Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAI JAI RAM MANOHAR LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NATIONAL BUILDING MATERIAL SUPPLY, GURGAON
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/03/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1267 1970 SCR (1) 22
1969 SCC (1) 869
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC 484 (11,13)
RF 1978 SC1329 (28)
ACT:
Practice and Procedure-Amendment of plaint-Should not be
refused on technical grounds-Amended plaint when deemed to
be filed-Effect on limitation-Costs when party persists in
plea without merit.
HEADNOTE:
Manoharlal s/o Jai Jai Ram commenced an action in the Court
of the Subordinate Judge, for valuer of timber supplied to
the defendant. The action was instituted in the name of
’Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal’ which was the name in which the
business was carried on. The plaintiff signed and verified
the plaint as ’Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal, by the pen of
Manohar lal.’ Later he applied to the Court for leave to
amend the plaint. In the application he averred that the
business carried on under the name Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal
was a joint Hindu family business and the name was not an
assumed or fictitious one as it contained his-name and that
of his father. On these averments he prayed that he be
allowed to describe him-’ self in the cause title as Manohar
Lal proprietor of Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal and in paragraph 1
to state that he carried on the business in timber in the
name of ’Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal’. The application was
’allowed by the trial Judge. The defendant then filed a
supplementary written statement raising two additional
contentions : (1) that the plaintiff was not the sole owner
of the business and that his other brothers were also the
owners of the business; and (2) that the amendment took
effect from the’ date on which it was made and if so, the
suit was barred by limitation. The trial court rejecting
these contentions decreed the suit. The High Court in
appeal took the view that the action having been instituted
in the name of a nonexisting person’, and Manohar Lal having
failed to aver in the application for amendment that the
action was instituted in the name of ’Jai Jai Ram Manohar
Lal’ on account of a bona fide mistake or omission, the
Subordinate Judge was incompetent to grant leave to amend
the plaint. The High Court further held that the amendment
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allowed by the trial Court took effect only from the date of
amendment, and the action was barred by limitation. Against
the judgment of the High Court the plaintiff, by special
leave, appealed to this Court.
HELD : (i) The order passed by the High Court could not be
sustained. Rules of procedure are, intended to, be a
handmaid to the administration of justice. A party cannot
be refused relief merely- because of same mistake,
negligence, inadvertence or even infraction of the rules of
procedure. The Court -always gives leave to amend the
pleading of a party, unless it is satisfied that the party
applying was acting mala fide , or that by his blunder he
had caused injury to his opponent which may not be com-
pensated for by an order of costs. However negligent or
careless may have been the -first omission and however late
the proposed amendment, the amendment may be allowed if it
can be made without injustice to the other side. [25 C-E]
Purshottam Umedbhai & Co. V. M/S. Manilal and Sons, [1961]
1 S.C.R. 982, explained and applied.
Amulakchand Mewaram & Ors. v. Babulal Kanalal Taliwala, 35
Bom. L.R. 569, applied.
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In the present case the plaintiff was carrying on business
as commission agent in the name of ’Jai Jai Ram Maryohar
Lal’. The plaintiff was competent to sue in his own name as
manager of the Hindu undivided family to which the business
belonged; he claimed to have filed the suit on behalf of the
family in the business name. The observations made by the
High Court that the application for amendment of the plaint
could not be granted, because there was no averment therein
that the misdescription was ’On account of a bona fide
mistake, and on that account the suit must fail, could not
be accepted. There is no rule that unless in an application
for ’amendment of the plaint it is expressly averred that
the error, -omission or misdescription is due to a bona fide
mistake the court has no power to grant leave to amend the
plaint. The power to grant amendment of the pleadings is
intended to serve the ends of justice and is not governed by
any such narrow or technical limitations. [57 B-D]
(ii) Since the name in which the action was instituted was
merely a misdescription of the original plaintiff, no
question of limitation arose and the plaint must be deemed
on amendment to have been instituted in the name of the real
plaintiff on the date on which it was originally instituted.
[27 E]
(iii)The defendant raised and persisted in a plea which had
no merit even after the amendment was allowed by the trial
court. In the circumstances he must pay the costs in this
Court and the High Court. [27 F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 697 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 9, 1964 of the Allahabad High Court in First Appeal
No. 257 of 1953.
S. C. Manchanda, S. k. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for the
appellant.
Bishan Narain and Harbans Singh, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. On March 11, 1950, Manohar Lal s/o Jai Jai Ram
commenced an action in the Court of the Subordinate Judge,
Nanital, for a decree for Rs. 10,139/12/- being the value of
timber supplied to the defendant-the National Building Mate-
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rial Supply, Gurgaon. The action was instituted in the name
of "Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal" which was the name in which the
business was carried on. The plaintiff Manohar Lal
subscribed his signature at the foot of the plaint as "Jai
Jai Ram Manohar Lal, by the pen of Manohar Lal", and the
plaint was also similarly verified. The defendant by its
written statement contended that the plaintiff was an
unregistered firm and on that account incompetent to sue.
On July 18, 1952, the plaintiff applied for leave to amend
the plaint. Manohar Lal stated that "the business name of
the plaintiff is Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal and therein Manohar
Lal the owner and proprietor is clearly shown and -named.
It is a
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joint Hindu family business and the defendant and all knew
it that Manohar, Lai whose name is there along with the
father’s name is the proprietor of it. The name is not an
assumed or fictitious one". The plaintiff on those
averments applied for leave to describe himself in the cause
title as "Manohar Lal proprietor of Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal"
and in paragraph 1 to state that he carried on the business
in timber in the name of Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal.
Apparently no reply was filed to this application by the
defendant. The Subordinate Judge granted leave to amend the
plaint. He observed that there was no doubt that the real
plaintiff was Manohar Lal himself, that it was Manohar Lal
who intended to file and did in fact Me the action, and that
the "amendment was intended to bring what in effect had been
done in conformity with what in fact should have been done".
The defendant then filed a supplementary written statement
raising two additional contentions-(1) that Manohar Lal was
not the sole owner of the business and that his other
brothers were also the owners of the business; and (2) that
in any event the amendment became effective from July 18,
1952, and on that account the suit was barred by the law of
limitation.
The Trial Judge decreed the claim for Rs. 6,568/6/3.
Against that decree an appeal was preferred to the High
Court of Allahabad. The High Court being of the view that
the action was instituted in the name of a "non-existing
person" and Manohar Lal having failed to aver in the
application for amendment that the action was instituted in
the name of "Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal" on account of some
bona fide mistake or omission, the Subordinate Judge was
incompetent to grant leave to amend of the plaint. The High
Court after making an extensive quotation from the judgment
of this Court in purushottam Umedbhai and Company v. Messrs.
Manilal and Sons(1) observed that the action could not be
instituted by the plaintiff in the business name; it should
have been instituted in the name of the Karta of the Hindu
undivided family in his representative capacity or else ’all
the members of the joint family must join as plaintiffs.
The Court then observed :
"The suit instituted by the joint Hindu family
business in the name of an assumed business
title was a suit by a person, who did not
exist and was, therefore, a nullity. Hence
there could be no amendment of the description
of such a plaintiff who did not exist in the
eye of law. The court below was in obvious
error in thinking otherwise and allowing the
name of Manohar Lal to be added as proprietor
of the original plaintiff Jai Jai Ram Manohar
Lal, which was neither
(1) [1961] 1 S. C. R. 982.
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a legal entity nor an existing person who
could have validly instituted the suit."
The High Court was also of the opinion that the substitution
of the name of Manohar Lal as a plaintiff during the
pendency of the action took effect from July 18, 1952, and
the action must be deemed to be instituted on that date the
amendment could not take effect retrospectively and on the
date of the amendment the action was barred by the law of
limitation. The plaintiff has appealed to this Court with
special leave.
The order passed by the High Court cannot be sustained.
Rules of procedure are intended to, be a handmaid to the
administration of justice. A party cannot be refused just
relief merely because of some mistake, negligence,
inadvertence or even infraction of the rules of procedure.
The Court always gives leave to amend the pleading of a
party, unless it is satisfied that the party applying was
acting mala fide, or that by his blunder, he had caused
injury to his opponent which may not be compensed for by an
order of costs. However negligent or careless may have been
the first omission, and, however late the proposed amend-
ment, the amendment may be allowed if it can be made without
injustice to the other side. In Amulakchand Mewaram and
others v. Babulal Kanalal Taliwala(1), Beaumont, C.J., in
delivering the judgment of the Bombay High Court set out the
principles applicable to cases like the present and
observed:
"...... the question whether there should be
an amendment or not really turns upon whether
the name in which the suit is brought in the
name of a non-existent person or whether it is
merely a misdescription of existing persons.
If the former is the case, the suit is a
nullity and no amendment can cure it. If the
latter is the case, prima facie, there ought
to be an amendment because the general rule,
subject no doubt to certain exceptions, is
that the Court should always allow an
amendment where any loss to the opposing party
can be compensated for by costs."
In Amulakchand Mewaram’s case(1) a Hindu undivided family
sued in its business name. It was not appreciated at an
early stage of the suit that in fact the firm name was not
of a partnership, but was the name of a joint Hindu family.
An objection was raised by the defendant that the suit as
filed was not maintainable. An application to amend, the
plaint, by substituting the names of the three members of
the joint family for the name of the family firm as
plaintiffs, was rejected by the Court
(1) 35 Bom. L. R. 569.
Sup CI/69-3
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of First Instance. In appeal the High Court observed that a
suit brought in the name of a firm in a case not within 0.
30 C.P. Code being in fact a case of misdescription of
existing persons, leave to amend ought to have been given.
This Court considered a somewhat similar case in Purushottam
Umedbhai’s case(1). A firm carrying on business outside
India filed a suit in the firm name in the High Court of
Calcutta for a decree for compensation for breach of
contract. The plaintiff then applied for amendment of the
plaint by describing the names of all the partners and
striking out the name of the firm as a mere misdescription.
The application for amendment was rejected on the view that
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the original plaint was no plaint in law and it was not a
case of misnomer or misdescription, but a case of a non-
existent firm or a non-existent person suing. In appeal,
the High Court held that the description of the plaintiff by
a firm name in a case where the Code of Civil Procedure did
not permit a suit to be brought in the firm name should
properly be considered a case of description of the
individual partners of the business and as such a
misdescription, which in law can be corrected and should not
be considered to amount to a description of a non-existent
person. Against the order of he High Court an appeal was
preferred to this Court. This Court observed (at p. 994) :
"Since, however, a firm is not a legal entity
the privilege of suing in the name of a firm
is permissible only to those persons who, as
partners, are doing business in India. Such
privilege is not extended to persons who are
doing business as partners outside India. In
their case they still have to sue in their
individual names. If, however, under some
misapprehension, persons doing business as
partners outside India do file a plaint in the
name of their firm they are misdescribing
themselves, as the suit instituted is by them,
they being known collectively as a firm. It
seems, therefore, that a plaint filed in a
court in India in the name of a firm doing
business outside India is not by itself a
nullity. It is a plaint by all the partners
of the firm with a defective description of
themselves for the purpose of the Code of
Civil Procedure. in these circumstances, a
civil court could permit, under the provisions
of s. 153 of the Code (or possibly under 0.
VI, r. 17, about which we say nothing), an
amendment of the plaint to enable a proper
description of the plaintiffs to appear in it
in order to assist the Court in determining
the real question or issue between the
parties."
(1) [1961] 1 S. C. R. 982.
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These cases do no more than illustrate the well-settled rule
that all amendments should be permitted as may be necessary
for the purpose of determining the real question in
controversy between the parties, unless by permitting the
amendment injustice may result to the other side.
In the present case, the plaintiff was carrying on business
as commission agent in the name of "Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal.
The plaintiff was competent to sue in his own name as
Manager of the Hindu undivided family to which the business
belonged; he says he sued on behalf of the family in the
business ’name. The observations made by the High Court
that the application for amendment of the plaint could not
be granted, because there was no averment therein that the
misdescription was on account of a bona fide mistake, and on
that account the suit must fail, cannot be accepted. In our
view, there is no rule that unless in an application for
amendment of the plaint it is expressly averred that the
error, omission or misdescription is due to a bona fide
mistake, the Court has no power to grant leave to amend the
plaint. The power to grant amendment of the pleadings is
intended to serve the ends of justice and is not governed by
any such narrow or technical limitations.
Since the name in which the action was instituted was merely
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a misdescription of the original plaintiff, no question of
limitation arises: the plaint must be deemed on amendment to
have been instituted in the name of the real plaintiff, on
the date on which it was originally instituted.
In our view, the order passed by the Trial Court in granting
the amendment was clearly right, and the High Court was in
error in dismissing the suit on a technicality wholly
unrelated to the merits of the dispute. Since all this
delay has taken place and costs have been thrown away,
because the defendant raised and persisted in a plea which
had no merit even after the amendment was allowed by the
Trial Court, he must pay the costs in this Court and the
High Court. The appeal is allowed and the decree passed by
the High Court is set aside. It appears that the High Court
has not dealt with the appeal on the merits. The proceed-
ings will stand remanded to the High Court for disposal
according to law on the merits of the dispute between the
parties.
G.C. Appeal allowed.
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