Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
L MOOLCHAND & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FATIMA SULTANA BEGUM & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/11/1995
BENCH:
M. M. PUNCHHI, S.C. SEN.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
In an administrative suit, the parties had agreed for
sale of a property at Ootacamund in the State of Tamil Nadu.
The receivers appointed by the Court for the purpose sold
the said property. The appellants herein are the purchasers
thereof. Some of the parties to the suit raised objections
to the sale purporting to be under Order 21, Rule 90 read
with Section 151 CPC. An objection was raised before the
trial court that such objections were not maintainable. The
trial court framed a preliminary issue and went into the
matter. It rejected the application being not maintainable.
The respondents herein took the matter in appeal to the High
Court which was placed before a Division Bench for disposal.
The High Court agreed with the trial court that an objection
under Order 21, Rule 90 CPC to such a sale did not lie. But,
since the sale had been effected by the court through its
appointed receivers, the High Court viewed that the court
had full control and grip over the matter, empowering it to
oversee whether the sale had been properly conducted and if
the was any other objection thereto, what was the merit of
the objection. This role of the court was spelled out by the
High Court to be within the domain of Section 151 CPC which
recognises and preserves the inherent powers of the Civil
Court. It is for that purpose that the High Court. It is for
that purpose that the High Court effected a remand to the
trial court to go into the matter, holding the application
filed by the respondents maintainable. That view is in
question before this Court.
After hearing learned counsel for the parties, we are
in total unison with the views expressed by the High Court.
In an administrative suit, the receivers appointed by the
court to perform a function are agents of the court and like
a good principal, the court can put the receivers to
accountability. To awaken the role of the court in that
behalf, applications by the parties connected with the suit,
are perfectly in order to obviate any doubt entering in that
regard and to effect a sense of transparency so that no
blame or aspersion is cast on the court for its having
handled the matter in a particular way. The court’s role is
of a balancer.
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It has also to be borne in mind that interests of
justice are the primary consideration in granting or not
granting prayers in a petition under Sec. 151 CPC. No rule
or procedure can curtail that power of the court. The High
Court rightly has pursued that path in permitting promote
the cause of justice. We, therefore, see no reason to
interfere in the said order.
The appeal, therefore, fails and is hereby dismissed,
but without any order as to costs.