Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LALA MATA DIN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
A. NARAYANAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/08/1969
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1953 1970 SCR (2) 90
1969 SCC (3) 464
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC 897 (7)
ACT:
Counsel, mistake of-When sufficient ground for condoning
delay in filing appeal-Practice and procedure-Limitation
Act, 1908, s. 5-Punjab Courts Act, s. 39(1).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s suit against the respondent for rendition
of account and other reliefs was valued at Rs. 5,930/- for
purposes of court fee and jurisdiction. The suit was
decreed in part and the amount decreed was less. than the
amount at which he stated his tentative valuation. He filed
an appeal to the District Court stating the valuation for
purposes of appeal at Rs. 4,880’/-. The memorandum of
appeal showed the valuation in the original suit and the
court fee paid was the same amount as in the trial court.
The District Court returned the memorandum of appeal for
presentation to the proper court because, under s. 39’(1) of
the Punjab Courts Act appeals above the value of Rs. 5,000/-
had to filed before the High Court. The appeal was filed in
the High Court the same day, but it was out of time. The
appellant also filed a revision against the order of the
District Court. His counsel placed reliance on r. 4 in Ch.
3-B of Vol. 1 of the Rules of the High Court which states
that "in a suit for the amount found due after taking
accounts it is not the tentative valuation of the plaintiff
but the amount found to be due and decreed by the court that
determines the forum of appeal." The High .Court held that
there was no ground for extending time under s. 5 of the
Limitation Act and dismissed the appeal and also the
revision. In appeal to this Court,
HELD: The High Court should have extended time under s.
5 of the Limitation Act. [9’4 A--B]
(i) The appellant did not have any underhand motive in
filing the appeal before the District Court, the filing had
to be attributed entirely to the advice of his counsel. [93
A--B]
There is no general proposition that mistake of counsel
by itself is always a sufficient ground for condoning
delay. It is always a question whether the mistake was bona
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fide or was merely a device to cover an ulterior purpose.
[92 F--G]
In the present case the original valuation determined
the court of lowest denomination before which the appeal
from the suit had to go and that forum was the High Court.
The counsel seems to have been misled by r. 4 in Ch. 3-B of
Vol. 1 of the Rules and Orders of the High Court. This rule
is applicable in a case where the amount decreed is larger
than the amount for which the original suit was brought. It
does not apply where the amount decreed is below the
valuation in the original court. There is nothing in the
case to show that the error committed by the counsel was
tainted by any mala fide motive. [93 C--F; 94 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2410 and
2411 of 1966.
91
Appeal from the judgment ,and order dated March 20, 1963
of the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at Delhi in R.F.A.
No. 122-D of 1962.
Bishan Narain, K. K. Raizada and A.G. Ratnaparkhi, for
the appellant (in both the appeals).
A.S. Nambiar, K.R. Nambiar and Lily Thomas, for the
respondent (in both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, C.J. This is an appeal against the
judgment, dated March 20, 1963, of a Division Bench of
the Punjab High Court dismissing an appeal and a revision
filed by the present appellant. The appeal arises under the
following circumstances: A suit was filed by the appellant
in the Court of the Senior Sub-Judge, Delhi for three
reliefs in respect of a business in which the respondent
was stated to be the manager and also for ejectment of the
respondent from the premises in which the business was being
carried on The same valuation was adopted for purposes of
court-fee and jurisdiction. The valuation was divided
into three parts: Rs. 4,000/- were taken as the valuation
for rendition of accounts or arrears of rent, Rs. 130/- for
injunction and Rs. 710/- for ejectment--Total Rs. 4,840/-.
During the hearing of the suit and on objection by the
defendant, the= valuation for ejectment was raised to
Rs. 1,800/-. It appears that the appellant paid the
additional court-fee but did not amend the plant. The suit
was decreed in part on May 11, 1961. The appellant obtained
a decree for Rs. 600/- as arrears of rent for 3/4 portion
off the shop and Rs. 463.33 P. as damages for 1/4
portion of the shop ejectment from which portion was also
decreed in his favour. But the suit was dismissed as to the
remaining arrears of rent or for accounts and ejectments
from 3/4 of the premises.
The plaintiff (appellant) thereupon filed an appeal in
the District Court of Delhi. In stating the valuation for
appeal, he correctly described the: three-fold valuation
in the suit as Rs. 4,000/-, Rs. 130/- and Rs. 1,800/-
(total Rs. 5,930/-). He however valued the appeal as
follows:
Rs. 3,400/- as the valuation for arrears of
rent or for rendition of accounts, Rs. 130/-
for injunction and Rs. 1,350/- for
ejectment--(Total Rs. 4,880/-).
Now it is obvious that if the valuation was Rs. 4,880/-
appeal would have lain in the District Court, but if the
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appeal had to be valued at Rs. 5,930/- it had to go before
the High Court. When the notice of the appeal was served on
the defendent (respondent) he flied a cross-objection in
the same court
92
but did not take any exception to the valuation of the
appeal in the District Court on its presentation in that
Court. On July 25, 1962, the District Judge made an order
upholding a preliminary objection taken before him at the
hearing that the memorandum of appeal was liable to be
returned for presentation to the proper court, and he
ordered the memorandum of appeal to be so returned. It
appears that it was filed in the High Court the same day
and, therefore, there was no loss of time after the return
of the memorandum. The appeal was delayed by nearly one
year.
It may, however, be mentioned that the plaintiff
(appellant) did not submit to the decision of the District
Court but took the matter in revision before the High Court.
The appeal as represented and the application for revision
were disposed of by the common judgment under appeal before
us. The High Court held that there was no ground for
extending time under s. 5 of the Limitation Act for which
purpose an application had been sub-joined to the appeal
filed in the High Court.
The question in this case is whether the High Court was
fight in dealing with this problem as it did. The High
Court seemed to be of the opinion that an Advocate (Mr. K.K.
Raizada) of 34 years’ standing could not possibly make the
mistake in view of the clear provisions on the subject of
appeals existing in s. 39(1) of the Punjab Courts Act.
That sub-section at that time clearly showed that appeals
of the value of Rs. 5,000/- must be filed before the
District Court but appeals above Rs. 5’000/must be filed
before the High Court. The High Court also felt that the
learned counsel persisted in pursuing his own theory by
willing a revision. It is on this account that time was
denied to the present appellant in the appeal. The only
question is whether the decision of the High Court can be
accepted.
The law is settled that mistake of counsel may in
certain circumstances be taken into account in condoning
delay although there is no general proposition that mistake
of counsel by itself is always a sufficient ground. It is
always a question whether the mistake was bona fide or was
merely device to cover an ulterior purpose such as laches on
the part of the litigant or an attempt to save limitation in
an underhand way. The High Court unfortunately never
considered the matter from this angle. If it had, it would
have seen quite clearly that there was no attempt to avoid
the Limitation Act but rather to follow it albeit on a wrong
reading of the situation.
It is quite clear that the limitation for the appeal to
the High Court was three times as much as it was for the
District Court. When the appeal was filed, litigant had as
much as two months
93
in hand to file the same in the High Court. Further he did
not attempt to save court-fee on the appeal but paid the
same courtfee which would have been payable in the High
Court. It does not appear that he had an underhand motive
for filing the appeal in the District Court. Therefore, the
filing of the appeal must be attributed entirely to the
advice of the counsel. Here again, the counsel did not
suppress anything. As has been stated earlier, he put down
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both the valuations in the forefront of his memorandum of
appeal, that is to say, the valuation of the suit in the
original court and the valuation of the appeal. No doubt
the counsel was one with some experience and ought to have
known that an appeal above Rs. 5,000/- must be filed in the
High Court and not the District Court and therefore, we have
to see whether he was genuinely under a mistake or not.
Here there is proof that he adhered to this view, because
not only he filed the appeal but also took a revision from
the order of the District Court to the High Court, still
labouring under the same mistaken view. Further he, seems to
have been misled by a rule, i.e.r. 4 in Ch. 3B of Vol. 1 of
the rules and orders of the High Court which read as
follows:
"In a suit for the amount found to be
due after taking into accounts, it is not the
tentative valuation of the plaintiff, but the
amount found to be due and decreed by the
court that determines the forum of appeal."
This rule is applicable in a case in which the amount
decreed is larger than the amount for which the original
suit was brought. Now it is well-known that in a suit for
accounts, the plaintiff is not obliged to state the exact
amount which would result after the taking of accounts. He
may do so if he is able to; but if he is not, he can put a
tentative valuation upon his suit for accounts taking care
that the valuation is adequate and reasonable in all the
circumstances of the case. But the rule also obtains that
if the amount which is found is larger than the amount at
which he stated his tentative valuation, he must file the
appeal against the larger amount and in the forum before
which an appeal of that valuation can go. This rule does
not apply where the amount decreed is below the valuation in
the original court. Here the original valuation holds good
both to find the forum and to put a valuation. After the
amendment of the valuation on account of ejectment the total
claim was Rs. 5,930/- and that determined the court of
lowest denomination before which the appeal from the suit
had to go. That according to the other rule which we have
cited was the High Court. The second rule, which we have
later cited, does not cut across the first rule. This
appears to be the error which was committed by Mr. Raizada
and we do not
94
find anything in the case to show that this error was
tainted by any mala-fide motive on the part of the counsel
for the litigant. In the circumstances we think that the
High Court would have been justified in extending time under
s. 5 of the Limitation Act and the reasoning of the High
Court unfortunately started from a wrong angle.
We accordingly set aside the order of the High Court and
remit the appeal for hearing and disposal according to law.
The appellant will however pay all the costs of the
respondent which have been incurred till today irrespective
of the result.
We may mention that there are two appeals pending before
us. The other appeal is from the revisional order of the
High Court and we think that there is no need to pronounce
any decision in that appeal, because it becomes infructuous
by reason of our decision in this appeal. As the appeal
before. the High Court is an old one, we hope that the High
Court will be able to give it priority.
y.p. Appeal
remitted.
95
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