Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRI BUDHIA SWAIN & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOPINATH DEB & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/05/1999
BENCH:
A.P.Misra, R.C.Lahoti
JUDGMENT:
R.C. LAHOTI, J.
The respondent no.1 is a deity seated at village
Bishwanathpur in the District of Puri. On an application
filed by the respondent no.1 under Sections 6 and 7 of the
Orissa Estates Abolition Act, 1951 (hereinafter ’the Act’,
for short), the Estate Abolition Collector-cum- Additional
Tashildar passed an order of settlement dated 2.4.1966 in
favour of respondent no.1 settling the lands covered by
khata numbers 431 & 438 of village Bishwanathpur. Rent
schedule was issued pursuant to the order of settlement and
rent was realised from the respondent no.1 from the date of
settlement. There was no appeal preferred against the order
dated 2.4.1966 and thus the order of settlement achieved a
finality.
On 24.7.74 the appellants, 12 in number, who are
residents of village Panibhandar, District Puri filed an
application seeking review of the order of settlement dated
2.4.66. The only ground for review raised in the
application was that the public notice of the claim
preferred by the respondent no.1 was not served in the
locality as prescribed. The O.E.A. Collector purported to
exercise the power of review under Section "151 CPC" having
formed an opinion that the proclamation was not properly
done in accordance with the law as the order-sheet of the
case did not disclose the manner of proclamation. The
respondent no.1 preferred an appeal before the Additional
District Magistrate (Land Records) Puri, who formed an
opinion that the O.E.A. Collector was not expressly
conferred with any power of review but the order could be
justified as one of recalling of an earlier order which had
occasioned failure of justice. If the mandatory provisions
of Section 8A (2) of the Act were not followed then the
order dated 2.4.1966 was rendered a nullity. The learned
ADM observed that the claim petition by respondent no.1 was
filed some time in 1963, i.e. beyond the prescribed period
of six months. The learned ADM also observed that the claim
preferred by the respondent no.1 should have been treated as
a lease case and not as a claim case. At the end,
sustaining the setting aside of the order dated 2.4.1966 the
learned ADM remanded the case to the O.E.A. Collector-cum-
Additional Tahsildar for disposal afresh in the light of the
observations made by him. The respondent no.1 preferred a
petition under Article 226/227 of the Constitution before
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the High Court of Orissa. The petition has been allowed and
the orders of O.E.A. Collector and the ADM have both been
set aside by the High Court forming an opinion that the
power to review as assumed by O.E.A. Collector did not
exist and the circumstances of the case did not warrant the
exercise of power to recall an earlier order passed by the
O.E.A. Collector which was one passed within the
jurisdiction of the O.E.A. Collector being set aside, more
so when the averments made in the application seeking
review/recall did not go beyond alleging an irregularity
merely or at the worst an illegality. The aggrieved
appellants, the 12 villagers who had sought for
review/recall, have filed this appeal by special leave
impugning the order of the High Court. Having heard the
learned counsel for the parties we are of the opinion that
no fault can be found with the order of the High Court and
the appeal therefore deserves to be dismissed.
The only provision for review in the Act is to be
found in Section 38A whereunder a review may be sought for
within one year from the date of the decision or order but
only on the ground that there has been a clerical or
arithmetical mistake in the course of any proceedings in the
Act. It was also conceded by the learned counsel for the
appellants that the proceedings initiated by the appellants
were certainly not under Section 38A. It was also conceded
at the bar that the subsequent action of the O.E.A.
Collector could be sustained only if supportable by the
power to recall. What is a power to recall? Inherent power
to recall its own order vesting in tribunals or courts was
noticed in Indian Bank Vs. M/s Satyam Fibres India Pvt.
Ltd. 1996 (5) SCC 550. Vide para 23, this Court has held
that the courts have inherent power to recall and set aside
an order (i) obtained by fraud practised upon the Court,
(ii) when the Court is misled by a party, or (iii) when the
Court itself commits a mistake which prejudices a party. In
A.R. Antulay Vs. R.S. Nayak & Anr. AIR 1988 SC 1531
(vide para 130), this Court has noticed motions to set aside
judgments being permitted where (i) a judgment was rendered
in ignorance of the fact that a necessary party had not been
served at all and was shown as served or in ignorance of the
fact that a necessary party had died and the estate was not
represented, (ii) a judgment was obtained by fraud, (iii) a
party has had no notice and a decree was made against him
and such party approaches the Court for setting aside the
decision ex debito justitiae on proof of the fact that there
was no service. In Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol. XIX) under
the Chapter "Judgment- Opening and Vacating" (paras.265 to
284 at pages 487-510) the law on the subject has been
stated. The grounds on which the courts may open or vacate
their judgments are generally matters which render the
judgment void or which are specified in statutes authorising
such actions. Invalidity of the judgment of such nature as
to render it void is a valid ground for vacating it at least
if the invalidity is apparent on the face of the record.
Fraud or collusion in obtaining a judgment is a sufficient
ground for opening or vacating it. A judgment secured in
violation of an agreement not to enter judgment may be
vacated on that ground. However, in general, a judgment
will not be opened or vacated on grounds which could have
been pleaded in the original action. A motion to vacate
will not be entered when the proper remedy is by some other
proceedings, such as by appeal. The right to vacation of a
judgment may be lost by waiver or estoppel. Where a party
injured acquiesces in the rendition of the judgment or
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submits to it, waiver or estoppel results. In our opinion a
tribunal or a court may recall an order earlier made by it
if (i) the proceedings culminating into an order suffer from
the inherent lack of jurisdiction and such lack of
jurisdiction is patent, (ii) there exists fraud or collusion
in obtaining the judgment, (iii) there has been a mistake of
the court prejudicing a party or (iv) a judgment was
rendered in ignorance of the fact that a necessary party had
not been served at all or had died and the estate was not
represented. The power to recall a judgment will not be
exercised when the ground for re-opening the proceedings or
vacating the judgment was available to be pleaded in the
original action but was not done or where a proper remedy in
some other proceeding such as by way of appeal or revision
was available but was not availed. The right to seek
vacation of a judgment may be lost by waiver, estoppel or
acquiescence. A distinction has to be drawn between lack of
jurisdiction and a mere error in exercise of jurisdiction.
The former strikes at the very root of the exercise and want
of jurisdiction may vitiate the proceedings rendering them
and the orders passed therein a nullity. A mere error in
exercise of jurisdiction does not vitiate the legality and
validity of the proceedings and the order passed thereon
unless set aside in the manner known to law by laying a
challenge subject to the law of limitation. In Hira Lal
Patni Vs. Sri Kali Nath AIR 1962 SC 199, it was held :-
".......The validity of a decree can be challenged in
execution proceedings only on the ground that the court
which passed the decree was lacking in inherent jurisdiction
in the sense that it could not have seisin of the case
because the subject matter was wholly foreign to its
jurisdiction or that the defendant was dead at the time the
suit had been instituted or decree passed, or some such
other ground which could have the effect of rendering the
court entirely lacking in jurisdiction in respect of the
subject matter of the suit or over the parties to it." As
already noted the appellants sought for review or recall of
the order from the O.E.A. Collector solely by alleging that
the notice which was required to be published in the
locality before settling the land in favour of the
respondent no.1 was not served in accordance with the manner
prescribed by law. The appellants did not plead
‘non-service of the notice’ but raised objection only with
regard to ‘the manner of service of the notice’. The High
Court had called for and perused the record of the O.E.A.
Collector and noted that the notice was issued on 15.12.1963
inviting public objection. The notice was available on
record but some
of its pages were missing. The O.E.A. Collector had
noted in his order dated 23.2.1966 as under :-.lm20
"It is only due to missing of some pages of the
proclamation including the last page over which the report
of the process server was there, a scope was available to
the objectors to file this petition. Under the above
circumstances, it is not necessary to issue another
proclamation and entertain further objection since the case
is being heard and going to be finalised on 14.3.66."
The O.E.A. Collector was satisfied of the notice
having been published. Assuming that the notice was not
published in the manner contemplated by law, it will at best
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be a case of irregularity in the proceedings but certainly
not a fact striking at the very jurisdiction of the
authority passing the order. The Appellate Authority, i.e.,
the ADM has in his order noted two other contentions raised
by the appellants, viz., (i) the application for settlement
by the respondent no.1 was not filed within the prescribed
time, and (2) the application should have been treated as an
application for lease and should not have been treated as a
claim case. None of the two pleas was raised by the
appellants in their pleadings. None of the two was urged
before O.E.A. Collector. Therefore there was no occasion
to consider those pleas. Still we may make it clear that
none of the two pleas could have been a ground for recalling
the order which was otherwise within the jurisdiction
conferred on the O.E.A. Collector. Though it is a disputed
question of fact, as noted by the High Court, that the
application by the respondent no.1 was filed within the
prescribed time or not. Nevertheless, we are very clear in
our mind that an order made on an application filed beyond
the time prescribed for filing the same may be an illegal
order but is certainly not an order passed without
jurisdiction.
A suit or proceeding entertained and decided in spite
of being barred by limitation is not without jurisdiction;
at worst in can be a case of illegality. In Ittyavira
Mathai Vs. Varkey Varkey & Anr. - AIR 1964 (Vol.15) SC 907
this Court has held:-
".....Even assuming that the suit was barred by time,
it is difficult to appreciate the contention of learned
counsel that the decree can be treated as a nullity and
ignored in subsequent litigation. If the suit was barred by
time and yet the Court decreed it, the court would be
committing an illegality and therefore the aggrieved party
would be entitled to have the decree set aside by preferring
an appeal against it. But it is well settled that a Court
having jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit and
over the parties thereto, though bound to decide right may
decide wrong; and that even though it decided wrong it
would not be doing something which it had no jurisdiction to
do. It had the jurisdiction over the subject-matter and it
had the jurisdiction over the party and, therefore, merely
because it made an error in deciding a vital issue in the
suit, it cannot be said that it had acted beyond its
jurisdiction. As has often been said, courts have
jurisdiction to decide right or to decide wrong and even
though they decide wrong, the decrees rendered by them
cannot be treated as nullities...."
So also whether an application by way of claim
petition or an application for grant by way of lease, both
were entertainable by the O.E.A. Collector and it was for
him to decide which way he chose to deal with the
application. In any case, he had the jurisdiction to deal
with the application. No case was made out before the
O.E.A. Collector and the ADM for recalling the order of
settlement dated 2.4.1966. The order did not suffer from
lack of jurisdiction or from error of jurisdiction much less
an inherent one. The High Court has rightly set aside the
order dated 2.2.1976 passed by the O.E.A. Collector as the
same was without jurisdiction. In passing the order dated
2.2.1976 O.E.A. Collector had exercised a jurisdiction
which the law did not vest in him. The order could not have
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been sustained by the ADM in
appeal. No fault can be found with the view taken by
the High Court. The appeal is therefore dismissed though
without any order as to the costs.