Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
KRISHNAJI DATTATRYAYA BAPAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KRISHNAJI DATTATRYAYA BAPAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/04/1969
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1 1970 SCR (1) 322
1969 SCC (2) 74
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1974 SC1380 (24)
E 1980 SC 962 (76)
RF 1981 SC 960 (14,15)
RF 1983 SC1090 (5)
D 1986 SC1780 (11)
ACT:
Constitution of India, Arts. 226 and 227-Writ Petitions-
Jurisdiction of High Court, after exercising revisionary
jurisdiction-Code of Civil Procedure, s. 115-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Against the order of an appellate court, the respondent
filed a revision under s. 115 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The Single Judge of the High Court dismissed the
revision. Thereupon the respondent moved a petition under
Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution challenging the same
order of the appellate court. The High Court held that in
spite of the dismissal of the revision petition, it could
interfere under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution on a
proper case being made out; and after going into the merits
of the case, it granted relief to the respondent. In appeal
to this Court, the appellant contended that the High Court
could ,not interfere under arts. 226 and 227.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD : Even on the assumption that the order of the
appellate court .had not merged in the order of the Single
Judge who had disposed of the revision petition a writ
petition ought not to have been entertained by the High
Court when the respondent had already chosen the remedy
under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure. If there are
two modes of invoking the jurisdiction of the High Court and
one of those modes has been -chosen and exhausted it would
not be a proper and sound exercise of discretion to grant
relief in the other set of proceedings in respect of the
same order of the subordinate court. The refusal to grant
relief in such circumstances would be in consonance with the
anxiety of the court to prevent abuse of process as also to
respect and accord finality to its -own ’decisions. [327 H]
When the aid of the High Court is invoked on the revisional
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
side it is done because it is a superior court and it can
interfere for the purpose of rectifying the error of the
court below. Section 115 of the Code of Civil ’Procedure
circumscribes the limits of that jurisdiction but the
jurisdiction which is being exercised is a part of the
general appellate jurisdiction of the High Court as a
superior court. It is only one of the modes of exercising
power conferred by the Statute; basically and fundamentally
it is the appellate jurisdiction of the High Court which is
being invoked and exercised in a wider and larger sense.
The principle of merger of orders of inferior courts in
those superior courts would not be affected or would not
become inapplicable by making a distinction between a
petition for revision and an appeal. [327 B]
Madan Lal Rungta v. Secy. to the Government of Orissa,
[1962] 3 Supp. S.C.R. 906, Nagendra Nath Dey v. Suresh
Chandra Dey. 59 I.A. 283, 287; Raja of Ramnad v. Kamid
Rowthen & Ors. 53 I.A. 74, P. P. P. Chidambara Nadar v.
C.P.A. Rama Nadar & Ors. A.I.R. 1937 Mad. 385, Secretary of
State for India in Council v. British India Steam Navigation
Co. 13 C.L.J. 90, Attorney-General v. Sillem, (1864) 10
H.L.C. 704, Chappan v. Moidin, (1898) I.L.R. Mad. 68, 80, U.
J. S. Chopra v. State
323
of Bombay, A.I.R. 1955 S.C. 633 and Chandi Prasad Chokhani
v. state of Bihar, [1962] 2 S.C.R. 276, referred to.
K. B. Sipahimalani v. Fidahussein Yallibhoy, 58 B.L.R.
344, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 870 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
June 14, 1965 of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil
Application No. 371 of 1965.
S. S. Shukla, for the appellant.
M. C. Bhandare, K. Rajendra Chaudhuri and K. R. Chaudhuri,
for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal by special leave from a judg-
ment of the division bench of the Bombay High Court. The
only question for decision is whether the High Court could
interfere under Arts. 226 & 227 of the Constitution with the
order of the appellate court in proceedings under the Bombay
Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947,
hereinafter called the "Act", when a petition for revision
under S. 115, Civil procedure Code, against the same order
had been previously dismissed by a single Judge of that
court.
The appellant is the owner of a house in Poona. The res-
pondent, who was a teacher, was the tenant of a block of
four rooms on the first floor of the house. In 1958 he was
transferred to another town Wai where he was allotted
suitable residential accommodation. His son, however,
stayed on in Poona as he was studying there. The appellant
filed a suit in the court of Judge, Small Causes, under the
provisions of the Act for possession of the suit premises,
inter alia, on the ground that the respondent had acquired
suitable -accommodation elsewhere. The position taken up by
the respondent was that his son was required to stay on in
Poona and for that reason it could not said that the had
acquired suitable residence at Wai. Moreover he had gone
away from Poona only temporarily and on his return the pre-
mises would be required for his own use. The trial court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
held that only a part of the premises which were required by
the son should be vacated. It granted a decree for
possession of two out of four rooms and directed
proportionate reduction of the rent. Both sides filed
appeals in the court of the District Judge. The Extra
Assistant Judge who disposed them of was of the view that
the court was not empowered to bifurcate the premises. It
was either suitable for the whole family or it was not
suitable. But
324
he affirmed the decree on the ground that the order of the
trial court was an equitable one. The respondent preferred
a petition for revision under s. 1 15 of the Code of Civil
Procedure before the High Court. A learned Single Judge who
heard the petition dismissed it as he was not satisfied that
the appellate court had acted in exercise of its
jurisdiction illegally or with material irregularity. The
respondent moved a petition under Arts. 226 and 227 of the
Constitution challenging the same order of the appellate
court. Following a decision of a full bench in K. B. Sipahi
malani v. Fidahussein Vallibhoy(1) the division bench which
heard the writ petition held that in -spite of the dismissal
of the petition by the learned Single Judge there could be
interference under Arts. 226 and 227 of the Constitution on
a proper cast being made out. After going into the merits
the bench expressed the view that the respondent had not
acquired an alternative suit able residence. The courts
below were therefore,. wrong, in coming to the contrary
conclusion. As s. 13 (I) (1) of the Act had been
misconstrued and the error was apparent on the record the
orders of the courts below were set aside.
Now as is) well known s. II 5 of the Civil Procedure Code
empowers the High Court to call for the record of any cast
which has been decided by any court subordinate to it and in
which no appeal lies to it. It can interfere if the
subordinate court appears to have exercised the jurisdiction
not vested in it by law or to have failed to exercise the
jurisdiction so vested on to have acted in the exercise of
its jurisdiction legally or with material illegality. The
limits of the jurisdiction of the High Court under this
section are well defined by a long course of judicial
decisions. If the revisional jurisdiction is invoked and
both parties are heard and an order is made the question is
whether the orders of the subordinate court has become
merged in the order of the High Court. If it has got merged
and the order is only of the High Court, the order of the
subordinate court cannot be challenged or attacked by
another set of proceedings in the High Court, namely, by
means of a petition under Art. 226 or 227 of the
Constitution. It is only if by dismissal of the revision
petition the order of the subordinate court has not become
merged in that of the High Court that it may be open to
party to invoke the extraordinary writ jurisdiction of that
court. There again the question will arise whether it would
be right and proper for the High Court to interfere with an
order of a subordinate court in a writ petition when a
petition for revision under S. 115, C.P.C., against the same
order has been dismissed. Such a consideration will also
enter into the exercise of discretion in a petition under
Aft. 226 or 227,
(1) 58 B.L.R. 344,
325
The Bombay High Court in K. B. Sipahimalani’s (1) case made
a distinction between an appellate jurisdiction and a
revisional jurisdiction. A right of appeal is a vested
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
right and an appeal is a continuation or a rehearing of the
suit. A revision, however, is not a continuation or a
rehearing of the suit; nor is it obligatory upon the
revisional court to interfere with the order even though the
order may be improper or illegal. If the revisional court
interferes the order of the lower court does not merge in
the order passed by a revisional court but the order of the
revisional court simply sets aside or modifies the order of
the lower court. it was this argument which mainly prevailed
before the Bombay bench. It would appear that this Court
has taken a view which runs counter to that of the Bombay
High Court. Although the case of Madan Lal Rungta v. Secy.
to the Government of Orissa(2) was not one which had been
decided under s. 115 of the Civil Procedure Code but the
ratio of that decision is apposite. The State Government of
Orissa a rejected the application of the appellant there who
had applied for grant of a mineral lease. He made in
application for review to the Central Government under Rule
57 of the Mineral Concession Rules which was rejected. He
moved the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution
which was also dismissed. The appellant came up by special
leave to this Court. His main contention was that the
Central Government had merely dismissed the review petition
and the effective order rejecting his application for the
mining lease was that of the State Government. The High
Court, thus, had jurisdiction to grant a writ under Art.
226. This contention was negatived and it was held that the
High Court was right in taking the view that it had no
jurisdiction to issue a writ as the final order was that of
the Central Government which was not within its territorial
jurisdiction. The ratio of this decision is that it was the
order of the Central Government dismissing the review peti-
tion which was the final order into which the order of the
State Government had merged.
It would appear that their lordships of the Privy Council
regarded the revisional jurisdiction to be a part and parcel
of the appellate jurisdiction of the High Court. This is
what was said in Nath Dey v. Suresh Chandra Dey(3).
"There is no definition of appeal in the Code
of Civil Procedure, but their Lordship have no
doubt that any application by a party to an
Appellate Court, asking it to set aside or
revise a decision of a subordinate Court, is
an appeal within the ordinary acceptation of
the term. . . . "
(1) 58 B.L.R. 344. (2) [1962] 3 Supp.
S.C.R. 906.
(3) 591.A.283, 287.
L13Sup.CI/69-7
326
Similarly in Raja of Ramnad v. Kamid Rowthen & Ors. (1) a
civil revision petition was considered to be an appropriate
form of appeal from the judgment in a suit of small causes
nature. A full bench of the Madras High Court in P. P. P.
Chidambara Nadar v. C. P. A. Rama Nadar & Ors. (2) had to
decide whether with reference to Art. 182(2) of the
Limitation Act, 1908 the term "appeal" was used in a
restrictive sense so as to exclude revision petitions and
the expression "appellate court" was to be confined to a
court exercising appellate, as opposed to, revisional
powers. After an exhaustive examination of the case law in-
cluding the decisions of the Privy Council mentioned above
the full bench expressed the view that Art. 182(2) applied
to civil revisions as well and not only to appeals in the
narrow sense of that term as used in the Civil Procedure
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
Code. In Secretary of State for India in Council v. British
India Steam Navigation Company(3) and order passed by the
High Court in exercise of its revisional jurisdiction under
S. 115, Code of Civil Procedure, was held to be an order
made or passed in appeal within the meaning, of S. 39 of the
Letters Patent, Mookerji, J., who delivered the judgment of
the division bench referred to the observations of Lord
Westbury in Attorney General v. Sillem(4) and of Subramania
Ayyar, J. in Chappan v. Moidin(5) on the true nature of the
right of appeal. Such a right was one of entering a
superior Court and invoking its aid and interposition to
redress the error of the court below. Two things which were
required to constitute appellate jurisdiction were the
existence of the relation of superior and inferior Court and
the power on the part of the former to review decisions of
the latter. In the well known work of Story on Constitution
(of United States) vol. 2, Art. 1761, it is stated that the
essential criterion of appellate jurisdiction is that it
revises and corrects the proceedings in a cause already
instituted and does not create that cause. The appellate
jurisdiction may be exercised in a variety of forms and,
indeed, in any form in which the legislature may choose to
prescribe. According to Art. 1762 the most usual modes of
exercising appellate jurisdiction, at least those which are
most known in the United States, are by a writ of error, or
by an appeal, or, by some process of removal of a suit from
an inferior tribunal. An appeal is a process of civil law
origin and removes a cause, entirely subjecting the fact as
well as the law, to a review and a retrial’. A writ of
error is a process of common law origin, and it removes
nothing for re-examination but the law. The former mode is
(1)53 I.A. 74. (2) A.I.R. 1937 Mad. 385. (3) 13 C.L.J. 90.
(4) [1864] 10 H.L.C. 704.
327
usually adopted in cases of equity and admiralty
jurisdiction; the latter, in suits at common law tried by a
jury.
Now when the aid of the High Court is invoked on the revi-
sional side it is done because it is a superior court and it
can interfere for the purpose of rectifying the error of the
court below. Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure
circumscribes the limits of that jurisdiction but the
jurisdiction which is being exercised is a part of the
general appellate jurisdiction of the High Court as a
superior court. It is only one of the modes of exercising
power conferred by the Statute; basically and fundamentally
it is the appellate jurisdiction of the High Court which is
being invoked and exercised in a wider and larger sense. We
do not, therefore, consider that the principle of merger of
orders of inferior Courts in those of superior Courts would
be affected or would become inapplicable by making a
distinction between a petition for revision and an appeal.
It may be useful to refer to certain other decisions which
by analogy can be of some assistance in deciding the point
before us. In U. J. S. Chopra v. State of Bombay(1) the
principal of merger was considered with reference to s. 439
of the Criminal Procedure Code which confers revisional
jurisdiction on the High Court. In the majority judgment it
was held, inter alia, that a judgment pronounced by the High
Court in the exercise of its appellate or revisional
jurisdiction after issue of a notice and a full hearing, in
the presence of both the parties would replace the judgment
of the lower court thus constituting the judgment of the
High Court-the only final judgment to be executed in
accordance with law by the court below. In Chandi Prasad
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
Chokhani v. The State of Bihar, (2) it was said that save in
exceptional and special circumstances this Court would not
exercise its power under Art. 136 in such a way As to bypass
the High Court and ignore the latter’& decision which had
become final and binding by entertaining an appeal directly
from orders of a Tribunal. Such exercise of’ power would be
particularly inadvisable in a case where the result might
lead to a conflict of decisions of two courts of competent
_jurisdiction. In our opinion the course which was followed
by the High Court, in the present case, is certainly one
which leads to a conflict of ’decisions of the same court.
Even on the assumption that the order of the appellate court
had not merged in the order of the single Judge who had dis-
posed of the revision petition we are of the view that a
writ petition ought not to have been entertained by the High
Court when the respondent bad already chosen the remedy
under s. 115 of
(1) A.I.R. 1955 S.C. 633.
(2) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 276.
328
the Code of Civil Procedure. If there are two modes of
invoking the jurisdiction of the High Court and one of those
modes has been chosen and exhausted it would not be a proper
and sound exercise of discretion to grant relief in the
other set of proceedings in respect of the same order of the
subordinate court. The refusal to gray relief in such
circumstances would be in consonance with the anxiety of the
court to prevent abuse of process as also to respect and
accord finality to its own decisions.
In the result the appeal is allowed and the judgment of the
division bench of the High Court is hereby set aside. The
appellant shall be entitled to costs in this Court.
Y.P.
Appeal allowed.
329