Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 446 of 2007
PETITIONER:
PREM LALA NAHATA & ANR
RESPONDENT:
CHANDI PRASAD SIKARIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/2007
BENCH:
S.B. SINHA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP(C) No.23272 of 2005)
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
Leave granted.
1. The appellants are the plaintiffs in C.S. No. 29 of
2003 filed on the original side of the Calcutta High Court.
They are mother and daughter. They together sued the
respondent, the defendant, for recovery of sums allegedly
due to them from him. Appellant No.1 sought recovery of
a sum of Rs. 10,93,863/- with interest thereon and
appellant No. 2 sought recovery of a sum of
Rs.10,90,849/- with interest. Their claims were based on
transactions they allegedly had with the respondent
herein, through Mahendra Kumar Nahata, the husband of
appellant No.1 and father of appellant No.2. In essence,
the claim of appellant No. 1 was that a sum of Rs. 5 lakhs
had been lent by her to the respondent and the same had
not been repaid and the same was liable to be repaid with
interest and damages. The case of appellant No. 2 was
also that she had lent a sum of Rs. 5 lakhs to the
respondent and the same along with interest and damages
was due to her. It was their case that the transactions
had been entered into through Mahendra Kumar Nahata,
and that through Nahata, they have had prior dealings
with the respondent. They had averred thus in paragraph
4 of the plaint:
"The said Nahata in his usual course of
business was known to the Defendant for
many years and sometime in April, 2000
while acting on behalf of the Plaintiffs, the
said Nahata at the request of Defendant
had duly arranged for two loans of
Rs.5,00,000/- to be lent and advanced by
each of the Plaintiffs to the Defendant and
this Suit has been brought to recover the
said loans with interest and special
damages arising from the Defendant’s
failure to repay the said loans within the
stipulated date therefor as is stated more-
fully hereinafter."
The respondent not having repaid the money and having
repudiated their claim by filing suits against them, the
suit for recovery of the amounts was being filed.
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2. The respondent had earlier filed two suits for
recovery of amounts allegedly due from the appellants.
Money Suit No. 585 of 2001 was instituted by the
respondent against appellant No. 2 herein claiming
recovery of certain amounts after setting off the amount of
Rs. 5 lakhs taken from appellant No. 2. He had accepted
that Rs. 5 lakhs had been paid by the appellant but
pleaded that it was not a loan, but it was as part of a
business transaction set out in that plaint. The
respondent had also filed Money Suit No. 69 of 2002
against appellant No.1 herein for recovery of certain
amounts on the same basis and after setting off the sum
of Rs.5 lakhs alleged to have been paid by her. The suits
were filed in the City Civil Court at Calcutta. The said
suits were pending when the appellants together
instituted their suit C.S. No. 29 of 2003. Their suit, as
noticed, was on the basis that the sums of Rs. 5,00,000/-
each paid by them to the respondent were by way of loans.
3. The appellants moved A.L.P. No. 10 of 2003 on
the original side of the Calcutta High Court invoking
clause 13 of the Letters Patent read with Section 24 of the
Code of Civil Procedure (for short "the Code") seeking
withdrawal of Money Suit No. 585 of 2001 and Money Suit
No. 69 of 2002 for being tried with C.S. No. 29 of 2003 on
the plea that common questions of fact and law arise in
the suits and it would be in the interests of justice to try
and dispose of the three suits together. Though the
respondent resisted the application, the court took the
view that it would be appropriate in the interests of justice
to transfer the two suits pending in the City Civil Court at
Calcutta to the original side of the High Court for being
tried and disposed of along with C.S. No. 29 of 2003 filed
by the appellants. The said order for withdrawal and
joint trial became final.
4. While matters stood thus, the respondent
herein, the defendant in C.S. No. 29 of 2003, made an
application G.A. No. 4458 of 2003 praying that the plaint
in C.S. No. 29 of 2003 be rejected under Order VII Rule 11
of the Code on the ground that the cause of action of each
of the appellants, the plaintiffs in that suit, did not
emanate from any common source and there was no
interdependence or nexus between the causes of action
put forward by the respective plaintiffs in the suit and that
there was no common foundation for the right to relief
claimed by them. It was pleaded that the appellants, the
plaintiffs could not have joined as plaintiffs in one suit in
terms of Order I Rule 1 of the Code and could not have
united their independent causes of action in the same suit
in terms of Order II Rule 3 of the Code. It was submitted
that there was not only misjoinder of parties but there was
also misjoinder of causes of action. It was on this basis
that the prayer for rejection of the plaint under Order VII
Rule 11(d) of the Code was made. The appellants, the
plaintiffs, resisted the application. They contended that
the claim of the plaintiffs emanated from the dealings at
the instance of Nahata, husband of plaintiff No.1 and
father of plaintiff No.2 with the defendant and that there
was no defect of misjoinder of causes of action in the suit.
They submitted that the plaint was not liable to be
rejected under Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code.
5. The trial judge on the original side, considered
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the question whether the plaint filed by the appellants was
liable to be rejected under Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code
on the basis that the suit appeared from the statements in
the plaint to be barred by any law. The learned Judge
took the view that there was no law barring a suit in
which there was misjoinder of parties or a misjoinder of
causes of action, though, of course, for the purposes of
convenience, a court would avoid the misjoinder of causes
of action or misjoinder of parties. But on the basis of
such a defect, the plaint could not be rejected by invoking
Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code since it could not be held
that a suit which suffers from the defect either of
misjoinder of parties or misjoinder of causes of action or
both, is barred by any law. Thus, the application filed by
the respondent herein, the defendant in C.S. No. 29 of
2003, was dismissed.
6. The respondent purported to file an appeal
challenging that order under clause 15 of the Letters
Patent. The Division Bench held that the suit was bad for
misjoinder of causes of action and hence the trial court
was not justified in not invoking Order VII Rule 11(d) of
the Code and in not rejecting the plaint. The Division
Bench, did not reject the plaint, but, gave the appellants
an opportunity to elect to proceed with the present suit at
the instance of one of them and thus confine the plaint
claim to one of them and the transaction relied on by that
plaintiff. Aggrieved by this decision of the Division Bench
this appeal has been filed by the plaintiffs.
7. Though arguments were addressed on the
maintainability of the appeal filed by the respondent
before the Division Bench under clause 15 of the Letters
Patent, (in which one of us, Balasubramanyan, J. finds
considerable force) counsel for the appellant fairly brought
to our notice the decision in Liverpool & London S.P. & I
Association Ltd. Vs. M.E. Sea Success I and another
(2004 (9) SCC 512) to which one of us (Sinha J.) was a
party, which has taken the view that an appeal under
clause 15 of the Letters Patent lies even in a case where
the trial judge refuses to accede to the prayer of a
defendant to reject a plaint under Order VII Rule 11 of the
Code. Of course, that was a case where the rejection was
sought under Order VII Rule 11 (a) of the Code on the
basis that the plaint did not disclose a cause of action.
For the purpose of this case, we accept the position
enunciated therein. We also do not think it necessary to
consider whether there is any distinction between prayers
for rejection sought under clause (a) of Rule 11 of Order
VII of the Code and clause (d) of Rule 11 of Order VII of the
Code and we proceed on the basis that the Letters Patent
Appeal under clause 15 filed by the respondent herein was
maintainable.
8. But it is a different question whether a suit
which may be bad for misjoinder of parties or misjoinder
of causes of action, is a suit barred by law in terms of
Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. The Code of Civil
Procedure as its preamble indicates, is an Act to
consolidate and amend the laws relating to the procedure
of the Courts of Civil Judicature. No doubt it also deals
with certain substantive rights. But as the preamble
vouchsafes, the object essentially is to consolidate the law
relating to Civil Procedure. The very object of
consolidation is to collect the law bearing upon the
particular subject and in bringing it upto date. A
consolidating Act is to be construed by examining the
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language of such a statute and by giving it its natural
meaning uninfluenced by considerations derived from the
previous state of the law.
9. Based on this understanding, we can consider
the respective positions of Order I and Order II in the
scheme of things. Order I deals with parties to a suit and
provides who may be joined as plaintiffs and who may be
joined as defendants. It also deals with the power of the
Court to direct the plaintiffs either to elect with reference
to a particular plaintiff or a particular defendant or to
order separate trials in respect of the parties misjoined as
plaintiffs or defendants. It also gives power to the Court to
pronounce judgment for or against one of the parties from
among the parties who have joined together or who are
sued together. The order also specifies that a suit shall
not be defeated by reason of the misjoinder or non-joinder
of parties, so along as in the case of non-joinder, the non-
joinder is not of a necessary party. The Code also gives
power to the Court to substitute the correct person as a
plaintiff or add parties or strike out parties as plaintiffs or
defendants, at any stage, if it is found necessary.
10. Order II deals with frame of suits. It provides
that every suit shall be framed as far as practicable so as
to afford ground for final decision upon the subjects in
dispute and to prevent further litigation concerning them.
It is also insisted that every suit shall include the whole of
the claim that a plaintiff is entitled to make in respect of
its subject matter. There is a further provision that the
plaintiff may unite in the same suit several causes of
action against the same defendant and plaintiffs having
causes of action in which they are jointly interested
against the same defendant, may unite such causes of
action in the same suit. It provides that objection on the
ground of misjoinder of causes of action should be taken
at the earliest opportunity. It also enables the Court,
where it appears to the Court that the joinder of causes of
action may embarrass or delay the trial or otherwise cause
inconvenience, to order separate trials or to make such
other order as may be expedient in the interests of justice.
11. Thus, in a case where a plaint suffers from the
defect of misjoinder of parties or misjoinder of causes of
action either in terms of Order I Rule 1 and Order I Rule 3
on the one hand, or Order II Rule 3 on the other, the Code
itself indicates that the perceived defect does not make the
suit one barred by law or liable to rejection. This is clear
from Rules 3A, 4 and 5 of Order I of the Code, and this is
emphasised by Rule 9 of Order I of the Code which
provides that no suit shall be defeated by reason of non-
joinder or misjoinder of parties and the court may in
either case deal with the matter in controversy so far as it
regards the rights and interests of the parties actually
before it. This is further emphasised by Rule 10 of Order
I which enables the court in appropriate circumstances to
substitute or add any person as a plaintiff in a suit.
Order II deals with the framing of a suit and Rule 3
provides that save as otherwise provided, a plaintiff may
unite in the same suit several causes of actions against
the same defendant and any plaintiffs having causes of
actions in which they are jointly interested against the
same defendant may unite such causes of action in the
same suit. Rule 6 enables the Court to order separate
trials even in a case of misjoinder of causes of action in a
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plaint filed.
12. After the amendment of Order XVI Rule 1 in
England, it was held by the Court of Appeal in England in
Thomas Vs. Moore [(1918) 1 K.B. 555] thus:
"Whatever the law may have been at the
time when (1894) A C 494 was decided,
joinder of parties and joinder of causes of
action are discretionary in this sense, that
if they are joined there is no absolute right
to have them struck out, but it is
discretionary in the Court to do so if it
thinks right."
The Privy Council in Mahant Ramdhan Puri Vs.
Chaudhary Lachmi Narain [A.I.R. 1937 Privy Council 42]
pointed out:
"It is desirable to point out that under the
rules as they now stand, the mere fact of
misjoinder is not by itself sufficient to
entitle the defendant to have the
proceedings set aside or action dismissed."
Of course, their Lordships were speaking in the context of
Section 99 of the Code. Their Lordships referred to the
above quoted observation of the Court of Appeal in
Thomas Vs. Moore (supra) in that decision. It is therefore
clear that a suit that may be bad for misjoinder of causes
of action is not one that could be got struck out or rejected
by a defendant as a matter of right and the discretion
vests with the court either to proceed with the suit or to
direct the plaintiff to take steps to rectify the defect. In
fact, the Privy Council in that case noticed that the suit
was bad for misjoinder of causes of action. It further
noticed that the trial judge had in spite of the
complications created thereby, tried and disposed of the
suit satisfactorily. Therefore, there was no occasion for
the court to dismiss the suit on the ground of misjoinder
of causes of action at the appellate stage.
13. It is well understood that procedure is the
handmaid of justice and not its mistress. The Scheme of
Order I and Order II clearly shows that the prescriptions
therein are in the realm of procedure and not in the realm
of substantive law or rights. That the Code considers
objections regarding the frame of suit or joinder of parties
only as procedural, is further clear from Section 99 of the
Code which specifically provides that no decree shall be
reversed in appeal on account of any misjoinder of parties
or causes of action or non-joinder of parties unless a
Court finds that the non-joinder is of a necessary party.
This is on the same principle as of Section 21 of the Code
which shows that even an objection to territorial
jurisdiction of the Court in which the suit is instituted,
could not be raised successfully for the first time in an
appeal against the decree unless the appellant is also able
to show consequent failure of justice. The Suits Valuation
Act similarly indicates that absence of pecuniary
jurisdiction in the Court that tried the cause without
objection also stands on the same footing. The
amendment to Section 24 of the Code in the year 1976
confers power on the Court even to transfer a suit filed in
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a Court having no jurisdiction, to a Court having
jurisdiction to try it. In the context of these provisions
with particular reference to the Rules in Order I and Order
II of the Code, it is clear that an objection of misjoinder of
plaintiffs or misjoinder of causes of action, is a procedural
objection and it is not a bar to the entertaining of the suit
or the trial and final disposal of the suit. The Court has
the liberty even to treat the plaint in such a case as
relating to two suits and try and dispose them off on that
basis.
14. Order VII Rule 11 (d) speaks of the suit being
"barred by any law". According to the Black’s Law
Dictionary, bar means, a plea arresting a law suit or legal
claim. It means as a verb, to prevent by legal objection.
According to Ramanatha Aiyar’s Law Lexicon, ’bar’ is that
which obstructs entry or egress; to exclude from
consideration. It is therefore necessary to see whether a
suit bad for misjoinder of parties or of causes of action is
excluded from consideration or is barred entry for
adjudication. As pointed out already, on the scheme of
the Code, there is no such prohibition or a prevention at
the entry of a suit defective for misjoinder of parties or of
causes of action. The court is still competent to try and
decide the suit, though the court may also be competent
to tell the plaintiffs either to elect to proceed at the
instance of one of the plaintiffs or to proceed with one of
the causes of action. On the scheme of the Code of Civil
Procedure, it cannot therefore be held that a suit barred
for misjoinder of parties or of causes of action is barred by
a law, here the Code. This may be contrasted with the
failure to comply with Section 80 of the Code. In a case
not covered by sub-section (2) of Section 80, it is provided
in sub-section (1) of Section 80 that "no suit shall be
instituted". This is therefore a bar to the institution of the
suit and that is why courts have taken the view that in a
case where notice under Section 80 of the Code is
mandatory, if the averments in the plaint indicate the
absence of a notice, the plaint is liable to be rejected. For,
in that case, the entertaining of the suit would be barred
by Section 80 of the Code. The same would be the
position when a suit hit by Section 86 of the Code is filed
without pleading the obtaining of consent of the Central
Government if the suit is not for rent from a tenant. Not
only are there no words of such import in Order I or Order
II but on the other hand, Rule 9 of Order I, Rules 1 and 3
of Order I, and Rules 3 and 6 of Order II clearly suggest
that it is open to the court to proceed with the suit
notwithstanding the defect of misjoinder of parties or
misjoinder of causes of action and if the suit results in a
decision, the same could not be set aside in appeal, merely
on that ground, in view of Section 99 of the Code, unless
the conditions of Section 99 are satisfied. Therefore, by no
stretch of imagination, can a suit bad for misjoinder of
parties or misjoinder of causes of action be held to be
barred by any law within the meaning of Order VII Rule
11(d) of the Code.
15. Thus, when one considers Order VII Rule 11 of
the Code with particular reference to Clause (d), it is
difficult to say that a suit which is bad for misjoinder of
parties or misjoinder of causes of action, is a suit barred
by any law. A procedural objection to the impleading of
parties or to the joinder of causes of action or the frame of
the suit, could be successfully urged only as a procedural
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objection which may enable the Court either to permit the
continuance of the suit as it is or to direct the plaintiff or
plaintiffs to elect to proceed with a part of the suit or even
to try the causes of action joined in the suit as separate
suits.
16. It cannot be disputed that the court has power
to consolidate suits in appropriate cases. Consolidation is
a process by which two or more causes or matters are by
order of the Court combined or united and treated as one
cause or matter. The main purpose of consolidation is
therefore to save costs, time and effort and to make the
conduct of several actions more convenient by treating
them as one action. The jurisdiction to consolidate arises
where there are two or more matters or causes pending in
the court and it appears to the court that some common
question of law or fact arises in both or all the suits or
that the rights to relief claimed in the suits are in respect
of or arise out of the same transaction or series of
transactions; or that for some other reason it is desirable
to make an order consolidating the suits. (See Halsbury’s
Laws of England, Volume 37, paragraph 69). If there is
power in the court to consolidate different suits on the
basis that it should be desirable to make an order
consolidating them or on the basis that some common
questions of law or fact arise for decision in them, it
cannot certainly be postulated that the trying of a suit
defective for misjoinder of parties or causes of action is
something that is barred by law. The power to consolidate
recognised in the court obviously gives rise to the position
that mere misjoinder of parties or causes of action is not
something that creates an obstruction even at the
threshold for the entertaining of the suit.
17. It is recognised that the court has wide
discretionary power to control the conduct of proceedings
where there has been a joinder of causes of action or of
parties which may embarrass or delay the trial or is
otherwise inconvenient. In that situation, the court may
exercise the power either by ordering separate trials of the
claims in respect of two or more causes of action included
in the same action or by confining the action to some of
the causes of action and excluding the others or by
ordering the plaintiff or plaintiffs to elect which cause of
action is to be proceeded with or which plaintiff should
proceed and which should not or by making such other
order as may be expedient. (See Halsbury’s Laws of
England, Vol. 37, paragraph 73). Surely, when the
matter rests with the discretion of the court, it could not
be postulated that a suit suffering from such a defect is
something that is barred by law. After all, it is the
convenience of the trial that is relevant and as the Privy
Council has observed in the decision noted earlier, the
defendant may not even have an absolute right to contend
that such a suit should not be proceeded with.
18. The Division Bench has mainly relied on an
unreported decision of a learned Single Judge of the same
High Court in Margo Trading & Six others vs. Om Credit
Private Limited, a copy of which was provided for our
perusal. On going through that decision it is seen that the
learned Judge has not adverted to or considered Rule 9 of
Order I or its effect on the aspect of misjoinder of parties
and has also not given due importance to the effect of the
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other provisions in that Order. Nor has the learned judge
given due importance to the effect of the rules in Order II
and in particular to Rule 6. We find that there have been
very many decisions of the same High Court on the aspect
of misjoinder of parties or of causes of action. But it is
difficult to say that any of those decisions has taken the
view that a plaint was liable to be rejected under Order VII
Rule 11(d) of the Code on such a defect being pointed out.
On the other hand, in Harendra Nath Vs. Purna Chandra
[A.I.R. 1928 Calcutta 199] the Division Bench quoted from
Payne Vs. British Time, Recorder Co. LTd. [(1921) 2
K.B. 1], the following passage:
"Broadly speaking, where claims by or
against different parties involve or may
involve a common question of law or fact
bearing sufficient importance in proportion
to the rest of the action to render it
desirable that the whole of the matters
should be disposed of at the same time the
Court will allow the joinder of plaintiffs or
defendants, subject to its discretion as to
how the action should be tried."
and continued:
"This is a good working rule for practical
purposes and, applying it to the present
case, it seems to us clear that the action as
framed is justified by O.1, Rr.1 and 3, Civil
P.C. Looking at the matter, however, from
the point of view of O.1, R.2, we are of
opinion that the trial of the suit as laid is
likely to be somewhat embarrassing,
especially as some of the questions that will
arise so far as property A is concerned, will
have no bearing upon the claim as regards
properties B, C, D and E and also because
the question of costs, in so far as the deity
is concerned will arise, which, if possible,
must be kept separate from these which the
plaintiff will incur or be entitled to recover
in his personal capacity.
We, accordingly, set aside the orders
passed by both the Courts below and direct
that the plaint be treated as comprising two
suits: one at the instance of the plaintiff as
shebait of the deity Nandadulal Thakur in
respect of property A and the other at the
instance of the plaintiff in his personal
capacity in respect of the properties B, C,
D, and E, and the two suits be separately
tried."
The legal position in an identical situation as ours has
been considered by a learned judge of that Court in
Assembly of God Church Vs. Ivan Kapper & Anr. [2004
(4) Calcutta High Court Notes 360]. The learned judge has
held that a defect of misjoinder of parties and causes of
action is a defect that can be waived and it is not such a
one as to lead to the rejection of the plaint under Order VII
Rule 11(d) of the Code. As we see it, the said decision
reflects the correct legal position. The decision in Margo
Trading (supra) does not lay down the correct law. The
decision of this Court in Mayar (H.K.) Ltd. & Ors. Vs.
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Owners & Parties, Vessel M.V. Fortune Express & Ors.
[(2006) 3 S.C.C. 100] does not touch on this aspect and is
concerned with a case of suppression of material facts in a
plaint.
19. In the case on hand, we have also to reckon with
the fact that the suits filed by the respondent against the
respective appellants based on the transactions combined
together by the appellants, have already been withdrawn
for a joint trial with the present suit, C.S. No. 29 of 2003.
In those two suits, the nature of the transaction the
respective appellants had with the respondent have to be
decided after trial. In the present suit, the appellants are
claiming the payments which also form the basis of the
claim of the respondent against the respective appellants
in his two suits. In the present suit, C.S. No. 29 of 2003,
all that the appellants have done is to combine their
respective claims which are in the nature of counter
claims or cross suits to the suits filed by the respondent.
The ultimate question for decision in all the suits is the
nature of the transactions that was entered into by the
respondent with each of the appellants and the evidence
that has to be led, in both the suits, is regarding the
nature of the respective transactions entered into by the
respondent with each of the appellants. To a great extent,
the evidence would be common and there will be no
embarrassment if the causes of action put forward by the
appellants in the present suit are tried together especially
in the context of the two suits filed by the respondent
against them and withdrawn for a joint trial. In the case
on hand, therefore, even assuming that there was a defect
of misjoinder of causes of action in the plaint filed by the
appellants, it is not a case where convenience of trial
warrants separating of the causes of action by trying them
separately. The three suits have to be jointly tried and
since the evidence, according to us, would be common in
any event, the Division Bench was in error in directing the
appellants to elect to proceed with one of the plaintiffs and
one of the claims. We do not think that on the facts and
in the circumstances of the case one of the appellants
should be asked to file a fresh plaint so as to put forward
her claim. Even if such a plaint were to be filed, it will be
a clear case for a joint trial of that plaint with the present
suit and the two suits filed by the respondent. In any
event, therefore, the Division Bench was not correct in
interfering with the decision of the learned single judge.
The effect of withdrawal of the two suits filed by the
respondent against the appellants for a joint trial has not
been properly appreciated by the Division Bench. So, on
the facts of this case, the decision of the Division Bench is
found to be unsustainable and the course adopted by it
unwarranted.
20. We are of the view that on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case and the nature of the pleadings
in the three suits that are now before the Original Side of
the Calcutta High Court, it would be just and proper to try
them together and dispose them of in accordance with law
for which an order has already been made. A joint trial of
the three suits based on the evidence to be taken, in our
view, would be the proper course under the
circumstances.
21. We therefore allow this appeal and reversing the
decision of the Division Bench restore the decision of the
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learned single judge. We request the learned single judge
of the High Court to try and dispose off the three suits
expeditiously in accordance with law.