Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3185 of 2006
PETITIONER:
FIRDOUS OMER (D) BY LRS. & ORS
RESPONDENT:
BANKIM CHANDRA DAW (D) BY LRS.& Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/07/2006
BENCH:
S.B. SINHA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(ARISING OUT OF S.L.P. (C) NO.13231 OF 2003)
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
Leave granted.
1. The original plaintiff, Sheikh Mohammad Omer,
the predecessor-in-interest of the appellants herein, filed
the suit C.S. No.145 of 1983 in the High Court of Calcutta
praying for a declaration that he was a valid and lawful
tenant in respect of the plaint schedule premises and
indicated in the plan annexed to the plaint, for a perpetual
injunction restraining the defendants, the owner and
those who were claiming under or through him from the
interfering with his possession of the premises and for
other consequential reliefs. The case of the plaintiff was
that he had taken the suit premises on lease for being
enjoyed along with the adjacent premises belonging to him
and that on the expiry of the term of the lease which was
for 25 years, the plaintiff continued to be a tenant from
month to month and the owner and those claiming under
or through him, were not entitled to interfere with his
right as a tenant. The defendants, the owner and those
claiming under or through him, resisted the suit by
denying the claim of the plaintiff that he was a tenant from
month to month and setting up a plea that on the expiry
of the term of the lease relied on by the plaintiff, the
plaintiff had abandoned the premises, the owner had
taken possession of it and there was no subsisting
tenancy in his favour as claimed by the plaintiff.
2. Pending suit, the plaintiff died and his legal
representatives were brought on record as additional
plaintiffs 1(a) to 1(e). The owner, defendant No.1 also died
and his legal representatives were also brought on record.
3. For about 15 long years, it seems that the suit
was not even listed. On 21.7.1999, the suit appeared in
the scrutiny list of the Master under the Rules of the
Original Side of the Calcutta High Court. No one appeared
on behalf of the additional plaintiffs. The Master
adjourned the suit to another date in the same month.
On 29.7.1999, the suit again appeared before the Master
in the scrutiny list. Again, there was no representation on
behalf of the plaintiffs. The Master therefore directed that
the suit be posted before the trial judge in the special list
in terms of Rule 35 of Chapter X of the Original Side
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Rules.
4. Thus, the suit appeared in the special list of the
Judge trying the cause on 30.8.1999. In spite of repeated
calls, none appeared on behalf of the plaintiffs. The suit
was hence dismissed for non prosecution in terms of Rule
35 of Chapter X of the Original Side Rules. For
convenience, the said Rule can be set down hereunder:
"35. Disposal of suits for want of prosecution.
Suits and proceedings which have not appeared
in the Prospective List or in the Warning List or
Peremptory List within six months from the date
of institution, may be placed before a Judge in
Chambers, on notice to the parties or their
Advocates acting on the Original Side, to be
dismissed for default, unless good cause is
shown to the contrary, or be otherwise dealt
with as the Judge may think proper."
Thus, the suit stood dismissed for default on 30.8.1999.
5. It is said that on 7.9.1999, the order of dismissal
was drawn up, completed and filed. On 7.12.1999, the
plaintiffs filed an application for restoration of the suit,
after condoning the delay, if any, in making the
application. The said application did not indicate under
what provision the same was being filed. It was pleaded
that there was no latches on the part of the plaintiffs and
the suit happened to be dismissed for default under
unfortunate circumstances. The delay had occurred
because the plaintiffs were not made aware of the
dismissal. The said application was opposed by the
respondents to that application. It was contended that the
application was not maintainable. The application was
belated and that the trial Judge had become functus
officio since the order of dismissal had attained finality by
the same being drawn up, completed and filed on
7.9.1999 and that even otherwise, there was no ground
made out for restoration of the suit dismissed for default.
The learned trial judge took the view that in view of the
decision of the Division Bench of the High Court in M/s
Nanalal M. Varma and Co. (Gunnies) P. LTD. Vs.
Gordhandas Jerambhai & Ors. [AIR 1965 CALCUTTA
547], the suit dismissed for default under Rule 35 of
Chapter X of the Original Side Rules could not be restored
to file once the order had been drawn up, completed and
filed. Though the learned judge was inclined to condone
the latches on the part of the plaintiffs, he felt bound by
the decision and the practice followed in that court and
hence dismissed the application as not maintainable,
without going to the merits of the application. The
plaintiffs have approached this Hon’ble Court with this
Petition for Special Leave to Appeal challenging that order
of the learned Single Judge of the High Court.
6. Before proceeding to consider the contentions
raised, one aspect requires to be noticed. It is seen that
on 20.7.2002, when the application for restoration was
pending, petitioner No. 1(e) therein, plaintiff 1(e), S.M. Naqi,
one of the legal representatives of the deceased original
plaintiff, died. The surviving petitioners in the application,
the other legal representatives of the original plaintiff, did
not take steps to bring on record the legal representatives
of the said petitioner S.M. Naqi. Even in this Court, the
additional plaintiffs or the petitioners in the Petition for
Special Leave to Appeal, purported to implead that Naqi as
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Respondent No.11 as if he were alive. It may be noted that
the order rejecting the application filed by the plaintiffs
was made by the High Court on 2.7.2003 and the petition
for special leave to appeal was filed on 17.7.2003, both
after the death of S.M. Naqi, one of the legal
representatives of the original plaintiff and petitioner No.
1(e) in the application for restoration of the suit. In this
Court, an attempt was made by the petitioners to bring on
record the legal representatives of the S.M. Naqi as if the
death of Naqi occurred during the pendency of the petition
for special leave to appeal.
7. In this context, learned counsel for the
respondents raised a preliminary objection to the hearing
of the appeal on merits. He contended that the dismissal
of the suit for default has become final as against S.M.
Naqi, one of the legal representatives of the deceased
original plaintiff, since he died pending the application for
restoration of the suit and his legal representatives were
not brought on record and in view of this, this court
cannot proceed to allow the appeal and restore the suit,
even if it were possible, since it would give rise to
inconsistent decrees in the suit, one of dismissal of the
suit against Naqi, which has become final and the other, a
restoration of the suit in favour of the other legal
representatives of the original plaintiff and the re-opening
of the suit. Learned counsel contended that such re-
opening of the suit qua the surviving plaintiffs would only
be an exercise in futility since the Court cannot pass a
decree inconsistent with the decree of dismissal, that has
become final as against Naqi. Learned counsel relied on
the leading case in State of Punjab vs. Nathu Ram
[(1962) 2 S.C.R. 636] in support. Learned counsel for the
plaintiffs could not give any effective answer to this
submission on behalf of the defendants. The contention
that the other legal representatives substantially represented
the estate of the original plaintiff cannot take the appellants
far. The question is not whether the estate of the original
plaintiff is substantially represented or not, the question is,
what is the consequence of the death of one of the legal
representatives of the original plaintiff pending the application
for restoration of the suit that stood dismissed. The decree of
dismissal as against that legal representative has become
final. Therefore, the court cannot pass an inconsistent decree
in the same suit by granting a decree to the other legal
representatives. This is the position adopted by this Court in
the decision relied on by the learned counsel for the
respondents and followed subsequently by this Court in Ram
Sarup Vs. Munshi & Ors. [(1963) 3 SCR 858]. Thus, the
preliminary objection has to be upheld and it has to be held
that the relief of re-opening the suit cannot be granted to the
appellants since its dismissal has become final as against
S.M. Naqi, one of the legal representatives of the original
plaintiff.
8. Learned counsel for the respondents also raised
the contention that according to the decisions of the
Calcutta High Court and the practice followed in that
Court, a dismissal of the suit under Rule 35 of Chapter X
of the Original Side Rules amounts a judgment and it was
appealable under clause 15 of the Letters Patent. Hence
an appeal therefrom would lie before the Division Bench of
the High Court. He also raised an alternative contention
that if the application for restoration of the suit is treated
as one under Order IX Rule 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
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then again, an appeal would lie to a Division Bench of the
High Court under Order XLIII Rule 1(c) of Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908. He therefore submitted that in any event, a
direct approach to this Court was not permissible. Though,
there may be some force in these contentions as well, we do
not want to go into that question for the purpose of this case,
especially in the context of what we have said earlier.
9. The question that arises for consideration is
whether an application for restoration of the suit
dismissed under Rule 35 of Chapter X of the Original Side
Rules of the Calcutta High Court is maintainable and if it
is maintainable whether an application could be
entertained only if it is filed before the order dismissing
the suit is drawn up, completed and filed. The question
whether the power under Section 5 of the Limitation Act
could not be exercised by the Court in an appropriate
case, and what is the effect of exercise of that power, also
arises. In M/s Nanalal M. Varma and Co. (Gunnies) P.
LTD. Vs. Gordhandas Jerambhai & Ors. (supra), the
Calcutta High Court held that when a suit is dismissed
under Rule 35 of Chapter X of the Original Side Rules,
when neither party appeared before the judge, the suit
was not called on for hearing and hence Order IX Rule 3 of
the Code did not apply. The Division Bench also held that
when the order dismissing the suit had been drawn up,
completed and filed, the jurisdiction of the Court came to
an end and thereafter the trial judge, had no power to
reconsider the matter on the application made by the
plaintiff to set aside the order dismissing the suit. The
Division Bench also held, relying on an earlier decision of
that Court in Udoychand vs. Khetsidas [28 Calcutta
Weekly Notes 916], that an order dismissing the suit for
want of prosecution when it is placed before the trial judge
under Rule 35 of Chapter X of the Original Side Rules,
was a ’judgment’ within the meaning of clause 15 of the
Letters Patent and was hence appealable. This view of the
Calcutta High Court had been followed in The
Administrative General of West Bengal Vs. Kumar
Purnendu Nath Tagore [AIR 1970 CALCUTTA 231],
wherein the Court reiterated, that a suit dismissed on the
original side for non prosecution, could not be restored
under Order 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure even if an
application for restoration is made within time. The Court also
reiterated that when an Order dismissing the suit for non-
prosecution is drawn up, signed and perfected, the
concerned court had no power to recall that order. But
the court held that the power under Order XLVII Rule 1 of
the Code could be exercised in an appropriate case and
the suit could be restored by reviewing the dismissal. The
same view was adopted in a subsequent decision short-
noted in Sethia Mining Manufacturing Corporation Ltd.
Vs. Khas Dharamband Colliery Co. Ltd. [AIR 1979 NOC
163 (CAL.]
10. Keeping out for the moment, the Rules of the
Original Side of the Calcutta High Court or the practice
followed in that Court, it appears to us that it was a case
where the suit was dismissed for default or for non-
prosecution. Such a dismissal, no doubt, was on the
basis that the suit was placed before a Judge trying the
cause under Rule 35 of Chapter X of the Original Side
Rules. But the dismissal still remains a dismissal for
default of the plaintiff. It could be a dismissal under Rule
3 of Order IX, if both sides were not present when the suit
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was called on for hearing or it could be a dismissal under
Rule 8 of Order IX, if the defendant alone appeared and
the plaintiff did not appear. In either case, the plaintiff
could apply either under Rule 4 or under Rule 9 of Order
IX of the Code for restoration of the suit, on showing
sufficient cause for non-appearance. The application, no
doubt, had to be made within the period prescribed
therefor under the Limitation Act, which is 30 days from
the date of dismissal, under Article 122 of the Limitation
Act, 1963. Apparently, under the practice followed in the
Calcutta High Court on the Original Side, the order is
drawn up, completed and filed after the expiry of 30 days
from the date of the order. Section 5 of the Limitation Act
of 1908 proprio vigore did not apply to proceedings under
Order IX of the Code of Civil Procedure and the decision of
the Calcutta High Court in M/s Nanalal M. Varma and Co.
(Gunnies) P. LTD. Vs. Gordhandas Jerambhai & Ors.
(supra) dealt with a case which arose when the 1908 Act was
in force and Section 5 of the Limitation Act was not applicable.
But after the enactment of the Limitation Act, 1963, Section 5
has application to all applications other than an application
under Order XXI of the Code of Civil Procedure subject to any
special law. That means that time for filing an application
under Rule 4 or under Rule 9 of Order IX of the Code, or
under any other provision, unless excluded, could be extended
if sufficient cause is made out therefor. Therefore, the fact
that on the expiry of 30 days from the date of the order, the
order was drawn up, completed and filed, would not make
the court concerned functus officio since that court in an
appropriate case can exercise its jurisdiction under Section 5
of the Limitation Act and extend the time for filing the
application under Rule 9 or Rule 4 of Order IX of the Code.
Thus, it appears to us that in view of the applicability of
Section 5 of the Limitation Act, to proceedings under Order IX
of the Code, the position adopted in M/s Nanalal M. Varma
and Co. (Gunnies) P. LTD. Vs. Gordhandas Jerambhai &
Ors. (supra) and followed subsequently by the Calcutta High
Court cannot now be adopted.
11. After all, a dismissal of the suit for non-
prosecution or for non-appearance of the plaintiff is not a
decree as specified by the Section 2(2) of the Code itself.
Hence it is not appealable as a decree. Of course, the
Calcutta High Court seems to have taken the view that the
order of dismissal would amount to a judgment and hence
appealable under clause 15 of the Letters Patent. We do
not think it necessary to decide for the purpose of this
case, whether dismissal of a suit for default on the part of
the plaintiff would amount to a judgment within the
meaning of clause 15 of the Letters Patent. We leave that
question open for the present.
12. We also feel that the view of the Calcutta High
Court, no doubt, backed by the procedure followed in that
court and the practice of that court that once the order of
dismissal is drawn up, completed and filed, the court loses
its power to restore the suit in an appropriate case, seems
to deprive the court of a power which every court has, of
restoring a suit so as to enable the parties to contest the
same on merits. It is even possible to argue, that the
power to dismiss a suit for default, carries with it the
power to restore that suit. That apart, in view of the
power available under Section 5 of the Limitation Act to
extend the period of limitation for making an application
for restoration of the suit, the rigid view adopted cannot be
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said to survive. May be, the view that the order was a
judgment and it was appealable under clause 15 of the
Letters Patent, also induced the theory of the trial judge
becoming functus officio on the order of dismissal being
drawn up, completed and filed. After all, law of procedure
is the handmaid of justice and Rule 35 of Chapter X of the
Original Side Rules itself must be taken to confer a power
on the trial judge to restore a suit which he had dismissed
for default if sufficient cause in that behalf is shown
especially in the context of Section 5 of the Limitation Act,
1963. The fact that the records have been consigned to
the record room cannot interfere with the power of the
court to do justice in a cause. We are therefore inclined to
hold that the position adopted by the Calcutta High Court
that on the expiry of the 30 days from the date of
dismissal of a suit for default and on the order of
dismissal being drawn up, completed and filed, the court
becomes functus officio is not sustainable.
13. Coming back to the case on hand, since we find
that in case we were to allow this appeal and restore the
suit, that will result in an order inconsistent with the
order dismissing the suit as against S.M. Naqi, one of the
legal representatives of the deceased original plaintiff,
which has become final, we are unable to grant the
appellants any relief. Thus, we decline to interfere with
the decision of the High Court. We may also notice that
the appellants have not acted bona fide in impleading the
deceased co-plaintiff as a respondent in the Petition for
Special Leave to Appeal as if he were alive and then
seeking to bring on record his legal representatives in this
Court.
14. Thus, though on law, we are inclined to disagree
with the High Court that the suit could not be restored, we
decline to interfere with its decision for the reason
mentioned above. We dismiss the appeal. In the
circumstances, we make no order as to costs.