Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
DEDH NATHU RAJA (DEAD) BY L. RS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L. ANGHA NATHU JAMAL (DEAD) BY L. RS & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/09/1969
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 300 1970 SCR (2) 434
1969 SCC (3) 813
ACT:
Practice and Procedure--States Reorganisation Act (37 of
1956), ss. 52, 57 land 59--High Court in Part B State of
Saurashtra--Appeal from Judgment to single judge to Division
Bench permissible only with certificate--Part B State merged
with State of Bombay and High Court in Part B State
abolished--Proceedings transferred to Bombay High Court-
Letters Patent, Cl. 15--Judgment of single Judge in first
appeal appealable without certificate--First appeal to High
Court in Part B State--Disposed by Single Judge of Bombay
High Court after merger--Whether appeal to Division Bench
lies without certificate.
HEADNOTE:
Under s. 22A(2) of the Saurashtra Ordinance No. 2 of
1948, an appeal lay to a Division Bench of the Saurashtra
High Court Tom a judgment of a single Judge of that High
Court in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, if the
Judge certified that the, case was a fit one for appeal.
The States Reorganisation Act, 1956, merged the Part ’B’
State of Saurashtra into the State of Bombay, abolished the
High Court of Saurashtra as from November 1, 1956, and
transferred the proceedings pending before the High Court of
Saurashtra to the High Court of Bombay. Section 52 of the
Act conferred upon the High Court of Bombay, after November
1, 1956, the original, appellate and other jurisdiction
which was exercised by the High Court of Saurashtra
immediately prior to that date in respect of the territories
in the State of Saurashtra. The Saurashtra Ordinance No. 2
of 1948 was repealed with effect from November 1. 1956. by
the Saurashtra (Adaptation of Laws on Union Subjects Order,
1957. and the Rules and orders relating to practice and
procedure framed by the High Court of Saurashtra were
abrogated as from November 1, 1956 by rules of the High
Court of Bombay made under s. 54 of the State Reorganisation
Act. 1956. The effect of s. 57 of the States Reorganisation
Act is that the powers of a Division Bench of the High Court
for the new State of Bombay shall be the same as the powers
of the Division Bench under the law in force immediately
before November 1, 1956, in the State of Bombay. Clause 15
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
of the Letters Patent of the High Court of Bombay, which was
law in force immediately before November 1. 1956, in the
State of Bombay, provides that an appeal from the judgment
of a single Judge of the Bombay High Court, in a first
appeal from a judgment of the Subordinate Court, could be
filed without a certificate of the Judge hearing the first
appeal. Clause 15 of the Letters Patent of the Bombay High
Court applied also to the Gujarat High Court which was
established as a result of the Bombay Reoganisation Act.
1960.
A first appeal against a decree of a subordinate court
in Saurashtra, pending in the Saurashtra High Court on
November 1, 1956, was transferred to the High Court of
Bombay, and disposed of by a single Judge of the Bombay High
Court. ’An appeal to the Division Bench under CI. 15 of the
Letters Patent of the High Court of Bombay, was transferred
to the Gujarat High Court after its establishment, but the
Gujarat High Court held that the appeal was incompetent
under s. 22A of the Saurashtra Ordinance No. 2. of 1948
without a certificate from the single Judge.
435
In appeal to this Court,
HELD: (1) It was only in the absence of any provision to
the contrary, that a right attached to the action when it
was commenced in the subordinate court in Saurashtra that an
appeal against the decision of the single Judge of the High
Court of Saurashtra in appeal, shall lie only if the single.
judge certified that it was a fit case for appeal to a
Division Bench.
Garikapatti Veerayya v.N. Subbiah Choudhury, [1957]
S.C.R. 488, referred to. [443 A-B].
(2) But, from November 1, 1956, the Saurashtra High
Court was abolished, the Saurashtra Ordinance No. 2 of 1948
was repealed, and the jurisdiction of the High Court of
Saurashtra was conferred upon the Bombay High Court.
Therefore, the single Judge of the High Court who heard the
first appeal, heard it not as a Judge of the Saurashtra High
Court, but as a Judge of the Bombay Court. [443 B-C]
(3) Section52 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956
does not mean that the jurisdiction conferred upon the
Bombay High Court in respect of the territories within the
State of Saurashtra was to be regulated with reference to
the law which was in force on November 1, 1956 in
Saurashtra. Therefore, it does not incorporate either
expressly or by implication the limitations prescribed by s.
22A(2) of the Saurashtra Ordinance into the Letters Patent
of the High Court. [443 G-H; 444 C-D]
(4) Since the restriction placed by s. 22A of the
Ordinance applied only to a judgment of a single Judge of
the High Court of Saurashtra and could not apply to a
judgment of a single-Judge of the Bombay High Court, and
could not operate to restrict a right of appeal exercisable
under CI. 15’ of the Letters Patent, the judgment of the
single Judge of the Bombay High Court was, under s. 57 of
the States Reorganisation Act, subject to appeal to a
Division Bench without a certificate of the single Judge.
[443 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1456 of1966.
Appeal from the judgment ,and order dated April 6, 1964
of the Gujarat High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 8 of
1960.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
D.U. Shah, P.C. Bhartari and J.B. Dadachanji, for the’
appellants.
S.K. Dholakis and Vineet Kumar, for respondents Nos. 1
(a) to 1(e)and (g).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J.---The facts which give rise to these appeal are
few and simple. The appellant commenced on May 3, 1951 an
action in the Court of the Assistant Judge, Morvi, in the
former Part ’B’ State of Saurashtra for a decree for Rs.
9,387/5/- against one L. Angha Nathu Jamal and respondents 2
& 3 in this appeal. The Trial Court decreed the suit on
October 17, 1955. An appeal was filed against the decree in
the High Court of Saurashtra at Rajkot. On November 1,
1956, the High Court of Saurashtra was abolished and the
proceedings pending in that Court stood’ transferred to the
High Court of Bombay. On February 21,.
436
1958, Vyas, J., of the High Court of Bombay allowed the
appeal. Against that order an appeal under C1. 15 of the
Letters Patent of the High Court of Bombay was filed by the
plaintiff but without an order of Vyas, J. certifying that
the case was fit for appeal to a Division Bench of the High
Court. On May 1, 1960 under the Bombay Reorganisation Act
1960, the appeal stood transferred to the High Court of
Gujarat. The High Court of Gujarat held that the appeal was
incompetent in the absence of an order under S. 22A of the
Saurashtra Ordinance 2 of 1948 certifying that the case was
fit for appeal to a Division Bench. With certificate
granted by the High Court of Gujarat this appeal has been
preferred.
The Rulers of Indian States in Kathiawar agreed "to
unite and integrate" their territories in one State to be
styled the United State of Saurashtra with a common
executive, legislature and judiciary. By Ordinance 1 of
1948 the administration of the covenanting States was
taken over by the Rajpramukh. The Rajpramukh issued,
in exercise of power reserved to him by Art. 9 el. (3) of
the Covenant, Ordinance 2 of 1948 setting up with effect
from February 29, 1948, a High Court of Judicature for the
State of Saurashtra. The expression "High Court" was
defined in s. 3(c) as meaning "the High Court established
and constituted by this Ordinance and functioning as the
High Court of the Saurashtra State. By s. 21 the High Court
was to be the highest Court of appeal and revision in the
State and to have jurisdiction to maintain and dispose of
such appeals, revision and other cases, civil or criminal,
as it may be empowered to do under the Ordinance or any
enactment in force in the State. By s. 22 the High Court
was also to be a Court of reference with power to hear,
revise and determine all eases referred to it. By Ordinance
5 of 1950 s. 22A was added: it vas provided thereby:
"( 1 ) Except as otherwise provided by any
enactment for the time being in force, an
appeal from any original decree, or from any.
order against which an appeal is permitted by
any law for the time being in force, or from
any order under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India, made by a single Judge
of the High Court, shall lie to a Bench
consisting of two other Judges of the High
Court.
(2) An appeal shall lie from a judgment of
one Judge of the High Court in respect of a
decree or order made in exercise of Appellate;
Jurisdiction to a Bench consisting of two
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
other Judges of the High Court if the Judge
who made the decree or order certifies that
the case is a fit one for appeal:"
437
Under the Constitution of India, the territory of
the United State of Saurashtra was formed into a Part ’B’
State of Saurashtra. By the States Reorganisation Act 1956
the territory of the State of Saurashtra merged into the
State of Bombay.
By s. 49 of the States Reorganization Act, 1956, it was
enacted that the High Court exercising immediately before
the appointed day, jurisdiction in relation to the existing
State of Bombay shall, as from the appointed day, be deemed
to be the High Court for the new State of Bombay. By s.
50(1) as from the appointed day, the High Courts of all the
existing Part B States (with certain exceptions not
material) were to cease to function and were abolished.
By section 52 was provided:
"The High Court for a new State shall
have, in respect of any part of the
territories included in that new State, all
such original, appellate and other
jurisdiction as, under the law in force
immediately before the appointed
day, is
exercisable in respect of that part of the
said territories by any High Court or Judicial
Commissioner’s Court for an existing State".
By s. 54 it was provided:
"Subject to the provisions of this Part,
the law in force immediately before the
appointed day with respect to practice and
procedure in the High Court for the
corresponding State shall, with the necessary
modifications, apply in relation to the High
Court for a new State, and accordingly, the
High Court for the new State shall have all
such powers to make rules ’and orders with
respect to practice and procedure as are,
immediately, before the appointed day,
exercisable by the High Court, for the
corresponding State:
Provided that any rules or orders which
are in force immediately before the appointed
day with respect to practice and procedure in
the High Court for the corresponding State
shall, until varied or revoked by rules or
orders made by the High Court for a new State,
apply with the necessary modifications in
relation to practice and procedure in the High
Court for the new State as if made by that
Court".
Section 59(3) provided that all proceedings pending in
the High Court of Saurashtra or in the Court of the Judicial
Commissioner for Kutch immediately before the appointed day
shall stand transferred to the High Court of Bombay. By s.
119 it was provided:
"The provisions of Part II shall not
be deemed to have effected any change in the
territories to which any
L2Sup .CI/70--6
438
law in force immediately before the
appointed day extends or applies, and
territorial references in any such law to an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
existing State shall, until otherwise provided
by a competent Legislature or other competent
authority, be construed as meaning the
territories within that State immediately
before the appointed day."
Section 127 provided:
"The provisions of this Act shall have
effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent
therewith contained in any other law."
In exercise of the power conferred upon the Central
Government by s. 120 of the States Reorganisation Act,
1956, the Saurashtra (Adaptation of Laws on Union Subjects)
Order, 1957, was promulgated by the Central Govt. By cl. 3
of the order it was provided that Saurashtra Ordinance 2 of
1948 shall stand repealed with effect from November 1,
1956. The High Court of Bombay for the new State added rr.
252-A and 252-B to the Rules of the High Court of Judicature
at Bombay, Appellate Side, 1950. By r. 252-A it was
provided:
"Rules and orders relating to. practice
and procedure in the High Court in force
immediately prior to the appointed day in the
High Court of Bombay shall, subject to.
modifications made from time to time thereto,
apply to the practice and procedure in the
High Court."
Rule 252-B provided:
"Rules and orders relating to practice and
procedure in the High Court framed by the
High Courts of Nagpur, Hyderabad and
Saurashtra and Judicial Commissioner’s Court,
Kutch, shall stand abrogated as from the 1st
November 1956 in the areas of the new State of
Bombay which before the 1st November 1956 were
parts of the States of Madhya Pradesh,
Hyderabad, Saurashtra and-Kutch."
The High Court of Gujarat held that the appeal filed by
the respondents in the High Court of Saurashtra against the
judgment of the Assistant Judge, was and continued to remain
subject to the provisions of s. 22A of Saurashtra Ordinance
2 of 1948 and an appeal could lie against the decision of
Vyas J., only if he certified that the case was fit for
appeal to a Division Bench. Clause 15 of the Letters Patent
of the Bombay High Court provided:
"And we do further ordain that an appeal
shall lie to the said High Court of
Judicature at Fort William in Bengal from
the judgment (not being a judgment passed
in the exercise of appellate jurisdiction in
respect of a
439
decree or order made in the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction by a Court subject to
the superintendence of the said High Court,
and not being an order made in the exercise of
revisional jurisdiction and not being a
sentence or order passed or made in the
exercise of the power of superintendence under
the provisions of s. 107 of the Government of
India Act or in the exercise of criminal
jurisdiction) of one Judge of the said High
Court or one Judge of any Division Court,
pursuant to section 108 of the Government of
India ACt, and that notwithstanding anything
hereinbefore provided an appeal shall lie to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
the said High Court from a judgment of one
Judge of the said High Court or one Judge of
any Division Court, pursuant to section 108 of
the Government of India Act made on or after
the; first day of February 1929) in the
exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect
of a decree or order made in the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction by a Court subject to
the superintendence of the said High Court,
where the Judge who passed the judgment
declares that the same is a fit one for
appeal; but .. .. .right of appeal from other
judgments of Judges of the said High Court or
of such Division Court shall be to Us, Our
Heirs or Succes-SOTS. "
By cl. 15 of the Letters Patent a judgment in an appeal from
a civil suit by a single Judge of the High Court of
Bombay is subject to appeal to a Division Bench except when
the order is made in exercise of the revisional jurisdiction
of the Court or in second appeal, or in exercise of
criminal jurisdiction, or in exercise of power of
superintendence under s. 107 of the Government of India Act,
1935 (Art. 227 of the Constitution). Vyas, J, decided the
appeal sitting as a Judge of the High Court of Bombay.
Prima facie, his judgment delivered in a first appeal from
a judgment of the subordinate court was subject to appeal 0
a Division Bench of the High Court of Bombay.
There was clearly an inconsistency between s. 22A of the
Saurashtra Ordinance 2 of 1948, and cl. 15 of the Letters
Patent of the High Court of Bombay. By virtue of s. 22A(2)
an appeal lay to a Division Bench of the Saurashtra High
Court from a judgment of one Judge "in respect of a decree
or order made in exercise of Appellate Jurisdiction when the
Judge who made the decree or order certified that the case
is a fit one. for appeal". The Legislature made no
distinction between a first appeal, a second appeal, an
appeal from order land an application in exercise of
revisional jurisdiction. But an appeal under cl. 15 of the
440
Letters Patent of the High Court of Bombay in be appeal from
filed without the judgment of the Court of First Instance
could a certificate of the Judge hearing the appeal.
The right to appeal from a decree or order is a
substantive right. As a corollary thereto, the right to
maintain a decree of a Court without interference by a
superior Court and subject only to the limitation therein is
also a vested right and may be taken away by express
enactment or clear implication of the amending statute. In
Colonial Sugar Refining Company v. Irving(x) the Judicial
Committee held that a provision which deprives a suitor in a
pending action of an appeal to a superior tribunal which
belonged to him as of right does not regulate procedure.
The Australian Commonwealth Judiciary Act, 1903, came into
force on August 25, 1903. Against the judgment of the
Supreme Court of Queens land in an action commenced on Act.
25, 1902, an application was made for leave to appeal to the
Judicial Committee and leave was granted on September 4,
1903. At the hearing of the appeal by the Judicial
Committee the respondents applied that the appeal from the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Queensland be dismissed on
the ground that the power of the Court below to give leave
to ,appeal stood abrogated by s. 39 of the Australian
Commonwealth Judiciary Act, 1903. The application was
rejected by the Judicial Committee. Lord Macnaghten
observed:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
As regards the general principles
applicable to the case there was no
controversy. On the one hand it was not
disputed that if the matter in question be a
matter of procedure only, the petition (to
dismiss) is well founded. On the other
hand, if it be more than a matter of
procedure, if it touches a right in existence
at the passing of the Judiciary Act, it was
conceded that in accordance with a long
line of authorities from the time of Lord
Coke to the present day the appellants (the
Sugar Co.) would be entitled to succeed.
The Judiciary Act is not retrospective by
express enactment or by necessary
intendment. And therefore, the only question
is, was the appeal to His Majesty in
Council a right vested in the appellants at
the date of the passing of the Act, or was
it a mere matter of procedure ? .It seems to
their Lordships that the question does not
admit of doubt. To deprive. a sui
tor in a
pending action of an appeal to a superior
tribunal which belonged to him as of right is
a very different thing from regulating
procedure".
(1) [1905] A.C. 369.
441
In Garikapatti Veeraya v.N. Subbiah ChoudhurY(1), this Court
accepted the principle in Colonial Sugar Refining
Company’s case(2). In the absence of any provision to the
contrary, there- fore, a right attached to the action when
it was commenced in 1951, that an appeal against the
decision of a single Judge of the High Court of Saurashtra
shall lie only if the Judge deciding the case certified the
case to be a fit one for appeal. But the Saurashtra High
Court was abolished from November 1, 1956 and the
jurisdiction of the Saurashtra High Court was conferred upon
the Bombay High Court. The case was tried by Vyas, J., not
as a Judge of the Saurashtra High Court but as a Judge of
the High Court of Bombay. In terms the restriction placed
by s. 22A applies to a judgment of one of the Judges of the
High Court of Saurashtra: it does not apply to a judgment of
a Judge of the High Court of Bombay. Once the Saurashtra
Ordinance 2 of 1948 was repealed and the jurisdiction to try
the appeal was conferred upon the High’ Court of Bombay,
the right of appeal exercisable by the parties to the
litigation decided by the High Court of Bombay was governed
by the Letters Patent of that court had not by s. 22A of the
Saurashtra Ordinance 2 of 1948. Granting that the incident
prescribed by s. 22A continued to attach to the action, in
terms s. 22A of the Saurashtra Ordinance could not operate
to restrict a right of appeal exercisable by cl. 15 of the
Letters Patent governing the judgments of the Judges of
the High Court of Bombay. The expression "Judge of the High
Court" in s. 22A of the ordinance for the’ purpose of
giving effect to the rule in Colonial Sugar Refining
Company’s case(2) cannot be read as meaning a Judge of the
High Court of Bombay. By the clearest implication of
the repeal by the Saurashtra (Adaptation of Laws on Union
subjects) Order, 1957, promulgated by the Central Government
and by the application of cl. 15 of the Letters Patent of
the Bombay High Court, the judgment of Vyas, J., was subject
to appeal to a Division Bench without an order of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
Learned judge certifying the case to be fit for appeal.
In support of his submission counsel for the respondents
relied upon the terms of s. 52 of the States Reorganisation
Act, 1956. But that section only confers upon the High Court
of Bombay after November 1, 1956 the original, appellate and
other jurisdiction, which was exercisable by the High Court
of Saurashtra immediately prior to November 1, 1956, in
respect of the territories within the State of Saurashtra.
The section does not incorporate either expressly or by
implication the limitations prescribed by s. 22A(2) of
Saurashtra Ordinance 2 of 1948 into the Letters Patent of
the High Court of Bombay. The jurisdiction--original,
appellate and other--which the High Court of Saurashtra
could exercise prior to November 1, 1956, survived to the
High Court
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 488.
(2)[1905] A.C.360.
442
of Bombay in respect of the territories of the State of
Saurashtra, and the appeal filed by the respondent before
the High Court of Saurashtra was triable in the exercise of
the appellate jurisdiction of the High Court of Bombay,
after the case stood transferred to that Court by virtue of
sub-s. (3) of s. 59 of the States Reorganization Act, 1956.
Vyas, J., functioned as a Judge of the High Court of Bombay
and his judgments in first appeals were, in the absence of
an express provision to the contrary, subject to appeal
under cl. 15 of the Letters Patent to a Division Bench
without a certificate.
The High Court of Gujarat was right in holding that in
respect of the areas of the former Saurashtra State, the
High Court Bombay acquired the same jurisdiction which
the High Court of Saurashtra possessed. That however, does
not mean that the jurisdiction was to be regulated "with
reference to the law which was in force on the appointed day
i.e. November 1, 1956". Section 52 of the States
Reorganisation Act preserved the original, appellate and
other jurisdiction as under the law in force immediately
before the appointed day exercisable in respect of the
territories within the State of Saurashtra. Unless in the
exercise that jurisdiction any restriction under the law
then in force was by express provision or by clear
implication preserved, the provisions of cl. 15 of the
Letters Patent must apply.
It is necessary to recall the provisions of s. 57 of the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956, which provide that the law
in force immediately before the appointed day relating to
the powers of the Chief Justice, single Judges and division
courts of the High Court for the corresponding State and
with respect to matters ancillary to the exercise of the
powers shall, with the necessary modification, apply in
relation to the High Court for a new State. Immediately
before November 1, 1956, against the judgment of a single
Judge of the High Court of Bombay exercising power in a
first appeal, an appeal lay to a Division Bench without a
certificate. The power of a Division Bench to entertain an
appeal continued to remain exercisable by the Judges of the
Bombay High Court when dealing with cases transferred under
s. 59(3) to the Bombay High Court from the Saurashtra High
Court. In terms s. 57 provides that powers of the Division
Bench of the High Court for the corresponding State i.e. the
new State of Bombay shall be the same as the powers of the
Division Bench under the law in force immediately before the
appointed day in the State of Bombay. A Division Bench of
the High Court of BOmbay was competent to entertain an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
appeal against the judgment of a single Judge deciding a
first appeal from the decision of a subordinate court
without a certificate of the Judge deciding the appeal.
443
The High Court of Gujarat have made a distinction
between ’power" and "jurisdiction", and they have held that
when s. 52 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, enacts
that the appellate jurisdiction of the High Court of Bombay
for the new State of Bombay shall in relation to the
Saurashtra area be the same as the jurisdiction which the
Saurashtra High Court possessed, it is meant that the High
Court of Bombay has the same jurisdiction which the High
Court of Saurashtra originally had, and in exercise of that
jurisdiction is subject to the same limitations which the
High Court of Saurashtra was subject. We are unable to
agree with that view. Section 52 of the States
Reorganization Act, 1956, does not say so, and s. 57 of that
Act provides to the contrary.
The High Court of Gujarat was also of the view that s.
52 of the States Reorganisation Act, 1956 "crystalizes the
law" only with respect to the territorial jurisdiction of
each of the areas comprised in the High Court of Bombay, and
if the Legislature extended the jurisdiction of the High
Court of Bombay and also retained the jurisdiction which the
abolished High Court possessed, the result would be "odd and
conflicting"--there being conflict of jurisdiction. But
that, in our judgment, is a ground for holding that the
jurisdiction of the Bombay High Court superseded in case of
conflict, the restrictions on the exercise of jurisdiction
by the original High Court qua the Saurashtra territory, and
not that the jurisdiction of the High Court of Bombay was
because of some unexpressed limitation restricted.
The High Court of Gujarat recognised that the conclusion
to which they had reached revealed a defect in the
administration of justice. They observed:
"The Legislature may have had a good
reason for preserving in tact the old
jurisdiction of the Saurashtra High Court in
regard to pending cases. However, our
conclusion affects cases instituted after the
Reorganisation Act came into force. In our
judgment, there is no reason why the litigants
from the Saurashtra and Kutch areas should now
be treated on a different footing from the
litigants in the old Bombay area. In our
judgment, the rights of appeal of litigants in
all the areas should now be placed on the same
footing. live would recommend to the
authorities concerned to examine
this question and, if so advised, to undertake
the necessary legislation so as to confer the
same rights of appeal to the litigants from
the Saurashtra & Kutch areas as are given to
the litigants from the rest of the State of
Gujarat."
444
In our view the conclusion that the restriction on the "old
jurisdiction of the Saurashtra High Court" in regard to.
pending cases was preserved by s. 52 is erroneous. _ The
States Reorganisation Act, 1956 does not purport to.
preserve the restrictions upon the exercise of jurisdiction,
and no implication arises from the use of the expression
"original, appellate and other jurisdiction as under the law
in force immediately before the appointed day", that the
limitations upon the exercise of the jurisdiction which
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
were existing prior to November 1, 1956, notwithstanding the
provisions of s. 57 of the States Reorganisation Act were
preserved.
The order passed by the High Court of Gujarat is set
aside, and the case is remanded to the High Court to be re-
entered under the original number and to be heard and
disposed of according to law. Costs wilt be costs in the
High Court.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed and case remanded.
445