Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2874 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Government of Karnataka & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Smt. Gowramma and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/12/2007
BENCH:
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT & P. SATHASIVAM
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dr. ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
1. Heard learned counsel for the parties.
2. Challenge in this appeal is to the judgment of a learned
Single Judge of the Karnataka High Court allowing the appeal
filed by the respondents.
3. Plaintiffs, who are the respondents in the present appeal
filed a Suit for recovery of a sum of Rs.1,47,965.20 on the
ground that being owners of the Trees which were transported
to the Government godown on the basis of the permission
granted by the present appellants, the value of the Trees has
to be paid by the government.
4. The case of the plaintiff, as culled out from the
averments in the plaint is that they are the owners of the
suit schedule property. The plaintiffs and their predecessor
had drown silver wood, jungle wood and other varieties of
trees in the schedule land by spending lot of money and had
cultivated the said land with coffee crop. In order to
regulate the shade in the schedule property and also for
cutting and felling of silver wood, jungle wood and other
trees, the plaintiffs had applied for permission for cutting and
felling of the silver wood, jungle wood and other trees. Before
granting the felling permission of the said trees, a joint survey
was carried out by the forest authorities as well as the
revenue surveyors. Thereafter, the second defendant granted
permission for felling of the trees situated in the schedule
properties. In terms of the permission, the plaintiffs cut and
felled the trees. While issuing the transport permit to the
plaintiffs, the second defendant had directed issuance of
transport permit for a portion of the trees and ordered to
transfer 1050 CFT of timber valued at Rs.1,31,250/- to an
earmarked forest depot. The firewood of 22-1/2 meters valued
at Rs.10,000/- was also transported to the same depot.
Therefore, the claim was made that the plaintiffs are entitled
to the value of the Timber @ Rs.125/- per CFT and At
Rs.150/- per CFT at the prevailing rates. Defendants took the
stand that the permission was conditional and there was
never any challenge to the conditional permission granted.
After having accepted the permission with the conditions
stipulated, it was not open to the plaintiffs to lay a claim for
the value of the trees. The Trial Judge dismissed the Suit,
inter alia, holding that in the absence of a challenge to the
conditional permission, there was no question of the plaintiff’s
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
making a claim for value of the timber transported.
5. An appeal was filed before the High Court, which, by the
impugned judgment, accepted the stand of the plaintiffs. For
granting relief to the plaintiffs, i.e. the present respondents,
reliance was placed on certain judgments of the High Court
where it was held that in respect of reserved trees, the
ownership was not with the Government but was with the
owner of the land. Accordingly, as noted above, the appeal was
allowed.
6. In support of the appeal, learned counsel for the
appellant-State submitted that the grant of permission was
governed by the Karnataka Preservation of Trees Act, 1976 (in
short \021the Act’). Permission is required for felling of all trees
irrespective of whether they are situated in private or in
government land. The permission undisputedly is subject to
the stipulated conditions. There is a provision for preferring an
appeal in case of refusal to grant permission. The permission
was granted on 30.3.1999 and there was a specific condition
which stipulated that 27 trees of a particular variety which are
reserved trees are to be transported to the Government Nata
Warehouse after felling. There was no challenge to the order in
this regard. Since the conditions were not challenged, the High
Court should not have granted relief to the respondents-
plaintiffs relying on certain decisions which were rendered in
different context and had no application to the facts of the
present case.
7. Learned counsel for the respondents, on the other hand,
submitted that merely because the trees which were permitted
to be cut were reserved trees, that did not mean that
government was the owner of the trees. Reference is made to
certain provisions of the Karnataka Forest Act, 1963 to
contend that the ownership of the Government in respect of
the trees is restricted only to sandalwood trees.
8. It is an admitted position that the permission was
granted with conditions. It is also not disputed that PW-l, who
was examined in support of the plaintiffs’s case, accepted that
the trees in question were reserved trees. The Trial Court took
note of this fact and noted that in the cross-examination of
PW-1, he has specifically admitted that the Nandi trees are
reserved trees. Further, the High Court lightly brushed aside
the stand of the State and its functionaries that in the absence
of any challenge to the conditions stipulated in the permission
granted, it was not open to the plaintiffs to claim value of the
Timber. The High Court, in the impugned judgment, referred
to some judgments rendered in writ petitions.
9. Reliance on the decision without looking into the factual
background of the case before it is clearly impermissible. A
decision is a precedent on its own facts. Each case presents its
own features. It is not everything said by a Judge while giving
a judgment that constitutes a precedent. The only thing in a
Judge\022s decision binding a party is the principle upon which
the case is decided and for this reason it is important to
analyse a decision and isolate from it the ratio decidendi.
According to the well-settled theory of precedents, every
decision contains three basic postulates \026 (i) findings of
material facts, direct and inferential. An inferential finding of
facts is the inference which the Judge draws from the direct,
or perceptible facts; (ii) statements of the principles of law
applicable to the legal problems disclosed by the facts; and (iii)
judgment based on the combined effect of the above. A
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
decision is an authority for what it actually decides. What is
of the essence in a decision is its ratio and not every
observation found therein nor what logically flows from the
various observations made in the judgment. The enunciation
of the reason or principle on which a question before a Court
has been decided is alone binding as a precedent. (See: State
of Orissa v. Sudhansu Sekhar Misra and Ors. (AIR 1968 SC
647) and Union of India and Ors. v. Dhanwanti Devi and Ors.
(1996 (6) SCC 44). A case is a precedent and binding for what
it explicitly decides and no more. The words used by Judges
in their judgments are not to be read as if they are words in
Act of Parliament. In Quinn v. Leathem (1901) AC 495 (H.L.),
Earl of Halsbury LC observed that every judgment must be
read as applicable to the particular facts proved or assumed to
be proved, since the generality of the expressions which are
found there are not intended to be exposition of the whole law
but governed and qualified by the particular facts of the case
in which such expressions are found and a case is only an
authority for what it actually decides.
10. Courts should not place reliance on decisions without
discussing as to how the factual situation fits in with the fact
situation of the decision on which reliance is placed.
Observations of Courts are neither to be read as Euclid\022s
theorems nor as provisions of the statute and that too taken
out of their context. These observations must be read in the
context in which they appear to have been stated. Judgments
of Courts are not to be construed as statutes. To interpret
words, phrases and provisions of a statute, it may become
necessary for judges to embark into lengthy discussions but
the discussion is meant to explain and not to define. Judges
interpret statutes, they do not interpret judgments. They
interpret words of statutes; their words are not to be
interpreted as statutes. In London Graving Dock Co. Ltd. V.
Horton (1951 AC 737 at p.761), Lord Mac Dermot observed:
\023The matter cannot, of course, be settled
merely by treating the ipsissima vertra of
Willes, J as though they were part of an Act of
Parliament and applying the rules of
interpretation appropriate thereto. This is not
to detract from the great weight to be given to
the language actually used by that most
distinguished judge.\024
11. In Home Office v. Dorset Yacht Co. (1970 (2) All ER 294)
Lord Reid said, \023Lord Atkin\022s speech.....is not to be treated as
if it was a statute definition. It will require qualification in new
circumstances.\024 Megarry, J in (1971) 1 WLR 1062 observed:
\023One must not, of course, construe even a reserved judgment
of Russell L.J. as if it were an Act of Parliament.\024 And, in
Herrington v. British Railways Board (1972 (2) WLR 537) Lord
Morris said:
\023There is always peril in treating the
words of a speech or judgment as though they
are words in a legislative enactment, and it is
to be remembered that judicial utterances
made in the setting of the facts of a particular
case.\024
12. Circumstantial flexibility, one additional or different fact
may make a world of difference between conclusions in two
cases. Disposal of cases by blindly placing reliance on a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
decision is not proper.
13. The following words of Lord Denning in the matter of
applying precedents have become locus classicus:
\023Each case depends on its own
facts and a close similarity between one
case and another is not enough because
even a single significant detail may alter
the entire aspect, in deciding such
cases, one should avoid the temptation
to decide cases (as said by Cordozo) by
matching the colour of one case against
the colour of another. To decide
therefore, on which side of the line a
case falls, the broad resemblance to
another case is not at all decisive.\024
*
\023Precedent should be followed only
so far as it marks the path of justice, but
you must cut the dead wood and trim off
the side branches else you will find
yourself lost in thickets and branches.
My plea is to keep the path to justice
clear of obstructions which could impede
it.\024
14. As noted above, there was no challenge to the conditions
stipulated and it was accepted that the trees were reserved
trees. What is the effect of this admission, was not examined
by the High Court. Therefore, looked at from any angle, the
judgment of the High Court is clearly unsustainable and is set
aside. The appeal is allowed but without any order as to costs.