Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE ASSOCIATED HOTELS OF INDIA, LTD. AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R. B. JODHA MAL KUTHALIA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/08/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 156 1961 SCR (1) 259
CITATOR INFO :
R 1975 SC 824 (27)
ACT:
Partition of India-Creation of two Dominions, India and
Pakistan-Formation of new provinces and transfer of
territories-Decree passed by Federal Court of Pakistan-
Whether executable in India-Evacuee laws-Whether affect such
decree--The Indian Independence Act, 1947, s. 9-The Indian
Independence (Legal Proceedings) Order, 1947, art. 4, cls.
1, 2, 3-Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (V of 1908), O. 45, r.
15.
HEADNOTE:
On October 2, 1946, the Associated Hotels of India Ltd., and
its managing director, Mohan Singh Oberoi, appellant 1 and 2
respectively, entered into an agreement with the respondent
for purchasing certain property from the latter for a price
of Rs. 52,75,000 and paid Rs. 5 lacs as earnest money; but
as the respondent’s title to the property was found to be
defective the sale was not completed. The appellants filed
a suit in the Court of Senior Subordinate judge at Lahore
for the recovery of Rs. 5,10,000 which included the earnest
money and interest accruing thereon, and the suit was
decreed for Rs. 5,08,333/5/4 with future interest in favour
of appellant NO. 2 on March 14, 1949. The claim of
appellant No. I was rejected. On appeal by the respondent
the High Court at Lahore reversed the decree of the trial
court and dismissed the suit on November 21, 1949. The
Federal Court of Pakistan on appeal by the appellants
allowed the appeal of appellant NO. 2 on December 21, 1953,
and restored the decree passed in his favour by the trial
court. After the passing of the decree by the trial court
and before the decision of the respondent’s appeal in the
Lahore High Court the appellants had put the decree in
execution which was stayed at the request of the respondent
on condition that the respondent should deposit Rs. 3,00,000
in the High Court and furnish security for the balance of
the decretal amount. In course of the execution proceedings
and after the Federal Court’s decree in favour of appellant
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NO. 2 the main question that arose, inter alia, was whether
the deposited sum of Rs. 3,00,000 should be applied towards
the satisfaction of the decree of the Federal Court and paid
to the decree-holder after transferring it to India or
whether the custodian of evacuee property in Pakistan was
entitled to the money as evacuee property. The decree-
holder and the judgment-debtor were both agreed that the
money in question vested in the decree-holder and
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260
should as requested by him be either transmitted to India or
paid to him. This was resisted by the custodian and the
High Court held that the money could not be transferred to
India, and directed the custodian to report what interest
any evacuee had in the money. It was under these
circumstances that the appellants made the present
application to the Punjab High Court (India) under O. 45, r.
15, and s. 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure with a prayer
for transmitting to the Court of the Senior Subordinate
judge, Simla, the proceedings’ between the parties for
execution of the said decree in accordance with the
provisions applicable for execution of original decrees
passed by the said judge. Their contention was that as a
result of the provisions of Art. 4(3) of the Indian
Independence (Legal Proceedings) Order, 1947, the decree
passed in favour of appellant No. 2 by the Federal Court of
Pakistan had become executable in India as if it had been
passed by the Supreme Court of India. The respondent
resisted this on the grounds that the application was not
entertainable and the decree could not be executed in the
absence of a certificate as required by O. 21, r. 6(b) of
the Code of Civil Procedure, that the decree did not attract
the provisions of Art. 4(3) of the Order and that the decree
in question having vested in the Custodian appellant NO. 2
was not entitled to execute it. The relevant portion of
Art. 4 of the Indian Independence (Legal Proceedings) Order,
1947, runs thus:-
" Notwithstanding the creation of certain new
provinces and the transfer of certain territories from the
Province of Assam to the Province of East Bengal by the
Indian Independence Act, 1947-
(1) All proceedings pending immediately before the appointed
day in any civil or criminal court (other than a High Court)
in the Province of Bengal, the Punjab or Assam shall be
continued in that court as if the said Act had not been
passed, and that the Court shall continue to have for the
purpose of the said proceedings all the jurisdiction and
powers which it had immediately before the appointed day;
(2) Any appeal or application for revision in respect of
any proceedings so pending in any such court shall be to the
court which would have appellate or as the case may be
divisional jurisdiction over that court if the proceedings
were instituted in that court after the appointed day, and
(3) effect shall be given within the territories of either
of the two dominions to any judgment, decree, order or
sentence of any such court in the said proceedings, as if it
had been passed by a court of competent jurisdiction within
the Dominion."
Although the High Court held that the decree sought to be
executed fell under Art. 4(1) of the order and could be
executed under Art. 4(3) of the said order, it came to the
conclusion that
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the " Court of competent jurisdiction " was the Senior
Subordinate judge at Simla and that the appellants should
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have filed their application under O. 45 T. 15, Code of
Civil Procedure in that Court. The High Court further held
that the application was incompetent owing to absence of a
certificate under O. 21, r. 6(b), of the Code, that the
judgment debt was property and its situs was Pakistan and
that the decree vested in the Custodian of Evacuee Property
at Lahore and was not executable at the instance of the
appellants. Consequently the High Court dismissed the
appellant’s application under O. 45, r. 25. On appeal by
the appellants on a certificate of the High Court,
Held, (Kapur, J., dissenting), that the provisions of Art. 4
of the Indian Independence (Legal Proceedings) Order, 1947,
did not apply to the decree sought to be executed by the
appellants. The pending proceedings to which Art. 4(1) of
the order applied would continue before the specified courts
even though the jurisdiction of the said courts might
otherwise have been affected by the passing of the Indian
Independence Act or the transfer of certain territories.
Article 4(1) could not be extended to pending proceedings in
respect of which the trial court’s jurisdiction was in no
way affected by the passing of the Act or the transfer of
any territories.
Appeals would be taken against the judgments or orders
passed in the said proceedings in the same manner in which
they would have been allowed if the Original proceedings had
been instituted after the appointed day.
Protap Kumar Sen and An.Y. v. Nagendra Nath Mazumday, A.I.R.
1951 Cal. 511, Ahidhar Ghose v. Jagabandhu Roy, A.I.R. 1952
Cal. 846, Naresh Chandra Bose v. Sachindra Nath Deb and Ors,
A.I.R. 1956 Cal. 222, not applicable.
Per Kapur, J.-The High Court could and should have sent down
the decree in question to the Senior Subordinate judge,
Simla, to execute it in accordance with law.
The effect of Art. 4(1) and (3) of the Order was that " all
proceedings " meaning all suits and other proceedings would
continue unaffected by the passing of the Act and the
setting up of two provinces of West Punjab and East Punjab,
and also that once a decree was passed or sentence
pronounced by a court in either of the new provinces of the
two Dominions it was to be given effect to as if it was a
decree or order passed by a Court of competent jurisdiction
in the other Dominion. The amplitude of the language of
Art. 4 is not cut down by any words in the article or the
Order.
The meaning of the words appellate jurisdiction " as used in
cl. (2) of Art- 4 of the Order is not affected by the
subsequent extension of restriction of the jurisdiction of
the Court and the decree of the Federal Court of Pakistan is
covered by these words.
262
The word effect " in cl. (3) of Art. 4 is wider than the
words " enforce or " execute " and is not equivalent to "
being enforced " by suit on a foreign judgment.
Clause 3 of the Art. 4 is in the nature of a deeming clause
and makes the decree of the Pakistan Court (West Punjab) a
decree of a court of competent jurisdiction in East Punjab
(India).
Situs of the decree was not Pakistan alone but by a fiction
of law the decree was a decree of a court of competent
jurisdiction in what was the Dominion of India.
The provisions of the evacuee law in Pakistan would not
affect the rights of the appellant to execute the decree in
question in India.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 320/58.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 22nd January,
1957, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Misc. No. 24/C of
1955.
D. N. Pritt, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji and P.L. Vohra,
for the Appellants.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, A. V. Viswanatha
Sastri and Naunit Lal, for the Respondent.
1960. August 23. The Judgment of B. P. Sinha, C. J., P. B.
Gajendragadkar, K. Subba Rao, and K. N. Wanchoo, JJ., was
delivered by Gajendragadkar, J. Kapur, J. delivered a
separate Judgment.
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-The Associated Hotels of India Ltd., and
its Managing Director Mohan Singh Oberoi (hereafter called
appellants 1 and 2 respectively) had filed an application in
the High Court of Punjab under O. 45, r. 15 of the Civil
Procedure Code for executing a decree passed by the Federal
Court of Pakistan in favour of appellant 2 and against Jodha
Mal Kuthalia (hereafter called the respondent). The said
application was dismissed but, on an application made by the
appellants under Art. 133(1) (a) and (c) of the
Constitution, the said High Court granted a certificate to
the appellants and it is with the said certificate that they
have preferred the present appeal before this Court.
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It is necessary at the outset to state the material facts
leading to the appellants’ application before the High Court
under O. 45, r. 15. It appears that by an agreement dated
October 2, 1947, the respondent had agreed to sell to the
appellants certain property known as Nedous Hotel at Lahore
for Rs. 52,75,000. In pursuance of the terms of the said
agreement the appellants had paid the respondent Rs.
5,00,000 by, way of earnest money. It, however, turned out
that the respondent’s title to the property in question was
defective, and so the sale could not be completed. That is
why the appellants had to file a suit in the court of the
Senior Subordinate Judge at Lahore claiming to recover from
the respondent a sum of Rs. 5,10,000; this amount included
Rs. 5,00,000 paid by the appellants to the respondent as
earnest money and interest accrued due thereon up to the
date of the suit. In the said suit the trial judge passed a
decree for Rs. 5,08,333-5-4 with future interest thereon at
5% per annum in favour of appellant 2. The claim made by
appellant I was rejected. This decree was challenged by the
respondent before the Lahore High Court. The High Court
upheld the contentions raised by the respondent, allowed his
appeal, set aside the decree passed in favour of appellant 2
and dismissed the appellants’ suit with costs. This decree
led to an appeal by the appellants before the Federal Court
of Pakistan. The Federal Court in turn allowed the appeal
in favour of appellant 2 and restored the decree passed in
his favour by the trial court. This decree was passed on
December 21, 1953. The present application made by the
appellants in the Punjab High Court under O. 45, r. 15 is
intended to obtain the execution of this decree.
While the litigation between the appellants and the
respondent was thus proceeding in the courts in Pakistan
certain other events took place in regard to the execution
of the said decree to which reference must now be made After
the trial court had passed its decree and before the date of
the decision of the Lahore High Court, the appellants had
put the decree in execution and thereupon the respondent had
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applied for stay of the said execution before the Lahore
High Court. On the said application the Lahore High Court
ordered that the execution taken out by the appellants
should be stayed on condition that the respondent should
deposit a sum of Rs. 3,00,000 in the High Court and furnish
security for the balance of the decretal amount. In
accordance with this order the respondent deposited the
amount and furnished the security. Subsequently when the
Lahore High Court allowed the respondent’s appeal he applied
for a refund of the amount already deposited by him, and his
application was allowed on December 16, 1949. On the same
day, however, the Lahore High Court directed that
information of its order allowing the respondent to withdraw
the amount should be given to the Custodian. The Custodian
then moved the High Court on December 20, 1949, for a review
of its order on the ground that the amount in question was
evacuee property and as such it vested in him. These
proceedings were pending before the High Court when the
appellants had taken their appeal before the Federal Court
of Pakistan against the High Court’s decision.
After the Federal Court decreed the claim of appellant 2 the
said proceedings were taken up before the High Court for
final disposal. At this stage the respondent made an
application before the High Court that the deposit of Its.
3,00,000 should be applied towards the satisfaction of the
decree passed by the Federal Court in favour of appellant 2
and he stated that he wanted to withdraw his previous
application for the return of the said deposit (R. F. A.
No. 31 of 1949).
Similarly appellant 2 filed a Civil Miscellaneous
Application (No. 120 of 1954) praying that the amount of Rs.
3,00,000 deposited by his judgment-debtor should be
transferred to India, or that, if it could not be so
transferred, it should be held that the Custodian was not
entitled to the said amount and so it should be paid to the
decree-holder at Lahore, or that it should be paid to such
person other than the Custodian as may be entitled to it.
These two applications
265
along with the original petition filed by the Custodian for
a review of the High Court’s original order allowing a
refund to the respondent were heard together by the High
Court.
The High Court noticed that both the judgment debtor and
appellant 2 agreed that the amount in question vested in the
decree-holder and should either be transmitted to India or
paid to him. The Custodian, however, resisted this prayer.
Under s. 4 of the Pakistan Transfer of Evacuee Deposits Act,
1954, a deposit made in a civil proceeding to which an
evacuee was entitled and in which no muslim was interested
could be transferred to India provided that if the court was
satisfied that if any of the persons interested in the
deposit was not an evacuee the deposit shall not be
transferred. It was under the provisions of s. 4 that
appellant 2 had claimed a transfer of the deposit on the
allegation that he was an evacuee. The High Court, however,
proceeded to consider whether the amount of Rs. 3,00,000
belonged exclusively to appellant 2- and held that on going
through the record it was satisfied that though the decree
stood in the name of appellant 2 the amount really belonged
to the Associated Hotels Limited, and it observed that it
was not denied that among the shareholders of the Associated
Hotels Limited there were muslims and non-evacuees. It was
urged before the High Court by appellant 2 that since the
decree stood in his name he alone could execute it and no
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question as to the title of appellant I could arise in the
proceedings before the court. Curiously enough this
contention was negatived and appellant 2’s prayer for the
transfer of deposit was rejected. How the High Court could
have considered the question of the title of appellant in
view of the decree passed by the Federal Court it is
difficult to appreciate. However, on the view that it took
the High Court came to the conclusion that since appellant I
some of whose shareholders were muslims and non-evacuees was
entitled to the deposit appellant 2 was riot entitled to
claim the transfer of the deposit to India. In the result
the High Court allowed the application of the
266
Custodian and set aside its earlier order for refund in
favour of the respondent. In regard to the other two
prayers made by appellant 2 the High Court observed that
under s. 34 of the Pakistan Administration of Evacuee
Property Ordinance it was only for the Custodian to consider
what interest, if any, an evacuee had in the deposit in
dispute, and so it left that question to be determined by
the Custodian, and directed that the said prayers made by
appellant 2 would have to be decided after issuing notice to
the Custodian and after the Custodian returns his finding on
the issue framed by it. This order was passed on January
20, 1956. It is under these circumstances that the appel-
lants made the present application to the Punjab High Court
under O. 45, r. 15 of the Code.
The case for the appellants was that as a result of the
provisions of s. 4(3) of the Indian Independence (Legal
Proceedings) Order, 1947 (hereafter called the Order), the
decree passed in favour of appellant 2 by the Federal Court
of Pakistan had become executable in India as if it had been
passed by the Supreme Court of India. On this basis the
provisions of O. 45, r. 15 of the Code were invoked and the
High Court was requested to transmit to the Court of the
Senior Subordinate Judge, Simla, the proceedings between the
parties for execution of the said decree in the manner and
according on the provisions applicable to the execution of
the original decree passed by the said Judge. An
alternative prayer was made for the same order under the
High Court’s inherent jurisdiction under s. 151 of the Code.
This application was resisted by the respondent on several
grounds. It was urged that neither O. 45, r. 15 nor s. 151
of the Code was applicable, that the decree could not be
executed, and the application made by the appellants in that
behalf could not be entertained, in the absence of a
certificate required by O. 21, r. 6(b), that the decree in
fact did not attract the provisions of s. 4(3) of the Order
and that appellant 2 was not entitled to execute it because
the decree under execution had vested in the Custodian of
Evacuee Property at Lahore.
267
The High Court has held that the decree sought to be
executed fell under s. 4(1) of the Order and thus could be
executed under s. 4(3) of the said Order. As a result of
these findings the appellant was held entitled to invoke the
relevant provisions of the Order. The High Court, however,
came to the conclusion that the court of competent
jurisdiction specified in s. 4(3) was in the context of the
relevant facts in the present case the Court of the Senior
Subordinate Judge at Simla and that the appellants should
have filed their application before that court. The High
Court also took the view that the present application was
incompetent for the additional reason that the certificate
of non-satisfaction had not been filed along with the
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application as required under O. 21, r. 6(b). According to
the High Court the judgment-debt was property and its situs
was Pakistan. The result of these findings was that under
the Pakistan law the decree vested in the Custodian of
Evacuee Property at Lahore, and so it was not executable at
the instance of the appellants. On these findings the
application made by the appellants was dismissed. In the
present appeal Mr. Pritt has challenged the correctness of
these findings.
Mr. Pritt contends that the expression " a court of
competent jurisdiction " in s. 4(3) of the Order must mean a
court which can pass the decree under execution and that
inevitably must mean the Supreme Court of India, because the
decree under execution is a decree passed by the Federal
Court of Pakistan. According to him the High Court was in
error in holding that the appellants should have produced a
certificate of non-satisfaction because the provisions of O.
45, r. 15 do not require such a certificate. If the decree
under execution has to be regarded as one passed by the
Supreme Court of India the provisions of O. 45, r. 15 should
have been applied and no additional limitations imposed on
the appellants. Mr. Pritt conceded that the judgment-debt
is property but disputed the correctness of the conclusion
of the High Court that the situs of the said debt is
Pakistan. He also urged alternatively that even if the
situs of the judgment debt is assumed to be Pakistan, under
the relevant
35
268
provisions of Pakistan law the property in the judgment-debt
did not vest in the Custodian and continued to be the
property of appellant 2. Naturally in his opening Mr. Pritt
assumed that the view taken by the Punjab High Court as to
the applicability of ss. 4(1) and 4(3) of the Order was
right and when the correctness of the said finding was
challenged by the respondent in his reply Mr. Pritt
supported the said finding on the merits.
On the other hand, the learned Solicitor-General has
seriously disputed the correctness of the High Court’s
conclusion about the applicability of ss. 4(1) and 4(3) of
the Order to the decree in question while he has supported
the other findings of the High Court against the appellants.
On these contentions the question which logically must first
be considered is whether the decree under execution attracts
the provisions of s. 4(3) of the Order.
The Order was made by the Governor-General on August 12,
1947, in exercise of the powers conferred on him by s. 9 of
the Indian Independence Act, 1947, and all other powers
enabling him in that behalf. Section 1(2) of the Order
provides that it shall come into force at once. Section 2
of the Order provides that the appointed day means the 15th
of August, 1947. Section 3 makes provisions for proceedings
pending immediately before the appointed day in any of the
special tribunals specified in column 1 to the Schedule. We
are not concerned with the provisions of this section in the
present appeal. We are concerned with s. 4 which it is
necessary to read.
Section 4 reads thus:-
"4. Notwithstanding the creation of certain new Provinces
and the transfer of certain territories from the Province of
Assam to the Province of East Bengal by the Indian
Independence Act, 1947-
(1) All proceedings pending immediately before the appointed
day in any civil or criminal court (other than a High Court)
in the Province of Bengal, the Punjab or Assam shall be
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continued in that court as if the said Act had not been
passed, and that court shall continue to have for the
purposes of the said
269
proceedings all the jurisdiction and powers which it had
immediately before the appointed day ;
(2) any appeal or application for revision in respect of any
proceedings so pending in any such court shall lie in the
court which would have appellate, or as the case may be
revisional, jurisdiction over that court if the proceedings
were instituted in that court after the appointed day; and
(3) effect shall be given within the territories of either
of the two Dominions to any judgment, decree, order or
sentence of any such court in the said proceedings, as if it
had been passed by a court of competent jurisdiction within
that Dominion."
The question which we have to consider is whether the
proceedings from which the appeal to the Federal Court arose
fall within s. 4(1); if they do s. 4(3) will come into
operation. If, however, the said proceedings do not fall
within s. 4(1), s. 4(3) would be inapplicable. The
appellants contend that the words used in s. 4(1) are wide
enough to include every suit pending in any civil court in
the Punjab at the material time, and there is no scope for
limiting the extent of the applicability of the said clause.
On the other hand, it is urged for the respondent that it is
only such proceedings as were pending in any court at the
material time jurisdiction in respect of which would have
been affected by the transfer of certain territories from
one country to the other that are intended to be covered
under s. 4(1). The problem thus posed by the parties is one
of construction. As we have already observed, the High
Court has construed s. 4(1) in favour of the appellants; and
we have to consider whether the High Court was right in
reaching the said conclusion.
Both the parties are agreed that in construing the
provisions of s. 4(1) of the Order we should bear in mind
the object with which the Order was made and should construe
the provisions of the Order after reading them as a whole.
Since the Order has been passed in exercise of the powers
conferred on the Governor-General by s. 9 of the Indian
Independence Act it would be useful to refer to the material
provisions of the said section. Section 9(1)(d) provides
that the
270
Governor-General shall by order make such provision as
appears to him necessary or expedient for removing
difficulties arising in connection with the transition to
the provisions of this Act. It was realised that as a
result of the Act, in carving out two Dominions certain
areas may have to be transferred from a Province in one
Dominion to a province in another Dominion and such a
transfer would inevitably create difficulties of
jurisdiction of the civil courts to continue to try
proceedings already pending before them. The Order was,
therefore, made with the object of avoiding unnecessary
complications or hardship to the litigants, and so it
provided that the proceedings covered by it which were
pending at the material time should be continued as if the
Act had not been passed. In other words, a departure was
deliberately made from the normal rules of private
international law in regard to the enforceability of foreign
judgments. Both parties are agreed that this was the object
in making the Order, and that in construing the relevant
words of the Order the courts must bear this object in mind.
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It is then urged by the learned Solicitor-General that in
its very nature the Order should be treated as temporary
though he immediately added that it would be alive and in
operation until all the proceedings covered by it have been
finally and fully disposed of. No doubt he commented on the
fact that the Pakistan Government had by its legislative
process made a substantial departure from the provisions of
the Order, and had in substance decided to refuse to
recognise judgments and orders of Indian courts to which the
provisions of the Order undoubtedly applied. In this
connection our attention was drawn to the Indian
Independence (Pakistan Courts Pending Proceedings) Act, 1952
(IX of 1952), which by s. 3 provides that notwithstanding
anything contained in any of the orders referred to in s. 2,
no decree to which this Act applies shall be given effect to
by any court or authority in India so far as such decree
imposes any liability or obligation on any government in
India. It appears that the Indian Government was satisfied
that Pakistan had thought it fit to provide that no decree
or
271
order passed by a court in India would be given effect to in
Pakistan, and so it became necessary that the position of
the Government India and the three State Governments
concerned should be adequately safeguarded. It is with that
object that this Act was passed. The Solicitor-General
contends that though the R. Order had been made by the
Governor-General under s. 9 of the Indian Independence Act
and was intended to apply to both the Dominions virtually
the provisions of the Order are no longer in operation in
Pakistan. In our opinion, this consideration is hardly
relevant in construing the material provisions of the Order.
So long as the Order remains in force and has neither been
modified or repealed it is the duty of the courts in India
to consider its provisions in a fair and reasonable manner
and to give full effect to them. Considerations based on
the unilateral conduct adopted by the Pakistan Legislature
in departing from the provisions of the Order cannot, in our
opinion, have any bearing when we are dealing with the
question of the construction of the Order itself. The Order
is in force, and if the decree sought to be executed by the
appellants falls under s. 4(1) it will attract the pro-
visions of s. 4(3) and all relevant questions arising in
working out the provisions of s. 4(3) would have to be
judicially considered. It may be that there may not be a
large number of decrees or orders which still remain
executable and have not been executed and so occasions to
invoke the provisions of this Order may not be too many ;
but that is another matter.
Let us then consider the provisions of s. 4(1) first. Mr.
Pritt has urged that the appeal to the Federal Court in
which the decree under execution was passed in favour of
appellant 2 arose from proceedings which were pending at the
material time in a court in the Punjab and as such it fell
within the purview of s. 4(1). He emphasises the fact that
s. 4(1) refers to all proceedings in any civil court in the
Punjab as well as in the Provinces of Bengal and Assam, and
his case is that there is no justification for limiting the
scope and effect of the wide words used in the first part of
the clause. Prima facie there is some force in
272
this contention ; but, in our opinion, it would be erroneous
to construe these words in isolation and apart from the rest
of the provisions in the said clause it. self. It is
significant that s. 4 refers to the creation of certain new
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Provinces and the transfer of certain terri tories from the
Province of Assam to the Province of East Bengal by the
Independence Act. In other words, the non-obstante clause
which constitutes the preamble of s. 4 clearly indicates
that it was the creation of certain new Provinces and the
transfer of certain territories which was the reason for the
provisions made in the three clauses of the said section.
It is also significant that s. 4 is confined to the
specified judicial proceedings pending in only three
Provinces; that is to say, proceedings pending in competent
courts either in Sind or in the North West Frontier Province
which are parts of Pakistan and in all the States in India
except Punjab, West Bengal and Assam do not attract the
provisions of the Order. There is, therefore, no doubt that
the High Court was in error in assuming that " the use of
the words gall’ in ’all proceedings’ clearly indicated that
all cases pending in all courts in the two Dominions were
intended to be covered by the Order. It is manifest that
the Order, in its application to India and Pakistan, covered
only three Provinces and not all.
The latter part of s. 4(1) must now be considered. The
pending proceedings covered by the first part have to be
continued in the court where they are pending as if the said
Act had not been passed, and that court shall continue to
have for the purpose of the said proceedings all the
jurisdiction and powers which it had immediately before the
appointed day. These two clauses unambiguously indicate
that by the passing of the Act the initial jurisdiction of
the court to entertain the proceedings pending before it was
affected ; that is why, in authorising the said proceedings
to continue before the said court the clause proceeds to say
that the said proceedings shall continue as if the Act had
not been passed. In other words, reading s. 4(1) as a whole
there can be no doubt that
273
its provisions were intended to safeguard the continuance of
only such pending proceedings in respect of which questions
of Jurisdiction of the trial court would have arisen by the
passing of the Act and the transfer of certain territories.
If proceedings were pending before the specified courts
validly at the material time, and if the jurisdiction of the
said courts to continue with the trial of the said
proceedings was not affected by the passing of the Act or
the transfer of the territory, it was wholly unnecessary to
authorise the continuance of the said proceedings in the
said court and to provide that the said proceedings should
be so continued as if the Act had not been passed. In
regard to such proceedings the latter part of s. 4(1) would
be wholly redundant. The only answer which Mr. Pritt
attempted to give in facing this difficulty was that even in
regard to proceedings which the specified court was
competent to try even after the passing of the Act its
jurisdiction to execute the decree would be impaired or
affected and that was intended to be cured ’by s. 4(1).
This argument is clearly far-fetched and untenable. The
jurisdiction and powers which are saved by s. 4(1) are in
terms described as jurisdiction and powers " for the purpose
of the said proceedings ". It is the jurisdiction to con-
tinue with the pending proceedings which had been validly
initiated and the word " proceedings " in the context must
mean, in the case of a suit, a suit and not proceedings
which may be taken out to execute the decree that may be
passed in such a suit. Therefore, we feel no difficulty in
holding that s. 4(1) does not apply to all proceedings
pending at the material time before the specified courts but
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only such of them in respect of which the jurisdiction of
the trial court would have been affected by the passing of
the Act or by the transfer of certain territories.
Section 4(2) deals with appeals or revisional applications
arising from the pending proceedings covered by cl. (1).
The learned Solicitor-General contends that this clause
cannot apply to an appeal before the Federal Court because,
according to him, it is only an appeal in respect of a
pending proceeding that is
274
contemplated by the clause. He argues that the word appeal
" can reasonably mean only one appeal which arises directly
against the decree passed in the pending proceedings and
there would, therefore, be no scope to extend the
application of s. 4(2) to a second appeal, as for instance
an appeal to the Federal Court in the present case. In
support of this argument he J. has incidentally referred to
the fact that the Federal Court had not come into existence
and had no jurisdiction to entertain a regular appeal from a
decision of the High Court at the time when the Order was
made. We are not impressed by this argument. In our
opinion there is no doubt that the word " appeal " in the
context must mean any appeal or appeals allowed by law in
respect of pending proceedings covered by cl. (1). Any
other view would lead to unreason. able, if not anomalous,
consequences. What cl. (2) intends to provide is that the
proceedings to which cl. (1) applies should be allowed to
take their full course under the law governing them, and the
final effective appellate decision should be as valid in
regard to the said proceedings as it would be in regard to
the proceedings validly instituted in that court after the
appointed day. Incidentally, we may point out that as a
result of the combined operation of Order G. G. O. 3 made
on. February 25, 1948, and the provisions of the Federal
Court (Jurisdiction Enlargement) Act, 1 of 1950, the Federal
Court must be deemed to have come into existence and must be
deemed to have had powers to entertain appeals from the
decrees of the High Courts as from the appointed day.
That takes us to s. 4(3). The Solicitor-General con; tends
that the expression,, effect shall be given to’ in this
clause does not mean that the decree shall be executed. It
only means that the decree shall be recognised as a decree
passed by a court of competent jurisdiction and nothing
more. His argument is that s. 4 wanted to make a very
narrow and limited departure from the ordinary principles of
private international law. It is well-known that except for
cases falling under ss. 44 and 44A of the Code of Civil
Procedure a foreign judgment has to be enforced by a suit;
275
and in such a suit the judgment-debtor is entitled to make
certain pleas against the enforcement of the judgment.
These pleas are specified by cls. (a) to (f) of s. 13 of the
Code. According to the Solicitor-General, as a result of
the fiction introduced by s. 4(3), when a foreign judgment
to which s. 4(1) applies is I sought to be enforced by a
suit in an Indian court it would not be open to the
judgment-debtor to urge that the judgment or decree has not
been passed by a( court of competent jurisdiction ; though
such a plea is permissible under s. 13(a) it is excluded by
operation of s. 4(3) of the Order; the remaining pleas would
still be available to the judgment-debtor. If it is held
that the word " effect shall be given " means that the
decree shall be executed quite clearly all the pleas
recognised by s. 13 of the Code would be inapplicable.
Therefore, according to the respondent, the present decree
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cannot be executed but must be enforced by a suit and it
would be open to the judgment-debtor to raise pleas (b) to
(f) recognised by s. 13 of the Code. This argument is
sought to be supported on the ground that the jurisdiction
which is protected by s. 4(1) is a national or local
jurisdiction whereas the competent jurisdiction to which
reference is made in s. 4(3) is the international
jurisdiction. The distinction between these two
jurisdictions is based on the statement contained in an
earlier edition of Dicey’s "Conflict of Laws" to the effect
that " Proper Court means a court which is authorised by the
law of the country to which it belongs or under whose
authority it acts, to adjudicate upon a given matter,
whereas ’Court of competent jurisdiction means a Court which
has, according to the principles maintained by English
Courts, the right to adjudicate upon a given matter"(1). We
ought to add that these definitions have been given by Dicey
only to explain the meaning of the said words used by him in
his Digest and nothing more, and even so it is not shown
that they find a place in the latest edition of the book.
(1) Dicey’s " Conflict of Laws", 6th Ed., P. 345.
36
276
In considering the merits of this argument it is necessary
first to bear in mind what is meant by the clause " a court
of competent jurisdiction within that Dominion ". This
clause in substance provides inter alia that the judgment
should be given effect to within the territories of either
of the two Dominions, and in doing so the said judgment
should be treated as if it had been passed by a court of
competent jurisdiction within that Dominion. The context
thus clearly shows that the words " that Dominion " indicate
the Dominion where effect is being given to the judgment; it
cannot possibly mean the Dominion in which the judgment had
been delivered, because the competent jurisdiction of the
court to deliver the said judgment has been already provided
for by s. 4(1). It would, we think, be idle to make any
distinction between the jurisdiction prescribed by s. 4(1)
and the competent jurisdiction to which reference is made in
s. 4(3). Thus s. 4(3) requires that in the Dominion where
effect is being given to a judgment, the judgment should be
treated as passed by a court of competent jurisdiction in
that Dominion. If that be so it would be difficult to
accept the plea that the only way in which effect should be
given is to recognise the judgment as a foreign judgment as
suggested by the learned Solicitor-General. If, for
instance, in the present case the judgment of the Federal
Court is treated by the statutory fiction as one passed by
the court of competent jurisdiction in India the words it
effect shall be given " used in the said clause must
inevitably mean that the decree following upon that judgment
should be executed in India on the basis that the judgment
has been competently pronounced by an Indian court. Indeed
it is clear that unless cl. (3) intended to provide for the
execution of the judgment covered by cls. (1) and (2) it
would serve no purpose whatever. To say that cl. (3) merely
saves a possible plea in s. 13(1) is to ignore the effect of
cl. (1) itself. By cl. (1) the jurisdiction of the
specified court to deal with the pending proceedings is
provided, and so there could be no challenge to the said
jurisdiction any longer. We are, therefore, satisfied that
cl. (3) in
277
effect lays down that the judgment, decree, order or
sentence to which the Order applies is executable and would
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be executed as though it bad been passed or pronounced by a
competent court in the Dominion where execution is sought.
This conclusion is fortified if we bear in mind that a
sentence pronounced by a criminal court is dealt with in the
same manner as a judgment delivered or order made by a civil
court. It, would be far-fetched to suggest that in the case
of a sentence pronounced by a criminal court all that cl.
(3) authorises to be done is to take recourse to extradition
proceedings permitted by law and nothing more. We must,
therefore, hold that reading the three clauses of s. 4
together the result is that the pending proceedings to which
cl. (1) applies would continue before the specified courts
even though the jurisdiction of the said courts may
otherwise have been affected by the passing of the Act or
the transfer of certain territories, that the appeals would
be taken against the judgments or orders passed in the said
proceedings in the same manner in which they would have been
allowed if the original proceedings had been instituted
after the appointed day, and that the final judgment,
decree, order or sentence in the said proceedings would be
executed in either Dominion as if the said proceedings had
terminated in that manner in a competent court in the
Dominion where execution is sought. Having regard to the
very serious departure which has been made by cl. (3) from
the ordinary provisions of private international law it
would not be unreasonable to draw additional support to our
conclusion that the scope and extent of the proceedings
covered by cl. (1) is limited only to such cases where
jurisdiction of the specified court was affected by the
passing of the Act or the transfer of certain territories.
It seems to us difficult to assume that in making the Order
the Governor-General intended that all decrees, judgments or
orders passed by all the courts in the three specified
States should fall under cl. (1) and should be capable of
immediate execution in either Dominion under cl. (3). If
that were so it is not easy
278
to appreciate why the two other Provinces which formed part
of Pakistan as well as the other Provinces in India should
have been excluded from the scope of this Order. It seems
to us that the main. object of the Order was not to disturb
or interrupt judicial proceedings pending in the respective
courts in the Provinces specified where it was apprehended
that the jurisdiction of the said courts would be affected
by the passing of the Act. We have carefully considered the
three clauses in question and we are satisfied that on a
fair and reasonable construction s. 4(1) cannot be extended
to pending proceedings in respect of which the trial court’s
jurisdiction was in no way affected by the passing of the
Act or the transfer of any territories.
At this stage we may conveniently refer to three decisions
of the Calcutta High Court on which Mr. Pritt relied and to
which the High Court has referred in its judgment. In
Protap Kumar Sen & Anr. v. Nagendra Nath Mazumdar (1) the
Calcutta High Court was dealing with an execution proceeding
initiated by the decree-holder in the Alipore Court with a
certificate of non-satisfaction issued by the Sub-Judge at
Jessore who had passed the decree under execution. The
validity of the non-satisfaction certificate appears to have
been challenged by the judgment-debtor. The High Court held
that the Jessore Court was competent to grant a certificate
of non-satisfaction having regard to the provisions of s.
4(1) and (3) of the Order. The other point which was raised
was in regard to the validity of the Order itself. It was
urged that after the Indian Constitution was adopted the
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Indian Independence Act and orders issued thereunder were no
longer in force having regard to the provisions of art. 395
of the Constitution. This argument was also rejected. We
may add that the respondent has not urged before us that the
Order is no longer in force and so it is unnecessary to
consider that point. This decision, therefore, is not of
much assistance in construing the material words used in s.
4(1).
In Ahidhar Ghose v. Jagabandhu Roy (2) a decree
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Cal. 511.
(2) A.I.R. 1952 Cal. 846.
279
sought to be executed bad been passed by the Alipore Court
on compromise. It was a suit between a zemindar who held a
Patni in respect of lands which at the institution of the
suit lay wholly within the jurisdiction of Alipore Court but
as a result of the partition part of the land went into
Pakistan and thus R. ceased to be under the jurisdiction of
the Alipore Court. The compromise decree provided for the
payment of kist amount by stated installments and it further
directed that in case of default of payment of any of the
said instalments the entire decretal amount then outstanding
would be realisable by the attachment and sale of the
property in default. Since the property of the Patni tenure
was situated partly within the jurisdiction of Alipore Court
and partly outside, the judgment-debtor raised a plea that
the claim made by the decree-holder for sale of the property
within jurisdiction was incompetent. With that part of the
case we are not concerned in the present appeal. So far as
the applicability of s. 4(1) of the Order is concerned the
court held that s. 4(1) applied to the proceedings and that
we think was clearly right. It was a proceeding validly
instituted before the Alipore Court; the jurisdiction of the
Alipore Court was affected by partition, and so the
proceeding fell within the scope of s. 4(1). There are some
general observations made in the judgment on which reliance
is placed by Mr. Pritt, but the said general observations
must be read in the context of the facts in the case with
which the court was concerned. Thus this decision also does
not really assist the appellants.
In Naresh Chandra Bose v. Sachindra Nath Deb and Ors.
(1),the principal question which the court considered was
the effect of the provisions of Art. 395 of the Constitution
on the validity and the continuance of the Order. As we
have already pointed out, with this aspect of the matter we
are not concerned in the present appeal.
The next question which must be considered is whether the
present suit falls within s. 4(1) at all. The answer to
this question must obviously be in the
(1) A.I.R. 1956 Cal. 222.
280
negative.The material allegations made by the appellants in
the plaint filed by them in the present suit clearly show
that the whole cause of action had accrued within the
jurisdiction of the Senior Sub-Judge at Lahore. The
original contract had taken place at Lahore, the property
agreed to be sold was situated at Lahore, the earnest amount
of Rs. 5,00,000 was paid by the appellants to the
respondent at Lahore, the breach of the contract took place
at Lahore, and so under s. 20(c) of the Code of Civil
Procedure the suit was properly filed in the court at Lahore
and the jurisdiction of the said court to try the suit was
in no manner affected by the passing of the Actor the
transfer of territory. This position was not and is not
disputed. There is, therefore, no doubt that the trial
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court could have proceeded to deal with this suit even if
the Order in question had not been passed; and so the
statutory fiction raised by the provisions of the Order
cannot be invoked in enforcing a decree passed by the
Federal Court in an appeal arising from such a suit. In our
opinion, therefore, the High Court was in error in holding
that the provisions of s. 4 applied to the decree sought to
be executed by the appellants.
In view of this conclusion it is not necessary to deal with
the other points which have been decided by the High Court
and which were argued before us. If we had come to the
conclusion that the suit out of which the appeal before the
Federal Court arose was a pending proceeding under s. 4(1)
it would have been necessary for us to decide some other
questions. We would, for instance, have had to consider
which is the court of competent jurisdiction in India under
s. 4(3) is it the Supreme Court ? If yes, do the provisions
of O.45, r. 15 apply if not, does the statutory fiction
raised by s. 4 assist the appellants in invoking the said
provisions ? If the statutory fiction does not assist the
appellants, to what court should they have applied ? Are the
present proceedings in the nature of execution proceedings
before a transferee court? Is the certificate of non-
satisfaction prescribed by O. 21, r. 6(b) necessary ? It
would also have been necessary to consider the character of
the judgment-debt with the
281
object of deciding whether or not the decree vested in
appellant 2, or in the Custodian of Evacuee Property at
Lahore. As we have already indicated, since we have held
that the provisions of s. 4 are inapplicable to the decree
sought to be executed by the appellants it is unnecessary to
decide these questions.
Thus, though we have differed from the conclusion of the
High Court in regard to the applicability of s. 4 of the
Order that does not affect the final result of the appeal ;
because on the view we take about the scope and effect of
the provisions of s. 4 we hold that the application made by
the appellants before the High Court under O. 45, r. 15 was
incompetent, and so the High Court was right in dismissing
it.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
KAPUR J. I regret I am unable to agree with the majority
judgment proposed which I have read with care and respect
that it necessarily deserves and I now proceed to give my
reasons for this dissent.
This is an appeal by a certificate under Art. 133 (1) (a)
and (c) against the judgment and order of the High Court of
Punjab dismissing the appellants’ application for execution.
The appellants, the Associated Hotels of India Ltd. and R.
B. Mohan Singh Oberoi, the petitioners in the High Court, by
an agreement, dated October 2, 1946, agreed to purchase and
the respondent agreed to sell certain properties situate at
Lahore now in Pakistan for a, sum of Rs. 52,75,000. In
pursuance of the said agreement the appellants paid to the
respondent a sum of Rs. 5 lacs by way of deposit or earnest
money. The sale was not completed as the respondent could
not make out a good title to the property agreed to be sold.
On May 8, 1947, the appellants filed a suit in the court of
the Senior Subordinate Judge at Lahore against the
respondent for the recovery of Rs. 5,10,000, the amount
deposited and interest thereon @ 6% per annum and also
claimed future interest. This suit was decreed by the
Senior Subordinate Judge on March 14,1949, for a sum of Rs.
5,08,333/5/4 with future interest @ 5% per
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282
annum but only in favour of the second appellant R. B. Mohan
Singh Oberoi. The respondent took an appeal to the High
Court at Lahore and on November 24, 1949, the decree of the
trial court was reversed and the suit dismissed with costs.
Against that judgment and decree both the appellants took an
appeal to the Federal Court of Pakistan. On December 21,
1953, the Federal Court of Pakistan allowed the appeal, set
aside the decree of the High Court and restored that of the
Senior Subordinate Judge, Lahore.
After preferring his appeal in the High Court the respondent
applied to and on April 27, 1949, obtained from the High
Court an order of stay of the execution on the condition
that he deposited a sum of Rs. 3 lacs in the High Court and
gave security for the balance. This sum was deposited and
the security was furnished and thus the execution was
stayed. After the judgment of the High Court the respondent
applied to that Court for the refund of the three lacs
deposited by him and an order to that effect was made on
December 16, 1949. By the same order the Lahore High Court
directed notice to be issued to the Custodian of Evacuee
Property, Lahore. On December 20, 1949, the Custodian
applied for a review of the order of the High Court allowing
the money to be withdrawn by the respondent on the
allegation that the amount deposited was evacuee property.
He also obtained an interim stay of the order directing the
return of money to the respondent. On December 21, 1953,
the Federal Court of Pakistan reversed tile decree of the
Lahore High Court. Thereafter on January 6, 1954, the
respondent applied to the High Court praying that the amount
deposited be applied towards a part satisfaction of the
decree passed against him. On March 31, 1954, R. B. Mohan
Singh Oberoi appellant No. 2, applied for the transfer of
the Rs. 3 lacs along with the relevant records relating
thereto, to India under the Transfer of Evacuee Deposits
Ordinance, 1954 (Ordinance No. 1 of 1954), and the
subsequent enactment. In the alternative he submitted that
the Custodian of Evacuee Property was not entitled to that
money and prayed that it be paid to him
283
at Lahore or that it be paid to a person other than the
Custodian of Evacuee Property but not to the respondent as
the latter had no interest in the money. On January 30,
1956, the Lahore High Court which by then became the High
Court of West Pakistan held (1) that the money could not
be transferred to India ; (2) allowed the petition for
review; and (3) directed the Custodian to report what
interest, if any, any evacuee had in the money. That
matter, we were informed, is under appeal in the Supreme
Court of Pakistan.
On January 19, 1955, the appellants filed an application in
the Punjab High Court at Chandigarh under Order 45, Rule 15,
Civil Procedure Code and s. 151 of the Code for transmission
of the decree of the Pakistan Federal Court to the Court of
the Subordinate Judge at Simla and for directions to
determine the decretal amount. In the alternative the
appellants prayed for the decree being sent to the District
Judge for execution. They alleged therein that under the
provisions of Art. 4(3) of the Indian Independence (Legal
Proceedings Order), 1947, hereinafter called the Order made
under s. 9 of the Indian Independence Act, hereinafter
called the Act, effect could be given within the territories
of the Union of India to the decree passed by the Federal
Court of Pakistan and it could be executed as if it had been
passed by a court of competent jurisdiction within the Union
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of India; that the decree was to be treated as if it was a
decree of the Supreme Court of India and was executable by
the court of the senior Subordinate Judge at Simla on the
decree being transmitted to it by the High Court as provided
in Order 45, Rule 15, Civil Procedure Code. In the
alternative it was prayed that if the procedure under Order
45, Rule 15, Civil Procedure Code, was not appropriate and
applicable, the decree be sent for execution to the Senior
Subordinate Judge’s Court "as if it had been passed by the
Court ". With this petition an application in the form set
out in Order 21, Rule 11, Civil Procedure Code was attached.
The respondent pleaded that the decree being a
37
284
decree of a foreign court could not be executed in India and
O. 45, r. 15, was inapplicable; that the Act having been
repealed by the Indian Constitution the Order had ceased to
exist; that the decree vested in the Custodian of Evacuee
Property, Lahore and the "appellants being divested of it
could not execute it; that the petition wag not maintainable
because the appellants had not filed a certificate of non-
satisfaction of the court which passed the decree; that Art.
4(3) of the Order was inapplicable as the suit pending in
the Lahore court at the time of the partition did not suffer
from any defect of jurisdiction as a result of the partition
of India; and that the appellants could not simultaneously
take execution proceedings in the courts of two independent
countries in regard to the same decree.
On January 22, 1957, the High Court of Punjab dismissed the
petition holding that in spite of the coming into force of
the Indian Constitution the Order was still in force; that "
all cases pending in all courts in the two dominions were
intended to be covered by the Order ", and the only way in
which a decree of a civil court in Pakistan could be given
effect to was to allow it to be executed in India; that the
court of competent jurisdiction mentioned in the Order would
be the court of the Subordinate Judge First Class at the
place where the decree was sought to be executed and there-
fore the proper procedure was not to apply to the High Court
but to apply for a transfer certificate and after obtaining
a non-satisfaction certificate from the Federal Court of
Pakistan or from any other competent court in Pakistan, to
execute the decree in the court of the Senior Subordinate
Judge, Simla; that the appellants had been divested of all
rights in the decree by the Evacuee Law of Pakistan and they
had no right to execute the decree. In this connection the
High Court held that the situs of the decree was Pakistan
where the decree was passed and that the amount of Rs. 3
lacs which was being claimed by the Custodian of Evacuee
Property, Lahore, will be taker. into account after the
decision of that matter by the courts of Pakistan. Thus the
petition of the appellants
285
was dismissed. It is against this judgment and order that
the appellants have come in appeal to this court.
The first question for decision is the construction of the
fourth clause of the Order. The High Court did not accept
the contention of the respondent that the Order was
applicable only to proceedings over which R. the court had
lost its territorial jurisdiction consequential upon the
division of the border districts and not to in proceedings
pending in any court in the provinces of the two dominions,
i.e., in any court of the provinces of East and West Punjab
or East or West Bengal. This contention was repeated before
us and the same Constricted interpretation was sought to be
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put on the words of Art. 4(1) of the Order. An examination
of the provisions of the Act and other Orders made hereunder
will be helpful in determining the scope of Art. 4 of the
Order. The object of the Act was to provide for the setting
up of the two independent Dominions in India, to make
suitable changes in the Government of India Act, 1935, and "
to provide for the matters consequential on or connected
with the getting up of those Dominions ". By s. 1 two
separate Comings of India and Pakistan were set up. By. 2
the territories which were to fall in the two respective
Dominions were delimited. Certain provinces wholly fell in
one Dominion or the other, but three provinces, i.e.,
Bengal, the Punjab and Assam were to be provided between the
two Dominions which was done under ss. 3, 4 and 9(6) of the
Act. Under s. 3 the province of Bengal, as it was
constituted under the Government of India Act, 1935, ceased
to exist and in as place two new provinces to be
respectively known East Bengal and West Bengal were
constituted. Under the first schedule of the Act certain
districts wholly fell in East Bengal and the rest in West
Bengal. this was subject to the Award of the Boundary Com-
mission in regard to the boundary between the two provinces
which meant between contiguous districts the two new
provinces. Similarly under s. 4 the province of the Punjab
was divided into West Punjab and East Punjab and whole
districts mentioned in schedule 2 fell in West Punjab and
the rest in East
286
Punjab, but this was also subject to the Award to be made by
the Boundary Commission which though made on August 12,
1947, was published on August 17, 1947, and thus became
operative on that day. There was some dispute as to a
portion of the province of Assam and it, as a result of a
plebiscite, was in corporated in the province of East Bengal
and the rest of the province of Assam was constituted under
s. 9(6) of the Act into what became the province of Assam.
The Award of the Punjab Boundary Commission shows that only
small areas of the border tehsils of the border districts of
Gurdaspur, Amritsar and Ferozepur in East Punjab and
Sialkot, Lahore and Montgomery in West Punjab, i.e., tehsils
along the rivers Ravi and Sutlej were affected by the Aware
and the territories exchanged were not numerous of large by
any standard.
The setting up of the two Dominions and the division of the
three provinces of Bengal, the Punjab and Assam gave rise to
many problems relating to legislative, executive and
judicial branches of the Government including the division
of assets, liabilities and powers. Certain provisions were
made in the Act itself, but in order to give effective
operation to the purposes of the Act it became necessary to
promulgation Orders which was provided for in s. 9 of the
Act an which comprised all the three branches of govern
mental activity; executive, legislative and judicial Section
9 provided and I quote the relevant provisions:
" 9(1) The Governor General shall by order
make such provision as appears to him to be
necessary
expedient-
(a) for bringing the provisions of this Act in
the effective operation ;
(b) for dividing between the new Dominions,
and between the new Provinces to be
constituted under this Act, the powers,
rights, property, duties and liabilities
of the Governor General or, as the case me be,
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of the relevant Provinces which, under this A
are to cease to exist;
(c) ......................................................
.
287
(d) for removing difficulties arising in
connection with the transition to the
provisions of this Act;......
(i) so far as it appears necessary or expedient in
connection with any of the matters aforesaid, for varying
the constitution, powers or jurisdiction of any legislature,
court or other authority in the new Dominions and creating
new legislatures, courts or other authorities therein ".
By sub-s. (6) the Province of Assam on a certain event
happening was to cease to exist and was to be reconstituted.
Provision was also made in the section for continuance of
the existing laws. In exercise of the powers conferred upon
him under the Act the Governor General of India promulgated
a number of Orders.
In regard to other provinces unaffected by the Act, it was
unnecessary to make any Order as to the executive, judicial
or legislative functions of the government and consequently
none were made. But wherever any provision was necessary
whether in the sphere of the Dominion or of the provinces of
Bengal, the Punjab and Assam various Orders were made by the
Governor General which included Orders in regard to the
Federal Court because of the setting up of the two Dominions
and in regard to the High Courts of Calcutta and Lahore.
The Federal Court Order was promulgated on August 11, 1947,
by Art. 5 of which all proceedings which were pending in the
Federal Court immediately before the appointed day were to
continue in the Federal Court of India on or after that day
with the proviso that if it appeared to the Court that any
such case ought to be transferred to the Federal Court of
Pakistan those proceedings were to be transferred to that
Court and with regard to those proceedings the jurisdiction
of the Pakistan Court was exclusive. Any order made in the
proceedings which were pending in the Federal Court of India
and were continued on or after the appointed date became
enforceable not only in India but also in Pakistan as if
they were orders made by the Federal Court of Pakistan.
This is clear from the language used in those articles and
it was so
288
held in regard to the High Court of Calcutta by the Federal
Court in Midnapore Zemindary Co. Ltd. v. Province of Bengal
and others (1) where Patanjali Sastri, J. (as he then was),
said:-
" It will be seen that, by virtue of these provisions,
notwithstanding the constitution of the new province of East
Bengal as part of the Dominion of Pakistan, the decree now
under appeal which was made by the High Court of Calcutta
before the appointed day is to have effect in East Bengal as
if it was an order made by the High Court of East Bengal,
while any decision of this court as the " appellate court "
confirming, varying or reversing that decree is to receive
effect as if that decree were also a decree of the High
Court of East Bengal. In other words, the judgment under
appeal is to be regarded as a judgment of the High Court of
East Bengal and quoad hoc this Court as the Court of appeal
from that High Court ".
For the purposes of defining the jurisdiction of the High
Courts of Calcutta and Lahore, for the establishment of the
High Courts for the five new provinces, for specifying their
powers and the extent and limit of the effectiveness of
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their orders the Governor General made four orders on August
11, 1947, i.e., The High Courts (Bengal) Order, The High
Courts (Punjab) Order, The High Court (Calcutta) Order and
the High Court (Lahore) Order. Under Art. 13 of the High
Courts (Punjab) Order original proceedings in the Lahore
High Court were to continue in that High Court but appeals
and revisions pending immediately before the appointed day
stood transferred to the High Court of East Punjab where the
court of origin was situated in the province of Delhi or the
Province of East Punjab. That Order provided that any order
made by the High Court of East Punjab in proceedings
transferred to it was to have effect not only as an order of
that High Court but also of the High Court of Lahore; Art.
13(5). Further it provided that where before or after the
appointed day any order had been confirmed, varied or
reversed on appeal, effect shall be given to the decision of
the appellate court as if the order appealed
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 309, 318.
289
from were an order not only of the High Court that made the
order but also of the High Court of East Punjab or of Lahore
as the case may be.
There still remained the problem of the civil and criminal
proceedings pending in the courts subordinate to the High
Courts. The other provinces of India and Pakistan had no
such problem which the abolition of three provinces created.
In order to declare the courts where the pending proceedings
were to be tried and to specify the jurisdiction of the
courts and the effect of their orders and decrees the Order
was made by the Governor General. It was No. G. G. O. 11,
dated August 12, 1947, and its relevant articles were:-
" (3) Notwithstanding the setting up of the two independent
Dominions of India and Pakistan and the creation of new
Provinces by the Indian Independence Act, 1947,-
(1) all proceedings pending immediately before the
appointed day in any of the Special Tribunals specified in
column 1 of the Schedule to this Order shall be continued in
that Tribunal as if the said Act had not been passed, and
that Tribunal shall continue to have for the purposes of the
said proceedings all the jurisdiction and powers which it
had immediately before the appointed day ;
(2) notwithstanding anything contained in any other law to
the contrary, any appeal from or application for revision of
any order or sentence of the Tribunal in a case specified in
column 2 of the Schedule to this Order shall lie to the High
Court specified in the corresponding entry in column 3 of
the said Schedule; and
(3) effect shall be given within the territories of either
of the two Dominions to any order or sentence of any such
Special Tribunal as aforesaid and of any High Court in
appeal or revision therefrom as if the order or sentence had
been passed by a court of competent jurisdiction in that
Dominion.
(4) Notwithstanding the creation of certain new provinces
and the transfer of certain territories from the Province of
Assam to the Province of East Bengal by the Indian
Independence Act, 1947,-
290
(1) all proceedings pending immediately before the
appointed day in any civil or criminal court (other than a
High Court) in the Province of Bengal, the Punjab or Assam
shall be continued in that court as if the said Act had not
been passed, and that court shall continue to have for the
purposes of the said proceedings all the jurisdiction and
powers which it had immediately before the appointed day.
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(2) any appeal or application for revision in respect of
any proceedings so pending in any such court shall lie in
the court which would have appellate, or as the case may be,
revisional jurisdiction over that court if the proceedings
were instituted in that court after the appointed day; and
(3) effect shall be given within the territories of either
of the two Dominions to any judgment, decree, order or
sentence of any such court in the said proceedings, as if it
had been passed by a court of competent jurisdiction within
that Dominion.
THE SCHEDULE
(See Article 3)
1 2 3
Special Tribunal Cases High Court
First Special All cases The High
Tribunal Court in
Calcutta... Calcutta.
Second Special All cases The High
Tribunal Court in
Calcutta. Calcutta.
First Special 1.Crown v. Sohan Lal The High
Tribunal... Bhayana, Shanta Court of
Lahore. Nand, and Ram East
Lal Sharma. Punjab.
2. Crown v. Major C. The High
A. Hunt, M. A. Court in
Sheikh Hussain Lahore.
and Din and Naja-
muddin.
291
1 2 3
3. Crown v. Major C. The High
A. Hunt, Subedar Court in
Sant Ram Bhatia Lahore.
and M. A. Sheikh.
Second Special 1. Crown v. R. B. L. The High
Tribunal, Padam Chand Court in
Lahore.... Teela and another. Lahore.
2. Crown v. J. K. Gas The High
Plant Manufactur- Court in
ing Co., Ltd., Jug- Bombay.
gilal Kamlapat
(Rampur) Ltd., B.
B. Mathur and
S. K. Seth.
3. Crown v. Juggilal The High
Kamlapat. Gas Court in
Plant Manufactur- Bombay.
ing Co., Ltd.,
Juggilal Kamlapat
(Rampur) Ltd.,
Kailashpat Singhania,
B. B. Mathur, and
S. K. Seth.
4. Crown v. Madanlal The High
Dalmia, Lakshmi Court of
Chand Jain, Rang East
Lal, Kishan Sax- Punjab.
ena, Ranchor Das
Bagri, Ganga Das
Mohta Ram Gopalss
Daga, and Balabh
Das.
Third Special All cases The High
Tribunal, Court of
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Lahore. East
Punjab.
Under Art. 3 of the Order proceedings were to continue in
the respective Special Tribunals but appeals
38
292
therefrom lay to different High Courts set out in the
Schedule thereto and effect was to be given to the orders
made and sentences passed by the Tribunals or by the High
Courts to which the appeals lay within the territories of
either of the two Dominions as if the ’orders bad been
passed by a court of Competent jurisdiction in the Dominion
in which effect was given. Therefore notwithstanding the
partition, for offences committed in any part of British
India, if the accused were convicted by any of these
Tribunals whether at Lahore or Calcutta the orders were
effective throughout India or Pakistan as the case may be.
Now we come to Art. 4. An important fact to be kept in view
is that the award of the Boundary Commission was not
published till August 17, 1947, i.e., two days after the
appointed day. Thus the two new provinces, East Punjab and
West Punjab, upto that date were comprised of whole and
undivided districts as specified in Schedule 2 of the Act
and the territorial jurisdiction of the courts of the
various border districts was till then unaffected as a
result merely of the partition. The non obstante clause in
Art. 4 refers to the creation of new provinces and to the
transfer of certain territories from the province of Assam
to the province of East Bengal. The language of cl. 1 of
the article is of wide amplitude. It comprises and applies
to all pending proceedings in any civil or criminal court
(other than a High Court) in the erstwhile provinces of
Bengal, the Punjab and Assam. It declares that the pending
proceedings would Continue in the courts where they were
pending immediately before August 15, 1947, and qua such
proceedings the court was to continue to have the
jurisdiction it would have had as if the Act had not been
passed, i.e., three provinces had not ceased to exist and
five new provinces had not come into existence in their
place with all the consequential changes. There is no
indication in the first part which limits, constricts or
circumscribes the amplitude of the words of that clause. It
contains no limitation either by express words or by
implication. The words "all proceedings" and "in any civil
or criminal court" are indicative of their comprehensiveness
293
and negative the idea of a mere change based on the
territorial jurisdiction of the court. The Act in its
second schedule contemplated the division by whole districts
and it is well-known that the Punjab Government, as other
Governments to be affected by the Act, had made an extensive
survey of the Punjab with a view to giving effect to the "
Cabinet formula " for dividing the province; charts had been
prepared, survey maps of revenue estates, maps of the canal
irrigation system and distribution of population according
to religious communities were prepared by the cleverest
officers of the Government. It was on this basis that
schedules in the Act were prepared. The Award of Sir Cyril
Radcliffe (as be then was) shows that little change was
required to be made in the dividing line prepared by the
Punjab Government. The major change was of one district
minus its trans Ravi Tahsil. It is significant that
whatever the intention was to imply a change in territorial
jurisdiction and its effect it was specifically so stated ;
e.g., Art. 3 of the Indian Independence (Income-tax
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Proceedings) Order of August 12, 1947, which was in the
following terms :
" Where before the appointed day the jurisdiction of a tax
officer under the relevant Tax Act has been altered in
connection with the setting up of the Dominions of India and
Pakistan, or where after the appointed day the case of an
assessee is transferred from one Dominion to the other by
agreement between the Central Board of Revenue of the two
Dominions, and by reason of such alteration of jurisdiction
or transfer the case of an assessee falls to be dealt with
on or after the appointed day by the tax authorities of
India, or as the case may be, of Pakistan, all proceedings
relating to the case pending before any tax authority of
Pakistan, or as the case may be of India, shall be
transferred to the corresponding tax authority of India, or
as the case may be of Pakistan, and shall be disposed of by
the last mentioned tax authority in accordance with law ".
Respondent also relied on the fact that by unilateral action
Pakistan bad by statute made the decrees of
294
Indian courts including East Punjab ineffective in West
Punjab and that an Indian Act had made similar provision as
to decrees against the Government. This is hardly
indicative of the true meaning of art. 4 but if it can
afford any indication it only supports the appellants’
contention that,, all proceedings" in Cc any court " were
words of wider connotation. But limitation is sought from
the words of the second part of the clause :
" and that court shall continue to have for the purposes of
the said proceedings all the jurisdiction and powers which
it had before the appointed day ". These words have no such
effect and do not circumscribe the amplitude of the language
of the first part of the clause. They are merely dispersive
of the doubts which a strict adherence to the rules of
private International Law as accepted in courts founded upon
the principle of effectiveness and submission might cast on
the extent of jurisdiction and powers of the courts of the
new provinces where pending proceedings were to be
continued.
The language of arts. 3 and 4 of the Order is almost
identical except that there is no mention of the transfer of
territory from Assam to East Bengal in the non-obstante
clause of art. 3 and the three provinces of Bengal, the
Punjab and Assam are not mentioned in cl. 1 of that article
because in the context they were irrelevant. The words in
art. 3 must necessarily have wide amplitude because the
cases before the tribunals related to offences committed in
various parts of India. Is there any reason to give a
different and constricted meaning to those same words in
art. 4 of the Order. The mention of the three provinces was
necessitated by their ceasing to exist. But the words
emphasised by the respondent in the second part of cl. 1 of
art. 4, i.e., " for the purposes of the said proceedings "
are common. They only mean that qua the proceedings pending
in the particular court the jurisdiction and powers were to
remain the same as they were before the division. The use
of these words only carries out the intention of the makers
of the
295
Order and subserves the objects of the Act, i.e., providing
machinery for an orderly continuance of the normal
functioning of the judicial system.
Under the Civil Procedure Code the jurisdiction of courts
was not based only on effectiveness or submission but on
location of property, cause of action or residence. Unless
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expressly or impliedly taken away ordinarily the
jurisdiction and powers of a Court conferred under a Statute
continue if the Court continues to exist and that is also
the principle of s. 9 of the Civil Procedure Code. The
general doctrine of English law is that in the absence of an
Act of Parliament the exercise of civil jurisdiction is
founded upon one of the two principles-of effectiveness or
submission, i.e., either the subject-matter of suit is in
England or the defendant is present at the time of service
of the writ in England. If neither of these elements is
present the maxim actor sequitur forum rei applies: Cheshire
on Private International Law, pp. 139-40 (3rd Ed.); Sirdar
Gurdyal Singh v. Rajah of Faridkote (1) where this position
has been clearly stated. In that case it was held that in
all personal actions the courts of the country in which the
defendant resides, not the courts of the country where the
cause of action arose, should be resorted to. The defendant
there was residing in and was domiciled in the State of Jind
and at the date of the suit had ceased to be a resident of
Faridkote which passed the decree based on the cause of
action arising there. Such decrees it was held were a
nullity under International law. The Privy Council at p.
185 said :-
" The general rule is " that the plaintiff must sue in the
court to which the defendant is subject at the time of suit
Actor sequitur forum rei which is rightly stated by Sir
Robert Philli more (International Law, Vol. 4, p. 891) to
lie at the root of all international and of most domestic
jurisprudence on this matter. All jurisdiction is properly
territorial, and " extra territorium jus dicenti, impune non
paretur ". Territorial jurisdiction attaches (with special
exceptions) upon all persons either permanently or
temporarily
(1) [1894] 21 I.A. 171.
296
resident within the territory while they are within it ; but
it does not follow them after they have withdrawn from it
and when they are living in another independent country. It
exists always as to land within the territory ; and it may
be exercised over moveables within the territory, and in
questions of status or succession governed by domicile, it
may exist as to persons domiciled or who when living were
domiciled, within the territory. As between different
provinces under one sovereignty (e. g., under the Roman
Empire) the legislation of the sovereign may distribute and
regulate jurisdiction ; but no territorial legislation can
give jurisdiction which any foreign court ought to recognise
against foreigners, who owe no allegiance or obedience to
the Power which so legislates ".
Thus jurisdiction may be conferred by Statute as under the
Code of Civil Procedure or it may be based on the two
principles of English Law above stated. If the latter are
the exclusive guides in the matter of competence then mere
accrual of cause of action will not make the court
competent. Obviously therefore arts. 3 & 4 are a
recognition of the rule above stated which would remove any
doubts created as a result of the division of the provinces
and of difficulties resulting therefrom. We cannot lose
sight of the fact that the people of the province of the
Punjab divided into West and East Punjab and so also of
Bengal were so intertwined both in regard to relationship,
succession, property and business dealings that if no such
provision had been made it would have led to uncertainty,
hardships and chaotic conditions, which would equally be the
consequence of the interpretation contended for by the
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respondent.
If the interpretation contended for by the respondent were
accepted in every case the litigant would have had to decide
whether his suit could be continued or was hit by the
principles above discussed, a decision which is difficult
anywhere more so in the Courts subordinate to the High
Courts. The absence of a provision made in the Order would
have created an almost impossible position in regard to most
297
proceedings. Even in the case of suits dealing with
immoveable property the difficulty would have arisen where
property was situated in the jurisdiction of more courts
than one, the courts being in the two new provinces of the
Punjab, e.g., suits for partition of property, succession,
enforcement of mortgages and declarations of title under the
provisions of the Punjab Land Revenue Act. Greater
uncertainty would have arisen in cases where decrees of
original courts were under appeal in districts and still
more in suits where preliminary decrees had been passed and
final decrees remained to be made. Even in cases of a
matrimonial or testamentary nature, in cases dealing with
guardianship and custody of infants, maintenance,
restitution of conjugal rights and suits of a like nature
the absence of a provision like art. 4 of the Order would
have created almost unsurmountable difficulties. These
cases are illustrative of the various kinds of proceedings
which had to be provided for. In order to overcome
difficulties and remove doubts and hardships the Order was
made by the Governor-General in such general terms using
language of wide amplitude. Thus the necessity to start new
proceedings, pay fresh court fees and have fresh trials was
obviated.
This interpretation is strengthened by reference to criminal
cases. The jurisdiction of criminal courts under Chapter XV
of the Criminal Procedure Code is dependent upon variety of
circumstances any one of them could give rise to the
conflict of jurisdictions. One of the simplest case would
be the trial of an offender where a case was transferred
from one district to another and the two districts fell into
different provinces. His trial could not be continued
without cl. 1 of art. 4 nor conviction become effective
without cl. 3. The absence of a provision like art. 4 of the
Order would lead to inconvenience if not confusing
situations in cases where a person could, under the Criminal
Procedure Code, be tried in different courts of the two
Punjabs and the rules of International Law supervened.
Instances could be multiplied in regard to criminal cases
where but for the wider meaning given
298
to the article the legality of the proceedings would have
seriously been jeopardized.
The third clause of art. 4 is couched in equally wide
language and it had necessarily to be so and was meant to be
so, the object being remedial and to effectuate the orders,
decrees and sentences passed by courts. Without this clause
the first clause would have been of little purpose because
if the judgments, decrees and sentences passed by courts of
one part of the Punjab were to be treated merely as foreign
judgments then the whole object of the Order would have been
defeated. It has to be emphasised that in the Orders
relating to the Federal Court and to the High Courts of
Calcutta and Lahore which have been discussed in a previous
part of this judgment effect was given to the judgments and
orders of one court as if they were the judgments of the
other court also and this was recognised in the judgment of
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the Federal Court in Midnapare Zemindary Co. Ltd. v.
Province of Bengal & Others (1). Similar words used must,
in the absence of any indication to the contrary, receive
the same meaning and it is significant that Parliament has
used the same words in a later Statute-The Indian
Independence Pakistan Courts (Pending Proceedings) Act IX of
1952. which was passed to make ineffective the orders and
decrees of Pakistan courts passed by virtue of the Special
Orders under the Act for the continuance of proceedings in
courts in Bengal, Assam and the Punjab. By s. 3 of that Act
(IX of 1952) it was provided:-
" Section 3. Notwithstanding anything contained in any of
the orders referred to in s. 2, no decree to which the Act
applies shall be given effect to by any court or authority
in India in so far as such decree imposes any liability or
obligation on any Government in India ".
This recognises the force of art. 4(3) of the Order and
there is no indication in that Statute that Parliament was
dealing with the limited territory contended for by the
respondent.
It was argued that the intention of cl. 3 of art. 4
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 309.
299
was that the court passing the decree or order would be a
court of competent jurisdiction within s. 13 of the Civil
Procedure Code and the question of jurisdiction of the court
passing the decree would not be available to the losing
party, the submission being that the word " effect " did not
mean the same thing as " execute ".
It may be pointed out that the respondent never raised, at
the trial, the question of jurisdiction. He submitted
voluntarily to the judgment of the Lahore Court and he can
at no later stage be heard to say that the judgment is not
binding on him: Cheshire on Private International Law, p.
140 (3rd Ed.). The word effect " is wider than the words "
enforce " or execute ". There are decrees which are not
executed in the ordinary sense of the term but are given
effect to; e. g., decrees for dissolution of marriage,
restitution of conjugal rights and injunction. In criminal
matters it would mean carrying out the sentence of the
court. It was for these reasons that the word " effect "
was used in cl. 3 of arts. 3 and 4 of the Order. After the
partition all these courts situated in the two new provinces
of West Punjab and East Punjab became foreign courts qua
each other and therefore certain judgments and sentences
passed and orders made in regard to certain cases in the
absence of the Order might no longer have been effective.
As has already been stated it was to provide for these
difficulties and for removing all doubts as to the juris-
diction of courts in the provinces which had cased to exist
that art. 4 was promulgated and a consequential provision
had to be made to give effect to these various decrees and
orders. That decrees passed in courts of one new province
of the Punjab were to be treated as if they were passed by
the courts of competent jurisdiction in the other new
Province of the Punjab is shown by the language used and
particularly the words " court of competent jurisdiction
within that Dominion ". The use of the words is very
significant. Similar words were used in cl. (3) of art.; 3
where also effect was, to be, given. to the orders passed
by, the Special Tribunal sitting in
300
Lahore in regard to offences which might have been committed
anywhere in India. It has not been suggested that those
words were of lesser amplitude and did not make the
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conviction good in any part of India or Pakistan or the
conviction was ineffective anyWhere in those two Dominions.
It might be repetitive as an argument but is equally
efficient in the case of cl. 3 of art. 4 as it was in cl. 3
of the third article.
It was also argued that a court of competent jurisdiction in
cl. 3 was used in the same sense as in International Law,
i.e., a court which has the right to adjudicate upon the
matter. In the context it can only mean the court as
envisaged in cl. 1 of art. 4 or a court of similar and equal
or co-ordinate jurisdiction but exercising it under the
Civil Procedure Code or Criminal Procedure Code in either of
the Punjabs in the two Dominions as the case may be. This
would clearly show that the effect of art. 4(1) and (3) was
that all proceedings meaning all suits and other proceedings
would continue unaffected by the passing of the Act and the
setting up of two provinces of West Punjab and East Punjab
and also that once a decree was passed. or sentence
pronounced by a court in either of the new provinces of the
two Dominions it was to be given effect to as if it was a
decree or order passed by a court of competent jurisdiction
in the other Dominion.
Submission was then made that in cl. 2 of art. 4 reference
to any appeal or to the court which would have appellate
jurisdiction did not include the Federal Court of Pakistan
because it was not in existence at the time and the Federal
Court which came into existence as a result of the Federal
Court Order was a court of limited jurisdiction. The word "
appeal " there cannot be read as confined to only one appeal
because the provision made for appeals is that it shall lie
in the court having appellate jurisdiction over the court as
if proceedings were instituted after the appointed day, and
for proceedings instituted after, the appointed day the
jurisdiction of the Privy Council had been conferred by the
laws of Pakistan on the
301
Federal Court of Pakistan. In these circumstances it would
be contrary to the intention of the words used in the Order
to restrict the appeals to the District Judge or to the High
Court but they must be taken to include appeals to the
highest court to which appeals could be taken.
It was then submitted that at the time when the suit was
filed the jurisdiction of the Federal Court was a limited
one and no such appeal as was subsequently taken could have
been taken to that court at that time. The Federal Court of
Pakistan was undoubtedly a court of appellate jurisdiction
over the courts including the High Courts even though its
jurisdiction fell under s. 205 of the Government of India
Act, 1935. The meaning of the words " appellate
jurisdiction " as used in cl. (2) of art. 4 of the Order is
not affected by the subsequent extension of restriction of
the jurisdiction of the court because the scope of the
appellate jurisdiction may vary from time to time but it
still remains appellate jurisdiction. See Midnapore
Zemindary Co. Ltd. v. Province of Bengal and Others (1).
The next question for decision is whether as a consequence
of evacuee legislation in Pakistan the appellant No. 2 lost
his rights in the decree. The respondent contended that by
s. 6 of the Pakistan Administration of Evacuee Property
Ordinance, 1949 (Act XV of 1949), the decree must be taken
to have vested and be deemed always to have vested in the
Custodian with effect from March 1, 1947. The decree in
dispute was passed by the Senior Subordinate Judge in 1949
and no claim was made by the Lahore Custodian of Evacuee
Property in regard to it nor is there any proof that he has
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done so up to the present. Under s. 13 it was open to the
Custodian to publish, by notification in the official
gazette, this decree in the list of evacuee properties but
it has not been shown that that has been done. Section 11
of that Ordinance which was in the following terms was how-
ever relied upon by the respondent:-
" Section 11(1). Any amount due to an evacuee
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 309.
302
or payable in respect of any evacuee property, shall be paid
to the Custodian by the person liable to pay the same ".
It is true that if the decree is evacuee property and has
vested in the Custodian then the Custodian can claim payment
from the judgment debtor. The appellant urged two points:-
(1) that the situs of the decree was the place where it
could be effectuated and therefore where the debtor resides
and (2) it was for the Custodian to decide as to whether it
was evacuee property or he had made no such decision. If
anything the decree had never been treated as evacuee
property by the Custodian and it could no longer be so
treated because of s. 3 of the Pakistan (Administration of
Evacuee Property) Act, 1957 (XII of 1957), the relevant part
of which is as follows:-
" Section 3(1). Property not to be treated as evacuee
property on or after 1st January, 1957 : Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, no person or property not
treated as evacuee or as evacuee property immediately before
the first day of January, 1957, shall be treated as evacuee
or, as the case may be, as evacuee property, on or after the
said date ". As to the situs of the decree Mr. Pritt relied
on certain English cases which deal with the situs of a con-
tract debt and referred to the following cases: In re,
Russian Bank for Foreign Trade (1); Sutherland v.
Administration of German Property (1); ’The Jupiter’ (3).
In this court in Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. v.
Harnam Singh & Others (4) it was held that situs varies in
the case of simple contract debts. At page 423 Bose, J.,
observed:-
" But when all is said and done, we find that in every one
of these cases the proper law of the contract was applied,
that is to say the law of the country in which its elements
were most densely grouped and with which factually the
contract was most closely connected ".
Applying these rules it would appear that the situs of a
contract debt would be where the defendant
(1) [1933] 1 Ch. 745.
(2) [1934] 1 K.B. 423.
(3) [1927] P. 250.
(4) [1955] 2 S.C.R 402.
303
resides. But it was submitted by the learned Solicitor-
General that the situs of the decree or judgment is where it
was recorded and reliance was placed on Attorney-General v.
Bouwen(1). According to Dicey’s Conflict of Laws (7th
Edition) p. 506, judgment debts are situate where the
judgment is recorded and according to Cheshire’s
International Law p. 456:-
" With regard to this theory there can, of course, be no
doubt that a debt is deemed by English law to have a
definite locality of its own for several different purposes,
such as the exercise of jurisdiction, the payment of death
duties, and the grant of probate or of letters of
administration ", and again pp. 519-520:-
" For the purposes of jurisdiction to make a grant of
probate or administration, however, it has long been settled
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with respect to chooses in action and titles to property
that judgment debts are assets where the judgment is
recorded; leases, where the land lies; specially debts,
where the instrument happens to be; and simple contract
debts, where the debtor resides at the time of the
testator’s death ".
The authority for this is an observation of Lord Abinger, C.
B., in Attorney-General v. Bouwen (1) from where this
passage has been taken. That was a case of a claim by the
Crown for probate duty on foreign securities held by the
testatrix at the time of her death and the question for
decision was whether for the purposes of administration they
were assets locally situate within the jurisdiction of the
Ordinary. As they were sold and delivered by the executors
without doing any act outside the jurisdiction of the Ordi-
nary, duty was payable in England. The above quoted
observation was made in connection with the limited
jurisdiction of the Ordinary. Thus it appears that the
reason given by Lord Abinger for a judgment or decree having
its situs where it is recorded is that it is normally
enforceable in the country in which it is given; for the
purposes of jurisdiction for the grant of probate, judgment
debts are assets where the judgment is recorded. But in the
present case by a fiction
(1) (1838) 4 AL & W. 172; 150 E.R. 1390, 1398.
304
of law the decree is also decree of a court of competent
jurisdiction in what was the Dominion of India and now the
Union of India. Consequently the provision of the evacuee
law will not affect the rights of the appellant to execute
the decree in this country. Secondly for the purposes of
jurisdiction to grant probate a judgment debt may have situs
in the country where it was recorded but as was pointed out
by this Court in Delhi Cloth & General Mills Case (1), the
most densely grouping of elements may also have to be taken
into account and in the peculiar circumstances of the
present case where the judgment-debtor is residing and
domiciled in East Punjab where the judgment debt is
enforceable , the situs of the judgment-debt would not only
be in Pakistan. Furthermore the judgment-debtor is an
evacuee qua Pakistan and his property, if any, must have
equally vested in the Custodian and the only country where
the decree can be enforced will be in India.
No argument was addressed in support of the finding of the
High Court that a transfer and non-satisfaction certificate
was necessary to execute the decree of the Federal Court,.
In the view that I have taken of art. 4(1) and (3) no such
objection is sustainable. Even if Order 45, Rule 15, Civil
Procedure Code may be inapplicable the High Court could and
should have sent down the decree to the court of the Senior
Subordinate Judge, Simla, to execute the decree in
accordance with law.
To sum up I am of the opinion that (1) the amplitude of the
language of art. 4 is not cut down by any words in the
article or in the Order and therefore the decree of the
courts of West Punjab passed in proceedings pending
immediately before the appointed day are not foreign
judgments in East Punjab and the limited interpretation
contended for by the respondent is not sustainable. (2) The
decree of the Federal Court of Pakistan is covered by the
words " appellate jurisdiction " in cl. 2 of art. 4 of the
Order. (3) The word " effect " in cl. 3 of art. 4 is of wide
connotation and is not equivalent to ’being enforced’ by
suits on a
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 402.
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foreign judgment. (4) Clause 3 of art. 4 is in the nature of
a deeming clause and makes the decree of the Pakistan court
(West Punjab) a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction
in East Punjab (India). (5) Situs of the decree is not in
Pakistan alone but the legal fiction applies to that also,
and (6) the evacuee A laws of Pakistan do not affect the
effectiveness of the decree in India.
I would therefore allow this appeal and set aside the
judgment and order of the High Court. The appellants will
have their costs throughout.
BY COURT: In view of the majority Judgment, the appeal is
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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