Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANNAN LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MST. CHHOTAKA BIBI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1970
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1374 1971 SCR (1) 253
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC1503 (10)
ACT:
The U.P. High Court (Abolition of Letters Patent Appeals)
Act, 1962 (U.P. Act 14 of 1962), s. 3-Special Appeal against
judgment of Single Judge of High Court presented with
deficient court-fees before coming into force U.P. Act 14 of
1962-Deficiency made up under order of Court after coming
into force of Act-Appeal whether to be treated as pending on day
immediately preceding coming into force of Act within
meaning of s. 3(2)Court Fees Act, S. 4 and Code of Civil
Procedures s. 149 should he read harmoniously.
HEADNOTE:
The U.P. High Court (Abolition of Letters Patent Appeals)
Act came in-to force on November 13 1962. Section 3(1) of-
the Act provided that no appeal arising from a suit or a
proceeding instituted or commenced whether prior or
subsequent to the enforcement of the Act, shall lie to the
High Court from a judgment and order of one Judge of the
High Court, made in exercise of appellate jurisdiction in
respect of a decree or order made by a court subject to the
superintendence of the High Court, anything to the contrary
contained in cl. 10 of the, Letters Patent of Her Majesty
dated 17th March 1866 read with cls, 17 of the U.P. High
Court Amalgamation Order of 1948, or in ’any law,
notwithstanding. In subs. (2) of the section an exception
was made in the case of appeals pending before the, High
Court on the date immediately preceding the date of en-
forcement of the Act. The memorandum of appeal in Special
Appeal No. 1880 of 1962 was presented in the High Court of
Allababad on November 9, 1962. The High Court directed the
payment of additional court fees and on that being done that
memorandum was ’accented and registered in January 1963.
Eventually, however the High Court held that the appeal was
not saved by s. 3(2) of U.P. Act of 1962, since in view of
s. 4 of the Court Fees Act the memorandum of appeal had no
effect before the making good of the deficiency in court
fees. In appeal by certificate, to this Court, the question
for decision was whether there was an appeal pending before
the High Court on November 12, 1962 i.e. tile date
immediately preceding the date of the enforcement of Act 14
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of 1962.
HELD : In considering the question as to the maintainability
of an appeal when the court fee paid was insufficient to
start with but the deficiency was made good later on, the
provisions of the Court Fees Act and the Code of Civil
Procedure have to be read together to form a harmonious
whole and no effort should be made to give precedence to
provisions in, one over those of the other unless the
express words of a statute clearly override there of the
other. In the present context this could only-be done by
readings s. 149 of the Code of Civil Procedure as. a proviso
to s. 4 of the Court Fees Act by allowing the deficiency to
be made good within the period of time fixed by it. [261 F-
H]
Although there is no definition of the word "appeal" in the
Code of Civil Procedure, it can be instituted by filing a
memorandum of appeal as provided in O. 41, r. 1 of the Code.
The filing of a memorandum of appeal therefore bring an
appeal into existence; if the memorandum is deficient in
court-fee, it may be rejected and if rejected, the appeal
comes to an end. But if it is not rejected and time is
given to the appellant
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to make up the deficiency and this opportunity is availed of
s. 149 of the Code which expressly provides that the
document is to have validity with retrospective effect as if
the deficiency had been made good in the first instance
comes into play. By reason of the deeming provision in s.
149 the memorandum of appeal is to have, full force and
effect and the appeal has to be treated as one pending from
the date when it was before the Stamp Reporter and the
deficiency noted therein. [264 H; 265 D-H]
Applying the above principle the bar of s. 3(1) of U.P. Act
14 of 1962 would not operate in the instant case since the
appeal in question must be held to have been ’pending’
within the meaning of s. 3(2). [265 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 544 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 18, 1964 of
the Allahabad High Court in-Special Appeal No. 880 of 1962.
Gobind Das and G. S. Chatterjee for the appellant.
C. B. Agarwala, Yogeshwar Prasad and S. K. Bagga, for res-
pondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by--
Mitter, J. In this appeal by certificate granted by the
Allahabad High Court the only question is, whether Special
Appeal No. 880 of 196 of that court was maintainable in view
of the provisions of the U.P. Act XIV of 1962 abolishing
such appeals.
The said Act styled the U.P. High Court (Abolition of Let-
ters Patent Appeals) Act came into force on 13th November,
1962. Section 3 of the Act provided as follows :-
"(1) No appeal, arising from a suit or
proceeding instituted or commenced, whether
prior or subsequent to the enforcement of this
Act, shall lie to the High Court from a
judgment and order of one Judge of the the
High Court, made in exercise of appellate
jurisdiction, in respect of a decree or order
made by a court subject to the superintendence
of the High Court, anything to the contrary
contained in clause ten of the Letters Patent
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of Her Majesty, dated the 17th March 1866 read
with Clause 17 of the U.P. High Courts’ (Amal-
gamation) Order, 1948, or in any law not with
standing.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1) all appeals pending before the
High Court on the date immediately preceding
the date of enforcement of this Act shall
continue to lie and be heard and disposed of
as heretobefore, as if this Act had not been
brought into force."
255
The memorandum of appeal in Special Appeal No. 880 of 1962
was presented in the High Court on 9th November, 1962.
There was some doubt as to whether the court-fee paid in
respect of the memorandum at the date of its presentment was
sufficient. Ultimately however a Bench of the High Court
directed the payment of additional court-fee and on that
being done the memorandum was accepted and registered in
January 1963. The question before us is, whether there was
an appeal pending before the High Court on 12th November
1962 i.e. the date immediately preceding the date of
enforcement of the above U.P. Act.
It will not be out of place to set forth a short history of
the litigation culminating in the filing of the said
memorandum of appeal. On 2nd-April 1872 a property was
mortgaged with possession to one Beni Madho by two
mortgagers, namely, Girdharilal and Smt. Sunder Bibi for a
sum of Rs. 3,684. The first respondent herein claiming to
be the representative-in-interest of the mortgagors claimed
to have paid the amount of the mortgage money to respondents
2 to 7 herein on 10th September 1945. She filed a suit on
September 26, 1946 ’being Suit No. 117 of 1946 praying inter
alia for )ejectment from the suit property of the appellant
(impleaded as defendant No. 1 in the suit) and another
person impleaded as defendant No. 8, a sub-tenant. For pur-
poses of jurisdiction and court-fee she valued the property
in suit i.e. a grove with houses, at Rs. 5,200 besides Rs.
420 by way of mesne profits. Alternatively, she prayed for
a decree for Rs. 3,684 in case possession and occupation was
not decreed to her. On 2nd November 1951 the Additional
Civil Judge of Mirzapur dismissed the suit as, against the
appellant and defendants 3 and 4. The plaintiff, the first
respondent herein, filed First Appeal No. 309 of 1952 is the
High Court at Allahabad oil 26th February, 1952. She valued
the appeal at Rs. 4,816 and paid court-fee amounting to Rs.
493-12-0. During the pendency of the appeal to the High
Court, the original plaintiff died and her legal
representatives were brought on record. A learned single
Judge or the High Court allowed the appeal by a judgment
rendered on 10th September 1962 He held that the plaintiff
was entitled to a decree for possession against respondents
1 and 8 and also passed a decree for Rs. 420 against
respondent No. 1 alone. According to the learned Judge
defendants 2 to 7 being the representatives of the mortgagee
were proforma defendants and were not liable for the
Dlaintiffs costs. On 8th November, 1962 the appellant
(defendant No. 1 in the suit) filed a memorandum of appeal
which was ultimately registered as Special Appeal No. 880 of
1962 paying court-fee amounting to Rs. 425 on the basis of
the valuation of the property at Rs. 4,816. The Stamp
Reporter of the Court reported that the court-fee stamps
affixed to the
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memorandum were insufficient by Rs. 425 according to the
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valuation of the property which was Rs. 8,920 on the basis
of the relief claimed. Counsel for the appellant made an
endorsement at the foot of the said report raising
objections thereto. The Joint Registrar made a note on 9th
November 1962 reading:
"Without going through the papers the question
of court-fees cannot be decided forthwith.
Let it be taken as presented to-day."
The order sheet shows that
In compliance with the Registrar’s order dated
11th December 1962 an objection filed by
counsel for, the appellant was put up with
the Stain Reporter’s Report."
On 20th December 1962 the Taxing Officer made a note that
the deficiency, of Rs. 425/- had been made good on that date
by the appellant and that counsel expressed his desire
not to press the objection raised earlier. The Taxing’
Officer directed that the matter be placed before the
Court for orders as to the acceptance of stamps to make good
the deficiency and for amendment of the valuation of the
Special Appeal. The matter appeared on the board of a
Division Bench of the High Court on 31st December, 1962 when
it was adjourned till 3rd January 1963. On the last
mentioned date the Bench allowed the amendment of the
valuation of the appeal and directed the admission of the
appeal and issue of notices. On the matter appearing before
another Division Bench on 4th January, 1963 and explanatory
order was made recording, that the court-fee on the
memorandum of the Special Appeal was originally deficient
because the First Appeal had been wrongly under-valued
inasmuch as the valuation of the property had been
determined by the tral court at the figure of Rs. 8,920.
After that determination, the trial court had called upon
the plaintiff to make up the deficiency in respect of the
court-fee for the relief of possession and the plaintiff had
complied with that order. Consequently the order of the
trial court determining the court-fee payable as well as the
valuation had become final. The plaintiff should have
valued the First Appeal at Rs. 8,920 and his counsel was
prepared to make up the deficiency in court-fee.
The point to note is that the appellant in the Special
Appeal was probably not very much to blame inasmuch as he
had valued the same according to the valuation put on the
First Appeal by the plaintiff herself to start with. The
question however remains as to whether on the deficiency
being made good the appeal could be treated as one pending
on 12th November, 1962.
257
Appeals being creatures of statutes or statutory rules, we
must turn to the Code of Civil Procedure first to find out
how they are to be instituted. Order 41 rule 1 (1) lays
down that :
"Every appeal shall be preferred in the form
of a memorandum signed by the appellant or his
pleader and presented to the Court or to such
officer as it appoints in this behalf. The
memorandum shall be accompanied by a copy of
the decree appealed from and (unless the
Appellate Court dispenses therewith) of the
judgment on which it is founded."
Sub-r.(2) of the rule provides that the memorandum shall set
forth concisely and under distinct heads, the grounds of
objection to the decree appealed from without any argument
or narrative; and such grounds shall be numbered
consecutively. Under rule 9(1) of the Order:
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"Whether a memorandum of appeal is admitted,
the Appellate Court of the proper officer of
that Court shall endorse thereon the date of
presentation, and shall register the appeal in
a book to be kept for the purpose."
Under sub-r.(2) such book is called the Register of Appeals.
Rule 22 of Order 41 gives the respondent, although he may
not have appealed from any part of the decree the right to
support the decree on any of the grounds decided against him
and further to take any cross-objection to the decree which
he could have taken by way of appeal provided he files such
objection in the appellate court in- the manner laid down.
Under sub-r.(2) such cross-objection has to be put up in the
form of a memorandum.
It is necessary to note the relevant provisions of the Rules
of the High Court Allahabad High Court made in exercise of
the powers conferred by Art.225 of the Constitution of India
and all other powers enabling the court in that behalf with
regard to the institution of appeals generally and also
Special Appeals. In Chapter 1 rule 3 a Special Appeal is
defined as an appeal from the judgment of one Judge.
Omitting the words which are not relevant, rule 5 of Chapter
VIII. provides
An appeal shall lie to the Court from the
judgment..... of one Judge made in the
exercise of appellate jurisdiction in respect
of a decree or order made in the exercise of
appellate jurisdiction by a court subject to
the superintendency of the Court, where the
Judge who passed the judgment declares that
the case is a fit one for- appeal."
Chapter XI deals in general with the presentation of appeals
and applications. Under rule 1 of this Chapter every
memorandum of
258
appeal or objections must be presented for admission in
court.( This rule however does not apply to appeals and ap-
plications that may under the rules of the court be filed
before the Registrar or other officers. Under r. 3 of
Chapter Xi no memorandum of appeal shall be presented unless
it bears an office report specifying the matters mentioned
in clauses (a) to (f) thereof. Cl. (a) relates to the
question whether the memorandum of appeal is within time or
if beyond time, the period by Which it is beyond time.
Under cl. (d) a statement has to be made whether any court-
fee is payable or not. The matters mentioned in cl. (e) are
:
"Where court-fee is payable, whether the
court"fee paid is sufficient and in case it is
deficient, the extent fo such deficiency."
The rule also lays down that where a report under cl. (e)
cannot be made without an examination of the record, the
office shall state that a further report would be made on
receipt of the record. Under r. 4 it is open to the
appellant or his advocate if he contests the office report
as to court-fee to take the memorandum of appeal to the
Taxing Officer for the determination of his objection and
the Taxing Officer must determine it forthwith. Further, if
the Taxing Officer decides that there is deficiency in the
amount of the court-fee paid, the appellant or the
applicant as the case may be shall make good such deficiency
before presenting the memorandum or application to the
court; provided that if limitation is about to expire and
the time is too Short to enable the appellant to make good
such deficiency, he can present the memorandum of appeal in
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court and make good such deficiency within such time as may
be allowed by the court. Under r. 10(2) of Chapter IX
"In a Special Appeal from the judgment of one
Judge passed in the exercise of appellate
jurisdiction, the memorandum of appeal, duly
stamped, shall be presented within sixty days
from the date of judgment. The memorandum of
appeal need not be accompanied by a copy of
the judgment appealed from or a copy of the
decree or formal order and the time taken in
obtaining such copies shall not be excluded in
computing the said period of sixty days."
Under sub-r. (1) of r. 21 of Chapter IX no memorandum of
appeal shall be received if it is not in the proper form or
it is not accompanied by the necessary documents. Under
sub-r. (2) :
"If the required documents are not supplied or
the defects are not removed within the time
allowed by the Judge or the Registrar, as the
case may be, the appli-
259
cation or memorandum of appeal shall be-
listed for rejection before the Court."
Rule 1 of Chapter XXXVII lays down that a separate register
of institutions in the prescribed form has to be kept for
each of the classes of cases mentioned therein. The 14th
item in the list is "Special Appeals". Under this rule
cases must be, entered in the register according to the date
of admission and no defective case should be entered
therein. Under r. 3 of this Chapter a register in the
prescribed form has to be maintained of all defective cases
under several classes mentioned in rule 1 including Special
Appeals. Such cases have to be entered in the register
according to the date of presentation and a record kept of
the steps taken from time to time to remove the defect. As
soon as the defect has been removed and the case admitted,
it has to be entered in the appropriate register of
institutions.
The recital of facts given above show that the rules of the
High Court were folowed in this case and the requirements
thereof were duly complied with.
The Court Fees Act, VII of 1870, provides for the payment of
various fees payable in respect of different kinds of
documents to be filed in court. Omitting the words which
are not relevant, s. 4 lays down that :
"No document of any of the kinds specified in
the First or Second Schedule to this Act
annexed, as chargeable with fees, shall be
exhibited or recorded in, or shall be received
or furnished by, any of the said High Courts
in any case coming before such Court in the
exercise of its jurisdiction as regards
appeals from the judgments of one or more
Judges of the said Court, or of a Division
Court unless in respect of such document
there be paid a fee of an amount not less than
that indicated by either of the said Schedules
as the proper fee for such document."
Among the documents specified in the First Schedule
chargeable with fees which are ad valorem are memoranda of
appeal presented to any court. Section 28 of the Act lays
down that no document which ought to bear a stamp under this
Act shall be of any validity unless and until it is properly
stamped. This is however subject to the qualification that
if any such document is through mistake or inadvertance
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received, filed or used in any court without being properly
stamped, the presiding Judge or the head of the office as
the case may be or in the case of a High Court, any Judge of
such court may, if he thinks fit, order that such document
be stamped as he may direct; and on such document being
260
stamped accordingly, the same and every proceeding relative
thereto shall be as valid as if it had been properly stamped
in the first instance.
As an appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure can only be
preferred in the form of a memorandum laid down in Order 41
rule 1 of the Code and further as the memorandum of appeal
has to be stamped in accordance with the Court Fees Act it
would appear that unless there were some saving provisions
such a memorandum if not properly stamped could not be recei
ved at all by the High Court when a litigant desires
to file an appeal or a Special Appeal. The rules of the
Allahabad High Court specified above are aimed at
adjudication of any dispute or objection as to court-fee
payable on a memorandum of appeal. When it is found that
the court-fee paid is deficient, the court has power to
allow time for the purpose of making the deficiency good.
Even where limitation is about to expire and the time is too
short to enable the appellant to make good the deficiency
the court may allow the litigant time for the purpose. This
shows that the court can keep on its file a memorandum of
appeal although insufficiently stamped and the court will
ordinarily allow an opportunity to the appellant to make
good the deficiency and will not throw it out of hand. The
Court Fees Act however lays an embargo on the court from
receiving any document including a memorandum of appeal if
it is not properly stamped. this provision of law was
strictly construed in the case of Balkaran Rai v. Gobind
Nath Tiwari(1) where the Allahabad High Court took the view
that where a memorandum of appeal was insufficiently stamps
when tendered was subsequently stamped sufficiently, the
affixing %of the full stamps would not have a retrospective
effect so as to validate the original presentation unless it
has been done by order made under the second paragraph of s.
28 of the Court Fees Act. In that case the court allowed
the Preliminary objection that as the making good of the
deficiency had taken peace after the period of limitation
there was before the court no valid appeal in regard whereof
a decision could be given on merits.
The rigour of the law as interpreted in this decision was
mitigated by the amendment of the Code of Civil Procedure of
1882 by the insertion of section 582-A by Act VI of 1892
reading
"If a memorandum of appeal or application for
a review of judgment has been presented within
the proper period of limitation, but is
written upon paper insufficiently stamped, and
the insufficiency of the stamp was caused by a
mistake on the part of the appellant or
applicant as to the amount of the requisite
stamp, the
(1) I.L.R. 12 Allahabad 129 F.B.
261
memorandum of appeal or application shall have
the same effect, and be, as valid as if it had
been properly stamped :
Provided that such appeal or application shall
be rejected unless the appellant or applicant
supplies the requisite stamp within a
reasonable time after the discovery of the
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mistake to be fixed by the court."
The above provision was enacted in a slightly different form
in the Code of 1908. S. 149 of the new Code reads:
"Where the whole or any part of any fee
prescribed for any document by the law for the
time being in force relating to court-fees has
not been paid, the Court may, in its
discretion, at any stage, allow the person, by
whom such fee is payable, to pay the whole or
part, as the case may be, of such court-fee;
and upon such payment the document, in respect
of which such fee is payable, shall have the
same force and effect as if such fee had been
paid in the first instance."
The above section therefore mitigates ’the rigour of s. 4 of
the Court Fees Act and it is for the court in its discretion
to allow a person who has filed a memorandum of appeal with
deficient court-fee to make good the deficiency and the
making, good of such deficiency cures the defect in the
memorandum not from the time when it is made but from the
time when it was first presented in court.
In our view in considering the question as to the maintain-
ability of an appeal when the court-fee paid was
insufficient to start with but the deficiency is made good
later on, the provisions of the Court Fees Act and the Code
of Civil Procedure have to be read together to form a
harmonious whole and no effort should be made to give
precedence to provisions in one over those of the other
unless the express words of a statute clearly override those
of the other.
Apart from the decisions bearing on the point, there can in
our opinion, be no doubt that s.4 of the Court Fees Act is
not the last word on the subject and the court must consider
the provisions of both the Act and the Code to harmonise the
sets of provisions which can only be done by reading s. 149
as a proviso to s. 4 of the Court Fees Act by allowing the
deficiency to be made good within a period of time fixed by
it. If the deficiency is made good no possible objection
can be raised on the ground of the bar of limitation : the
memorandum of appeal must be treated as one filed within the
period fixed by the Limitation Act subject to any
12sup(Cl)/70-3
262
express provision to the contrary in that Act and the appeal
must be treated as pending from the date when the memorandum
of appeal was presented in court. In our view it must be
treated as pending from the date of presentation not only
for the purpose of limitation but also for, the purpose of
sufficiency as to court-fee under s. 149 of the Code. If
such a construction be accepted, the bar of s. 3 of the
Abolition of Letters Patent Appeals Act of 1962 would not
operate in the instant case.
In the case of Gavarnga Sahu v. Botokrishna Patro(1) a Full
Bench of the Madras High Court was called upon to adjudicate
on the question of the validity of a plaint presented on a
paper insufficiently stamped to start with but where the
deficiency was made good within the time given by the court
under s.54(b) of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1882. Section
54(b) of the Code of 1882 is reproduced in Order 7, rule 11
of the Code of 1908. Under the said provisions a plaint has
to be rejected if the relief sought is properly valued but
the plant is ’Written upon a paper insufficiently stamped
and the plaintiff on being required by the court to supply
the requisite stamp within a time to be fixed by it fails to
do so. The argument advanced in that case before the court
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appears to have been to the effect that a plaint which was
not sufficiently stamped within the period of limitation was
not a valid plaint at all. In the order of reference the
law on the subject was set forth in some detail and the
learned referring judge opined that an insufficiently
stamped plaint did not become a new plaint when the
deficiency was supplied. The learned Judges of the Full
Bench fully agreed with the view taken in the order of
reference and with the reasons upon which it was based and
merely added that s.149 of the Civil Procedure Code of 1908
was in accordance, with the view.
The Judicial Committee of the Party Council gave a decision
much to the same effect in Faizullah v. Mauladad(2). In
this case the suit was filed for accounts and the settlement
of the sums due in connection with the affairs of a
partnership firm, the plaintiffs valuing the suit at Rs.
3,000 for the purpose of court fees ’and asking for
rendition of accounts and a decree for Rs. 3,000 with the
statement that if more than that amount was found due the
plaintiffs would pay an additional court-fee. The defendant
asked for a decree in his own favour for Rs. 29,000/. The
trial Judge passed a final decree in favour of the defendant
for Rs. 19,991 and no sum was found due by him to the
plaintiffs under their claim for Rs. 3,000. The judgment
was appealed from by both parties. The plaintiffs-
,appellants challenged the decree against them and
maintained that not only that decree be set aside but one in
their favour for Rs. 3,000/_ or less or more should be
granted. They
(1) I.L.R. 32 Madras 305 F.B.
(2) A.I.R. 1929 P.C. 147.
263
valued the appeal for purposes of court-fee at Rs. 19,991
and paid fees thereon amounting to Rs. 975. The question as
to the invalidity of the appeal on the ground of
insufficiency of court-fee was answered by the Judicial
Committee by holding that the memorandum of appeal did state
in terms of the Act (i.e. the Court Fees Act) the amount at
which the relief was sought and that determined the appeal.
According to the Judicial Committee even if it was held that
the fee payable was insufficient it was the duty of the
court in exercise of its discretion to give an opportunity
to add to the amount lodged the extra sum of Rs. 70 or 80
required for deferring the question of the amount of fee
under the Court Fees Act until final value was ascertained.
Referring to the provisions of s. 149 of the Code the Board
observed that the discretion under that section "extended to
the whole or any part of any fee prescribed and could be
exercised at any stage in the case, while finally, upon the
extra payment being made, the document is to have the same
effect as if it had been paid in the first instance". The
Board further held that as the decree of the Subordinate
Judge was dated 24th March, 1924, the first appeal was on
27th May and the Second Appeal on 2nd June the time for
limitation of the appeal being 90 days both appeals were
within time. It was further held that the appeals were not
a nullity and on the contrary they were documents duly
presented to and accepted by the court, and as to the court
fee thereon, should the valuation be unsatisfactory or in
the end insufficient, that is validated by the additional
payment, the result of which payment is that the document,
namely, the memorandum of appeal, stands good from its date
and the appeals are accordingly not time-barred
On a parity of reasoning it is difficult to see why if a
memorandum of appeal insufficiently stamped is not to be
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rejected as barred under the Limitation Act, why a different
conclusion should flow as regards compliance with the Court
Fees Act in view of the express provisions of s. 1 49 of the
Code. In our opinion s. 1. 49 will cure the defect as from
the date when the memorandum of appeal was filed alike for
the purpose of Limitation Act and the Court Fees Act and the
appeal must be treated as one pending on the 9th November
1962 and as such unaffected by s.3 of the U.P. Act of 1962.
In Wajid Ali v. Isar Bano(1) s. 149 was interpreted as a
proviso to s. 4 of the Court Fees Act in order to avoid
contradiction between the two sections. The court was
however careful to lay down that discretion had to be
exercised in allowing deficiency of court fees to be made
good but once it was done a document was to be deemed to
have been presented and received on the date on which it was
originally filed. This was a case of plaint.
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Allahabad 4 F. B.
264
In another Full Bench, Hari Har Prasad Singh v. Beni
Chand(1) of the same, year dealing with a case of a
memorandum of appeal which was found defective for want of
proper court-fee and not admitted in view of s. 4 of the
Court Fees Act but returned or rejected on that ground it
was held that the memorandum could not be treated as an
appeal. It was there observed
"If s. 4 of the Act (i.e. Court Fees, Act) had
stood by itself, an unstamped or
insufficiently stamped memorandum of appeal,
chargeable with fees, could not have been
received by the High Court for any
purpose....... There is nothing in s. 149 of
the Code which overrides the provisions of s.
4, Court-fees Act,, it merely postpones the
operation of that section for the time being.
If the whole or part of the requisite court-
fee is not paid within the time allowed by the
Court, s. 149 of the Code ceases to have
effect, and the Court is precluded from filing
or recording an unstamped or insufficiently
stamped memorandum of appeal in court."
According to Stroud, a legal proceeding is "pending" as soon
as commenced, and until it is concluded i.e. so long as the
court having original cognizance of it can make an order on
the matters in issue, or to be dealt with, therein.
When the deficiency in the payment of court-fees is made
good and the document or memorandum of appeal is to be given
the force and effect which it would have had if there had
been no deficiency, the appeal must be treated as pending on
12th November, 1962. In Nagendra Nath v. Suresh (2 ) which
turned on the interpretation of Art. 182(2) of the
Limitation Act of 1908 as regards the validity of an appeal
presented in an irregular form the Board observed that
although there was no definition of ’appeal’ in the Civil
Procedure Code any application by a party to an appellate
court asking it to set aside or revise a decision of a
Subordinate Judge, is an appeal within the ordinary
acceptation of the term, and that it was no less an appeal
because it was irregular and incompetent.
The words used in that judgment are no doubt of wide import.
But however that may be in the case before us there can be
no difficulty in holding that an appeal was presented in
terms of Order 41, r. 1 of the Code inasmuch as all that
this provision of law requires for an appeal to be preferred
is the presentation in the form of a memorandum as therein
prescribed. If the court fees paid thereon be insufficient
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it does not cease to be a memorandum of appeal although the
court may reject . If the deficiency in
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Allahabad 79. (2) A.I.R. 1932 P.C. 165.
265
the fees is made good in terms of an order of the court, it
must be held that though the curing of the defect takes
place on the date of the making good of the deficiency, the
defect must be treated as remedied from the date of its
original institution.
In view of the above reasons, we find ourselves unable to
concur in the judgment of the High Court. In the main
judgment under appeal, the reasoning appears to be that the
memorandum of appeal had no effect before the making good of
the deficiency and as the same took place after 12th
November 1962 the appeal was not saved by s. 3 (2) of the
U.P. Act. The learned Chief Justice of the Allahabad High
Court expressed the opinion that a memorandum of appeal
barred by time stood on a footing different from the one in
which there was deficiency in the court free paid.
According to him under s. 3 of the Limitation Act it is an
appeal that is dismissed and not a memorandum of appeal.
When therefore s.4 of the Court Fees Act deals with a
memorandum of appeal the consideration of the laws of
limitation bears no analogy to a deficiency in court-fees.
With due respect we are not impressed by the above
reasoning. As already noted, although there is no
definition of the word "appeal" in the Code of Civil
Procedure, it can only be instituted by filing a memorandum
of appeal. The filing of memorandum of appeal therefore
brings an appeal into existence; if the memorandum is
deficient in court-fees, it may be rejected and if rejected,
the appeal comes to an end. But if it is not rejected and
time is given to the appellant to make up the deficiency and
this opportunity is availed of, s. 149 of the Code expressly
provides that the document is to have validity with
retrospective effect as if the deficiency had been made good
in the first instance. By reason of the deeming provision
in s. 149 the memorandum of appeal is to have full force and
effect and the appeal has to be treated as one pending from
the date when it was before the Stamp Reporter and the
deficiency noted therein.
In the result, the appeal must be allowed with a direction
that the High Court should hear the Special Appeal
instituted on the 9th November, 1962. The costs of this
appeal will abide by the decision of the Special Appeal.
G.C. Appeal allowed.
266