Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1036 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Kashmir Singh
RESPONDENT:
Harnam Singh & Anr
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/03/2008
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & P. SATHASIVAM & AFTAB ALAM
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1036 OF 2002
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Challenge in this appeal is to the judgment of a learned
Single Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court allowing
the Second Appeal filed by respondent No.1. The Second
Appeal was filed under Section 100 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (in short the ’Code’). Though many points
were urged in support of the appeal it was primarily submitted
that no substantial question of law was formulated and
Second appeal would not have been allowed without
formulating any such question.
2. In view of Section 100 of the Code the memorandum of
appeal shall precisely state substantial question or questions
of law involved in the appeal as required under sub-section (3)
of Section 100. Where the High Court is satisfied that in any
case any substantial question of law is involved it shall
formulate that question under sub-section (4) and the second
appeal has to be heard on the question so formulated as
stated in sub-section (5) of Section 100.
3. Section 100 of the Code deals with "Second Appeal". The
provision reads as follows:
"Section 100- (1) Save as otherwise
expressly provided in the body of this Code or
by any other law for the time being in force, an
appeal shall lie to the High Court from every
decree passed in appeal by any Court
subordinate to the High Court, if the High
Court is satisfied that the case involves a
substantial question of law.
(2) An appeal may lie under this section from
an appellate decree passed ex parte.
(3) In an appeal under this Section, the
memorandum of appeal shall precisely state
the substantial question of law involved in the
appeal.
(4) Where the High Court is satisfied that a
substantial question of law is involved in any
case, it shall formulate that question.
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(5) The appeal shall be heard on the question
so formulated and the respondent shall, at the
hearing of the appeal, be allowed to argue that
the case does not involve such question:
Provided that nothing in this sub-section
shall be deemed to take away or abridge the
power of the Court to hear, for reasons to be
recorded, the appeal on any other substantial
question of law, not formulated by it, if it is
satisfied that the case involves such question."
4. A perusal of the impugned judgment passed by the High
Court does not show that any substantial question of law has
been formulated or that the second appeal was heard on the
question, if any, so formulated. That being so, the judgment
cannot be maintained.
5. In Ishwar Dass Jain v. Sohan Lal (2000 (1) SCC 434) this
Court in para 10, has stated thus:
"10. Now under Section 100, after the 1976
Amendment, it is essential for the High Court
to formulate a substantial question of law and
it is not permissible to reverse the judgment of
the first appellate Court without doing so."
6. Yet again in Roop Singh v. Ram Singh (2000 (3) SCC 708)
this Court has expressed that the jurisdiction of a High Court
is confined to appeals involving substantial question of law.
Para 7 of the said judgment reads:
"7. It is to be reiterated that under section 100
jurisdiction of the High Court to entertain a
second appeal is confined only to such appeals
which involve a substantial question of law
and it does not confer any jurisdiction on the
High Court to interfere with pure questions of
fact while exercising its jurisdiction under
section 100. That apart, at the time of
disposing of the matter the High Court did not
even notice the question of law formulated by
it at the time of admission of the second
appeal as there is no reference of it in the
impugned judgment. Further, the fact findings
courts after appreciating the evidence held
that the defendant entered into the possession
of the premises as a batai, that is to say, as a
tenant and his possession was permissive and
there was no pleading or proof as to when it
became adverse and hostile. These findings
recorded by the two courts below were based
on proper appreciation of evidence and the
material on record and there was no
perversity, illegality or irregularity in those
findings. If the defendant got the possession of
suit land as a lessee or under a batai
agreement then from the permissive
possession it is for him to establish by cogent
and convincing evidence to show hostile
animus and possession adverse to the
knowledge of the real owner. Mere possession
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for a long time does not result in converting
permissive possession into adverse possession
(Thakur Kishan Singh v. Arvind Kumar (1994
(6) SCC 591). Hence the High Court ought not
to have interfered with the findings of fact
recorded by both the courts below."
7. The position has been reiterated in Kanahaiyalal and
Ors. v. Anupkumar and Ors. (JT 2002 (10) SC 98)
8. After the amendment, a second appeal can be filed only if
a substantial question of law is involved in the case. The
memorandum of appeal must precisely state the substantial
question of law involved and the High Court is obliged to
satisfy itself regarding the existence of such a question. If
satisfied, the High Court has to formulate the substantial
question of law involved in the case. The appeal is required to
be heard on the question so formulated. However, the
respondent at the time of hearing of the appeal has a right to
argue that the case in the court did not involve any
substantial question of law. The proviso to the section
acknowledges the powers of the High Court to hear the appeal
on a substantial point of law, though not formulated by it with
the object of ensuring that no injustice is done to the litigant
where such a question was not formulated at the time of
admission either by mistake or by inadvertence.
9. It has been noted time and again that without insisting
for the statement of such a substantial question of law in the
memorandum of appeal and formulating the same at the time
of admission, the High Courts have been issuing notices and
generally deciding the second appeals without adhering to the
procedure prescribed under Section 100 of the Code. It has
further been found in a number of cases that no efforts are
made to distinguish between a question of law and a
substantial question of law. In exercise of the powers under
this section in several cases, the findings of fact of the first
appellate court are found to have been disturbed. It has to be
kept in mind that the right of appeal is neither a natural nor
an inherent right attached to the litigation. Being a
substantive statutory right, it has to be regulated in
accordance with law in force at the relevant time. The
conditions mentioned in the section must be strictly fulfilled
before a second appeal can be maintained and no court has
the power to add or to enlarge those grounds. The second
appeal cannot be decided on merely equitable grounds. The
concurrent findings of facts will not be disturbed by the High
Court in exercise of the powers under this section. Further, a
substantial question of law has to be distinguished from a
substantial question of fact. This Court in Sir Chunilal V.
Mehta and Sons Ltd. v. Century Spg. & Mfg. Co. Ltd. (AIR
1962 SC 1314) held that :
"The proper test for determining whether a
question of law raised in the case is substantial
would, in our opinion, be whether it is of general
public importance or whether it directly and
substantially affects the rights of the parties and
if so whether it is either an open question in the
sense that it is not finally settled by this Court or
by the Privy Council or by the Federal Court or is
not free from difficulty or calls for discussion of
alternative views. If the question is settled by the
highest court or the general principles to be
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applied in determining the question are well
settled and there is a mere question of applying
those principles or that the plea raised is
palpably absurd the question would not be a
substantial question of law."
10. It is not within the domain of the High Court to
investigate the grounds on which the findings were arrived at,
by the last court of fact, being the first appellate court. It is
true that the lower appellate court should not ordinarily reject
witnesses accepted by the trial court in respect of credibility
but even where it has rejected the witnesses accepted by the
trial court, the same is no ground for interference in second
appeal when it is found that the appellate court has given
satisfactory reasons for doing so. In a case where from a given
set of circumstances two inferences of fact are possible, one
drawn by the lower appellate court will not be interfered by the
High Court in second appeal. Adopting any other approach is
not permissible. The High Court will, however, interfere where
it is found that the conclusions drawn by the lower appellate
court were erroneous being contrary to the mandatory
provisions of law applicable or its settled position on the basis
of pronouncements made by the Apex Court, or was based
upon inadmissible evidence or arrived at by ignoring material
evidence.
11. The question of law raised will not be considered as a
substantial question of law, if it stands already decided by a
larger Bench of the High Court concerned or by the Privy
Council or by the Federal Court or by the Supreme Court.
Where the facts required for a point of law have not been
pleaded, a litigant should not be allowed to raise that question
as a substantial question of law in second appeal. Mere
appreciation of facts, the documentary evidence or the
meaning of entries and the contents of the documents cannot
be held to be raising a substantial question of law. But where
it is found that the first appellate court has assumed
jurisdiction which did not vest in it, the same can be
adjudicated in the second appeal, treating it as a substantial
question of law. Where the first appellate court is shown to
have exercised its discretion in a judicial manner, it cannot be
termed to be an error either of law or of procedure requiring
interference in second appeal. This Court in Reserve Bank of
India v. Ramkrishna Govind Morey (1976 (1) SCC 803) held
that whether the trial court should not have exercised its
jurisdiction differently is not a question of law justifying
interference.([See: Kondiba Dogadu Kadam v. Savitribai Sopan
Gujar and Others (1999(3) SCC 722)].
12. The phrase "substantial question of law", as occurring in
the amended Section 100 is not defined in the Code. The word
substantial, as qualifying "question of law", means \026 of having
substance, essential, real, of sound worth, important or
considerable. It is to be understood as something in
contradistinction with \026 technical, of no substance or
consequence, or academic merely. However, it is clear that the
legislature has chosen not to qualify the scope of "substantial
question of law" by suffixing the words "of general importance"
as has been done in many other provisions such as Article
133(1)(a) of the Constitution. The substantial question of law
on which a second appeal shall be heard need not necessarily
be a substantial question of law of general importance. In
Guran Ditta v. T. Ram Ditta (AIR 1928 PC 172), the phrase
’substantial question of law’ as it was employed in the last
clause of the then existing Section 100 (since omitted by the
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Amendment Act, 1973) came up for consideration and their
Lordships held that it did not mean a substantial question of
general importance but a substantial question of law which
was involved in the case. In Sri Chunilal’s case (supra), the
Constitution Bench expressed agreement with the following
view taken by a full Bench of the Madras High Court in
Rimmalapudi Subba Rao v. Noony Veeraju (AIR 1951 Mad.
969):
"When a question of law is fairly arguable, where
there is room for difference of opinion on it or
where the Court thought it necessary to deal with
that question at some length and discuss
alternative views, then the question would be a
substantial question of law. On the other hand if
the question was practically covered by the
decision of the highest court or if the general
principles to be applied in determining the
question are well settled and the only question
was of applying those principles to the particular
facts of the case it would not be a substantial
question of law."
13. This Court laid down the following test as proper test, for
determining whether a question of law raised in the case is
substantial as quoted in Sir Chunilal’s case (supra).
14. In Dy. Commnr. Hardoi v. Rama Krishna Narain (AIR
1953 SC 521) also it was held that a question of law of
importance to the parties was a substantial question of law
entitling the appellant to a certificate under (the then) Section
100 of the CPC.
15. To be "substantial" a question of law must be debatable,
not previously settled by law of the land or a binding
precedent, and must have a material bearing on the decision
of the case, if answered either way, insofar as the rights of the
parties before it are concerned. To be a question of law
"involving in the case" there must be first a foundation for it
laid in the pleadings and the question should emerge from the
sustainable findings of fact arrived at by court of facts and it
must be necessary to decide that question of law for a just and
proper decision of the case. An entirely new point raised for
the first time before the High Court is not a question involved
in the case unless it goes to the root of the matter. It will,
therefore, depend on the facts and circumstance of each case
whether a question of law is a substantial one and involved in
the case, or not; the paramount overall consideration being
the need for striking a judicious balance between the
indispensable obligation to do justice at all stages and
impelling necessity of avoiding prolongation in the life of any
lis. (See :Santosh Hazari v. Purushottam Tiwari (deceased) by
Lrs. [(2001) 3 SCC 179].
16. The principles relating to Section 100, relevant for this
case, may be summarized thus:-
(i) An inference of fact from the recitals or contents of
a document is a question of fact. But the legal effect
of the terms of a document is a question of law.
Construction of a document involving the
application of any principle of law, is also a question
of law. Therefore, when there is misconstruction of a
document or wrong application of a principle of law
in construing a document, it gives rise to a question
of law.
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(ii) The High Court should be satisfied that the case
involves a substantial question of law, and not a
mere question of law. A question of law having a
material bearing on the decision of the case (that is,
a question, answer to which affects the rights of
parties to the suit) will be a substantial question of
law, if it is not covered by any specific provisions of
law or settled legal principle emerging from binding
precedents, and, involves a debatable legal issue. A
substantial question of law will also arise in a
contrary situation, where the legal position is clear,
either on account of express provisions of law or
binding precedents, but the court below has decided
the matter, either ignoring or acting contrary to
such legal principle. In the second type of cases, the
substantial question of law arises not because the
law is still debatable, but because the decision
rendered on a material question, violates the settled
position of law.
17. The general rule is that High Court will not interfere with
concurrent findings of the Courts below. But it is not an
absolute rule. Some of the well recognized exceptions are
where (i) the courts below have ignored material evidence or
acted on no evidence; (ii) the courts have drawn wrong
inferences from proved facts by applying the law erroneously;
or (iii) the courts have wrongly cast the burden of proof. When
we refer to ’decision based on no evidence’, it not only refers to
cases where there is a total dearth of evidence, but also refers
to any case, where the evidence, taken as a whole, is not
reasonably capable of supporting the finding.
18. In view of the aforesaid position, we set aside the
impugned judgment of the High Court and remit the matter to
it for fresh consideration. The Second Appeal can be only
maintained after formulating substantial question of law, if
any and not otherwise. We make it clear we have not
expressed any opinion on the question as to whether any
substantial question of law is involved or not.
19. The appeal is allowed to the aforesaid extent without any
order as to costs.