Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KUNHAYAMMED & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/07/2000
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas, D.P. Mohapatra., & R C Lahoti.
JUDGMENT:
R.C. Lahoti, J.
A question of frequent recurrence and of some significance
involving the legal implications and the impact of an order
rejecting a petition seeking grant of special leave to appeal
under Article 136 of the Constitution of India has arisen for
decision in this appeal.
Facts in brief :
The Kerala Private Forests (Vesting and Assignment) Act, 1971
(Act 26 of 1971), hereinafter referred to as the Act for short,
was enacted by the State of Kerala to provide for the vesting in
the Government of private forests in the State of Kerala and for
the assignment thereof to agriculturists and agricultural
labourers for cultivation. The Act and the assent of the
President on the Act were both published in Kerala Government
Gazette (Extraordinary) dated 23.8.1971. The Act was given a
retrospective operation by declaring that it shall be deemed to
have come into force on the 10th day of May, 1971. We are not
concerned with the details of several provisions contained in the
Act. For our purpose it would suffice to notice that the
disputes - (i) whether any land is a private forest or not, or
(ii) whether any private forest or portion thereof is vested in
the Government or not - may be entrusted for decision under
Section 8 to a Tribunal constituted under Section 7 of the Act
popularly known as Forest Tribunal. The Government or any person
objecting to any decision of the Tribunal may within a period of
60 days from the date of that decision, appeal against such
decision to the High Court under Section 8A of the Act.
There is a large family consisting of 71 members which raised a
dispute before the Forest Tribunal, Kozhikode which was
registered as OA 5 of 1981. Land to the tune of 1020 acres was
the subject-matter of dispute. By order dated 11.8.1982 the
Tribunal held that the land did not vest in the Government. An
appeal was preferred by the State of Kerala before the High Court
of Kerala which was dismissed on 17.12.1982 by an elaborate
order. There was no statutory remedy of appeal, revision or
review provided against the order of the High Court. The State
of Kerala filed a petition for special leave to appeal under
Article 136 of the Constitution registered as SLP(C) No.8098 of
1983. The petition was dismissed by an order dated 18.7.83. The
order reads as under :- Special leave petition is dismissed on
merits. By Amendment Act No.36 of 1986 published in Kerala
Government Gazette (Extraordinary) dated 1.12.1986 Section 8C
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amongst others was enacted into the body of the Act giving it a
retrospective effect from 19.11.1983. Sub-section (2) of Section
8C, with which we are concerned, reads as under:-
8C. Power of Government to file appeal or
application for review in certain cases.
(1) xxxx xxxx xxxxx
xxxx xxxx xxxx
(2) Notwithstanding anything containing in this Act, or in the
Limitation Act, 1963 (Central Act 36 of 1963), or in any other
law for the time being in force, or in any judgment, decree or
order of any court or other authority, the Government, if they
are satisfied that any order of the High Court in an appeal under
Section 8A (including an order against which an appeal to the
Supreme Court has not been admitted by that Court) has been
passed on the basis of concessions made before the High Court
without the authority in writing of the government or due to the
failure to produce relevant data or other particulars before the
High Court or that an appeal against such order could not be
filed before the Supreme Court by reason of the delay in applying
for and obtaining a certified copy of such order, may, during the
period beginning with the commencement of the Kerala Private
Forests (Vesting and Assignment) Amendment Act, 1986 and ending
on the 31st day of March, 1987, make an application to the High
Court for review of such order.
xxx xxx xxx xxx
[emphasis supplied]
In January 1984 the State of Kerala filed an application for
review registered as RP No.14 of 1984 before the High Court of
Kerala seeking review of the order dated 17.12.1982 passed by the
High Court. On behalf of the respondents before the High Court a
preliminary objection was raised to the maintainability of the
review petition which has been heard and disposed of by the order
dated 14th December, 1995 which is put in issue in this appeal.
The High Court has overruled the preliminary objection as to the
maintainability of the petition and directed the review petition
to be posted for hearing on merits. Feeling aggrieved the
petitioners have sought for leave to appeal to this Court which
has been granted on 16.9.1996. On 14.3.2000 when this matter
came up for hearing before a bench of two Judges they directed
the matter to be referred to a bench of three Judges having
regard to the importance of the question involved.
Shri T.L.V. Iyer, the learned senior counsel for the appellant
has raised two contentions: Firstly, that the order of the High
Court dated 17.12.1982 having merged into the order of this court
dated 18.7.1983, the order of the High Court had ceased to exist
in the eye of law and therefore an application seeking review of
the order dated 17.12.1982 passed by the High Court and before
the High Court is entirely misconceived; Secondly, the order
dated 18.7.1983 passed by this Court amounts to affirmation of
the order dated 17.12.1982 passed by the High Court and therefore
the High Court cannot entertain a prayer for review of its order
much less disturb the order in exercise of review jurisdiction.
The doctrine of merger :
The doctrine of merger is neither a doctrine of constitutional
law nor a doctrine statutorily recognised. It is a common law
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doctrine founded on principles of propriety in the hierarchy of
justice delivery system. On more occasions than one this Court
had an opportunity of dealing with the doctrine of merger. It
would be advisable to trace and set out the judicial opinion of
this Court as it has progressed through the times.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay Vs. M/s Amritlal Bhogilal
and Co. AIR 1958 SC 868 this Court held :
There can be no doubt that, if an appeal is provided against an
order passed by a tribunal, the decision of the appellate
authority is the operative decision in law. If the appellate
authority modifies or reverses the decision of the tribunal, it
is obvious that it is the appellate decision that is effective
and can be enforced. In law the position would be just the same
even if the appellate decision merely confirms the decision of
the tribunal. As a result of the confirmation or affirmance of
the decision of the tribunal by the appellate authority the
original decision merges in the appellate decision and it is the
appellate decision alone which subsists and is operative and
capable of enforcement.
However, in the facts and circumstances of the case this Court
refused to apply the doctrine of merger. There, an order of
registration of a firm was made by the Income-tax Officer. The
firm was then assessed as a registered firm. The order of
assessment of the assessee was subjected to appeal before the
Appellate Commissioner. Later on the order passed by the
Income-tax Officer in respect of registration of the firm was
sought to be revised by the Commissioner of Income-tax. Question
arose whether the Commissioner of Income-tax could have exercised
the power of revision. This Court held that though the order of
assessment made by the ITO was appealed against before the
Appellate Commissioner, the order of registration was not
appeallable at all and therefore the order granting registration
of the firm cannot be said to have been merged in the appellate
order of the Appellate Commissioner. While doing so this Court
analysed several provisions of the Income-tax Act so as to
determine the nature and scope of relevant appellate and
revisional powers and held if the subject matter of the two
proceedings is not identical, there can be no merger. In State
of Madras Vs. Madurai Mills Co.Ltd. AIR 1967 SC 681 this
Court held that the doctrine of merger is not a doctrine of rigid
and universal application and it cannot be said that wherever
there are two orders, one by the inferior authority and the other
by a superior authority, passed in an appeal or revision there is
a fusion or merger of two orders irrespective of the
subject-matter of the appellate or revisional order and the scope
of the appeal or revision contemplated by the particular statute.
The application of the doctrine depends on the nature of the
appellate or revisional order in each case and the scope of the
statutory provisions conferring the appellate or revisional
jurisdiction.
In M/s Gojer Brothers Pvt.Ltd. Vs. Shri Ratanlal AIR 1974 SC
1380 this Court made it clear that so far as merger is concerned
on principle there is no distinction between an order of reversal
or modification or an order of confirmation passed by the
appellate authority; in all the three cases the order passed by
the lower authority shall merge in the order passed by the
appellate authority whatsoever be its decision whether of
reversal or modification or only confirmation. Their Lordships
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referred to an earlier decision of this court in U.J.S. Chopra
Vs. State of Bombay AIR 1955 SC 633 wherein it was held.
A judgment pronounced by a High Court in exercise of its
appellate or revisional jurisdiction after issue of a notice and
a full hearing in the presence of both the parties would replace
the judgment of the lower court, thus constituting the judgment
of the High Court the only final judgment to be executed in
accordance with law by the courts below.
In S.S. Rathor Vs. State of Madhya Pradesh AIR 1990- SC 10 a
larger Bench of this Court (Seven-Judges) having reviewed the
available decisions of the Supreme Court on the doctrine of
merger, held that the distinction made between courts and
tribunals as regards the applicability of doctrine of merger is
without any legal justification; where a statutory remedy was
provided against an adverse order in a service dispute and that
remedy was availed, the limitation for filing a suit challenging
the adverse order would commence not from the date of the
original adverse order but on the date when the order of the
higher authority disposing of the statutory remedy was passed.
Support was taken from doctrine of merger by referring to C.I.T.
Vs. Amritlal Bhogilal & Co. (supra) and several other decisions
of this Court.
The logic underlying the doctrine of merger is that there cannot
be more than one decree or operative orders governing the same
subject-matter at a given point of time. When a decree or order
passed by inferior court, tribunal or authority was subjected to
a remedy available under the law before a superior forum then,
though the decree or order under challenge continues to be
effective and binding, nevertheless its finality is put in
jeopardy. Once the superior court has disposed of the lis before
it either way - whether the decree or order under appeal is set
aside or modified or simply confirmed, it is the decree or order
of the superior court, tribunal or authority which is the final,
binding and operative decree or order wherein merges the decree
or order passed by the court, tribunal or the authority below.
However, the doctrine is not of universal or unlimited
application. The nature of jurisdiction exercised by the
superior forum and the content or subject-matter of challenge
laid or which could have been laid shall have to be kept in view.
Stage of SLP and post-leave stage The appellate jurisdiction
exercised by the Supreme Court is conferred by Articles 132 to
136 of the Constitution. Articles 132, 133 and 134 provide when
an appeal thereunder would lie and when not. Article 136 of the
Constitution is a special jurisdiction conferred on the Supreme
Court which is sweeping in its nature. It is a residuary power
in the sense that it confers an appellate jurisdiction on the
Supreme Court subject to the special leave being granted in such
matters as may not be covered by the preceding articles. It is
an overriding provision conferring a special jurisdiction
providing for invoking of the appellate jurisdiction of Supreme
Court not fettered by the sweep of preceding articles. Article
136 opens with a non- obstante clause and conveys a message that
even in the field covered by the preceding articles, jurisdiction
conferred by Article 136 is available to be exercised in an
appropriate case. It is an untrammeled reservoir of power
incapable of being confined to definitional bounds; the
discretion conferred on the Supreme Court being subjected to only
one limitation, that is, the wisdom and good sense or sense of
justice of the Judges. No right of appeal is conferred upon any
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party; only a discretion is vested in Supreme Court to interfere
by granting leave to an applicant to enter in its appellate
jurisdiction not open otherwise and as of right.
The exercise of jurisdiction conferred on this Court by Article
136 of the Constitution consists of two steps : (i) granting
special leave to appeal; and (ii) hearing the appeal. This
distinction is clearly demonstrated by the provisions of Order
XVI of the Supreme Court Rules framed in exercise of the power
conferred by Article 145 of the Constitution. Under Rule 4, the
petition seeking special leave to appeal filed before the Supreme
Court under Article 136 of the Constitution shall be in form
No.28. No separate application for interim relief need be filed,
which can be incorporated in the petition itself. If notice is
ordered on the special leave petition, the petitioner should take
steps to serve the notice on the respondent. The petition shall
be accompanied by a certified copy of the judgment or order
appealed from and an affidavit in support of the statement of
facts contained in the petition. Under Rule 10 the petition for
grant of special leave shall be put up for hearing ex-parte
unless there be a caveat. The court if it thinks fit, may direct
issue of notice to the respondent and adjourn the hearing of the
petition. Under Rule 13, the respondent to whom a notice in
special leave petition is issued or who had filed a caveat, shall
be entitled to oppose the grant of leave or interim orders
without filing any written objections. He shall also be at
liberty to file his objections only by setting out the grounds in
opposition to the questions of law or grounds set out in the
S.L.P.. On hearing the Court may refuse the leave and dismiss
the petition for seeking special leave to appeal either ex-parte
or after issuing notice to the opposite party. Under Rule 11, on
the grant of special leave, the petition for special leave shall,
subject to the payment of additional court fee, if any, be
treated as the petition of appeal and it shall be registered and
numbered as such. The appeal shall then be set down for hearing
in accordance with the procedure laid down thereafter. Thus, a
petition seeking grant of special leave to appeal and the appeal
itself, though both dealt with by Article 136 of the
Constitution, are two clearly distinct stages. In our opinion,
the legal position which emerges is as under :-
1. While hearing the petition for special leave to appeal, the
Court is called upon to see whether the petitioner should be
granted such leave or not. While hearing such petition, the
Court is not exercising its appellate jurisdiction; it is merely
exercising its discretionary jurisdiction to grant or not to
grant leave to appeal. The petitioner is still outside the gate
of entry though aspiring to enter the appellate arena of Supreme
Court. Whether he enters or not would depend on the fate of his
petition for special leave;
2. If the petition seeking grant of leave to appeal is
dismissed, it is an expression of opinion by the Court that a
case for invoking appellate jurisdiction of the Court was not
made out;
3. If leave to appeal is granted the appellate jurisdiction of
the Court stands invoked; the gate for entry in appellate arena
is opened. The petitioner is in and the respondent may also be
JJ
called upon to face him, though in an appropriate case, in spite
of having granted leave to appeal, the court may dismiss the
appeal without noticing the respondent.
4. In spite of a petition for special leave to appeal having
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been filed, the judgment, decree or order against which leave to
appeal has been sought for, continues to be final, effective and
binding as between the parties. Once leave to appeal has been
granted, the finality of the judgment, decree or order appealed
against is put in jeopardy though it continues to be binding and
effective between the parties unless it is a nullity or unless
the Court may pass a specific order staying or suspending the
operation or execution of the judgment, decree or order under
challenge.
Dismissal at stage of special leave - without reasons - no res
judicata, no merger
Having so analysed and defined the two stages of the jurisdiction
conferred by Article 136, now we proceed to deal with a number of
decisions cited at the Bar during the course of hearing and
dealing with the legal tenor of an order of Supreme Court
dismissing a special leave petition. In Workmen of Cochin Port
Trust Vs. Board of Trustees of the Cochin Port Trust and Another
1978 (3) SCC 119, a Three-Judges Bench of this Court has held
that dismissal of special leave petition by the Supreme Court by
a non-speaking order of dismissal where no reasons were given
does not constitute res judicata. All that can be said to have
been decided by the Court is that it was not a fit case where
special leave should be granted. That may be due to various
reasons. During the course of the judgement, their Lordships
have observed that dismissal of a special leave petition under
Article 136 against the order of a Tribunal did not necessarily
bar the entertainment of a writ petition under Article 226
against the order of the Tribunal. The decision of Madras High
Court in The Management of W. India Match Co. Ltd. Vs.
Industrial Tribunal, AIR 1958 Mad 398, 403 was cited before their
Lordships. The High Court had taken the view that the right to
apply for leave to appeal to Supreme Court under Article 136, if
it could be called a right at all, cannot be equated to a right
to appeal and that a High Court could not refuse to entertain an
application under Article 226 of the Constitution on the ground
that the aggrieved party could move Supreme Court under Article
136 of the Constitution. Their Lordships observed that such a
broad statement of law is not quite accurate, although
substantially it is correct.
In Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. Vs. State of Bihar and Ors. -
AIR 1986 SC 1780 there was a labour dispute adjudicated upon by
an award made by the Labour Court. The employer moved the
Supreme Court by filing special leave petition against the award
which was dismissed by a non-speaking order in the following
terms :-
The special leave petition is dismissed. Thereafter the
employer approached the High Court by preferring a petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution seeking quashing of the award of
the Labour Court. On behalf of the employee the principal
contention raised was that in view of the order of the Supreme
Court dismissing the special leave petition preferred against the
award of the Labour Court it was not legally open to the employer
to approach the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution
challenging the very same award. The plea prevailed with the
High Court forming an opinion that the doctrine of election was
applicable and the employer having chosen the remedy of
approaching a superior court and having failed therein he could
not thereafter resort to the alternative remedy of approaching
the High Court. This decision of the High Court was put in issue
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before the Supreme Court. This Court held 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. Referring to two
earlier decisions of this Court, it was further held :-
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, implicity 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.
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 to grant special
leave in cases 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 special leave petition.
[emphasis supplied]
In our opinion what has been stated by this Court applies also to
a case where a special leave petition having been dismissed by a
non- speaking order the applicant approaches the High Court by
moving a petition for review. May be that the Supreme Court was
not inclined to exercise its discretionary jurisdiction under
Article 136 probably because it felt that it was open to the
applicant to move the High Court itself. As nothing has been
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said specifically in the order dismissing the special leave
petition one is left merely guessing. We do not think it would
be just to deprive the aggrieved person of the statutory right of
seeking relief in review jurisdiction of the High Court if a case
for relief in that jurisdiction could be made out merely because
a special leave petition under Article 136 of the Constitution
had already stood rejected by the Supreme Court by a non-speaking
order.
In M/s. Rup Diamonds and others Vs. Union of India and others
AIR 1989 SC 674, the law declared by this Court is that it cannot
be said that the mere rejection of special leave petition could,
by itself, be construed as the imprimatur of this Court on the
correctness of the decision sought to be appealed against.
In Wilson Vs. Colchester Justices 1985 (2) All England Law
Reports 97, the House of Lords stated;
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 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. . 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.
In Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association Vs. Union of
India and Another 1989 (4) SCC 187, and Yogendra Narayan
Chowdhury and Others Vs. Union of India and Others 1996 (7) SCC
1, both decisions by Two-Judges Benches, this Court has held that
a non-speaking order of dismissal of a special leave petition
cannot lead to assumption that it had necessarily decided by
implication the correctness of the decision under challenge.
We may refer to a recent decision, by Two-Judges Bench, of this
Court in V.M. Salgaocar & Bros. Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner
of Income Tax 2000 (3) Scale 240, holding that when a special
leave petition is dismissed, this Court does not comment on the
correctness or otherwise of the order from which leave to appeal
is sought. What the Court means is that it does not consider it
to be a fit case for exercising its jurisdiction under Article
136 of the Constitution. That certainly could not be so when
appeal is dismissed though by a non- speaking order. Here the
doctrine of merger applies. In that case the Supreme Court
upholds the decision of the High Court or of the Tribunal. This
doctrine of merger does not apply in the case of dismissal of
special leave petition under Article 136. When appeal is
dismissed, order of the High Court is merged with that of the
Supreme Court. We find ourselves in entire agreement with the
law so stated. We are clear in our mind that anorder dismissing
a special leave petition, more so when it is by a non-speaking
order, does not result in merger of the order impugned into the
order of the Supreme Court.
A few decisions which apparently take a view to the contrary may
now be noticed. In Sree Narayana Dharmasanghom Trust Vs. Swami
Prakasananda and Others 1997 (6) SCC 78, it was held that a
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revisional order of the High Court against which a petition for
special leave to appeal was dismissed in limine could not have
been reviewed by the High Court subsequent to dismissal of S.L.P.
by Supreme Court. This decision proceeds on the premises, as
stated in para 6 of the order, that It is settled law that even
the dismissal of special leave petition in limine operates as a
final order between the parties. In our opinion, the order is
final in the sense that once a special leave petition is
dismissed, whether by a speaking or non- speaking order or
whether in limine or on contest, second special leave petition
would not lie. However, this statement cannot be stretched and
applied to hold that such an order attracts applicability of
doctrine of merger and excludes the jurisdiction of the Court or
authority passing the order to review the same.
In State of Maharashtra and Anr. Vs. Prabhakar Bhikaji Ingle
1996 (3) SCC 463, the view taken by a Two-Judges Bench of this
Court is that the dismissal of special leave petition without a
speaking order does not constitute res judicata but the order
dealt with in S.L.P., disposed of by a non-speaking order cannot
be subjected to review by the Tribunal. In our opinion the law
has been too broadly stated through the said observation.
Learned Judges have been guided by the consideration of judicial
discipline which, as we would shortly deal with, is a principle
of great relevance and may be attracted in an appropriate case.
But we find it difficult to subscribe to the view, as expressed
in this decision, that dismissal of SLP without a speaking order
amounts to confirmation by Supreme Court of the order against
which leave was sought for and the order had stood merged in the
order of Supreme Court.
Dismissal of SLP by speaking or reasoned order - no merger but
Rule of discipline and Article 141 attracted. The efficacy of an
order disposing of a special leave petition under Article 136 of
the Constitution came up for the consideration of Constitution
Bench in Penu Balakrishna Iyer and Ors. Vs. Ariya M. Ramaswami
Iyer and Ors. - AIR 1965 SC 165 in the context of revocation of
a special leave once granted. This Court held that in a given
case if the respondent brings to the notice of the Supreme Court
facts which would justify the Court in revoking the leave earlier
granted by it, the Supreme Court would in the interest of justice
not hesitate to adopt that course. It was therefore held that no
general rules could be laid down governing the exercise of wide
powers conferred on this Court under Article 136; whether the
jurisdiction of this Court under Article 136 should be exercised
or not and if used, on what terms and conditions, is a matter
depending on the facts of each case. If at the stage when
special leave is granted the respondent- caveator appears and
resists the grant of special leave and the ground urged in
support of resisting the grant of special leave is rejected on
merits resulting in grant of special leave then it would not be
open to the respondent to raise the same point over again at the
time of the final hearing of the appeal. However, if the
respondent/caveator does not appear, or having appeared, does not
raise a point, or even if he raised a point and the Court does
not decide it before grant of special leave, the same point can
be raised at the time of final hearing. There would be no
technical bar of res judicata. The Constitution Bench thus makes
it clear that the order disposing of a special leave petition has
finality of a limited nature extending only to the points
expressly decided by it.
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The underlying logic attaching efficacy to an order of the
Supreme Court dismissing S.L.P. after hearing counsel for the
parties is discernible from a recent Three-Judges Bench decision
of this Court in Abbai Maligai Partnership Firm & Anr. Vs. K.
Santhakumaran & Ors. 1998 (7) SCC 386. In the matter of
eviction proceeding initiated before the Rent Controller, the
order passed therein was subjected to appeal and then revision
before the High Court. Special leave petitions were preferred
before the Supreme Court where the respondents were present on
caveat. Both the sides were heard through the senior advocates
representing them. The special leave petitions were dismissed.
The High Court thereafter entertained review petitions which were
highly belated and having condoned the delay reversed the orders
made earlier in civil revision petitions. The orders in review
were challenged by filing appeals under leave granted on special
leave petitions. This Court observed that what was done by the
learned single Judge was subversive of judicial discipline.
The facts and circumstances of the case persuaded this Court to
form an opinion that the tenants were indulging in vexatious
litigations, abusing the process of the Court by approaching the
High Court and the very entertainment of review petitions (after
condoning a long delay of 221 days) and then reversing the
earlier orders was an affront to the order of this Court.
However the learned judges deciding the case have nowhere in the
course of their judgment relied on doctrine of merger for taking
the view they have done. A careful reading of this decision
brings out the correct statement of law and fortifies us in
taking the view as under.
A petition for leave to appeal to this Court may be dismissed by
a non-speaking order or by a speaking order. Whatever be the
phraseology employed in the order of dismissal, if it is a
non-speaking order, i.e. it does not assign reasons for
dismissing the special leave petition, it would neither attract
the doctrine of merger so as to stand substituted in place of the
order put in issue before it nor would it be a declaration of law
by the Supreme Court under Article 141 of the Constitution for
there is no law which has been declared. If the order of
dismissal be supported by reasons then also the doctrine of
merger would not be attracted because the jurisdiction exercised
was not an appellate jurisdiction but merely a discretionary
jurisdiction refusing to grant leave to appeal. We have already
dealt with this aspect earlier. Still the reasons stated by the
Court would attract applicability of Article 141 of the
Constitution if there is a law declared by the Supreme Court
which obviously would be binding on all the courts and tribunals
in India and certainly the parties thereto. The statement
contained in the order other than on points of law would be
binding on the parties and the court or tribunal, whose order was
under challenge on the principle of judicial discipline, this
Court being the apex court of the country. No court or tribunal
or parties would have the liberty of taking or canvassing any
view contrary to the one expressed by this Court. The order of
Supreme Court would mean that it has declared the law and in that
light the case was considered not fit for grant of leave. The
declaration of law will be governed by Article 141 but still, the
case not being one where leave was granted, the doctrine of
merger does not apply. The Court sometimes leaves the question
of law open. Or it sometimes briefly lays down the principle,
may be, contrary to the one laid down by the High Court and yet
would dismiss the special leave petition. The reasons given are
intended for purposes of Article 141. This is so done because in
the event of merely dismissing the special leave petition, it is
likely that an argument could be advanced in the High Court that
the Supreme Court has to be understood as not to have differed in
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law with the High Court.
Incidentally we may notice two other decisions of this Court
which though not directly in point, the law laid down wherein
would be of some assistance to us. In Shankar Ramchandra
Abhyankar Vs. Krishnaji Dattatraya Bapat AIR 1970 SC 1, this
Court vide para 7 has emphasized three pre conditions attracting
applicability of doctrine of merger. They are : i) the
jurisdiction exercised should be appellate or revisional
jurisdiction; ii) the jurisdiction should have been exercised
after issue of notice; and, iii) after a full hearing in
presence of both the parties. Then the appellate or revisional
order would replace the judgment of the lower court and
constitute the only final judgment. In Sushil Kumar Sen Vs.
State of Bihar AIR 1975 SC 1185 the doctrine of merger usually
applicable to orders passed in exercise of appellate or
revisional jurisdiction was held to be applicable also to orders
passed in exercise of review jurisdiction. This Court held that
the effect of allowing an application for review of a decree is
to vacate a decree passed. The decree that is subsequently
passed on review whether it modifies, reverses or confirms the
decree originally passed, is a new decree superseding the
original one. The distinction is clear. Entertaining an
application for review does not vacate the decree sought to be
reviewed. It is only when the application for review has been
allowed that the decree under review is vacated. Thereafter the
matter is heard afresh and the decree passed therein, whatever be
the nature of the new decree, would be a decree superseding the
earlier one. The principle or logic flowing from the above-said
decisions can usefully be utilised for resolving the issue at
hand. Mere pendency of an application seeking leave to appeal
does not put in jeopardy the finality of the decree or order
sought to be subjected to exercise of appellate jurisdiction by
the Supreme Court. It is only if the application is allowed and
leave to appeal granted then the finality of the decree or order
under challenge is jeopardised as the pendency of appeal reopens
the issues decided and this court is then scrutinising the
correctness of the decision in exercise of its appellate
jurisdiction.
In Gopalbandhu Biswal Vs. Krishna Chandra Mohanty & Ors. 1998
(4) SCC 447 there are observations vide para 8 and at a few other
places that rejection of a special leave petition against the
order of administrative tribunal makes the order of the Tribunal
final and binding and the party cannot thereafter go back to the
Tribunal to apply for review. However, paras 12 & 13 of the
judgment go to show that (i) the applications for review before
the Tribunal were not within the principle laid down under Order
47 Rule 1 of the C.P.C., (ii) did not comply with the relevant
rules contained in Central Administrative Tribunal (Procedure)
Rules, 1987, (iii) the review applicants were not in the category
of persons aggrieved, and (iv) the review petitions were filed
beyond the period of limitation prescribed and the delay was not
explained. Thus the case proceeds on the peculiar facts of its
own.
In Junior Telecom Officers Forum & Ors. Vs. Union of India &
Ors. 1993 Supp.(4) SCC 693 also the view taken by a Two- Judges
Bench of this Court is that the dismissal of the SLP, though in
limine, was on merits and the Court had declined to interfere
with the impugned judgment of the High Court except to a limited
extent as noticed therein whereafter the Tribunal could not have
reopened the matter. The order passed earlier by the Supreme
Court is quoted in para 5 of the report. It clearly states that
on SLP itself the Court heard counsel of both the sides. While
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dismissing the special leave petition on merits, this Court had
to some extent interfere with the order of the High Court which
was put in issue before the Supreme Court. It is clear that the
Supreme Court had exercised appellate jurisdiction vested in it
under Article 136 of the Constitution and heard both the sides
though the leave was not formally granted and the special leave
petition was not formally converted into an appeal. Hence this
decision rests on the special facts of that case.
In Supreme Court Employees Welfare Associations case (supra),
this Court held :-
When Supreme Court gives reasons while dismissing a special
leave petition under Article 136 the decision becomes one which
attracts Article 141. But when no reason is given and the
special leave petition is summarily dismissed, the Court does not
lay down any law under Article 141. 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 the Supreme Court had
decided only that it was not a fit case where special leave
petition should be granted.
Leave granted - dismissal without reasons - merger results It may
be that in spite of having granted leave to appeal, the Court may
dismiss the appeal on such grounds as may have provided
foundation for refusing the grant at the earlier stage. But that
will be a dismissal of appeal. The decision of this Court would
result in superseding the decision under appeal attracting
doctrine of merger. But if the same reasons had prevailed with
this Court for refusing leave to appeal, the order would not have
been an appellate order but only an order refusing to grant leave
to appeal.
Doctrine of merger and review :-
This question directly arises in the case before us.
The doctrine of merger and the right of review are concepts which
are closely inter-linked. If the judgment of the High Court has
come up to this Court by way of a special leave, and special
leave is granted and the appeal is disposed of with or without
reasons, by affirmance or otherwise, the judgment of the High
Court merges with that of this Court. In that event, it is not
permissible to move the High Court by review because the judgment
of the High Court has merged with the judgment of this Court.
But where the special leave petition is dismissed - there being
no merger, the aggrieved party is not deprived of any statutory
right of review, if it was available and he can pursue it. It
may be that the review court may interfere, or it may not
interfere depending upon the law and principles applicable to
interference in the review. But the High Court, if it exercises
a power of review or deals with a review application on merits -
in a case where the High Courts order had not merged with an
order passed by this Court after grant of special leave - the
High Court could not, in law, be said to be wrong in exercising
statutory jurisdiction or power vested in it.
It will be useful to refer to Order 47 Rule 1 of the Code of
Civil Procedure 1908. It reads as follows :
R.1. Application for review of judgment.
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(1) Any person considering himself aggrieved, -
(a) by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed, but
from which no appeal has been preferred,
(b) by a decree or order from which no appeal is allowed, or
(c) by a decision on reference from a Court of Small Causes, and
who, from the discovery of new and important matter or evidence
which, after the exercise of due diligence, was not within his
knowledge or could not be produced by him at the time when the
decree was passed or order made, or on account of some mistake or
error apparent on the face of the record, or for any other
sufficient reason, desires to obtain a review of the decree
passed or order made against him, may apply for a review of
judgment to the Court which passed the decree or made the order.
(2) A party who is not appealing from a decree or order may apply
for a review of judgment notwithstanding the pendency of an
appeal by some other party except where the ground of such appeal
is common to the applicant and the appellant, or when, being
respondent, he can present to the Appellate Court the case on
which he applies for the review.
[Explanation. - The fact that the decision on a question of law
on which the judgment of the Court is based has been reversed or
modified by the subsequent decision of a superior Court in any
other case, shall not be a ground for the review of such
judgment.]
For our purpose it is clause (a) sub-rule(1) which is relevant.
It contemplates a situation where an appeal is allowed but no
appeal has been preferred. The Rule came up for consideration
of this Court in Thungabhadra Industries Ltd. Vs. The Govt. of
A.P. (AIR 1964 SC 1372) in the context of Article 136 of the
Constitution of India. The applicant had filed an application
for review of the order of the High Court refusing to grant a
certificate under Article 133 of the Constitution. The applicant
also filed an application for special leave to appeal in respect
of the same matter under Article 136 along with an application
for condonation of delay. The Supreme Court refused to condone
the delay and rejected the application under Article 136. When
the application for review came up for consideration before the
High Court, it was dismissed on the ground that the special leave
petition had been dismissed by the Supreme Court. This Court
held that the crucial date for determining whether or not the
terms of Order 47 Rule 1(1) CPC are satisfied is the date when
the application for review is filed. If on that date no appeal
has been filed it is competent for the Court hearing the petition
for review to dispose of the application on the merits
notwithstanding the pendency of the appeal, subject only to this,
that if before the application for review is finally decided the
appeal itself has been disposed of, the jurisdiction of the Court
hearing the review petition would come to an end. On the date
when the application for review was filed the applicant had not
filed an appeal to this Court and therefore there was no bar to
the petition for review being entertained.
Let us assume that the review is filed first and the delay in the
SLP is condoned and the special leave petition is ultimately
granted and the appeal is pending in this Court. The position
then, under Order 47 Rule 1 CPC is that still the review can be
disposed of by the High Court. If the review of a decree is
granted before the disposal of the appeal against the decree, the
decree appealed against will cease to exist and the appeal would
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be rendered incompetent. An appeal cannot be preferred against a
decree after a review against the decree has been granted. This
is because the decree reviewed gets merged in the decree passed
on review and the appeal to the superior court preferred against
the earlier decree - the one before review - becomes infructuous.
The Review can be filed even after SLP is dismissed is clear from
the language of Order 47 Rule 1 (a). Thus the words no appeal
has been preferred in Order 47 Rule 1(a) would also mean a
situation where special leave is not granted. Till then there is
no appeal in the eye of law before the superior court.
Therefore, the review can be preferred in the High Court before
special leave is granted, but not after it is granted. The
reason is obvious. Once special leave is granted the
jurisdiction to consider the validity of the High Courts order
vests in the Supreme Court and the High Court cannot entertain a
review thereafter, unless such a review application was preferred
in the High Court before special leave was granted.
Conclusions :-
We have catalogued and dealt with all the available decisions of
this Court brought to our notice on the point at issue. It is
clear that as amongst the several two-Judges Bench decisions
there is a conflict of opinion and needs to be set at rest. The
source of power conferring binding efficacy on decisions of this
Court is not uniform in all such decisions. Reference is found
having been made to (i) Article 141 of the Constitution, (ii)
doctrine of merger, (iii) res-judicata, and (iv) Rule of
discipline flowing from this Court being the highest court of the
land.
A petition seeking grant of special leave to appeal may be
rejected for several reasons. For example, it may be rejected
(i) as barred by time, or (ii) being a defective presentation,
(iii) the petitioner having no locus standi to file the petition,
(iv) the conduct of the petitioner disentitling him to any
indulgence by the Court, (iv) the question raised by the
petitioner for consideration by this Court being not fit for
consideration or deserving being dealt with by the apex court of
the country and so on. The expression often employed by this
Court while disposing of such petitions are - heard and
dismissed, dismissed, dismissed as barred by time and so on.
May be that at the admission stage itself the opposite party
appears on caveat or on notice and offers contest to the
maintainability of the petition. The Court may apply its mind to
the meritworthiness of the petitioners prayer seeking leave to
file an appeal and having formed an opinion may say dismissed on
merits. Such an order may be passed even ex-parte, that is, in
the absence of the opposite party. In any case, the dismissal
would remain a dismissal by a non-speaking order where no reasons
have been assigned and no law has been declared by the Supreme
Court. The dismissal is not of the appeal but of the special
leave petition. Even if the merits have been gone into, they are
the merits of the special leave petition only. In our opinion
neither doctrine of merger nor Article 141 of the Constitution is
attracted to such an order. Grounds entitling exercise of review
jurisdiction conferred by Order 47 Rule 1 of the C.P.C. or any
other statutory provision or allowing review of an order passed
in exercise of writ or supervisory jurisdiction of the High Court
(where also the principles underlying or emerging from Order 47
Rule 1 of the C.P.C. act as guidelines) are not necessarily the
same on which this court exercises discretion to grant or not to
grant special leave to appeal while disposing of a petition for
the purpose. Mere rejection of special leave petition does not
take away the jurisdiction of the court, tribunal or forum whose
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order forms the subject matter of petition for special leave to
review its own order if grounds for exercise of review
jurisdiction are shown to exist. Where the order rejecting an
SLP is a speaking order, that is, where reasons have been
assigned by this Court for rejecting the petition for special
leave and are stated in the order still the order remains the one
rejecting prayer for the grant of leave to appeal. The
petitioner has been turned away at the threshold without having
been allowed to enter in the appellate jurisdiction of this
Court. Here also the doctrine of merger would not apply. But
the law stated or declared by this Court in its order shall
attract applicability of Article 141 of the Constitution. The
reasons assigned by this Court in its order expressing its
adjudication (expressly or by necessary implication) on point of
fact or law shall take away the jurisdiction of any other court,
tribunal or authority to express any opinion in conflict with or
in departure from the view taken by this Court because permitting
to do so would be subversive of judicial discipline and an
affront to the order of this Court. However this would be so not
by reference to the doctrine of merger.
Once a special leave petition has been granted, the doors for the
exercise of appellate jurisdiction of this Court have been let
open. The order impugned before the Supreme Court becomes an
order appealed against. Any order passed thereafter would be an
appellate order and would attract the applicability of doctrine
of merger. It would not make a difference whether the order is
one of reversal or of modification or of dismissal affirming the
order appealed against. It would also not make any difference if
the order is a speaking or non- speaking one. Whenever this
Court has felt inclined to apply its mind to the merits of the
order put in issue before it though it may be inclined to affirm
the same, it is customary with this Court to grant leave to
appeal and thereafter dismiss the appeal itself (and not merely
the petition for special leave) though at times the orders
granting leave to appeal and dismissing the appeal are contained
in the same order and at times the orders are quite brief.
Nevertheless, the order shows the exercise of appellate
jurisdiction and therein the merits of the order impugned having
been subjected to judicial scrutiny of this Court.
To merge means to sink or disappear in something else; to
become absorbed or extinguished; to be combined or be swallowed
up. Merger in law is defined as the absorption of a thing of
lesser importance by a greater, whereby the lesser ceases to
exist, but the greater is not increased; an absorption or
swallowing up so as to involve a loss of identity and
individuality. (See Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. LVII, pp.
1067-1068)
We may look at the issue from another angle. The Supreme Court
cannot and does not reverse or modify the decree or order
appealed against while deciding a petition for special leave to
appeal. What is impugned before the Supreme Court can be
reversed or modified only after granting leave to appeal and then
assuming appellate jurisdiction over it. If the order impugned
before the Supeme Court cannot be reversed or modified at the SLP
stage obviously that order cannot also be affirmed at the SLP
stage.
To sum up our conclusions are :-
(i) Where an appeal or revision is provided against an order passed by
a court, tribunal or any other authority before superior forum and such
superior forum modifies, reverses or affirms the decision put in issue
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before it, the decision by the subordinate forum merges in the decision
by the superior forum and it is the latter which subsists, remains
operative and is capable of enforcement in the eye of law.
ii) The jurisdiction conferred by Article 136 of the Constitution
is divisible into two stages. First stage is upto the disposal
of prayer for special leave to file an appeal. The second stage
commences if and when the leave to appeal is granted and special
leave petition is converted into an appeal.
(iii) Doctrine of merger is not a doctrine of universal or
unlimite application. It will depend on the nature of
jurisdiction exercised by the superior forum and the content or
subject-matter of challenge laid or capable of being laid shall
be determinative of the applicability of merger. The superior
jurisdiction should be capable of reversing, modifying or
affirming the order put in issue before it. Under Article 136 of
the Constitution the Supreme Court may reverse, modify or affirm
the judgment-decree or order appealed against while exercising
its appellate jurisdiction and not while exercising the
discretionary jurisdiction disposing of petition for special
leave to appeal. The doctrine of merger can therefore be applied
to the former and not to the latter.
iv) An order refusing special leave to appeal may be a non-
speaking order or a speaking one. In either case it does not
attract the doctrine of merger. An order refusing special leave
to appeal does not stand substituted in place of the order under
challenge. All that it means is that the Court was not inclined
to exercise its discretion so as to allow the appeal being filed.
v) If the order refusing leave to appeal is a speaking order,
i.e. gives reasons for refusing the grant of leave, then the
order has two implications. Firstly, the statement of law
contained in the order is a declaration of law by the Supreme
Court within the meaning of Article 141 of the Constitution.
Secondly, other than the declaration of law, whatever is stated
in the order are the findings recorded by the Supreme Court which
would bind the parties thereto and also the court, tribunal or
authority in any proceedings subsequent thereto by way of
judicial discipline, the Supreme Court being the apex court of
the country. But, this does not amount to saying that the order
of the court, tribunal or authority below has stood merged in the
order of the Supreme Court rejecting special leave petition or
that the order of the Supreme Court is the only order binding as
res judicata in subsequent proceedings between the parties.
(vi) Once leave to appeal has been granted and appellate
jurisdiction of Supreme Court has been invoked the order passed
in appeal would attract the doctrine of merger; the order may be
of reversal, modification or merely affirmation.
(vii) On an appeal having been preferred or a petition seeking
leave to appeal having been converted into an appeal before
Supreme Court the jurisdiction of High Court to entertain a revew
petition is lost thereafter as provided by sub-rule (1) of Rule
(1) of Order 47 of the C.P.C.
Having thus made the law clear, the case at hand poses no problem
for solution. The earlier order of the High Court was sought to
be subjected to exercise of appellate jurisdiction of Supreme
Court by the State of Kerala wherein it did not succeed. The
prayer contained in the petition seeking leave to appeal to this
Court was found devoid of any merits and hence dismissed. The
order is a non- speaking and unreasoned order. All that can be
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spelled out is that the Court was not convinced of the need for
exercising its appellate jurisdiction. The order of the High
Court dated 17.12.1982 did not merge in the order dated 18.7.1983
passed by this Court. So it is available to be reviewed by the
High Court. Moreover such a right of review is now statutorily
conferred on the High Court by sub-section (2) of Section 8C of
the Kerala Act. Legislature has taken care to confer the
jurisdiction to review on the High Court as to such appellate
orders also against which though an appeal was carried to the
Supreme Court, the same was not admitted by it. An appeal would
be said to have been admitted by the Supreme Court if leave to
appeal was granted. The constitutional validity of sub-section
(2) of Section 8C has not been challenged. Though, Shri T.L.V.
Iyer, the learned senior counsel for the appellant made a feeble
attempt at raising such a plea at the time of hearing but
unsuccessfully, as such a plea has not so far been raised before
the High Court also not in the petition filed before this Court.
No fault can be found with the approach of the High Court. The
appeal is dismissed. No order as to the costs.