Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASRUMATI DEBI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KUMAR RUPENDRA DEB RAIKOT AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/02/1953
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 198 1953 SCR 1159
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1965 SC 507 (19)
RF 1970 SC 891 (5)
R 1971 SC2337 (4)
R 1974 SC1719 (11,12,13,14)
RF 1981 SC1786 (73,99,139,152)
R 1988 SC1531 (63)
ACT:
Letters Patent (Calcutta High Court), cls. 13, 15-Order for
transfer of suit under cl. 13-Whether " judgment"-
Appealability -meaning of "judgment".
HEADNOTE:
An order for transfer of a suit, made under clause 13 of the
Letters Patent of the Calcutta High Court is not a
"judgment" within the meaning of clause 15 of the Letters
Patent and no appeal lies therefrom under the Letters
Patent, as it neither affects the merits of the controversy
between the parties in the suit itself, nor terminates or
disposes of the suit on any ground.
[Meaning of the word "judgment" discussed].
Khatizan v. Sonairam (I.L.R. 47 Cal. 1104), Justices of the
Peace for Calcutta v. Oriental Gas Co. (8 Beng. L.R. 433),
Dayabhai v. Murugappa Chettiar (I.L.R. 13 Rang. 457),
Tuljaram v. Alagappa (I.L.R. 35 Mad. 1), Mathura Sundari v.
Haranchandra (I.L.R. 48 Cal. 857), Chandicharan v. Tnanendra
(29 C.L.J. 225), Lea Badin v. Upendra Mohan Boy Chowdhry (39
C.W.N. 156), Kanwar Lal Singh v. Uma Devi (A.I.R. 1945 Nag.
156), Sankar Deo v. Kalyani (A.I.R. 1948 Nag. 85), Shahzadi
Begum v. Alaknath (I.L.R. 57 All. 983), Shaw Hari v. Sonahal
Beli Ram (I.L.R. 23
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Lab. 491), Sonebai v. Ahmedbhai (9 Bom. H.C.R. 398) and
Vaghoji v. Gamaji (I.L.R. 29 Bom. 249) referred to. Krishna
Reddi v. Thanikachala (I.L.R. 47 Mad. 136) disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 92 of 1952.
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Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Order dated
16th May, 1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta
(Harries C. J. and Das J.) in Appeal from Original Order No.
136 of 1949 arising out of Judgment and Order dated the 25th
April,’ 1949, of the said High Court (Banerjee J.) in Extra-
ordinary Suit No. 2 of 1948.
N. C. Chatterjee (B. Sen, with him) for the-
appellant.
S. P. Sinha (A. K. Dutt, with him) for the
respondent.
1953. February 27. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
MUKHERJEA J.This appeal, which has come before us on
special leave, is directed against a judgment of an
Appellate Bench of the Calcutta High Court, dated the 16th
May, 1951, by which the learned Judges dismissed an appeal
taken against an order, made by a single Judge on the
Original Side of that Court,, under clause 13 of the Letters
Patent, on the preliminary ground that the appeal was not
competent in law.
There is no dispute about the material facts of the case
which lie with-in a short compass. On 7th August, 1947, a
suit was filed by the respondent Kumar Rupendra Deb Raikot
in the Court of the Subordinate Judge at Jalpaiguri in West
Bengal,being Title Suit No. 40 of 1947,for recovery of
possession of a large estate known as Baikunthapur Raj
situated in that district, on the allegation that he, being
the eldest son of late Prosanna Deb Raikot, the last holder
of the estate, became entitled to the properties on the I
death of his father under a custom of the family which
excludes all females from inheritance and follows the rule
of Iineal
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primogeniture in matters of succession. Prosanna died in
December, 1946, and Asrumati Debi, the appellant before us,
is admittedly his widow. There was no son born to her and
her only child is a daughter named Prativa. According to
the plaintiff respondent, his mother Renchi Debi, who is a
Lepcha by birth was another lawfully wedded wife of Prosanna
and was married to the latter in what is known as the "
Gandharba form. Prosanna had three sons by this wife, the
plaintiff being the eldest. Asrumati, it is alleged, took
possession of the bulk of the properties comprised in the
estate on the death of her husband, although she had no
legal right to the same and it was to evict her from these
properties that this suit was brought. Besides Asrumati,
the plaintiff also impleaded three other agnatic relations
of the deceased (who are defendants Nos. 2 to 4) and also
his own two younger brothers as defendants to the suit.
Asrumati filed her written statement on January 19, 1948,
and the main defence put forward by her was that there was
no legal marriage between her husband and the plaintiff’s
mother, the latter being only one of the several mistresses
of her husband. She denied that there was any custom in the
family under which females were excluded from inheritance.
The defendants 2 to 4 also filed written statements,
challenging the legitimacy of the plaintiff and his claim to
succession, and put forward their own rights as heirs under
the customary law obtaining in the family.
On 30th April, 1948, the plaintiff presented an application
in the Original Side of the High Court of Calcutta under
clause 13 of the Letters Patent, praying for transfer of the
suit filed in the Jalpaiguri court to the High Court to be
tried in its Extraordinary Original Civil Jurisdiction.
This application was heard by Banerjee J. sitting singly and
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by his order dated the 25th of April, 1949, the learned
Judge allowed the application, substantially on the ground
that having regard to the atmosphere of prejudice that was
created in the locality by supporters of the defendant, who
wielded
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considerable influence in the district, the plaintiff might
have a legitimate apprehension that he would not get fair
trial in the district court.
Against this decision the defendant No. 1 took an appeal to
the Appellate Bench of the High Court of Calcutta and the
learned Judges (Trevor Harries C. J. and Das J.) dismissed
the appeal on the ground that the order appealed again was
not a ’judgment’ within the meaning of clause 15 of the
Letters Patent. It is the propriety of this decision that
has been challenged before us in this appeal.
The High Court of Calcutta in holding the appeal before it
to be incompetent based its decision entirely upon an
earlier pronouncement of a Division Bench of the same court,
where it was held by Mookerjee A.C.J. sitting with Fletcher
J. that an order for transfer of a suit made under clause 13
of the Letters Patent was not a ’judgment’ within the
meaning of clause 15 (1). Reliance was placed by the
learned Judges for this view upon the pronouncement of Sir
Richard Couch C. J. in the well-known and often cited case
of The Justice of the Peace for Calcutta v. The Oriental Gas
Company (2), where the learned Chief Justice said as
follows:-
"We think that ’judgment’ in clause 15 means a decision
which affects the merits of the question between the parties
by determining some right or liability. It may be either
final or preliminary, or interlocutory, the difference
between them being that a final judgment determines the
whole cause or suit, and a preliminary or interlocutory
judgment determines only a part of it, leaving other matters
to be determined."
The identical question, whether an order for transfer
under clause 13 of the Letters Patent is a ’judgment’ for
purposes of appeal, was pointedly raised before the Madras
and the Rangoon High Courts, and while the Madras High Court
(3) answered the question hi the affirmative, a definitely
negative answer was given by
(1) See Khatizan v. Sonairam, I.L.R. 47 Cal. 1104
(2) 8 Ben. L.R. 433.
(3) Vide Krishns Reddi v. Thanikacha, I.L.R 47 Mad. 136.
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the Rangoon High Court (1). The Madras decision purports to
be in accordance with the view enunciated a Full Bench of
that court in Tuljaram v. Alagappa(2) where Sir Arnold White
C. J. sitting with Krishna swami Aiyar and Ayling JJ.
formulated a definition of ’judgment’ in a comprehensive
manner differing fro the wide interpretation put upon the
term in the earlier case of DeSouza v. Coles (3). "The test
seems me," thus observed the learned Chief Justice, "to be
not what is the form of the adjudication, but what is its
effect on the suit or proceeding in which it is made. If
its effect, whatever its form may be, and whatever may be
the nature of the application on which it is made, is to put
an end to the suit or proceeding so far as the court before
which the suit or proceeding is pending is concerned, or if
its effect, if it is not complied with, is to put an end to
the suit or proceeding, I think the adjudication is a
judgment within the meaning of the clause." This decision,
it may be pointed out, has not only been adhered to in
Madras since then without any comment, but the Calcutta High
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Court has in several instances manifested a marked leaning
towards it (4).
On the other hand, a Full Bench(1) of the Rangoon High Court
presided over by Page C.J. took ’a view altogether different
from that of the Calcutta and the Madras High Courts as
regards the meaning of the word I judgment’ in clause 13 of
the Rangoon Letters Patent, which corresponds to clause 15
of the Letters Patent of the Calcutta and Madras High
Courts. It was held by the Full Bench of the Rangoon High
Court that the term ’judgment’ in the Letters Patent means
and is a decree in a suit by which the rights of the
-parties in the suit are determined. In other words,
’judgment’ is not what is defined in section 2 (9) of the
Civil Procedure Code as being the statement given by the
judge of the grounds of a decree
(1) Dayabhai v. Muyugappa Chettiay, 13 Rang. 457 (F.B.).
(2) 35 M 1 (F.B.).
(3) 3 M.H.C.R. 384.
(4) Vide Muathura Sundari v. Haran Chandra I.L.R. 43 Cal.
857; Chandi Charan v. Jnanendra 29 C.L.J. 225 at 229 Lea
Badin v. Upendra Mohan Roy Chaudhury, 39 C.W. N. 155
1164
or order, but is a judoment in its final and definitive
sense embodying a decree. A final ’ judgment is an
adjudication which conclusively determines the rights of the
parties with regard to all matters in issue in the suit,
whereas a preliminary or interlocutory judgment is a decree
by which the right to the relief claimed in the suit is
decided but under which further proceedings are necessary
before a suit in its entirety can be disposed of. Save and
except final and preliminary judgments thus defined, all
other decisions are ’ orders’ and they do not come within
the description of I judgments ’ under the relevant clause
of the Letters Patent. No ’order’ is appealable unless an
appeal is expressly provided against it by the Civil
Procedure code or some other Act of the Legislature. In
this view an ’ order’ for transferring a suit from a
subordinate court to the High Court could not possibly be
regarded as a ’judgment’, and consequently no appeal would
lie against such an order. This definition of ’ judgment
’has been accepted in several cases by the Nagpur High Court
(1), and substantially this seems to be the view of the
Allahabad High Court also (2). A Full Bench of the Lahore
High Court(,’), however, has refused to accept this view and
has preferred to follow the tests enumerated by the Calcutta
and the Madras High Courts. The Bombay High Court accepted
the Calcutta view from the very beginning (4).
In view of this wide divergence of judicial opinion, it
may be necessary for this court at some time or other to
examine carefully the principles upon which the different
views mentioned above purport to be based and attempt to
determine with as much definiteness as possible the true
meaning and scope of the word I judgment’ as it occurs in
clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Calcutta High Court
and in the corresponding clauses of the Letters Patent of
the other High Courts. We are, however, relieved from
embarking
(1) Vide Kunwar Lal Singh v. Uma Devi, A.I.R. 1945 Nag.
156; Shankar Deo v. Kalyani, A.I.R. 1948 Nag. 85.
(2) Vide Shahzadi Begam v. Alakhnath, 57 All. 983 (F.B.)
(3) Shaw Hari v. Sonah Mal Beli Ram, I.L.R. 23 Lah. 491,
(4) Vide Sonebai v. Ahmedbhai, 9 Bom. H.C.R. 398,
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on such enquiry in the present case as we are satisfied that
in none of the views referred to above could an order of the
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character which we have before us, be regarded as a
judgment’ within the meaning clause 15 of the Letters
Patent.
Couch C.J., as said already, defined ’judgment’ be a
decision which determines some right or liability affecting
the merits of the controversy between the parties. It is
true that according to the learned Chief Justice an
adjudication, in order that it might rank as a ’judgment’,
need not decide the case on its merits, but it must be the
final pronouncement of the court making it, the effect of
which is to dispose of or terminate the suit or proceeding.
This will be apparent from the following observations made
by Couch C.J. in the course of his judgment in the case
referred to above :
" It is, however, said that this court has already put a
wider construction upon the word I judgment’ in clause 15 by
entertaining appeals in cases where the plaint has been
rejected as insufficient, or as showing that the, claim is
barred by limitation,, and also in cases where orders have
been made in execution. These however are both within the
above definition of a judgment, and it by no means follows
that, because we hold the order in the present case not to
be appealable, we should be bound to hold the same in the
cases referred to. For example, there is an obvious
difference between an order for the admission of a plaint
and an order for its rejection. The former determines
nothing, but is merely first step towards putting the case
in a shape for determination. The latter determines finally
so far as the court which makes the order is concerned that
the suit, as brought. will not lie. The decision,
therefore, is a judgment in the proper sense of the term ."
It cannot be said, therefore, that according to Sir
Richard Couch every judicial pronouncement on a right or
liability between the parties is to be regarded
151
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as a ’judgment’, for in that case there would be any
number of judgments in the course of a suit or proceeding,
each one of which could be challenged by way of appeal.
The judgment must be the final pronounce ment which puts
an end to the proceeding so far as the court dealing with it
is concerned. It certainly involves the determination of
some right or liability, though it may not be necessary that
there must be a decision on the merits. This view, which is
implied in the observations of Sir Richard Couch C.J. quoted
above, has been really made the basis of the definition of I
judgment’ by Sir Arnold White C.J. in the Full Bench
decision of the Madras High Court to which reference has
been made (1). According to White C.J. to find out whether
an order is a I judgment ’ or not, we have to look to its
effect upon the particular suit or proceeding in which it is
made. If its effect is to terminate the suit or proceeding,
the decision would be a ’judgment’ but not otherwise. As
this definition covers not only decisions in suits or
actions but ’orders’ in other proceedings as well which
start with applications, it may be said that any final order
passed on an application in the course of a suit, e.g.,
granting or refusing a party’s prayer for adjournment of a
suit or for examination of a witness, would also come within
the definition. This seems to be the reason why the learned
Chief Justice qualifies the general proposition laid down
above by stating that "an adjudication on an application,
which is nothing more than a step towards obtaining a final
adjudication in the suit, is not a judgment within the
meaning of the Letters Patent. "
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As stated already, it is not our purpose in the present case
to frame an exhaustive definition of the word ’judgment’ as
used in clause 15 of the Letters Patent. We have indicated
what the essential features of a I judgment’ are according
to both the Calcutta and the Madras High Courts and all that
we need say is that, in our opinion, an order under clause
13 of the Letters Patent does not satisfy the tests of a
’judgment’ as formulated by either of these High Courts.
(1) Vide Tuljaram v. Alagappa, 35 Mad, 1,
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The question that requires determination in an application
under clause 13 of the Letters Patent is, whether a
particular suit should be removed from any court which is
subject to the superintendence of the High Court and tried
and determined by the latter as a court of extraordinary
original jurisdiction. It is true that unless the parties
to the suit are agreed on this point, there must arise a
controversy between them which has to be determined by the
court. In the present case, a single Judge of the High
Court has decided this question in favour of the plaintiff
in the suit; but a decision on any and every point in
dispute between the parties to a suit is not necessarily a ’
judgment’. The order in the present case neither affects
the merits of the controversy between the parties in the
suit itself, nor does it terminate or dispose of the suit on
any ground. An order for transfer cannot be placed in the
same category as an order rejecting a plaint or one
dismissing a suit on a preliminary ground as has been
referred to by Couch C.J. in his observations quoted above.
An order directing a plaint to be rejected or taken off the
file amounts to a final disposal of the suit so far as the
court making the order is concerned. That suit is
completely at an end and it is immaterial that another suit
could be filed in the same or another court after removing
the defects which led to the order of rejection. On the
other hand, an order of transfer under clause 13 of the
Letters Patent is, in the first place, not at all an order
made by the court in which the suit is pending. In the
second place, the order does not put an end to the suit
which remains perfectly alive and that very suit is to be
tried by another court, the proceedings in the latter to be
taken only from the stage at which they were left in the
court in which the suit was originally filed.
Mr. Chatterjee in the course of his arguments placed
considerable reliance upon the pronouncement of the Calcutta
High Court in Hadjee Ismail v. Hadjee Mahomed (1), where it
was held by Court C.J. and
(1) 13 Beng, L.R. 91.
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Pontifex J. that an order refusing to rescind leave to sue
granted under clause 12 of the Letters Patent was a
’judgment’ under clause 15 and could be challenged by way of
appeal. This decision was followed by the Bombay High Court
in Vaghoji v. Camaji(1); and it is argued by Mr. Chatterjee
that there is no difference in principle between an order of
that description and an order transferring a suit under
clause 13 of the Letters Patent. The contention of Mr.
Chatterjee undoubtedly receives support from the judgment of
the Madras High Court in Krishna Reddy v.
Thanikachala(2),where precisely the same line of reasoning
was adopted. In our opinion, this reasoning is not sound
and there is an essential difference between an order
rescinding or refusing to rescind leave to sue granted under
clause 12 of the Letters Patent and one removing a suit from
a subordinate court to the High Court under clause 13 of the
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Letters Patent, and this distinction would be apparent from
the observations of Sir Arnold White C.J. in the Madras Full
Bench case(3) mentioned above, to which sufficient attention
does not appear to have been paid by the learned Judges of
the same court who decided the later case. Referring to the
decision of the Bombay High Court in Vaghoji v. Camaji(1),
White C.J. observed as follows:
"As regards the Bombay authorities I may refer to Vaghoji v.
Camaji(1), where it was held that an appeal lay from an
order dismissing a Judge’s summons to show cause why leave
granted under clause 12 of the Letters Patent should not be
rescinded and the plaint taken off the file. Here the
adjudication asked for, if made, would have disposed of the
suit. So also would an order made under an application to
revoke a submission to arbitration. I think such an order
is appealable."
Leave granted under clause 12 of the Letters Patent
constitutes the very foundation of the suit which is
instituted on its basis. If such leave is rescinded. the
(1) I.L.R. 29 Bom. 249. (2) I.L.R. 47 Mad. 136.
(3) Vide Tuljaram v. Alagappa 35 Mad. 1 (F.B.).
1169
suit automatically comes to an end and there is no doubt
that such an order would be a judgment. If, on the other
hand, an order is made dismissing the Judge’s summons to
show cause why the leave should not be rescinded, the result
is, as Sir Lawrence Jenkins pointed out(1), that a decision
on a vital point adverse to the defendant, which goes to the
very root of the suit, becomes final and decisive, against
him so far as the court making the order is concerned. This
brings the order within the category of a ’judgment’ as laid
down in the Calcutta cases. We need not express any final
opinion as to the propriety or otherwise of this view. It
is enough for our purpose to state that there is a
difference between ail order refusing to rescind leave
granted under clause 12 of the Letters Patent and one under
clause 13 directing the removal of a suit from one court to
another, and there is no good reason to hold that the
principle applicable to one applies to the other also.
The result, therefore, is that, in our opinion, the view
taken by the High Court is right and this appeal should
fail, and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: P. K. Bose.
Agent for the respondent No. 1 : Sukumnar Ghose for P. C.
Dutt.