Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6320-6321 of 2000
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ADANI EXPORTS LTD. & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/10/2001
BENCH:
N. Santosh Hegde & Ashok Bhan
JUDGMENT:
(With C.A.No. 6319/2000)
J U D G M E N T
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
These civil appeals are preferred by the Union of India and
Others challenging the judgment and order of the High Court of
Gujarat at Ahmedabad made in Special Civil Application
Nos.3282/99 and 3279/99 wherein the High Court allowed the said
civil applications and granted the relief as prayed for by the
petitioner therein.
Though in these appeals, principal contention involved
pertains to the entitlement of the respondents herein to the benefit
of the Pass Book Scheme found in paragraph 54 of the Import
Export Policy introduced by the appellants herein w.e.f. 1st April,
1995 in relation to certain credits to be given on export of Shrimps,
the appellant firstly challenges before us the territorial jurisdiction
of the High Court of Gujarat at Ahmedabad to entertain the civil
applications and grant relief in favour of the respondents.
Mr. Mukul Rohtagi, learned Additional Solicitor General of
India and Mr. Jaideep Gupta, learned counsel appearing for the
appellants, contended that the High Court at Ahmedabad did not
have the territorial jurisdiction to entertain the special civil
applications since no part of the cause of action based on which the
applications were filed arose within the territorial jurisdiction of
the High Court at Ahmedabad. They contended that though this
ground was specifically urged, the High Court wrongly placing
reliance on a judgment of this Court in the case of Union of India
& Ors. vs. Oswal Woollen Mills Ltd. & Ors. (1984 (2) SCC 646)
rejected the said objection of the appellants and granted the relief
which, of course, the appellants contend even on merits is not
liable to be granted. They contend that since the question of
jurisdiction in this case goes to the root of the matter, this issue
should be first decided and if it is held in favour of the appellants,
then ipso facto the judgment under appeal is liable to be set aside
as having been delivered by a court of no jurisdiction.
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Per contra, Mr. Ashok Desai, learned senior counsel
appearing for the respondents, contended that it is incorrect to say
that no part to the cause of action arose within the territorial
jurisdiction of the High Court at Ahmedabad. According to the
learned counsel, a substantial part of the cause of action has arisen
within the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court at Ahmedabad,
hence, the judgment in question cannot be invalidated on this
preliminary ground. He placed strong reliance on the judgment of
this Court in the case of Navinchandra N.Majithia vs. State of
Maharashtra & Ors. (2000 (7) SCC 640).
Having considered the arguments addressed on behalf of the
parties and having perused the records, we are of the considered
opinion that the question of jurisdiction should be first decided by
us before going into the merits of the case in hand. As a matter of
fact, we feel it would have been more appropriate on the facts of
these cases if the High Court had proceeded under Order XIV Rule
2 of Civil Procedure Code by deciding the question of jurisdiction
as a preliminary issue first instead of deciding the case on merit.
For deciding the above issue, it is necessary to first notice
the contentions raised in the special civil applications to establish
the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court. Contentions regarding
the cause of action and the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court
are pleaded in the applications at para 16 which read thus:
The petitioners carry on business of export
and import from Ahmedabad. The orders for
export and import are placed from and executed
from Ahmedabad. The documents and payments
for export and imports are sent/made at
Ahmedabad. The credit of duty claimed in respect
of exports were handled from Ahmedabad since
export orders were received at Ahmedabad and
payments also received at Ahmedabad. The non-
granting and denial of utilisation of the credit in
the said Pass Book shall effect the business of the
Petitioners at Ahmedabad. Respondent Nos. 1 to 3
have regional offices at Ahmedabad. A substantial
part of the cause of action has arisen within the
jurisdiction of this Honourable Court. This
Honourable Court has therefore, jurisdiction to
entertain, try and dispose of this Petition.
The appellants herein while opposing the civil applications
had specifically pleaded that the courts at Ahmedabad did not have
the territorial jurisdiction to adjudicate upon the claims of the
respondents since no part of the cause of action has arisen within
the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court at Ahmedabad. In their
statement of objection rebutting the pleadings of the respondents,
the appellants had contended thus :-
With reference to para 16 of the petition, I
say that since the Pass Book Licence was issued at
Chennai by the designated authority at Chennai
and the transactions concerning the said pass book
were made from Chennai port and cause of action
is lying at Chennai, it is in order that the case is
transferred to the jurisdiction of the Honble High
Court of Madras at Chennai notwithstanding the
petitioners having their office at Ahmedabad from
where the export import planning work was being
executed.
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From the above, it is seen that the appellants had taken a
serious objection as to the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court
at Ahmedabad, contending that it is the High Court at Chennai
which alone had the jurisdiction to entertain the applications as no
part of the cause of action had arisen within the territorial
jurisdiction of the High Court at Ahmedabad. Hence, the
appellants had prayed for transfer of the case to the High Court at
Chennai.
We will now consider how the High Court dealt with this
issue. Having noticed the objection filed by the appellants in
regard to its territorial jurisdiction, the High Court following the
judgment of this Court in the case of Union of India v. Oswal
Woollen (supra) held that in view of the observations of this Court
in the said case, a civil application can be filed at the place where
the registered office of the Company is situated and having regard
to the fact that the registered office of the respondent-Company is
situated at Ahmedabad, it accepted the argument of the learned
counsel for the respondent that it is not necessary to discuss this
issue any further, meaning thereby it accepted the contention of the
respondents counsel that the High Court at Ahmedabad had the
territorial jurisdiction to decide the application.
We are unable to accept this finding of the High Court. The
view of the High Court that this Court in the case of Oswal
Woollen (supra) had held that the existence of the registered office
of a Company would ipso facto give a cause of action to the High
Court within whose jurisdiction the registered office of such
Company is situated, is not correct. As a matter of fact, in the case
of Oswal Woollen (supra), the question of territorial jurisdiction in
the sense with which we are concerned now, did not arise at all. In
that case, the observations of the Court were as follows :
Having regard to the fact that the registered
office of the Company is at Ludhiana and the
principal respondents against whom the
primary relief is sought are at New Delhi, one
would have expected the writ petition to be
filed either in the High Court of Punjab and
Haryana or in the Delhi High Court. The writ
petitioners, however, have chosen the Calcutta
High Court as the forum perhaps because one
of the interlocutory reliefs which is sought is in
respect of a consignment of beef tallow which
has arrived at the Calcutta Port. We do not
desire to probe further into the question
whether the writ petition was filed by design or
accident in the Calcutta High Court when the
office of the Company is in the State of Punjab
and all the principal respondents are in Delhi.
It is in that context of noticing the motive of the parties
concerned in that case in choosing a forum, the above observation
as to the place of the registered office of the Company was
incidentally made in the judgment. Having perused the judgment in
Oswals case (supra), we are of the opinion that that judgment is
no authority to decide as to the requirement of law in regard to
establishing the territorial jurisdiction of a court. We must say in
all fairness, Mr. Desai, learned senior counsel, has not placed any
reliance on this judgment nor on the basis of the finding of the
High Court in this case in regard to its territorial jurisdiction. He,
however, contends that from the facts narrated in the civil
applications, more so in Paragraph 16 of the application, it is
crystal clear that a substantial part of the cause of action has arisen
within the jurisdiction of the High Court at Ahmedabad. He
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pointedly referred to the bundle of facts mentioned in Paragraph 16
of the application as also the additional fact pleaded in Paragraph 7
of the application in regard to the respondents having furnished a
bank guarantee as also a Bond in favour of the appellants. He
pointed out that the bank guarantee and the Bond were executed by
the respondents at Ahmedabad, hence, at least on this count a part
of the cause of action has arisen at Ahmedabad.
We will now examine whether any of the facts mentioned in
Paragraph 16 of the applications or for that matter in the entire
special civil applications would give rise to any part of the cause of
action at Ahmedabad, at least for the purpose of conferring
territorial jurisdiction on the High Court at Ahmedabad. At this
stage, it is relevant to mention that it is an admitted fact that none
of the respondents in the civil applications (Appellants herein) are
stationed at Ahmedabad. It is also an admitted fact that the pass-
book in question, benefit of which the respondent is seeking in the
civil applications, is issued by an authority who is stationed at
Chennai. The Designated Authority who is the competent person in
respect of the matters concerning the Pass Book Scheme and who
discharges various functions under the Scheme is also stationed at
Chennai. The entries in the pass-book under the concerned Scheme
are to be made by the authorities at Chennai. The export of prawn
made by the respondents and the import of the inputs benefit of
which the respondents are seeking in the applications, also will
have to be made through the same Port i.e. Chennai.
Inspite of the above admitted facts, the respondents herein
plead that as per the plea raised by them in paragraph 16 of the
special civil application, the following facts give rise to the cause
of action conferring territorial jurisdiction on the Court at
Ahmedabad. They are :-
(i) the respondents carry on their business of export
and import from Ahmedabad ;
(ii) their orders of export and import are placed from
and are executed at Ahmedabad ;
(iii) documents and payments for export and import are
sent/made at Ahmedabad ;
(iv) the credit of duty claimed in respect of exports
were handled from Ahmedabad since export orders
were received at Ahmedabad and payments also
received at Ahmedabad ;
(v) non-granting and denial of utilisation of the credit
in the pass-book will affect the business of the
respondents at Ahmedabad ;
(vi) respondents have executed a bank guarantee
through their bankers at Ahmedabad as well as a
Bond at Ahmedabad.
Though it is also contended in para 16 of the application that
the appellants have their office at Ahmedabad, that contention has
not been pressed since it is clear from the records that none of
these appellants have their office at Ahmedabad. De hors this fact,
if we take into consideration the other facts enumerated
hereinabove in support of the cause of action pleaded by the
respondents, it is seen that none of these facts is in any way
connected with the relief sought for by the respondents in their
civil applications so as to constitute the cause of action at
Ahmedabad.
Article 226(2) of the Constitution of India which speaks of
the territorial jurisdiction of the High Court reads : -
The power conferred by clause (1) to issue
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directions, orders or writs to any Government,
authority or person may also be exercised by
any High Court exercising jurisdiction in
relation to the territories within which the cause
of action, wholly or in part, arises for the
exercise of such power, notwithstanding that
the seat of such Government or authority or the
residence of such person is not within those
territories.
It is clear from the above constitutional provision that a
High Court can exercise the jurisdiction in relation to the territories
within which the cause of action, wholly or in-part, arises. This
provision in the Constitution has come up for consideration in a
number of cases before this Court. In this regard, it would suffice
for us to refer to the observations of this Court in the case of Oil
and Natural Gas Commission v. Utpal Kumar Basu and Ors. (1994
4 SCC 711 at 713) wherein it was held :
Under Article 226 a High Court can exercise the
power to issue directions, orders or writs for the
enforcement of any of the fundamental rights
conferred by Part III of the Constitution or for
any other purpose if the cause of action, wholly
or in part, had arisen within the territories in
relation to which it exercises jurisdiction,
notwithstanding that the seat of the Government
or authority or the residence of the person against
whom the direction, order or writ is issued is not
within the said territories. The expression cause
of action means that bundle of facts which the
petitioner must prove, if traversed, to entitle him
to a judgment in his favour by the Court.
Therefore, in determining the objection of lack of
territorial jurisdiction the court must take all the
facts pleaded in support of the cause of action
into consideration albeit without embarking upon
an enquiry as to the correctness or otherwise of
the said facts. Thus the question of territorial
jurisdiction must be decided on the facts pleaded
in the petition, the truth or otherwise of the
averments made in the petition being
immaterial.
It is seen from the above that in order to confer jurisdiction
on a High Court to entertain a writ petition or a special civil
application as in this case, the High Court must be satisfied from
the entire facts pleaded in support of the cause of action that those
facts do constitute a cause so as to empower the court to decide a
dispute which has, at least in-part, arisen within its jurisdiction. It
is clear from the above judgment that each and every fact pleaded
by the respondents in their application does not ipso facto lead to
the conclusion that those facts give rise to a cause of action within
the courts territorial jurisdiction unless those facts pleaded are
such which have a nexus or relevance with the lis that is involved
in the case. Facts which have no bearing with the lis or the dispute
involved in the case, do not give rise to a cause of action so as to
confer territorial jurisdiction on the court concerned. If we apply
this principle then we see that none of the facts pleaded in
Paragraph 16 of the petition, in our opinion, fall into the category
of bundle of facts which would constitute a cause of action giving
rise to a dispute which could confer territorial jurisdiction on the
courts at Ahmedabad.
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As we have noticed earlier, the fact that the respondents are
carrying on the business of export and import or that they are
receiving the export and import orders at Ahmedabad or that their
documents and payments for exports and imports are sent/made at
Ahmedabad, has no connection whatsoever with the dispute that is
involved in the applications. Similarly, the fact that the credit of
duty claimed in respect of exports that were made from Chennai
were handled by the respondents from Ahmedabad have also no
connection whatsoever with the actions of the appellants impugned
in the application. The non-granting and denial of credit in the
pass-book having an ultimate effect, if any, on the business of the
respondents at Ahmedabad would not also, in our opinion, give
rise to any such cause of action to a court at Ahmedabad to
adjudicate on the actions complained against the appellants.
Mr. Ashok Desai, however, pleaded that the respondents
have executed a bank guarantee and a Bond at Ahmedabad which
in law the respondents are entitled to get cancelled through the
intervention of the courts at Ahmedabad. This fact having been
specifically pleaded in the application and a relief being sought for
that purpose, would definitely give rise to a part of cause of action
at Ahmedabad, but on behalf of the appellants, it is pointed out to
us that the subject-matter involved in the applications pertains to
the denial of the benefit of the import-exports scheme which ended
w.e.f. 31.3.1997 while the bank guarantee and the Bond in
question were not part of the Pass Book Scheme which is the
subject-matter of the special civil applications with which we are
concerned now. Execution of the bank guarantee was not with
reference to the demand of the respondents to give it due credit in
the pass book but the same was executed much later than
31.3.1997 in regard to certain disputes pending with the customs
authorities in regard to the valuations made by the said authorities
as to the value of the export and import of prawn and its inputs. It
was also pointed out that these customs authorities, as a matter of
fact, are not even parties to these special civil applications. Thus, it
is contended that the factum of the respondents having executed a
bank guarantee and a Bond at Ahmedabad will have no direct
nexus or bearing on the disputes involved in these applications. It
is pointed out to us by learned counsel for the appellants that in
regard to the correctness of the valuation, separate proceedings
have been initiated and against the findings in those proceedings,
separate appeals are pending in this Court, therefore, the bank
guarantee and the Bond executed by the respondents, as a matter of
fact, have nothing to do with the cause of action that may arise to
challenge the denial of the benefit of the Pass Book Scheme.
Inclusion of this totally extraneous claim in the present writ
petition cannot be construed as being a factor giving rise to a cause
of action. In the case of ONGC (supra), this Court negatived the
contentions advanced on behalf of the respondents therein that
either the acquisition of knowledge made through media at a
particular place or owning and having an office or property or
residing at a particular place, receiving of a fax message at a
particular place, receiving telephone calls and maintaining
statements of accounts of business, printing of letterheads
indicating branch offices of the firm, booking of orders from a
particular place are not the factors which would give rise to either
wholly or in part cause of action conferring territorial jurisdiction
to courts. In the said case, this Court also held that the mere service
of notice is also not a fact giving rise to a cause of action unless
such notice is an integral part of the cause of action.
Mr. Desai, however, placed reliance on a recent judgment of
this Court in Navinchandra v. State of Maharashtra (supra) wherein
this Court had held that a part of the cause of action had arisen
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within the jurisdiction of the Bombay High Court. It is to be noted
that in the said petition, among other reliefs, the writ petitioner had
prayed for a writ of mandamus to the State of Meghalaya to
transfer the investigation to Mumbai Police as also allegations of
mala fides were made as to the filing of the complaint at Shillong.
It was also averred in that case that the petitioner was primarily
aggrieved by the criminal complaint filed at Meghalaya because
the bulk of the investigation was carried on at Bombay. The said
writ petition was dismissed by the Bombay High Court solely on
the ground that since the complaint in question was filed in
Shillong in the State of Meghalaya and the petitioner had sought
for quashing of the said complaint, such a writ petition was not
maintainable before the High Court of Bombay. According to this
Court, that finding was given without taking into consideration the
other alternative prayers in the writ petition to which we have
made reference hereinabove, which prayers according to this
Court, gave rise to a cause of action to move the High Court at
Bombay for relief. Therefore, in our opinion, this judgment does
not help the writ petitioner to justify its action in filing a writ
petition before the Gujarat High Court. That apart, we must notice
that the said judgment is delivered in a matter involving criminal
dispute and consequences of such dispute have a direct bearing on
the personal freedom of a citizen guaranteed under Article 21 of
the Constitution. Therefore, the consideration that arises in
deciding the question of territorial jurisdiction in cases involving
criminal offences may not always apply to cases involving civil
disputes like the special civil applications with which we are
concerned. Mr. Desai then urged that since the High Court has
elaborately dealt with the merits of the case and given a finding in
favour of the respondents in the interest of justice, we should not
interfere with the said finding and uphold the same. We are not
inclined to accept this argument of the learned counsel because the
appellants herein had taken objection to the entertainment of the
special civil applications by the Gujarat High Court on the ground
of lack of territorial jurisdiction in the first instance itself and the
same was rejected, according to us, wholly on unsustainable
grounds. As a matter of fact, the appellant on the entertainment of
the civil application and grant of interim order, had challenged the
said order on the ground of want of jurisdiction by way of a civil
appeal in this Court which appeal is pending consideration by this
Court, therefore, the objection having been taken at the first
instance itself and the court having not proceeded to decide this
question of territorial jurisdiction as contemplated under Order
XIV Rule 2 CPC, we think we cannot deny relief to the appellant
solely on the ground that the High Court has chosen to proceed to
decide the case on merit. This being a judgment of a court having
no territorial jurisdiction, the judgment has to be set aside.
However, the special civil applications cannot be dismissed on this
ground because it has been the contention of the appellants
themselves in the objections filed by them before the High Court,
that these applications ought to be transferred to the High Court at
Chennai, in the interest of justice, we agree with this plea.
For the reasons stated above, these appeals succeed and the
same are hereby allowed. The impugned judgment is set aside. We
further direct that Special Civil Application Nos. 3282/99 and
3279/99 filed by the respondents are hereby directed to be
transferred to the High Court of Madras at Chennai forthwith and
on receipt of the papers, we request the Chief Justice of the High
Court of Madras to place them before an appropriate Bench for
disposal in accordance with law. We are also of the opinion that
since the parties have already undergone one round of litigation
before the High Court at Ahmedabad and thereafter in these
appeals before us, it is appropriate to request the High Court to
dispose of these appeals as early as possible. The appeals are,
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accordingly, allowed.
J.
(N Santosh Hegde)
..J.
October 31, 2001. (Ashok Bhan)