Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6907 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Mr. Shaikh Salim Haji Abdul Khayumsab
RESPONDENT:
Mr. Kumar & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/11/2005
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & R.V. RAVEENDRAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No. 15807 of 2004)
With
Civil Appeal No.6918 of 2005
(Arising out of SLP (C) No. 16523/2004)
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Leave granted.
Both the appeals involve identical issues except that
appellant Shaikh Salim Haji Abdul Khayumsab was respondent
No. 15 in the suit and appellant Kanti Lal was defendant
No. 1.
Challenge in these appeals is to judgment rendered by a
learned Single judge of the Bombay High Court in WP Nos.
2500 and 2501 of 2004. The writ Petitions filed by the
present appellants were dismissed by learned single judge
holding that the trial court was right in its view that
there was no scope for granting extension of time beyond the
period of 90 days to file the written statement, in view of
the amendment to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (in short
the ’CPC’) by Civil Procedure Code (Amendment) Act, 1999 (in
short the 1999 ’Amendment Act’). Factual background needs to
be noted in brief.
In a suit for partition, separate possession and
perpetual injunction the appellants were arrayed as
defendant Nos. 15 & 1. The suit filed by respondent No. 1
was Special Civil Suit No. 144 of 2003 in the Court of Civil
Judge (Senior Division), Latoor. The appellants were
summoned under Order V Rule 1 & 5 CPC on 21st October,
2003. They sought time to file the Written Statement and by
order dated 29th October, 2003 the trial court granted
time till 17.11.2003. On the said date another application
was filed for extension of time to file the Written
Statement. Time was allowed till 19.2.2004. As 19.2.2004
was a holiday the written statement was filed on 20.2.2004.
Trial court refused to accept the written statement on the
ground that the written statement was filed beyond the
period of 90 days. The appellants filed writ petitions
before the Bombay High Court, Aurangabad Bench which were
numbered as Writ Petition Nos.2500 and 2501 of 2004. By the
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impugned order the High Court dismissed the Writ Petitions.
The logic as appears from the orders passed by the trial
court and the High Court is that there was no scope for
granting time to file written statement beyond the
prescribed period of 90 days.
Learned counsel for the appellants submitted that when
the court itself had granted time to file the written
statement by 19.2.2004 and that being a holiday the written
statement was filed on 20.2.2004, the view taken that the
written statement could not have been filed within 90 days
is clearly untenable.
Learned counsel appearing for the respondent supported
the order passed by the trial court and the High Court.
The CPC enacted in 1908 consolidated and amended the
laws relating to the procedure of the Courts of Civil
Judicature. It has undergone several amendments by several
Acts of Central and State Legislatures. Under Section 122
CPC the High Courts have power to amend by rules, the
procedure laid down in the Orders. In exercise of these
powers various amendments have been made in the Orders by
various High Courts. Amendments have also been made keeping
in view recommendations of Law Commission. Anxiety of
Parliament as evident from the amendments is to secure an
early and expeditious disposal of civil suits and
proceedings without sacrificing the fairness of trial and
the principles of natural justice in-built in any
sustainable procedure. The Statement of Objects and Reasons
for enacting Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 1976
(104 of 1976) (in short ’1976 Amendment Act’) highlights
following basic considerations in enacting the amendments:-
(i) with the accepted principles of
natural justice that a litigant
should get a fair trial in
accordance;
(ii) that every effort should be made to
expedite the disposal of civil suits
and proceedings, so that justice may
not be delayed;
(iii) that the procedure should not be
complicated and should, to the utmost
extent possible, ensure fair deal to
the poorer sections of the community
who do not have the means to engage a
pleader to defend their cases."
By the 1999 Amendment Act the text of Order VIII, Rule
1 was sought to be substituted in a manner that the power of
court to extend the time for filing the written statement
was so circumscribed as would not permit the time being
extended beyond 30 days from the date of service of summons
on the defendant. Due to resistance from the members of the
Bar against enforcing such and similar other provisions
sought to be introduced by way of amendment, the Amendment
Act could not be promptly notified for enforcement. The text
of the provision in the present form has been introduced by
the Amendment Act with effect from 1.7.2002. The purpose of
such like amendments is stated in the Statement of Objects
and Reasons as "to reduce delay in the disposal of civil
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cases".
The text of Order VIII, Rule 1, as it stands now,
reads as under: -
"1. Written statement.- The defendant shall,
within thirty days from the date of service
of summons on him, present a written
statement of his defence:
Provided that where the defendant
fails to file the written statement
within the said period of thirty days,
he shall be allowed to file the same on
such other day, as may be specified by
the Court, for reasons to be recorded in
writing, but which shall not be later
than ninety days from the date of
service of summons."
Order VIII, Rule 1 after the amendment casts an
obligation on the defendant to file the written statement
within 30 days from the date of service of summons on him
and within the extended time falling within 90 days. The
provision does not deal with the power of the court and also
does not specifically take away the power of the court to
take the written statement on record though filed beyond the
time as provided for. Further, the nature of the provision
contained in Order VIII, Rule 1 is procedural. It is not a
part of the substantive law. Substituted Order VIII, Rule 1
intends to curb the mischief of unscrupulous defendants
adopting dilatory tactics, delaying the disposal of cases
causing inconvenience to the plaintiffs and petitioners
approaching the court for quick relief and also to the
serious inconvenience of the court faced with frequent
prayers for adjournments. The object is to expedite the
hearing and not to scuttle the same. While justice delayed
may amount to justice denied, justice hurried may in some
cases amount to justice buried.
All the rules of procedure are the handmaid of
justice. The language employed by the draftsman of
processual law may be liberal or stringent, but the fact
remains that the object of prescribing procedure is to
advance the cause of justice. In an adversarial system, no
party should ordinarily be denied the opportunity of
participating in the process of justice dispensation. Unless
compelled by express and specific language of the Statute,
the provisions of the CPC or any other procedural enactment
ought not to be construed in a manner which would leave the
court helpless to meet extraordinary situations in the ends
of justice.
The mortality of justice at the hands of law troubles a
Judge’s conscience and points an angry interrogation at the
law reformer.
The processual law so dominates in certain systems as
to overpower substantive rights and substantial justice.
The humanist rule that procedure should be the handmaid, not
the mistress, of legal justice compels consideration of
vesting a residuary power in judges to act ex debito
justiciae where the tragic sequel otherwise would be wholly
inequitable. - Justice is the goal of jurisprudence -
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processual, as much as substantive. (See Sushil Kumar Sen v.
State of Bihar (1975 (1) SCC 774).
No person has a vested right in any course of
procedure. He has only the right of prosecution or defence
in the manner for the time being by or for the Court in
which the case is pending, and if, by an Act of Parliament
the mode of procedure is altered, he has no other right than
to proceed according to the altered mode. (See Blyth v.
Blyth (1966 (1) All E.R. 524 (HL). A procedural law should
not ordinarily be construed as mandatory, the procedural law
is always subservient to and is in aid to justice. Any
interpretation which eludes or frustrates the recipient of
justice is not to be followed. (See Shreenath and Anr. v.
Rajesh and Ors. (AIR 1998 SC 1827)
Processual law is not to be a tyrant but a servant,
not an obstruction but an aid to justice. Procedural
prescriptions are the handmaid and not the mistress, a
lubricant, not a resistant in the administration of justice.
It is also to be noted that though the power of the
Court under the proviso appended to Rule 1 of Order VIII is
circumscribed by the words - "shall not be later than
ninety days" but the consequences flowing from non-
extension of time are not specifically provided though they
may be read by necessary implication. Merely, because a
provision of law is couched in a negative language implying
mandatory character, the same is not without exceptions.
The courts, when called upon to interpret the nature of the
provision, may, keeping in view the entire context in which
the provision came to be enacted, hold the same to be
directory though worded in the negative form.
Challenge to the Constitutional validity of the
Amendment Act and 1999 Amendment Act was rejected by this
Court in Salem Advocate Bar Association, Tamil Nadu v. Union
of India (JT 2002 (9) SC 175). However to work out
modalities in respect of certain provisions a Committee was
constituted. After receipt of Committee’s report the matter
was considered by a three-Judge Bench in Salem Advocate Bar
Association, Tamil Nadu v. Union of India (JT 2005 (6) SC
486). As regards Order VIII Rule 1 Committee’s report is as
follows:
"The question is whether the Court has any
power or jurisdiction to extend the period
beyond 90 days. The maximum period of 90 days
to file written statement has been provided but
the consequences on failure to file written
statement within the said period have not been
provided for in Order VIII Rule 1. The point
for consideration is whether the provision
providing for maximum period of ninety days is
mandatory and, therefore, the Court is
altogether powerless to extend the time even in
an exceptionally hard case.
It has been common practice for the parties to
take long adjournments for filing written
statements. The legislature with a view to curb
this practice and to avoid unnecessary delay and
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adjournments, has provided for the maximum
period within which the written statement is
required to be filed. The mandatory or
directory nature of Order VIII Rule 1 shall have
to be determined by having regard to the object
sought to be achieved by the amendment. It is,
thus, necessary to find out the intention of the
legislature. The consequences which may follow
and whether the same were intended by the
legislature have also to be kept in view.
In Raza Buland Sugar Co. Ltd., Rampur v. The
Municipal Board, Rampur [AIR 1965 SC 895], a
Constitution Bench of this Court held that the
question whether a particular provision is
mandatory or directory cannot be resolved by
laying down any general rule and it would depend
upon the facts of each case and for that purpose
the object of the statute in making out the
provision is the determining factor. The
purpose for which the provision has been made
and its nature, the intention of the legislature
in making the provision, the serious general
inconvenience or injustice to persons resulting
from whether the provision is read one way or
the other, the relation of the particular
provision to other provisions dealing with the
same subject and other considerations which may
arise on the facts of a particular case
including the language of the provision, have
all to be taken into account in arriving at the
conclusion whether a particular provision is
mandatory or directory.
In Sangram Singh v. Election Tribunal Kotah &
Anr. [AIR 1955 SC 425], considering the
provisions of the Code dealing with the trial of
the suits, it was opined that:
"Now a code of procedure must be regarded
as such. It is procedure, something
designed to facilitate justice and further
its ends: not a Penal enactment for
punishment and penalties; not a thing
designed to trip people up. Too technical
construction of sections that leaves no
room for reasonable elasticity of
interpretation should therefore be guarded
against (provided always that justice is
done to both sides) lest the very means
designed for the furtherance of justice be
used to frustrate it.
Next, there must be ever present to the
mind the fact that our laws of procedure
are grounded on a principle of natural
justice which requires that men should not
be condemned unheard, that decisions should
not be reached behind their backs, that
proceedings that affect their lives and
property should not continue in their
absence and that they should not be
precluded from participating in them. Of
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course, there must be exceptions and where
they are clearly defined they must be given
effect to. But taken by and large, and
subject to that proviso, our laws of
procedure should be construed, wherever
that is reasonably possible, in the light
of that principle. "
In Kailash v. Nanhku (2005(4) SCC 480) and Rani Kusum
(Smt.) v. Kanchan Devi (Smt.) and Others (2005(6) SCC 705)
similar view was expressed.
The matter can be looked at another angle.
Undisputedly the trial court had granted time up to
19.2.2004 which undisputedly fell beyond the 90 days’
period. Since the 19.2.2004 happened to be a holiday, the
Written Statement was filed on the next day. Had the
Written Statement been filed on 19.2.2004, obviously the
court could not have refused to accept the written statement
as it was within the time granted by it. Merely because of
a fortuitous circumstance the written statement came to be
filed next day i.e. on account of the date fixed being a
holiday that cannot make the Written Statement, filed,
unacceptable.
Learned counsel for the respondent submitted that the
Court could not have granted time beyond 90 days. This plea
is untenable in view of what has been stated in Kailash’s
case (supra) and Rani Kusum’s case (supra). Additionally a
party cannot be made to suffer if the court has committed a
mistake if for the sake of argument it is held that the
Court had mistakenly granted time.
In the facts and circumstances of the case, the maxim
of equity, namely, actus curiae neminem gravabit \026 an act of
court shall prejudice no man, shall be applicable. This
maxim is founded upon justice and good sense which serves a
safe and certain guide for the administration of law. The
other maxim is, lex non cogit ad impossibilia \026 the law does
not compel a man to do what he cannot possibly perform. The
law itself and its administration is understood to disclaim
as it does in its general aphorisms, all intention of
compelling impossibilities, and the administration of law
must adopt that general exception in the consideration of
particular cases. The applicability of the aforesaid maxims
has been approved by this Court in Raj Kumar Dey v. Tarapada
Dey (1987 (4) SCC 398), Gursharan Singh v. New Delhi
Municipal Committee (1996 (2) SCC 459) and Mohammod Gazi v.
State of M.P. and others (2000(4) SCC 342).
The High Court’s orders are clearly indefensible and
are set aside. The appeals are allowed but without any order
as to costs.