Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ADDL. COLLECTOR OF CUSTOMS, CALCUTTA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. BEST & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/03/1966
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
SUBBARAO, K.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1713 1966 SCR 46
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC 523 (9)
ACT:
Limitation Act (9 of 1908), s. 12(2) and (3)-Application for
leave to appeal-Rules of High Court permitting filing
without copies of judgment or order-Time taken for obtaining
copies-If could be excluded in computing limitation.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent’s petition under Art. 226 challenging an
order of the appellants (customs authorities) was ordered by
the High Court. The appellants immediately applied for
certified copies of the judgment and order. They filed an
application for leave, to appeal to this Court against the
order of the High Court, along with a certified copy of the
judgment which alone was furnished to them by then; but the
application was beyond the period of limitation even after
excluding the time taken for obtaining the certified copy of
the judgment. The certified copy of the order was furnished
to the appellants thereafter, but it was not annexed to the
application for leave to appeal. The High Court dismissed
the application on the ground that it was barred by time.
In appeal to this Court, the appellants contended that they
were entitled under s. 12(2) of the Limitation Act to
exclude the time taken in obtaining the certified copy of
the order, while the respondent sought to support the
dismissal on the grounds that: (1) the application for leave
to appeal was competent without annexing either the
certified copy of the judgment or order under the Rules of
the High Court, and therefore, it cannot be said that the
time taken for obtaining the copy of the judgment or order
was requisite, and hence, could not be excluded under s.
12(2) or (3), and (ii) the prescribed Form for an
application for leave prohibited the annexing of a copy of
the judgment or order.
HELD:(i) Under s, 12(2) and (3) of the Limitation Act, the
time for obtaining the certified copies of the judgment and
the decree or the order must be excluded while computing the
period of limitation. The Legislature allowed the exclusion
to enable a party who intends to file an appeal to examine
the decree or the judgment before he launches a further
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proceeding. The provision does not depend upon whether the
Civil Procedure Code or Rules of a Court permit a petitioner
to file an application for leave to appeal with or without a
copy of the judgment or order or decree, and where the Rules
so permit, whether he has annexed such a copy to his
application or not. [52 H-53 B].
Surty v. Chettyar, L.R. 55 I.A. 161, applied. Gangaram v.
Beharilal A.I.R. 1952 Bhopal 39 and Abdul Aziz v. Jai Ram,
A.I.R. 1951 H.P. 67, overruled.
(ii)The rule and the Form prescribed do not lay down any
mandatory direction that a copy either of the order or of
the judgment shall not be annexed. [51 B-C]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 275 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the order dated August 17, 1965
of the Calcutta High Court in an application for leave to
appeal to this court in Appeal No. 254 of 1963.
WITH
Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 2195 of 1965 (Petition for
Condonation of delay).
B. R. L. Iyengar and B. R. G. K. Achar, for the appellant.
A. K. Sen and D. N. Mukherjee, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. On March 31, 1959 the respondents obtained a
licence to import certain machinery from West Germany. The
import licence contained particulars of the machinery to be
imported and inter alia stated that its value would be
"C.I.F. value of Rs. 45,000". One of the conditions upon
which the licence was issued was that:
"the above application is accepted and import
licence is granted having quantity and value
as the limiting factor and is not valid for
clearance if the actual value of any item
exceeds the C.I.F. value indicated in the
licence by more than five per cent."
The machinery arrived at the port of Calcutta sometime in
July 1960 and was allowed to be cleared on the bill of entry
submitted on behalf of the respondents. The bill of entry
showed the C.I.F. value of the machinery at Rs. 44,843.61
nP. The customs authorities thereafter assessed the duty
payable on the said machinery and the duty so assessed was
paid by the respondents. On May 6, 1961, in consequence of
certain information received by the authorities a search was
made of the business premises of the respondents and also of
Stahlumon & Co.,. Ltd., the agents of the exporters. As a
result of the search certain documents and papers were
seized by the customs authorities. On June 19/20, 1961 a
notice was served upon the respondents calling upon them to
show cause why action should not be taken against them under
s. 167(8) of the Sea Customs Act, 1878. The notice alleged
that the respondents were guilty of illegal import of goods
worth Rs. 6,730.74 nP, that being the excess value of the
goods permitted to be imported under the said licence. The
respondents in due course gave their explanation.
Thereafter an amended show cause notice dated September 21,
1961 was served upon the respondents charging them under s.
167(8) of the Sea Customs Act read with s. 3(2) of the
Imports and Exports Control Act. 1947
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for illegally importing the said consignment. The
respondents were given a personal hearing and thereafter the
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first petitioner passed an order dated March 17, 1962
directing confiscation of the said machinery and imposing a
tine of Rs. 20,000 in lieu of confiscation and further
imposing a personal penalty of Rs. 25,000/-. Aggrieved by
this order the respondents filed a petition in the High
Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution praying for
mandamus. directing the petitioners to rescind the order
dated March 17, 1962 and for certiorari quashing the said
order. The learned single Judge who heard the petition
passed an order dated September. 2, 1963 dismissing the
petition holding that the said. import was illegal.
Thereupon the respondents filed an appeal against the said
order and the Appellate Bench of the High Court by its
orders dated December 18, 1964 allowed the respondents’
appeal directing the petitioners to forbear from giving
effect to the said order of the first petitioner. The peti-
tioners filed an application for a certificate under Art.
133 but the Appellate Bench of the High Court by its order
dated August 17, 1964 dismissed the said application on the
ground that it was barred by limitation, though holding that
(i)the valuation tests laid down in sub-cl. (a) and (b) of
Art. 133(1) were satisfied, and
(ii)that the order being one of reversal the petitioners
were otherwise entitled to a certificate.
The present appeal is against the said order dated December
18, 1964 by which the High Court issued the writ of mandamus
against the petitioners.
As aforesaid, the High Court delivered its judgment and
,passed the abovmentioned order allowing the respondent’s
appeal on December 18, 1964. On December 19, 1964 the peti-
tioners applied for certified copies of the said judgment
and the said order. The certified copy of the judgment was
furnished to the petitioners on January 18, 1965. The
petitioners however waited for the certified copy of the
said order which was yet not furnished to them. As the
certified copy of the said order was not finalised and was
not ready the petitioners filed the said application for
leave on May 10, 1965; annexing thereto the certified ,copy
of the judgment only.- On July 17, 1965, a certified copy of
’the said order was furnished to the petitioners but they
did not annex it to their application for leave as it was
already filed. As stated earlier, the High, Court dismissed
the application by its order dated-August 17, 1965, on the
ground that it was barred by limitation. The High Court
however observed, that if the petitioners had annexed the
certified copy of the said order furnished to them on July
17, 1965 they would have been entitled to exclude the, time
taken in obtaining it ,from the period of Iimitation under
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s.12(2) of the Limitation Act. The result according to that
view would be that:-
(i)if the petitioners had waited till July 17, 1965 and
filed their application annexing also the certified copy of
the said order their application would have been within time
as they would have been entitled to exclude the time for
obtaining it;
(ii) if they had amended their application and annexed the
certified copy of the order on receiving the same they would
still have been entitled to exclude the aforesaid period
and their application then would have been within time; and
(iii)if they had withdrawn the application and filed a fresh
application annexing thereto the certified copy of the said
order such fresh application would have been within time as
they would have been entitled to exclude the time taken in
obtaining the certified copy of the order. According to the
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High Court the petitioners however were not entitled to
exclude the time for obtaining the certified copy of the
order as they had filed the said application without
annexing thereto the copy of the said order and their
application filed on May 10, 1965 was already time barred.
According to the respondents, since under Art. 132 of the
Limitation Act the application for leave had to be made
within 60 days, the petitioners’ application lodged on May
10, 1965 was clearly beyond 60 days even after the certified
copy of the judgment was furnished to them on January 18,
1965. Consequently, the petitioners’ application was time
barred and was rightly rejected by the High Court.
The question for determination is whether the application
for leave to appeal was barred by limitation and the
petitioners were not entitled under s. 12(2) of the
Limitation Act to exclude the time taken in obtaining the
certified copy of the said order. Section 12(2) provides
that in computing the period of limitation for an appeal or
application for leave to-appeal, the time requisite. for
obtaining a copy of the decree, sentence or order appealed
from or sought to be revised shall be excluded. Similarly,
under sub-section 3 where an application is made for leave
to appeal, from a decree or order, the time requisite for
obtaining a copy of the judgment on which the decree or an
order is founded shall also be excluded. On a plain reading
of these sub-sections, it is clear that the time for
obtaining the certified copy of both the judgment and the
decree or order as the case may be must be excluded while
computing the period of limitation. The object of the
exclusion is to enable the person desiring to appeal to
consider the terms of the decree, judgment and order before
he decides to launch a further proceeding in respect of it.
Two views were, however, canvassed before us on the con-
struction of-s. 12. One was that the right of exclusion of
time is
50
qualified by the words "time requisite for obtaining a copy
of the decree, sentence or order" in sub-section 2.
Therefore, if an application for leave to appeal does not
require a certified copy of the order in question to be
annexed to the application, it is not possible to say that
the time required for obtaining such a copy was requisite.
In such cases the time in obtaining the copy would not be
requisite time and consequently the applicant would not be
entitled to exclude the time taken in obtaining the
certified copy of the order. Certain decisions of some of
the High Courts have also taken the view that such an
applicant would not be entitled to the benefit of the sub-
section where a copy of the decree, judgment or order is not
actually annexed to the application or the memorandum of
appeal. The other view is that sub-ss. 2 and 3 of s. 12
enact the rule of exclusion as a positive direction. The
object of the sub-section being to afford a party
opportunity to consider his position even where a certified
copy of the judgment gives all the necessary information
enabling the party to decide to proceed further or not, he
would nevertheless be entitled to exclude the time for
obtaining the certified copy of the decree or order. It has
been held in some decisions that even in cases where it is
not necessary to prepare a formal order, if such an order is
prepared, the party would be entitled to the benefit of
exclusion of time taken in preparing and furnishing a copy
thereof where it is applied for.
Counsel for the respondents relied on the first view and
argued that though the petitioners applied for certified
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copies of both the judgment and the order, they were at best
entitled to exclude the time for obtaining the copy of the
judgment as they had annexed such a copy but not to the
exclusion of time in obtaining the latter. He contended that
though the petitioners applied also for the copy of the said
order it was not necessary for them to annex it to their
application and in fact though it was applied for and
obtained it was not actually annexed. That being the
position and the application for leave to appeal being
competent without annexing either the certified copy of the
judgment or of the order under the rules of the High Court
of Calcutta it would not be possible to say that the time
for obtaining the copy was time for something that was
requisite and therefore that time could not be excluded. He
also argued that the rules of the High Court of Calcutta not
only did not require such a party to annex a copy of the
order but the prescribed form for such an application was
mandatory in language and was a provision to the contrary.
He therefore argued that there was a double reason for the
petitioners not being entitled to the benefit of the
exclusion.
We shall deal with the second contention first as it is
capable of an easy disposal. Rule 4, in Chapter XXXIIIA of
the Rules of the High Court requires that an application for
leave to appeal
51
shall be made by a notice of motion before the appellate
court and shall be presented in the prescribed form, viz.,
Form No. 3. That form does not require that a certified copy
of the judgment and/or decree or order need be annexed to
such an application. The rule and the form thus enable a
party to file an application for a certificate without
annexing either a copy of a judgment or a copy of an order.
But that does not mean that the rule and the form lay down
any mandatory direction that a copy either of the order or
of the judgment shall not be annexed. The rule and the form
thus do not assist or further the argument urged by counsel
for the respondents.
In regard to his first contentoin the learned counsel for
the respondents urged that sub-ss. 2 and 3 of S. 12 would
not apply where it is not necessary to annex a copy of the
judgment or order. For, in such a case it is not possible
to say that the time taken in obtaining such a copy is time
"requisite" within the meaning of that expression in sub-s.
2 of S. 12. Exclusion of the time required in obtaining a
copy of the order therefore can only be allowed if and only
if, such a copy is either required to be annexed or in any
event is in fact annexed to the petition for leave to
appeal. The question is: is the provision for exclusion of
time in S. 12(2) dependent upon whether the rules of a court
permit a petitioner to file an application for leave with or
without a copy of the judgment or order or decree and also
where the rules so permit whether he has annexed such a copy
to his application? In Surty v. Chettyar(1) the Privy
Council after considering various decisions ,of different
High Courts held that (1) the preponderance of practice in
India was that time for obtaining a copy of the judgment or
decree or order should be excluded even thought under the
rules of the Court it was not necessary to obtain a copy of
the judgment or decree to be filed with the memorandum of
appeal, and (2) that on a grammatical construction of s.
12(2), the subsection plainly lays down a positive direction
for exclusion of time without any reference to the Code of
Civil Procedure or any other Act. In that case the
appellant had brought a suit on the original side of the
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High Court of Rangoon. That suit was dismissed on January
8, 1925. On April 28, he filed his memorandum of appeal
before the appellate side of the High Court. A question
arose whether the appeal was filed in time. The appellant
tried to explain the delay and prayed for extension of time
but the court refused to condone the delay and dismissed
the appeal. The appellant then filed an application for
review and it was then that he for the first time invoked
sub-ss. 2 and 3 of S. 12 contending that the time taken in
obtaining the copy of the order and of the judgment should
be excluded. The Court upheld the contention of the
respondents that such time could not be excluded as under
the rules of that High Court the memorandum of appeal could
(1) 55 I.A. 161
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be filed without annexing thereto the copy of the judgment
or the order. This view was challenged in appeal before the
Privy Council. The rule on which the respondents in that
case relied provided that a memorandum of appeal and an
application for revision should be accompanied by certified
copies of the judgment and decree unless they were dispensed
with by the court. That rule however had a proviso which
was in the terms following:-
"Provided that a memorandum of appeal against
a decree or order of the High Court in the
exercise of the original jurisdiction may be
presented without a certified copy of the
decree or formal order accompanying it.,
Relying on this rule, it was contended that inasmuch as the
proviso enables the appellant to file his appeal without a
copy of the order or judgment the appellant would not be
entitled to exclusion of time as such time , would not be
"requisite" time within the meaning of s. 12(2) and the High
Court was therefore right in dismissing the appeal as being
beyond time. The Privy Council disagreed with this
contention holding that s. 12 contained a positive direction
for exclusion of time and that such direction applied
irrespective of whether the rules permitted the filing of an
appeal or an application without annexing the copy of the
order or judgment. The Privy Council emphasised that the
positive direction contained in s. 12 was unconditional
inasmuch as there was no reference therein to the Code of
Civil Procedure and the section did not say why the time was
to be excluded. At page170 of the report the Privy
Council observed:
"if, indeed, it could be shown that in some
particular class of cases there could be no
object in obtaining the two documents, an
argument might be offered that no time could
be requisite for obtaining something not
requisite. But this is not so. The decree
may be complicated, and it may be open to draw
it up in two different ways, and the
practitioner may well want to see its form
before attacking it by his memorandum of
appeal. As to the judgment, no doubt when the
case does not come from up country, the
practitioner will have heard it delivered, but
he may not carry all the points of a long
judgment in his memory, and as Sir John Edge
says, the Legislature may not wish him to
hurry to make a decision till he has well
considered it."
These observations were an answer to the contention that no
time could be requisite for obtaining something not
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requisite. The legislature allowed the exclusion even
though the rules of a court might not require a copy to be
annexed to the memorandum of
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appeal for a party who intends to file an appeal may desire
to examine the decree or the judgment before he launches a
further proceeding. Therefore, the exclusion was allowed
irrespective of tile rules of a court which permit a party
to file an appeal without annexing a certified copy of the
judgment or decree or order.
In Imperial Bucket Co. v. Smt. Bhagwati Basak(1) there are
however observations to the effect that an appellant will
have the benefit of s. 12 in a case where he has annexed to
the memorandum of appeal a certified copy of the judgment
appealed from even though by the statute under which the
appeal is filed, no certified copy of the order appealed
from is required. This decision does not necessarily mean
that where a copy is applied for and obtained but not
annexed the time in obtaining it was for a thing not
requisite. As the Privy Council observed, a party might
like to examine the judgment or the decree or the order be-
fore he challenged it in a higher forum. Though the
judgment states that such time would be excluded where the
copy is annexed, it does not lay down that there can be no
exclusion of time where it is not annexed. But in Gangaram
v. Beharilal(1) a view has been taken that sub-ss. 2 and 3
of s. 12 would only be attracted when a copy of the judgment
or decree or order appealed from accompanies the application
for review. This view is not in consonance with and in fact
is contrary to the interpretation of s. 12 by the Privy
Council in Surty’s Case(1) and is therefore unwarranted. The
same must also be said of Abdul Aziz v. Jai Ram(1). As
observed by the Privy Council in Surty’s Case(") the view of
the High Courts of Bombay, Calcutta and Allahabad as
expressed in Haji Hassum v. Noor Mohammedan(5), Kalipada v.
Shakhar(6), and Waji-Ali Shah v. Nawal Kishore(7) was that
an appellant was entitled to exclusion of time in obtaining
a copy of a judgment and decree even though the rules permit
him to file the appeal without annexing such a copy. The
view contended for on behalf of the respondents is thus not
only contrary to the decision of the Privy Council but if
accepted would lead to a somewhat surprising result, viz.,
that if the petitioners had waited till the copy of the
order was furnished to them, their application would have
been in time or if they had withdrawn their application and
filed a fresh one or amended their application and annexed
the copy of the order such a fresh application, or such
amended application, which in its unamended form was in
their view time barred, would have been well within the
period of limitation. In our view such a result is not to
be contemplated. As the Privy Council has laid down the
provisions of s. 12(2) and (3) are a positive
(1) A.I.R. 1954 Cal. 520. (2)A.T.R. 1952 Bhopal 39.
(3) 54 I.A. 161. (4) A.I.R. 1951 H P. 67.
(5) 1,T,.R. Born. 643. (6) 24 Cal. 235.
(7) I.T,.R. 17 All. 213.
54
direction excluding the time taken in obtaining a copy of
the judgment and decree or order as the case may be and
those provisions are irrespective of the Code of Civil
Procedure or the rules made by a court under s. 122 of the
Code. Such rules if they permit a memorandum of appeal to
be filed without annexing thereto a copy of the judgment or
decree or order confer a privilege on a would be appellant
but do not govern the positive direction contained in s. 12.
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The High Court in this view, therefore, was not right in
dismissing the petitioners’ application for leave to appeal
on the ground that it was barred by limitation.
In the result, we allow the appeal and set aside the High
Courts order of dismissal and remand the case directing the
High Court to decide that application in the hot of this
judgment and consider whether the petitioners were entitled
to leave under Art. 133 of the Constitution. As we are
allowing the appeal. no order need be passed on the petition
for condonation of delay. The Special Leave Petition 1110 of
1965 is allowed to be with. drawn. There will be no order
as to costs.
Appeal allowed.
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