Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7228 of 2001
PETITIONER:
CCI CHAMBERS CO-OP. HSG. SOCIETY LTD.
RESPONDENT:
DEVELOPMENT CREDIT BANK LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/08/2003
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & ASHOK BHAN
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2003 Supp(3) SCR 139
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
R.C. LAHOTI, J. The appellant, who was maintaining a Savings Bank Account
with the respondent-Bank filed a complaint alleging deficiency of service
by the respondent, submitting that the Bank had wrongly debited an amount
of Rs. 75,70,352 in the account of the complainant by honouring such
cheques as bore forged signatures of the complainant and in some of the
cheques the figures had been altered. Photocopies of such cheques were
filed with the complaint. As many as 72 cheques were issued on such dates
when one of the two persons purportedly drawing the cheques ws already
dead. The other one denied his signatures and such disputed signatures did
not at all tally with the standard specimen signatures. Suspicion was
raised against an official of the respondent-Bank. The complaint was filed
after serving notice on the respondent-Bank, which was not complied with.
The National Consumer Distputes Redressal Commission, New Delhi
(hareinafter, NCDRC, for short), formed an opinion as under :
"...considering the allegations in the comaplaint and the time that will
require to decide the matter, it cannot be perhaps possible for this
Commission to take up this matter. Numerous documents would be required to
be proved including about 150 cheques. Service of the experts will have to
be requisitioned for proof of the signatures and the writings wherein the
figures in cheques have been altered. Under the Consumer Protection Act,
1986, this Commission is expected to decide the matter within a set frame
of time. In Bharthi Knitting Co. v. DHL Worldwide, [1996] 4 SCC 704,
Supreme Court has said, "Each case depends upon its own facts. In an
appropriate case where there is an acute dispute of facts necessarily a
Tribunal has to refer the parties to original civil suit established under
CPC or appropriate State law to have the claims dealt with between the
parties". Present is certainly a case involving an acute dispute.
"We feel reluctant to require the complainant to knock the door of civil
court but considering the constraint of time required to decide this
matter, this Commission has its limitations. With these observations this
compalint is returned."
The complainant has filed this appeal under Section 23 of the Consumer
Protection Act, 1986 (hereinafter, the Act for short).
Having heard the learned counsel for the parties we are of the opinion that
the appeal deserves to be allowed and the matter sent back to the NCDRC for
hearing and decision afresh.
Shri Harish N. Salve, the learned senior counsel for the appellant has
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submitted, placing reliance one three-Judge Bench decision of this Court
Dr. J.J Merchant & Ors. v. Shrinath Chaturvedi, [2002] 6 SCC 635, Indian
Medical Association v. V.P. Shantha and Ors., [1995] 6 SCC 651 and Amar
Jwala Paper Mills (India) and Am. v. State Bank of India, [1998] 8 SCC 387
that the approach adopted by NCDRC does not deserve to be countenanced.
Shri P. Chadambaram, the learned senior counsel for the respondent-Bank has
supported the impugned order placing reliance on Synco Industries v. State
Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur and Ors., [2002] 2 SCC 1.
It cannot be denied that fora at the National Level, the State level and at
the District level have been constituted under the Act with the avowed
object of providing summary and speedy remedy in conformity with the
principles of natural justice, taking care of such grievances as are
amenable to the jurisdiction of the fora established under the Act. These
fora have been established and conferred with jurisdiction in addition to
the conventional courts. The principal object sought to be achieved by
establishing such fora is to relieve the conventional courts of their
burden which is ever-increasing with the mounting arrears and whereat the
disposal is delayed because of the complicated and detailed procedure which
at times is accompanied by technicalities. Merely because recording of
evidence is required, or some questions of fact and law arise which would
need to be investigated and determined, cannot be a ground for shutting the
doors of any forum under the Act to the person aggrieved.
In the Indian Medical Association case (supra) this Court noticed the
powers conferred on the serveral fora under the Act, the procedure
applicable (including the exercise of some powers of the Civil Court under
the Code of Civil Procedure having been made available to the fora under
the Act) and held that the nature of averments made in the complaint is not
by itself enough to arrive at a conclusion that the complaint raises such
complicated questions as cannot be determined by the NCDRC. It is only when
the dispute arising for adjudication is such as would require recording of
lengthy evidence not permissible within the scope of a summary enquiry that
a forum under the Act may ask the complainant to approach the Civil Court.
The fora made available under the Act are in addition to, and not in
derogation of the provisions of any other law for the time being in force
and the jurisdiction of the conventional courts over such matters as are
now cognizable under the Act has not been taken away. A three-Judge Bench
of this Court recently in Dr. J.J.Merchant & Ors. ’s case (supra)
specifically dealt with the issue as to the guidelines which would
determine the matter being appropriately dealt with by a forum under the
Act or being left to be heard and decided by Civil Court. This Court
noticed that the fora under the Act are specifically empowered to follow
such procedure which may not require more time or delay the proceedings. A
forum under the Act is entitled, and would be justified, in evolving a
procedure of its own and also by effectively controlling the proceedings so
as to do away with the need of a detailed and complicated trial and arrive
at a just decision of the case by resorting to the principles of natural
justice and following the procedue consistent with the principles thereof,
also making use of such of the powers of Civil Courts as are conferred on
it. The decisive test is not the complicated nature of the questions of
fact and law arising for decision. The anvil on which entertainability of a
complaint by a forum under the Act is to be determined is whether the
questions, though complicated they may be, are capable being determined by
summary enquiry i.e. by doing away with the need of a detailed and
complicated method of recording evidence. It has to be remember that the
fora under the Act at every level are headed by experienced persons. The
National Commission is headed by a person who is or has been a Judge of the
Supreme Court. The State Commission is headed by a person who is or has
been a Judge of the High Court. Each District Forum is headed by person who
is, or has been, or is qualified to be a District Judge. We do not think
that mere complication either of facts or of law can be a ground for the
denial of hearing by a forum under the Act. In Synco Industries case
(supra) this Court upheld that order of NCDRC holding the complaint before
it not a fit case to be tried under the Act and allowing liberty to the
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complainant to approach the Civil Court because this Court agreed with the
opinion formed by the Commission that "very detailed evidence would have to
be led, both to prove the claim and thereafter to prove the damages and
expenses". The Court concluded that in any event it was "not appropriate
case to be heard and disposed of in a summary fashion."
In Amar Jwala Paper Mills (India) and Anr. ’s case (supra) this Court set
aside the order of NCDRC relegating a complainant to a Civil Court in spite
of the complexity of the matter because the hearing had almost concluded
before the Commission.
In Dr. J.J. Merchant & Ors. ’s case (supra) this Court dealing with the
contention that complicated questions of facts cannot be decided in summary
proceedings held - "this submission also requires to be rejected because
under the Act, for summary or speedy trial, exhaustive procedure in
conformity with the principles of natural justice is provided. Therefore,
merely because it is mentioned that the Commission or Forum is required to
have summary trial would hardly be a ground for directing the consumer to
approach the civil court. For the trial to be just and reasonable, a long-
drawn delayed procedure, giving ample opportunity to the litigant to harass
the aggrieved other side, is not necessary. It should be kept in mind that
the legislature has provided an alternative, efficacious, simple,
inexpensive and speedy remedy to the consumers and that sould not be
curtained on such ground. It would also be a totally wrong assumption that
because summary trial is provided, justice cannot be done when some
questions of fact are required to be dealt with or decided. The Act
provides sufficient safeguards."
In our opinion the decision arrived at by the NCDRC is premature. The
Commission ought to have issued notice to the respondent and taken its
pleadings on record. Only when the pleadings for both parties were
available should the Commission hav formed an opinion as to the nature and
scope of enquiry, i.e., whether the questions arising for decision in the
light of the pleadings of the parties required a detailed and complicated
investigation into the facts which was incapable of being undertaken in a
summary and speedy manner. Then the Commission could have justifiably
formed an opinion on the need of diring away the complainant to the Civil
Court. Mere complicated nature of the facts and law arising for decision
would not be decisive.
The appeal is allowed. The impugned decision of the National Commission is
set aside. The case is sent back to the Commission for hearing afresh
consistently with the observations made hereinabove. No order as to the
costs.