Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
KAUSHALYA DEVI AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAIJNATH SAYAL AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/02/1961
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 790 1961 SCR (3) 769
ACT:
Suit against Minor--Preliminary decree on consent by
guardian without leave of court--If a nullity--If can be set
aside in appeal against final decree--Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), s. 97, 0. 32, r. 7.
HEADNOTE:
Order 32, r. 7(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is
intended to protect the interest of the minor, really means
that an agreement or compromise entered into on behalf of
the minor in contravention of 0. 32, r. 7(1) is voidable
only at the instance of the minor and not at the instance of
any other party to it. Such contravention does not render
the agreement or decree a nullity and the same has to be
avoided in an appropriate proceeding.
Manohar Lal v. jadu Nath Singh (1906) L.R. 33 I.A. 128,
referred to.
Chhabba Lal v. Kallu Lal (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 52, jamna Bai
v. Vasanta Rao (1916) L.R. 43 I.A. 99 and Khiarajmal v. Daim
(1904) L.R. 32 I.A. 23, held inapplicable.
Where a preliminary decree is passed in non-compliance with
the provision of 0. 32, r. 7(1), the remedy of the minor is
by way of an appeal against that decree and not against the
final decree since s. 97 of the Code is a bar to the
challenging of the preliminary decree in an appeal against
the final decree.
Consequently, in a suit for the partition where preliminary
decree by consent was passed against the minor in
contravention of 0. 32, r. 7(i) and that decree having been
sought to be set aside in an appeal from the final decree
the High Court held that S. 97 of the Code precluded the
appellant from doing so.
Held, that the decision of the High Court was correct and
must be ashamed,
770
Held, further, that the object s. 97 of the Code was
intended to achieve would be wholly frustrated if it were to
be held that the section merely prohibited a challenge to
the factual correctness of the decree and not its legal
validity.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 216 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
August 28, 1950, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Regular
First Appeal No. 343 of 1944.
L.K. Jha, K. P. Bhandari and Harbans Singh, for the
appellants.
Darya Datt Chawla for respondent Nos. 1(i) to (iii).
1961. February 9. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This appeal by special leave arises from
a partition suit filed by Baij Nath against his other
coparceners. Baij Nath is the son of Behari Lal and he had
four brothers Kidar Nath, Raghunath Sahai, Jagan Nath and
Badri Nath. Kidar Nath was dead at the time of the suit,
and his branch was represented by his five sons Ghansham
Lal, Shri Ram, Hari Ram, Tirath Ram and Murari Lal, who were
impleaded as defendants 1 to 5 respectively. On the death
of Ghansham Lal pending the Suit his two minor sons Jai Pal
and Chandar Mohan were brought on the record as his legal
representatives and their mother Mst. Kaushalya was
appointed guardian ad item. The two minors are the
appellants before us. Chuni Lal, the son of Raghunath Sahai
was defendant 6, Bal Kishan and Hari Kishan the two sons of
Jagan Nath were defendants 7 and 8, and Badri Nath was
defend. ant 9. Baij Nath’s case was that the family was
undivided and he wanted a partition of his share in the
family properties, and so in his plaint he claimed
appropriate reliefs in that behalf. The several defendants
made out pleas in respect of the claims made by Baij Nath,
but for the purpose of this appeal it is unnecessary to
refer to the said pleas. The suit wail instituted on Juno
11, 1941,
771
It appears that by consent of parties a preliminary decree
was drawn by the trial court on October 30, 1941, but the
validity of this decree was successfully challenged by an
appeal to the Lahore High Court. It was held by the High
Court that all parties had not joined in the compromise and
so the preliminary decree could not be sustained. In the
result the said decree was set aside and the case was
remanded for trial.
It further appears that after remand parties again came
together and by consent requested the court to pass a
preliminary decree once again. This was done on October 15,
1943. This preliminary decree specified the shares of the
respective parties and left three outstanding issues to be
determined by Chuni Lal, defendant 6, who it was agreed
should be appointed Commissioner in that behalf. Pursuant
to this preliminary decree the Commissioner submitted his
interim report on November 19,1943, and his final report on
November 29, 1943. On receipt of the reports the trial
court gave time to the parties to consider the said report
which had been explained to them. Parties wanted time and
so the case was adjourned. Since the property in dispute
was valuable and the parties were unable to make up their
minds about the said reports further time was granted to
them by the court to consider the matter. Ultimately, when
parties did not appear to come to any settlement about the
reports the case was adjourned to December 17, 1943, for
objections to be filed by the parties. Tirath Ram, defend-
ant 4 alone filed objections; nobody else did. The said
objections were considered by the court in the light of the
evidence which had been led and a final decree was drawn on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
June 21, 1944.
Against this decree an appeal was preferred by the
appellants before the High Court of Punjab, and it was urged
on their behalf that the preliminary decree was invalid in
that at the time of passing the said decree the court had
failed to comply with the mandatory provisions of 0. 32, r.
7 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The High Court did not
allow the appellants to raise, this point because it held
that their
99
772
failure to make an appeal against the preliminary decree
precluded them from challenging its correctness or validity
under s. 97 of the Code. Certain other minor objections
were raised by the appellants on the merits but they were
also rejected. In the result the appeal failed and was
dismissed, but in view of the circumstances of the case the
parties were directed to bear their own costs. It is this
decree that is challenged by the appellants in their present
appeal by special leave; and the only point which has been
urged by Mr. Jha on their behalf is that the High Court was
in error in disallowing the appellants to challenge the
validity of the preliminary decree in their appeal before
it.
Mr. Jha contends that in dealing with the question about the
competence of the plea raised by the appellants the High
Court has misjudged the effect of the provisions of 0. 32,
r. 7. It is common ground that at the time when the
preliminary decree was passed by consent and the appellants’
guardian Kaushalya Devi agreed to the passing of such a
preliminary decree and to the appointment of Chuni Lal as
Commissioner the appellants were minors and that leave had
not been obtained as required by 0. 32, r. 7. Order 32, r.
7(1) provides that no next friend or guardian for the suit
shall without the leave of the court expressly recorded in
the proceedings enter into any agreement or compromise on
behalf of the minor with reference to the suit in which he
acts as next friend or guardian. It is also not disputed
that the agreement which resulted in the drawing up of the
preliminary decree and the appointment of Chuni Lal as
Commissioner fell within the scope of this rule and that
sanction required by the rule had not been recorded in the
proceedings. The argument is that the failure to comply
with this mandatory provision of the rule makes the
agreement and the preliminary decree void, and if that is so
s. 97 of the Code of Civil Procedure would be no bar in the
way of the appellants challenging the validity of the decree
at the appellate stage.
The effect of the failure to comply with 0. 32, r. 7(1) is
specifically provided by 0, 32, r. 7(2) which says
773
that any such agreement or compromise entered into without
the leave of the court so recorded shall be voidable against
all parties other than the minor. Mr. Jha reads this
provision as meaning that the impugned agreement is voidable
against the parties to it who are major and is void in
respect of the minor; in other words, he contends that the
effect of this provision is that the major parties to it can
avoid it and the minor need not avoid it at all because it
is a nullity so far as he is concerned. In our opinion this
contention is clearly inconsistent with the plain meaning of
the rule. What the rule really means is that the impugned
agreement can be avoided by the minor against the parties
who are major, and that it cannot be avoided by the parties
who are major against the minor. It is voidable and not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
void. It is voidable at the instance of the minor and not
at the instance of any other party. It is voidable against
the parties that are major but not against a minor. This
provision has been made for the protection of minors, and it
means nothing more than this that the failure to comply with
the requirements of 0. 32, r. 7(1) will entitle a minor to
avoid the agreement and its consequences. If he avoids the
said agreement it would be set aside but in no case can the
infirmity in the agreement be used by other parties for the
purpose of avoiding it in their own interest. The
protection of the minors’ interest requires that he should
be given liberty to avoid it. No such consideration arises
in respect of the other parties to the agreement and they
can make no grievance or complaint against the agreement on
the ground that it has not complied with 0. 32, r. 7(1).
The non-observance of the condition laid down by r. 1 does
not make the agreement or decree void for it does not affect
the jurisdiction of the court at all. The non-observance of
the said condition makes the agreement or decree only
voidable at the instance of the minor. That, in our
opinion, is the effect of the provision of 0. 32, r. 7(1)
and (2).
The question as to the procedure which the minor should
adopt in avoiding such an agreement or decree has been the
subject-matter of several decisions, and
774
it has been held that a compromise decree may be avoided by
the minor either by a regular suit or by an application for
review by the court which passed the said decree. The
decision in Manohar Lal v. Jadu Nath Singh (1), is an
illustration of a suit filed by the minor for declaration
that the impugned decree did not bind him. It is, however,
not necessary for us to deal with this aspect of the matter
in the present appeal any further.
In support of his argument that the failure to comply with
the requirements of 0. 32, r. 7(1) makes the decree a
nullity Mr. Jha has very strongly relied on the decision of
the Privy Council in Chhabba Lal v. Kallu Lal (2). In that
case an objection to the validity of a reference to
arbitration was taken by a party in an appeal against the
decree passed on an award; and one of the points raised for
the decision before the Privy Council was whether an appeal
lay against the decree in question. Under Schedule 2,
paragraph 16(2) of the Code which was then in force it was
provided that upon the judgment pronounced according to the
award a decree shall follow and no appeal shall lie from
such decree except in so far as it is in excess of or not in
accordance with the award. The argument urged against the
competence of the appeal was that the objection against the
validity of the reference and the award could and should
have been raised under paragraph 15(1)(c) of the said Sche-
dule, and since such an objection had not been so raised and
a decree was drawn in accordance with the award under
paragraph 16, r. 1 no contention could be raised against the
validity of the decree outside the terms of paragraph 16(2).
This argument was repelled by the Privy Council. It was
held that the objection against the validity of the
reference based on the ground that the requirements of 0.
32, r. 7(1) had not been complied with did not fall within
the purview of paragraph 15(1)(c). The said paragraph
specified the grounds on which an award could be challenged.
It provided that the award could be set aside if it was made
after the issue of an order by the
(1) (1906) L.R. 33 I A. 128. (2) (1946) L.R. 73 I.A. 52.
775
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
court superseding arbitration and proceeding with the suit
or if it was made after the expiration of the period allowed
by the court, or if it was otherwise invalid. It is on the
last clause in paragraph 15(1)(c) that reliance was placed
in support of the contention that the challenge to the
validity of the reference should have been made under the
said clause. The Privy Council did not uphold this
argument. " In their opinion," observed Sir John Beaumont,
who spoke for the Board, " all the powers conferred on the
court in relation to an award on a reference made in a suit
presuppose a valid reference on which an award has been made
which may be open to question. If there is no valid
reference the purported award is a nullity, and can be
challenged in any appropriate proceeding." It is on this
last observation that Mr. Jha has naturally relied; but, in
our opinion, the observation in question does not purport to
be a decision on the interpretation of 0. 32, r. 7(2). The
context shows that the said observation was made in support
of the decision that the challenge to the validity of the
arbitration and the award could not have been made under
paragraph 15(1)(c) and nothing more. We are not prepared to
extend this observation to cases like the present where the
point in dispute is in regard to the interpretation of 0.
32, r. 7. It is significant that while describing the award
as a nullity the Privy Council has also added that it can be
challenged in any appropriate proceeding which postulates
the adoption of necessary proceedings to avoid the award.
The point for consideration by the Privy Council was whether
a proceeding under paragraph 15(1)(c) was indicated or
whether an appeal could be regarded as an appropriate
proceeding; but it was assumed that a proceeding had to be
adopted to challenge the award. The decision of the Privy
Council was that the validity of the award could be
challenged by an appeal because it could not have been
challenged under paragraph 15(1)(c). Since it could not be
challenged under paragraph 15(1)(c), according to the Privy
Council paragraph 16(2) could not be invoked against the
competence of the appeal. It is unnecessary
776
for us to examine the merits of the said decision in the
present appeal. All that we are concerned to point out is
that the observation in the judgment on which Mr. Jha relies
cannot be treated as a decision on the interpretation of 0.
32, r. 7(2). That question did not directly arise before
the Privy Council and should not be treated as concluded by
the observation in question. As we have already pointed
out, the words used in 0. 32, r. 7(2) are plain and
unambiguous and they do not lend any support to the argument
that non-compliance with 0. 32, r. 7(1) would make the
impugned decree a nullity.
Mr. Jha has also relied upon another decision of the Privy
Council in Jamna Bai v. Vasanta Rao (1). In that case two
defendants of whom one was a minor compromised a suit
pending against them, and in doing so entered into a bond by
which they jointly agreed to pay a certain sum to the
plaintiff at a future date. The leave of the court was Dot
obtained on behalf of the minor as required by s. 462 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1882, which was then in force.
When a claim was made on the said bond it was held that the
bond was not enforceable against the minor but it was
enforceable for the full amount against the joint
contractor. We do not see how this case assists the
appellants. It appears that Jamna Bai who was the joint
contractor on the bond advanced the plea that one of the two
promisers can plead the minority and consequent immunity of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
the other as a bar to the promise’s claim against him. This
plea was rejected by the Privy Council, and that would show
that the bond which was executed in pursuance of a compro-
mise agreement was not treated as null and void but as being
unenforceable against the minor’ alone. In ,that connection
the Privy Council observed that the minor’s liability could
not be enforced in view of the fact that the requirements of
s. 462 of the Code had not been complied with. Indeed, in
the judgment an observation has been made that the Privy
Council was not expressing any opinion as to whether the
bond could be enforceable against a minor even if s. 462 had
(1) (1916) L.R.43 I.A.99.
777
been complied with. Thus this decision is of no assistance
to the appellants.
Similarly, the decision of the Privy Council in Khiarajmal
v. Daim (1), can also be of no help to the appellants,
because in that case all that the Privy Council decided was
that a court has no jurisdiction to sell an equity of
redemption unless the mortgagors are parties to the decree
or the proceedings which lead to it, or are properly
represented on the record. In other words, if a minor is
not properly represented on the record no order passed in
the proceedings can bind him. We are unable to see how this
proposition has any relevance to the point which we are
called upon to decide in the present appeal.
If the preliminary decree passed in the present proceedings
without Complying with the provisions of 0.32, r. 7(1) is
not a nullity but is only voidable at the instance of the
appellants, the question is: can they seek to avoid it by
preferring an appeal against the final decree ? It is in
dealing with this point that the bar of s. 97 of the Code is
urged against the appellants. Section 97, which has been
added in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, for the first
time provides that where any party aggrieved by a
preliminary decree passed after the commencement of the Code
does not appeal from such decree he shall be precluded from
disputing its correctness in any appeal which may be
preferred from the final decree.
It is urged for the appellants that an appeal is a
continuation of the suit and so the appellants would be
entitled to challenge the impugned preliminary decree as
much by an application made in the suit itself as by an
appeal preferred against the final decree passed in the said
suit. It is true that the proceedings in appeal can be
regarded as a continuation of the proceedings in suit; but
the decision of the question as to whether the appellants
can challenge the said preliminary decree in their appeal
against the final decree must in the present case be
governed by the provisions of s. 97 of the Code. The whole
object of enacting s. 97 was to make it clear that any party
(1) (1904) L.R. 32 I.A. 23.
778
feeling aggrieved by a preliminary decree must appeal
against that decree; if he fails to appeal against such a
decree the correctness of such a decree cannot be challenged
by way of an appeal against the final decree, which means
that the preliminary decree would be taken to have been
correctly passed. When s. 97 provides that the correctness
of the preliminary decree cannot be challenged if no appeal
is preferred against it, it clearly provides that if it is
not challenged in appeal it would be treated as correct and
binding on the parties. In such a case an appeal against
the final decree would inevitably be limited to the points
arising from proceedings taken subsequent to the preliminary
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
decree and the same would be dealt with on the basis that
the preliminary decree was correct and is beyond challenge.
It would be idle to contend that what is prohibited is a
challenge to the factual correctness of the decree on the
merits, because if the said decree is voidable, as in the
present case, the very point as to its voidable character is
a part of the merits of the dispute between the parties.
Whether or not 0. 32, r. 7(1) applies to the case would
certainly be a matter of dispute in such a case and the
object of s. 97 is precisely to disallow any such dispute
being raised if the preliminary decree is not challenged by
appeal. The whole object which s. 97 intends to achieve
would be frustrated if it is held that only the factual
correctness of the decree cannot be challenged but its legal
validity can be even though an appeal against the
preliminary decree has not been filed. Therefore, in our
opinion, the High Court was right in coming to the
conclusion that it was not open to the appellants to
challenge the validity of the preliminary decree in the
appeal which they had preferred against the final decree
before the said High Court.
The result is the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs,
Appeal dismissed,
779