Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA SOAP FACTORY AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. P. SHANTHARAJ AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/01/1965
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1449 1965 SCR (2) 800
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC1531 (152)
D 1991 SC2176 (30)
ACT:
High Court of Mysore Act, 1962 (Mysore Act 5 of 1962)-Trade
and Merchandise Marks Act, 1958 (Act 43 of 1958), 105-Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908), ss. 24, 151-High
Court--Passing off Action, institution-Entertainability-
Exercise of original jurisdiction-Jurisdiction, Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents instituted a passing off action in the High
Court of Mysore for a declaration that they were exclusive
owners of a certain trade mark and for a permanent
injunction restraining the appellants from passing off their
goods as that of respondents. By s. 105 of the Trade and
Merchandise Mark Act such an action may be instituted in any
court not inferior to a District Court having jurisdiction
to try the suit. It appears that on the day the suit was
instituted the District Court was closed and there was no
Judge functioning in the District Court who was on duty
and competent to exercise the powers of the District Court.
The High Court entertained the plaint and granted temporary
injunction. In appeal by special leave :
HELD:(i) The High Court of Mysore is by its constitution
primarily a court exercising appellate jurisdiction; it is
competent to exercise original jurisdiction only in those
matters in respect of which by special Acts it has been
specifically invested with jurisdiction. It would be
competent to exercise original jurisdiction under s. 105 of
the Act if it was invested with ordinary original
jurisdiction of a District Court and not otherwise. [802 D-
F]
As a Court of appeal it undoubtedly stands at the apex
within the State, but on that account it does not stand
invested with original jurisdiction in matters not expressly
declared within its cognizance. [802 H]
(ii) Power under s. 24 of the Code of Civil Procedure
to try and dispose of a proceeding after transfer from a
court lawfully seized of it does not involve a power to
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entertain a proceeding which is not otherwise within the
cognizance of the High Court. [803 C-D]
(iii) Section 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure
preserves the inherent powers of the Court, but it does not
authorise the High Court to invest itself with jurisdiction
where the jurisdiction is not conferred by law. [803 D-E]
(iv) By "jurisdiction" is meant the extent of the power
which is conferred upon the court by its constitution to try
a proceeding : its exercise cannot be enlarged because an
extraordinary situation "requires" the court to exercise
it. [803 H-804 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 771 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated H
May 29, 1964, of the Mysore High Court in Civil Petition No.
90 of 1964.
801
S. S. Khanduja and Ganpat Rai, for the appellants.
B. R. L. Iyengar, S. K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for
respondents Nos. 1 to 7.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. On May 5, 1964 the respondents-hereinafter called
’the plaintiffs’-instituted in the High Court of Mysore an
action in the nature of a passing off action against the
appellants-hereinafter called ’the defendants--for a
declaration that they "are exclusive owners of the trade
mark consisting of the letters R.S.F. and No. 806", for a
permanent injunction restraining the defendants from passing
off their washing soap as the goods of the plaintiffs and
for incidental reliefs.
By s. 105 of the Trade and Merchandise Marks Act 43 of 1958
a passing off action whether the trade mark is registered or
unregistered may be instituted in any court not inferior to
a District Court having jurisdiction to try the suit. It
appears that on May 5, 1964 the District Court of Mysore,
within the territorial limits of which the cause of action
was alleged to have arisen, was closed for the summer
vacation, and it is common ground that on that day there was
no Judge functioning in the District Court who was on duty
and competent to exercise the powers of the District Court.
At the request of the plaintiffs the High Court entertained
the plaint and also an application for interim injunction
restraining "the defendants their agents or servants from
using the trade mark R.S.F. on washing soap manufactured by
them and from selling washing soap bearing the said
offending mark pending disposal of the case." By order dated
May 29, 1964 the High Court granted the temporary injunction
in terms of the prayer in the application.
In this appeal with special leave, counsel for the
defendants argues that the High Court had no jurisdiction to
entertain the action instituted by the plaintiffs and had no
power to make an order issuing a temporary injunction. The
action, as framed, could properly be instituted in the
District Court. The expression "District Court" has by
virtue of s. 2(e) of Act 43 of 1958 the meaning assigned to
that expression in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.
Section 2(4) of the Code defines a "district" as meaning the
local limits of the jurisdiction of a principal civil court-
called the District Court-and includes the local limits of
the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of a High Court.
If therefore a High Court is
802
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possessed of ordinary original civil jurisdiction, it would,
when exercising that jurisdiction be included, for the
purpose of Act 43 of 1958, in the expression "District
Court".
Exercise of jurisdiction by the High Court of Mysore is
governed by Mysore Act 5 of 1962. The Act is purely a
regulatory Act enacted for regulating the business and
exercise of the powers of the High Court in relation to the
administration of justice : it does not purport to confer
upon the High Court any jurisdiction original or appellate.
It is true that by s. 12 of the Mysore High Court Act 1 of
1884 enacted by the Maharaja of Mysore to amend the
constitution of the High Court of Mysore, and to provide for
the administration of justice by that Court, the Government
of Mysore was authorised by notification to invest the High
Court with ordinary original civil jurisdiction of a
District Court in all suits of a civil nature exercisable
within such local limits as the Government may from time to
time declare and appoint in that behalf. But s. 12 of the
Mysore Act 1 of 1884 has been repealed by s. 14 of Mysore
Act 5 of 1962.
The High Court of Mysore is by its constitution primarily a
court exercising appellate jurisdiction : it is competent to
exercise original jurisdiction only in those matters in
respect of which by special Acts it has been specifically
invested with jurisdiction. The High Court is competent to
exercise original jurisdiction under s. 105 of the Trade and
Merchandise Marks Act 43 of 1958 if it is invested with the
ordinary original civil jurisdiction of a District Court,
and not otherwise, and the High Court of Mysore not being
invested by any statute of under its constitution with that
jurisdiction was incompetent to entertain a passing off
action.
But it was urged that in a State the High Court is at the
apex of the hierarchy of civil courts and has all the powers
which the subordinate courts may exercise, and it is
competent to entertain all actions as a court of original
jurisdiction which may lie in any court in the State. For
this exalted claim, there is no warrant in our
jurisprudence. Jurisdiction of a Court means the extent of
the authority of a Court to administer justice prescribed
with reference to the subject-matter, pecuniary value and
local limits. Barring cases in which jurisdiction is
expressly conferred upon it by special statutes, e.g. the
Companies Act; the Banking Companies Act, the High Court of
Mysore exercises appellate jurisdiction alone. As a Court
of Appeal it undoubtedly stands at the apex within the
State, but on that account it does not stand invested with
original jurisdiction in matters not expressly declared
within its cognizance.
803
Section 24 of the Code of Civil Procedure on which counsel
for the plaintiffs relied lends no assistance to his
argument. Among the powers conferred upon a High Court by
s. 24 Code of Civil Procedure, there is enumerated the power
to withdraw any suit, appeal or other proceeding in any
Court subordinate to it, and to try or dispose of the same :
[S. 24(1) (b) (i)]. But jurisdiction to try a suit, appeal
or proceeding by a High Court under the power reserved by s.
24(1) (b) (i) arises only if the suit, appeal or proceeding
is properly instituted in a court subordinate to the High
Court, and the suit, appeal or proceeding is in exercise of
the power of the High Court transferred to it. Exercise of
this jurisdiction is conditioned by the lawful institution
of the proceeding in a subordinate court of competent
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jurisdiction, and transfer thereof to the High Court. Power
to try and dispose of a proceeding after transfer from a
court lawfully seized of it does not involve a power to
entertain a proceeding which is not otherwise within the
cognizance of the High Court.
Section 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure preserves the in-
herent power of the Court as may be necessary for the ends
of justice or to prevent abuse of the process of the Court.
That power may be exercised where there is a proceeding
lawfully before the High Court : it does not however
authorise the High Court to invest itself with jurisdiction
where it is not conferred by law.
Reliance was sought to be placed upon the summary of a
judgment dated June 6, 1962 in a case decided by Narayana
Pai, J : Kaverappa v. Narayanaswamy, which is found printed
under the heading "Short Notes of Recent Decision" in the
Mysore Law Journal (1962) at p. 1. The learned Judge is
reported to have observed that s. 24 of the Code of Civil
Procedure "read along with s. 151 which preserves to the
High Court all inherent powers to make such orders as may be
necessary for ends of justice necessarily implies that
whenever an extraordinary situation so requires, a High
Court may confer original jurisdiction upon itself to do or
protect ends of justice". It does not appear that the
judgment is reported in any series of reports-authorised or
unauthorised, and we have not been supplied with a copy of
the original judgment. But if the learned Judge, as reported
in the summary of the judgment, was of the opinion that the
High Court is competent to assume to itself jurisdiction
Which it does not otherwise possess, merely because an
"extraordinary situation" has arisen, with respect to the
learned Judge, we are unable to approve of that view. By
"jurisdiction" is meant the extent of the power Which is
conferred upon the Court by its constitution to try a
proceeding; its exercise
804
cannot be enlarged because what the learned Judge calls an
extraordinary situation "requires" the Court to exercise it.
The appeal must therefore be allowed. Temporary injunction
granted by the High Court is vacated and the plaint is
ordered to be returned for presentation to the proper Court.
As before the High Court, no objection was raised about the
maintainability of the suit or the application for
injunction, we direct the parties to bear their own costs.
Appeal allowed.
805