Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JUSTINIANO AUGUSTO DE PIEDADA BARRETO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANTONIO VICENTE DE FONSECA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/03/1979
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 984 1979 SCR (3) 494
1979 SCC (3) 47
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1990 SC2072 (52)
R 1992 SC 81 (7,27)
ACT:
Limitation-Provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code
relating to limitation, whether stand repealed by Limitation
Act 1963 (Act 36 of 1963) by necessary implication or
whether they are saved by section 29(2) of that Act-
Limitation Act, 1963 section 29(2), Portuguese Civil Code
Art. 535. The Goa, Daman and Diu (Administration) Act, 1962
sub section (1) and (2) of sections 5 and 6. The Goa Daman
and Diu (Laws) Regulations promulated under Art. 240 of the
Constitution scope of-"Local Law" and "Special Law"
difference in-Whether the Portuguese Civil Code a local law-
Whether there is any repugnancy and therefore void under
Art. 254(1) of the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
On Goa, Daman and Diu becoming a part of India as a
Union Territory, Parliament enacted the Goa, Daman and Diu
(Administration) Act, 1962 to provide for its administration
and for matters connected therewith. Section 5(1) of the Act
declared that all laws in force immediately before 20th
December, 1961 in Goa, Daman and Diu or any part thereof
shall continue to be in force therein until amended or
repealed by a competent Legislature or other competent
authority. Pursuant to the powers conferred by Article 240
of the Constitution, the President promulgated certain
Regulations styled as ‘The Goa, Daman and Diu (Laws)
Regulations’ from time to time. These Regulations extended
certain enactments to Goa, Daman and Diu with specified
modifications. To the extent that any law in force in Goa,
Daman and Diu corresponded to any Act which was so extended
to those Territories such law was declared to stand
repealed.
Before Goa, Daman and Diu became part of India,
Portuguese Civil Code and the Portuguese Civil Procedure
Code were in force in those territories. The Portuguese
Civil Code contained various provisions dealing with
limitation for suits, applications and appeals. These
provisions were never repealed either by express legislative
enactment or by an order made by the Central Government in
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exercise of the powers conferred upon it under section 5(2)
of the 1962 Act by any Regulation made by the President.
Neither any notification by the Central Government under
section 6 of the 1962 Act was issued nor was a regulation
made by the President extending the Limitation Act, 1908 to
Goa, Daman and Diu with or without modification Nor did any
Regulation repeal any of the provision of the Portuguese
Civil Code relating to Limitation. Even the Goa, Daman and
Diu (Extension of the Code of Civil Procedure and
Arbitration Act), 1965, neither expressly nor by implication
repealed the provisions relating to limitation contained in
the Portuguese Code. The Goa, Daman and Diu (Extension of
the Code of Civil Procedure and Arbitration Act), 1965 also
did not either expressly or by implication repeal the
provisions relating to limitation in the Portuguese Civil
Code.
In the circumstances, the question that arose for
consideration in the appeals by the appellants-defendants
was "whether the provisions of the Portuguese
495
Civil Code relating to Limitation stood repealed by the
Limitation Act, 1963, by necessary implication, or whether
they were saved by Section 29(2) ibid ?"
Dismissing the appeals by special leave the Court,
^
HELD : 1. The provisions in the Portuguese Civil Code
dealing with the subject of Limitation of suits etc. and in
force in the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu only is
"local law" within the meaning of Section 29(2) of the
Limitation Act, 1963. These provisions have to be read into
the 1963 Act, as if the schedule to the said Act is amended
mutatis mutandis. [503 B]
2. If section 32 and section 29(2) of the Limitation
Act 1963 are read together it is clear that the only law of
Limitation that was repealed was the Limitation Act, 1908
and all other laws dealing with limitation, special or local
were saved and are to be read into the Limitation Act, 1963.
Therefore, no question of repugnancy or voidness of the
provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code relating to
limitation on that ground arises. They continue to be in
force, in the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu. [503 A-
B, C]
Deep Chand v. The State of U.P., [1959] 2 SCR 843;
Municipal Council, Palai v. T. J. Joseph, [1964] 2 SCR 87;
State of Jammu and Kashmir v. H. S. Farooqui, AIR 1972 S.C.
1738; referred to.
3. The word "special" has reference to subject and the
word "local" has reference to a particular area or
territory. A special law is a law relating to a particular
subject while a local law is a law confined to a particular
area or territory. Used in an Act made by Parliament the
word local may refer to a part or the whole of the many
States constituting the Union. Though a law dealing with a
particular subject may be a general law in the sense that it
is a law of general applicability, laying down general rules
yet, it may contain special provisions relating to bar of
time, in specified cases different from the general law of
limitation. Such a law would be a special law for the
purpose of section 29(2) of the Limitation Act, 1963.
Similarly, a law which may be a law of general applicability
is yet a local law, if its applicability is confined to a
particular area instead of ‘generally’ the whole country.
[501 A-D]
Kaushalya Rani v. Gopal Singh, [1964] 4 SCR 982 @ 987
and 988; applied.
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Queen v. Land County Council [1863] 2 Q.B. 454 @ 462
quoted with approval.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1818 of
1969.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17-3-1969 of the
Judicial Commissioner’s Court in Appeal No. 243/66.
AND
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2038 of 1969
From the Judgment and Decree dated the 12th March 1969
of the Court of Judicial Commissioner Goa, Daman and Diu in
Second Appeal No. 5 of 1968.
496
V. M. Tarkunde, Naunit Lal and Dr. Bernardo Das Rais
for the Appellant (In C.A. 1818/69).
Eduardo Falero, O. C. Mathur, D. N. Misra and B. D. &
Co. for the Respondent (In C.A. 1818/69).
Naunit Lal and Dr. Bernardo Das Rais for the Appellant
(In C.A. 2038/69).
S. V. Tambwekar for the Respondent (In C.A. 2038/69).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J.-It is now a matter of history that
the erstwhile Portuguese Colonial Possessions of Goa, Daman
and Diu became part of the Territory of India from 20th
December, 1961. The territories of Goa, Daman and Diu were
incorporated as a Union Territory by the Constitution
(Twelfth Amendment) Act, 1962, with effect from 20th
December, 1961. The Goa, Daman and Diu (Administration) Act,
1962, repealing and re-enacting the provisions of the Goa,
Daman and Diu Administration Ordinance 1962, was enacted by
Parliament to provide for the administration of the Union
Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu and for matters connected
therewith. Section 5(1) of the Act declared that all laws in
force immediately before the appointed day (20th December,
1961) in Goa, Daman and Diu or any part thereof shall
continue to be in force therein until amended or repealed by
a competent Legislature or other competent authority.
Section 5(2) enabled the Central Government, within two
years from the appointed day, to make such adaptations and
modifications, whether by way of repeal or amendment, as may
be necessary or expedient for the purpose of facilitating
application of any such law in relation to the
administration of Goa, Daman and Diu as a Union Territory
and for the purpose of bringing the provisions of any such
law into accord with the provisions of the Constitution.
Section 6 of the Act empowered the Central Government, by
notification in the official Gazette, to extend with such
restrictions or modifications, as it thinks fit, to Goa,
Daman and Diu, any enactment which is in force in a State at
the date of the notification.
Before Goa, Daman and Diu became part of India, certain
laws such as the Portuguese Civil Code, the Portuguese Civil
Procedure Code etc. were in force in those Territories.
Apart from dealing with multiple other matters, the
Portuguese Civil Code contained, various provisions dealing
with limitation for suits, applications and appeals. It is
undisputed that the provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code
relating to Limitation were never repealed either by express
Legislative
497
enactment or by any order made by the Central Government in
exercise of the powers conferred upon it under Section 5 (2)
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of the Goa, Daman and Diu (Administration) Act, 1962. It is
also not in dipute that the Central Government did not issue
any notification under Section of the Goa, Daman and Diu
(Administration) Act extending the Indian Limitation Act,
1908, to Goa, Daman and Diu with or without modification.
The Constitution (Twelfth Amendment) Act suitably
amended Article 240 of the Constitution to enable the
President to make Regulations for the peace, progress and
good Government of the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu
until a body was created by Parliamentary enactment to
function as a Legislature for the Union Territory. Pursuant
to the powers conferred by Article 240 of the Constitution,
the President promulgated certain Regulations styled as ‘The
Goa, Daman and Diu (Laws) Regulations’ from time to time.
These Regulations extended certain enactments to Goa, Daman
and Diu with specified modifications. To the extent that any
law in force in Goa, Daman and Diu corresponded to any Act
which was so extended to those Territories, such law was
declared to stand repealed. The Indian Limitation Act, 1908,
was not one of the Acts extended to Goa, Daman and Diu under
any of the Goa, Daman and Diu (Laws) Regulalations. Nor was
any Regulation made by the President repealing any of the
provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code relating to
Limitation.
While so, the Limitation Act 1963, was enacted by
Parliament on 5th October, 1963, to take effect from the
date to be appointed by the Central Government by
notification in the official Gazette. 1st January, 1964, was
later specified as the date from which the Limitation Act
was to come into force. Section 1(2) extends the Limitation
Act, 1963, to the whole of India except the State of Jammu
and Kashmir. Section 32 of the Act containing but one
sentence repeals the Indian Limitation Act, 1908. No other
enactment is expressly repealed. Section 31 makes special
provision for suits etc. for which the prescribed period of
limitation is shorter than the period prescribed by the
Indian Limitation Act, 1908. Section 29 contains ‘savings’
clauses and Section 29(2) which particularly saves ‘special
and local laws’ is in these terms :
"29(2) Where any special or local law prescribes
for any suit, appeal or application a period of
limitation different from the period prescribed by the
Schedule, the provisions of section 3 shall apply as if
such period were the period prescribed by the Schedule
and for the purpose of
498
determining any period of limitation prescribed for any
suit, appeal or application by any special or local
law, the provisions contained in sections 4 to 24
(inclusive) shall apply in so far as, and to the extent
to which, they are not expressly excluded by such
special or local law".
The question which has arisen for consideration in
these two appeals is whether the provisions of the
Portuguese Civil Code relating to Limitation stand repealed
by the Limitation Act, 1963, by necessary implication, or
whether they are saved by Section 29(2) of that Act.
Civil Appeal No. 1818 of 1969 arises out of a suit
filed by the respondent-plaintiff against the appellant-
defendant on 25th November, 1965, claiming damages for
malicious prosecution. The prosecution which was alleged to
have been maliciously launched against the plaintiff ended
in an acquittal by the decision of the Supreme Court,
Lisbon, on 6th April, 1960. The plaintiff claimed that the
suit was within time under Article 535 of the Portuguese
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Civil Code which provides a period of limitation of 20
years. On the other hand the defendant claimed that the suit
was governed by Article 74 of the Limitation Act, 1963,
which provides a period of limitation of one year only. The
Trial Court decided the point of limitation, as a
preliminary issue, in favour of the plaintiff. An ‘Agravo’
appeal to the District Judge and a further appeal to the
Judicial Commissioner not having borne fruit the defendant
has preferred this appeal after obtaining special leave from
this Court.
Civil Appeal No. 2038 of 1969 arises out of a suit
instituted by the plaintiff-respondent to recover a sum of
Rs. 5,000/- said to be due on a promissory note dated 24th
November, 1962, executed by the defendant-appellant. In this
suit the plaintiff claimed that the period of limitation was
as provided by Article 535 of the Portuguese Civil Code
while the defendant claimed that the period of limitation
was as provided by Article 31 of the Schedule to the
Limitation Act, 1963. The question of Limitation was decided
as a preliminary issue in favour of the plaintiff by the
Subordinate Courts and by the Judicial Commissioner of Goa.
The defendant has preferred this appeal after obtaining
special leave from this Court.
The principal submission of Shri V. M. Tarkunde and
Shri Naunit Lal, learned Counsel for the appellants in the
two appeals was that the provisions of the Portuguese Civil
Code relating to Limitation for the filing of suits etc.
must be considered to have been pro-tanto-repealed by the
Limitation Act, 1963, in view of Article 254(1) of the
Constitution of India. It was their submission that the
provisions
499
relating to limitation contained in the Portuguese Civil
Code, a law made by the Legislature of a State, were
repugnant to the provisions of the Limitation Act, a law
made by Parliament and, therefore, the former provisions
were void to the extent of the repugnancy. It was submitted
that the question of a local or special law being saved by
the provisions of Section 29 would arise only if the
provisions of the local or special law were not repugnant to
the law made by Parliament namely the Limitation Act. It was
further argued that the Portuguese Civil Code was a general
law and not a local law and, therefore, the provisions
contained in it relating to limitation were not saved under
Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act. It was also contended
that the words "where any special or local law prescribes
for any suit, appeal or application" occurring in Section
29(2) indicated that Section 29(2) was confined in its
application to odd Legislation dealing with particular types
of suits and did not extend to a general law of Limitation
like the Portuguese Civil Code.
Shri Eduardo Falero and Shri Tambwekar, learned Counsel
for the respondents urged that the Portuguese Civil Code
which was applicable to the Union Territory of Goa, Daman
and Diu only and not the whole of India was a local law,
and, therefore, the provisions contained in it relating to
limitation were saved by Section 29(2) of the Limitation
Act, 1963. The relevant provisions of the Portuguese Civil
Code having been expressly saved, no question of any
repugnancy between those provisions and those of the
Limitation Act arose. It was also urged that Parliament
which made express provision in Section 30 for suits for
which the Limitation Act 1963, prescribed shorter periods of
limitation than the Indian Limitation Act, 1908, would
surely not have allowed the drastic inroads into the law of
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Limitation of suits prevailing in Goa, Daman and Diu without
introducing a provision similar to Section 30. It was
further urged that the Limitation Act, 1963, was not
retrospective so as to cutail periods of limitation in
respect of causes of action which had already arisen.
Before considering the rival contentions of the
parties, we may, at this juncture, mention that the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 and the Arbitration Act, 1940, were
extended to the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu by
Section 3 of the Goa, Daman and Diu (Extension of the Code
of Civil Procedure and the Arbitration Act) Act, 1965.
Section 4 of the Act repeals so much of the law in force in
the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu as corresponds to
the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 or the Arbitration Act,
1940. This Act also neither expressly nor by implication
repeals the provisions relating to limitation contained in
the Portuguese Civil Code.
500
Article 254(1) of the Constitution prescribes that if
any provision of a law made by the Legislature of a State is
repugnant to any provision of a law, made by Parliament
which Parliament is competent to enact, or to any provision
of an existing law with respect to one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent List, then subject to the
provisions of clause 2, the law made by Parliament, whether
passed before or after the law made by the Legislature of
such State, or as the case may be, the existing law shall
prevail and the law made by the Legislature of the State
shall, to the extent of repugnancy be void. We are not here
concerned with the provisions of clause 2. For the purpose
of the present appeals, we will assume that the Portuguese
Civil Code which was continued by Parliament to be in force
in the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu was a law made
by the Legislature of a State, though there may be several
objections to so doing. The principles applicable to
ascertain whether there is repugnancy or not have been
enunciated by this Court in Deep Chand v. The State of Uttar
Pradesh(1), Municipal Council, Palai v. T. J. Joseph(2),
State of Jammu and Kashmir v. H. S. Farooqi(3), and other
cases. We do not consider it necessary to restate the well
known principles. Without doubt the provisions of the
Portuguese Civil Code, unless they are saved by Section
29(2) of the Limitation Act, are repugnant to the provisions
of the Limitation Act, 1963. If, howver, the provisions of
the Portuguese Civil Code are saved by Section 29(2) then
there can be no question of any repugnancy. Section 29(2)
declares that the period of limitation prescribed by any
special or local law shall apply as if such period was
prescribed by the Schedule to the Limitation Act. In other
words it is as if the special or local law is incorporated
into the Limitation Act and the Schedule to the Limitation
Act is amended, mutatis mutandis, by the special or local
law. Therefore, to say that the provisions of a special or
local law which by the necessary implication of Section
29(2) are read into the Limitation Act are contrary to the
provisions of the Limitation Act, is merely to argue in a
vicious circle, to end where one begins. So the question
whether the provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code are void
on the ground that they are repugnant to the provisions of
the Limitation Act depends on the question whether the
Portuguese Civil Code is saved by Section 29(2) of the
Limitation Act, 1963. That depends on whether the Portuguese
Civil Code is a special or local law within the meaning of
Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act.
501
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We do not see how we can escape from the conclusion
that the Portuguese Civil Code is a local law within the
meaning of Section 29(2). Obviously the word ’special’ has
reference to subject and the word ’local’ has reference to
area or territory. A special law is a law relating to a
particular subject while a local law is a law confined to a
particular area or territory. Used in an Act made by
Parliament the word local may refer to a part or the whole
of one of the many States constituting the Union. Though a
law dealing with a particular subject may be a general law
in the sense that it is a law of general applicability,
laying down general rules, yet, it may contain special
provision relating to bar of time, in specified cases,
different from the general law of limitation. Such a law
would be a special law for the purpose of Section 29(2). The
rule of limitation contained in Section 417(4) of the Code
of Criminal Procedure of 1898 was accordingly held to be a
’special law’ in Kaushalya Rani v. Gopal Singh(1).
Similarly, a law which may be a law of general applicability
is yet a local law if, its applicability is confined to a
particular area instead of generally the whole country. In
The Queen v. London County Council(2) Bowen L.J. observed:
"Now, a general Act, prima facie, is that which
applies to the whole community. In the natural meaning
of the term it means an Act of Parliament which is
unlimited both in its area and, as regards the
individual, in its effects; and as opposed to that you
get statutes which may well be public because of the
importance of the subjects with which they deal and
their general interest to the community, but which are
limited in respect of area a limitation which makes
them local-or limited in respect of individuals or
persons-a limitation which makes them personal.
Here, we may also extract the following useful observations
from Kaushalya Rani v. Gopal Singh (supra) to which we have
already referred:
"It has been observed in some of the cases decided
by the High Courts that the Code is not a special or a
local law within the meaning of s. 29(2) of the
Limitation Act, that is to say, so far as the entire
Code is concerned, because it is a general law laying
down procedure, generally, for the trial of criminal
cases. But the specific question with which we are here
concerned is whether the provision contained in s.
417(4) of the Code is a special law. The whole Code is
502
indeed a general law regulating the procedure in
criminal trials generally, but it may contain
provisions specifying a bar of time for particular
class of cases which are of a special character. For
example, a Land Revenue Code may be a general law
regulating the relationship between the revenuepayer
and the revenue-receiver or the rent-payer and the
rentreceiver. It is a general law in the sense that it
lays down the general rule governing such relationship,
but it may contain special provision relating to bar of
time, in specified cases, different from the general
law of limitation. Such a law will be a ’special law’
with reference to the law generally governing the
subject-matter of that kind of relationship. A ’special
law’, therefore, means a law enacted for special cases,
in special circumstances, in contradistinction to the
general rules of the law laid down, as applicable
generally to all cases with which the general law
deals. In that sense, the Code is a general law
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regulating the procedure for the trial of criminal
cases, generally; but if it lays down any bar of time
in respect of special cases in special circumstances
like those contemplated by s. 417(3) & (4), read
together, it will be a special law contained within the
general law. As the Limitation Act has not defined
’special law’, it is neither necessary nor expedient to
attempt a definition. Thus, the Limitation Act is a
general law laying down the general rules of limitation
applicable to all cases dealt with by the Act; but
there may be instances of a special law of limitation
laid down in other statutes, though not dealing
generally with the law of limitation. For example,
rules framed under Defence of India Act, vide S. M.
Thakur v. The State of Bihar (I.L.R. 30 Pat. 126);
Canara Bank Ltd. v. The Warden Insurance Co.
(I.I.R.(1952) Bom. 1083) dealing with the special rule
of limitation laid down in the Bombay Land Requisition
Act (Bom. XXXIII of 1948). These are mere instances of
special laws within the meaning of s. 29(2) of the
Limitation Act".
If in the above extracted passage dealing with the scope of
Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act one reads the words
"local law" for the words "special law" and the word "area"
for the words "special cases", the meaning of the expression
"local law" becomes clear.
Now, there is only one general law of Limitation for
the entire country and it is the Limitation Act, 1963. All
other laws prescribing periods of limitation are either
special or local laws. They are
503
special laws if they prescribe periods of limitation for
specified cases. They are local laws if their applicability
is confined to specified areas. If Section 32 and Section
29(2) of the Limitation Act 1963 are read together, it
becomes clear that the only law of Limitation that is
repealed is the Limitation Act, 1908, and all other laws
dealing with limitation, special or local are saved and are
to be read into the Limitation Act, 1963.
We, therefore, arrive at the conclusion that the body
of provisions in the Portuguese Civil Code dealing with the
subject of Limitation of suits etc. and in force in the
Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu only is "local law"
within the meaning of Section 29(2) of the Limitation Act,
1963. As stated earlier these provisions have to be read
into the Limitation Act, 1963, as if the Schedule to the
Limitation Act is amended mutatis mutandis. No question of
repugnancy arises. We agree with the Judicial Commissioner
that the provisions of the Portuguese Civil Code relating to
Limitation continue to be in force in the Union Territory of
Goa, Daman and Diu.
We do not think that it is necessary to consider the
other submissions of the learned Counsel for the
respondents. In the result both the appeals are dismissed
with costs.
S.R. Appeals dismissed.
504