Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANTOSH KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHAI MOOL SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/02/1958
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 321 1958 SCR 1211
ACT:
Negotiable Instruments--Summary Suit on dishonouyed cheque
-Application for leave to de fend-Triable issue-Failure to
produce documentary evidence-If renders defence vague and
not bona fide-Grant Of conditional leave-Discretion of
Court, interference withCode of civil Procedure, 0.
XXXVII,rr. 2 and 3.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent filed a suit against the appellant under 0.
xxxvII of the Code of Civil Procedure on the basis of a
cheque for Rs. 60,000 drawn by the appellant in favour of
the respondent which, on presentation to the Bank, had been
dishonoured. The appellant applied under r. 3 Of 0. XXXVII
for leave to appear and defend the suit on the ground that
the cheque had been given only as a collateral security for
the price of goods supplied, that the goods had been paid
for by cash payments and by other cheques and that therefore
the cheque in question had served its
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end and was without consideration. The Court held that the
defence raised a triable issue but that the defence was
vague and was not bona fide as the appellant had produced no
evidence to prove his assertions and consequently granted
leave to defend the suit on the condition of the appellant
giving security for the suit amount and the costs of the
suit :
Held, that the imposition of the condition was illegal and
the appellant was entitled to defend the suit without giving
the security. The object of the special procedure under 0.
XXXVII of the Code is to see that a defendant does not
unnecessarily prolong the litigation by raising untenable
and frivolous defences. The test is to see whether the
defence raises a real issue and not a sham one, in the sense
that, if the facts alleged by the defendant are established,
there would be a good, or even a plausible, defence on those
facts. If the Court is satisfied about that, leave must be
given and given unconditionally.
Held, further, that the Court was wrong in imposing the
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condition about giving security on the ground that for want
of production of documentary evidence the defence was vague
and not bona fide as the stage of proof can only arise after
leave to appeal and defend has been granted. Though the
Court is given a discretion about imposing conditions it
must be exercised judicially and in consonance with
principles of natural justice. If the discretion is
exercised arbitrarily, or is based on a misunderstanding of
the principles that govern ’its exercise, then interference
is called for if there has been a resultant failure of
justice.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 96 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 17, 1956, of the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench)
at Delhi in Civil Misc. No. 896-D of 1956, arising out of
the judgment and order dated November 1, 1956, of the Court
of Commercial Subordinate Judge, Delhi in Suit No. 264 of
1956 under Order XXXVII, C.P.C.
]A. V. Vishwanatha Sastri ’and Naunit Lal, for the
appellant.
Bakhshi Gurcharan Singh and Sardar Singh, for the
respondent.
1958. February 5. The following Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
BOSE J.-The defendants, Santosh Kumar and the Northern
General Agencies, were granted special leave to appeal. The
plaintiff filed the suit out of which the
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appeal arises on the basis of a cheque for Rs. 60,000 drawn
by the defendants in favour of the plaintiff and which, on
presentation to the Bank, was dishonoured.
The suit was filed in the Court of the Commercial
Subordinate Judge, Delhi, under 0. XXXVII of the Code of
Civil Procedure.
The defendants applied for leave to defend the suit under r.
3 of that Order.
The learned trial Judge held that
" the defence raised by the defendants raises a triable
issue," but he went on to hold that the defendants
" have not placed anything on the file to show that the
defence was a bona fide one."
Accordingly, he permitted the defendants
to appear and defend the suit on the condition of their
giving security to the extent of the suit amount and the
costs of the suit."
The defendants applied for a review but failed. They then
applied under Art. 227 of the Constitution to the Delhi
Circuit Bench of the Punjab High Court and failed again. As
a result, they applied here under Art. 136 and were granted
special leave.
At first blush, 0. XXXVII, r. 2(2), appears drastically to
curtail a litigant’s normal rights in a Court of justice,
namely to appear and defend himself as of right, if and when
sued, because it says that when a suit is instituted on a
bill of exchange, hundi or a promissory note under the
provisions of sub-rule (1) "..... the defendant shall not
appear or defend the suit unless he obtains leave from a
judge as hereinafter provided so to appear and defend."
But the rigour of that is softened by r. 3(1) which makes it
obligatory on the Court to grant leave when the conditions
set out there are fulfilled. Clause (1) runs-
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" The Court shall, upon application by the defendant, give
leave to appear and to defend the suit, upon affidavits
which disclose such facts as would make it incumbent on the
holder to prove consideration, or such other facts as the
Court may deem sufficient to support the application."
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But no sooner is the wide discretion given to the Court in
r. 2(2) narrowed down by r. 3(1) than it is again enlarged
in another direction by r. 3(2) which says
that
" Leave to defend may be given unconditionally or subject to
such terms as to payment into Court, giving security,
framing and recording issues or otherwise as the Court
thinks fit."
The learned counsel for the plaintiff argues that the
discretion so conferred by r. 3(2) is unfettered and that as
the discretion has been exercised by the learned trial
Judge, no appeal can lie against it unless there is a "
grave miscarriage of justice or flagrant violation of law"
and he quotes D. N. Banerji v. P.R. Mukherjee (1) and Waryam
Singh v. Amarnath (2).
Now what we are examining here are laws of procedure. The
spirit in which questions about procedure are to be
approached and the manner in which rules relating to them
are to be interpreted are laid down in Sangrayn Singh v.
Election Tribunal, Kotah, Bhurey
Lal Baya (1).
" Now a code of procedure must be regarded as such. It is
procedure, something designed to facilitate justice and
further its ends; not a penal enactment for punishment and
penalties; not a, thing designed to trip people up. Too
technical a construction of sections that leaves no room for
reasonable elasticity of interpretation should therefore be
guarded against (provided always that justice is done to
both sides) lest the very means designed for the furtherance
of justice be used to frustrate it.
Next, there must be ever present to the mind the fact that
our laws of procedure are grounded on a principle of natural
justice which requires that men should not be condemned
unheard, that decisions should not be reached behind their
backs, that proceedings that affect their lives and property
should not continue in their absence and that they should
not be precluded from participating in them. Of course,
there must be exceptions and where they are clearly defined
(1) [1953[ S.C.R. 302, 305. (2) [1954] S.C.R. 565.
(3)[1955] 2 S.C.R. 1, 8 9.
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they must be given effect to. But taken by and large, and
subject to that proviso, our laws of procedure should be
construed, wherever that is reasonably possible, in the
light of that principle."
Applied to the present case, these observations mean that
though the Court is given a discretion it must be exercised
along judicial lines, and that in turn means, in consonance
with the principles of natural justice that form the
foundations of our laws. Those principles, so far as they
touch the present matter, are well known and have been laid
down and followed in numerous cases.
The decision most frequently referred to is a decision of
the House of Lords in England where a similar rule prevails.
It is Jacobs v. Booth’s Distillery Company (1). Judgment
was delivered in 1901. Their Lordships said that whenever
the deferce raises a " triable issue", leave must be given,
and later cases say that when that is the case it must be
given unconditionally, otherwise the leave may be illusory.
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See, for example, Powszechny Bank Zwiazkowy W. Polsce v.
Paros (2), in England and Sundaram Chettiar v. Valli Ammal
(3) in India. Among other cases that adopt the " triable
issue " test are Kiranmoyee Dassi v. J. Chatterjee and
Gopala Rao v. Subba Rao (5).
The learned counsel for the plaintiff-respondent relied on
Gopala Rao v. Subba Rao (5), Manohar Lal v. Nanhe Mal (6),
and Shib Karan Das v. Mohammed Sadiq (7). All that we need
say about them is that if the Court is of opinion that the
defence is not bona fide, then it can impose conditions and
is not tied down to refusing leave to defend. We agree with
Varadachariar J. in the Madras case that the Court has this
third course open to it in a suitable case. But it cannot
reach the conclusion that the defence is not bona fide
arbitrarily. It is as much bound by judicial rules and
judicial procedure in reaching a conclusion of this kind as
in any other matter. It is unnecessary
(1) (1901) 85 L.T. 262. (2) [1932] 2 K.B. 353.
(3) (1935) 1 L.R. 58 Mad. 116. (4) (1945) 49 C.W.N. 246.
(5) A.I.R. (1936) Mad.246.
(6) A.I.R. 1938 Lah. 548. (7) A.I.R. 1936 Lah. 584.
12l6
no examine the facts of those cases because they are not in
appeal before us. We are only concerned with the principle.
It is always undesirable, and indeed impossible, to lay down
hard and fast rules in matters that affect discretion. But
it is necessary to understand the reason for a special
procedure of this kind in order that the discretion may be
properly exercised. The object is explained in Kesavan v.
South Indian Bank Ltd. (1), and is examined in greater
detail in Sundaram Chettiar v. Valli Ammal (supra), to which
we have just referred. Taken by and large, the object is to
see that the defendant does not unnecessarily prolong the
litigation and prevent the plaintiff from obtaining an early
decree by raising untenable and frivolous defences in a
class of cases where speedy decisions are desirable in the
interests of trade and commerce. In general, therefore, the
test is to see whether the defence raises a real issue and
not a sham one, in the sense that, if the facts alleged by
the defendant are established, there would be a good, or
even a plausible, defence on those facts.
Now, what is the position here? The defendants admitted
execution of the cheque but pleaded that it was only given
as collateral security for the price of goods which the
plaintiff supplied to the defendants. They said that those
goods were paid for by cash payments made from time to time
and by other cheques and that therefore the cheque in suit
had served its end and should now be returned. They set out
the exact dates on which, according to them, the payments
had been made and gave the numbers of the cheques.
This at once raised an issue of fact, the truth and good
faith of which could only be tested by going into the
evidence and, as we have pointed out, the learned trial
Judge held that this defence did raise a triable issue. But
he held that it was not enough for the defendants to back up
their assertions with an affidavit; they should also have
produced writings and documents which they said were in
their possession
(1) I.L.R. 1950 Mad. 251.
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and which they asserted would prove that the cheques and
payments referred to in their defence were given in payment
of the cheque in suit; and he said-
" In the absence of those documents, the defence of the
defendants seems to be vague consisting of indefinite
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assertions.................
This is a surprising conclusion. The facts given in the
affidavit are clear and precise, the defence could hardly
have been clearer. We find it difficult to see how a
defence that, on the face of it, is clear becomes vague
simply because the evidence by which it is to be proved is
not brought on file at the time the defence is put in.
The learned Judge has failed to see that the stage of proof
can only come after the defendant has been allowed to enter
an appearance and defend the suit, and that the nature of
the defence has to be determined at the time when the
affidavit is put in. At that stage all that the Court has
to determine is whether " if the facts alleged by the
defendant are duly proved " they will afford a good, or even
a plausible, answer to the plaintiff’s claim. Once the
Court is satisfied about that, leave cannot be withheld and
no question about imposing conditions can arise; and once
leave is granted, the normal procedure of a suit, so far as
evidence and proof go, obtains.
The learned High Court Judge is also in error in thinking
that even when the defence is a good and valid one,
conditions can be imposed. As we have explained, the power
to impose conditions is only there to ensure that there will
be a speedy trial. If there is reason to believe that the
defendant is trying to prolong the litigation and evade a
speedy trial, then conditions can be imposed. But that
conclusion cannot be reached simply because the defendant
does not adduce his evidence even before he is told that he
may defend the action.
We do not wish to throw doubt on those decisions which
decide that ordinarily an appeal will not be entertained
against an exercise of discretion that has been exercised
along sound judicial lines. But if the
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discretion is exercised arbitrarily, or is based on a mis-
understanding of the principles that govern its exercise,
then interference is called for if there has been a
resultant failure of justice. As we have said, the only
ground given for concluding that the defence is not bona
flde is that the defendant did not prove his assertions
before he was allowed to put in his defence ; and there is
an obvious failure of justice if judgment is entered against
a man who, if he is allowed to prove his case, cannot but
succeed. Accordingly, interference is called for here.
The appeal is allowed. We set aside the orders of the High
Court and the learned trial Judge and remand the case to the
first Court for trial of the issues raised by the
defendants. The costs of the appellants in this Court will
be paid by the respondent who has failed here.
Appeal allowed.