shanmugam which show interrelation between the two accounts.
For instance,
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102
on January 9, 1904,.according to the Mining Company’s
account Shanmugam was paid three amounts Rs. 36/-, Rs,
362/14/1 and Rs. 12,243/5/-. About this time Shanmugam was
indebted to the Cavalry Road Bank in the sum of Rs. 3,400/-
on promissory notes. On January 19, 1904, he paid Rs.
3,100/into the Bank and partially satisfied this liability.
Rs. 12,120/6/9 are found credited in the account of
Vydialingam on January 23, 1904 and Rs. 12,000/are withdrawn
on January 29. There is no direct evidence to connect the
payments made in the accounts of Shanmugam and Vydialingam
with the amounts received by Shanmugam, but it would be a
reasonable inference, having regard to the proximity of
time, that it was out of the Amount of Rs. 15,900/received
by Shanmugam on January 19, 1904, that his liability for Rs.
3,100/- to the Cavalry Road Bank was discharged and an
amount of Rs. 12,120/ 619 was paid into the Cavalry Road
Bank and an amount of Rs. 305/- was utilized for satisfying
the debts of Vydialingam in his personal account. There are
also other entries disclosing interrelation between the
accounts. Vydialingam borrowed Rs. 140/- on February 1.8,
1904, under promissory note dated February 18, 1904, and the
identical amount is credited in the account of Shanmugam
under the entry "Receipt from V. S. Vydialinga Mudaliar."
The Chitta number under which amounts are credited and
debited are identical. On December 1, 1904, Shanmugam
received a cheque for Rs. 10,000/- from the Mining Company.
The cheque was credited in the Cavalry Road Bank on 10-12-
1904. On that day Shanmugam was indebted in the sum of Rs.
2 625/- in the promissory note account. On December 19, he
withdrew a total amount of Rs. 8,733/2/0. The Chitta entry
in that behalf is No. 113. On that very day there are two
entries under Chitta No. 113 for payment of Rs. 1,050/- in
Vydialingam’s account. There are entries in Shanmugam’s
account with the Bank
103
showing debts made pursuant to directions’ given by
Vydialingam. For instance, on March 25, 1903, Rs. 500/- are
debited pursuant to directions given by Vydialingam. There
are two similar debit entries pursuant to directions given
by Vydialingam on April 4, 1903, and April 10, 1903, for Rs.
500/- each.
In Vydialingam’s account on July 13, 1903 there is an entry
of Rs. 280/- paid for cart hire. That is also indicative of
the fact that he was carrying on the business of a building
contractor, otherwise this entry is not capable of
explanation. There are also entries in the account
maintained in the name of Shanmugam showing expenses
incurred by Vydialingam and Devraj for travelling in
connection with the building of the English Church". On
August 7, 1904, Rs. 20/- were debited as spent by
Vydialingam for going to Madras. There is also a debit
entry of Rs. 3/- dated July 26, 1904, for travelling
expenses of Devrai and Shanmugam. The account maintained in
the name of Shanmugam for the period prior to July, 1901, is
not produced. The account is available till 1907 and then
there is a break. There is an account book for 1910-1 1,
but not for the period immediately before April 1, 1912,
when a partnership was started between Ramalingam and Shan-
mugam. There are numerous entries in this account showing
that large amounts were received from Gadag from Devraj and,
also for amounts sent to him. On May 5, 1905, an amount of
Rs. 1,000/- was raised on a promissory note and sent to
Devraj. On July 19, 1905, there was a remittance to Devraj
by Shaamugam of Rs. 1,00 1/ 8/2. There is a similar
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remittance on September 17, 1905. On September 26, 1905,
Rs. 100/- had been paid through Ramalingam. There are
credit entries for large amounts received from Devraj. On
May 27, 1907, Devraj remitted Rs. 7,000/-
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from Gadag to Kolar Gold Fields. It is unnecessary to
examine all these entries. Also in the account in the name
of Shanmugam there are several credit entries for house rent
collected from tenants of the two houses which Vydialingam
died possessed of, and debit entries for payment of
municipal taxes. There are also in that account numerous
entries for amounts collected by Ramalingam and paid into
the account.
There are also four letters which throw some light on the
connection of the three brothers with the Kolar Gold Fields
business. On October 5, 1909, Devraj addressed a letter to
Ramalingam enquiring whether the letter did go to Gadag and
gave several directions with regard to business matters.
There is another letter dated October 6, 1909, also written
by Devraj to Ramalingam which states "Pariapa" (Shanmugam)
has come from Bangalore and he expects you here as soon as
you finish your work there." This letter also gives
directions for procuring certain articles. There is a
letter dated January 18, 1911, addressed by Ramalingam to
Shanmugam. By the letter Ramalingam informs Shanmugam that
the question of (departmental employment in the Nandidurg
Mining Company was discussed and that it ,,was finally
decided not to do so" and to have the sundry works carried
on as usual. He then proceeds to state that the Oorgaum
Gold Mining Company had temporarily stopped all operations
for "some unknown reasons". then there is a reference to the
Electricity Department of putting in and concrete in "N’s
Bungalow". There is also reference to "drudging on with the
drains and the compressor work we have been having."
Regarding the Oorgaum Gold Mines, he says that all the
"works on hand" in the mines had been completed and the
prospects for new work were gloomy. There is also a
reference
105
to the timber department. In the next letter dated February
11, 1911, addressed to Shanmugam, Ramalingam states that Mr.
Bullen had sent for him and had enquired of him whether he
would undertake some small building contract at Manigatha
where they were prospecting for gold and further that he
(Ramalingam) had agreed "to do the work and promised to be
there to receive instructions." He also stated that he would
return by the week-end after the arrangements were made and
he would take leave of Messrs. Moky &Cooke and tell them
that Mr. Ramaiah will lookafter the business (during his
absence). The letters do suggest that Ramalingam and Devraj
were interested as owners in the business about which
information was given to Shanmugam and they were not merely
acting as his agents.
There are numerous entries in the General Account also
indicting that these accounts are not in respect of the
personal transactions of Shanmugam but they are the accounts
of the family. Expenses of various members are debited in
that account. They are found side by side with business
expenses. The High Court was, in our judgment, right in
holding that these were not the accounts of Shanmugam
personally but were of the joint family.
The Attorney-General, however, says that certain
circumstances relied upon by ’him conclusively establish
that the business done by Shanmugam was his separate
business. He points out that Vydialingam was a public
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servant and his service record showed that he was on leave
only for short periods in the year 1898 and when he was
posted at a considerable distance from Kolar Gold Fields, it
would be impossible for him to attend at the latter place to
any business requiring his continued attendance. But only a
few extracts from the service record of Vydialingam have
been
106
printed in the record. Ext. 368 shows that Vydialingam drew
a salary of Rs. 125/- for 20 days for Working no Nazir and
Sheriatedar, and that he was transferred to the District
Court of Shimoga in September, 1901. There is also an entry
that Vydialingam was appointed Munsif for 12 days in June,
1900. Ext. 370 shows the amount of salary that Vydialingam
drew from time to time. These documents do not show that it
was impossible for Vydialingam to attend to the business.
It is true that in the Mining Company’s account payments
made for construction work are debited till 1900 to
Loganathan‘ and after Loganathan’s death to Shanmugam, but,
evidently, Vydialingam being a public servant could not
publicly appear as carrying on a building contractor’s
business and receive paymenta for- the work done by him in
his own name. The debit entries in the name of Shanmugam in
the Mining Company’s account are therefore not decisive, nor
would they be sufficient to destroy the direct evidence of
the two witnesses Sitharam Naidu and Varadaraja Mudaliar.
It was then urged that Cavalry Road Bank Account showed a
payment of Rs. 2,000/- in May, 1898, to Shanmugam and that
this account was’ returned to Vydialingam %by Shanmugam in
December 1902. From this it is urged that Shanmugam started
business as a building contractor with the amount borrowed
from his father Vydialingam and ultimately he repaid it
after four years and seven months. But the evidence of the
two witnesses Sitharam Naidu and Varadaraja Mudaliar does
establish that the business of building contractor was
conducted by Vydialingam and that is amply corroborated by
the entries in the Cavalry Road Bank account. The debit
entry relating to payment of Rs. 2,000/- to Shanmugam from
Vydialingam’s account, and the credit entry for repayment by
Shanmugam will not, in our
107
judgment, necessarily lead to the inference that this amount
was borrowed by Shanmugam for starting his business as a
building contractor. It was also urged that the account
started in July 1901 and continued till the year 1912 was
the private account of Shanmugam. We have already dealt
with this question in dealing with the evidence of the
plaintiffs and we are unable to hold, having regard to the
numerous entries posted therein that the account was the
personal account of Shanmugam.
It is also true that Vydialingam was indebted to Loganathan
for amounts borrowed by him on the security of his two
houses and that the debts were paid off in the year 1903.
Bat having regard especially to the direct evidence
supported by contemporaneous entries in the account books,
an inference that Vydialingam did not carry on any business
will not be justified.
Strong reliance was placed on certain recitals in two
documents a sale deed executed by Ramalingam for sale of the
house inherited by him from Vdialingam by deed dated July
27, 1910, and a deed of release executed on March 30, 1912,
by the three brothers. It is urged that the recitals in
these two documents completely destory the case that after
the death of Vydialingam there was a subsisting joint family
or that Ramalingam and Davraj had interest in the business
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carried on by Shaumugam. In the sale deed dated July 2O,
1910, executed by Ramalingam in favour of Mandi Mohammad
Hussain Saheb it was recited- that Shanmugam and Devraj had
acquired properties out of their own earnings and were in
enjoyment thereof, but he (Ramalinga) had no property of his
own earning and therefore Vydialingam had given oral
directions that the immovable property belonging to
Vydialingam should be in the possession or enjoyment of
Ramalingam alone and that
108
Shanmugam and Devraj should have no right therein and that
in accordance with the directions and with the permission of
his two brothers. Ramalingam was in possession and
enjoyment thereof and that he conveyed one of the houses for
Rs. 4000/- to the vendee and in order to prove that his
aforesaid brothers had no right in the property, he had got
them to attest the documents. The sale deed bears the
attestations of Shanmugam and Devraj. There is another
document dated March 30, 1912, which is calleda "Release
Deed", between Shanmugam on the one hand and Devraj and
Ramalingam Mudaliar on the other, The three brothers are
described as doing business as building contractors. It is
recited in that deed that in 1898 Shanmugam started life as
a building contractor and merchant by his own exertions and
without the use or aid of funds of the joint family to which
he belonged and found his own ’means of living" on the Kolar
Gold Fields and elsewhere and by his own exertions he had
made acquisitions described in the schedule annexed to the
deed and that the same were his separate property. The deed
also recited that before his death on May 3, 1905,
Vydialingam had given directions for the disposal of the
immovable and movable properties in favour of Ramalingam and
accordingly the said properties had been appropriated first
towards the discharge of his. debts and thereafter the
immovable properties had been taken over by Ramalingam and
that "nothing in the nature of an undivided Hindu joint-
family remained". The document then proceeded to recite
that in consideration of a sum of Rs.2,500/- paid by
Shanmugam to Devraj and another sum of Rs. 2,500/- paid to
Ramalingam and his minor son Vishwanath, Devaraj and
Ramalingam declared that they will not claim any "manner of
right or title or interest in the property of Shanmugam"
described in the schedule attached to the deed and agreed
that they or any of them had never any
109
right, title or interest in the property and that if there
was any such right it "shall be deemed to have been
released, relinquished and quit claimed so that Shanmugam
Mudaliar remain the sole and absolute owner thereof." In the
schedule to the deed was described a bungalow at
Robertsonpet and movables and outstanding of the value of
Rs. 1,79,000/-. At the foot of the document were endorsed a
receipt for Rs. 2,500/- by Devraj and another receipt for
Rs. 2,500/- by Ramalingam. The Attorney-General contented
that the admissions in these documents .were unequivocal and
destroyed the case of the plaintiffs, that there was any
subsisting jointfamily after the death of Vydialingam or
that the business carried on by Shanmugam was joint-family
business. Counsel submitted that the trial Judge had
evolved a theory which was not supported by any pleading or
evidence that the sale deed and the release deed were parts
of a scheme of division of the property of the joint family
of the three brothers.
It is true that the recitals in the sale deed show that the
house sold by Ramalingam was given by Vydialingam to him
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under an oral direction and he dealt with that house on that
footing. It is also true that in the ,Release Deed" it has
been recited that Shanmugam was carrying on business as a
contractor since the year 1898 without the aid of any joint-
family funds and that the acquisitions made by him were his
self-acquired properties. The deed also recites that there
was no joint-family property which remained to be divided.
But these two documents cannot be regarded as decisive of
the question whether Vydialingam was carrying on the
business of a building contractor and whether that business
devolved on his three sons. The three brothers during the
life time of Vydialingam were living jointly and the
building contractor’s business was being conducted during
the life time of Vydialinga. We have already pointed out
that
110
the evidence shows that even before 1898 Vydialingam was
carrying on a contractor’s business. Both during the
lifetime of Vydialingam and thereafter till 1910 the three
brothers lived together and the entries in the General
accounts maintained in the name of Shanmugam indicate that
their expenses were jointly met. It also appears that the
rent received from the houses which Ramalingam ultimately
disposed of were taken into account and amalgamated with the
family account. Large amounts were sent to Devraj and were
also received from him. Ramalingam is also shown to have
participated in the business of Shanmugam. It is true that
the trial Judge made out a case of a partition of the joint-
family estate in the year 1910 which after Devraj migrated
to Madras, was given effect to in the deed of release dated
March 30, 1912. This case does not find place in any plead-
ing and is not supported by direct evidence. But the
approach of the High Court to the evidence was different.
In the view of the High Court the evidence indicated that
the three brothers continued to carry on business as members
of a Hindu jointfamily which had devolved upon them from
their father Vydialingam that the business was extended to
different places such as Gadag, Calicut and others, that
Shanmugam was after the death of Vydialingam also carrying
on an independent business at Kalai in partnership with one
Balakrishna and that the deed of release was in respect of
the property which was claimed by Sbanmugam as his separate
property and not in respect of the jointfamily property.
Evidently, the recitals in the release deed were made for
maintaining a record that Devraj and Ramalinga had no
interest in the property of Shanmugam. Admissibility of
evidence. to contradict the recital that there was in fact
no property of the joint-family is not precluded by s. 92 of
the Indian Evidence Act, as the dispute in this suit does
not arise between the parties to the documents but between
persons who
111
claimed under Ramalingam the executant of the document.
The evidence of Masilamany Pillai who was examined on behalf
of the plaintiffs in the District Court at Bangalore is in
this context of some importance. The witness deposed that
in 1.912 he was consulted in connection with settlement of
certain matters between Shaumugam Mudaliar and his two
brothers, that he had discussions with shanmugam and his
lawyers regarding matters relating to the properties of the
family and also in respect of the business in Kolar Gold
Fields and that he had given advice after ascertaining from
the three brothers several matters in respect of which a
settlement had to be effected. He then stated that he had
suggested that the release deed might be obtained from
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Devraj and Ramalingam releasing and relinquishing the claims
if any they might have in respect of any property which were
claimed by Shanmugam as his self acquisitions, but he had
himself not drawn up the deed nor had seen it at any time.
The witness then made a statement that at the interview it
"was understood that good-, will of the Kolar Gold Fields
contract business was to be given to Ramalingam Mudaliar."
On this part of his evidence there was no cross-examination.
This evidence is important in two respects (i) that the
release deed was to be drawn up in respect of properties
which were claimed by Shanmugam to be his self acquisitions,
and (ii) that it was understood that the goodwill of Kolar
Gold Fields business was to be of Ramalingam. If the Kolar
Gold Fields business was the exclusive business of
Shanmugam, which he had started, it is difficult to
appreciate why the goodwill of that business should be given
to Ramalingam when for a comparatively small amounts
Ramalingam and Devraj were relinquishing all their interest
which they may possibly have in that business, and in the
earnings made by
112
Shanmugam out of that business. The trial Court as well as
the High Court have accepted this evidence.
The accounts of the family maintained in the name of
Shanmugam immediately prior to April, 1912, have not been
produced by the executors. It is true that it is their case
that they did not find these account books when they took
over the estate of Bamalingam, whereas the plaintiffs assert
that the account-books were withheld by the executors
because, if produced, they would have destroyed the defence
raised by the executors. The High Court, on the evidence,
was unable to raise any definite inference in regard to this
matter. Admittedly, the executors had taken possession of
the property of Ramalingam immediately after his death and
it is somewhat surprising that no inventory of the property
of books of account or documents of Ramalingamif any,
prepared at the time when the execute totook possession
of property should have beenproduced. The executors
are men of considerable experience of business affairs and
Wajid the principal executor was an officer holding a high
office in public administration. They would certainly have
realised the necessity of making an inventory of the
documents and the property which they took in their custody
If the books of account immediately prior to Ist of April,
1912, bad not come in their possession, the executors would
have forthwith produced the inventory made by them at the
time of taking over possession of the estate.
Even if we draw no adverse inference against the executors
because they failed to produce the books of accounts
immediately prior to April 1, 1912, there are other
circumstances which support the inference raised by the High
Court. The release deed does not take into account the
business at
113
Gadag which was conducted by Devraj and in which Ramalingam
assisted. As we have already pointed out for carrying on
this business large amounts were sent from the family
account. There is evidence that there were assets in that
business. In the General Account there are certain entries
in the accounts of Devraj which cannot be easily
appreciated. After the entry dated 5th March, 191 1,
crediting Rs. 280/-, there are some debit entries under the
date 31st March, 1911, the following four of which are for
amounts of Rs. 1,000/- and more :-
Debit given by V. V. S.
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Mudaliar in connection
with cheque .........Rs. 1,000-
0-0
Debit S. R. B. cheque oneRs. 15,000-0-0
Debit Electricity cheque one Rs.
1,619-15-8
Debit Nandidurgam cheque Rs.
9,322-12-6
Under the same date there are ten entries, of which the
following four are for Rs. 2,000/ and more :-
Credit V. V. S. Moodr. given
previously .... Rs.
12,142-5-7
Credit .... Rs. 2,000-0-0
Credit ..... Rs.
10,000-0-0
Credit ..... Rs.
10,000-0-0
As a result of these entriesRs. 28,085-11-6 stood
debited and Rs.25,689-11-4 stood credited in the
account of Devraj. Counsel for the executors has not
attempted to explain these entries. The trial Court thought
that the credit entries represented payments made by
Ramalingam to Devraj. There is no evidence in support of
this view. The learned Judge appears to have thought that
because
114
the good will was agreed to be given to Ramalingam-that is
how he read the evidence of Masilamany Pillai-Ramalingam
became the owner of all its assets, and the account was
since the date of the agreement in reality an account of
Ramalingam. There is no warrant for this view. But the
entries do show that large amounts were credited in the name
of Devraj and debited, at the end of the year. If these
entries were in respect of the Gadag business, the inference
that the deed of release was only in respect of the separate
estate of Shanmugan may receive some support.
The conduct of Shanmugam subsequent to March 30, 1912, has
also some bearing on this question. Shortly after the
execution of the Release deed Shanmugam left for the United
Kingdom and it is stated that he returned to India after
more than a year.’ It does not appear that thereafter he
took any interest in the Kolar Gold Fields business but he
continued to make large withdrawals. In the books of
account of the partnership between Shanmugam and Ramalingam
an amount exceeding Rs. 34,000/- is initially credited to
Shanmugam and Rs. 7,500/. to Ramalingam. But what the
shares of the two partners in the business were is nowhere
indicated. There is no deed of partnership, nor is any
balance sheet drawn. There is no evidence of division of
profits of the business.’ By 1916, Shanmugam had not only
withdrawn the amount initially credited to him but he had
withdrawn an additional amount of Rs. 35,538/12/-. He
thereafter ceased to have any interest in the Kolar Gold
Fields business and the amount overdrawn was written off
debiting it to "premium account." This conduct may indicate
that after March 30, 1912, Shanmugam had no interest in the
business even though the books of account showed that it was
a partnership business. Even if it be hold that Shanmugam
115
was a partner in the business from April 1, 1910, to May 1,
1916, the inference is inevitable that the building
contractors business carried on by Ramalingam thereafter was
directly related the business inherited from Vydialingam.
The circumstance that Shanmugam ceased to have any interest
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in the business, after overdrawing Re. 35,000/-odd, also
corroborates the testimoney of Masilamany Pillai that
goodwill of the business was given exclusively to
Ramalingam. From this evidence it is clear that Shanmugam
was unwilling to continue the joint family business at Kolar
Gold Fields and that he desired to secure an assurance from
his brothers that they had no interest in his separate
business at Kalai and acquisitions thereof and for that
purpose, the "Release deed" was obtained from them.
The High Court held that the amount of Rs. 4,000/- received
by Ramalingam by sale of the house and the amount of Rs.
2,500/- received from Shanmugam were put in the business by
Ramalingam. Wajid deposed that the consideration received
by sale of the house was given by Ramalingam to C. Savade &
Co., and to his sister. In our view the High Court ’Was
right in holding that the testimony of Wajid who has deposed
that he was present at the time when Rs. 500/- were ’given
by Ramalingam to his sister is not reliable, Wajid was a
stranger to the family and there was no reason why
Ramalingam should if the story be true keep Wajid present at
the time of handing an amount of Rs, 500/- to his needy
sister. The story of Wajid that Ramalingam was carrying on
business of a building contractor in the name of Rambal and
Co., and that in that business he suffered loss is not
supported by any independent evidence and does not carry
conviction.
Having regard to all these circumstances we do not think
that the recitals in the sale deed and
116
the deeds of release are by themselves sufficient to justify
this Court in refusing to accept the finding of fact
recorded by the High Court on appreciation of evidence.
The High Court has held that the business which Ramalingam
carried on since April 1, 1912, apparently in partnership
with Shanmugam till 1916, and thereafter exclusively was
directly connected with the business which devolved upon the
three sons Vydialingam when he died in 1.905. Prima,-facie
the findings recorded by the High Court are findings of
fact, and this Court normally does not enter upon a
reappraisal of the evidence, but we have entered upon a
review of the evidence on which they were founded, because
the High Court of Mysore had on the identical issue about
the character of the property devised under the will of
Ramalingam arrived at a different conclusion.
A dispute with regard to the nature of the property called
"Palm Grove" for the purpose of considering whether the
judgment of the Mysore High Court is conclusive qua that
property remains to be mentioned. It appears that at some
time about which there is no clear evidence-"Palm Grove" was
agreed to be sold in plots by Ramalingam. In the suit, as
originally filed in the Bangalore District Court "Palm
Grove" was one of the properties in respect of which the
plaintiffs made a claim. But that claim was withdrawn when
the, Madras properties were excluded, and no decision was
therefore given by the District Judge in respect of the
"Palm Grove" property. Before us’ no argument was advanced
to show that during the lifetime of Ramalingam this property
had acquired the character of movable property- so that the
decision of the Bangalore Court would operate as conclusive
in the Madras suit. The High Court of Madras rejected the
contention of
117
the executors that it must be deemed to have acquired the
character of movable property. Our attention is not invited
to any material in support of the contention that it had
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acquired such a character.
Certain directions were, however, given by the learned trial
Judge observing that ,the proceeds realised from ",Palm
Grove’ constitute the assets of Ramalingam subject to
certain equities that may arise in favour of Narayanaswamy
Mudaliar..................... on the foot of the doctrine of
quantum meruit to be determined in the final decree or in
the execution proceedings." We need express no opinion as to
the true import of this direction, for Narayanaswamy
Mudaliar who was primarily concerned with the direction, did
not prefer an appeal against that part of the decree, and
counsel have not asked us to interpret that part of the
decree. The High Court observed that in so far as the
executors were concerned, all they can in reason ask is that
such disbursements as being bona fide Made should be
regarded as properly debatable against the estate and that
they should not be surcharged in respect of such payments,
and accordingly they added a qualification that the
executors need not pay such sums as they had bona fide made
to Narayanaswami Mudaliar in respect of that transaction
either on the basis of quantum meruit or as a partner of the
business.
In that view of the case the decree passed by the High Court
on the footing that the plaintiffs are entitled to the
immovable properties in Madras and not the movables must be
confimed.
The appeals therefore fail and are dismissed.
The High Court at Madras has held on the evidence, that the
properties which were disposed of by Ramalingam by his will
were not his separate
118
estate but were joint family properties, whereas the Mysore
High Court has taken a contrary view. We have on a review
of the evidence agreed with the view taken by the Madras
High Court. Evidently, as a result of the judgment of the
Mysore High Court the heirs of Ramalingam have lost property
of substantial value. We think that in the special
circumstances of this case the plaintiffs should not be out
of pocket in respect of the costs of this litigation. We
therefore direct that all costs of the plaintiffs between
advocate and client, in the suit, the appeals in the High
Court and in this Court should come out of the estate in the
hands of the executors.
The remaining appeals may now be dealt with briefly.
C. A. Nos. and 279, 280 of 1958
Appeals Nos. 279 and 280 of 1958 arise out of proceedings
for revocation of probate granted by the Madras High Court.
In T. S. 0. No. 52 of 1944, Mr. Justice Chandrasekhara
Aiyyar of the Madras High Court, by order dated July 17,
1944, granted probate to the executors under the will
of .Ramalingam dated September 10, 1943. The learned Judge
expressly stated in the order that the probate granted by
him was subject to the result of the appeal filed to His
Majesty-in-Council against the order of the Resident’s Court
at Mysore. After the appeal to the Privy Council was
disposed of for reasons set out in the principal judgment,
by Petition No. 469 of 1953, the plaintiffs and Gajambal,
widow of Ramalingam applied for revocation of the probate
granted by the Madras High Court. This petition was heard
together with Suit No. 214 of 1944. The learned trial Judge
’ ordered that the probate granted on July 17, 1944, be
revoked. Against that order an appeal was preferred by two
of the executors to the High Court of Madras. In appeal,
the High Court restricted the operation of the revocation in
so far
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110
as it’ affected the immovable properties in Madras and
vacated the order in relation to the movables. Against the
order passed by the High Court, two Appeals-Nos. 279 and 290
of 1958 have been filed. C. A. No. 279 of 1958 is filed by
the sons and widow of Ramalingam, and they have claimed
that the order of revocation made by’ Mr. Justice Ramaswami
be confirmed. In Appeal No. 280 of 1958 filed by the
executors it is urged that the order of revocation be
vacated in its entirety. At the hearing of the appeals no
substantial arguments were advanced before us. The
executors did not contend that even if this Court holds,
agreeing with the High Court of Madras that the will of
Ramalingam was inoperative in so far it purported to dispose
of the immovable properties of the joint family of
Ramalingam and his sons. at Madras the order granting
probate in respect of the immovable property should still
continue to operate. They have conceded before us that such
an order revoking grant of probate when it has become
infructuous because of a decision in a suit relating to
title to the property affected thereby may properly be made
in exercise of the powers under s. 263 (d) of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925. The claim of the sons and the widow
of Ramalingam for revocation of the order granting probate
by the Madras High Court in its entirety cannot be sustained
because, for reasons set out by this Court, they are unable
to claim title to the movables of Ramalingam in Madras.
The appeals, therefore, fail and are dismissed with costs.
Civil Appeal No. 281 of 1958
This appeal arises out of a suit filed by the .executors
under the will of Ramalingam for a declaration that 2000
shares in the India Sugars &
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Refineries Ltd., standing in the name of Vishwanath, in
truth, belonged to Ramalingam and that be purchased the same
for himself and out of his self-acquisitions but benami in
the name of Vishwanath, and accordingly under the will of
Ramalingam they were entitled to those shares as part of the
estate. Vishwanath resisted the suit contending that the
shares belonged to the joint family consisting of Ramalingam
and his sons and that on the death of Ramalingam, his sons
as surviving co. parceners became owners of the entire
property of the joint family, including the shares. The
trial Judge dismissed the suit filed by the executors. In
appeal, the High Court of Madras held that the judgment of
the Full Bench of the Mysore High Court dated July 29, 1949,
was conclusive as between the parties as to title to those
shares. The High Court accordingly allowed the appeal of
the executors. Vishwanath has appealed against the decree
of the High Court rejecting his claim.
For reasons set out in the principal appeals, we are of the
view that the appeal must be dismissed. But we are of the
view that the cost,% of. Vishwanath as between the advocate
and client of and incidental to the suit and the appeals in
the High Court and in this Court should come out of the
estate of Ramalingam in the hands of the executors.
Civil Appeal No 281 of 1958
This appeal arises out of Suit No. 200 of 1944. The
executors sued Gajambal, widow of Ramalingam for a
declaration that 2695 shares of the India Sugars &
Refineries Ltd. Standing in her name were purchased by
Ramalingam benami out of his own funds and the same were his
selfacquisition, and they as executors of the will of the
were entitled to those shares under
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authority vested in them under the will dated September 10,
1942. The executors prayed for a declaration that the
shares were held benami by Gajambal for the benefit of
Ramalingam as the true owner. Gajambal admitted that she
held the shares benami out she contended that they did not
belong to Ramalingam but to the co-parcenary of Ramalingam
and his sons and ’on the death of Ramalingam the shares
devolved upon the surviving coparceners and the executors
had no title or right thereto. This suit was tried with
Suit No. 214 of 1944. The trial Judge held that the shares
belonged to the joint-family of Ramalingam and his sons and
the executors acquired no right to the shares under his
will. In appeal, the High Court agreed with the view of the
trail Court as to the title to the shares, but, in their
view, the judgment of the Mysore High Court in respect of
movables including the shares in dispute was conclusive as
to the rights between the parties. The High Court
accordingly reversed the decree passed by the trial Court
and decreed the suit of the executors. Against that decree
Gajambal has preferred an appeal in this Court which is No.
282 of 1958.
For reasons set out in the judgement in the principal
appeals, it must be held that the judgment of the Mysore
High Court was conclusive as between the executors and
Gajambal in so far as it related to title to the shares in
dispute. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed. But
we are of the view that the costs of Gajambal between
Advocate and client of and incidental to the suit and the
appeals in the High Court and this Court should come out of
the estate of Ramalingam in the hands of the executors.
Civil Appeal No. 283 of 1958
This appeal arises out of a suit relating to an immovable
property, Nose. 1 and 2 Waddels Road,
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Kilpauk, Madras. Of this property, the second respondent T.
A. Ramchandra Rao was the former Owner. There were court
proceedings in Civil Suit No. 10 of 1940 filed by Gajambal
against T.A. Ramchandra Rao, and a compromise decree was
passed in that suit and pursuant to that compromise, T. A.
Ramchandra Rao sold the property to Gajambal by deed dated
August 7, 1940. The executors of the estate of Ramalingam
filed Suit, No. 91 of 1944 in the High Court of Madras
against Gajambal and T. A. Ramchandra Rao for a declaration
that the Waddels Road property formed part of the estate of
Ramalingam and that Gajambal was merely a benamidar for
Ramalingam, and for an order for possession of the property
from Gajambal and T. A. Ramchandra Rao and for mesne profits
at the rate of Rs. 50/- per mensem from the date of
Ramalingam’s death till the date of delivery of possession
to the executors Gajambal contended that the property
belonged ’to her and that it was acquired by her out of her
own funds. T.A. Ramchandra Rao denied the title of the
executors and also liability to pay mesne profits. The suit
was also tried with Suit No. 214 of 1944. The trial Court
decreed the suit in favour of the executors but he declared
that the property belonged to the sons of Ramalingam and
they were entitled to possession and mesne profits. Against
the decree passed by the trial Court the executors preferred
an appeal to the High Court. The appeal was dismissed.
In this appeal filed by the executors the principal ground
set up in the Memo of appeal is that the sons of Ramalingam
were not parties to the suit, and no decree directing the
executors to deliver possession to the sons of Ramalingam
could be passed.
In the principal appeals 277 and 278 of 1958, we have held
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that the executors did not obtain any
123
title to the immovable properties in Madras which were
sought to be disposed of under the will of Ramalingam. It
is true that to Suit No. 91 of 1944, the sons of Ramalingam
were not parties. But as on the view taken in the principal
appeals, the executors acquired no title to the property in
,suit that being the property belonging to the joint family
to which Ramalingam belonged-interference with the decree
passed by the High Court will not be called for.
Counsel for the executors has advanced no argument in
support of the appeal. We may observe that T. A. Ramchandra
Rao has set up a certain arrangement between him and
Gajambal relating to his right to occupy the Waddels Road
premises free of payment of rent, and it is his case that
this arrangement was confirmed after issues were framed in
Suit No. 91 of 1944 between himself and Vishwanath. T. A.
Ramchandra Rao, it appears, did not prefer any appeal before
the High Court of Madras against the decree passed by the
trial Judge nor did he attempt to prove the, agreement set
up by him. He has not preferred any appeal against the
decision of the High Court to this Court. We dismiss the
appeal filed by the executors. We may observe that for the
purpose of deciding this case it is unnecessary to consider
whether the arrangement set up by T. A. Ramchandra Rao is
proved. The executors will pay the costs of the first
respondent Gajambal in this appeal.
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-One Ramalingam, a prosperous contractor and
businessman, died on December 18, 1942. Three months before
his death, he executed on September 10, 1942, the last of
his many wills. By that will, he cut off his eldest son,
Viswanathan and a, daughter, Bhagirathi, completely from
any benefit, gave some immovable property and shares to his
widow, small bequests to
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his other daughters, his grandson, Tyagaraja, son of
Viswanathan and his grand daughter from Bhagirathi. From
the residue of his vast estate, he directed that Rs.
50,0001- be spent over a ward in a hospital and the rest be
applied for certain charitable purposes of a public nature.
He appointed three execuitors: ( 1) A. Wajid (a retired
official of Mysore State), (2) Narayanaawamy Mudaliar and
(3) S. L. Mannaji Rao. For sometime before his death, his
relations with his family were estranged and the latter had
gone to the length of starting proceedings on June 2, 1942,
under the Lunacy Act in the District Court, Civil and
Military Station, Bangalore, against him. Some evidence was
recorded in that case, and medical experts were examined.
After the death of Ramalingam, the executors applied for
probate of the will in the District Court, Civil and
Military Station, Bangalore. This was Suit No. 2 of 1913.
It was heard by Mr. P. Madappa, who granted probate of the
will on November 27, 1443. Two appeals filed against the
decision (R. A. Nos. 1 and 2 of 1944) were dismissed by the
Court of the British Resident Mysore on July 5, 1944. A
further appeal to the Privy Council was admitted, but it was
later declared by the Judicial Committee to have become
incompetent due to the Constitutional Changes in which the
Civil and Militar Station was handed back to the Mysore
State. (P.C....Appeal No. 53 of 1948 decided on December 1949).
Meanwhile applications for probate were.also filed in the
District Court, Bangalore and.the Madras High Court. some of
the properties affected by the will being situated, in these
jurisdictions. Probated were granted but subject to the
decision of the appeal before the Privy Council.
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We now come to other suits, some proceeding from the sons
and widow of Ramalingam and some,from the executor of his
will. They were field in
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the Mysore State and in the High Court of Madras. Two suits
were filed by the sons of Ramalingam in the District Court,
Bangalore and in the District Court, Civil and Military
station, Bangalore respectively. The first was Civil Suit
No. 56 of 194 , and the second civil suit No. 60 of 1944.
These were suits for possession of properties, movable and
immovable, together with the business of Ramalingam within
the jurisdiction of these two Courts, on the averment that
Ramalingam belonged to a Hindu coparcenary, and was carrying
on the family business started with the family funds. These
suits were directed against the executors and diverse
persons said to be in possession of the properties. The
plea of the executors per contra was that these were the
personal properties and business of Ramalingam, over which
he had full disposing power. The two suits were later
consolidated and were decided in favour of the sons of
Ramalingam by the District Judge, A third suit was filed by
the sons of Ramalingam in the Madras High Court (0. S.),
and was numbered C. S. No. 214 of 1944 for possession of
properties, both movable and immovable, said to be situated
in Madras. A detailed reference will be made later to these
properties.
In addition to these suits many suits were filed by the
members of the family and the executors of the will in the
Madras High Court (O.S.). These were C. S. Nos. 200 of 1944,
203 of 1945, 274 of 1944, 344 of 1946 and 91 of 1944. To
these suits it is not necessary presently to refer. In all
these other suits in Madras, the claim was for possession of
some specific property either under the will or on the
averment that it belonged to a joint family. Leaving out of
account the suits concerning specific properties for the
present, the net position was that C. S. No. 56 of 1942 and
C. S. No. 60 of 1944 related to properties in Mysore State,
and C. S. No. 214 of 1944 in the Madras High Court related
to
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properties, movable and immovable, in Madras. ,In both, the
main issue to be tried was whether Ramalingam died a member
of a coparcenary, possessed of joint family property and
joint family business.
The consolidated suit in the Court of the District Judge,
Bangalore, was decided first and it was held that the
properties were joint and that the will was incompetent.
Two appeals were then filed in the Mysore High Court, R. As.
Nos. 104 and 109 of 1947-48. The appeals were first placed
before Paramasiviah, C. J., and Balakrishaniah, J. They were
adjourned at one of the earlier hearings, as a compromise
was contemplated. Later, the parties were at issue as to
whether a compromise took place. ..According to the
executors, none took place;...but according to the family,
it did take place. .The appeals were then fixed for
September 23, 1948. On September 22, 1948, Paramasiviah, C.
J., suddenly retired, and Mr. P. Medappa was appointed Chief
Justice. The appeals were then placed before Balakrishaniah
and Kandaswami Pillai, JJ., and the question of compromise
was raised. The High Court, however, did not enquired into
the matter, since it was of opinion that the compromise, if
any, could not be recorded. This was on March 15, 1949.
After the appeals were heard, the two learned Judges
differed, and they pronounced separate judgments on April
2, 1949.Balakrishaniah, J., was for allowing the appeals,and
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Kandaswami Pillai, J., for dismissing them.According
to the Code of Civil Procedure in forcein Mysore
State, the judgment of the District Court would have been
confirmed, unless a Judge of the Division Bench or both the
Judges referred the case under s. 15 (3) of the Mysore High
Court Regulation, 1884. Balakrishaniah, J., referred the
appeals to a Full Bench.
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The Mysore High Court then consisted of five Judges. Of
these, one learned Judge had appeared in the case and wished
to be left out. Of the remaining four, Balakrishaniah, J.,
had already heard the appeals before, and expressed his
judgment on the facts and the law involved in them. There
remained three other Judges.-The Chief Justice, who had
decided the probate case and had passed some strictures
against the family in his judgment, Puttaraja Urs, J. (who
was appointed in place of Kaildaswami Pillai, J.),. who had
recorded the evidence in C. S. No. 60 of 1944 between 1945-
47 and Mallappa, J., had almost no connection with the case.
The Full Bench that was constituted to hear the appeal,%
then was composed of the Chief Justice, Balakrishaniah, J.,
and Mallappa, J. This Full Bench heard the appeals or rather
the arguments on behalf of the executors, since the family
took no part in the hearing and their counsel withdrew. The
appeals were allowed by the Full Bench, Mallappa, J.,
pronouncing the judgment: with which the other learned
Judges agreed. This was on July 29, 1949, the hearing
having concluded on the 27th July, that is two days before.
Civil Petitions Nos. 61, 62, 49 and 50 of 1949-50 were filed
to obtain a review, but were dismissed by the Full Bench on
November 10, 1949.
Thus finished the Mysore part of the litigation. Before the
Full Bench in the Mysore High Court heard the appeals,
fruitless efforts were made by the sons of Ramalingam to
induce the Maharaja to appoint ad hoe Judges to hear the
appeals. Requests were made by them to the Chief Justice to
grant them time, so that the state authorities might be
moved against and also to adjourn the appeals on other
grounds. The sons of Ramalingam gain that they were anxious
to secure the services of outside counsel to argue the
appeals, but the requests were
128
rejected, These are all matters of record, and there is no
dispute about facts. It was alleged in the Madras suit that
there were unpleasant scones between Medappa, C. J., and one
Raju, counsel for the appellant, about which I shall say
something later, as the facts are in dispute. In short, the
appeals were allowed, and the two suits were dismissed.
This is a convenient stage to refer to the pleas raised in
the Mysore suits and the reliefs claimed therein. In this
connection, we need refer only to C. S. , No. 56 of 1942.
The case of the sons of Ramalingam was that Ramalingam
received his-father considerable paternal estate, both
movable and immovable. The immovable property was sold and
with the proceeds of the sale and other ancestral assets,
several businesses were started by him commencing with the
business of a building contractor in Kolar Gold Fields. He
prospered in this joint family business, and all the
properties were acquired from this nucleus and were joint
family properties, and even if there was any separate
property it was thrown into the common stock and became
joint family property. Possession was thus claimed of all
the properties in the Schedules to the plaint including
inter alia :
Schedule A: (1) Houses Nos. 1 and 2, Waddells
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Road, Madras (Item 13)
(2) Palm Grove, Madras (Item 18)
(3) 18566 shares of Indian Sugars and
Refineries, Ltd., in the name of Ramalingam
(Item 22)
(4) 1000 shares of the Indian Sugars and
Refineries, Ltd., in the name of A. Wajid
(Item 24)
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Schedule B : (1) Kolar Gold Field business
(Item 1)
(2) Vegetable oil building contract (Item 5)
(3) Oriental Films (Item 6).
The executors denied that there was any ancestral nucleus or
property or funds or business from which the estate was
built up, They denied the existence of a joint family
business. According to them, Ramalingam by his unaided
enterprise carried on business for over 26 years and
acquired all the properties in which no other member of the
family bad any share. Later, the plaint was amended to
exclude the immovable properties outside the State of
Mysore. Suitable issues were framed to cover these
allegations and counter-allegations and all of them were
finally decided in favour of the executors. The District
Judge decreed the suit, but it was held by the Fall Bench
that none of the properties,was acquired with the aid of
joint family nucleus, and that the Kolar Gold Field business
was the private business of Ramalingam. The decree of the
District Judge, who had ordered possession of the properties
in favour of the family, was reversed.
The suit in the Madras High Court had been stayed to await
the dicision of the Mysore suits. In that suit, possession
of the movable and immovable properties in Madras was
claimed. The immovable properties were :
(1) House No 1, Weddells Road, with land.
(2) House No. 3, Weddells Road, with land
etc.
(3) Some parcels of land.
(4) House No. 14, Monteith Road, Madras. The
movable properties were:
130
(1) Assets of Oriental Films, Madras.
(2) 18366 3hares of Indian Sugars and Refin-
eries Ltd., Hospet.
(3) 1000 shares of Indian Sugars and Refin-
eries Ltd., Hospet
(4) Balance of the amount for building cons-
tructed for the Mysore Vegetable oil Co.
,
Madras.
It was stated in the plaint that since the executors had
objected to the jurisdiction of’ the Mysore Courts to
entertain the claim in respect of the properties situated in
Madras, another suit was being filed. The same pleas about
the joint family, its nucleus, its family members were,
raised. The defence was also the same. When the judgment
of the Mysore High Court was relied upon by the executors as
conclusive on the point of jointness of the family, its
nucleus and the joint character of the Kolar Gold Field
business, the sons of Ramalingam alleged that the judgment
was not in accordance with the rules of natural justice,
that the decision was coram non judice, and that the Chief
Justice and Balakrishniah, J., were not competent Judges,
due to their bias and interest, to sit on the Bench. In the
course of numerous affidavits, the eldest son,
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Vishwanathan, made several allegations showing the interest
and prejudices of Medappa, C. J., his conduct in and out of
Court, and the violation of the rules of natural justice by
the Full Bench, over which he presided. Similarly, the
presence of Balakrishniah, J:, who had already given one
judgment in the case and had attempted a compromise between
the rival parties, was alleged to render him incompetent to
sit on the Full Bench. On the other side, the executors
claimed that the Mysore High Court bad finally decided the
issue of jointness in relation
131
to all property, movable and immovable. They claimed that
in this suit the questions of jointness of the family, the
character of the Kolar Gold Fields business and the absence
of nucleus must be taken to have beenconclusively decided in
the Mysore suits and appeals, and could not be reopened.
The sons of Ramalingam denied that the Mysore Court was a
Court of competent jurisdiction, in so far as the property
in Madras was concerned. In short, the executors claimed
that the Mysore judgment, in so far as any matter decided
therein, was conclusive, while the family maintained that it
was not a Court of competent jurisdiction and the judgment
was itself coram non judice, and had been rendered by
violating the principles of natural justice. The first
fight thus was under s. 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Though numerous facts were alleged to show bias and
interest on the part of the Chief Justice, the parties went
to trial on one allegation only. The allegations against
Medappa, C. J., were ; (a) that he was a close friend of A.
Wajid, (b) that he had decided the probate case, bad heard
the witnesses now relied upon and had already formed
pronounced opinions about them and his judgment in the
probate case was ’in danger of, being annulled by the
decision of the District Judge under appeal before him, as
the latter had held the family and the properties to be
oint, (c) that when he was a District Judge, he was using a
car belonging to the executors and was thus under their
obligation and also interested in them, and (d) that he had
tried to dissuade Mr. Raju, counsel for the sons of
’Ramalingam, from conducting this case. Rajagopalan, J.,
who heard the suit in the earlier stages, selected from the
allegations two which, according to him, if established,
were capable of establishing an ’interest’ and a ’bias’ in
Meddappa, C. J. He declined to frame issues about
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the other allegations. The two selected allegations were
the use of the car and the attempt to dissuade Mr. Raju,
Rajagopalan, J., also held that the judgment of the Mysore
High Court, did not constitute res judicata at least in
respect of the immovable property in Madras, (a) because
this questionwasnot considered by the Mysore High Court due
to amendment of the plaint, and (b) because the Mysore Court
had no jurisdiction to try it.
Against the decision of Rajagopalan J., both sides appealed.
The executors were aggrieved by the decision about res
judicata and the enquiry into the conduct of the Chief
Justice, and the sons of Ramalingam, by the restricted
enquiry into the conduct of the Chief Justice. The
Divisional Bench, which heard the appeal, agreed with
Rajagopalan, J., about res judicata, and affirmed that part
of his order. The Divisional Bench held that the incident
of the use of’ the car was too old, even if true, to show
interest and was not relevant. The issue regarding the
dissuation of Mr. Raju was allowed to stand.
The allegations against Balakrishniah J., were that he had
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suggested the compromise when sitting with Paramasiviah, C.
J., and had discussed, the terms, that he had thus rendered
himself a Witness, that he made strong remarks against the
family duringthe hearings of the appeals when sitting with
Kandaswami Pillai, J., and the same were expressed in his
judgment dated April 2, 1949, and that ho showed his bias by
awarding costs not out of the state but against the sons of
Ramalingam. He was said to be incompetent to sit on the
Full Bench in view of his judgment already pronounced.
There were general allegations about the refusal to adjourn
the hearing at the request of the sons of Ramalingam, and
even when Sir Alladi Krishanaswami
133
Ayyar, the senior counsel, was to be absent on public work
in the Constituent Assembly.
The parties then went to trial before Ramaswami, J. More
affidavits and court-affidavits were filed. Though fresh
evidence was also led in this suit, by consent of parties
the evidence recorded in the two Mysore suits was treated as
evidence in this suit. The records of these suits and of
the Privy Council were also marked by consent. The
executors asked that the question of the application s. 13
of the Code of Civil Procedure be tried as a preliminary
issue. This was declined and a Letters Patent Appeal and
One to this Court also failed. The affidavit filed in this
Court were also marked in the case.
Among the witnesses examined in the case were Vishwanathan,
the eldest son of Ramalingam, and Puttaraja Urs, J., for the
plaintiffs, and Abdul Wajid, Narayanaswami Mudaliar and
Balakrishniah, J., for the other side, Medappa, C.J., and
Raju were cited but were not examined. After a protracted
trial, Ramaswami, J., held that the judgment of the Full
Bench of Mysore was coram non judice and that the judgment
was thus not conclusive under s. 13 of the Code of Civil
Procedure-. He further held that the properties in Suit
were those of a joint family. The claim of the sons of
Ramalingam, was thus decreed, and possession was ordered
against the executors and also accounts. Ancillary orders
were passed in the other suits already mentioned, which were
tried along with the main suit. C. S. No. 214 of 1944.
The executors appealed under the Letters Patent. The
Divisional Bench upheld the findings about the joint family,
but reversed those, about the Mysore judgment being coram,
non, judice. As a result the Mysore judgment was held to
bind the
134
Madras Courts in respect of the movables but not in respect
of the immovable property in Madras. From the judgment of
the Divisional Bench, Civil Appeals Nos. 277 and 278 of
1958, have been filed respectively by the sons of Ramalingam
and the executors. The sons of Ramalingam raise the issue
that the judgment of the Full Bench of the Mysore High Court
was coram non judice and not conclusive in respect of
immovables, while the executors claim that it is conclusive
in respect of any matter decided by it, particularly about
the Kolar Gold Fields business being the private business of
Ramalingam, contending that the only point that was open for
decision in the Madras High Court was whether any item of
property was acquired without the funds of that private
business.
Though these appeals were argued at considerable length the
points were only two. They are : 1. the application of s.
13 of the Code of Civil Procedure from these view points,
viz., (1) violation of the principles of natural justice,
(2) bias and interest of some of the Judges constituting the
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Full Bench, (3) competence of the Mysore Courts as to the
controversy between the parties and the extent of that
competence ; and 11. whether Ramalingam died in the
jointness and whether the estates left by him including his
businesses belong to the joint family, the sons of
Ramalingam being the survivors.
Section 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads :
" 13. A foreign judgment shall be conclusive
as to any matter thereby directly adjudicated
upon between the same parties or between
parties under whom they or any of
135
them claim litigating under the same title
except-
(a) where it has not been pronounced by a
Court of competent jurisdiction
(b) where it has not been given on the
merits of the case ;
(c) where it appears on the face of the
proceedings lo be founded on an incorrect vie
w
of international law or a refusal to recognise
the law of British India in cases in which
such law is applicable
(d) where the proceedings in which the
judgment was obtained are opposed to natural
justice
(e) where it has been obtained by fraud
(f) where it sustains a claim founded on a
breach of any law in force in British India."
it will thus be seen that the case was sought to be brought
under cls. (a), (c) and (d) of the section by the sons of
Ramalingam, while the executor deny the allegations and
claim the benefit of the opening words. I shall, therefore,
take up these matters first and shall consider the evidence
before deciding how far, in law, the judgment is conclusive,
if at all, I shall follow the same order which I have set
out.
The first head is whether during the hearing of the appeal
by the Full Bench the principles of natural justice could be
said to have been violated. This question, divides itself
into two parts. The first part concerns the actual hearing
and the second the composition of Benches. The first
contention is that the Full Bench did not give a fair
hearing and
136
compelled the case of the sons of Ramalingam to go unheard.
This was said to have arisen from the refusal to adjourn the
appeals as requested by the sons of Ramalingam. Now, such a
question can hardly be considered by another Court not hear-
ing, an appeal but deciding whether the conduct of the
Judges of foreign Court who heard the appeal,, amounted to a
violation of the principles of natural justice, unless an
extremely clear and strong case is made out. The conduct of
a case is a matter ordinarily for the Court hearing it. All
that is stated is that the sons of Ramalingam were hustled
and not granted some adjournments, when they asked for
,them. Whether a particular prayer for adjournment ought to
have been granted is hardly a question for another Court to
decide. In, this case the conduct of the sons of Ramalingam
cannot be said to be entirely correct. It is matter of
record that from the moment the names of the Judges of the
Full Bench were announced they had no desire to have the
case heard and decided by them. Admittedly, they made
applications to the Maharaja and Dewan for the appointment
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of ad hoc Judges. The attempt to get the appeals adjourned
was based on two reasons : firstly to avoid the presiding
Judges, or at least two of them, and secondly, to enable Sir
Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar to appear for them. The attempt
to secure adjournments were not only to suit their senior
counsel but also to play for time to get other Judges
appointed, if possible. As to the senior counsel, it is
enough to say that there were other counsel in the case, but
the sons of Ramalingam asked them to withdraw from the case.
This was not done bona fide but merely to force the Court to
grant an adjournment it had earlier refused. In my
judgment, the sons of Ramalingam had long notice of the date
of hearing, and if they wished to engage other counsel, they
had ample time and opportunity to do so. It was argued that
the appeals were adjourned once
137
by the Full Bench to accommodate counsel for the executors,
but when Sir Alladi asked for an adjournment, it was
refused. It was said that this showed a double standard.
It is common knowledge that an adjournment is sometimes
given because it is asked betimes but not another, if
delayed. All Courts do that. Perhaps, the Full ’Bench
might well have granted an adjournment for a short time
specially as the sons of Ramalingam were nervous about the
result of their appeals. But I do not consider that I shall
be justified in reaching the conclusion that by the refusal,
the principles. of natural justice were violated, when I
notice that three other counsel were already briefed in the
appeals and one of them had argued them before the
Divisional Bench, I am thus of opinion that it cannot be
held that the principles of, natural justice were violated
so as to bring the judgment within the ban of el. (d) of s.
13 of the Code.
The next question is the composition of the Full Bench,
apart from the conduct of the Judges. Here, the objection
is that Balakrishniah, J., was incompetent to sit on the
Bench after his views already expressed in his dessenting
Judgment. Now, it is clear that the two learned Judges who
had heard the appeals, had differed and had delivered
separate judgments. It was contended that Balakrishniah, J,
was incompetent to make the reference, because no sooner
Kandaswami Pillai J., delivered his, than the judgment of
the District Judge, with whom be agreed, stood confirmed by
virtue of s. 98 of the Code of Civil Procedure in force in
Mysore State. In other words, Balakrishniah, J., bad missed
his chance to make a reference, ’because he had already
delivered his judgment and the other Judge having delivered
his, the result under the Code follow. The action of
Balakrishniah, J., taken under a. 15(3) of the
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Mysore High Court Regulation, 1884, was said to be too late
to arrest the consequences of s. 98. In my opinion, this
argument has no substance whatever, and I think that it
would not have been arguable if there was no authority to
support it. I do not think it necessary to enter into the
niceties of the question when is a judgment final, that is
to say, whether on pronouncement by the Judge or on his
signing it. The very interesting argument of the counsel
for the sons of Ramalingam may be left to be decided in
abetter case. If the argument is accepted, some curious
results will follow. Either, Balakrishniah, J., had to make
a reference without waiting for his brother Judge to deliver
his judgment or to lose his right because no sooner Kanda-
swami Pillai, J., read his judgment to the And than the
judgment of the District Judge would be confirmed. In fact,
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whoever delivered the judgment first’ would lose his turn to
make a reference. It is obvious that Balakrishniah, J.,
would wait in common courtesy for his brother Judge to
deliver his judgment before making the reference. The
judgment of Balakrishniah, J., ends with the order of
reference and ’-hen follows his signature. What happened
really does not appear from the record but is contained in
affidavits, which, to my mind, should not have been read in
this, connection. It is obvious that the reference was made
before the judgment was perfected by the signature. No
doubt, there is a rulling of the Allahabad High Court in Lal
Singh v. Ghansham Singh (1), but the practice of the Mysore
High Court was authoritatively established by a Full Bench
decision of that court in Nanjamma v. Lingappa (2). In view
of the cursus curiae thus laid down, the Allahabad view,
even if right, cannot be applied. In my opinion, the appeal
stood properly referred to the Full Bench.
(1) (1887) I.L.R. 9 All 625. (2) (1949) 4 D.L.R.Mysore 118.
139
The next contention is that Balakrishniah J., @at on the
Full Bench after expressing his view on the merits of the
appeals in a long and considered judgment. It was contended
that this deprived the sons of Ramalingam was of a proper
hearing before a Judge who had not made up his mind already.
There is considerable room for doubt on this point. There
have been several cases before, in which Judges who have
made a reference to a larger Bench have sat on the Bench,
even though they had earlier expressed an opinion. Some of
them have also changed their views later. Here again, the
practice of the Court must receive some attention. The
learned Attorney-General drew our attention to three cases
of the Mysore High Court in which precedents are to be
found. He also drew our attention to oases from the other
High Courts in India and of some Courts abroad. In some of
the foreign cases, judges have sat in a Bench hearing case,
after decision by them, in appeal or re-hearing. Of course,
one need not go so far as that in our country, though in
cases under el. 26 of the Letters Patent of the Chartered
High Court, Judges who have presided over Sessions Trial
have sat at re-hearing after the certificate of Advocate-
General. Examples of both kinds of cases are to be found in
the Law Reports: See Emperor v. Fatehchand Agarwalla (1),
Emperor v. Barendra Kumar Ghose(2). The learned Attorney-
General drew our attention to the Encyclopedia of Laws and
precedents (1906) Vol, 23, p. 588 and American Jurisprudence
(1958), Vol. 30A, p. 76, para 187 and William Cramp & Sons
V. International Curtis Marine Purbine Co.(,,)and Rex v.
Lovegrove (4). In some of the’ earliar cases the practice
was quite common due to the smallness of number of Judges:
See, for example, Rohilkhand & Kumaon Bank v. Row (5), The
Queen Empress v. Saminda Chetti (6), Seshadri
(1) (1917)I.L.R.44Cal.477.
(2) A.I.R. 1924 Cal. 257 .
(3) (1912) 57 L. Ed. 1003.
(4) [1951] 1 All. E.R. 804.
(5) (1884) 6 All. 469.
(6) (1883). I.L.R.7 Mad. 274.
140
Ayyangar v. Nataraja Ayyar (1). There is no law to prohibit
this, and in a small Court with limited number of Judges,
this may be unavoidable. It is riot to be expected that ad
hoc Judges would be appointed every time such a situation
arises. But what we have to guide ourselves by is the
practice obtaining in the Courts with which we are dealing.
If the practice there was common and inveterate no litigant
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can be said to apprehend reasonably that he would not got
justice. There are no less than four cases of the Mysore
High Court in which a similar procedure was followed, in
addition to those already cited. In my opinion, in view of
the strength. of the Court and the practice in vogue, the
Judgment of the Full Bench cannot, on the circumstance, be
described as against the principles. of natural justice.
The next contention in support of the plea that the decision
of the Mysore High Court was coram non judice and against
the principles of natural justice charges the learned Chief
Justice and Balakrishniah, J., with unjudicial conduct and
prejudice and the former with interest in the executors. It
is convenient to take the allegations against the Chief
Justice and Balakrishniah, J., separately.
As regards the Chief Justice, it will be recalled evidence
was allowed. to be led only on the question of dissuading
Mr. Raju from appearing in the case. But no direct evidence
was led. What transpired between the Cheif Justice and Mr.
Raju (If something did transpire) could only be deposed to
by one of them. None else was present at that meeting, and
neither was examined in the case. Mr. Raju had by then been
imprisoned after trial and conviction for an attempt on the
life of Chief Justice, and was not available for
examination. It seems
(1) (1898) I L.R 21 Mad. 179.
141
that no serious effort was made to get his testimony, and it
is now said that legal difficulties’ prevented his
examination. But whatever the difficulties, the record
shows that the sons of Ramalingam voluntarily gave up Raju
as a witness, and now it is too late for them to complain of
’legal difficulties.’ Nor can they for that reason make the
worse appear the better reason. The other also gave up
Medappa C. J. Indirect evidence was, of course, sought to be
led, but it does not help either party, and the party which
must fail must obviously be the party which made the
allegation. Here, the sons of Ramalingam suffer from
another disability. Viswanathan himself wrote letters to
say that the allegations were false, and were made under
advice referring most probably to Mr. Raju. No doubt these
admissions were sought to be withdrawn but only when
confronted with the letters, though Viswanathan, at first,
denied their existence. The explanation was that these
letters were written under the pressure of Wajid. In view
of the basic fact that the allegation itself was not proved
by evidence, it is pointless to decide whether the letters
were written under undue pressure. I can only say that if
Wajid’s evidence appeared to be untrue in part, Viawanathan
impressed me even less. The fight over the dissuading of
Mr. Raju thus, at best, ended in a stalemate, if not wholly
against the sons of Ramalingam.
Having failed to establish the only issue which was
specifically raised, there was an attempt to revive the
allegations on which evidence was not allowed. Reference
was made in this connection to certain passages in the
cross-examination of Wajid and the evidence of Viswanathan.
This was on the use of a car belonging to the estate by Mr.
Medappa some years before, when he was the District Judge.
The foundation of
142
this allegation was in affidavits sworn by Viswanathan, who
seems to have begun each day of bearing with an affidavit.
These affidavits were denied by the other side through
Wajid’s affidavits. This vehement war of affidavits only
resulted in the interested testimony of Viswanathan, on the
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one side, and Wajid, on the other. The matter has thus to
be examined carefully. The evidence was not related to any
specific issue, there being none raised in the caset. Most
of the evidence was in affidavits, which do no appear to
have been ordered and could not, for that reason, be read as
evidence, Such evidence as there was, was highly interested
and uncorroborated from any independent source. The affair
was extremely old even if true, to establish an interest,
such as would disqualify a Judge from hearing the case. In
these circumstances, it is evident that the case alleged,
cannot be held to have been established.
Next was the allegation of friendship between Medappa, C.J.,
and A. Wajid and Manaji Rao. Manaji Rao faded out as an
executor, and took hardly any interest in his duties as
such, and cannot, therefore, be said to have been a potent
factor to interest Medappa, C. J. In support of his
allegation that Medappa, C. J., and A. Wajid were great
friends, Viswanathan swore a few affidavits. A fairly long
affidavit (No. 440 of 1950) in the High Court was reproduced
in its entirety by Ramaswami, J., in his Judgment. Some
other affidavits were sworn in this Court when certain
proceedings for a writ of prohibition were started, and they
were also read in the High Court and were read to us.
Making a selection from these affidavits the allegations may
be stated briefly as follows : Medappa, C. J., was the Chief
Steward of the Bangalore Race Club and A. Wajid, his
Secretary, that A. Wajid was visiting Medappa, C. J., at the
latter’s house when the probate case was going on and that
they were great friends. It was also alleged that Chief
Justice
143
Medappa’s attitude during the probate case was extremely
hostile to the family, which was later reflected in the
judgment of that case, and that Medappa, C. J., was
extremely worth, when Viswanathan asked him not to sit on
the Full Bench and the Chief Justice forced Viswanathan to
disclose the name of the counsel who had advised the move
and said that he would see what to do with him. All these
allegations were denied by A. Wajid both in affidavits and
in his oral testimony. Balakrishniah, J., was questioned
about what happened in the Court and gave evasive replies.
The rule of law about judicial conduct is as strict, as it
is old. No Judge can be considered to be competent to hear
a case in which he is directly or indirectly interested. A
proved interest in a Judge not disqualifies him but renders
his judgment a nullity. There is yet another rule of
judicial conduct which bears upon the hearing of case. In
that, the Judge is expected to be serene and evenhanded,
even though his patience may be sorely tried and the time of
the Court appear to be wasted. This is based on the maxim
which is often repeated that justice should not only be done
but should be seen to be done. No litigant should leave the
Court feeling reasonable that his case was not heard or
considered on its merit. If he does, then justice, even
though done in the case. fails in the doing of it.
Can we say that Medappa, C. J., was so interested as to be
disqualified, or that he acted in a manner that his conduct
in Court was a denial of justice ? Apart from the fact that
A. Wajid denied familiarity, though not acquaintance with
Medappa, C. J., there are no instances of undue leaning in
favour of the executors. What happened in the case was
engineered by Mr. Raju, as the letters of Viswanathan
himself suggested. The family which
144
did not know how to get on the right side of a father,
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however obdurate, acted in much the same way with the Court.
Their conduct on and from the announcement of the Full Bench
was calculated to exasperate and annoy any Judge, who held
his own reputation dear. Of course, the more Medappa, C.
J., showed irritation, the more Raju and his clients got
publicity value, which they hoped to exploit with the
Maharajah. In My opinion, the conduct of the sons of
Visbwanathan was studied and designed to further their move
for a different Bench. If we leave out of consideration the
dissuading of Raju, as to which also there is no evidence,
and the use of the estate car, about which also there is no
evidence, there remains a vague allegation of deep
friendship denied on the otherside and not proved otherwise
by independent evidence. I say independent evidence,
because the evidence of Puttaraja Urs, J., about the
conversation between him and Medappa, C.J., about this case
cannot be said to be disinterested because the witness had
his own grievance against the Chief Justice, which be was
ventilating to all and sundry. He even went to the length
of reporting to the Chief Justice of India. I am not
required to pronounce upon the truth or otherwise of
Puttaraja Urs, J’s personal aspersions on Medappa, C.J., but
is it obvious that he cannot be regarded as a witness who
can be trusted to have taken no sides. That leaves only the
fact that Medippa, C. J., had heard and decided the probate
case against the family. But I do not think that this
circumstance was enough to disqualify him from sitting on a
Bench to hear a case in which more evidence has been led.
This happens frequently in all Courts.
The same conclusion is also reached, when one examines the
allegations about the conduct of Balakrishniah, J. There
too, the allegations are in, affidavits. These allegations
are that Balakrishniah., J., made hostile remarks against
the case of the sons of Ramalingam, while hearing the appeal
with
145
Kandaswami Pillai, J. If every remark of a Judge made from
the Bench is to be construed as indicating prejudice, I am
afraid most Judges will fail to pass the exacting test. In
the course of arguments, Judges express opinions,
tentatively formed, sometimes even strongly ; but that does
not always mean that the case has been prejudged. An argu-
ment in Court can never be effective if the Judges do not
sometimes point out what appears to be the under lying
fallacy in the apparent plausibility thereof, and any lawyer
or litigant, who forms an apprehension on that score, cannot
be said to be reasonably doing so. It has frequently been
noticed that the objection of a Judge breaks down on a
closer examination, and often enough, some Judges
acknowledge publicly that they were mistaken. Of course, if
the Judge unreasonably obstructs the flow of an argument or
does not allow it to be raised, it may be said that there
has been no fair hearing.
The remarks of Balakrishniah, J., which have been quoted in
the case do not bear that suggestion. He seemed to have
formed opinions as the arguments proceeded, and if he had
kept them to himself, there would have been no complaint.
It is because they were expressed that there is one. No
doubt, he expressed his opinion in the judgment and then sat
on the Full Bench. But I have explained already that due to
the retirement of Kanda, swami Pillai, J., the incompetence
of one other learned Judge who had acted as a lawyer, the
choice was between him and Puttaraja Urs, J. Perhaps that
would have been equally objected to on the other side, as
subsequent events disclosed. In any case, there was to be a
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rehearing, and if the Chief Justice, included Balakrishniah,
J., following the inveterate practice of his Court, it is
too much to say that the judgment was Coram non judice, or
the principles of natural justice were violated. The
further contention that Balakrishniah, J., had
146
rendered himself a witness because the terms of compromise
were discussed before him’ loses all significance in the
face of the order that the compromise, if any, could not be
recorded in the interest of the estate.
On a review of these allegations, I am not satisfied that
the sons of Ramalingam have made an acceptable case. It
cannot, therefore, be said that cls. (a) and (d) of S. 13
are applicable, and that the judgment of the Mysore Full
Bench is not conclusive. I should not be taken to hold the
view that the hearing was without incident, or that the
conduct of these two Judges was always correct. But all the
facts are overlaid with exaggeration and perjury, and no
definite conclusion can be reached. I am, however, quite
clear that the evidence falls far short of that degree of
proof which would entitle another Court to say of a foreign
judgment that it was coram non judice or that it had been
rendered violating the principles of natural justice.
I shall next consider the competence of the Mysore Courts
and the extent of the conclusiveness of the judgment of the
Full Bench under a. 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure. To
decide them points, it is necessary to examine critically
the pleas in the cases in the Mysore Courts and the decision
on those pleas. In so far as the decision is concerned, I
shall confine myself to the judgment of the Full Bench, for
its is only the final judgment, which can be considered
conclusive.
The suits were filed on identical pleas. Two suits were
necessary, because the property was situated in the
jurisdiction of two different Courts. In any event, both
the suits were consolidated after the return of the Civil
and Military Station to the’ Mysore State. The suits were
filed for declaration that the properties were joint family
147
properties, that Ramalingam had no right to dispose of the
same by a will, and for possession and accounts. As against
this, the executors had contended that the properties were
self acquired. The basis of the claim of the sons of
Ramalingam was contained in the following paragraph :
"The said V. Ramalinga Mudaliar came into
possession of movable and immovable properties
including some houses in Arunachala Mudaliar
Road, Civil and Military Station, Bangalore,
which had belonged to his father, Vaidyalinga
Mudaliar. The said properties were sold of by
Ramalinga Mudaliar and the sale-proceeds were
invested in several businesses. In or about
the year 1928 the first plaintiff
(Vishwanathan) joined his father and
actively assisted him in the several
businesses of the family. Apart from the fact
that there was a nucleus of ancestral property
with which the businesses were carried on, the
plaintiff submit that the adult members of the
family, viz., the first plaintiff and late Mr.
V. Ramalinga Mudaliar were actively associated
with the family businesses and that all the
properties were treated by Ramalinga Mudaliar
as family properties."
In dealing with the’ case, the Full Bench gave the following
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findings :
(1)That Vaidyalinga Mudaliar who was away In
Shimoga and Mysore working as District
Sheristadar had nothing to do with the
contract business at the Kolar Gold Field
Mines;
(2)That Shanmuga borrowed Rs. 2000/ on a
pronote, in which his father joined, from a
Bank and did business with it successfully;
148
(3) That this money was returned by
Shanmuga to his father ;
(4) That the other brothers, acknowledged in
writing that they had no title or interest in
the business of Shanmuga which were his self
acquisitions ;
(5)That Ramalingam joined Shanmuga as a
partner and later brought out his interest;
(6)That Ramalingam did not come into
possession of any movable property of his
father ;
(7)That even if Ramalingam sold the houses
left to him by the father they were his
exclusive properties bequeathed to him by
Vaidyalingam whose self-acquisitions they were
(8)That the claim of the sons of Ramalingam
that the properties were acquired with the aid
of the joint family nucleus and that were
joint family properties was disproved.
In the result, it was that the business and possessions were
not of those of a joint family but the separate properties
of Ramalingam.
The question whether these finding or any of them are
conclusive in the subsequent litigation in Madras has been
raised in connection with the 18366 shares of the Indian
Sugars and Refineries Ltd., by the sons of Ramalingam, who
seek to avoid the Mysore judgment and in respect of the
immovable property in Madras by the executors who claim the
benefit of the same under a. 13 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Though the question is mainly one of
interpretation of s. 13, the arguments were reinforced by
reference to Books on Private International Law and cases
decided by English Courts.
149
The law as contained in s. 13 has been the result of an
evolution. In the Code of Civil Procedure 1887, the subject
of foreign judgments was a part of the law of res judicata.
It was enacted in s. 14 that,
"No foreign judgment shall operate as a bar to
a suit in British India-
(a) if it has not been given on the merits
of the case ;
(b) if it appears on the face of the pro-
ceedings to be founded on an incorrect view of
international law or any law in force in
British India;
(c) if it is in the opinion of the-Court
before which it is produced contrary to
natural justice ;
(d) if it has been obtained by fraud;
(e) if it sustains a claim founded on a
breach of any law in force in British India."
That the section was to take its colour from the preceding
section (13) which dealt with res judicata is made obvious
by the Vlth Explanation to the latter section, which read :
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"Where a foreign judgment is relied on, the
production of the judgment duly authenticated
is presumtive evidence that the Court which
made it had competent jurisdiction, unless the
contrary appears on the record but such
"’presumption may be removed by proving the
want of’ ’jurisdiction."
There was one other section (s. 12), which laid down the
circumstances for the application of the doctrine of Lis
Alibi Pendens, with which we are not concerned.
150
In the Code of 1882, an Explanation was added to s. 14 by
Act VII of 1888 (s. 5) that the Courts in British India must
examine, in a suit based on a foreign judgment of any
foreign Court in Asia and Africa excepting a Court of Record
established by Letters Patent of Her Majesty or any
predecessor of Her Majesty or a Supreme Consular Court
established by an Order of Her Majesty in Council) the
merits of that judgment when it was pleaded as a bar in a
suit before the British Indian Courts. This was obviously
done to prevent the judgments of the Courts of Indian States
to be placed on an equal footing with those in European
Countries. The Governor-General in Council was, however,
given the power to declare which Courts in the Indian States
could have their decrees executed in British India as if
they were decrees passed by a British Indian Court. Some
Indian States were so declared, and it is interesting to
know that Mysore State was one of them.
In the Code of 1908, with which we are concerned, the ban
against the judgments of Indian States was removed and s. 14
was re-enacted as a. 13, and Explanation VI was re-
enacted with slight modifications of language as s. 14. The
change between the old a. 14 which worded in a negative way
and s. 13, which states affirmatively that a foreign
judgment shall be conclusive is significant, and lies in the
fact that during this time there was a corresponding advance
in the theories of Private International law in England.
But this much is evident that in dealing with the question
of foreign judgments in India, we have to be guided by the
law as codified in our Country. That law attaches a
presumption (though rebuttable) of the competency of the
Court, which pronounced the foreign judgment. It makes it
(a) conclusive (b) as to any matter thereby directly
adjudicated between the same
151
parties or between parties under whom they or any of them
claim litigating under the same title. The conditions
precedent are contained in six clauses of which the first
clause is that it must be pronounced by a Court of competent
jurisdiction.
It may be mentioned at this stage that s. 41 of the Indian
Evidence Act provides that a final judgment, order or decree
of a competent Court in the exercise of probate,
matrimonial, admiralty or insolvency jurisdictions shall be
relevant and also conclusive proof as to certain legal
character. The, contention on behalf of the executors has
been that s. 41 of the Indian Evidence Act provides the
rules for judgments in rem, while s. 13 of the Code of Civil
Procedure provides for judgments in personam and the only
judgments in rem are those mentioned in s. 41. To this
argument, I shall come later.
The first point to decide is whether the Mysore Courts were
competent to decide the controversy which they decided.
What is meant by competency can be looked at from two points
of view., There is the internal competency of a court
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depending upon the procedural rules of the law’ applicable
to that Court in the State to which it belongs. There is
also its competency in the eye of international law. The
competency in the international sense means jurisdiction
over subject-matter of the controversy and jurisdiction over
the parties as recognised by rules of international law.
What is meant by competency in this context was stated by
Blackburn, J., speaking for-the Judges in answer to the
question referred by the House of Lords in Castrique v.
Imrie (1). Relying upon Story is Conflict of Laws, the
learned Judge observed:
"We may observe that the words as to an action
being in rem or in personam, and the common
statement that the one its binding on
(i) (1870) L.R. 4. L. 414.
152
third persona and the other not, are apt to be
used by English lawyers without attaching any
very definite meaning to those phrases. We
apprehend the true principle to be that
indicated in the last few words quoted from
Story. We think the inquiry is, first,
whether the subject-matter was so situated as
to be within the lawful control of the State
under the authority of which the Court sits;
and secondly, whether the sovereign authority
of that State has conferred on the Court
jurisdiction to decide as to the disposition
of the thing, and the Court has acted within
its jurisdiction. If these conditions are
fulfilled, the adjudication is conclusive
against all the world."
Story’s exact words are to be found in para. 586 of his
Book, and this is what the learned author said:
"In order however to found a proper ground of
recognition of any foreign judgment in another
country, it is indispensable to establish that
the Court pronouncing judgment should have a
lawful jurisdiction over the cause, over the
thing, and over the parties. If the
jurisdiction fails as to either it is...
treated as a mere nullity, having no obliga-
tion, and entitled to no respect beyond the
demestic tribunals. And this is equally
true,, whether the proceedings lie in rem or
in personam or in rem and also in personam".
The opinion expressed by Story here is, in its turn, based
on that of Boullernois in his Traite, et de la Personnalite
et de la Realite des Lois Coutumes ou Status, (1766) Vol.
I, pp. 618-620.
The law stated by Blackburn, J., has been universally
accepted by all the Courts in the English speaking countries
and it was quoted with
153
approval recently by the Privy Council in Ingenohl v. Wingh
On & Co. (1) No distinction in approach to the question of
competence ’is made between cases in rem and in personam.
In Pemberton v. Hughes (2). Lindley, M. R., stated the law
relating to competency to be this:
"Where no substantial justice, according to
English notions, is offended, all that the
English courts look to is the finality of the
judgment and the jurisdiction of the court, in
this sense and to this extent-namely, its
competence to entertain the sort of case-
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which it did deal with, and its competence, to
require the defendant to appear before it. If
the court had jurisdiction in this sense and
to this extent, the courts of this country
never enquire whether the jurisdiction has
been properly or improperly exercised,
provided always that no substantial injustice,
according to English notions, has been
committed.
There is no doubt that the courts of this
country will not enforce the, decisions of
foreign courts which have no jurisdiction in
the sense. above explained-i.e., over the
subject-matter or over the persons brought
before them: Schibsby v. Westenholz (3):
Rousillon v. Rousillon (4); "Price v.
Dewhurst(5) Buchanan v. Rucher (6) Sirdar
Gurdyal Singh v. Rajah of Faridkote (7). But
the jurisdiction which aline is important in
these matters is the competence of the Court
in an inter-national sense-i.e., its
territorial competence over the subject-matter
and over the defendant. Its Competence or
jurisdiction in any other sense is not
regarded as material by the courts of
(1) A.I.R. 1928 P.C. 83.
(2) (1899)1 Ch. 781.
(3) (1870) L R 6 Q.B. 155.
(5) (1838) 4 My. Cr. 76.
(4) 1883) 4 Ch. D. 351.
(6) (1808) 9 Est. 192.
(7) [1894] A.C.670.
154
this country. This is pointed out by Mr.
Westlake (International Law, 3rd ed. s. 328)
and by Foote (Private International Juris-
prudence, 2nd ed. p. 547), and is illustrated
by Vancuelin v. Bouard (1)...
It may be safely said that, in the opinion of
writers on international purposes, the
jurisdiction or the competency of a Court does
not depend upon the exact observance of its
own rules of procedure...
A judgment of a foreign court having
jurisdiction over the parties and subject
matter-i.e., having jurisdiction to summon
defendant before it and to decide such matters
as it has decided-cannot be impeached in this
country on its merits: Castrique v. Imprie (2)
(in rem); Godard v. Gray (3) (in personam);
Messine v. Petrococchino (4) (in personam).
It is quite inconsistent with those cases and
also with Vanquelin v. Bouard (1) to hold that
such a judgment can be impeached here for a
mere error in procedure. And in Castrique v.
Imprie (2) Lord Colonsay said that no inquiry
on such a matter should be made."
The dictum of Lindley, M. R., goes a bit too far in reducing
internal want of jurisdiction to nothing. It may be that
the judgment of the foreign Court may be a nullity, and it
would be too much to say that full faith should be given to
such a judgment. Indeed, in England,: this part of dictum
was not applied; Papdopoulos v. Papadopoulas (5). That
apart, in my opinion, the above passage’ admirably sums up
the law connected with the competency of the foreign Court.
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Mere irregularities of procedure in the exercise of
jurisdiction by
(1) (1863) 15 C.B. (N.S.) 341.
(2) (1870) L.R. 4 H.L. 414.
(3) (1870) L.R.6 Q. B. 139.
(4) (1872) L.R. 4 P.C. 144.
(5) [1930] P. 55.
155
the foreign Court are not enough: See Ashbury v. Ellis (1);
but a total want of internal jurisdiction may have to be
noticed if pleaded in answer to the foreign judgment. There
is no real difference in so far as competency goes between
actions in rem and actions in personam. In some actions in
personam, the necessity of jurisdiction over any particular
thing may not arise. This is always necessary inri
judgments in rem relating to immovable property. Besides
this a judgment in personam binds only the parties, while a
judgment in rem seeks to bind others also. Thus, the
objection to the jurisdiction of the Court in a foreign
country on other than international considerations, must be
raised in that country. This is settled in Vanquelin v.
Bouard (2). Objections to it internationally can be raised
in the Court in which the judgment is produced. But even if
the objection to the jurisdiction be raised in the Court
where the judgment is produced, that Court will consider in
actions in rem whether the foreign Court had jurisdiction
over the subject-matter and the defendant and also in
actions in personam, whether the jurisdiction was possessed
over the subject-matter and the parties. In the approach
there is no difference. In the latter class, of cases, the
English Courts consider the defendant bound where: -
(1) he is the subject of the foreign country
in which the judgment has been obtained:
(2) he was resident in the foreign country
when the action began;
(3) he, in the character of’ plaintiff, has
selected the forum in which he is afterwards
sued;
(1) [1893] A.C. 319, 344. (2) (1863) 15 C.B
(N.S.) 341.
156
(4) he has voluntarily appeared ;
(5) he has contracted to submit himself to
the forum in which the judgment was obtained.
I leave out the sixth ground added by Becquet v. MacCarthy
(1), as it has not been universally endorsed and has been
said to go to the verge of the law.
In addition to these, the English Courts take into
consideration the conduct of the party raising the objection
against the foreign judgment. If he, has plaintiff, invoked
the jurisdiction of the foreign Court, he cannot be allowed
to complain against the judgment on the ground of
competence. This was laid down in very clear terms by
Blackburn, J., in Schisby v. Westenholz (2) as follows :
"Again we think it clear, upon principle, that
if a person selected, as plaintiff, the tri-
bunal of a foreign country as the one in which
he would sue, he could not afterwards say that
the judgment of that tribunal was not binding
upon him."
The contrary case is General Steam Navigation Co. v.
Guillon(3), where the conduct of the defendant was not held
binding. Recently, in Harris v. Tayalor (4), appearance
conditionally by a defendant in a foreign Court to object to
jurisdiction was considered not to be the sort of conduct to
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bind him, but in Travers v. Holky(5), Donning, L, J. (as he
then was), has made certain obiter remarks against the last
case. Since I am not concerned with the conduct of a
defendant before a foreign Court but’ that of a plaintiff, I
need not refer to these cases in detail.
(1) (1831) 2B. & Ad.951. (2) (1870) L. R. 6 Q. B 155,
(3) (1843) 11 M. & W. 877. 894. (4) [1915] 2 K.B. 580.
(5) [1953] P. 246.
157
Applying these tests to find out if the Mysore Courts were
competent to deal with the case both internally and
internationally, it is clear that they were.The subject of
the controversy was the status of Ramalingam, a subject
and resident of Mysore State. His will made in that
jurisdiction was admitted to probate there. His sons and
other relatives who figured as parties and those in poss-
ession of the property were in that State. The property
which was the subject of dispute, including the Kolar Gold
Fields business situated in Mysore State, but excluding the
shares in the Indian Sugars and Refineries Ltd., (Which are
disputed as to their situs) was also in Mysore. The sons of
Ramalingam themselves commenced the two suits and invoked
the jurisdiction of the Mysore Courts. They claimed that
the Kolar Gold Fields business belonged to a joint family
and not to Ramalingam alone. They in fact, succeeded at
first, but lost on appeal. In view of these considerations
and applying the dicta of Blackburn, J., and Lindley, M. R.,
the conclusion is inescapable that the Mysore Courts were
competent internally as well as inter. nationally to decide
about the status of Ramalingam and the rights to or in the
Kolar Gold Fields business between these very parties. It
may be mentioned here that the competence is to be judged in
relation to the subject matter of the suit in the foreign
Court and not in relation to the subject matter of the suit
in another country where the judgment is produced. Ex
facie, the Mysore Court exercised no jurisdiction in respect
of the properties in Madras. They were never the subject-
matter of the Mysore suits and that subject-matter is wholly
irrelevant when considering the competency of the Mysore
Court. What has to be considered is the effect of the
Mysore judgment upon the litigation in Madras in view of s.
13 of the (.’)ode. If, then, the Mysore Courts were Courts
of competent jurisdiction, the Question, is how far are the
158
judgments conclusive. The properties, with which we are
concerned, are the 16,000 odd shares of the Indian Sugars
and Refineries Ltd., and the immovable properties in Madras.
The executors claim that it) respect of the shares there is
a decision between the parties and in respect of the immov-
able property, no question of status of Ramalingam or the
ownership of the Kolar Gold Fields business can be
reconsidered in view of the Mysore judgment while the other
side seeks to avoid the judgment altogether.
Numerous cases from English Law Reports and some standard
text-books on the subject of Private International Law or,
as it is sometimes called, the Conflict of law, were cited
in support by the rival parties. It may. however, be said
at the start that the treatment’ of the subject in India is
somewhat different from that in England. In our country,
the binding force of a judgment arises partly from adjective
law and partly from the law of evidence. The Subject of res
judicata, which is based upon a rule of public policy as
expressed in Coke on Littleton as interest rei publicae ut
sit finis litium is mainly to be found in the Code of Civil
Procedure, while the evidentiary value of Judgments is dealt
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with in the Indian Evidence Act. In England, the subject of
res judicata is mainly dealt with as part of the law of
evidence, and a former judgment is said to create an
estoppel by record. The subject of the conclusiveness of
foreign judgments is dealt with in India in the law of
procedure, while in England it is dealt with as a part of
Private International Law. This law is not to be taken as a
kind of law binding upon the States of the world arising out
of a communis comsensus of the States. There is no such
consensus, though reciprocal laws exist. Each Country
decides for itself how far the foreign judgments will be
received. A foreign
159
judgment receives different treatment in different parts of
the world. Apart from reciprocity between different
Countries which have agreed to be Mutually bound, there are
numerous approaches to the problem. In some Countries,
direct enforcement of such judgments, if registered in the
Country of origin, is permitted in the same way as in ss’ 44
and 44A of our Code of Civil Procedure. In others, the
judgments (unless reciprocal agreements exist) must be sued
upon. There too, the question arises whether the original
cause of action merges in the judgment-transitu in rem
judicature, or survives. In some Countries like France, the
judgment of a foreign Court is subjected to scrutiny, while
in some of the Nordic Countries, the judgment has no value.
In Tallack v. Tallack (1) jurisdiction was refused, because
the judgment of the English Court would not have bound the
parties in the foreign Country. Numerous rules have been
evolved in England and the English speaking Countries,
mainly by Judges, which show the extent to and the conditi-
ons under which the judgments is received. In America, the
Restatement has done much to simplify the subject, but even
so, it has proved inadequate. The subject has been made so
complicated that one learned author has been provoked to
say.
"In one respect the law of Conflict of Laws is
nothing but an unmitigated nuisance, serving
no useful purpose whatever." (Leflar The Law
of Conflict of Laws (1959) para 8 of
Introduction).
The salient point of English law on the subject may be
stated to be that all judgments are divided into two broad
categories-judgments in rem and, judgments in personam. The
best defin-
(1) (1927) P. 211.
160
defitions of these terms tire to be found in Halsbury’s Laws
of England, Vol. 22, p. 742, para 1605, which reads:
.lm15
"A judgment in rem may be defined as the judgment of
a court of competent jurisdiction determining the status of
a person or thing, or the disposition of a thing, as
distinct from the particular interest in it of a party to
the litigation. A judgment in personam determines the
rights of the parties inter se to or in the subject matter
in dispute, whether it be corporeal property of any kind
whatever, or a liquidated or unliquidated demand, but does
not affect the status of either persons or things, or make
any disposition of property, or declare or determine any
interest in it except as between the parties litigants.
Judgments in personam include all judgments which are not
judgments in rem but, as many judgments in the latter class
deal with the status of persons and not of things, the
description ’judgments inter partes’ is preferable to
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’judgment in personam’.
The definition of Halsbury is merely a restatement of a
definition given by Bowers, and it has been accepted and
applied by Evershed, M. R., in Lazarus-Barlow v. Regents
Estates Co. Ltd. (1). Such judgments, says Phipson on
Evidence, 8th Edn., p.401, are conclusive in the case of
judgments in rem against parties or their privies or stran-
gers, and in the case of judgments in personam, against the
parties and their privies only. In the matter of foreign
judgments, the rule about judgments in rem has been somewhat
reduced in its extent in one direction and extended in
another in recent years in England. In the matter of
(1) (1949) 2 K.B. 465, 475.
161
status’ it has been extended to give more and more faith to
foreign decrees but in the other direction, it has been
curtailed. In respect of things and determinations of
rights or title to things (excluding immovable property as
to which I shall say something later) judgments in rem are
now confined to Admiralty actions. There is, however, a
remnant in respect of movables, which is represented in the
three rules of Westlake (a. 149) which are:
(a) judgments which immediately vest the
property in a certain person as against the
whole world;
(b) judgments which decree the sale of a
thing in satisfaction of a claim against the
thing itself; and
(c) judgments which order movables to be
sold by way of administration.
This distinction is summed up by Holmes, C. J., in Tyler v.
Judges of the Court of Registration as follows:
" If the technical object of the suit is to
establish a claim against Some particular
person, with a judgment which generally in
theory, at least binds his body, or to bar
some individual claim or objection, so that
only certain persons are entitled to be heard
in defence, the action is in personam.,
although it may concern the right to, or
possession of a tangible thing......... If on
the other hand the object is to bar
indifferently all who might be minded to make
an objection of any sort against the right
sought to be established and if any one in the
world has a right to be heard on the strength
of alleging facts which, if true show an
inconsistent interest, the
(1) (1900) 175Mass.71.
162
proceeding is in rem............ All
proceedings, like all rights, are really
against persons. Whether they are proceedings
or rights in rem depends on the number of
persons affected." ( Cheatham-Cases and
Materials on Conflict of Laws, p. 168).
This classic exposition, which has evoked. the admiration of
every text-book writer and also the Privy Council in
Ingenohl v. Wing On & Co. (1) sums up in an admirable manner
the distinction between the two kinds of judgments.
I shall now follow up and analyse the application of these
principles in England and America where the law is almost
the same, and then show how the subject has been treated in
the India Statutes. In dealing with this subject, I shall
not enter upon two subjects. They are the reciprocal
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arrangements and Arbitral awards, which are two classes
apart. The first condition of recognition of a foreign
judgment is, of course, the competency of a foreign Court,
about which I have said much already. The next condition is
the absence of fraud of collusion. Further still, the
judgment which is propounded must not offend the public
policy of English law, or must not be contrary to the
principles of natural justice. Barring these, the judgments
of foreign Courts are received in actions based on them and
given effect to under certain conditions arising from
whether they are in rem or in personam. I have shown
already that the judgments in rem are concerned with res.
But the word "res" is given a very large meaning. Lord
Dunedin in Salvesan v. Administrator of Austrian Property
(2) observed :
"The other point on which I want to say a few
words is the question of what is a judg-
(1) A.I.R. 1928 P.C. 83.
(2) (1927) A.C. 641, 662.
163
ment in rem. All are agreed that a judgment
of divorce is a judgment in rem, but the whole
argument of the judges in the Court of
Sessions turns on the distinction between
divorce and nullity. The first remark to be
made is that neither marriage nor the status
of marriage is, in the strict sense of the
word, a res, as that word is used when we
speak of a judg, ment in rem. A res is a
tangible thing within the jurisdiction of the
Court, such as a ship or other chattel. A
metaphysical idea, which is what the status of
marriage is, not strictly a res, but it, to
borrow a phrase, savors of a res, and has all
along been treated as such. Now, the learned
Judges make this distinction. They say that
in an action of divorce you have to do with a
res, to wit, the status of marriage, but that
in an action of nullity there is no status of
marriage to be dealt with, and therefore Do
res. Now it seems to me that celibacy is just
as much as status as marriage."
See also the observations of Lord Haldane at pp. 652-653.
Commenting upon that case, Cheshire (op. Cit.
8UP) says at p. 657:
"Thus the word res as used in this context
includes those human relationships, such as
marriage, which do not originate merely in
contract, but which constitute what may be
called institutions recognised by the State."
In the same way, adoptions in foreign Countries which were
not recognised in England at one time are now being
recognised. See Dicey’s Conflict of Laws, 7th Edn., p. 460,
particularly p. 461, where Dicey’s Original view is shown to
be obsolete. The subject of adoption is being treated
164
as in pari materia with legitimation. Cheshire’s views
expressed in his book (pp. 442-443) show that on the analogy
of a case like In re Goodman’s Trusts (1) they are being
equated. Cheshire then observes in forceful language:
"The genius and expansion of the common law
would indeed wither away if the traditional
practice were to be abandoned of applying the
principles already established for one type of
case to another type substantially similar in
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nature."
He then concludes; that the existence of Y’s status as fixed
by the law of the domicile common to him and his adopter
must on principle be recognised in England. In England,
judgments in personam which are ancillary to such judgments
in rem were considered binding at one time, see Phillips v.
Batho (2 ); but the view has since changed somewhat.
As regards the extent of conclusiveness of foreign
judgments, the subject again gets divided into two parts.
Judgments in rem, according to Foote on Private
International Law, 5th Edn., p. 625, are received in respect
of any matter decided by them. The following passage gives
his views:
"Accepting then, as incontrovertible the
principle that a foreign judgment in rem is
conclusive in all Courts and against ail
parties, it remains to consider to what its
conclusiveness has been held to extend. As to
the fact directly adjudicated upon there can
be no doubt; but there is often difficulty in
applying the principle to facts inferentially
decided, as well as to the grounds, expressed
or implied, of the foreign decision. The
safest expression of the English law on the
subject appears to be that the truth of every
fact,
(1) (1881) 17 C.H.D. 266.
(2) (1913) 3 K.B. 992.
165
which the foreign Court has found, either as
part of its, actual adjudication or as one of
the stated grounds of that decision, must be
taken to be conclusively established."
He, however, adds that the foreign Court will not be taken
as having established any fact which it has not expressly
found as laid down in the judgment relied on. Short of
this, not only the actual decree but every adjudicative fact
is treated as conclusively decided. Rattigan in his Private
International, Law at p. 268 observes:
"This conclusiveness extends to every fact
which the foreign Court has found, either as
part of its actual adjudication or as one of
the stated grounds of its decision."
Dicey in his Conflict of Law, 7th Edn. (Rule 183) ,states
the law in concise form:
"A foreign judgments is conclusive as to any
matter thereby adjudicated upon and cannot be
impeached for any error either.
(1)of fact
(2)or of law".
In so far asjudgment in. personam are concerned, any of
the matters decided inter partes are binding on the parties
and privies, though not on strangers. This follows from the
rule now firmly grounded that a foreign judgment well be
examined from the point of view of competence but not of its
errors, subject, of course, to there being no fraud,
collusion, breach of the principles of, natural justice or
of public policy of England or a wrong apprehension of the
law of England, if that law be involved. From the
conclusiveness ’of foreign decrees, it. may be said
166
here that the penal laws of another Country or judgments
involving a penal decree are excluded. It is customary to
quote Chief Justice Marshall’s famous dictum in the Antelope
(1): ’,The Courts of no country execute the penal laws of
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another." The same is the position of decrees, orders or
judgments in matters of taxation and penalties under taxing
laws. The American Courts follow in these respects the law
in England, and Goodrich in his Conflict of Law, p. 603,
sums up the American approach in one pithy sentence :
"A valid foreign judgments should be recognized and given
effect in another State as a’ conclusive determination of
the rights and obligations of the parties. This is the
modern doctrine."
He adds further:
"On principle, the foreign judgment should be conclusive.
The judgment has determined that, under the law of the State
where it was rendered, the plaintiff has or has not certain
rights, and that the defendant is or is not under certain
corresponding legal obligations. Those rights and
obligations exist in the State where the judgment was
rendered so long as the judgment remains in force. When
such a judgment is presented for recognition and enforcement
in another State, it ought to be treated no less favorably
than any suit founded upon foreign operative facts."
Indeed, there is now a liberal approach in respect of
immovable property outside the jurisdiction. At p. 217,
Goodrich has cited instances of recognition of foreign
judgments in respect of matters which, normally, would not
come within the jurisdiction of the Court. He says :
(1) (18225) 10 MI eat If, 123. 6 L. Ed. 268.
167
Plaintiff asks defendant, who is before the
Court, be compelled to execute in plaintiff’s
favour a conveyance of land which lies outside
the State. Is there any defect in
’jurisdiction because the land is in another
State? It is clear that the Court could not
make its decree operate directly to convey the
land nor could it effectively authorize a
master appointed by the Court to make the
decree if the defendant were unable or unwill-
ing to do it. "But if, at the situs of the
land a deed executed elsewhere will be
recognized as effective, the Court may order
defendant, who is before it, to execute a deed
conveying the land. This power has been
exercised by the Court even since the time of
the historic litigation between Penn v.
Baltimore (1), and is recognized in
innumerable decisions."
The same views have been expressed by Stumberg in Conflict
of Laws (2nd Edn.), p. 69, Nussbaum in his Principles of
International Law (1943), op. 299, 235 and others.
In India, the law as to conclusiveness of judgments is
contained in ss. 40-44 of the India Evidence Act and ss, 11-
14 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 41 of the former
makes certain special kinds of judgments conclusive, while
s. 11 makes judgments in India and s. 13 makes foreign
judgments conclusive under certain conditions. I shall
first analyse the sections in the Indian Evidence Act.
Section 40 makes the existence of a judgment ete. which by
law prevents any Court from taking cognisances of a suit or
holding a trial, a relevant fact when the question is.
whether such Court ought to take cognisance of such suit or
hold such trial. This enables a judgment, order or dec-
ree, whether of a Court in India or a foreign Court,
(1) (1750) 1 Ves Sen. 444.
168
to be propounded for the particular purpose mentioned.
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Section 42 next mentions that judgments etc. other than
those mentioned in a. 41, are relevant if they relate a
matters of public nature relevant to the enquiry, but such
judgments, etc., are not conclusive proof of what they
state. The illustration shows what is meant by matters of a
public nature. Section 43 then lays down that judgments
etc., other than those mentioned in as. 40, 41 and 42, are
irrelevant unless the existence of such judgments etc., is a
fact in issue or is relevant under some other provision of
the Evidence Act. Section 44 says lastly that any party to
a suit or other proceeding may show that any judgment etc.,
which is relevant under as. 40, 41 or 42 and which has been
proved by the adverse party was delivered by a Court not
competent to deliver it or was obtained by fraud or
collusion. Section 41 which I left out, provides for
relevancy of certain kinds of judgment and for their
conclusiveness. It reads :
"A final judgment, order or decree of a
competent Court, in the exercise of probate,
matrimonial, admiralty or insolvency juris-
diction, which confers upon or takes away from
any person any legal character, or which
declares any person to be entitled to any such
character, or to be entitled to any specific
thing, not as against any specified person but
absolutely, is relevant when the existence of
any such legal character, or the title of any
such person to any such thing is relevant.
Such judgment, order or decree is conclusive
proof-
that any legal character which it confers,
accrued at the time when such judgment, order
or decree came into operation :
that any legal character to which, it declares
any such person to be entitled, accrued to
169
that person at the time when such judgment,
order or decree declares it to have accrued to
that person:
that any legal character which it takes way
from any such person ceased at the time from
which such judgment, order or decree declared
that it had ceased or should cease;
and that anything to which it declares any
person to be so entitled was the property of
that person at the time from which such
judgment, order or decree declares that it had
been or should be his property."
The judgments mentioned in this section are called judgments
in rem. As far back as Yarakalamma v. Ankala (1)
distinction ’was made between judgments which bound only the
parties to it and judgments which bound also strangers. The
terms of Roman Law which divided law into quod ad res
pertinet and quod ad personas pertinet furnished the root,
and this classic distinction has been taken as the
foundation. In Kanhya Lal v. Radha Charan(2) Peacock, C.J.,
gave a list of judgments in rem, and that list has been
followed in framing s.41. The list of such judgments is much
longer in Taylor on evidence, and the present day Private
International Law includes all question of status within it.
Sir James Stephen is reported to have said that he included
only those judgments to which conclusiveness could be given
from the point of view of the law of evidence and the
conclusiveness attaches as to a given matter of fact
relevant to the issue, which may be proved from the
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judgment. That there may be other provisions, of some other
law which may also attach conclusiveness to judgment etc.,
of some other kinds goes without saying. Section 41 does
not prohibit the making of other laws. The
(1) 2 M H.C.R. 276.
(2) (1667) 7 W.R. 338.
170
provisions of El. 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for
example, go much farther than s. 40 or s. 41 of the Indian
Evidence Act. Section 40 touches only the fringe of the law
of resjudicata ; but provision for that has been made more
exhaustively in s. 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The
difference between provisions in the law of evidence and the
law of procedure is that one deals with the question of
proof and the other, with a bar of suit. A fact which can
be proved from a judgment made conclusive for that purpose
need not be proved afresh. The proof of the judgment is
enough. But a second suit can only be barred on the
principle of resjudicata if the law says so ; and this bar
is regarding the adjudication of a controversy decided
before. It is not possible to add to the list of subjects
mentioned in s. 41 of the Indian Evidence Act, except by
legislation. Conclusiveness there attaches only to the
subjects mentioned therein, and a fact established by a
judgment of a competent Court on any of the subjects is
taken to be proved, and established in all subsequent
proceedings and does not require to be proved again. The
Judicial Committee in Appa Trimbak v. Waman Govind (1) did
not extend the Principle of s. 41 to a case of adoption and
a former judgment on the question of adoption was considered
under s. 1 of the code and not under P. 41 of the Indian
Evidence Act. The former judgment was not accepted under s.
11 of the Code as it did not come within its terms, and the
fact was allowed to be proved de novo. The reason given for
the nonapplicability of s. 41 was said to be that the deci-
sions on adoption were excluded by Sir Barne Peacock in
Kanhya /,at v. Radha Charan (2) and also in s. 41.
From the above, it follows that conclusi. veness, from the
point of view of the law of
(1) A.I.R. 1941 P C. 85.
(2) (1867) 7 W.R. 338.
171
evidence, will attach to a judgment, order or decree, only
if it falls within the categories mentioned in s. 41. Once
a judgment etc. falls within it, the law dispenses with the
proof of the fact and the conclusion of the former judgment
etc., about the legal character which it confers or
declares, together with the declarations of property arising
from that legal character, is final. In my opinion, the
conclusiveness under s. 41 of the Indian Evidence Act cannot
be claimed in this case for the Mysore judgment in view of
the enumeration of certain jurisdictions in the section,
bacause the status of being joint or separate in relation to
a Hindu coparcenery property is not one of the legal
characters mentioned in it.
The question thus to consider is whether s. 13 of the Code
of Civil Procedure is confined to those judgments, which do
not fall within s. 41, or in other words, to judgments in
personam as contended by the learned Attorney General.
There is nothing in the language of s. 13 to suggest this,
as the section provides a general rule about foreign judg-
ments and makes them conclusive between the same parties or
between parties under whom or any of them claim litigating
under the same title. .From the mention of parties and their
privies, it does appear as if the section is confined to
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judgments inter partes, to borrow the language of Halsbury.
But a comparison of the terms of the section with those of
ss. 40-44 of the Indian Evidence Act discloses a different
meaning. Section 41 speaks of a competent Court, and s. 44
allows the question to be raised whether the judgment was
obtained by fraud or collusion. But ss. 40-44 of the Indian
Evidence Act do not contain certain provisions which are
contained, in s. 13 as conditions precedent to the
conclusiveness of foreign judgment. It is inconceivable
that a foreign judgment in rem of
172
the class mentioned in s. 41 of the Indian Evidence Act was
intended to operate, as conclusive, even though it was
opposed to the principles of natural justice or though it
was not given on the merits of the case or if it was founded
on an incorrect view of international law or the law of
India, or was in breach of any law in force in India. The
existence of such prior conditions in s. 13 of the Code and
their absence in the Evidence Act compel one to hold that
both judgments in rem and judgments in personam are
contemplated by s. 13 of the Code. The only difference is
that while the Code makes foreign judgments conclusive inter
partes, s. 41 makes certain determinations described there
as conclusive proof even against strangers. But such
determinations, if found to foreign judgments, must also
comply with the conditions stated in a. 13 to merit
conclusiveness, and a foreign judgment will fail to bar a
suit if those conditions are not also fulfilled. It is from
this standpoint that I shall consider these appeals,
because, in my opinion, no other approach is admissible.
The judgment of the Mysore High Court cannot be brought
within the terms of s. 41 of the Indian Evidence Act except
in so far as it would have, if the probate granted by the
Mysore Court had been cancelled. Such an eventuality has
not taken place, and I need not consider it, because even
there, some difficulties are possible. Here, the judgment
of the Mysore High Court was given between the self-same
parties, who are litigating under the same title in Madras.
The executors rely here, as they did in Mysore, on the will
of. Ramalingam, and the sons of Ramalingam rely on his
being a member of coparcenery. The will is effective or
ineffective if it disposes of the separate property of
Ramalingam or the property of a
173
coparcenery. These titles were finally decided in respect
of the properties in Mysore including the business of
Ramalingam and the properties, movable and immovable, in
Mysore State. No decision was given in respect of the
property in Madras. The matter relating to Hindu
coparcenery and the position of Ramalingam were really
questions of status, and why this is so I shall now explain.
Ordinarily, a judgment upon status is considered to be a
judgment in rem; see the classic definition of a judgment in
rem in Smith’s Leading Cases which has stood unchanged
through the many editions. There is, however, no settled
definition of ’status’. Paton in his jurisprudence (1946)
at p. 256 quoting the analysis of Dr. Allen (Legal Duties)
says:-
"Status may be described as the fact or
condition of membership of a ground of which
the powers are determined extrinsically by
law, status affecting not merely one
particular relationship, but being a condition
affecting generally though in varying degree a
member’s claims and powers."
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Dr. Allen calls it.
"the condition of belonging to a particular
class of persons to whom the law assign
certain peculiar legal capacities or
incapacities or both."
Dr. Allen also adds:-
"We must-distinguish three quite separate
things Status the condition which gives rise
to certain capacities or incapacities or both;
Capacity the power to acquire and exercise
rights. and the rights themselves which are
acquired by the exercise of capacity."
174
Thus status leads to capacity, and capacity to rights and to
rights can be said to be embedded in status and to spring
from it. Scrutton, L. J., in In re Luck’s Settlement Trusts
(1) said: "Status is in every case the creature of
substantive law."
According to Salmond, the aggregate of man’s proprietary
rights constitutes his estate his assets or property. The
sum total of his personal rights, on the other hand,
constitutes his status. According to him, substantive Civil
Law is thus divided:-
Substantive Civil Law
|
-----------------------------------------
| | |
property Obligations Status
Domestic |
-------------------
| |
Status Extra-domestic
status
Domestic status, as he explains in an appendix to his Book
is-
"the Law of family relations, and deals with
the nature acquisition and loss of all these
personal rights, duties, liabilities and
disabilities which are involved in domestic
relations."
The conflict of law ordinarily recognises status created by
the law of another country. See In re Luck’s Settlement
Trusts(1) at p. 891 and Salvesan v. Administrator of
Austrian Property(2). In the. domain of Domestic Status
(barring marriage) there is no element of contract, and
Maine says in Ancient Law ,,the movement of progressive
secirties has hitherto been a movement from status to
contract" Hollond in
(1) (1940) 1 Ch. 864, 890.
(2) [1927] A.C. 641, 662.
175
his Jurisprudence gives sixteen instances of status and
includes in them ’patria potestas’ which brings the matter
very near a Karta of a joint Hindu family.
All the above definitions have been judicially noticed and
applied by the Australian High Court in the exposition of s.
35 of the Judiciary Act, 1903, which allows an appeal to be
brought without leave from any judgment of the Supreme Court
of a State which "affects the status of any porson". In
Daniel v. Daniel(1) Griffith, C. J. defined status to be:-
"a condition attached by law to a person which
confers or affects or limits a legal capacity
of exercising some power that under other
circumstances he could not or could exercise
without restriction".
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In Shanks v. Shanksthis definition was accepted and
in Ford v. Fordall the definitions considered by me
were referredto among others and the analysis of Dr. Allen
was approved.
It must therefore follow that where the source of rights is
birth and the domestic relationship leads to rights but not
to proprietorship of property the rights can only be said to
arise from status. A coparcener in a Hindu coparcenery
cannot be admitted by contract. The right, is obtained by
birth. Even an infant "en ventre sa mere" is in Hindu Law
relating to a coparcenery born for many purposes. His
rights are thus determined by status. In early law& there
is always an emphasis on rights following on birth and
writers of Jurisprudence have commented that in such
societies there is always difficulty in rising above’ birth.
No doubt the words status and estate had a common origin but
in course of time they have acquired different legal
meanings. See Pollock and Maitland History of English Law,
Vol. II, 1st Edn.
(1) (1906) 4 C.L.R. 563, 566. (2) (1942) 65 C.L.R. 334.
(3) (1947) 73 C.L.R. 524,
176
pp. IO and 78. In the law of Hindu Coparcenery, there is no
ownership of property apart from the coparcenery and the
rights in the property are such as are determined by status.
Where domestic relationship determines the status and the
status, the rights all disputes and claims can only be based
on status and not on proprietorship. Inheritance thus
depends on domestic status, and in the same way survivorship
the right to share partition and maintenance are the aspects
of domestic status. In this sense, a coparcenery is nothing
more than a kind of corporation not arising from contract
but status and any matter relating to coparcenery is first a
question of status and only when the status is established
that a source of material rights comes into being.
If the matter had rested with the application of modern
theories of Private International Law I would have been
tempted to characterise the decision of the Mysore High
Court as partly in rem and partly in personam, that dealing
with the question of joint or separate acquisition of the
Kolar Gold Fields business by Ramalingam as involving
decision arising out of status and thus in rem. Such
composite actions are not unknown. Story has adverted to
them in a passage I have cited earlier and the Court of
Appeal in England in In re Trepca Mines Ltd. (1) found the
action to be partly in rem and partly in personam. The
decision of the Mysore High Court was one on status and
savoured of a decision in rem. Limited as the Judicial
approach is by the existence of a. 41 of the Indian Evidence
Act and the Judicial Committee in Appa Trimback’s case (2),
I venture to express this opinion. Private International
Law today is developing by reciprocity and more and more
kinds of judgments are being received as conclusive, which
twenty years ago were not consi-
(1) (1960) 1. W. L. R. 1273. (2) A.I.R. 1941 P.C. 524.
177
dered as conclusive. If we do not give faith to foreign
judgments on the subject of adoption family status and
questions arising from such domestic relations, other
Countries will also follow suit about our judgments. It
will be quite amazing if a judgment on adoption in Ceylon
(for example) is not considered binding in this Country and
vice versa. Adoption is not one of the subjects mentioned
in s. 41, and if treated as a decision on status and thus in
rem will be conclusive between the same parties and their
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privies under s. 13. The same must be said of judgments on
joint family status or the position of any particular member
vis a vis the family. To treat judgments in this manner
accords with the modern notions of Conflict of Laws.
Even if the subject be viewed from the angle of a judgment
in personam, it is obvious that "the matter" decided be the
Mysore High Court was whether Ramalingam was a member of a
coparcenory and acquired the Gold Kolar Fields business and
other properties as such member. That was the res decided,
the destination of the properties being ancillary to this
main decision.
It was argued on the basis of ruling of the Judicial
Committee in Brijlal Ramjidas v. Govindram Gordhandas
Seksaria(1) that the words "judgment" in. s. 13 of the Code
means "an adjudication by the foreign, Court upon the matter
before it" and not the reasons for judgment. The-words of
the section are "directly adjudicated thereby." What was
meant by the Privy Council was that the adjudicative part of
the judgment is conclusive and this part ’of the Mysore High
Court judgment is that Ramalingam was not carrying on the,
Kolar Gold Fields business as a coparcener but
independently. If was not the adjudicative part there was
very
(1) (1947) L. R. 74 I.A. 203, 210.
178
little else. The language of a. 13 speaks not of the
judgment but "’matter thereby directly adjudicated upon" and
the word ’,,any" shows that all the adjudicative parts of
the judgment are equally conclusive in the sense in which
Foote and Rattigan and other have described them.
It was argued that the subject-matter of the suit in Madras
was immovable property over which the Mysore Court did not
and could not exercise jurisdiction. Reference was made to
Decey’s Conflict of Laws and Castrique v. Imrie (1) to show
that only the Courts of the Country where immovable property
is situated have jurisdiction and the lexsitus is
applicable. In Cartrique v. Imrie (1) the question really
was whether the sale of chattal (a ship) in satisfaction of
a claim against the chattal itself was binding on certain
parties who had not submitted to the jurisdiction of the
French Courts and it was held that a judgment ordering such
sale was a judgment in rem if the chattal at that time was
in the territory of the foreign State. The ship in question
had taken provision on board for which payment was demanded
and the action in the French Tribunals was taken against the
Commander Benson who was required to pay ’par privilege sur
ce Navire. Of course the owner Clause or Castrique the
purchaser did not appear before the French Tribunal but
jurisdiction of the French Tribunals was founded on the
presence of the ship in French waters at Havre. Such
question can hardly arise in respect of immovable property
because the courts of the Country where immovables are
situated can alone have the jurisdiction and no foreign
Court can decide the dispute or enforce it effectively.
Apart from the fact that even in England the distinction
between real and personal property has not been adhered to
when the English Courts
(1) (1870) L.R. 4 H.L. 414.
179
specify immovable property for purposes of Private
International Law it is obvious that the distinction does
not come within s. 13 of the Code. If the Mysore High Court
purported to decide about immovable property in Madras or
the law applicable to the family was different I would have
at once agreed with the argument. But the argument confuses
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the jurisdiction and the law, on the one hand with "the
matter decided" on the other. The rule in British South
Africa Company v. Companhia De Mocambique (1) that court can
entertain actions in respect of immovables which are
situated in a foreign country does not prevent in India
under a. 13, the conclusiveness inter partes of a judgment
as to any matter adjudicated thereby. That is quite a
different affair if the adjudication is about proprietorship
based on status. The rule in the above case would have made
the decree of the Mysore High Court a nullity if the Mysore
High Court had decided as issue about immovable property in
Madras. But the Mysore High Court did not decide any such
question. It decided a question of the status of Ramalingam
and the ownership of the Kolar Gold Fields business with
complete jurisdiction between the same parties litigating
under the same title. That decision must be viewed in the
Madras suit as a conclusive adjudication. The Madras Court
could not decide the question of the ownership of the Kolar
Gold Fields business de novo and as ancillary to that
decision determine the right to the property in Madras. Of
course the Madras Court was free to try other questions and
consider other defenses such as why the judgment of Mysore
High Court was not applicable to the properties before it ;
but the fundamental question of ownership of the Kolar Gold
Fields business, it could not try over again. In my
opinion, even the evidence led
(1) [1893] A.C. 602.
180
in the Madras suit to reopen that question was inadmissible
though evidence to prove bias interest etc. on the part of
the learned Judges was properly allowed to be led. It was
not open to the- Madras High Court, to try the question of
Ramalingam’s status de novo and that part of the decision
must be treated as without jurisdiction. I am therefore not
entering into that question nor considering the evidence.
Before I consider the question of the shares of the Indian
Sugar and Refineries Ltd., Madras I wish to refer to a case
of the Privy Council on which great reliance has been
placed. That case is reported as Maqbul Fatima v. Amir
Hasan(1). The judgment that is printed in the All India
Reporter is of the Allahabad High Court which the head note
says was "confirmed by" the Privy Council. I shall content
myself with citing the headnote :
"A obtained judgment in the sub Court Bareilly
(British Indian Court) declaring his title to
the properties of the deceased situate within
the jurisdiction of that Court. Subsequently
B instituted a suit against A in Rampur, a
Native State for recovery of possession of the
properties of the deceased situate within the
Native State. Thereupon A filed the ’present
suit for a declaration that the Judgment of
the Bareilly Court would operate as res
judicata in the Rampur Court and for a
perpetual injunction restraining B from
proceeding with the suit therein. The High
X X
Court held that as the Court in British India
were not competent to try suits with respect
to property situate in Native State the
judgment of the Bareilly Court would not
operate as res judicata.
(1) A.I.R. 1916 P.C. 136.
181
It being urged that under s. 13 Civil P.C. the
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rule contained in which was alleged to apply
in Rampur the Judgment of the Bareilly Court
was conclusive between the parties the High
Court hold that it was only in proceedings on
foreign Judgment that the question of the
effect of foreign Judgment could properly
arise."
The second reason given by the High Court was quite
sufficient and- valid. There was no need to decide the
first point which was for the Rampur Courts to decide. The
High Court however, went further and decided whether their
judgment would be res judicata under s. 13 of the Code of
Civil Procedure (as applied in Rampur which the High Court
presumed was the same as in British India) in Rampur State
and came to the conclusion that the words"directly
adjudicated thereby" meant the actual decretal part of their
judgment. This question was not for the High Court to
decide but for the Rampur Court.
I may men, ion here this suit which was filed for an
injunction was one of a kind resorted to in the seventeenth
Century of which the Reports do not exist apart from Lord
Nottingham’s manuscripts to be found in 3 Swanston
603607(46) which seems to have long ago fallen in desuetude.
No wonder the Privy Council judgment was :
"Their Lordships do not see their way to
reverse the decision appealed from and will
humbly advise His Majesty to dismiss the
appeal. As the respondents have not appeared
there will-be no order is to costs."
it only remains to consider the argument in relation to the
shares of the Indian Sugars and Re. fineries Ltd. It was
contended that the, shares must
182
be deemed to be situated where they could be effectively
dealt with and that was Madras, where the Head Office of the
Company was situated. Learned counsel relied upon some
English cases in support of his contention. It is not
necessary to refer to those cases. The suits of shares
between the Company and the shareholders is undoubtedly in
the Country where the business is situated. But in a
dispute between rival claimants both within the jurisdiction
of a Court over shares the Court has jurisdiction over the
parties and the share scripts which are before the Court.
The Mysore Court was in this position. Between the rival
claimants the Mysore High Court could order the share scrips
to be handed over to the successful party and if necessary
could order transfer of the shares between them and enforce
that order by the coercive process of the law. It would be
a different matter if the Company refused to, register the
transfer and a different question might then have arisen;
but we are told that the Company has obeyed the decision and
accepted the executors as the shareholders. The judgment of
the Mysore Court on the ownership of the shares is ancillary
to the main decision. It is therefore not necessary for me
to consider the argument of Mr. Desai that jurisdiction
attaches on the principle of effectiveness propounded by
Dicey, but which has been criticised by the present editors
of his book and by Cheshire. In my opinion, this
controversy does not arise in this case, which must be
decided on the plain words of s. 13 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
For the reasons above given I would dismiss the appeal of
the sons of Ramalingam (Civil Appeal No. 277 of 1958) and
allow that of the executors (Civil Appeal No 278 of 1958),
dismissing C. S. No. 214 of 1944 with costs throughout. In
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the light of what I have decided I would have considered the
183
remaining appeals and passed appropriate orders therein; but
this is unnecessary as my brethren take a different view in
the two main appeals.
By COURT: In view of the majority Judgment, there will be
decree in terms as stated in the Judgment of the majority.