Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DARYAO AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF U. P. AND OTHERS(and Connected Petitions)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/03/1961
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1457 1962 SCR (1) 574
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1962 SC1621 (15,75,78,111,132)
R 1963 SC 996 (2)
R 1964 SC 782 (4,5)
D 1964 SC1013 (17)
RF 1965 SC1150 (7)
R 1965 SC1153 (5,27,53)
RF 1967 SC 1 (59)
RF 1967 SC1335 (4)
E 1968 SC 985 (4)
E 1968 SC1196 (4,5,6,7)
R 1970 SC 898 (3,4,36,37A,54,57)
RF 1974 SC 532 (11)
R 1975 SC 202 (16)
RF 1977 SC1680 (7)
R 1978 SC1283 (10)
F 1979 SC1328 (9,10)
RF 1981 SC 728 (5,7,8,9,10)
RF 1981 SC 960 (13)
RF 1981 SC2198 (13,33)
E&D 1987 SC 88 (8)
F 1987 SC 522 (24)
R 1988 SC1531 (126)
R 1990 SC 53 (15)
R 1990 SC1607 (35)
RF 1991 SC1309 (3)
ACT:
Fundamental Right-Res judicata-Dismissal of writ Petition by
High Court-If and when bar to petition in Supreme Court-
Constitution of India, Arts. 32, 226.
HEADNOTE:
Where the High Court dismisses a writ petition under Art.
226 of the Constitution after hearing the matter on the
merits on the ground that no fundamental right was proved or
contravened or that its contravention was constitutionally
justified, a subsequent petition to the Supreme Court under
Art. 32 of the Constitution on the same facts and for the
same reliefs filed by the same party would be barred by the
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general principle of res judicata.
There is no substance in the plea that the judgment of the
High Court cannot be treated as res judicata because it
cannot
575
under Art. 226 entertain a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution.
Citizens have ordinarily the right to invoke Art. 32 for
appropriate relief if their fundamental rights are illegally
on unconstitutionally violated and it is incorrect to say
that Art. 32 merely gives this Court a discretionary power
as Art. 226 does to the High Court.
Basheshar Noth v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi and
Rajasthan, [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 528, referred to.
Laxmanappa Hanumantappa jamkhandi v. The Union of India,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 769, and Diwan Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Mohla
v. The Union of India, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 773, considered.
The right given to the citizens to move this Court under
Art. 32 is itself a fundamental right and cannot be
circumscribed or curtailed except as provided by the
Constitution. The expression "appropriate proceedings" in
Art. 32,(1), properly construed, must mean such proceedings
as may be appropriate to the nature of the order, direction
or writ the petitioner seeks from this Court and not
appropriate to the nature of the case.
Romesh Thappar v. The State of Madras, [1950] S.C.R. 594,
referred to,
Even so the general principle of res judicata, which has
it.; foundation on considerations of public policy, namely,
(1) that binding decisions of courts of competent
jurisdiction should be final and (2) that no person should
be made to face the same kind of litigation twice over, is
not a mere technical rule that cannot be applied to
petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution,
Duchess of Kingston’s case, 2 Smith Lead. Cas. 13th E-d.
644, referred to.
The binding character of judgments of courts of competent
jurisdiction is in essence a part of the rule of law on
which the administration of justice, so much emphasised by
the Constitution, is founded and a judgment of the High
Court under Art. 226 passed after a hearing on merits as
aforesaid must bind the parties till set aside in appeal as
provided by the Constitution and cannot be circumvented by a
petition under Art. 32.
Pandit M. S. M. Sharma v. Dr. Shree Krishna Sinha, [1961] 1
S.C.R. 96 and Raj Lakshmi Dasi v. Banamali Sen, [1053]
S.C.R. 154, relied on.
Janardan Reddy v. The State of Hyderabad, [1951] S.C.R. 344,
Syed Qasion Rezvi v. The State of Hyderabad, [1953] S.C.R.
589 and Bhagubhai Dullabhabhai Bhandari v. The District
magistrate, Thana, [1956] S.C.R. 533, referred to.
It was not correct to say that since remedies under Art. 226
and Art. 32 were in the nature of alternate remedies the
adoption of one could not bar the adoption of the other,
Mussammat Gulab Koer v. Badshah Bahadur, (1909) 13 1197 held
inapplicable.
576
Consequently, (1) where the petition under Art. 226 is
considered on the merits as a contested matter and dismissed
by the High Court, the decision pronounced is binding on
the parties unless modified or reversed by appeal or other
appropriate proceedings under the Constitution;
(2) Where the petition under Art. 226 is dismissed I not on
the merits but because of laches of the party applying for
the writ or because an alternative remedy is available to
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him, such dismissal is no bar to a subsequent petition under
Art. 32 except in cases where the facts found by the High
Court may themselves be relevant even under Art. 32;
(3) Where the writ petition is dismissed in limine and an
order is pronounced, whether or not such dismissal is a bar
must depend on the nature of the order;
(4) if the petition is dismissed in limine without a
speaking order, or as withdrawn, there can be no bar of res
judicata.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petitions Nos. 66 and 67 of
1956, 8 of 1960, 77 of 1957, 15 of 1957 and 5 of 1958.
Writ Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India
for the enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
Naunit Lal, for the petitioner in W. Ps. Nos. 66 and 67 of
1956.
C. P. Lal, for respondent No. 1 in W. Ps. Nos. 66 and 67
of 1956.
Bhawani Lal and P. C. Agarwal, for respondents Nos. 3a and 4
in W. Ps. Nos. 66 and 67 of 1956.
C. B. Agarwala and K. P. Gupta, for the petitioner in W.
P. No. 8 of 1960.
Veda Vayasa and C. P. Lal, for respondent in W. P. No. 8 of
1960.
Pritam Singh Safeer, for the petitioner in W. P. No. 77 of
1957.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General, Punjab, N. S. Bindra and D.
Gupta, for respondent No. 1 in W. P. No. 77 of 1957.
Govind Saran Singh, for respondent. No. 2 in W. P. No. 77
of 1957.
A. N. Sinha and Raghunath, for petitioner in W. P. No. 15
of 1957.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, N. S Bindra
and R. H. Dhebar, for respondent in W.P. No 15 of 1957.
577
B. R. L. lyengar, for the petitioner in W. P. No. 5 of
1958.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, R. Gana- Dar
pathy Iyer and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent in W. P.
No. 5 of 1958.
1961. March 27. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-These six writ petitions filed Gaje,
under Art. 32 of the Constitution have been placed before
the Court for final disposal in a group because though they
arise between separate parties and are unconnected with each
other a common question of law arises in all of them. The
opponents in all these petitions have raised a preliminary
objection against the maintainability of the writ petitions
on the ground that in each case the petitioners had moved
the High Court for a similar writ under Art. 226 and the
High Court has rejected the said petitions. The argument is
that the dismissal of a writ petition filed by a party for
obtaining an appropriate writ creates a bar of res judicata
against a similar petition filed in this Court under Art. 32
on the same or similar facts and praying for the same or
similar writ. The question as to whether such a bar of res
judicata can be pleaded against a petition filed in this
Court under Art. 32 has been adverted to in some of the
reported decisions of this Court but it has not so far been
fully considered or finally decided; and that is the
preliminary question for the decision of which the six writ
petitions have been placed together for disposal in a group.
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In dealing with this group we will set out the facts which
give rise to Writ Petition No. 66 of 1956 and decide the
general point raised for our decision. Our decision in this
writ petition will govern the other writ petitions as well.
Petition No. 66 of 1956 alleges that for the last fifty
years the petitioners and their ancestors have been the
tenants of the land described in Annexure A attached to the
petition and that respondents 3 to 5 are the proprietors of
the said land. Owing to communal
73
578
disturbances in the Western District of Uttar Pradesh in
1947, the petitioners had to leave their village in July,
1947; later in November, 1947, they returned but they found
that during their temporary absence respondents 3 to 5 had
entered in unlawful possession of the said land. Since the
said respondents refused to deliver possession of the land
to the petitioners the petitioners had to file suits for
ejectment under s. 180 of the U. P. Tenancy Act, 1939.
These suits were filed in June, 1948. In the trial court
the petitioners succeeded and a decree was passed in their
favour. The said decree. was confirmed in appeal which was
taken by respondents 3 to 5 before the learned Additional
Commissioner. In pursuance of the appellate decree the
petitioners obtained possession of the land through Court.
Respondents 3 to 5 then preferred a second appeal before the
Board of Revenue under s. 267 of the U. P. Tenancy Act,
1939. On March 29, 1954, the Board allowed the appeal
preferred by respondents 3 to 5 and dismissed the
petitioner’s suit with respect to the land described in
Annexure A, whereas the said respondents’ appeal with regard
to other lands were dismissed. The decision of the Board
was based on the ground that by virtue of the U. P.
Zamindary Abolition and Land Reforms (Amendment) Act XVI of
1953 respondents 3 to 5 had become entitled to the
possession of the land.
Aggrieved by this decision the petitioners moved the High
Court at Allahabad under Art. 226 of the Constitution for
the issue of a writ of certiorari to quash the said
judgment. Before the said petition was filed a Full Bench
of the Allahabad High Court had already interpreted s. 20 of
the U. P. Land Reforms Act as amended by Act XVI of 1953.
The effect of the said decision was plainly against the
petitioners’ contentions, and so the learned advocate who
appeared for the petitioners had no alternative but not to
press the petition before the High Court. In consequence
the said petition was dismissed on March 29, 1955. It
appears that s. 20 has again been amended by s. 4 of Act XX
of 1954. It is under these
579
circumstances that the petitioners have filed the present
petition under Art. 32 on March 14, 1956. It is plain that
at the time when the present petition has been filed the
period of limitation prescribed for an appeal under Art.
136 against the dismissal of the petitioners’ petition
before the- Allahabad High Court had already expired. It is
also clear that the grounds of attack against the decision
of the Board which the petitioners seek to raise by their
present petition are exactly the same as the grounds which
they had raised before the Allahabad High Court; and so it
is urged by the respondents that the present petition is
barred by res judicata.
Mr. Agarwala who addressed the principal arguments on behalf
of the petitioners in this group contends that the
’principle of res judicata which is no more than a technical rule similar
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to the rule of estoppel cannot be pleaded
against a petition which seeks to enforce the fundamental
rights guaranteed by the Constitution. He argues that the
right to move the Supreme Court for the enforcement of the
fundamental rights which is guaranteed by Art. 32(1) is
itself a fundamental right and it would be singularly
inappropriate to whittle down the said fundamental right by
putting it in the straight jacket of the technical rule of
res judicata. On the other hand it is urged by the learned
Advocate-General of Punjab, who led the respondents, that
Art. 32(1) does not guarantee to every citizen the right to
make a petition under the said article but it merely gives
him the right to move this Court by appropriate
proceedings, and he contends that the appropriate
proceedings in cases like the present would be proceedings
by way of an application for special leave under Art. 136 or
by way of appeal under the appropriate article of the Con-
stitution. It is also suggested that the right to move
which is guaranteed by Art. 32(1) does not impose on this
Court an obligation to grant the relief, because as in the
case of Art. 226 so in the case of Art. 32 also the granting
of leave is discretionary.
In support of the argument that it is in the discretion of
this Court to grant an appropriate relief or refuse to do so
reliance has been placed on the observations
580
made in two reported decisions of this Court. In Laxmanappa
Hanumantappa Jamkhandi v. The Union of India & Another (1),
this Court held that as there is a special provision in
Art. 265 of the Constitution that no tax shall be levied or
collected except by authority of law, cl. 1 of Art. 31 must
be regarded as concerned with deprivation of property
otherwise than by imposition or collection of tax and as the
right conferred by Art. 265 is not a fundamental right con-
ferred by Part III of the Constitution, it cannot be
enforced under Art. 32. In other words, the decision was
that the petition filed before this Court under Art. 32 was
not maintainable; but Mahajan, C.J.., Who spoke for the
Court, proceeded to observer that "even otherwise in ’the
peculiar circumstances that have arisen it would not be just
and proper to direct the issue of any of the writs the issue
of which is discretionary with this Court". The learned
Chief Justice has also added that when this position was put
to Mr. Sen he fairly and rightly conceded that it was not
possible for him to combat this position. ’To the same
effect are the observations made by the same learned Chief
Justice in Dewan Bahadur Seth Gopal Das Mohta v. The Union
of India & Another (2). It will, however, be noticed that
the observations made in both the cases are obiter, and,
with respect, it would be difficult to treat them as a
decision on the question that the issue of an appropriate
writ tinder Art. 32 is a matter of discretion, and that even
if the petitioner proves his fundamental rights and their
unconstitutional infringement this Court nevertheless can
refused. to issue an appropriate writ in his favour Besides,
the subsequent decision of this Court in Basheshar Nath v.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi and, Rajasthan (3)
tender to show that if a petitioner makes out a case of
illegal contravention of his fundamental rights he may be
entitled to claim an appropriate relief and a plea of waiver
cannot be raised against his claim. It is true that the
question of res judicata did not fall to be considered in
that case but the tenor of all the judgments, which no doubt
disclose a
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 760, 772, 773- (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 773,
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776.
(3) [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 528
581
difference in approach, seems to emphasise the basic
importance of the fundamental rights guaranteed by, the
Constitution and the effect of the decision appears to be
that the citizens are ordinarily entitled to appropriate
relief under Art. 32 once it is shown that their fundamental
rights have been illegally or unconstitutionally violated.
Therefore, we are not impressed by the argument that we
should deal with the question of the applicability of the
rule of res judicata to a petition under Art. 32 on the
basis that like Art. 226 Art. 32 itself gives merely a
discretionary power to the Court to grant an appropriate
relief.
The argument that Art. 32 does not confer upon a citizen the
right to move this Court by an original petition but merely
gives him the right to move this Court by an appropriate
proceeding according to the nature of the case seems to us
to be unsound. It is urged that in a case where the
petitioner has moved the High Court by a writ petition under
Art. 226 all that he is entitled to do under Art. 32(1) is
to move this Court by an application for special leave under
Art. 136; that, it is contended, is the effect of the
expression "appropriate proceedings" used in Art. 32(1). In
our opinion, on a fair construction of Art. 32(1) the
expression "appropriate proceedings" has reference, to
proceedings which may be appropriate having regard to the
nature of the order, direction or writ which the petitioner
seeks to obtain from this Court. The appropriateness of the
proceedings would depend upon the particular writ or order
which he claims and it is in that sense that the right has
been conferred on the citizen to move this Court by
appropriate proceedings. That is why we must proceed to
deal with the question of res judicata on the basis that a
fundamental right has been guaranteed to the citizen to move
this Court by an original petition wherever his grievance is
that his fundamental rights have been illegally contravened.
There can be no doubt that the fundamental right guaranteed
by Art. 32(1) is a very important safeguard for the
protection of the fundamental rights of the citizen, and as
a result of the said guarantee this
582
Court has been entrusted with the solemn task of upholding
the fundamental rights of the citizens of this country. The
fundamental rights are intended not only to protect
individual’s rights but they are based on high public
policy. Liberty of the individual and the protection of his
fundamental rights are the very essence of the democratic
way of life adopted by the Constitution, and it is the
privilege and the duty of this Court to uphold those rights.
This Court would naturally refuse to circumscribe them or to
curtail them except as provided by the Constitution itself.
It is because of this aspect of the matter that in Romesh
Thappar v. The State of Madras (1), in the very first year
after the Constitution came into force, this Court rejected
a preliminary objection raised against the competence of a
petition filed under Art. 32 on the ground that as a matter
of orderly procedure the petitioner should first have
resorted to the High Court under Art. 226, and observed that
"this Court in thus constituted the protector and guarantor
of the fundamental rights, and it cannot, consistently with
the responsibility so laid upon it, refuse to entertain
applications seeking protection against infringements of
Ruch rights". Thus the right given to the citizen to move
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this Court by a petition under Art. 32 and claim an
appropriate writ against the unconstitutional infringement
of his fundamental rights itself is a matter of fundamental
right, and in dealing with the objection based on the
application of the rule of res judicata this aspect of the
matter had no doubt to be borne in mind.
But, is the rule of res judicata merely a technical rule or
is it based on high public policy? If the rule of res
judicata itself embodies a principle of public policy which
in turn is an essential part of the rule of law then the
objection that the rule cannot be invoked where fundamental
rights are in question may lose much of its validity. Now,
the rule of res judicata as indicated in s. 11 of the Code
of Civil Procedure has no doubt, some technical aspects, for
instance the rule of constructive res judicata may be said
to be technical; but the basis on which the said rule rests
is
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 594.
583
founded on considerations of public policy. It is in the
interest of the public at large that a finality should
attach to the binding decisions pronounced by Courts’ of
competent jurisdiction, and it is also in the public
interest that individuals should not be vexed twice over
with the same kind of litigation. If these two principles
form the foundation of the general rule of res judicata they
cannot be treated as irrelevant or inadmissible even in
dealing with fundamental rights in petitions filed under
Art. 32.
In considering the essential elements of res judicata one
inevitably harks back to the judgment of Sir William de
Grey, (afterwards Lord Walsingham) in the leading Duchess of
King8ton’s case (1). Said Sir William de Grey, (afterwards
Lord Walsingham) "from the variety of cases relative to
judgments being given in evidence in civil suits, these two
deductions seem to follow as generally true: First, that the
judgment of a court of concurrent jurisdiction, directly
upon the point, is as a plea, a bar, or as evidence,
conclusive between the same parties, upon the same matter,
directly in question in another court; Secondly, that the
judgment of a court of exclusive jurisdiction, directly upon
the point, is in like manner conclusive upon the same
matter, between the same parties, coming incidentally in
question in another court for a different purpose". As has
been observed by Halsbury, "the doctrine of res judicata is
not a technical doctrine applicable only to records; it is a
fundamental doctrine of all courts that there must be an end
of litigation" (2 ). Halsbury also adds that the doctrine
applies equally in all courts, and it is immaterial in what
court the former proceeding was taken, provided only that it
was a court of competent jurisdiction, or what form the
proceeding took, provided it was really for the same cause"
(p. 187, paragraph 362). "Res judicata", it is observed in
Corpus Juris, "is a rule of universal law pervading every
well regulated system of jurisprudence, and is put upon two
grounds embodied in various maxims of the common law; the
one,
(1) 2 Smith Lead. Cas. 13th Ed., pp. 644, 645.
(2) Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd, Ed., Vol. 15, para.
357, P. 185.
584
public policy and necessity, which makes it to the, interest
of the State that there should be an end to s litigation
interest republican ut sit finis litium; the other, the
hardship on the individual that he should be vexed twice for
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the same cause-nemo debet bis vexari pro eadem causa" (1).
In this sense the recognised basis of the rule of res
judicata is different from that of technical estoppel.
"Estoppel rests on equity able principles and res judicata
rests on maxims which are taken from the Roman Law" (2).
Therefore, the argument that res judicata is a technical
rule and as such is irrelevant in dealing with petitions
under Art. 32 cannot be accepted.
The same question can be considered from another point of
view. If a judgment has been pronounced by a court of
competent jurisdiction it is binding between the parties
unless it is reversed or modified by appeal, revision or
other procedure prescribed by law. Therefore, if a judgment
has been pronounced by the High Court in a writ petition
filed by a party rejecting his prayer for the issue of an
appropriate writ on the ground either that he had no
fundamental right as pleaded by him or there has been no
contravention of the right proved or that the contravention
is justified by the Constitution itself, it must remain
binding between the parties unless it is attacked by
adopting the procedure prescribed by the Constitution
itself. The binding character of judgments pronounced by
courts of competent jurisdiction is itself an essential part
of the rule of law, and the rule of law obviously is the
basis of the administration of justice on which the
Constitution lays so much emphasis. As Halsbury has observ-
ed "subject to appeal and to being amended or set aside a
judgment is conclusive as between the parties and their
privies, and is conclusive evidence against all the world of
its existence, date and legal consequences"(3). Similar is
the statement of the law in Corpus Juris: "the doctrine of
estoppel by judgment does not rest on any superior authority
of the court rendering the judgment, and a judgment of one
court is a bar to an
(1) Corpus juris, VOl. 34, P 743- (2) Ibid. P. 745-
(3) Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd Ed., VOl. 22, P- 780,
paragraph 1660.
585
action between the same parties for the same cause in the
same court or in another court, whether the latter has
concurrent or other jurisdiction. This rule is subject to
the Limitation that the judgment in the former action must
have been rendered by a court or tribunal of competent
jurisdiction" (1). "It is, however’ essential that there
should have been a judicial determination of rights in
controversy with a final decision thereon" In other words,
an original petition for a writ under Art. 32 cannot take
the place of an appeal against the order passed by the High
Court in the petition filed before it under Art. 226. There
can be little doubt that the jurisdiction of this Court to
entertain applications under Art. 32 which are original
cannot be confused or mistaken or used for the appellate
jurisdiction of this Court which alone can be invoked for
correcting errors in the decisions of High Courts pronounced
in writ petitions under Art. 226. Thus, on general
considerations of public policy there seems to be no reason
why the rule of res judicata should be treated as
inadmissible or irrelevant in dealing with petitions filed
under Art,. 32 of the Constitution. It is true that the
general rule can be invoked only in cases where a dispute
between the parties has been referred to a court of
competent jurisdiction, there has been a contest between the
parties before the court, a fair opportunity has been given
to both of them to prove their case, and at the end the
court has pronounced its judgment or decision. Such a
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decision pronounced by a court of competent jurisdiction is
binding between the parties unless it is modified or
reversed by adopting a procedure prescribed by the
Constitution. In our opinion, therefore, the plea that the
general rule of res judicata should not be allowed to be
invoked cannot be sustained.
This Court had occasion to consider the application of the
rule of res judicata to a petition filed under Art. 32 in
Pandit M. S. M. Sharma v. Dr. Shree Krishna Sinha (3). In
that case the petitioner had moved this
(1) Corpus juris Secundum, VOI. 50 (judgments), p. 603.
(2) Ibid. p. 608.
(3) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 96.
74
586
Court under Art. 32 and claimed an appropriate writ against
the Chairman and the Members of the Committee of Privileges
of the State Legislative Assembly. The said petition was
dismissed. Subsequently he filed another petition
substantially for the same relief and substantially on the
same allegations. One of the points which then arose for
the decision of this Court was- whether the second petition
was competent, and this Court held that it was not because
of the rule of res judicata. It is true that the earlier
decision on which res judicata was pleaded was a decision of
this Court in a petition filed under Art. 32 and in that
sense the background of the dispute, was different, because
the judgment on which the plea was based was a judgment of
this Court and not of any High Court. Even so, this
decision affords assistance in determining the point before
us. In upholding the plea of res judicata this Court
observed that the question determined by the previous
decision of this Court cannot be reopened in the present
case and must govern the rights and obligations of the
parties which are substantially the same. In support of
this decision Sinha, C. J., who spoke for the Court,
referred to the earlier decision of this Court in Raj
Lakshmi Dasi v. Banamali Sen (1) and observed that the
principle underlying res judicata is applicable in respect
of a question which hag been raised and decided after full
contest, even though the first Tribunal which decided the
matter may have no jurisdiction to try the subsequent suit
and even though the subject-matter of the dispute was not
exactly the same in the two proceedings. We may add
incidentally that the Court which tried the earlier
proceedings in the case of Raj Lakshmi Dasi (1) was a Court
of exclusive jurisdiction. Thus this decision establishes
the principle that the rule of res judicata can be invoked
even against a petition filed under Art. 32.
We may at this stage refer to some of the earlier decisions
of this Court where the presedt problem was posed but not
finally or definitely answered. In Janardan Reddy v. The
State of Hyderabad (2), it
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 154
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 344, 370-
587
appeared that against the decision of the High Court a
petition for specialleave had been filed but the, same
had been, rejectedand this was followed by petitions under
Art. 32.These petitions were in fact entertained though on
the merits they were dismissed, and in doing so it was
observed by Fazl Ali, J., who delivered the judgment of the
Court, that "it may, however, be observed that in this case
we have not considered it necessary to decide whether an
application under Art. 32 is maintainable after a similar
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application under Art. 226 is dismissed by the High Court,
and we reserve our opinion on that question". To the same
effect are the observations made by Mukherjea, J., as he
then was, in Syed Qasim Razvi v. The State of Hyderabad (1).
On the other hand, in Bhagubhai Dullabhabhai Bhandari v. The
District Magistrate, Thana (2) the decision of the High
Court was treated as binding between the parties when it was
observed by reference to the said proceedings that "but that
is a closed chapter so far as the Courts including this
Court also are concerned inasmuch as the petitioner’s
conviction stands confirmed as a result of the refusal of
this Court to grant him special leave to appeal from the
judgment of the Bombay High Court". In other words, these
observations seem to suggest that the majority view was that
if an order of conviction and sentence passed by the High
Court would be binding on the convicted person and cannot be
assailed subsequently by him in a proceeding taken under
Art. 32 when it appeared that this Court had refused special
leave to the said convicted person to appeal against the
said order of conviction.
The next question to consider is whether it makes any
difference to the application of this rule that the decision
on which the plea of res judicata is raised is a decision
not of this Court but of a High Court exercising its
jurisdiction under Art. 226. The argument is that one of
the essential requirements of s. 11 of the Code of Civil,
Procedure is that the Court which tries the first suit or
proceeding should be competent
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 589-
(2) [1956] S.C.R. 533.
588
to try the second suit or proceeding, and since the High
Court cannot, entertain an application under Art. 32 its
decision cannot be treated as res judicata for the purpose
of such a petition. It is doubtful if the technical
requirement prescribed by s. 11 as to the Competence of the
first Court to try the subsequent suit is an essential part
of the general rule of res judicata; but assuming that it
is, in substance even the said test is satisfied because the
jurisdiction of the High Court in dealing with a writ
petition filed under Art,. 226 is substantially the same as
the jurisdiction of this Court in entertaining an
application tinder Art. 32. The scope of the writs, orders
or directions which the High Court can issue in appropriate
cases under Art. 226 is concurrent with the scope of similar
writs, orders or directions which may be issued by this
Court under Art. 32. The cause of action for the two
applications would be the same. It is the assertion of the
existence of a fundamental right and its illegal
contravention in both cases and the relief claimed in both
the cases is also of the same character. Article 226
confers jurisdiction oil the High Court to entertain a
suitable writ petition, whereas Art. 32 provides for moving
this Court for a similar writ petition for the same purpose.
Therefore, the argument that a petition under Art. 32 cannot
be entertained by a High Court under Art. 226 is without any
substance; and so the plea that the judgment of the High
Court cannot be treated as res judicata on the ground that
it cannot entertain a petition under Art. 32 must be
rejected.
It is, however, necessary to add that in exercising its
jurisdiction under Art. 226 the High Court may sometimes
refuse to issue an appropriate writ or order on the ground
that the party applying for the writ is guilty of laches and
in that sense the issue of a high prerogative writ may
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reasonably be treated as a matter of discretion. On the
other hand, the right granted to a citizen to move this
Court by appropriate proceedings under Art. 32(1) being
itself a fundamental right this Court ordinarily may have to
issue an appropriate writ or order provided it is shown that
589
the petitioner has a fundamental right which has been
illegally or unconstitutionally contravened. It is not
unlikely that if a petition is filed even under Art. 32
after a long lapse of time, considerations ma arise whether
rights in favour of third parties which may, have arisen in
the meanwhile could be allowed to be’ affected, and in such
a case the effect of laches on the, part of the petitioner
or of his acquirence may have to be considered; but,
ordinarily if a petitioner makes out a case for the issue of
an appropriate writ or’ order he, would. be entitled to have
such a writ or, order under Art. 32 and that may be said to
constitute a difference in the right conferred on a citizen
to move the High Court under Art. 226 as distinct from the
right conferred on him to move this Court. This difference
must inevitably mean that if -the High, Court has refused to
exercise its discretion on the ground of laches or on the
ground that the party has an efficacious alternative remedy
available to him then of course the decision of the High
Court cannot generally be pleaded in support of the bar of
res judicata. if, however, the matter has been considered on
the merits and the High Court has dismissed the petition for
a writ on the ground that no fundamental right is proved or
its breach is either not established or is shown to be
constitutionally justified there is no reason why the said
decision should not be treated as a bar against the
competence of a subsequent petition filed by the same party
on the same facts and for the same reliefs under Art. 32.
In this connection reliance has been placed on the fact that
in England habeas corpus petitions can be filed one after
the other and the dismissal of one habeas corpus petition is
never held to preclude the making of a subsequent petition,
for the same reason. In our opinion, there is no analogy
between the petition for habeas corpus: and petitions filed
either under Art. 226 or under Art. 32. For historical
reasons the writ for habeas corpus is treated as standing in
-a category by itself; but, even with regard to a habeas
corpus petition it has now been- held in England in Re,
Hastings (No. 2) (1) that "an applicant for a writ
(1) (1958) 3 All E.R. Q.B.D. 625.
590
of habeas corpus in a criminal matter who has once been
heard by a Divisional Court of the Queen’s Bench Division is
not entitled to be heard a second time by another Divisional
Court in the same Division, since a decision of a Divisional
Court of the Queen’s Bench Division is equivalent to the
decision of all the judges of the Division, just as the
decision of one of the old common law courts sitting in bank
was the equivalent of the decision of all the judges of that
Court." Lord Parker, C. J., who delivered the judgment of
the Court, has elaborately examined the historical genesis
of the writ, several dicta pronounced by different judges in
dealing with successive writ petitions, and has concluded
that "the authorities cannot be said to support the
principle that except in vacation an applicant could go from
judge to judge as opposed to going from court to court" (p.
633), so that even in regard to a habeas corpus petition it
is now settled in England that an applicant cannot move one
Divisional Court of the Queen’s Bench Division after ano-
ther. The-said decision has been subsequently applied in Re
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Hastings (No. 3) (1) to a writ petition filed for habeas
corpus in a, Divisional Court of tile Chancery Division. In
England, technically an order passed on a petition for
habeas corpus is not regarded as a judgment and that places
the petitions for habeas corpus in a class by themselves.
Therefore we do not think that the English analogy of
several habeas corpus applications can assist the
petitioners in the present case when they seek to resist the
application of res judicata to petitions filed under Art.
32. Before we part with the topic we would, however, like
to add that we propose to express no opinion on the question
as to whether repeated applications for habeas corpus would
be competent under our Constitution. That is a matter with
which we are not concerned in the present proceedings.
There is one more argument Which still remains to be
considered. It is urged that the remedies available to the
petitioners to move the High Court under Art. 226 and this
Court under Art. 32 are
(1) [1959] 1 AR E.R. Ch.D. 698.
591
alternate remedies and so the adoption of one remedy cannot
bar the adoption of the other. These remedies are not
exclusive but are cumulative and so no bar of res judicata
can be pleaded when a party who has filed a petition under
Art. 226 seeks to invoke the jurisdiction of this Court
under Art. 32. In support of this contention reliance has
been placed on the decision of the Calcutta High Court in
Mussammat Gulab Koer v. Badshah Bahadur (1). In that case a
party who had unsuccessfully sought for the review of a
consent order on the ground of fraud brought a suit for a
similar relief and was met by a plea of res judicata. This
plea was rejected by the Court on the ground that the two
remedies though co-existing were not inconsistent so that
when a party aggrieved has had recourse first to one remedy
it cannot be precluded from subsequently taking recourse to
the other. In fact the judgment shows that the Court took
the view that an application for review was in the
circumstances ail inappropriate remedy and that the only
remedy available to the party was that of a suit. In
dealing with the question of res judicata the Court examined
the special features and conditions attaching to the appli-
cation for review, the provisions with regard to the
finality of the orders passed in such review proceedings and
the limited nature of the right to appeal provided against
such orders. In the result the Court held that the two
remedies cannot be regarded as parallel and equally
efficacious and so no question of election of remedies arose
in those cases. We do not think that this decision can be
read as laying down a general proposition of law that even
in regard to alternate remedies if a party takes recourse to
one remedy and a contest arising therefrom is tried by a
court of competent jurisdiction and all points of con-
troversy are settled the intervention of the decision of the
court would make no difference at all. In such a case the
point to consider always would be what is the nature of the
decision pronounced by a Court of competent jurisdiction and
what is its effect. Thus considered there can be no doubt
that if a writ petition filed by a party has been dismissed
on the merits
(1)(1909) 1 3 C.W.N. 1197.
592
by the High Court the,, judgment thus pronounced is binding
between the parties and it cannot be circumvented or by-
passed by his taking recourse to Art. 32 of the
Constitution. Therefore, we are not satisfied that the
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ground of alternative remedies is well founded.
We, must now proceed to state our conclusion on the
preliminary objection raised by the respondents. We hold
that if a writ petition filed by a party under Art. 226 is
considered on the merits as &-contested matter, and is
dismissed the decision thus pronounced would continue to
bind the parties unless it is otherwise modified or reversed
by appeal or other appropriate proceedings permissible under
the Constitution. It would not be open to a party to ignore
the said judgment and move this Court under Art. 32 by an
original petition made on the same facts and for obtaining
the same or similar orders or writs. If the petition filed
in the High Court under Art. 226 is dismissed not on the
merits but because of the laches of the party applying for
the writ or because it is held that the party had an
alternative remedy available to it, then the dismissal of
the writ petition would not constitute a bar to a subsequent
petition under Art. 32 except in cases where and if the
facts thus found by the High Court may themselves be
relevant even under Art. 32. If a writ petition is
dismissed in limine and an order is pronounced in that
behalf, whether or not the dismissal would constitute a bar
would depend upon the nature of the order. If the order is
on the merits it would be a bar; if the order shows that the
dismissal was for the reason that the petitioner was guilty
of laches or that he had an alternative remedy it would not
be a bar, except in cases which we have already indicated.
If the petition is dismissed in limine without passing a
speaking order then such dismissal cannot be treated as
creating a bar of res judicata. It is true that, prima
facie, dismissal in limine even without passing a speaking
order in that behalf may strongly suggest that the Court
took the view that there was no substance in the petition at
all; but in the absence of a speaking order it would not be
easy to decide
593
what factors weighed in the mind of the Court and that makes
it difficult and unsafe to hold that such a summary
dismissal is a dismissal on merits and as such constitutes a
bar of res judicata against a similar The petition filed
under Art. 32. If the petition is dismissed as withdrawn it
cannot be a bar to a subsequent Gaj petition under Art. 32,
because in such a case there has been no decision on the
merits by the Court. We wish to make it clear that the
conclusions thus reached by us are confined only to the
point of res jadirata which has been argued as a preliminary
issue in these writ petitions and no other. It is in the
light of this decision that we will now proceed to examine
the position in the six petitions before us.
In Petition No. 66 of 1956 we have already seen that the
petition filed in the High Court was on the same allegations
and was for the same relief The petitioners had moved the
High Court to obtain a writ of certiorari to quash the
decision of the Revenue Board against them, and when the
matter was argued before the High Court in view of the
previous decisions of the High Court their learned counsel
did not press the petition. In other words, the points of
law raised by the petition were dismissed on the merits.
That being so, it is a clear case where the writ petition
has been dismissed on the merits, and so the dismissal of
the writ petition creates a bar against the competence of
the present petition under Art. 32. The position with
regard to the companion petition, No. 67 of 1956, is exactly
the same. In the result these two petitions fail and are
dismissed; there would be no order as to costs.
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In Writ Petition No. 8 of 1960 the position is substantially
different. The previous petition for a writ filed by the
petitioner (No. 68 of 1952) in the Allahabad High Court was
withdrawn by his learned counsel and the High Court
therefore dismissed the said petition with the express
observation that the merits had not been considered by the
High Court in dismissing it and so no order is to costs was
passed. This order the writ petition withdrawn which was
75
594
passed on February 3, 1955, cannot therefore support the
plea of res judicata against the present petition. It
appears that a co-lessee of the petitioner had also filed a
similar Writ Petition, No. 299 of 1958. On this writ
petition the High Court no doubt made certain observations
and findings but in the end it came to the conclusion that
a writ petition was not the proper proceeding for deciding
such old disputes about title and so it left the petitioner
to obtain a declaration about title from a competent civil
or revenue court in a regular suit. Thus it would be clear
that the dismissal of this writ petition (on 17-3-1958) also
cannot constitute a bar against the competence of the
present writ petition. The preliminary objection raised
against this writ petition is therefore rejected and it is
ordered that this writ petition be set down for hearing
before a Constitution Bench.
In Petition No. 77 of 1957 the petitioner has stated in
paragraph 11 of his petition that he had moved the High
Court of Punjab by a writ petition under Arts. 226 and 227
but the same was dismissed in limine on July 14, 1957. It
is not clear from this statement whether any speaking order
was passed on the petition or not. It appears that the
petitioner further filed an application for review of the
said order under O. 47, r. 1 read with s. 151 of the Code
but the said application was also heard and dismissed in
limine on March 1, 1957. It is also not clear whether a
speaking order was passed on this application or not. That
is why, on the material as it stands it is not possible for
us to deal with the merits of the preliminary objection.
We’ would accordingly direct that the petitioner should file
the two orders of dismissal passed by the Punjab High Court.
After the said orders are filed this petition may be placed
for hearing before the Constitution Bench and the question
of res judicata may be, considered in the light of our
decision in the present group.
In Petition No. 15 of 1957 initially we had a bare recital
that the writ petition made by the petitioner in the Punjab
High Court had been dismissed. Subsequently, however, the
said order itself has been
595
produced and it appears that it gives no reasons for dis-
missal. Accordingly we must hold that the said order does
not create a bar of res judicata and so the petition will
have to be set down for hearing on the merits.
In Writ Petition No. 5 of 1958 the position is clear. The
petitioner had moved the Bombay High Court for an
appropriate writ challenging the order of the Collector in
respect of the land in question. The contentions raised by
the petitioner were examined in the light of the rejoinder
made by the Collector and substantially the petitioner’s
case was rejected. It was held by the High Court that the
power conferred on the State Government by s. 5(3) of the
impugned Act, the Bombay Service Inam (Useful to the
Community) Abolition Act, 1953, was not arbitrary nor was
its exercise in this particular case unreasonable, or
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arbitrary. The High Court also held that the land of the
petitioner attracted the relevant provisions of the said
impugned statute. Mr. Ayyangar ’for the petitioner realised
the difficulties in his way, and so he attempted to argue
that the contentions which he wanted to raise in his present
petition are put in a different form, and in support of this
argument he has invited am attention to grounds 8 and 10
framed by him in paragraph X of the petition. We are
satisfied that a change in the form of attack against the
impugned statute would make no difference to the true legal
position that the writ petition in the High Court and the
present writ petition are directed against the same statute
and the grounds raised by the petitioner in that behalf are
substantially the same. Therefore the decision of the High
Court pronounced by it on the merits of the petitioner’s
writ petition under Art. 226 is a bar to the making of the
present petition, under Art. 32. In the result this writ
petition fails and is dismissed. There would be no order as
to costs.
Petition dismissed.
596