Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VASUDEV DHANJIBHAI MODI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAJABHAI ABDUL REHMAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/03/1970
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1475 1971 SCR (1) 66
1969 SCC (1) 670
ACT:
Execution proceedings--Circumstances in which question of
jurisdiction of court passing decree can be raised.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who was the landlord of certain premises in
Ahmadabad, filed a suit against M for ejectment from the
premises,and for an order for payment of rent.. The trial
court dismissed the suit in appeal. The District Court
passed a decree in ejectment and further appeals against
that decision were rejected.
In proceedings filed by the appellant for execution of the
decree, M contended that the court of Small Causes which had
tried the suit ’had no jurisdiction to entertain it as the
suit premises were not governed by Bombay Act 57 of 1947.
The court executing the decree rejected this contention.
The order was confirmed by a Bench of the Court of Small
Causes. The High Court of Gujarat in a petition filed by M
under Article 227 of the Constitution, ordered that the
petition for execution ,be dismissed.
On appeal to this Court,
HELD : The appeal must be allowed and the order of the Court
of Small Causes restored.
When a decree which is a nullity, for instance, where it is
passed without bringing the legal representatives on the
record of a person who Was dead at the date of the decree,
or against a ruling prince without :a certificate, is sought
to be executed an objection in that behalf may be raised in
a proceeding for execution. Again, when the decree is made
by a Court which has no inherent jurisdiction to make it,
objection as to its validity may be raised in an execution
proceeding if the objection appears on the face of the
record : where the objection as to the jurisdiction of the
Court to pass the decree does not appear on the face of the
record and requires examination of the questions raised and
decided at the trial or which could have been but have not
been raised, the executing Court will have no jurisdiction
to entertain an objection as to the validity of the decree
even on the ground of absence of jurisdiction. [68 F]
In the present case the question whether the Court of Small
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Causes had jurisdiction to entertain the suit against M
depended upon the interpretation of the terms of the
agreement of lease and the user to which the land was put at
the date of the grant of the lease. These questions could
not be permitted to be raised in an execution proceeding so
as to displace the jurisdiction of the Court which passed
the decree. [69 B]
Jnanendra Mohan Bhaduri & Anr. v. Rabindra Nath Chakravarti,
60 I.A. 71; referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 406 of 1967.
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Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 22, 23, September 10, 1966 of the Gujarat High Court
in Special Civil Application No. 371 of 1965.
I. N. Shroff, for the appellant.
R. Gopalakrishnan and J. M. Thacker, for respondent No.1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. Vasudev Dhanjibhai Modi is the owner of Plot No.
15/3 of Jamalpur Town Planning Scheme, Ahmedabad. Since
1948 Rajabhai Munshi was a tenant of the land at an annual
rental of Rs. 411/-. Alleging that Munshi committed default
in payment of rent, Modi instituted a suit in the Court of
Small Causes, Ahmedabad, for an order in ejectment and for
payment of rent in arrears. Munshi deposited in Court an
amount which he claimed satisfied the liability to pay the
rent in arrears. The Court of first instance dismissed the
suit. In appeal to the District Court at Ahmedabad the
order of the Court of First Instance was reversed and a
decree in ejectment was passed in favour of Modi. The order
was confirmed in a revision application filed before the
High Court of Bombay. A petition for special leave to
appeal against that order was granted by this Court but was
later vacated when it was found that Munshi had made false
statements in his petition.
In the meanwhile Modi applied for execution of the decree in
ejectment against Munshi. Munshi raised the contention that
the Court of Small Causes had no jurisdiction to entertain
the suit and its decree was on that account a nullity.
According to Munshi the suit premises were not governed by
the Bombay Rents Hotel & Lodging House Rates (Control) Act
57 of 1947, and that in any event Parts II & III of that Act
did not apply to open land and on that account the decree of
the High Court confirming the decree of the District Court
was without jurisdiction. The Court executing the decree
rejected the contention. An appeal against that order to a
Bench of the Court of Small Causes was also unsuccessful.
But in a petition under Art. 227 of the Constitution moved
by Munshi the High Court of Gujarat (that High Court having,
by virtue of the provisions of the Bombay Reorganisation
Act, 1960, acquired jurisdiction to deal with and dispose of
the case) reversed the order of the Court of Small Causes
and ordered that the petition for execution be dismissed.
With special leave, Modi has appealed to this Court.
The expression "premises" in s. 5(8) of the Bombay Rents
Hotel & Lodging House Rates (Control) Act 57 of 1947 does
not
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include premises used for agricultural purposes. By s. 6 of
that Act the provisions of Part II which relate to
conditions in which orders in ejectment may be made against
tenants and other related matters apply to premises let for
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education, business, trade or storage. It is plain that the
Court exercising power under the Bombay Rents Hotel &
Lodging House Rates (Control) Act, 1947, has no jurisdiction
to entertain a suit for possession of land used for
agricultural purposes. Again in ascertaining whether the
land demised is used for agricultural purposes, the crucial
date is date on which the right conferred by the Act is
sought to be exercised: Mst. Subhadra v. Narasaji Chenaji
Marwadi(1).
In this case the suit for ejectment against Munshi was
instituted by Modi in the Court of Small Causes. No
objection was raised that the Court had no jurisdiction to
entertain the suit. The objection was not raised even in
appeal, nor before the High Court. The Trial Court
dismissed the suit on merits : the decree was reversed by
the District Court and that decree was confirmed by the High
Court. The objection was raised for the first time when the
decree was sought to be executed.
A Court executing a decree cannot go behind the decree :
between the parties or their representatives it must take
the decree according to its tenor, and cannot entertain any
objection that the decree was incorrect in law or on facts.
Until it is set aside by an appropriate proceeding in appeal
or revision, a decree even if it be erroneous is still
binding between the parties.
When a decree which is a nullity, for instance, where it is
passed without bringing the legal representatives on the
record of a person who was dead at the date of the decree,
or against a ruling prince without a certificate, is sought
to be executed an objection in that behalf may be raised in
a proceeding for execution. Again, when the decree is made
by a Court which has no inherent jurisdiction to make it,
objection as to its validity may be raised in an execution
proceeding if the objection appears on the face of the
record : where the objection as to the jurisdiction of the
Court to pass the decree does not appear on the face of the
record and requires examination of the questions raised and
decided at the trial or which could have been but have not
been raised, the executing Court will have no jurisdiction
to entertain an objection as to the validity of the decree
even on the ground of absence of jurisdiction. In Jnanendra
Mohan Bhaduri & Anr. v. Rabindra Nath Chakravarti (2) the
Judicial Committee held that where a decree was passed upon
an award made under the provisions of the Indian Arbitration
Act, 1899, an objection in the course of the execution pro-
ceeding that the decree was made without jurisdiction, since
under
(1) [1962] 3 S.C.R. 98.
(2) L.R. 60 I.A. 71.
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the Indian Arbitration Act, 1899, there is no provision for
making a decree upon an award, was competent. That was a
case in which the decree was on the face of the record
without jurisdiction.
In the present case the question whether the Court of Small
Causes had jurisdiction to entertain the suit against Munshi
depended upon the intepretation of the terms of the
agreement of lease, and the user to which the land was put
at the date of the grant of the lease. These questions
cannot be permitted to be raised in an execution proceeding
so as to displace the jurisdiction of the Court which passed
the decree. If the decree is on the face of the record
without jurisdiction and the question does not relate to the
territorial jurisdiction or under s. 11 of the Suits Valua-
tion Act, objection to the jurisdiction of the Court to make
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the decree may be raised; where it is necessary to
investigate facts in order to determine whether the Court
which had passed the decree had no jurisdiction to entertain
and try the suit, the objection cannot be raised in the
execution proceeding.
The High Court was of the view that where there is lack
of inherent jurisdiction in the Court which passed the
decree, the executing Court must refuse to execute it on the
ground that the decree is a nullity. But, in our judgment,
for the purpose of determining whether the Court which
passed the decree had jurisdiction to try the suit, it is
necessary to determine facts on the decision of which the
question depends’, and the objection does not appear on the
face of the record, the executing Court cannot enter upon
and enquiry into those facts. In the view of the High Court
since the land leased was at the date of the lease used for
agricultural purposes and that it so appeared on
investigation of the terms of the lease and other relevant
evidence, it was open to the Court to hold that the decree
was without jurisdiction and on that account a nullity. The
view taken by the High Court, in our judgment, cannot be
sustained.
The appeal is ’Allowed and the order passed by the High
Court is set aside. The order of the Court of Small Causes
is restored. The respondent Munshi will pay the costs of
the appellant throughout.
R.K.P.S.
Appeal allowed.
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