Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. VIJAY ANAND MAHARAJ
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/03/1962
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 946 1963 SCR (1) 1
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1965 SC 507 (19)
R 1971 SC2337 (4)
RF 1981 SC1786 (8,103,139)
RF 1986 SC1272 (100)
F 1992 SC1981 (8)
ACT:
Agricultural Income-tax-Review of proceedings--Proceedings,
if include writ proceedings-U.P. Agricultural Income-tax
Act, 1949 (U.P. III of 1949) as amended by U.P Act No. XIV
of 1956, s. 11-Rules of Court Ch. VIII, r.5-Letters Patent
Allahabad High Court, cl. 10--Constitution of India,Art.
226.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, who owned agricultural properties in the
different districts of Uttar Pradesh, was assessed to agri-
cultural income tax by the Additional Collector of Banaras.
On challenge by way of a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution, assessment was quashed by the Allahabad High
Court on the ground that the assessing authority had no
,jurisdiction to assess. Under s. 6 of the U.P. Act No. XIV
of 1956 the assessments by the Additional Collector were
validated and a party to the proceedings under Agricultural
Income-tax Act was given the right to move the Court or
authority within the prescribed period to review the
proceedings where in the assessments had been set aside on
the ground that the assessing authority had no jurisdiction
to make the assessment. By s. 11 the authority or court so
moved was bound to review the order. The State of Uttar
Pradesh applied to the High Court for review of its earlier
order quashing the assessment. The single judge of the High
Court held that s. II of the Act did not apply to writ pro-
ceedings under Art. 226 of the Constitution. On appeal the
Division Bench held that the order for the single judge did
not amount to a ’judgment’ under Ch. VIII r.5 cl.10 of the
Letter Patent and the Rules of Allahabad High Court and that
s. 11 of the Act did not apply to proceedings. by way of a
writ before the High Court. On appeal by special leave by
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the State it was contended that the Division Bench was wrong
and by an additional statement of case it was sought to be
urged that the application for review should be treated as
one under order 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
2
Held (per Sinha, C. J, Subba Rao, Ayyangar and Aiyar, jj.),
that under cl. IO of the Letters Patent of the Allahabad
High Court and the Rules of the Court the expression
’judgment’ would even on the narrow view of the expression
include the order in the present case whereby the statutory
right given to the party was finally negatived and that the
Division Bench was in error in holding that it was not a
’judgment’.
Held, further, that the proceeding under Art. 226 of the
constitution were neither ’proceedings’ under the Act nor
proceedings on the basis of the Act.
The proceedings under Art. 226 of the Constitution were
independent and original proceeding and not a continuation
of the assessment proceedings.
Venkataratnam v. Secretary of State for India, (1930)
I.L.R.53 Mad. 979, Ryots of Garabandha v. The Zamindar of
Parlakimedi I.L.R. 1938 Mad. 816, Ramayya v. State of
Madras, A.I.R. 1952 Mad. 300, Moulvi Hamid Hassan Nomani v.
Banwarilal Coy. (1947) II M.L.J. 32, Budge Budge
Municipality v. Mangru (1952) 57 C.W.N.25 and
Satyanarayanamurthi v. 1.T. Appellate Tribunal, A.I.R.1957
Andhra 123, referred to.
The Act had to be interpreted consistently with the
Constitution and there was no power in the State Legislature
to compel the High Court to act in a particular way in
exercise of its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitu-
tion. Section, II could only apply to cases ’Where any
court or authority other than the High Court in exercise of
its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution, had
decided the matter.
Held, further, that construing shall’ in s. II of the Act
as ‘may’ would defeat the very provisions of the Act.
Held, also, that the contention that the application under
s.11 of the Act may be treated as one order 47 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, was highly belated and further there
were many possible objections to such a course and it cannot
be acceded to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 25 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
November 26, 1957, of the Allahabad High Court in Special
Appeal No. 235 of 1957.
3
C.B. Agarwala and C. P. Lal, for the appellants.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor General of India, S. K.
Kapur, Bishamber Lal and. K. K. Jain, for the respondent.
1962. March 26. The Judgment of Sinha, C.J., Subba Rao and
Ayyangar, JJ. was delivered by Subba Rao, J., Mudholkar, J.,
delivered separate Judgment.
SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment and order of a division Bench of the
Allahabad High Court confirming those of a single Judge of
that court dismissing the application filed by the appellant
to review the order of the High Court dated November 22,
1958.
The facts leading up to the filing of this appeal may be
briefly stated. The respondent held certain zamindari and
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agricultural properties in different districts of the State
of Uttar Pradesh. On December 22, 1952, the Additional
Collector, Banaras, in exercise of the powers conferred on
him under the provisions of the U. P. Agricultural Income-
Tax Act (Act III of 1949), assessed the respondent to an
agricultural income-tax of Rs. 99,964-12-0 for the year 1359
fasli. On September 30, 1955, the respondent filed a
petition before the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution for quashing the said order on the ground that
the Additional Collector, Banaras, had no jurisdiction to
make the said assessment. ’On November 22, 1955, Mehrotra
J., allowed the writ petition quashing the said assessment.
The State of Uttar Pradesh did not prefer an appeal against
the said order and allowed it to become final. On February
9, 1956, the State of Uttar Pradesh promulgated an
Ordinance, being Ordinance No. 11 of 1956, which was
subsequently replaced by U. P. Act No. XIV of 1956, Under
the provisions of the Ordinance, the assessments made
4
by the Additional Collector were retrospectively validated
and, under s.6 thereof, a right was conferred upon any party
to the proceedings under the U.P. Agricultural Income-tax
Act, 1948, (hereinafter called the principal Act), wherein
any assessment made by an Additional Collector or Additional
Assistant Collector was set aside merely on the ground that
the assessing authority had no jurisdiction to make the
assessment, to apply within 90 days from the date of the
commencement of the said Ordinance for a review of the said,
proceedings in the light of the provisions of the Ordinance,
and a statutory injunction was imposed upon a court to
review the said order accordingly. Pursuant to the
provisions of s.6 of the said Ordinance, on March 14, 1956,
the appellants filed an application in the High Court at
Allahabad for review of its order dated November 22, 1956.
Subsequently as stated earlier, the. Ordinance was replaced
by the U. P. Act XIV of 1956 hereinafter called the Act. In
the course of the judgment we shall refer only to the
provision of the Act. The said application was heard, in
the first instance, by Mehrotra, J.,. and he held that s. II
of the Act, which corresponds to s.6 of the Ordinance, did
not entitle the appellant to file an application for review
of an order made by the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution. The appellant’s petition was
dismissed on that ground. The appellants preferred an
appeal against the said order to a division Bench of that
court. Nootham, C.J., and Srivastava, J., who heard the
appeal, dismissed it on two grounds, namely, (1) under Ch.
VIII r.5 of the Rules of Court, a special appeal against an
order of a single Judge of the court can be maintained only
if that order amounts to a "Judgment," and an order refusing
an application for review not being a "Judgment" cannot be
the subject of an appeal, (2) on merits, that is on the
construction of s. II of the Act, the view taken by
Mehrotra, J. was correct. The present appeal, as already
stated, was preferred against the said order.
5
Mr. C. B. Aggarwala, learned counsel for the appellants, has
raised before us the following points: (1) The order of
Mehrotra, J.,, dismissing the application for review of his
earlier order is a ,Judgment within the meaning of Ch. VIII
r. 5 of the Rules of Court and, therefore, an appeal lies
against that order to a division Bench of that court. (2)
The terms of s. 11 of the Act are comprehensive enough to
take in an order made by the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution quashing the order of assessment and even
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if there is some lacuna, the provisions shall be so
construed as to carry out clear intention of the
Legislature. (3) In any view, the application for review
filed by the appellants could be treated as one filed under
Order 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and the earlier
order reviewed on the ground that there is an error apparent
on the face of the record,. We shall take the questions in
the order they were argued.
The first question is whether an appeal Jay against the
order of Mehrotra, J., rejecting the application for review
filed by the appellants to a division Bench of the High
Court. Chapter VIII r.5 of the Rules of Court provides for
an appeal against an order of a single judge. Under that
rule a special appeal against an order of a single judge of
the court can be maintained only if that order amounts to a
"judgement". That rule gives effect to cl. 10 of the
letters Patent for the High Court of Allahabad, which gives
a right _ of appeal against a judgment of a single judge
subject to the conditions mentioned therein. The said cl.10
corresponds to cl.15 of the letters Patent for the High
Courts of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. The scope of the
expression "judgment" came under the judicial scrutiny of
the various High Courts: there is a cleavage of opinion on
that question. We shall briefly no"-,ice the leading
decisions of the various High Courts on the subject. Couch,
C.J.,
6
in The Justices of the Peace for Calcuttu v. The Oriental
Gas CO. (1) defines the word "judgment" in el. 15 of the
Letters Patent thus:
"We think ’judgment’ in clause 15 means a
decision which affects the merits of the
question between the parties by determining
,some right or liability. It may be either
final, or preliminary, or interlocutory,, the
difference between them being that a final
judgment determines the whole cause or suit
and a preliminary or interlocutory judgment
determines only a part of it, leaving other
metters to be determined".
The same High Court in Hadjee Ismael v. Hadjee Mahommed
(2 ) held that an appeal lay under the said clause from an
order refusing to set aside an order granting leave to sue
to the plaintiff under cl.12 of the Letters Patent. Therein
Couch, C.J., observed:
"It is not a mere formal order, or an order
merely regulating the procedure in the suit,
but on that has the effect of giving a
jurisdiction to the court it otherwise would
not have. And it may fairly be said to
determine some right between them, viz., the
right to sue in a particular Court, and to
compel the defendants who are not within its
jurisdiction to come in and defend the suit,
or if they do not, to make them liable to have
a decree passed against them in their
absence."
The Bombay High Court followed the Calcutta view. The
leading judgment of the Madras High Court is that in
Tuljaram v. Alagappa (3), where it was held that an order of
a single Judge in the Original Side refusing to frame an
issue asked for by one of the parties is not a ’judgment’
within
(1) (1872) 8 Beng. L.R. 433, 452.
(2) (1874) 13 Beng. L.R. 91, 101.
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(3) (1912) 1.L.R. 35 Mad, 1, 7, 15.
7
the meaning of cl.15 of the Letters Patent. White, C.J.,
laid down the following tests:
"The test seems to me to be not what is the
form of the adjudication, but what is its
effect in the suit or proceeding in which it
is made. If its effect, whatever its form may
be, and whatever be the nature of the appli-
cation on which it is made, is to put an end
to the suit or proceeding so far as the Court
before which the suit or proceeding is pending
is concerned, or if its effect, if it is not
complied with, is to put an end to the suit or
proceeding, I think the adjudication is a
’judgment’ within the meaning of the clause."
Referring to the decisions of the Calcutta High Court the
learned Chief Justice proceeded to state:
"On the other hand I am not prepared to say as
was held in The Justices of the Peace for
Calcutta v. The Oriental Gas Company (1) and
in Sonbai v. Ahamedbhai Habibhai (2), it must
be a decision which affects the merits by
determining some right or liability. think the
decision may be a judgment for the purposes of
the section though it does not affect the
merits of the suit or proceeding and does not
determine any question of right raised in the
suit or proceeding.
Krishnaswami Ayyar, J., observed much to the same effect:
"I would only stop here to remark that a
decision which determines the cause or
proceeding so far as the particular court is
concerned, though it refused to adjudge the
merits, must also be deemed to be a judgement:
far otherwise the rejection of a plaint for
defect of form or insufficiency of Court
(1) (1872) 8 Beng. L.R. 433.
(2) (1872) 9 B.H.C.R. 398.
8
fee or a return of it for want of jurisdiction
would be outside the definition of the learned
Chief Justice which could hardly have been his
meaning. I may also observe that the "Part"
which is determined may be a part of the claim
separable from the rest or a determination of
liability generally though the actual measure
of liability may be a matter of account".
The Lahore High Court generally followed the view expressed
by the Madras High Court. The Allahabad High Court in
Muhammad Naim-Ullah Khan v. Ihsan-Ullah Khan (1) expressed
the view that an order which is not appealable under 0.43 r.
1 of the Code of Civil Procedure is not appealable under cl.
10 of the Letters Patent. This view has been followed by a
division Bench of the same High Court in Tirmal Singh v.
Kanhayia Singh (2). But the said decisions do not attempt
to lay down a definition of the.. expression "judgment" in
the Letters Patent. The Nagpur High Court-in Manohar v.
Baliram(3) by a majority, after considering the case-law on
the subject, laid down the following definition.
Hidayatullah, J., who delivered the leading judgment, laid
down the test at p. 522 thus:
"A judgment means a decision in an action
whether final, preliminary, or interlocutory
which decides either wholly or partially, but
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conclusively in so far as the Court is
concerned, the controversy which is the
subject of the action. It does not include a
decision which is on a matter of procedure,
nor one which is ancillary to the action even
though it may either imperil the ultimate
decision or tend to make it effective. The
decision need not be immediately executable
per 88 but if left untouched, must result
inevitably without anything further, save the
determination of
(1) [1892] 1. L. R. 14 All. 226
(2) [1923] 1. L. R. 45 All. 535.
(3) 1. L. R. 1952 Nag. 471.
9
consequential details, in a decree or decretal
order, that is to say, an executive document
directing something to be done or not to be
done in relation to the facts of the contro-
versy. The decision may itself order that
thing to be done or not to be done or it may
leave that over till after the ascertainment
of some details but it must not be
interlocutory having for its purpose the
ascertainment of some matters or details prior
to the determination of the whole or any part
of the controversy."
The foregoing brief analysis of judgment shown that the
definition given by the Madras High Court is wider than that
given by the Calcutta and Nagpur High Courts. It is not
necessary in this case to attempt to reconcile the said
decision or to give a definition of our own, for on the
facts of the present case the order of Mehrotra, J., would
be a judgment within the meaning of the narrower definition
of that expression.
The appellants filed an application to review
the order of the High Court quashing the order of assessment
made by the Additional Collector. It was alleged in the
affidavit that the impugned assessment had been validated
under the Ordinance and that the applicants had the right to
have the order of Mehrotra, J., reviewed in the light of the
provisions of s. 6 thereof. The assessee denied that the
appellants had any such right. The appellants’ statutory
right to have the order of the High Court reviewed was
denied by the other side and was put in issue before the
High Court. The relevant provisions of the Act read :
Section 2. "In Section 2 of the U. P.
Agricultural Income Tax Act, 1948 (hereinafter
called the Principal Act), for clause (4), the
following shall be and be deemed always to
have been substituted-
10
"(4-a) ’Collector’ shall have the
meaning as in the U, P. Land Revenue Act,
1901, and will include an Additional Collector
appointed under the said Act."
Section 10. Validation-(1) For the removal of
doubts it is hereby declared that-
(a) in rule 18 of the, U. P. Agricultural
Income Tax Rules, 1949, the expression
"Collector" and "Assistant Collector in-charge
of a sub-division" shall respectively include
and be deemed always to have included an
"Additional Collector" and an "Additional
Assistant Collector in-charge of a sub-
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divisional".
(b) all orders, actions or proceedings
taken, directions issued or jurisdiction
exercised or in accordance with the provisions
of the Principal Act or of any rule framed
thereunder prior to the amendment of that Act
by ’Section 2 of this Act shall be deemed to
be as good and valid in law as if Section 2
aforesaid had been in force at all material
dates.
(2) Where any question arises as to the
validity or legality of anuy assessment made
by an Additional Collector in-charge of a sub-
division or by an Additional Collector in pur-
ported exercise of the powers under Section 14
or of the rules framed under clause (c) of sub
section (2) of Section 44 of the Principal
Act, the same shall be determined as if the
provisions of Section 2 of this Act had been
in force at all material dates.
Section 11 Review of Proceedings :-Where
before the commencement of this Act any court
or authority had, in any proceedings under the
Principal Act, set aside any assessment made
by an Additional Collector or
11
Additional Assistant Collector in-charge of a
subdivision merely on the ground that the
assessing authority had no jurisdiction to
make an assessment, any party to the
proceedings may, at any time within ninety
days from the date of commencement of this Act
apply to the Court or authority for a view of
the proceedings in the light of the provisions
of this Act, and the Court or authority to
which the application is made shall review the
proceedings accordingly and make such order,
if any, varying or revising the order
previously made as may be necessary to give
effect to the pro. visions of the Principal
Act as amended by Sections 2 and 8 of this
Act.
Under the aforesaid provisions the assessments made by the
Additional Collector were retrospectively validated and a
right was conferred on a party to the proceedings under the
Principal Act, wherein the assessments were set aside merely
on the ground that the assessing authority bad no
jurisdiction to make an assessment, to apply to the court to
have that order reviewed. A statutory injunction was also
issued to the court which set aside the assessment on the
ground of want of jurisdiction to review its order and to
give effect to the provisions of the Principal Act, as
amended by ss. 2 and 4 of the Act, that is to say, a fresh
right has been conferred upon a party to the earlier
proceedings to have the previous order set aside and to have
decision from the court on the basis of the amended Act.
This is a valuable and substantive right conferred upon a
party to the proceeding.
On the rival contentions, the question of the fresh right
conferred upon a party to the proceeding and the
jurisdiction of the court to enforce the said right would be
in issue and any decision thereon could legitimately be said
to be a decision determining the rights of parties. But for
the
12
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amending Act, the order of the High Court admittedly
would have become final; but, because of the amending Act
there was, a controversy whether the binding decision could
be reopened and the rights of the parties decided in
accordance with the amending Act. The decision of Mehrotra,
J., dismissing the application was certainly a decision
denying the right of the appellants alleged to have been
conferred under the amending Act. We therefore, hold that
the order of Mehrotra, J., dismissing the application, filed
for review of his earlier order, on the ground that s. 11 of
the Act did not confer any such right on the appellants was
a ’judgment’ within the meaning of cl.10 of the Letters
Patent as well as Ch.VIII r.5 of the Rules of Court. If so,
we must hold that the division Bench of the High Court went
wrong in holding that no appeal lay against the order of
Mehrotra, J.
Even so, the appellants would not be entitled to succeed,
unless we hold, differing from the High Court, that s.11 of
the Act confers a right on the appellants to have the order
of Mehrotra, J., reviewed. We have already extracted the
provisions of a. 11. Section 11 is in two parts: the first
part of the section confers a right on a party to the
proceedings under the Principal Act to apply to the court or
authority for a review of the proceeding in the light of the
provisions of the Act within 90 days from the commencement
of the Act, and the second part issues a statutory
injunction on such a court or authority to review the
proceedings accordingly and to make an order as may be
necessary to give effect to the provisions of the Principal
Act, as amended by ss.2 and 4 of the Act. The first
question, therefore, is whether the order of Mehrotra, J.,
in an application under Art. 226 of the Constitution was in
any proceeding under the Principal Act. Obviously a
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution cannot be a
proceeding under the Act: it is a proceeding
13
under the Constitution. But it is said, relying upon
certain passages in Maxwell on the Interpretation of
Statutes, at p, 68, and in Crawford on "Statutory
Construction’ at p. 492, that it is the duty of the Judge
"to make such construction of a statute as shall suppress
the mischief and advance the remedy," and for that purpose
the more extended meaning could be attributed to the words
so as to bring all matters fairly within the scope of such a
statute even though outside the letter, if within its spirit
or reason. But both Maxwell and Crawford administered a
caution in resorting to such a construction. Maxwell says
at p.68 of his book:
"The construction must not, of course, be
strained to include cases plainly omitted from
the natural meaning of the words."
Crawford says that a liberal construction does not justify
an extension of the statute’s scope beyond the contemplation
of the Legislature. The fundamental and elementary rule of
construction is that the words and phrases used by the
Legislature shall be given their ordinary meaning and shall
be constructed according to the rules of grammar. When the
language is plain and unambiguous and admits of only one
meaning, no question of construction of a statute arises,
for the Act speaks for itself. It is a well recognized rule
of construction that the meaning must be collected from the
expressed intention of the Legislature. So construed, there
cannot be two possible views on the interpretation of the
first part of the section. Learned counsel suggested that
we should read the relevant portion of the first part thus:
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"in any proceedings to set aside any assessment made on
the basis of the Principal Act". To accept this argument is
to rewrite the section. While the section says that the
order sought to be reviewed is that made in a proceeding
under
14
the Principal Act, the argument seeks to remove the
qualification attached to the proceeding and add the same to
the assessment. The alternative argument, namely, that
without changing the position of the words as they stand in
the section, the expression ,on the basis of" may be
substituted for the expression "under" does Dot also yield
the results expected by the learned counsel. It cannot be
held with any justification, without doing violence to the
language used, that a proceeding under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is either one under the Principal Act or on the
basis of the Principal Act, for it is a proceeding under
Art. 226 of the Constitution to quash the order on the
ground that it was made in violation of the Act. An attempt
is then made to contend that a proceeding under Art. 226 of
the Constitution is a continuation of the proceedings before
the Additional Collector and, therefore, the said proceedi-
ings are proceedings under the Act. This leads us to the
consideration of the question of the scope of the
proceedings under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Article 226 confers a power on a High Court to issue the
writs, orders, or directions mentioned therein for the
enforcement of any of the rights conferred by Part III or
for any other purpose. This is neither an appellate nor a
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court. Though the power
is not confined to the prerogative writs issued by the
English Courts, it is modeled on the said writs mainly to
enable the High Courts to keep the subordinate tribunals
within bounds. Before the Constitution, the chartered High
Court, that is, the High Courts at Bombay, Calcutta and Mad-
ras, were issuing prerogative writs similar to those issued
by the King’s Bench Division, subject to the same
limitations imposed on the said. writs. In Venkataratnam v.
Secretary of State for India(1),
(1) (1930) I.L.P.. 53 Mad. 979.
15
a division Bench of the Madras High Court, consisting of
Venkatasubba Rao and Madhavan Nair, JJ,; held that the
jurisdiction to issue a writ of certiorari was original
jurisdiction. In Ryots of Garabandha v. The Zamindar of
Parlakimedi (1), another division Bench of the same High
Court, consisting of Leach, C. J., and Madhavan Nair J.,
considered the question again incidentally and came to the
same conclusion "and held that a writ of certiorari is
issued only in exercise of the original jurisdiction of the
High Court. In Ramayya v. State of Madras (2), a division
Bench, consisting of Govinda Menon and Ramaswami Oounder,
JJ,, considered the question whether the proceedings under
Art. 226 of the Constitution are in exercise of the original
Jurisdiction or revisional jurisdiction of the High Court,
and the learned Judges held that the power to issue writs
under Art. 226 of the Constitution is original and the
jurisdiction exercised is original jurisdiction. In Moulvi
Hamid Hassan Nomani v. Banwarilal Boy (3), the Privy Council
was considering the question whether the original civil
jurisdiction which the Supreme Court of Calcutta possessed
over certain classes of persons outside the territorial
limits of that jurisdiction has been inherited by the High
Court. In that context the Judicial Committee. observed.
"It cannot be disputed that the issue of such
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writs is a matter of original jurisdiction".
The Calcutta. High Court, in Budge Budge Munici-
pality v. Mangru(4) came to the same conclusion, namely,
that the jurisdiction exercised under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is original as distinguished from appellate or
revisional jurisdiction; but the High Court pointed out that
the jurisdiction, though original, is a special jurisdiction
and should not be
(1) I.L.R 1938 Mad. 816. (2) A.I.R. 1952 Nad. 300.
(3) (1942) It M. L. J. 32, 35. (4) (1952) 57 C. W. N. 2S.
16
confused with ordinary civil jurisdiction under the Letters
Patent. The Andhra High Court in Satyanarayanamurthi v. 1.
T. Appellate Tribunal (1) described it as an extraordinary
original jurisdiction. It is, therefore, clear from the
nature of the power conferred under Art. 226 of the
Constitution and the decisions on the subject that the High
Court in exercise of its power under Art. 226 of the
Constitution exercises original jurisdiction, though the
said jurisdiction shall not be confused with the ordinary
civil jurisdiction of the High Court. This jurisdiction,
though original in character as contrasted with its
appellate and revisional jurisdictions, is exercisable
throughout the territories in relation to which it exercises
jurisdiction and may. for convenience, be described as
extraordinary original jurisdiction. If that be so, it
cannot be contended that a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is a continuation of the proceedings under the
Act.
There is another insurmountable difficulty in accepting the
construction suggested by learned counsel. Under the second
part of the section a party to the earlier proceedings may
within the prescribed time apply to the court or authority
for a review of the proceedings in the light of the pro-
visions of the Act, and the court or authority to which the
application is made shall review the proceedings
accordingly, and make such order, if any, varying or
revising the order previously made as may be necessary to
give effect to the Principal Act, as amended by s. 2 of the
Act. Should it be held that this section applies to an
order made by a High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution, the statutory mandatory injunction issued
under the second part of the section to the High Court to
make an order in a particular way would be constitutionally
void. Under the Constitution the Legislature of a
(1) A. 1. R. 1957 Andhra 123.
17
State derives its authority to make laws under Art. 245 of
the Constitution, which reads:
(1) "’Subject to the provisions of this Con-
stitution, Parliament may make laws for the
whole or any part of the territory of India,
and the, Legislature of a State may make laws
for the whole or any part of the State."
Article 245 is, therefore, subject to Art. 226 of the
Constitution. It follows that no law made by the
Legislature of a State can be in derogation of the powers of
the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution. It is
well settled that Art. 226 confers a discretionary power on
the High Courts to make or issue appropriate orders and
writs for the enforcement of any of the rights conferred by
Part III of the Constitution or for any other purpose.
While Art. 226 confers a discretionary power on the High
Court, the second part of s. 11 of the Act enjoins on the
High Court to make an order in a particular way. We should
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not give such a construction to the section as would bring
it into conflict with Art. 226 of the Constitution and which
,would have the effect of invalidating it to that extent.
On the other hand, the construction adopted by us would be
consistent with the second part of the section, for, if the
first part is confined only to an order made by any court or
authority, other, than the High Court in exercise of its
jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution, both the
parts fall in a piece, and we would not only be giving a
natural meaning to the express words used in the section but
we would also be saving the section from the vice of
constitutional invalidity.
Learned counsel for the appellants seeks to got over
this obvious difficulty by contending that the word "shall"
may be treated as ’may" so that the discretion of High Court
under Art. 226 may be maintained. Alternatively, he
contends that the second part of the section comprises two
parts-the
18
first empowers an aggrieved party only to file an
application, and the second imposes a statutory duty, and
that the first may conveniently be served from the second
and its validity to that extent sustained. The first
argument is contrary to the express words used and the
intention of the Legislature. If we read "shall" as ’,’may"
the same discretion will have to be given even to
authorities, and courts other than the High Court, with the
result the purpose of the section would be defeated. On the
other hand, if the expression "shall" is given its natural
meaning, the section carries out the intention of the
Legislature, viz., the mandatory injunction imposed on
courts and authorities to restore the assessment declared
invalid. The decisions cited by the learned counsel in
support of his construction are not of any help, for they
were based upon the construction of the relevant provisions
under consideration in those cases. The second argument, if
accepted, would be rewriting the section. While the
dominant intention of the Legislature is to issue a
mandatory injunction on the courts or authorities to review
their orders on a suitable application made to them, we
would be deleting it and thus defeating the object of the
Legislature. For the foregoing reasons, we have no
hesitation in holding that, on a plain reading of the clear
words used in the section, it does not apply to an order
made by the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Lastly it is contended that even if s. 11 does not apply, we
should treat the application filed by the appellants before
the High Court as one made under Order 47 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. There are. many objections for allowing
the appellants to do so at this very late stage of the
Proceedings. The application was filed only under s. 11 of
the Act and no attempt was made either before Mehrotra, J.,
or before the division Bench of the High Court to ask for an
amendment
19
or to sustain the petition under Order 47 of the Code, of
Civil Procedure; nor did the appellants raise this plea in
the petition filed for special leave or even in the
statement of case as originally filed by them. After the
case was argued for sometime on an observation casually made
by the Court, time was taken and for the first time this
plea was taken in the additional statement of case filed by
the appellants. This is, therefore, a highly belated
attempt to convert the application filed on one basis into
that on another. Further, the plea, if allowed, is not so
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innocuous or smooth sailing as it appears to be, but is
brimming with many controversial questions. It raises the
following questions : (1) Whether the application treated as
one made under order 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure was
within time ; (2) if it was out of time, could the delay be
excused without the appellant filing an application for
excusing it and giving valid reasons for the same ; (3)
whether an order made by the High Court in exercise of its
powers under Art. 226 of the Constitution could be reviewed
under Order 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and, if not,
under s. 151 of the said Code ; (4) whether the amendment
’of an Act with retrospective effect could be treated as an
error on the face of the record or as a sufficient cause
within the meaning of Order 47 of the Code of Civil
Procedure for reviewing the final orders and decrees made by
courts on the basis of the law obtaining at the time the
said orders or decrees were made ; and (5) if the order of
Mehrotra, J., was one made under Order 47 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, would an appeal lie to a division Bench of
the High Court under Order 43 of the Code. We do not
propose to express any opinion on the aforesaid questions.
It would be enough to say that we are not justified to allow
the appellants to convert their petition to one made under
Order 47 of the Code of Civil Pro-
20
cedure at this very late stage, in view of the foregoing
reasons.
In the result we hold that the order of the High Court is
correct. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
MUDHOLKAR, J.-I agree with my learned brother that the
appeal should be dismissed for the reasons stated in his
judgment. I, however, express no opinion on the question
regarding the maintainability of the appeal under the
Letters Patent against the decision of a single Judge in a
case of this kind.
Appeal dismissed.