Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1451 of 2007
PETITIONER:
M/s. Bajaj Hindustan Sugar & Industries Limited
RESPONDENT:
Balrampur Chini Mills Ltd. & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/03/2007
BENCH:
Dr.AR. Lakshmanan & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P. (c) No.1983 OF 2007)
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO. /2007
(Arising out of S.L.P. (c) No. 3855 OF 2007)
M/s. Balrampur Chini Mills Ltd. & Anr. ..Appellants
Versus
Union of India & Ors. ..Respondents
ALTAMAS KABIR, J.
Leave granted in both the special leave petitions.
These two civil appeals have been taken up one after the
other since both arise out of the same proceedings. While Civil
Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 1983 of 2007 was directed
against the interim order passed in the proceedings, the Civil
Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 3855 of 2007 was filed against
the final order. The interim order from which the first appeal
was filed has since merged with the final order and has
therefore been rendered infructuous.
Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 1983 of 2007 is
therefore dismissed as infructuous.
Civil Appeal arising out of SLP (C) No. 3855 of 2007 has
been filed by M/s. Balrampur Chini Mills Ltd. against the order
passed by the High Court of Uttar Pradesh, Lucknow Bench, in
Civil Revision Petition No. 16 of 2007, allowing the revision and
granting final relief in favour of the revisioner petitioner in the
High Court.
In order to appreciate the order passed by the High Court,
it is necessary to set out some of the facts leading to the filing
of the said revision petition.
The appellant before us is a registered company engaged
in the manufacture of sugar and has various industrial
undertakings at different sites in Uttar Pradesh. On
31.08.1998, a press note was issued by the Industries’ Ministry
requiring compulsory licensing and it was also provided that
new sugar factories, when established, would have to maintain
a minimum distance of 15 Kms. from an existing sugar mill.
Alleging that M/s. Bajaj Hindustan Sugar & Industries
Limited (formerly known as the Pratappur Sugar & Industries
Limited), the respondent No. 5 in this proceeding, was setting
up a sugar mill at Itai Maida, which was within 15 Kms. of the
proposed unit of the appellant-company at Kalu Bankat, the
appellant filed a suit in the Court of Civil Judge (Senior
Division) Balrampur, being No. 2 of 2006, against the Union of
India and its authorities and M/s. Bajaj Hindustan Sugar &
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
Industries Limited inter alia for a decree declaring that on filing
of the Performance Bank Guarantee, the Kalu Bankat unit of
the appellant-company had become a new sugar factory, as
such, no proposed factory could be permitted within 15 Kms. of
the proposed unit of the appellant-company at Kalu Bankat.
Since the suit was filed against the Union of India, an
application was also made under Section 80 (2) of the Code of
Civil Procedure (hereinafter referred to as ’the Code’, for short)
for grant of leave to proceed against the Government and its
authorities without service of notice under Section 80 (1) of the
said Code. It was prayed that compliance as envisaged under
Section 80 (2) of the Code, be dispensed with on account of the
urgency involved. The said application was taken up for
consideration by the learned Civil Judge on 18.01.2007.
Holding that on a perusal of the plaint, there was no urgency in
the matter, which warranted immediate relief, the leave prayed
for by the appellant was not granted and the appellant was
directed to ensure compliance of Section 80 (1) of the Code and
thereafter to place the suit. The plaint was accordingly
returned to the appellant (plaintiff) as per law.
Aggrieved by the said order of the learned Civil Judge, the
appellants herein filed Civil Revision No. 16 of 2007 in the
Allahabad High Court, Lucknow Bench. In the revision, apart
from praying for the order dated 18.01.2007 of the learned Civil
Judge to be set aside, the appellants also prayed for a direction
from the learned Civil Judge to register the case (emphasis
added) and to hear the application filed by the appellants on
merits and till the said application was decided, the
respondents be required not to take any steps which could
permit the respondent Nos. 5 and 6 to set up their industrial
undertaking at Itai Maida and also to restrain the others from
continuing their developmental activities from their site at the
said location.
Initially, while admitting the revision petition, the High
Court directed the respondent Nos. 5 and 6 to maintain status
quo and they were restrained from continuing with any
developmental or construction activities at Itai Maida. As
indicated hereinbefore, the first civil appeal was directed
against the said interim order.
After the revision petition had been admitted and the
interim order had been passed, the respondent Nos. 5 and 6
filed an application for vacation of the interim order passed on
25.01.2007. Inasmuch as, a counter affidavit had also been
filed by the said respondents in the main revision petition, both
the revision petition as well as the application for vacating the
interim order, were taken up for hearing together for final
disposal on 20.01.2007 with the consent of the counsel for both
the parties. After a contested hearing, the High Court decided
not to enter into the merits of the case and passed the following
order.
"The trial court, the Civil Judge (Senior
Division), Balrampur is directed to reconsider the
matter. The revisionists may present the
application seeking interim relief before the
competent court of law and put forth their
respective versions and place the legal precedents.
Since the actions of the State Government and the
Government of India are also involved in this civil
revision, let their version may also be taken into
account. It may be open for the parties to make all
these submissions before the trial court, competent
court and the same may be appreciated and
considered by the competent court. It is expected
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
from the competent court to pass a reasoned and
speaking order or orders after judicially scrutinizing
the matter in accordance with law. However, in the
interest of justice, it is made clear that the civil
court shall adjudicate the matter with an open and
independent mind. It shall be free to pass any order
in accordance with law following relevant provisions
of C.P.C., Evidence Act and other laws without
being influenced by this order or the last interim
order passed by this Court on 25.01.2007.
With the above observations and directions,
the civil revision is finally disposed of. The interim
order granted by this Court on 25.01.2005 is
vacated."
It is against the said order of the High Court by which the
interim order was vacated and the Civil Revision was finally
disposed of that the second civil appeal has been filed.
Appearing in support of the appeal, Mr. Harish Salve,
Senior Advocate, and Mr. Rohington Nariman, Senior Advocate,
submitted that after the order passed by the High Court
directing the learned trial Judge to hear out the appellant’s
application for interim relief, the learned Civil Judge without
doing so had in fact by his order dated 23.02.2007 directed that
the appellant’s application under Section 80 (2) of the Code be
re-heard. Mr. Salve submitted that the learned Civil Judge
should have decided the appellant’s application for interim relief
without re-opening the question of grant of leave under Section
80 (2) of the Code. According to Mr. Salve, by directing the
learned Trial Judge to hear out the appellant’s application for
interim relief, it had dispensed with the requirement of Section
80 (2) of the Code or had impliedly allowed the appellant’s
application for leave. It was, therefore, no longer open to the
learned Trial Judge to direct re-hearing of the appellant’s
application under Section 80 (2) of the Code instead of deciding
the application for interim relief on its merits.
Mr. Salve urged that even if the suit could not be
registered as far as the Union of India and its authorities were
concerned, the same could have been registered against the
private respondents instead of the plaint being returned to the
plaintiff.
On merits, Mr. Salve, contended that since the appellants
had filed an Industrial Entrepreneurship Memorandum (IEM)
for Kalu Bankat as well, the project of the respondent No. 5 to
set up a sugar mill at Itai Maida was in contravention of the
rules relating to maintenance of a minimum distance of 15
Kms. between two units. Mr. Salve submitted that on such
score also, the respondent Nos. 5 and 6 were not entitled to
continue with the construction work at Itai Maida.
Mr. Salve urged that having granted an interim order on a
detailed discussion of the facts at the time of admission of the
revision, the High Court erred in vacating such order at the
time of final hearing and to direct the trial court to reconsider
the matter. However, according to Mr. Salve, it was not only the
High Court which committed an error in remitting the matter to
the trial Judge for a fresh decision on the self-same matter, but
even the trial Judge misunderstood the scope of the order
passed by the High Court in reconsidering not the application
for interim order but the application for grant of leave under
Section 80 (2) of the Code. Mr. Salve urged that both the orders
of the High Court as well as that of the trial Judge were liable to
be set aside with a further direction to hear out the application
for interim orders.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
Mr. Venugopal and Mr. Mukul Rohtagi along with Mr.
Rajiv Dutta, Senior Advocates, strongly opposed Mr. Salve’s
submissions and urged that neither the High Court nor the
learned trial Judge had committed any error and/or illegality
which required any correction in the instant special leave
petition. Mr. Venugopal submitted that upon a reconsideration
of the matter, the High Court, at the time of final hearing of the
revision petition and the application for vacating the interim
order, concluded that the trial Judge should consider the grant
of interim order in the suit and accordingly directed the trial
Judge to reconsider the matter.
Reference was made to the order of the High Court
impugned in the appeal where it had been recorded that the
learned counsel of both parties had agreed that the order of
the trial court dated 18th January, 2007, was a non-reasoned
and non-speaking order and in that factual matrix the High
Court had remitted the matter to the trial court for
reconsidering the matter. In the process, the revisionists were
given the liberty to also place their application for interim relief.
It was urged that the matter relating to grant of leave had
been left to be decided by the trial court.
On the merits, as argued by Mr. Salve, Mr. Venugopal
submitted that, in any event, the case made out by the
appellants had no foundation, inasmuch as, the appellants had
ultimately decided as would be evident from their letter dated
9th August, 2005, not to proceed with the proposal to set up a
separate sugar unit at Kalu Bankat, which was within 15 Kms.
of their establishment at Datauli. Mr. Venugopal urged that
the High Court had not committed any jurisdictional error
which warranted the interference of this Court in this Appeal.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan, learned senior advocate, who
appeared for the appellant at a later stage of the proceedings,
urged that when the original court where the suit was to be filed
had refused leave under Section 80 (2) of the Code and the
plaint was returned, the plaintiff was entitled to invoke the
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court under Section 115 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in its application to
Uttar Pradesh.
He then urged that when the trial court had refused to
grant leave, it was always open to the revisional court to grant
such leave provided it was satisfied that such a case had been
made out. According to him, the language of Section 80 (2) of
the Code did not restrict its application to the court of original
jurisdiction alone.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan also urged that leave could also be
said to have been granted by implication when no express
language was used in that behalf. In support of his
contention, Mr. Shanti Bhushan relied on a decision of the
Calcutta High Court in Smt. Janak Rani Devi vs. Chandrabati
Devi & Anr., reported in A.I.R. 2002, Calcutta, page 11, wherein
it was observed, inter alia as follows;-
"................However, my reading of sub-
section (2) of Section 80 of the Code of
Civil Procedure is that no separate
application and an express order are the
essential requisites; such leave could be
presumed; the leave need not be granted
by passing a formal order. The leave
under sub-section (2) of Section 80 could
be implied and could be granted from
what the Court does."
Mr. Shanti Bhushan also referred to two other decisions
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
of the Delhi High Court and Kerala High Court reported in 111
(2004) Delhi Law Times, page 33 and AIR 1989 (Kerala) page
276, where similar views have been expressed.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan submitted that when the High Court
remitted the matter to the trial court for a decision on the
interim relief as well, it could be presumed that leave to file the
suit under Section 80 (2) of the Code had impliedly been
granted.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan lastly submitted that the superior
courts were always within their jurisdiction to vary or reverse
the order passed by the lower courts in exercise of the powers
vested in them in revision or in appeal. According to learned
counsel, when leave had been refused by the trial court under
Section 80 (2) of the Code it was always open to the High
Court to grant such leave under its revisional jurisdiction.
A few decisions in this regard with reference to Order
XXXIII Rule 5 of the Code was relied upon by Mr. Shanti
Bhushan wherein the High Court in revisional jurisdiction
granted leave to the plaintiff to file his suit as forma pauperis
even though such prayer had been refused by the trial court.
The same are as follows:-
1. AIR 1952 Allahabad page 582 \026 S.E. Orde vs.
Mrs.T.C. Deacon & Anr.
2. AIR 1955 Patna, page 257 - Raghuraj Singh &
Anr. vs. Mst. Sitapati Kuer & Ors. and
3. AIR 1975 Gujarat, page 94 \026 Rambhai Punjabhai
Vinchiya vs. The Gujarat State Road Transport
Corporation, Ahmedabad & Anr.
Mr. Shanti Bhushan submitted that by the same principle
it must be held that the High Court had the jurisdiction to grant
leave under Section 80 (2) of the Code, once such leave was
refused by the court of original jurisdiction.
Although, the order passed by the learned trial Judge,
upon the matter being remitted by the High Court, is not the
subject matter of the special leave petition, it has been brought
to the notice of this Court that the matter was directed to be re-
heard by the trial Judge on the question of grant of leave under
Section 80 (2) of the Code and the said application was fixed by
the learned trial Judge for filing of objections and disposal.
We have carefully considered the submissions made on
behalf of the respective parties and we fail to see how it can be
contended that the High Court had acted without jurisdiction or
in excess of jurisdiction in vacating the interim order and
directing the learned trial Judge to reconsider the matter. The
High Court merely remitted the matter to the learned trial
Judge to re-decide the entire matter on the concession that the
impugned order passed by the trial court on 18th January,
2007, was a non-reasoned and non-speaking order. The said
concession was obviously with regard to the rejection of the
plaintiff’s prayer for grant of leave under Section 80 (2) of the
Code.
There can be no dispute that once the plaint was
returned, there was no suit pending before the trial Judge.
Without the suit being registered the question of considering
the application for interim orders also did not arise. The
provisions of Section 80 (1) of the Code make it very clear that
except in the manner provided in sub-Section (2), no suit can be
instituted against the Government and its authorities in respect
of any act purported to have been done by such authority in its
official capacity until the expiration of two months after notice
in writing has been delivered to or left at the office of the
authorities named therein. Admittedly, the defendant Nos. 1-4
in the suit, were the Union of India and its authorities and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
without notice under Section 80 (1) of the Code, the suit could
not have been instituted against them without compliance with
the provisions of Section 80 (2) of the Code. The appellants
were fully aware of the said provision and accordingly, an
application was made under Section 80 (2) of the Code for grant
of such leave, which was refused. Section 80(2) provides as
follows:-
"(2) A suit to obtain an urgent or immediate
relief against the Government (including the
Government of the State of Jammu and Kashmir) or
any public officer in respect of any act purporting to
be done by such public officer in his official capacity,
may be instituted, with the leave of the Court,
without serving any notice as required by sub-section
(1); but the Court shall not grant relief in the suit,
whether interim or otherwise, except after giving to
the Government or public officer, as the case may be,
a reasonable opportunity of showing cause in respect
of the relief prayed for in the suit:
Provided that the Court shall, if it is satisfied,
after hearing the parties, that no urgent or immediate
relief need be granted in the suit, return the plaint
for presentation to it after complying with the
requirements of sub-section (1)."
From the above, it would be evident that a suit may be
filed against the Government or a public officer without serving
notice as required by sub-section (1) with the leave of the Court.
When such leave is refused, the question of institution of the
suit does not arise and accordingly, no interim relief could also
be granted at that stage.
The learned trial Judge does not also appear to have
committed any illegality in taking up the petitioners’ application
for grant of leave once again.
The decisions cited by Mr. Shanti Bhushan on the
question of implied leave was countered by Mr. Mukul Rohatgi
with the decision of this Court in State of A.P. & Ors. vs. M/s.
Pioneer Builders, A.P., reported in 2006 (9) Scale page 520,
wherein in paragraph 16 it has been observed as follows:-
"Thus, from a conjoint reading of sub-
sections (1) and ( 2) of Section 80, the
legislative intent is clear, namely, service
of notice under sub-section (1) is
imperative except where urgent and
immediate relief is to be granted by the
Court, in which case a suit against the
Government or a public officer may be
instituted, but with the leave of the
Court. Leave of the Court is a condition
precedent. Such leave must precede
the institution of a suit without serving
notice. Even though Section 80 (2) does
not specify how the leave is to be sought
for or given yet the order granting leave
must indicate the ground(s) pleaded and
application of mind thereon. A restriction
on the exercise of power by the Court
has been imposed, namely, the Court
cannot grant relief, whether interim or
otherwise, except after giving the
Government or a public officer a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
reasonable opportunity of showing
cause in respect of relief prayed for in
the suit."
The law, in our view, has been succinctly expressed in
the aforesaid judgment. The language of Section 80 (2) of the
Code leads us to hold that if leave is refused by the original
court, it is open to the superior courts to grant such leave as
otherwise in an emergent situation a litigant may be left
without remedy once such leave is refused and he is required
to wait out the statutory period of two months after giving
notice.
However, in the instant case, the High Court has not
granted such leave while disposing of the revision filed by the
appellant-company and the trial court was bound to
reconsider the question of grant of leave in the light of the
observations made by the High Court.
In such circumstances, we see no reason to interfere with
the order passed by the High Court, impugned in this appeal
and the same is accordingly dismissed.
The learned trial court is directed to dispose of the
plaintiff’s application for grant of leave under Section 80 (2) of
the Code within ten days from the date of the receipt of this
order.
There will be no order as to costs.