Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3362 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Baldev Singh & Ors. Etc.
RESPONDENT:
Manohar Singh & Anr. Etc.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/08/2006
BENCH:
AR.Lakshmanan & Tarun Chatterjee
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP) Nos.12719-12720/2005)
TARUN CHATTERJEE,
Leave granted.
An order rejecting an application for amendment of a
written statement passed by the Additional Civil Judge
(Senior Division), Nawanshahar, Punjab and Haryana and
affirmed by a learned Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court, is now under challenge before this Court by way of a
Special Leave Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution of
India filed at the instance of the defendants/ appellants
excepting the Respondent No.2 herein.
A suit has been filed by the plaintiff/respondent No.1
(Manohar Singh) for a declaration that he is the owner and
in possession of 40 Kanals and 15 Merlas comprised in Kh.
No. 16(8-0), 17(8-0),19(8-0),20/1(7-4), 25/1(1-11) of rect
No.19 of Khewat No.212 Khatauni No. 263 as fully described
to the schedule of the plaint. ( hereinafter referred to as "the
suit property").
The case set up by the plaintiff/respondent No.1 was
that the sale deeds executed on 24.6.1968 and 25.6.1968 in
the names of his parents were benami transactions and the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 was the real owner of the same as
his parents had no money to pay the consideration money of
the suit property and that the sale deeds were executed
pursuant to an oral agreement to sell which was entered into
only by the plaintiff/respondent No.1. The appellants
entered appearance and filed their written statement, inter
alia, denying that there was any agreement to sell the suit
property or that the suit property was owned and possessed
by the plaintiff/respondent No.1. It has also been pleaded in
the written statement that the defendant No.1/appellant
No.1 is the actual owner and in possession of the suit
property because he was residing in India continuously in
village Bhin without any interruption from any one whereas
the plaintiff is residing permanently in Canada. During the
pendency of the suit, an application for amendment of the
written statement was filed by the appellants seeking its
amendment in which it was alleged that the suit was barred
by limitation and that the plaintiff/respondent No.1 had no
money to pay the sale price of the suit property, and that the
father of the parties, who was serving as a Foreman in the
Central Government and their mother had sufficient income
to pay the sale price of the suit property and on the death of
their parents the names of the plaintiff and the defendants
have been mutated in equal shares in respect of the suit
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property. Accordingly, the defendants/appellants sought for
amendment of the written statement in the manner indicated
herein earlier. It was further pleaded in the application for
amendment of the written statement that the amendment
sought for was in fact an elaboration of the case made out in
the written statement. The High Court as well as the Trial
Court rejected the application for amendment of the written
statement.
Feeling aggrieved by and dissatisfied with the order
rejecting the application for amendment of the written
statement, this Special Leave Petition has been filed which,
on grant of leave, was heard in presence of the learned
counsel for the parties.
We have heard the learned counsel for the parties in
detail on the question whether the amendment sought for in
the written statement, in the facts and circumstances of the
present case, ought to have been allowed or not.
Before we take up this question for our decision, we
must consider some of the principles to be governed for
allowing an amendment of the pleadings.
It is well settled by various decisions of this Court as
well as the High Courts in India that Courts should be
extremely liberal in granting the prayer for amendment of
pleadings unless serious injustice or irreparable loss is
caused to the other side. In this connection, reference can
be made to a decision of the Privy Council in Ma Shwe Mya
v. Maung Mo Hnaung (AIR 1922 P.C. 249) in which the
Privy Council observed:
"All rules of courts are nothing but
provisions intended to secure the proper
administration of justice and it is, therefore,
essential that they should be made to serve
and be subordinate to that purpose, so that
full powers of amendment must be enjoyed
and should always be liberally exercised, but
nonetheless no power has yet been given to
enable one distinct cause of action to be
substituted for another, nor to change by
means of amendment, the subject-matter of
the suit."
Keeping this principle in mind, let us now consider the
provisions relating to amendment of pleadings. Order 6 Rule
17 of the Code of Civil Procedure deals with amendment of
pleadings which provides that the Court may at any stage of
the proceedings allow either party to alter or amend his
pleadings in such manner and on such terms as may be just,
and all such amendments shall be made as may be
necessary for the purpose of determining the real questions
in controversy between the parties. A bare perusal of this
provision, it is pellucid that Order 6 Rule 17 of the Code of
Civil Procedure consists of two parts. The first part is that
the Court may at any stage of the proceedings allow either
party to amend his pleadings and the second part is that
such amendment shall be made for the purpose of
determining the real controversies raised between the parties.
Therefore, in view of the provisions made under Order 6 Rule
17 of the CPC it cannot be doubted that wide power and
unfettered discretion has been conferred on the Court to
allow amendment of the pleadings to a party in such manner
and on such terms as it appears to the Court just and
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proper. While dealing with the prayer for amendment, it
would also be necessary to keep in mind that the Court shall
allow amendment of pladings if it finds that delay in disposal
of Suit can be avoided and that the suit can be disposed of
expeditiously. By the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment)
Act, 2002 a proviso has been added to Order 6 Rule 17 which
restricts the Courts from permitting an amendment to be
allowed in the pleadings either of the parties, if at the time of
filing an application for amendment, the trial has already
commenced. However, Court may allow amendment if it is
satisfied that in spite of due diligence, the party could not
have raised the matter before the commencement of trial. So
far as proviso to Order 6 Rule 17 of the Code of Civil
Procedure is concerned, we shall deal with it later.
Keeping these principles in our mind, let us now
consider whether the High Court as well as the Trial Court
had erred in rejecting the application for amendment of the
written statement filed by the appellants.
A bare perusal of the order rejecting the application for
amendment of the written statement indicates that while
rejecting the application for amendment of the written
statement, the High Court as well as the trial court based
their decisions mainly on three grounds. The first ground
was that since the appellants had made certain admissions
in the written statement, its amendment cannot be allowed
permitting the appellants to withdraw their admission made
in the same. Secondly, the question of limitation cannot be
allowed to be raised by way of an amendment of the written
statement and lastly inconsistent pleas in the written
statement cannot also be allowed to be raised by seeking its
amendment.
So far as the second ground for rejection of the
amendment of the written statement is concerned, we do not
like to delve in detail in view of the decision of this Court in
the case of Ragu Thilak D.John vs. S.Rayappan and Others
[(2001) 2 SCC 472]. In para 6, this Court observed:
"If the aforesaid test is applied in the instant
case, the amendment sought could not be
declined. The dominant purpose of allowing
the amendment is to minimize the litigation.
The plea that the relief sought by way of
amendment was barred by time is arguable in
the circumstances of the case, as is evident
from the perusal of averments made in paras
8(a) to 8(f) of the plaint which were sought to
be incorporated by way of amendment. We
feel that in the circumstances of the case the
plea of limitation being disputed could be
made a subject-matter of the issue after
allowing the amendment prayed for."
(underlining is ours)
In view of this decision, it can be said that the plea
of limitation can be allowed to be raised as an additional
defence by the appellants. Accordingly, we do not find any
reason as to why amendment of the written statement
introducing an additional plea of limitation could not be
allowed. The next question is that if such amendment is
allowed, certain admissions made would be allowed to be
taken away which are not permissible in law. We have
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already examined the statements made in the written
statement as well as the amendment sought for in the
application for amendment of the written statement. After
going through the written statement and the application for
amendment of the written statement in depth, we do not
find any such admission of the appellants which was
sought to be withdrawn by way of amending the written
statement.
As noted herein earlier, the case set up by the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 was that his parents had no money
to purchase the suit property and it was the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 who paid the consideration money.
In the written statement, this fact was denied and further it
was asserted in the written statement that the suit property
was in fact purchased by their parents and they had
sufficient income of their own. In the application for
amendment of written statement it was stated that the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 did not have any income to pay the
consideration money of the suit property and in fact the
parents of the plaintiff/respondent No.1 had sufficient
income to pay the sale price. It was only pointed out in the
application for amendment that after the death of their
parents, the suit property was mutated in the joint names of
the plaintiff/respondent No.1 and the defendants in equal
shares. Therefore, the question whether certain admissions
made in the written statement were sought to be withdrawn
is concerned, we find, as noted herein earlier, there was no
admission in the written statement from which it could be
said that by filing an application for amendment of the
written statement, the appellants had sought to withdraw
such admission. It is true in the original written statement, a
statement has been made that it is the defendant
No.1/appellant No.1 is the owner and in continuous
possession of the suit property but in our view, the powers of
the Court are wide enough to permit amendment of the
written statement by incorporating an alternative plea of
ownership in the application for amendment of the written
statement. That apart, in our view, the facts stated in the
application for amendment were in fact an elaboration of the
defence case. Accordingly, we are of the view that the High
Court as well as the Trial Court had erred in rejecting the
application for amendment of the written statement on the
ground that in the event such amendment was allowed, it
would take away some admissions made by the
defendants/appellants in their written statement. That apart,
in the case of Estralla Rubber vs. Dass Estate (P) Ltd. [(2001)
8 SCC 97], this Court held that even there was some
admissions in the evidence as well as in the written
statement, it was still open to the parties to explain the same
by way of filing an application for amendment of the written
statement. That apart, mere delay of three years in filing the
application for amendment of the written statement could not
be a ground for rejection of the same when no serious
prejudice is shown to have been caused to the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 so as to take away any accrued
right.
Let us now take up the last ground on which the
application for amendment of the written statement was
rejected by the High Court as well as the Trial Court. The
rejection was made on the ground that inconsistent plea
cannot be allowed to be taken. We are unable to appreciate
the ground of rejection made by the High Court as well as the
Trial Court. After going through the pleadings and also the
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statements made in the application for amendment of the
written statement, we fail to understand how inconsistent
plea could be said to have been taken by the appellants in
their application for amendment of the written statement,
excepting the plea taken by the appellants in the application
for amendment of written statement regarding the joint
ownership of the suit property. Accordingly, on facts, we are
not satisfied that the application for amendment of the
written statement could be rejected also on this ground.
That apart, it is now well settled that an amendment of a
plaint and amendment of a written statement are not
necessarily governed by exactly the same principle. It is true
that some general principles are certainly common to both,
but the rules that the plaintiff cannot be allowed to amend
his pleadings so as to alter materially or substitute his cause
of action or the nature of his claim has necessarily no
counterpart in the law relating to amendment of the written
statement. Adding a new ground of defence or substituting or
altering a defence does not raise the same problem as
adding, altering or substituting a new cause of action.
Accordingly, in the case of amendment of written statement,
the courts are inclined to be more liberal in allowing
amendment of the written statement than of plaint and
question of prejudice is less likely to operate with same
rigour in the former than in the latter case.
This being the position, we are therefore of the view that
inconsistent pleas can be raised by defendants in the written
statement although the same may not be permissible in the
case of plaint. In the case of M/s. Modi Spinning and
Weaving Mills Co.Ltd. & Anr. Vs. M/s. Ladha Ram & Co.
[(1976) 4 SCC 320], this principle has been enunciated by
this Court in which it has been clearly laid down that
inconsistent or alternative pleas can be made in the written
statement. Accordingly, the High Court and the Trial Court
had gone wrong in holding that defendants/appellants are
not allowed to take inconsistent pleas in their defence.
Before we part with this order, we may also notice that
proviso to Order 6 Rule 17 of the CPC provides that
amendment of pleadings shall not be allowed when the trial
of the Suit has already commenced. For this reason, we
have examined the records and find that, in fact, the trial has
not yet commenced. It appears from the records that the
parties have yet to file their documentary evidence in the
Suit. From the record, it also appears that the Suit was not
on the verge of conclusion as found by the High Court and
the Trial Court. That apart, commencement of trial as used
in proviso to Order 6 Rule 17 in the Code of Civil Procedure
must be understood in the limited sense as meaning the final
hearing of the suit, examination of witnesses, filing of
documents and addressing of arguments. As noted herein
after, parties are yet to file their documents, we do not find
any reason to reject the application for amendment of the
written statement in view of proviso to Order 6 Rule 17 of the
CPC which confers wide power and unfettered discretion to
the Court to allow an amendment of the written statement at
any stage of the proceedings.
For the reasons aforesaid, we are of the view that the
High Court as well as the trial court erred in rejecting the
application for amendment of written statement. Accordingly,
the orders of the High Court and the trial court are set aside,
the application for amendment of written statement is
allowed. The defendants/appellants are directed to file an
amended written statement within a period of one month
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from the date of production of this order before the trial court
positively. Considering the facts and circumstances of this
case, we direct the trial court to dispose of the suit within a
period of one year from the date of communication of this
order to it. The appeals are allowed. There will be no order
as to costs.