Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PANNALAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BOMBAY AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/02/1963
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1516 1964 SCR (1) 980
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC 54 (12)
ACT:
Civil Procedure-Respondent seeking relief against a co-
respondent by way of cross-objection-Power of Court of
Appeal-Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908), O.
41, rr. 22, 33.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant brought three suits claiming full payment with
interest in respect of three hospitals constructed by him in
execution of three separate contracts between him and the
Deputy Commissioner. The trial Judge decreed the suits for
part of his claim against the State of Madhya Pradesh and
held that other defendants were not liable, and accordingly
dismissed the suits against them. On appeals preferred by
the State of Madhya Pradesh, the High Court set aside the
decree against the State Government’ and allowed the,
appeals with costs. The plaintiff at that stage prayed for
leave of the High Court to file a cross-objection and also
for decrees to be passed against the Deputy Commissioner
under O. 41, r. 33 of the Code Of Civil Procedure, which was
rejected and all the suits were dismissed. It was urged
that (1) the State Government was liable in respect of all
of these contracts and (2) the High Court ought to have
granted relief against such of the other defendants as it
thought fit under O. 41, r. 33 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
Held, that the State Government was not liable in
respect of any of these contracts.
Held, further, that the wide wording of O. 41, r. 33
empowers the appellate court to make whatever order it
thinks fit, not only as between the appellant and the
respondent but also as between a respondent and a
respondent. It could not be said that if a party who could
have filed a cross-objection under O. 41, r. 22 did not do
so, the appeal court could under no circumstances give
him relief under the provision of O. 41, r. 33. Order 41,
r. 22 permits as a general rule, a respondent to prefer an
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objection directed only against the appellant and
981
it is only in exceptional cases that an objection under O.
41, r. 22 can be directed against the other respondents.
On the facts of these cases the High Court refused to
exercise its powers under O. 41, r. 33 on an incorrect view
of the law and so the appeal must be remanded to the High
Court for decision what relief should be granted to
plaintiff under O. 41 r. 33.
Burroda Soundree Dasee v, Nobo Gopal Mullick, (1864)
W.R. 294, Maharaja Tarucknath Boy v. Tuboorunissa
Chowdhrain, (1867) 7 W.R. 39, Ganesh Pandurang Agte v.
Gangadhar Ramakrishna, (1869) 6 Bom. H.C.Rep. 2244,
AnwarJan Bibee v. Azmut Ali, (1870) 15 W.R. 26, Tirmnama v.
Lakshmanan, (1883) 7 Mad. 215. Venkateswarulu v. Rammama,
I.L.R. (1950) Mad. 874, Jan Mohamed v. P. N. Razden, A.I.R.
(1944) Lal. 433 and Ghandiprasad v. Jugul Kishore, A.I.R.
(1948) Nag. 377, referred to.
Anath Nath v. Dwarka Nath, A.I.R. (1939) P. C. 86, held
inapplicable.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 207 to 209
of 1961.
Appeals from the judgment and decree dated August 23,
1957, of the Bombay High Court at Nagpur in First Appeals
Nos. 105 to 107 of 1952 from Original Decree.
S. T. Desai, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder
Narain, for the appellants.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of India,
N. S. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar for P. D. Menon, for the
respondent No. 1
Girish Chandra for sardar Bahadur, for respondents Nos.
3 and 8.
1963. February 11. The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
DAS GUPTA, J.-The appellant is a building contractor.
He constructed buildings for the Bai
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Gangabai Memorial Hospital, Gondia, Kunwar Tilaksingh Civil
Hospital, Gondia, and also for the Twynam Hospital, Tumsar,
all within the district of Bhandara in Madhya Pradesh, in
execution of three separate contracts in respect of the
three hospitals which were concluded between him and Deputy
Commissioner of Bhandara. Though he received part payment
in respect of each of these contracts he claims not to have
received full payment of what was due to him. On April 1,
1948 he brought the three suits out of which these three
appeals have arisen for obtaining payments which he claims
was due to him. His averments in all the three plaints are
similar, except that in respect of one of the suits, viz.,
the one in respect of the construction work done for the Bai
Gangabai Memorial Hospital, he has also claimed the price of
some furniture said to have been supplied by him at the
request of the Deputy Commissioner. The common case of the
plaintiff in these three suits was that the Deputy
Commissioner entered into these contracts ""as repre-
sentative of the Provincial Government" after having
obtained previous sanction of that Government. It was
further his case that the Deputy Commissioner, Bhandara, as
the administration head of the hospitals entered into these
contracts and as such was liable to pay the amounts due on
the contracts. The plaint also averred that the Gondia
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Municipal Committee, Gondia, in the suit in respect of Bai
Gangabai Memorial Hospital and the Dispensary Funds
Committee in the other two suits were liable to satisfy
plaintiff’s claim inasmuch as they had taken the benefit of
the work done under the contract which was not intended to
be done gratuitously. On these averments the plaintiff
impleaded the Provincial Government of the Province of
Central Provinces and Berar as the first defendant, and the
Deputy Commissioner of the Bhandara District, as the second
defendant, in all the three suits. The Gondia Municipal
Committee was impleaded as the third defendant in
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Suit No. 3-B of 1948, i. e., the suits in respect of Bai
Gangabai Memorial Hospital. The Dispensary Funds Committee
was impleaded as the third defendant in the other two suits.
In both, the members of the Dispensary Funds Committee were
also impleaded by name as defendants. Mr. G. K. Tiwari, who
as Deputy Commissioner, Bhandara, signed the argument was
impleaded in his personal capacity in all the three suits
(Defendant No. 4 in Suit No. 3-B, Defendant No. 9 in Suit
No. 2-B and defendant No. 14 in Suit No. 1-B). The State of
Madhya Pradesh was later substituted for the Provincial
Government of the Province of Central Provinces and Berar as
the first defendant in all the three suits.
It was admitted in the plaint that the construction could
not be completed within the time mentioned in the contracts
but it was pleaded that the time was not the essence of the
contract and further, that the delay was due to the Deputy
Commissioner’s failure to supply the necessary materials in
time and inclemency of weather and also that time was
extended by the Deputy Commissioner. In all the three suits
the plaintiff made his claim at a higher rate than the
contract rate on the plea that, the Deputy Commissioner had
sanctioned these higher rates. For the purpose of the
present appeals in which we are concerned solely with a
question of law it is unnecessary to mention the various
other averments in the plaint.
It is necessary to mention however that in Suit No.3-B the
plantiff asked for a decree of Rs. 21,281/- with costs and
interest from the date of suit against defendants 1 to 3 and
in the alternative, against defendant No. 4, i. e., Mr. G.
K. Tiwari. In suit No. 1-B, the plaintiff claimed a decree
for Rs. 12,000/- with full costs and future interest from
the date of suit against defendants 1 to 3 and/or defendant
No. 14, i. e., Mr. G. K. Tiwari. In Suit
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No. 2-B, the plaintiff asked for a decree for Rs. 32,208/-
with costs and future interest against defendants 1 to 3
and/or defendant No. 9, i. e., Mr. G. K. Tiwari.
The main contention of the State of Madhya Pradesh in
resisting the suits was that the agreement for the
construction of the buildings was not made on behalf of the
State Government and also that the hospital was not
government hospital and therefore it had no -liability. The
same contentions were raised by the Deputy Commissioner,
Bhandara and Mr. Tiwari, personally. All of them further
contended that even on merits the plaintiff was not entitled
to any relief, for, though time was essence of the contract
the work was not finished within the time agreed upon. They
also resisted the plantiff’s claim to increased rates on the
ground that the previous sanction of the Deputy Commissioner
had not been obtained. Another contention raised in all the
suits was that the plaintiff’s claim was barred by time.
The other defendants also contested the suits on grounds
which it is unnecessary for the purpose of the present
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appeals to set out.
The Trial judge held that the agreements in question
were made for and on behalf of the State and further, that
the constructions had "beyond doubt benefited the State" and
so the State was liable. The learned judge also rejected
the various objections raised by the defendants to the
plaintiff’s claim on merits except that he disallowed part
of the plaintiff’s claim and gave the plaintiff a decree for
part of his claim against the State of Madhya Pradesh in all
the three suits. He also held that none of the other
defendants were liable and dismissed the suits as against
them.
Against the Trial Court’s decision in these suits the
State of Madhya Pradesh preferred appeals to
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the High Court of judicature at Nagpur. During the pendency
of these appeals the State of Madhya Pradesh was substituted
by the State of Bombay. In all these appeals the plaintiff
Pannalal was impleaded as the first respondent; and all the
other defendants were also impleaded as respondents.
Disagreeing with the Trial Court the High Court held that
the contract entered into by the Deputy Commissioner was not
binding on the State Government; that the Deputy
Commissioner signed the contract at his own discretion; and
further, the contracts not having been entered into in the
form as required under s. 175(3) of the Government of India
Act, 1935, were not enforceable against the State
Government. The High Court also held that the Government
could not be held to have ratified the action of the
contracts entered into by the Deputy Commissioner. The High
Court also rejected the argument that the Government having
received the benefit of the works must pay for them, on
their finding that the hospitals were not government
hospitals and Government "can in no sense be regarded as
having benefited by anything done with respect to them". On
these findings the High Court set aside the decree passed by
the Trial Court against the State Government and allowed the
appeals with costs.
It appears that a prayer was made on behalf of the
plaintiff-respondent that the High Court should pass decrees
against the Deputy Commissioner, Bhandara, under Or. 41, r.
33 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That prayer was rejected
by the High Court in these words : -
"Shri Phadke then prayed that under Order 41
rule 33 of the Code of Civil Procedure we
should pass decrees against the Deputy
Commissioner, Bhandara, who was indubitably, a
party to the contracts. Though the provisions
of Order 41,
986
rule 33 are wide enough to permit this we do
not see any reason why we should exercise our
power when it was open to the respondent No. 1
to prefer a cross-objection against the
dismissal of his suits against those
defendants, as well as against some other
defendants."
The High Court also rejected the Counsel’s prayer to
grant him leave to file a cross-objection at that stage. In
the result, all the three suits were dismissed by the High
Court in their entirety. The High Court however granted a
certificate under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution. On
the basis of that certificate these three appeals have been
preferred by the plaintiff.
Two grounds were urged in support of the appeals. The
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first was that the High Court was wrong in holding that the
State Government was not liable. The second ground urged
was that, in any case, the High Court ought to have granted
relief to the plaintiff against such of the other defendants
as it thought fit under the provisions of Order 41, rule 33
of the Code of Civil Procedure.
There is, in our opinion, no substance in the
appellant’s contention that the State Government was liable.
On the materials on the record, it appears clear to us that
the Deputy Commissioner did not act on behalf of the State
Government in signing the contracts. Nor can it be said
that the State Government derived benefit from the work done
by the plaintiff. In our opinion, the High Court was right
in its conclusion that the State Government was not liable
in respect of any of these contracts and rightly dismissed
the suits as against the defendant No. 1. This position was
not seriously disputed before us.
There is however much force in. the appellant’s
contention that the High Court ought to have exercised its
jurisdiction under Or. 41, r. 33 of the Code
987
of Civil Procedure in favour of the plaintiff. The
operative portion of that rule, which was for the first time
introduced in the Civil Procedure Code in 1908, is in these
words :-
"33. The appellate court shall have power to
pass any decree and make any order which ought
to have been passed or made, and to pass or
make such further or other decree or order as
the case may require, and this power may be
exercised by the Court notwithstanding that
the appeal is as to part only of the decree
and may be exercised in favour of all or any
of the respondents or parties, although such
respondents or parties may not have filed any
appeal or objection."
A proviso was added to this by Act 9 of 1922 which, however,
does not concern us. It is necessary however to set out the
illustration to the rule which runs thus :
"A claims a sum of money as due to him from X
or Y, and in a suit against both obtains a
decree against X. X appeals and A and Y are
respondents. The appellate court decides in
favour of X. It has power to pass a decree
against Y."
Even a bare reading of Order 41, rule 33 is sufficient to
convince any one that the wide wording was intended to
empower the appellate court to make whatever order it thinks
fit, not only as between the appellant and the respondent
but also as between a respondent and a respondent. It
empowers the appellate court not only to give or refuse
relief to the appellant by allowing or dismissing the appeal
but also to give such other relief to any of the respondent
as "the case may require." In the present case, if there was
DO impediment in law the High Court could
988
therefore, though allowing the appeal of the State by
dismissing the plaintiff’s suits against it, give the
plaintiff a decree against any or all the other defendants
who were parties to the appeal as respondents. While the
very words of the section make this position abundantly
clear the illustration puts the position beyond argument.
The High Court appears to have been in no doubt about its
power to give the plaintiff relief by decreeing the suits
against one or more of the other defendants. But say the
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learned judges, "we do not think it proper to do so as the
plaintiff could have asked for this relief by filing a
cross-objection under Or. 41, r. 22, C. P. C., but has not
done so." The logic behind this seems to be that the cross-
objection under Or. 41, r. 22 could be filed only within the
time as indicated therein and if a respondent who could have
filed a cross-objection did not do so, is given relief under
Or. 41, r. 33, Or. 41, r. 22 is likely to become a dead
letter.
The whole argument is based on the assumption that the
plaintiff could, by filing a cross-objection under Or. 41,
r. 22, Civil Procedure Code,, have challenged the Trial
Court’s decree in so far as it dismissed the suits against
the defendants other than the State., We are not, at present
advised, prepared to agree that if a party who could have
filed a cross-objection under Or. 41, r. 22 of the Code of
Civil procedure has not done so, the appeal Court can under
no circumstances give him relief under the provisions of Or.
41, r. 33 of the Code. It is, however, not necessary for us
to discuss the question further as, in our opinion, the
assumption made by the High Court that the plaintiff could
have filed a cross-objection is not justified.
Whether or not a respondent can seek relief against any
other respondent by a cross-objection
989
under Or. 41, r. 22. Civil Procedure Code, was a vexed
question in Indian courts for a long time. The present
Order 41, r. 22 has taken the place of the former s. 561 of
the Code of 1882. Indeed, the provision as regards raising
an objection by a respondent without a separate appeal
appears even in the Code of 1859 as s. 348. ’The same
provision in a little more detailed form was enacted in the
Code of 1877 as s. 561. It was reproduced in the Code of
1882 also as s. 561 with slight amendments in these words :-
"Any respondent though he may not have
appealed against any part of the decree, may
upon the hearing not only support the decree
on any of the grounds decided-against him in
the court below, but take any objection to the
decree which he could have taken by the way of
appeal, provided he has filed a notice of such
objection Dot less than seven days before the
date fixed for the hearing of the appeal.
Such objection shall be in the form of a memo-
randum., and the provisions of s. 541, so far
as they relate to the form and contents of the
memorandum of appeal shall apply thereto.
Unless the respondent files with objection a
written acknowledgement from the appellant or
his pleader of having received a copy thereof,
the Appellate Court shall cause such a copy to
be served, as soon as may be after the filing
of the objection, on the appellant or his
pleader, at the expense of the respondent."
The question whether a respondent could by way of cross-
objection seek relief against another respondent under these
provisions was first raised before the courts almost a
century ago. Both the Calcutta and the Bombay High Courts
held in a number of cases that ordinarily it was not open to
a respondent
990
to seek relief as against a co-respondent byway of
objection, though in exceptional cases this could be done.
(Vide Burroda Soundree Dossee v. Nobo Gopal Mullick (1),
Maharaja Tarucknath Roy v. Tuboornnissa Chowdhrain (2),
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Ganesh Pandurang Agte v. Gangadhar Ramkrishna (3) , Anwar
Jan Bibi v. Azmut Ali(4). These decisions it is proper to
mention were given under the Code of 1859 where s. 348
provided that "Upon hearing of the appeal, the respondent
may take any objection to the decision of the lower court
which he might have taken if he had preferred a separate
appeal from such decision." After this section was replaced
by s. 561 in the Code of 1877 and the Code of 1882 the
question whether a respondent can file an objection against
another respondent came up before the courts several times
and the decision remained the same. The Patna and the
Allahabad High Courts also took the view that as a general
rule the right of a respondent to urge cross-objections
should be limited to asking relief against the appellant
only and it is only where the appeal opens up questions
which cannot be disposed of properly except by opening up
matters as between correspondents that relief against
respondents can also be sought by way of objections. The
Madras High Court took a different view in Timmayya v.
Lakshmanan (5), and held that the words of the section were
wide enough to cover all objections to any part of the
decree and it was open to a respondent seek relief under
this section even against another respondent, and this view
was reiterated by that Court even after the Code of 1908
made an important change in the provision by using the word
"cross-objection" in place of "objection". Ultimately
however in 1950 a Full Bench of the Madras High Court in
Venkateshwarlu v. Rammama (1), considered the question again
and decided overruling all previous decisions that on a
proper construction of the language, Or. 41, r. 22 confers
only a restricted
(1) (1864) W.R. 294.
(2) (1867) 7 W.R. 39.
(3) (1869) 6 Bom. H.C. Rep. 244.
(4) (1870) 15 W.R. 26.
(5) (1883) 7 Mad. 215.
(6) L R. (1950) Mad. 874.
991
right on the respondent to prefer objection to the decree
without filing a separate appeal; that such objection
should, as a general rule, be primarily against the
appellant, though in exceptional cases it may incidentally
be also directed against the other respondents. The Lahore
High Court which had earlier followed the former view of the
Madras High Court also decided in Jan Mohamed v. P. N.
Razden (1), to adopt the other view held by the High Courts
of Allahabad, Bombay, Calcutta and Patna. The Nagpur High
Court has also adopted the same view. (Vide Chandiprasad v.
Jugul Kishore) (2).
In our opinion, the view that has now been accepted by all
the High Courts that Order 41, r. 22 permits as a general
rule, a respondent to prefer an objection directed only
against the appellant and it is only in exceptional cases,
such as where the relief sought against the appellant in
such an objection is intermixed with the relief granted to
the other respondents, so that the relief against the
appellant cannot be granted without the question being re-
opened between the objecting respondent and other respon-
dents, that an objection under Or. 41, r. 22 can be directed
against the other respondents, is correct. Whatever may
have been the position under the old s. 561, the use of the
word "’cross-objection" in Or. 41 r. 22 expresses
unmistakably the intention of the legislature that the
objection has to be directed against the appellant. As
Rajammannar C. J., said in Venkataswrlu v. Ramamma (3).
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"The legislature by describing the objection which could be
taken by the respondent as a "cross-objection" must have
deliberately adopted the view of the other High Courts. One
cannot treat an objection by a respondent in which the
appellant has no interest as a cross-objection. The appeal
is by the appellant against a respondent, the cross-
objection -must be an objection by a respondent against the
appellant". We think, with respect, that these observations
put
(1) A.I.R. 1944 Lah. 433.
(2) A.I.R. 1948 Nag. 377.
(3) I.L.R. (1950) Mad. 8741
992
the matter clearly and correctly. That the legislature also
wanted to give effect to the views held by the different
High Courts that in exceptional cases as mentioned above an
objection can be preferred by a respondent against a
correspondent is indicated by the substitution of the word
"appellant" in the third paragraph by the words "the party
who may be affected by such objection."
On the facts of the present case, we have come to the
conclusion that it was not open to the plaintiff appellant
before the High Court to file any cross-objection directed
against the other defendants who were-correspondents. The
High Court was therefore wrong in refusing to consider what
relief, if any, could be granted to the plaintiff under the
provisions of Or. 41, r. 33, Civil Procedure Code.
Learned Counsel who appeared for the Gondia Municipality
in Civil Appeal No. 209 of 1961, relied on the decision of
the Privy Council in Anath Nath v. Dwarka Nath (1), for his
contention that rule 33 could not be rightly used in the
present case. In that case the plaintiff challenged a
revenue sale as wholly void for want of jurisdiction and bad
for irregularities and further contended that the respondent
had been guilty of fraud or improper conduct to the
prejudice of his co-owners in the estate. The Trial Court
rejected the plaintiff’s case that the sale was void for
want of jurisdiction and bad for irregularities but accepted
the other contention and gave the plaintiff a decree. On
appeal, the High Court held that no fraud -or improper
conduct towards co-owners in respect of the revenue sale had
been proved against respondent No. 1. The High Court refused
to grant any relief to the plaintiff on the other ground
which had been rejected by the Trial Court in the view that
it was no longer open to the plaintiff who had not filed any
cross-objections to the decree of the Trial Court to
maintain that the revenue
(1) A.I.R. 1939 P.C. 86.
993
sale should be set aside for want of jurisdiction or
irregularity. In accepting this view of the High Court the
Privy Council observed :-
"In their Lordships view the case came clearly
within the condition imposed by the concluding
words of sub-r. (1) of R. 22, "’provided he
has filed such objections in the Appellate
Court, etc., etc". It was contended however
that the language of R. 33 of the same Order
was wide enough to cover the case. Even if
their Lordships assume that the High Court was
not wholly without power to entertain this
ground of appeal-an assumption to which they
do not commit themselves-they are clearly of
opinion that Rule 33 could not rightly be used
in the present case so as to abrogate the
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important condition which prevents an
independent appeal from being in effect
brought without any notice of the grounds of
appeal being given to the parties who
succeeded in the courts below."
This decision is of no assistance to the respondents.
For the question which we have considered here, viz., how
fir it is open to a respondent to seek relief against a co-
respondent by way of cross-objection did not fall for
consideration by the Privy Council. The Privy Council based
its decision on the view that it was open to the respondent
before the High Court to file a cross-objection under Or.
41, r. 22 against the appellant and had not to consider the
question now before us. We think it proper also to point
out that the decision of the Privy Council in Anath Nath’s
case (1), should not be considered as an authority for the
proposition that the failure to file a cross-objection-where
such objection could be filed under the law-invariably and
necessarily excludes the application of Or. 41, r. 33.
There their Lordships assumed, without deciding, that the
(1) A.I.R. 1939 P. C. 86,
994
High Court was not wholly without power to entertain the
other ground of appeal but in the special circumstances of
the case they thought that it would not have been right to
give relief under the provisions of Rule 33 to the
appellant.
As the High Court has refused to exercise its powers under
Or. 41, r. 33 of the Code of Civil Procedure on an incorrect
view of the law the matter has to go back to the High Court.
We maintain the High Court’s order in so far as it dismisses
the suits against the State of Bombay but set aside the
order in so far as it dismisses the suits against the other
defendants and send the case back to the High Court in order
that it may decide, on an examination of the merits of the
case, whether relief should be granted to the plaintiff
under the provisions of Or. 41, r. 33, Civil Procedure Code.
Costs incurred in this Court will abide the final result in
the appeals before the High Court at Bombay.
Appeals allowed in part.
Case remanded.
995