Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5467 of 2000
PETITIONER:
GRAM PANCHAYAT OF VILLAGE NAULAKHA
RESPONDENT:
UJAGAR SINGH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/09/2000
BENCH:
M. JAGANNADHA RAO & K.G. BALAKRISHNAN
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2000 Supp(3) SCR 457
The following Order of the Court was delivered : Leave granted.
This appeal is preferred by the Gram Panchayat against the judgment of the
High Court of Punjab and Haryana dated 12.10.1998 in CWPNo. 11569 of 1997.
The appellant filed an application under Section 7 of the Village Common
Land (Regulation) Act, 1961 and an order was passed in its favour by the
Collector on 12.7.1988. The Collector found that an earlier decree obtained
by the respondents against the appellant for injunction on 10.6.1975 was a
decree obtained by the respondents in collusion with the then Sarpanch and
was not binding on the Panchayat in the present proceedings. On appeal by
the respondents before the Development Commissioner, the said judgment was
affirmed on 13.3.1997 upholding the plea of collusion. The respondents then
moved the High Court by way of a writ petition and the writ petition was
allowed by the High Court on 12.10.1998. The learned judges of the High
Court did not go into the question of collusion or the merits of the case
but felt bound by a decision of a Full Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court in Gram Panchayat, Village Bathoi Kalan, Patiala v. Jagar Ram and
Ors., AIR (1991) P&H 159, which judgment was said to have been followed by
another Division Bench on 28.1.1998. The Full Bench judgment laid down that
the statutory authorities under the Punjab Village Common Land
(Regulations) Act, 1961 could not ignore an earlier decree against the
Panchayat on the ground of its being collusive and fraudulent, unless the
Panchayat had first filed an independent suit to set aside the said decree
or sought declaration that the decree was collusive or fraudulent.
In the present case, learned counsel for the appellant submits that
admittedly the earlier suit was filed by the respondents against the
Panchayat for injunction on 16.5.1975 and that the Sarpanch then conceded
the case of the respondents and a decree was passed on 10.6.1995 within 24
days of the filing of the suit and that the said decree was, in the face of
these facts, obviously collusive and that it was not necessary to drive the
appellant to a separate suit to establish that the said decree was
collusive. Learned counsel contends that the Full Bench in Jagar Ram’s case
has laid down a wrong principle. In order to raise a plea of collusive of
an earlier suit, it is not necessary to file an independent suit and obtain
another decree as a condition precedent. Counsel submits that, in the facts
of this case, the collusion is obvious and the Collector and the’ Appellate
authority were having the necessary jurisdiction to decide that the earlier
decree was collusive. The earlier decree, being collusive, cannot operate
as res judicata.
On this point, we have heard the learned counsel for the respondents who
contended that the principle laid down by the Full Bench in Jagar Ram’s
case is correct and that the earlier judgment in the present case is
binding on the basis of the principle of res judicata. The panchayat cannot
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
therefore raise a plea of collusion in the latter proceeding unless it has
first filed a suit and obtained a declaration or unless it took steps to
have the earlier decree set aside.
We may state that the view taken by the Full Bench of the Punjab & Haryana
High Court in Jagar Ram’s case is not correct and in fact, it runs contrary
to the provisions of section 44 of the Indian Evidence Act. That section
provides that: Any party to a suit or proceeding may show that any
judgment, order or decree which is relevant under sections 40, 41, 42 and
which has been delivered by a Court not competent to deliver it or was
obtained by fraud or collusion. (Section 40 refers to the relevances of
previous judgments which are pleaded as a bar to a second suit or trial and
obviously concerns section 11 CPC).
It appears from commentary in Sarkar’s Evidence Act (13th Ed., reprint) (at
p. 509) on section 44 that it is the view of the Allahabad, Calcutta,
Patna, Bombay High Courts that before such a contention is raised in the
latter suit or proceeding, it is not necessary to file an independent suit.
The passage from Sarkar’s Evidence which refers to various decisions reads
as follows:
"Under Section 44 a party can, in a collateral proceeding in which fraud
may be set up as a defence, show that a decree or order obtained by the
opposite party against him was passed by a court without jurisdiction or
was obtained by fraud or collusion and // is not necessary to bring an
independent suit for setting it aside, Bansi v. Dhapo, ILR 24, All 242;
Rajib v. Lakhan, ILR 17 Cal. 11; Parbati v. Gajraj, AIR (1937) All. 28;
Prayag v. Siva, AIR 1926 Cal. 1; Hare Krishna v. Umesh, AIR (1921) Pat.
193; Aswini v. Banamali, 21 CWN 594; Manchharam v. Kalidas, ILR 19 Bom.
821; Ranganath v. Govind, ILR 28 Bom. 639; Kamiruddin v. Jhadejanessa, AIR
(1929) Cal. 685; Bhagwandas v. Patel & Co., AIR (1940) Bom. 131; Bishunath
v. Mirchi, AIR (1955) Pat. 66 and Vijaya v. Padmanabham, AIR (1955) AP
112."
Thus, in order to contend in a latter suit or proceeding that an earlier
judgment was contained by collusion, it is not necessary to file an
independent suit as stated in Jagar Ram’s case for a declaration as to its
collusive nature or for setting it aside, as a condition precedent. In our
opinion, the above cases cited in Sarkar’s Commentary are correctly
decided. We do not agree with the decision of the Full Bench of the Punjab
& Haryana High Curt in Jagar Ram’s case. The Full Bench has not referred to
section 44 of the Evidence Act not to any other precedents of other Courts
or to any basic legal principle.
The law in England also appears to be the same, that no independent suit is
necessary. In Spencer-Bower and Turner on Res Judicata (2nd Ed., 1969) it
is stated (para 369) that there are exceptions to the principle of res
judicata. If the party setting up res judicata as an estoppel has alleged
all the elements of an estoppel (i.e ingredients of res judicata), it is
still open to the latter (the opposite party) to defeat the estoppel by
setting up and establishing certain affirmative answers. Of these there are
four main classes-fraud, cross-estoppel, contract and public policy. The
author clearly says that no active proceedings for ’rescission’ of the
earlier judgment are necessary. They state (para 370) as follows:
"The avoidance of a judicial act on the ground of fraud or collusion is
effected not only by active proceedings for rescission........but also by
setting up the fraud as a defence to an action on the decision, or as an
answer to any case which, whether by way of estoppel or otherwise, depends
for its success on the decision being treated as incontrovertible."
Thus, the law is well settled that no independent suit as a condition
precedent is necessary.
Collusion, say Spencer-Bower and Turner (para 378), is essentially play-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
acting by two or more persons for one common purpose-a concerted
performance of a fabula disguised as a judicium-an unreal and fictitious
pretence of a contest by confederates whose game is the same. As stated by
Lord Selborne LC in Boswell v. Cooks, (1894) 6 Rep. 167, there is no judge;
but a person invested with the ensigns of a judicial office, is misemployed
in listening to a fictitious cause proposed to him, there is no party
litigating.......no real interest brought into question and to use the
words of a very sensible civilian on this point, fabula nonjudicium, hoc
est; in scena, non in foro, res agitur. That, in our view, is the true
meaning of the word ’collusion’ as applied to a judicial proceeding.
Further property of a public institution cannot be allowed to be
jeopardised by persons who, at an earlier point of time, might have
represented it and who were expected to effectively defend public interest
and community property. Persons representing public bodies are expected to
discharge their functions faithfully and in keeping with the trust reposed
in them.
We may also add one other important reason which frequently arises under
section 11 CPC. The earlier suit by the respondent against the Panchayat
was only a suit for injunction and not one on title. No question of title
was gone into nor decided. The said decision cannot, therefore, be binding
on the question of title. See in this connection Sajjadanashin Sayed\. Musa
Dadabhai Ummer, [2000] 3 SCC 350, where this Court, on a detailed
consideration of law in India and elsewhere held that even if, in an
earlier suit for injunction, there is an incidental finding on title, the
same will not be binding in a latter suit or proceedings where title is
directly in question, unless it is established that it was ’necessary’ in
the earlier suit to decide the question of title for granting or refusing
injunction and that the relief for injunction was founded or based on the
finding of title. Even the mere framing of an issue on title may not be
sufficient as pointed out in that case.
Thus, it was open to the statutory authorities under the 1911 Act to go
into the collusive nature of the suit in the proceedings under Section 7 of
the 1911 Act as stated above. The High Court has not gone into the merits
of the decision of the Collector and the Appellate authority but has
allowed the writ petition solely based on the Full Bench decision in Jagar
Ram. We have now overruled the Full Bench decision. We, therefore, set
aside the judgment of the High Court and remit the writ petition to the
High Court for disposal in accordance with law, in the light of the above
observations.
The appeal is allowed and disposed of accordingly. There shall be no order
as to costs.