Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KULDIP SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUBHASH CHANDER JAIN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/03/2000
BENCH:
A.P.Misra, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Plaintiff/respondents no. 1 to 3 and defendant
no.1/appellant are neighbours having their properties in the
city of Ludhiana. Sometime in the month of August, 1978,
the appellant constructed a bhatti (baking oven) in his
premises. He also moved an application to the Municipal
Corporation of Ludhiana seeking grant of licence to run the
bakery. The plaintiffs raised a protest and then filed a
suit seeking an injunction against the appellant restraining
him from running/operating the bhatti, and also an
injunction against the Municipal Corporation restraining it
from issuing the licence sought for by the appellant.
During the pendency of the suit the licence under Section
342 of the Punjab Municipal Corporation Act, 1976 was
granted by the Municipal Corporation to the appellant. By
its judgment and decree dated 3-3-1981 the Trial Court
dismissed the suit against the Municipal Corporation forming
an opinion that in as much as the licence had already been
issued the prayer for the grant of preventive injunction in
that regard was rendered infructuous, also that the
Municipal Corporation could not be restrained by the Civil
Court from exercising a statutory power by issuing an
injunction. The Trial Court also observed that if the
operation of bhatti by the defendant no.1 was a source of
nuisance to the neighbours or any other persons, an
objection could be raised before the Municipal Commissioner
who could either cancel the licence already granted or could
refuse to renew the same further. So far as the relief
sought for against the defendant No.1/appellant is
concerned, the Trial Court was of the opinion that the
bhatti was proposed to be run in a locality which was purely
residential having been so ear-marked in the town planning
scheme also and further the operation of bhatti would result
in emitting smell and generating heat and smoke which taken
together would amount to nuisance and so the plaintiffs were
entitled to issuance of an injunction restraining the
defendant No.1/appellant from running the bhatti for
manufacturing bakery products in his house. Accordingly,
the suit was decreed against the defendant no.1/appellant
injuncting him from running the bhatti.
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The defendant no.1 preferred an appeal before the
Additional District Judge who formed an opinion that the
locality was not purely a residential one as a few other
commercial activities were also being carried on in the
vicinity of the premises belonging to the parties. The
learned Additional District Judge himself carried out an
inspection of the bhatti constructed by the defendant No.1.
He found that there was a chimney installed in the bhatti
which was about 12 feet in height. The designing of the
bhatti revealed that the fire-wood would burn in between two
parallel brick-linings and the heat generated by burning of
the fire- wood would not travel much beyond the bhatti so as
to cause any inconvenience to others. In the opinion of the
learned Additional District Judge the operation of the
bhatti was not likely to cause any such nuisance which could
be termed actionable. On such findings the appeal was
allowed setting aside the decree passed by the Trial Court.
The plaintiffs preferred second appeal before the High
Court. The learned Single Judge who heard the second appeal
felt not happy about the learned Additional District Judge
having disposed of the appeal basing the judgment mostly on
the opinion formed by carrying out an inspection of the
defendant no.1s premises. Without discussing the evidence
in details, the High Court made an observation that the
plaintiff Subhash Chander, PW-1, and other witnesses
produced by him had stated that the bhatti would emit smoke,
heat & smell which were nuisance to the residents of the
locality. The High Court also referred to certain
correspondence exchanged between the district health
authorities and the Municipal Corporation. The High Court
observed :- . I find that the statements of Subhash
Chander, plaintiff (P.W.1) and other witnesses produced by
him, are reliable. They have clearly stated that the Bhathi
emits smoke, heat and smell which are nuisance to the
residents of the locality. Even the Municipal/Health
Authorities as also the District Health Authorities,
Ludhiana have reported that the residential locality cannot
be used for industrial installations from the health point
of view and had informed Kuldip Singh not to run the bakery
in the locality in dispute. Taking all this evidence into
consideration, I am of the considered view that the trial
Court was perfectly justified in coming to the conclusion
that the setting up of the Bhathi had caused nuisance to the
residents of the locality.
The evidence led by Kuldip Singh defendant shows that
the fire place and furnace have been made of such bricks and
material that it would not emit or spread heat. Assuming
that heat would not be nuisance of that degree to the
residents of the locality, but the smoke, gases and ash
etc., which would be emitted from the furnace, would
certainly be a nuisance to the residents of the locality and
if that is so, no burning of fire-wood etc. would be
permitted in the bhatti.
The High Court set aside the judgment and decree
passed by the first appellate Court and restored those
passed by the Trial Court. The aggrieved defendant No.1 has
come up in appeal by special leave to this Court.
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We have heard the learned Counsel for the parties.
Shri Jaspal Singh, learned Senior Counsel for the appellant
has submitted that in the suit filed by the
plaintiff/respondents they were seeking an injunction
against an apprehended injury likely to be caused by
nuisance not in existence on the date of the suit which
injunction could not have been granted in the facts &
circumstances of the case. In his submission the action
initiated by the plaintiff/respondents was quia timet action
which, on the settled legal principles, was premature on the
date of initiation and hence ought not to have been
entertained. The learned Counsel for the appellant has
invited our attention to Fletcher v. Bealey 28 Ch.D.698
which in his submission is the leading authority on the
point. Shri V.R. Reddy, learned Senior Counsel for the
plaintiff/respondents has, on the other hand, supported the
judgment of the High Court.
A quia timet action is a bill in equity. It is an
action preventive in nature and a specie of precautionary
justice intended to prevent apprehended wrong or anticipated
mischief and not to undo a wrong or mischief when it has
already been done. In such an action the Court, if
convinced, may interfere by appointment of receiver or by
directing security to be furnished or by issuing an
injunction or any other remedial process. In Fletcher v.
Bealey, Mr. Justice Pearson explained the law as to actions
quia timet as follows :-
There are at least two necessary ingredients for a
Quia timet action. There must, if no actual damage is
proved, be proof of imminent danger, and there must also be
proof that the apprehended damage will, if it comes, be very
substantial. I should almost say it must be proved that it
will be irreparable, because, if the danger is not proved to
be so imminent that no one can doubt that, if the remedy is
delayed the damage will be suffered, I think it must be
shown that, if the damage does occur at any time, it will
come in such a way and under such circumstances that it will
be impossible for the plaintiff to protect himself against
it if relief is denied to him in a Quia timet action.
Kerr on Injunctions (Sixth Edition, 1999) states the
law on threatened injury as under :- The Court will not
in general interfere until an actual nuisance has been
committed; but it may, by virtue of its jurisdiction to
restrain acts which, when completed, will result in a ground
of action, interfere before any actual nuisance has been
committed, where it is satisfied that the act complained of
will inevitably result in a nuisance. The plaintiff,
however, must show a strong case of probability that the
apprehended mischief will in fact arise in order to induce
the Court to interfere. If there is no reason for supposing
that there is any danger of mischief of a serious character
being done before the interference of the Court can be
invoked, an injunction will not be granted.
In our opinion a nuisance actually in existence stands
on a different footing than a possibility of nuisance or a
future nuisance. An actually existing nuisance is capable
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of being assessed in terms of its quantum and the relief
which will protect or compensate the plaintiff consistently
with the injury caused to his rights is also capable of
being formulated. In case of a future nuisance, a mere
possibility of injury will not provide the plaintiff with a
cause of action unless the threat be so certain or imminent
that an injury actionable in law will arise unless prevented
by an injunction. The Court may not require proof of
absolute certainty or a proof beyond reasonable doubt before
it may interfere; but a strong case of probability that the
apprehended mischief will in fact arise must be shown by the
plaintiff. In other words, a future nuisance to be
actionable must be either imminent or likely to cause such
damage as would be irreparable once it is allowed to occur.
There may be yet another category of actionable future
nuisance when the likely act of the defendant is inherently
dangerous or injurious such as digging a ditch across a
highway or in the vicinity of a childrens school or opening
a shop dealing with highly inflammable products in the midst
of a residential locality.
The nuisance complained of by the plaintiffs and which
was yet to accrue was to fall in the category of private
nuisance. The remedies for private nuisance are (1)
Abatement, (2) Damages, and (3) Injunction. In order to
obtain an injunction it must be shown that the injury
complained of as present or impending is such as by reason
of its gravity, or its permanent character, or both, cannot
be adequately compensated in damages. If the injury is
continuous the Court will not refuse an injunction because
the actual damage arising from it is slight (Ratanlal &
Dhirajlals Law of Torts, edited by Justice G.P. Singh,
Twenty-Second edition, pp. 522-524).
In the case at hand, it is not disputed that the
bhatti was not operational on the date of filing of the
suit. A bhatti (baking oven) is not an activity which by
itself is illegal or inherently dangerous or injurious. It
cannot also be said that the bhatti merely because it has
been constructed or become operational would pose such an
injury as would be irreparable or would be incapable of
being taken care of by a process known to law. The
pleadings raised by the plaintiffs do not and could not have
set out the nature and extent of injury, if any, caused or
likely to be caused to the plaintiffs. The High Court has
at one place observed that the bhatti would emit smoke,
heat and smell which would be nuisance to the residents of
the locality. At another place it has stated that smoke,
gases and ash etc. which were emitted from the furnace
would certainly be a nuisance to the residents of the
locality. The findings so recorded are oscillating and are
not clear and specific. They are a guess work. A clear
finding as to nuisance could not have been recorded by
basing it on generalised statements of certain witnesses
stating that bhatti emits smoke, heat and smell which
statements would be mere ipse dixit of the witnesses. There
is no foundation either in pleadings or in evidence for
observation made by the High Court as to gases, ash etc.
emitting from the furnace. In our opinion, no case for quia
timet action was made out. The suit filed by the plaintiffs
was premature. No relief, much less by way of preventive
injunction, could have been allowed to the plaintiffs. In
our opinion, the suit as filed by the plaintiffs should be
dismissed with liberty to file an appropriate suit on proof
of cause of action having accrued to the plaintiffs
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consistently with the observations made herein above.
In so far as Municipal Corporation is concerned, the
dismissal of the suit against it by by the Trial Court was
not challenged by the plaintiffs by filing an appeal. Grant
of licence is a statutory function to be discharged by the
Municipal Corporation. The licence having already been
issued by the Municipal Corporation to the defendant
no.1/appellant, the Trial Court rightly observed that the
plaintiffs were at liberty to approach the Municipal
Corporation and seek cancellation of licence or pray for
withholding the renewal thereof by making out a case for the
grant of such relief within the framework of the legal
provisions governing the grant and renewal of such licence.
Needless to say, in the event of the plaintiffs being
illegally or unreasonably denied relief by the Municipal
Corporation, they would be at liberty to pursue the remedy
of appeal or approach the superior authorities within the
framework of Punjab Municipal Corporation Act or such other
remedy as may be available to them in accordance with law.
The appeal is allowed. The judgment and decree passed
by the Trial Court and restored by the High Court against
defendant No.1/appellant are set aside. The suit filed by
the plaintiffs/respondents against the defendant
no.1/appellant is directed to be dismissed. However, such
dismissal shall not prejudice the right of the
plaintiffs/respondents to bring another action and seek an
appropriate relief by making out a case of actual injury or
imminent danger. No order as to the costs.