Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARHARI SHIVRAM SHET NARVEKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PANNALAL UMEDIRAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/01/1976
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1977 AIR 164 1976 SCR (3) 149
1976 SCC (3) 203
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedures 38 and 39 Transfer of a decree
dated 29-6-1960 passed by the Bombay High Court to the Goa
Court for execution- Whether it is a "foreign decree’ within
the meaning of sec. 2(6), C.P.C. and whether the High Court
a "foreign court" within the meaning of s. 2(5) especially
when the parties subjected themselves to the jurisdiction of
that Court by prosecuting their case upto a certain stage.
Constitution of India-Art. 261(3)-Meaning of the word
"according to law"- Whether they refer to the "law in force"
during the pendency of the appeal or the "law in force" on
the date of transfer of the decree for execution Scope of
Art. 261(3).
Decree-Executability of a decree is not a vested right-
Extension of the provisions of Civil Procedure Code to a
State later on does not affect the decree.
HEADNOTE:
In the Civil Suit No. 203 of 1955, on the original side
of the Bombay High . Court, filed by the decree-
holder/respondent against the appellant/judgment, debtor for
recovery of certain amount of money, summons were served on
the judgment-debtor who after filing his written statement
absented himself, and did not take any further part in the
proceedings of the Court resulting in a decree dated 29-6-
1960 for Rs. 65,953.79. On 20-12-1961, Goa became a part of
India and was made a Union Territory of India by the
Constitution (Twelth Amendment) Act, 1962 passed on 27-3-
1962. The decree-holder applied to the Bombay High Court for
transferring the decree to Goa Court for execution and by an
order dated 28-8-1963 the decree was transferred to the Goa
Court for execution. The execution application before the
Executing Court at Panjim filed on 21-1-1964 was dismissed
on 26-4-1965, holding that the decree transferred to it by
the Bombay High Court was not executable. An appeal was
preferred to the Additional Judicial Commissioner on 1-6-
1965 and the appellant Judgment-debtor filed his reply.
During the pendency of the appeal, the Code of Civil
Procedure was extended to Goa on 15-6-1966 by the Goa, Daman
and Diu Extension of the Code of Civil Procedure and
Arbitration) Act (30) of 1965 and repealing the Portuguese
Code. The Additional Judicial Commissioner by its order
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dated 28-6-1967 held that in view of Art. 261(3) of the
Constitution, the decree passed by the Bombay High Court
could not be treated as nullity and, was therefore,
executable.
On appeal by certificate, the appellant/judgment-debtor
contended (1) that the decree passed by me Bombay High Court
qua Goa Court was a nullity being a decree of a foreign
court. Even if the decree was not a nullity it could be
executed by a Goa court if the original decree had been
approved by the Goa Court under s. 50 of the Portuguese
Code; (2) that‘the Bombay High Court transferring the decree
for execution to the Goa Court under ss. 38 and 39 of the
C.P.C. was without jurisdiction inasmuch as the C.P.C. had
not been applied to Goa when the order of transfer was
passed. (3) that as the provisions of the C.P.C. were
applied to Goa after the order of the Execution Court was
passed and a vested right had accrued to the
appellant/judgment debtor the ’J decree continued to be
inexecutable and could not be validated by Art. 261(3) of
the Constitution.
The respondent/decree-holder contended (1) that
inasmuch as the judgment debtor had appeared and
participated in the suit for some time the decree passed by
the Bombay High Court could not be said to be a nullity (ii)
that as the C.P.C. was made applicable while the appeal was
pending before the Additional Judicial Commissioner, Goa the
decree became clearly executable and the order of transfer
of the decree by the Bombay High Court stood validated. and
(iii) that in view of the provisions of Art. 261(3) of the
Constitution of India, there was no bar to the execution of
the decree, which was passed by a court which was in the
territory of India.
150
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: (1) Where a party appears before the court, the
decree of the court, even mf it is a foreign court is not a
nullity. [154-D]
Raj Rajendra Sardar Maloji Marsingh Rao Shitole v. Sri
Shankar Saran and others, [1963] 2 S.C.R. 577, distinguished
and held not applicable.
Shaligram v. Daulat Ram, [1963] 2 S.C.R. 574 and Lalji
Raja & Sons v. Firm Hansraj Nathuram, [1971] 3 S.C.R. 815,
applied.
(2) The right of the judgment-debtor to pay up the
decree passed against him cannot be said to be a vested
right, nor can the question of executability of the decree
be regarded as a substantive vested right of the judgment-
debtor. A fortiorary, the execution proceedings being purely
a matter of procedure it is well-settled that any change in
law which is made during the pendency of the cause would be
deemed to be retrospective in operation and the Appellate
Court is bound to take notice of the change in law. The
Additional Judicial Commissioner was competent to take
notice of the change in the law. [154 E-F, 155 G]
Mohanlal Chunilal Kothari v. Tribhovan Haribhai
Tamboli, [1963] 2 S.C.R. 707, 715-716. Gummalapura Taggina
Matada Kotturswami v. Setra Veerava and others, A.T.R 1959
S.C. 577, 579 and Jose De Costa and another v. Bascora
Sedashiva Sinai Naroornin and others, A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 1843,
1849, followed.
(3) The proposition adumbrated viz., that the
executability of the decree was a vested right which could
not be taken away by the applicability of the Code of Civil
Procedure to Goa during the pendency of the appeal is wrong,
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since the executability of the decree could not be
considered to be a vested right
[155F-G]
Lalji Raja and Sons. v. Firm Hansraj Nathuram [1971] 3
S.C.R. 815, followed.
(4) The contention that as the Code of Civil Procedure
was not applicable to Goa at the time when the Bombay High
Court passed the order transferring
the decree to the Goa Court, the order of transfer was
absolutely without jurisdiction was wrong.[156 C-D]
As the decree was passed by the Bombay High Court, s.
38 of the Code of Civil Procedure would clearly apply and
the decree passed by the Bombay High Court was not a foreign
decree. It is true that at the time when the Bombay High
Court passed the order of transfer, the Code of Civil
Procedure had not been applied to Goa. But, that does not
put the respondent/decree-holder out of Court. The decree
could be transferred and was valid and executable. But,
because of infirmity, it could not be executed so long as
the C.P.C. was not made applicable to Goa. Thus, the only
bar which stood in the way of the execution of the decree
was the non-applicability of the provisions of the C.P.C. to
Goa. This was, however, not an insurmountable bar or an
obstacle and the bar or the obstacle disappeared the moment
the Code of Civil Procedure was applied to Goa on 15-6-1966.
[156 D-F]
HELD FURTHER: (5) The instant case is a fit case in
which the doctrine A of eclipse would apply and the wall or
the bar which separated Bombay from Goa having disappeared,
there was no impediment in the execution of a decree. The
decree lay dormant only so far as no bridge was built
between Bombay and Goa but as soon as the bridge was
constructed in the shape of the application of the
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure to Goa the decree
became at once executable. [156 F-G]
(6) In the instant case, the decree passed by the
Bombay High Court having been passed by a Court of competent
jurisdiction and not being a nullity because the judgment-
debtor had appeared and participated in the proceedings of
the Court to some extent, and the order of transfer under s.
38 of the Code of Civil Procedure also not having suffered
from any inherent lack of jurisdiction, the decree became
enforceable and executable as soon as the Code of Civil
Procedure was applied to Goa. [157 E-F]
151
Bhagwan Shankar v. Rajaram Bapu Vithal, A.I.R. 1951
Bom. 125, 127, approved.
(7) Art. 261(3) of the Constitution enjoins that a
decree shall be executable in ally part of the territory of
India, according to law. In the instant case, the decree was
passed by the Bombay High Court after the Constitution came
into force and Art. 261(3) would apply to the decree passed
by the Bombay High Court. The Article would also apply to
Goa because at the time when the application for execution
was made in Goa Court, the Constitution had already been
made applicable to that State also. [158 C-D]
(8) It is true that at the time when the Executing
Court dismissed the suit of the decree holder/respondent,
the Code of Civil Procedure had not been applied and the
Portuguese Code continued to apply but after the application
of the Code of Civil Procedure by virtue of the Goa, Daman
and Diu (Extension of the Code of Civil Procedure and the
Arbitration) Act, 1965. the Portuguese Code which was in
force in Goa was clearly repealed and the present case does
not fall within any of the clauses mentioned in the saving
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provisions of s. 4 of the Act. Thus, when the Civil
Procedure Code was made applicable to Goa during the
pendency of the appeal, the appellate Court, namely, the
Additional Judicial Commissioner was bound to decide the
matter in accordance with the law that was in force. Hence,
the contention the matter in accordance with the law that
was in force. Hence, the contention that the words
"according to law" in Art. 261(3) would mean that the decree
would be executable only in accordance with the law in force
in the Portuguese Code is not correct. [158 B-F]
[Jose De Costa and another v. Bascore Sadashiva Sinai
Narcornin and others, A.I.R. 1975 S.C. 1843, 1849 followed.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 909 of
1968.
(From the judgment and order dated the 28th June, 1967
of the Judicial Commissioner’s Court of Goa, Daman and Diu
in Civil Appeal No. 105 of 1965).
B. N. Lokur and A. G. Ratnaparkhi for the appellant.
D. V. Patel and P. N. Bhardwaj for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by-
FAZAL ALI, J. This is a judgment debtor’s appeal on a
certificate of fitness granted by the Additional Judicial
Commissioner, Goa, Daman & Diu and arises under the
following circumstances.
The decree holder/respondent had brought a suit on the
original side of the Bombay High Court being Suit No. 203 of
1956 against the appellant/judgment debtor for recovery of
certain amount of money. The Bombay High Court passed a
decree for Rs. 65,953.79 on June 29, 1960. In the suit
brought by the decree-holder/respondent summons were served
on the defendant/judgment debtor who filed his written
statement and thereafter absented himself and did not take
any part in the proceedings of the Court. On December 20,
1961 Goa became a part of India and was made a Union
Territory of India by the Constitution (Twelfth Amendment)
Act, 1962 passed on March 27, 1962. Thereafter the decree-
holder respondent applied to the Bombay High Court for
transferring the decree to Goa Court for execution. This
prayer was allowed by the Bombay High Court and by its order
dated August 28, 1963 the decree was transferred
11-390 SCI/76
152
to the Goa Court for execution, In pursuance of the order of
the Bombay High Court the decree-holder filed an execution
suit before the Executing Court at Panjim on January 21,
1964. The Executing Court however by its order dated April
26, 1965 held that the decree transferred to it by the
Bombay High Court was not executable and accordingly
dismissed the execution. Thereafter the decree-holder filed
a memo of appeal before the Additional Judicial Commissioner
on June 1, 1965 and the appeal was admitted on June 5, 1965.
On February 24, 1967 the judgment debtor/appellant filed his
reply. While the appeal was pending before the Additional
Judicial Commissioner the Code of Civil Procedure‘ was
extended to Goa on June 15, 1966. Accordingly the Additional
Judicial Commissioner by its order dated June 28, 1967 held
that the decree was executable and he accordingly remitted
the case to the Executing Court for proceeding in accordance
with the law. The Additional Judicial Commissioner also held
that in view of Art. 261(3) of the Constitution of India the
decree passed by the Bombay High Court could not be treated
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to be a nullity and was, therefore, clearly executable.
In support of the appeal Mr. B. N. Lokur submitted
three main contentions before us:
(1) that the decree passed by the Bombay High
Court qua Goa Court was a nullity being a
decree of a foreign Court. Even if the decree
was not a nullity it could be executed by a
Goa Court if the original decree had been
approved by the Goa Court under s. 50 of the
Portuguese Code;
(2) that the order of the Bombay High Court
transferring the decree for execution to the
Goa Court under ss. 38 & 39 of the Code of
Civil Procedure was without jurisdictions in
as much as the Code of Civil Procedure had
not been applied to Goa. When the order of
transfer was passed; and
(3) that as the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure were applied to Goa after the order
of the Executing Court was passed and a
vested right had accrued to the
appellant/judgment debtor the decree
continued to be inexecutable and could not be
validated by Art. 261(3) of the Constitution
of India.
Mr. D. V. Patel appearing for the respondent/decree-
holder submitted that as the judgment-debtor had appeared
and had participated in the suit for some time the decree
passed by the Bombay High Court could not be said to be a
nullity. Secondly it was contended that as the Code of Civil
Procedure was made applicable while the appeal was pending
before the Additional Judicial Commissioner, Goa, the decree
became clearly executable and the order of transfer of the
decree by the Bombay High Court stood validated. Thirdly it
was argued that in view of the provisions of Art. 261(3) of
the Constitution of India there was no bar to the execution
of the decree which was passed by a Court which was in the
territory of India.
The sheet-anchor of the argument of the learned counsel
for the appellant/judgment-debtor, that the decree passed by
the Bombay
153
High Court was a nullity either on the ground that it was
passed by A a foreign Court or on the ground that the
transfer was invalid under s. 38 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, was the decision of this Court in Raj Rajendra
Sardar Maloji Marsingh Rao Shitole v. Sri Shankar Saran and
Ors.(1). In that case it appears that the appellant had
instituted a suit in the Court in Gwalior State in May 1947.
The respondents did not appear before the Court and the
Gwalior Court passed a decree ex parte in November 1948. On
September 14, 1951 the Gwalior Court transferred the decree
for execution to Allahabad, as a result of which the
appellant before the Supreme Court filed an . application
for execution of the decree before the Allahabad Court. It
was mainly contended before this Court that the decree being
that of a foreign Court was a nullity and the execution
application was not maintainable. In these peculiar
circumstances this Court, after considering the entire law
on the subject, concluded as follows:
"Our conclusion therefore is that the Allahabad
Court had no power to execute the decree either under
section 3 or under ss. 43 or 44 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Therefore, even if the decree was not a
foreign decree, the decree-holder’s application for
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execution was rightly dismissed.
An analysis of Shitole’s case (supra) would clearly show
that the facts in that case are clearly distinguishable from
the facts in the present case and there are indeed a large
number of distinguishing features in the case indicated
above which are not at all applicable to the present case.
In the first place the decree in Shitole’s case(1) was
admittedly passed by the Gwalior Court in 1947 when Gwalior
being a princely State the Court which passed the decree was
undoubtedly a foreign Court. Secondly, the judgment-
debtors/defendants did not appear before the Gwalior Court
at all as a result of which an ex parte decree was passed.
According to Private International Law it is well settled
that an ex parte decree of a foreign Court is a nullity if
the party against whom a decree is passed does not appear at
all and does not take part in the proceedings of the Court.
Thirdly, it would appear that the provisions of Art. 261(3)
of the Constitution would not apply to the facts of
Shitole’s case(1) because the constitutional provisions not
being retrospective they could not apply to decrees passed
before the coming into force of the ’ Constitution. In view
of these circumstances therefore it cannot be said that
Shitole’s case(1) referred to above is of any assistance to
the appellant in deciding the issues involved in this case.
On the other hand the decision in Shaligram v. Daulat
Rant(2) appears to be directly in point so far as the facts
in the present case are concerned. In that case also a
decree was passed by the Bombay High Court which was in the
territory of India and to which the pro visions of the Code
of Civil Procedure applied. The appellant appear ed before
the Court and applied for leave to defend and thereafter
absented himself. The decree was thereafter transferred to
the Court
(1) [1963] 2 S.C.R. 577. (2) [1963] 2 S.C.R. 574.
154
of District Judge, Bhir in Hyderabad State. This Court held
that the decree was executable and observed as follows:
"A person who appears in obedience to the process
of a foreign Court and applies for leave to defend the
suit with out objecting to the jurisdiction of the
Court when he is not compellable by law to do so must
be held to have voluntarily submitted to jurisdiction
of such Court Shaikh Atham Sahib v. David Sahib [1909]
I.L.R. 32 Mad. 469. Therefore it cannot be said that
this decree suffered from the defects which a foreign
ex-parte decree without such submission would suffer
from. The order for transfer was made at a time when
the Indian Code of Civil Procedure became applicable to
the whole of India including the former territories of
Hyderabad State."
In Lalji Raja & Sons v. Firm Hansraj Nathuram(1) this
Court reiterated the view taken in Shaligram’s case (supra).
It was also pointed out in the aforesaid case that where a
party appears before the Court the decree of the Court even
if it is a foreign Court is not P a nullity.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellant however
submitted that since the Code of Civil Procedure was not
applicable to Goa the decree became inexecutable and this
being a vested right could not be taken away by the
application of the Code of Civil Procedure to Goa during the
pendency of the appeal before the Additional Judicial
Commissioner. It seems to us that the right of the judgment-
debtor to pay up the decree passed against him cannot be
said to be a vested right, nor can be question of
executability of the decree be regarded as a substantive
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vested right of the judgment-debtor. A fortiorari the
execution proceedings being purely a matter of procedure it
is well settled that any change in law which is made during
the pendency of the cause would be deemed to be retro-active
in operation and the Appellate Court is bound to take notice
of the change in law. In Moharllal Chunilal Kothari v.
Tribhowan Haribhai Tamboli(2) it was clearly ruled by this
Court that the Appellate Court was bound to apply the law as
it was found on the date of the judgment. In this connection
this Court observed as follows:
"But it was during the pendency of the suit at the
appellate stage that the second notification was issued
cancelling the first. Hence, the Court was bound to
apply the law as it was found on‘the date of the
judgment. Hence, there is no question of taking away
any vested rights in the land lords."
(1) [1971] 3 S.C.R. 815
(2) [1963] 2 S.C.R. 707, 715-716.
155
To the same effect is the decision of this Court in
Gummalapura Taggina Matada Kotturuswami v. Setra Veeravva
and others(1) where this Court observed as follows:
"It is well settled that an appellate Court is
entitled to take into consideration any change in the
law (vide the case of Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul v.
Keshwar Lal Chaudhuri -1940 FCR 84)" B
A similar view was taken by a recent decision of this
Court in Jose De Costa and another v. Bascora Sadashiva
Sinai Narcornin and others(2) where this Court observed as
follows:
"Before ascertaining the effect of the enactments
aforesaid passed by the Central Legislature on pending
suits or appeals, it would be appropriate to bear in
mind two well established principles. The first is
that "while provisions of a statute dealing merely with
matters of procedure may properly, unless that
construction be textually inadmissible, have
retrospective effect attributed to them, provisions
which touch a right in existence at the passing of the
statute are not to be applied retrospectively in the
absence of express enactment or necessary intendment"
(see Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Income-
tax Commr.-54 Ind. App. 421 (AIR 1927 PC 242). The
second is that a right of appeal being a substantive
right the institution of a suit carries with it the
implication that all successive appeals available under
the law then in force would be preserved to the parties
to the suit throughout the rest of the career of the
suit."
In these circumstances, therefore, we are unable to
accede to the contention of the appellant that the
Additional Judicial Commissioner was not competent to take
notice of the change in the law.
As regards the argument of the learned counsel for the
appellant that the executability of the decree was a vested
right which could not be taken away by the applicability of
the Code of Civil Procedure to Goa during the pendency of
the appeal, the decision of this Court in Lalji Raja & Sons’
case (supra) is a clear authority against the pro position
adumbrated by the learned counsel for the appellant. In that
case this Court appears to have considered this point in all
its comprehensive aspects and was of the opinion that the
executability of the decree could not be considered to be a
vested right. In this connection this Court made the
following observations:
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"Therefore the question for decision is whether
the non executability of the decree in the Morena court
under the law in force in Madhya Bharat before the
extension of ’the Code’ can be said to be a right
accrued under the repealed law. We do not think that
even by straining the language of the provision it can
be said that the non-executability of
(1) A.I.R. (1959) S.C., 577, 579 (2) A.I.R. 1975 S.C.
1843,1849.
156
a decree within a particular territory can be
considered as a privilege................... All that
has happened in view of the extension of ’the Code’ to
the whole of India in 1951 is that the decree which
could have been executed only by courts in British
India are now made executable in the whole of India.
The change made is one relating to procedure and
jurisdiction............. lt was the invalidity of the
order transferring the decree to the Morena court that
stood in the way of the decree-holders in executing
their decree in that court on the earlier occasion and
not because of any vested rights of the judgment-
debtors ............ By the extension of the ’the Code’
to Madhya Bharat, want of jurisdiction on the part of
the Morena court was remedied that court is now made
competent to execute the decree."
It was then argued that as the Code of Civil Procedure
was not applicable to Goa at the time when the Bombay High
Court passed the order transferring the decree to the Goa
Court, the order of transfer was absolutely without
jurisdiction. We are, however, unable to agree with this
contention. To begin with, as the decree was passed by the
Bombay High Court, s. 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure
would clearly apply because the decree passed by the Bombay
High Court was not a foreign decree. It is true that at the
time when the Bombay High Court passed the order of
transfer, the Code of Civil Procedure had not been applied
to Goa. But that does not put the respondent/decree-holder
out of Court. The decree could be transferred and was valid
and executable. But because of an impediment
or an infirmity it could not be executed so long as the
Code of Civil Procedure was not made applicable to Goa. Thus
the only bar which stood in the way of the execution of the
decree was the non-applicability of the provisions of the
Code of Civil Procedure to Goa. This was, however, not an
insurmountable bar or an obstacle and the bar or the
obstacle disappeared the moment the Code of Civil Procedure
was applied to Goa on June 15, 1966.- It is common ground
that this was done during the pendency of the appeal before
the Additional Judicial Commissioner passed the impugned
order on June 28, 1967. In these circumstances, therefore,
it seems to us that this is a fit case in which the doctrine
of eclipse would apply and the wall or the bar which
separated Bombay from Goa having disappeared there was any
impediment in the execution of the decree. The decree lay
dormant only so far as no bridge was built between Bombay
and Goa but as soon as the bridge was constructed in the
shape of the application of the provisions of the Code of
Civil Procedure to Goa the decree became at once executable.
In Bhagwan Shankar v. Rajaram Bapu Vithal(1) Chagla.
C.J. as he then was, while delivering the opinion of the
Full Bench of the Bombay High Court, observed as follows:
"Therefore, as far as this particular decree was
concerned as the defendant, we are-assuming, did not
submit to the
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(1) A.I.R. 1951 Bom. 125. 127.
157
jurisdiction of the Sholapur Court, quae the Akalkot
Court, A the judgment of the Sholapur Court was a
foreign judgment passed by a Court not of competent
jurisdiction & therefore the decree could not be
executed in the Akalkot Court so long as the Sholapur
Court continued to be a foreign Court. But once it is
conceded that the decree was not a nullity & it was
valid & binding as far as the Sholapur Court was
concerned then there is no difficulty. with respect, in
understanding & appreciating the judgment which we have
to consider in this Full Bench, because if the
character of the Akalkot Court changes & if the status
of the defendant alters because of that fact, then the
impediment which was initially there in the decree
being enforced in the Akalkot Court disappears & the
decree which was unenforceable till that change came
about becomes enforceable & executable in the Akalkot
Court. This is nat in any way violating private
international law. Private international law remains
the same. But under the circumstances of the case the
Sholapur Court no longer being a foreign Court quae the
Akalkot Court, the question of private international
law does not arise at all. The decree is then being
executed under the Municipal Law & clearly under the
Municipal Law the decree D is executable as it has been
passed by a Court of competent jurisdiction."
It would appear therefore that an identical phenomenon had
taken place in the case before the Bombay High Court and the
Full Bench held that the moment the decree became executable
and enforceable the status of the defendant/judgment-debtor
was altered and the decree became executable. On a parity of
reasoning, therefore, in the present case also the decree
passed by the Bombay High Court having been passed by a
Court of competent jurisdiction and not being a nullity
because the judgment-debtor had appeared and participated in
the proceedings of the Court to some extent, and the order
of transfer under s. 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure also
not having suffered from any inherent lack of jurisdiction,
the decree became enforceable and executable as soon as the
Code of Civil Procedure was applied to Goa. As we have
indicated above it was the duty of the Appellate Court,
namely the Additional Judicial Comm- sioner, to take note of
the change in law, namely, the applicability of the Code of
Civil Procedure to Goa and the repeal of the Portuguese Code
which was in force before the provisions of the Code of
Civil Procedure were applied. The Additional Judicial
Commissioner was, therefore, fully justified in taking the
view that the decree was executable and the bar of
inexecutability came to an end, when the provisions of the
Code of Civil Procedure were applied to Goa.
Mr. Patel appearing for the respondent submitted an
alternative argument that even if the transfer of the decree
under s. 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not valid,
under the Portuguese Code there was no provision which
required transfer of the decree to that Court before the
same could be executed. Counsel for the appellant objected
to this argument on the ground that it was never raised at
158
any stage of the case and being a question of fact as to
whether or not there was any such provision in the
Portuguese Code it should not be entertained. In these
circumstances, we do not think it necessary to go into this
question, particularly when the order of the Additional
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Judicial Commissioner can be upheld on other grounds
mentioned by us.
Finally it appears that this case is clearly covered by
the principles contained in Art. 261 (3) of the Constitution
of India which runs thus:
"Final judgments or orders delivered or passed by
civil courts in any part of the territory of India
shall be capable of execution anywhere within that
territory according to law."
This is a constitutional provision which enjoins that a
decree shall be executable in any part of the territory of
India according to law. It is obvious that in the instant
case the decree was passed by the Bombay High Court after
the Constitution came into force and this Article would,
therefore, clearly apply to the decree passed by the Bombay
High Court. The article would also apply to Goa because at
the time when the application for execution was made in a
Goa Court, the Constitution had already been made applicable
to that State also. Mr. Lokur counsel for the appellant,
however, submitted that the words ’according to law’ in Art.
261(3) would clearly show that the decree would be
executable only in accordance with the law in force, i.e.
the Portuguese Code. It is true that at the time when the
executing Court dismissed the suit of the decree-
holder/respondent the Code of Civil Procedure had not been
applied and the Portuguese Code continued to apply but after
the application of the Code of Civil Procedure by virtue of
the Goa, Daman and Diu (Extension of the Code of Civil
Procedure and the Arbitration) Act, 1965 (Act 30 of 1965)
the Portuguese Code which was in force in Goa was clearly
replaced and the present case does not fall within any of
the clauses mentioned in the saving provisions of s. 4 of
the Act. Thus when the Code of Civil Procedure was made
applicable to Goa during the pendency of
the appeal, the Appellate Court, namely, the Additional
Judicial Commissioner, was bound to decide the matter in
accordance with the law that was in force, namely, the Code
of Civil Procedure. In Jose Da Costa’s case (supra) this
Court, while dwelling upon the applicability of the
Portuguese Code, observed as follows:
"Thus considered, it is clear that the procedural
provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code were no longer
applicable to this case with effect from 15-6-1966. If
that be the correct position, there is no legal hurdle
in the way of the appellant to the reagitation in this
Court of the issue as to prescription left undecided by
the court below.
To sum up, since on and from 15-6-1966 the
Portuguese law relating to Reclamacao stood repealed
and no substantive right or obligation had been
acquired or incurred under
159
that repealed law within the meaning of the first
proviso to S. 4(1) of Act 30 of 1965, the appellants
cannot be debarred from canvassing in this appeal under
Article 136, the plea of prescription notwithstanding
the fact that they did not file any Reclamacao in the
Court of the Judicial Commissioner. We therefore
negative the preliminary objection raised by the
respondents."
For these reasons, therefore, we find ourselves in
complete agreement with the view taken by the Additional
Judicial Commissioner and hold that the decree passed by the
Bombay High Court was clearly executable. The Executing
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Court will now proceed in accordance with the law as
directed by the Additional Judicial Commissioner.
The appeal fails and is accordingly dismissed but in
view of the somewhat uncertain legal position we leave the
parties to bear their respective costs in this Court.
S.R Appeal dismissed.
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