Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDIAN OIL CORPORATION LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/08/1986
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
BENCH:
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1780 1986 SCR (3) 553
1986 SCC (4) 146 JT 1986 132
1986 SCALE (2)233
CITATOR INFO :
R 1990 SC 334 (22)
RF 1991 SC1309 (3)
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950-
Art. 226-Writ Petition-Refusal to consider on merits
solely on ground that a special leave petition had been
dismissed by a nonspeaking order-Validity of.
Art. 136-Special Leave Petition-Grant of-Dismissal by a
nonspeaking order-Effect of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s special leave petition against the
award of the Labour Court dated March 11, 1983 granting
relief to its employee-respondent No. 3, was dismissed by a
non-speaking order. In the said proceedings, respondent No.
3 had also been represented by a counsel. Thereafter, the
appellant approached the High Court by preferring a writ
petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution seeking to quash
the aforesaid award of the Labour Court. The High Court
admitted the writ petition and granted interim stay of
enforcement of the award.
The third respondent unsuccessfully challenged the
aforesaid interim order by a special leave petition.
Subsequently when the main writ petition came up for final
hearing before the Division Bench of the High Court, the
third respondent again raised a preliminary objection as to
the maintainability of the writ petition. The High Court
upheld the preliminary objection and dismissed the writ
petition holding (i) that the dismissal in limine by the
Supreme Court of the special leave petition filed by the
appellant against the award by the non-speaking order
precluded the appellant from challenging the said award
before the High Court; (ii) that the doctrine of election
was applicable to the case and the appellant having chosen
the remedy of approaching the y superior court and failed in
that attempt, he could not thereafter resort to the
alternative remedy of approaching the High Court for relief
under Article 226 of the Constitution; and (iii) that the
writ jurisdiction
554
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of the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution being
essentially discretionary in nature, it will be a sound
exercise of the court’s discretion to refuse relief in such
a situation.
Allowing the appeal and remanding the case to the High
Court for disposal on merits,
^
HELD: 1.(i) The view taken by the High Court was not
right and that the High Court should have gone into the
merits of the writ petition without dismissing it on the
preliminary ground. The dismissal by Supreme Court of the
special leave petition of the appellant by a non speaking
order did not operate as a bar against the appellant in the
matter of challenging the impugned award of the Labour Court
by resort to proceedings before the High Court under Art.
226 of the constitution. [560D-E]
1.(ii) The effect of the- non-speaking order of
dismissal of a special leave petition without anything more
indicating the grounds or reasons of its dismissal must, by
necessary implication, be taken to be that the Supreme Court
had decided only that it was not a fit case where special
leave should be granted. Questions which can be said to have
been decided by this Court expressly, implicitly or even
constructively while dismissing the special leave petition
cannot, of course, be re-opened in a subsequent writ
proceeding before the High Court. But neither on the
principle of res judicata nor on any principle of public
policy analogous thereto, would the order of this court
dismissing the special leave petition operate to bar the
trial of identical issues in a separate proceeding namely,
the writ proceeding before the High Court merely on the
basis of an uncertain assumption that the issues must have
been decided by this Court at least by implication. It is
not correct or safe to extend the principle of res judicata
or constructive res judicata to such an extent so as to
found it on mere guesswork. [558C-G]
Workmen of Cochin Port Trust v. Board of Trustees of
the Cochin Port Trust and Another, [1978] 3 SCC 119 and
Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico Printing Company Ltd. v.
Workmen and Anr, [1981] 3 SCR 213, relied upon
Wilson v. Colchester Justices, (1985)-Vol. 2-All
England Law Reports at page 97, referred to.
2. It is not the policy of the Supreme Court to
entertain special
555
leave petitions and grant leave under Art. 136 of the
Constitution save in those cases where some substantial
question of law of general or public importance is involved
and there is manifest injustice resulting from the impugned
order or judgment. Moreover, having regard to the very heavy
backlog of work in the Supreme Court and the necessity to
restrict the intake of fresh cases by strictly following the
criteria aforementioned, it has very often been the practice
of the Supreme Court not to grant special leave except where
the party cannot claim effective relief by approaching the
concerned High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution. In
such cases also special leave petitions are quite often
dismissed only by passing a non-speaking order and it would
work extreme hardship and injustice if the High Court were
to close its doors to the petitioner and refuse him relief
under Art. 226 of the Constitution on the sole ground of
dismissal of special leave petition. [559A-E]
Workmen of Cochin Port Trust v. Board of Trustees of
the Cochin Port Trust and Another, [1978] 3 SCC 119 and
Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico Printing Company Ltd. v.
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Workmen and Anr, [1981] 3 SCR 213, followed.
3. The doctrine of election referred to by the High
Court has no application at all to the present situation.
[560F]
Shankar Ramchandra Abhyankar v. Krishnaji Dattatreya
Bapat, [1970] 1 SCR 322, distinguished.
4. The grant of leave under Art. 226 of the
Constitution is undoubtedly in the discretion of the High
Court but the exercise of that discretionary Jurisdiction is
to be guided by established legal principles. It will not be
a sound exercise of that discretion to refuse to consider a
writ petition on its merits solely on the ground that a
special leave petition filled by the petitioner in the
Supreme Court had been dismissed by a non-speaking order.
[561A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1257
(NL) of 1985.
From the Judgment and order dated 24th January, 1985 of
the Patna High Court in Civil Writ Jurisdiction No. 5877 of
1983.
M.K. Banerjee, Sol. Genl, D.N. Misra, B.D. Barucha and
A.M. Dittia for the Appellant.
556
M.K. Ramamurthy and Mrs. Gyan Sudha Mishra for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BALAKRISHNA ERADI, J. The short question that arises
for decision in this appeal by special leave is whether the
dismissal in limine of a Special Leave Petition filed before
this Court by a party challenging the award of a Labour
Court would preclude the said party from subsequently
approaching the High Court under Article 226 of the
Constitution seeking to set aside the said award.
Having regard to the nature of the question arising for
determination, it is not necessary for us to set out in
detail the facts of the case and a brief narration thereof
would suffice. Respondent No. 3 was appointed in 1963 as a
Sales officer in the service of the appellant-The Indian oil
Corporation. He was dismissed from service in 1969 on
charges of misconduct but was subsequently reinstated under
orders of the Labour Court, Patna before which an industrial
dispute had been raised. During the period when Respondent
No. 4 was out of employment consequent on his dismissal,
some of his juniors had been promoted to higher posts.
Subsequent to his reintstatement, Respondent No. 3 claimed
that he was entitled to be given promotion with effect from
the date on which his juniors were promoted and also to be
given the higher pay scale of Rs. 1025-1625 from such date.
This claim was not accepted by the appellant and that again
gave rise to another industrial dispute. The State
Government of Bihar referred the said dispute to the Labour
Court, Patna on September 26, 1980. The Labour Court by its
award dated March 11, 1983 held that Respondent No.3 was
entitled to be paid salary in the scale of Rs. 1025-1625
with effect from December 30, 1970, that being the date on
which his juniors were promoted to that scale. It further
directed that the 3rd Respondent should be promoted from
grade ’B’ to grade ’C’ and should also be given the benefit
of revision in the pay scales of those grades.
Aggrieved by the said award, the appellant moved this
Court under Article 136 of the Constitution by filing
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Special Leave Petition No. 9147 of 1983. Respondent No. 3
had filed a caveat before this Court and he was represented
by Counsel at the time when the special leave petition was
heard. This Court on September 9, 1983 dismissed the special
leave petition by a non-speaking order, which was in the
following terms:
557
"The special leave petition is dismissed.",
Thereafter the appellant approached the High Court of
Patna by preferring a writ petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution seeking to quash the aforesaid award of the
Labour Court dated March 11, 1983. The High Court by its
order dated January 31, 1984 admitted the writ petition and
granted interim stay of enforcement of the award. Thereupon
the 3rd Respondent came up to this Court challenging the
order of the High Court admitting the writ petition and
granting interim stay of the award. The principal contention
taken in the special leave petition was that in view of the
order of this Court dated September 9, 1983 dismissing the
special leave petition (S.L.P. No. 2770 of 1984) filed by
the appellant against the award of the Labour Court, it was
not legally open to the appellant, thereafter, to approach
to the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution
challenging the very same award. This Court after hearing
both sides, dismissed the special leave petition filed by
the 3rd Respondent by the following order dated August 17,
1984:-
"Special Leave Petition is dismissed. We hope that
the High Court will dispose of the writ petition
as expeditiously as possible preferably within
four months from today. In the meantime the
respondents will deposit in the High Court a
further sum of Rs. 10,000 (apart from Rs. 5,000
which has already been deposited towards the cost
of the petitioner) within two weeks from today,
which amount the petitioner will be at liberty to
withdraw in case the Writ Petition will not be
disposed of within four months from today. "
Subsequently, when the writ petition came up for final
hearing before a Division Bench of the High Court, the 3rd
Respondent again urged the aforesaid contention as a
preliminary objection to the maintainability of the writ
petition. That contention was upheld by the Division Bench
which took the view that the dismissal in limine by this
Court of the special leave petition filed by the appellant
against the award by the non-speaking order reproduced above
precluded the appellant from challenging the said award
before the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution.
In the opinion of the High Court the doctrine of election
was applicable to the case and the appellant having chosen
the remedy of approaching a superior Court and failed in
that attempt, he could not thereafter resort to the
alternative re-
558
medy of approaching the High Court for relief under Article
226 of the Constitution. Another reason stated by the High
Court is that the writ jurisdiction of the High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution being essentially
discretionary in nature, it will be a sound exercise of the
Court’s discretion to refuse relief in such a situation. On
the basis of the aforesaid reasoning the High Court
dismissed the writ petition filed by the appellant without
going into the merits of the case. The appellant challenges
the correctness of the decision so rendered by the High
Court.
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We are clearly of opinion that the view taken by the
High Court was not right and that the High Court should have
gone into the merits of the writ petition without dismissing
it on the preliminary ground. As observed by this Court in
Workmen of Cochin Port Trust v. Board of Trustees of the
Cochin Port Trust and Another, [1978] 3 S.C.C. 119 the
effect of a non-speaking order of dismissal of a special
leave petition without anything more indicating the grounds
or reasons of its dismissal must, by necessary implication,
be taken to be that this Court had decided only that it was
not a fit case where special leave should be granted. This
conclusion may have been reached by this Court due to
several reasons. When the order passed by this Court was not
a speaking one, it is not correct to assume that this Court
had necessarily decided implicitly all the questions in
relation to the merits of the award, which was under
challenge before this Court in the special leave petition. A
writ proceeding is a wholly different and distinct
proceeding. Questions which can be said to have been decided
by this Court expressly, implicitly or even constructively
while dismissing the special leave petition cannot, of
course, be re-opened in a subsequent writ proceeding before
the High Court. But neither on the principle of res judicata
nor on any principle of public policy analogous thereto,
would the order of this Court dismissing the special leave
petition operate to bar the trial of identical issues in a
separate proceeding namely, the writ proceeding before the
High Court merely on the basis of an uncertain assumption
that the issue must have been decided by this Court at least
by implication. It is not correct or safe to extend the
principle of res judicata or constructive res judicata to
such an extent so as to found it on mere guesswork.
This enunciation of the legal position has been
reiterated by this Court in Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico
Printing Company Ltd. v. Workmen and Anr, [1981] 3 S.C.R.
213. The principles laid down in the two decisions cited
above fully govern the present case.
559
It is not the policy of this Court to entertain special
leave petitions and grant leave under Article 136 of the
Constitution save in those cases where some substantial
question of law of general or public importance is involved
or there is manifest injustice resulting from the impugned
order or judgment. The dismissal of a special leave petition
in limine by a non-speaking order does not therefore justify
any inference that by necessary implication the contentions
raised in the special leave petition on the merits of the
case have been rejected by this Court. It may also be
observed that having regard to the very heavy backlog of
work in this Court and the necessity to restrict the intake
of fresh cases by strictly following the criteria
aforementioned, it has very often been the practice of this
Court not to grant special leave except where the party
cannot claim effective relief by approaching the concerned
High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. In such
cases also the special leave petitions are quite often
dismissed only by passing a non-speaking order especially in
view of the rulings already given by this Court in the two
decisions afore-cited, that such dismissal of the special
leave petition will not preclude the party from moving the
High Court for seeking relief under Article 226 of the
Constitution. In such cases it would work extreme hardship
and injustice if the High Court were to close its doors to
the petitioner and refuse him relief under Article 226 of
the Constitution on the sole ground of dismissal of the
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special leave petition.
In Wilson v. Colchester Justices, [1985]-Vol. 2-All
England Law Reports at page 97 the House of Lords had to
consider the question whether the refusal of leave to appeal
by the Appeal Committee of the House of Lords would
constitute an implied approval of the decision which had
been unsuccessfully sought to be impugned. The following
observations of Lord Roskill are apposite in our present
context:
"Seemingly the Divisional Court felt that this
refusal indicated at least implied approval of the
decision which it had been unsuccessfully sought
to impugn. Counsel surprised your Lordships by.
saying that this impression was widespread in the
profession. My Lords, if that were so, as my noble
and learned friend Lord Diplock remarked during
the argument, the sooner this erroneous impression
is emphatically corrected by your Lordships the
better. There are a multitude of reasons why, in a
particular case, leave to appeal may be refused by
an Appeal Committee. I shall not attempt to embark
on an exhaustive list
560
for it would be impossible to do so. One reason
may be that the particular case raises no question
of general principle but turns on its own facts.
Another may be that the facts of the particular
case are not suitable as a foundation for
determining some question of general principle.
Your Lordships House is only able, in any given
year, to hear and determine a limited number of
cases and it is important for the evolution of the
law as a whole that those cases should be
carefully chosen. Conversely the fact that leave
to appeal is given is not of itself an indication
that the judgments below are thought to be wrong.
It may well be that leave is given in order that
the relevant law may be authoritatively restated
in clearer terms. It is not difficult to find in
the books examples of cases where, after leave to
appeal has been refused in one case, another case
will later arise in which leave to appeal has been
given as a result of which the decision against
which leave to appeal was originally refused is
shown to have been wrong. But that of itself does
not mean that the initial refusal of leave was
wrong."
Thus the correct legal position is that the dismissal
by this Court of the Special Leave Petition No. 9147 of 1983
by the non-speaking order of this Court dated September 9,
1983 did not operate as a bar against the appellant in the
matter of challenging the impugned award of the Labour Court
by resort to proceedings before the High Court under Article
226 of the Constitution.
The doctrine of election referred to by the High Court
has no application at all to the present situation and the
decision in Shankar Ramchandra Abhyankar v. Krishnaji
Dattatreya Bapat, [1970] 1 S.C.R. 322 is clearly
distinguishable. The question that arose in that case was
whether a party who had a choice of resorting to one of two
remedies before the same Court namely, the High Court, could
successively move the High Court under Section 115 of the
Civil Procedure Code and again under Articles 226 and 227 of
the Constitution. The question was answered in the negative
for the simple reason that the order passed by the High
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Court under the first proceeding would conclude the matter
inter-parties. In such a situation the party had to exercise
his choice and elect which remedy he would resort to in the
High Court.
The grant of leave under Article 226 of the
Constitution is un-
561
doutbedly in the discretion of the High Court but the
exercise of that discretionary jurisdiction is to be guided
by established legal principles. It will not be a sound
exercise of that discretion to refuse to consider a writ
petition on its merits solely on the ground that a special
leave petition filed by the petitioner in the Supreme Court
had been dismissed by a non-speaking order.
Apart from the above, in the present case there is the
additional fact that after the writ petition was admitted by
the High Court the 3rd Respondent challenged the High
Court’s order admitting the writ petition and granting
interim stay of the award by filing a special leave petition
in this Court. In that special leave petition the 3rd
Respondent had raised the very same objection concerning the
maintainability of the writ petition in the light of the
dismissal of the prior special leave petition filed by the
appellant. This Court dismissed the special leave petition
and requested the High Court to dispose of the writ petition
within four months from the date of the order (17.8.1984).
Obviously, the intention of this Court in passing that order
was that the writ petition should be considered and disposed
of by the High Court on the merits within the said period.
It is unfortunate that this order has not been adverted to
in the judgment of the High Court now under appeal.
In the light of the aforesaid discussion, we allow this
appeal, set aside the order of High Court and remand the
writ petition to the High Court for disposal on the merits.
Having regard to the fact that the case concerns the service
benefits claimed by the 3rd Respondent, the High Court is
requested to dispose of the writ petition as early as
possible. The parties will bear their respective costs.
M.L.A. Appeal allowed.
562