Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF HARYANA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHANDRA MANI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/01/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
AHMAD SAGHIR S. (J)
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1623 1996 SCC (3) 132
JT 1996 (3) 371 1996 SCALE (2)820
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
We have heard the counsel on both sides. We decline to
express any opinion on merits. The Division Bench of the
High Court refused to condone the delay of 109 days in
filing the Letters Patent Appeal. We have perused the
reasons given for the delay in filing the Letters Patent
Appeal.
Section 5 of the Limitation Act 1963 [for short, the
‘Act’) extends prescribed period of limitation, in filing an
application or an appeal except under the provisions of
Order 21 of Civil Procedure Code 1908 [for short, the
‘Code’] and gives power to the Court to admit the appeal or
application after the prescribed period. The only condition
is that the applicant/appellant satisfies the court that he
had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal or making
the application within such period. In Ramlal, & Chhotelal
v. Rewa Coalfields Ltd. [(1962) 2 SCR 762], it was laid down
that in showing sufficient cause to condone the delay, it is
not necessary that the applicant/appellant has to explain
whole of the period between the date of the judgment till
the date of filing the appeal. It is sufficient that the
applicant/appellant would explain the delay caused by the
period between the last of the dates of limitation and the
date on which the appeal/application is actually filed.
What constitute sufficient cause cannot be laid down by
hard and fast rules. In New India Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Smt.
Shanti Misra [AIR 1976 SC 237], this Court held that
discretion given by Section 5 should not be defined or
crystalized so as to convert a discretionary matter into a
rigid rule of law. The expression "sufficient cause’ should
receive a liberal construction. In Inder Singh v. Kanshi Ram
[AIR 1917 PC 156] it was observed that true guide for a
court to exercise the discretion under Section 5 is whether
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the appellant acted with reasonable diligence in prosecuting
the appeal. In Shakuntala Devi Jain v. Kuntal Kumari & Ors.
[(1969) 1 SCR 1006], a Bench of three Judges had held that
unless want of bona fides of such inaction or negligence as
would deprive a party of the protection of Section 5 is
proved, the application must not be thrown out or any delay
cannot be refused to be condoned.
In Concord of India Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Nirmala Devi
& Ors. [(1979) 3 SCR 694] which is a case of negligence of
the counsel which misled a litigant into delayed pursuit of
his remedy the default in delay was condoned. In Lala Mata
Din v. A. Narayanan [(1970) 2 SCR 90], this Court had held
that there is no general proposition that mistake of counsel
by itself is always sufficient cause for condonation of
delay. It is always a question whether the mistake was bona
fide or was merely a devise tn cover an ulterior purpose. in
that case it was held that the mistake committed by the
counsel was bona fide and it was not tainted by any mala
fide motive.
In State of Kerala v. E.K. Kuriyipe & Ors. [(1981)
Supp. SCC 72], it was held that whether or not there is
sufficient cause for condonation of delay is a question of
fact dependant upon the facts and circumstances of the
particular case. In Smt. Milavi Devi v. Dina Nath [(1982) 3
SCR 366], it was held that the appellant had sufficient
cause for not filing the appeal within the period of
limitation. This Court under Art.136 can reassess the ground
and in appropriate case set aside the order made by the High
Court or the Tribunal and remit the matter for hearing on
merits. It was accordingly allowed, delay was condoned and
case was remitted for decision on merits.
In O.P. Kathpaliaa v. Lakhmir Singh (dead) & Ors.
[(1984) 4 SCC 66], a Bench of three Judges had held that if
the refusal to condone the delay results in grave
miscarriage of justice, it would be a ground to condone the
delay. Delay was accordingly condoned. In Collector, Land
Acquisition, Anantrag & Anr. v. Mst. Katiji & Ors. [(1987) 2
SCC 107], a Bench of two Judges considered the question of
the limitation in an appeal filed by the State and held that
Section 5 was enacted in order to enable the court to do
substantial justice to the parties by disposing of matters
on merits. The expression "sufficient cause is adequately
elastic to enable the court to apply the law in a meaningful
manner which subserves the ends of the justice-that being
the life-purpose for the existence of the institution of
courts. It is common knowledge that this Court has been
making a justifiably liberal approach in matters instituted
in this Court. But the message does not appear to have
percolated down to all the other courts in the hierarchy.
This Court reiterated that the expression "every day’s delay
must be explained" does not mean that a pedantic approach
should be made. The doctrine must be applied in a rational
common sense pragmatic manner. When substantial justice and
technical considerations are pitted against each other,
cause of substantial justice deserves to be preferred for
the other side cannot claim to have vested right in
injustice being done because of a non-deliberate delay.
There is no presumption that delay is occasioned
deliberately, or on account of culpable negligence, or on
account of mala fides. A litigant does not stand to benefit
by resorting to delay. In fact he runs a serious risk.
Judiciary is not respected on account of its power to
legalize injustice on technical grounds but because it is
capable of removing injustice and is expected to do so.
Making a justice-oriented approach from this perspective,
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there was sufficient cause for condoning the delay in the
institution of the appeal. The fact that it was the State
which was seeking condonation and not a private party was
altogether irrelevant. The doctrine of equality before law
demands that all litigants, including the State as a
litigant, are accorded the same treatment and the law is
administered in an even-handed manner. There is no warrant
for according a step-motherly treatment when the State is
the applicant. The delay was accordingly condoned.
Experience shows that on account of an impersonal
machinery ( no one in charge of the matter is directly hit
or hurt by the judgment sought to be subjected to appeal)
and the inherited bureaucratic methodology imbued with the
note-making, file-pushing, and passing-on-the-buck ethos,
delay on its part is less difficult to understand though
more difficult to approve. The State which represent
collective cause of the community, does not deserve a
litigant-non-grata status. The courts, therefore, have to be
informed with the spirit and philosophy of the provision in
the course of the interpretation of the expression of
sufficient cause. Merit is preferred to scuttle a decision
on merits in turning down the case on technicalities of
delay in presenting the appeal. Delay was accordingly
condoned, the order was set aside and the matter was
remitted to the High Court for disposal on merits after
affording opportunity of hearing to the parties. In Smt.
Prabha v. Ram Parkash Kalra [(1987) Supp. SCC 338], this
Court had held that the court should not adopt an injustice-
oriented approach in rejecting the application for
condonation of delay. The appeal was allowed, the delay was
condoned and the matter was remitted for expeditious
disposal in accordance with law.
In G. Ramegowda, Major & Ors, v. Spl, Land Acquisition
Officer, Bangalore [(1988) 2 SCC 142], it was held that no
general principle saving the party from all mistakes of its
counsel could be laid. The expression "sufficient cause"
must receive a liberal construction so as to advance
substantial justice and generally delays in preferring the
appeals are required to be condoned in the interest of
justice where no gross negligence or deliberate inaction or
lack of bona is imputable to the party seeking condonation
of delay. In litigations to which Government is a party,
there is yet another aspect which, perhaps, cannot be
ignored. If appeals brought by Government are lost for such
defaults, no person is individually affected; but what, in
the ultimate analysis, suffers is public interest. The
decisions of Government are collective and institutional
decisions and do not share the characteristics of decisions
of private individuals. The law of limitation is, no doubt,
the same for a private citizen as for Governmental
authorities. Government, like any other litigant must take
responsibility for the acts or omissions of its officers.
But a somewhat different complexion is imparted to the
matter where Government makes out a case where public
interest was shown to have suffered owing to acts of fraud
or bad faith on the part of its officers or agents and where
the officers were clearly at cross-purposes with it. It was,
therefore, held that in assessing what constitutes
sufficient cause for purposes of Section 5, it might,
perhaps, be somewhat unrealistic to exclude from the
consideration that go into the judicial verdict, these
factors which are peculiar to and characteristic of the
functioning of the Government. Government decisions are
proverbially slow encumbered, as they are, by a considerable
degree of procedural red tape in the process of their
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making. A certain amount of latitude is, therefore, not
impermissible. It is rightly said that those who bear
responsibility of Government must have a little play at the
joints’. Due recognition of these limitations on
Governmental functioning - of course, within reasonable
limits - is necessary if the judicial approach is not to be
rendered unrealistic. It would, perhaps, be unfair and
unrealistic to put Government and private parties on the
same footing in all respects in such matters. Implicit in
the very nature of Governmental functioning is procedural
delay incidental to the decision making process. The delay
of over one year was accordingly condoned.
In Scheduled Caste Coop. Land Owning Society Ltd.,
Bhatinda v. Union of India & Ors. [(1991) 1 SCC 174], a
Bench of three Judges of this Court held that the bona fides
of the parties are to be tested on merits and the delay of
1146 to 1079 days was not condoned on the ground that the
parties approached the court after decision on merits was
allowed in other cases by this Court. Therefore, it was held
that it did not furnish a ground for condonation of delay
under Section 5. In Binod Bihari Singh v. Union of India
[(1993) 1 SCC 572], it was held that it is not at all a fit
case where in the anxiety to render justice to a party so
that a just cause is not defeated, a pragmatic view should
be taken by the court in considering sufficing cause for
condonation of the delay under Section 5. It was held that
when the party has come with a false plea to get rid of the
bar of limitation, the court should not encourage such
person by condoning the delay and result in the bar of
limitation pleaded by the opposite party. This Court,
therefore, refused to condone the delay in favour of the
party who came forward with false plea. In M/s. Shakambari &
Co. v. Union of India [(1993) Supp. 1 SCS 487], a Bench of
three Judges held that delay caused in filing the appeal due
to fluctuation in laying down the law was held to be a
sufficient cause and delay of 14 days was condoned. In Ram
Krishan & Anr. v. U.P. State Roadways Transport Corpn. &
Anr. [(1994) Supp. 2 SCC 507], this Court had held that
although the story put forward by the applicant for not
filing the application for compensation under the Motor
Vehicles Act within the period of limitation was not found
convincing but keeping in vies the facts and circumstances
and cause of justice, the delay was condoned and the appeal
was set aside and the matter was remitted to the Tribunal to
dispose it on merits. In Warlu v. Gangotribai & Anr. [(1995)
Supp. 1 SCC 37] a three-Judge Bench condoned delay of 11
years in filing the special leave petition.
It is notorious and common knowledge that delay in more
than 60 per cent of the cases filed in this Court - be it by
private party or the State - are barred by limitation and
this Court generally adopts liberal approach in condonation
of delay finding somewhat sufficient cause to decide the
appeal on merits. It is equally common knowledge that
litigants including the State are accorded the same
treatment and the law is administered in an even-handed
manner. When the State is an applicant, praying for
condonation of delay, it is common knowledge that on account
of impersonal machinery and the inherited bureaucratic
methodology imbued with the note-making, file-pushing, and
passing-on-the-buck ethos, delay on the part of the State is
less difficult to understand though more difficult to
approve, but the State represents collective cause of the
community. It is axiomatic that decisions are taken by
officers/agencies proverbially at slow pace and encumbered
process of pushing the files from table to table and keeping
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it on table for considerable time causing delay intentional
or otherwise - is a routine. Considerable delay of
procedural red tape in the process of their making decision
is a common feature. Therefore, certain amount of latitude
is not impermissible. If the appeals brought by the State
are lost for such default no person is individually affected
but what in the ultimate analysis suffers, is public
interest. The expression "sufficient cause" should,
therefore, be considered with pragmatism in justice-oriented
approach rather than the technical detection of sufficient
cause for explaining every day’s delay. The factors which
are peculiar to and characteristic of the functioning of the
Governmental conditions would be cognizant to and requires
adoption of pragmatic approach in justice-oriented process.
The Court should decide the matters on merits unless the
case is hopelessly without merit. No separate standards to
determine the cause laid by the State vis-a-vis private
litigant could be laid to prove strict standards of
sufficient cause. The Government at appropriate level should
constitute legal cells to examine the cases whether any
legal principles are involved for decision by the cours or
whether cases require adjustment and should authorise the
officers take a decision or give appropriate permission for
settlement. In the event of decision to file appeal needed
prompt action should be pursued by the officer responsible
to file the appeal and he should be made personally
responsible for lapses, if any. Equally, the State cannot be
put on the same footing as an individual. The individual
would always be quick in taking the decision whether he
would pursue the remedy by way of an appeal or application
since he is a person legally injured while State is an
impersonal machinery working through its officers or
servants. Considered from this perspective, it must be held
that the delay of 109 days in this case has been explained
and that it is a fit case for condonation of the delay.
On the facts and circumstances of the case, we are of
the opinion that it is a fit case for condoning the delay.
The delay is accordingly condoned. The High Court is
requested to dispose of the appeal as expeditiously as
possible.
The appeal is accordingly allowed. No costs.