Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 14
PETITIONER:
MAJOR S. S. KHANNA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BRIG. F.J. DILLON
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/08/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 497 1964 SCR (4) 409
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC 406 (10)
F 1973 SC1096 (5)
RF 1988 SC 812 (16)
ACT:
Civil Procedure-Revisional jurisdiction of High Court-
Meaning of "case" in s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure-
Separate trial of issues of law and issues of fact-Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 Act 5 of 1908), s. 115, 0.14, r. 2.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant and the respondent entered into a partnership
to do business as Construction Engineers but in February
1956 they agreed to dissolve it. It was agreed that the
respondent was to take over all the assets and liabilities
of the partnership and keep the appellant indemnified from
all liability. Later on, a suit was filed by the appellant
for dissolution of partnership and rendition of accounts.
That suit ended in a compromise which provided that all
realisations of the old partnership would be converted into
cash and placed in joint account in the name of the two
partners before being paid towards the liabilities of the
partnership.
The respondent filed two suits against the appellant for re-
covery of certain amounts on the allegation that the
appellant had taken that amount as loan. The defence of the
appellant was that as the money was still in the joint name
of the two partners and he had taken the money from the
joint account, suits between the two partners were not
maintainable.
In trying preliminary issues raised in the suits the trial
Judge held that the suits were not maintainable, but instead
of dismissing the suits there and then, he set them down for
a future date. Against the findings of the trial Judge,
revision petitions were filed in the High Court under s. 115
of the Code of Civil Procedure. The High Court set aside
the orders passed by the Trial judge and held that the suits
could not be held as not maintainable. The appellant
appealed by special leave.
The appellant challenged the order of the High Court on the
ground that the order of the trial Judge did not amount to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 14
27-2 S. C. India/64
410
"a case which has been decided" within the meaning of s. 115
of Code of Civil Procedure, that the decrees which may be
passed in the suits being subject to appeal to the High
Court, the power of the High Court was by the express terms
of s. 115 excluded, and that the orders of the trial Judge
did not fall within any of the three clauses (a), (b) and
(c) of s. 115. Rejecting the contentions of the appellant,
Held :The High Court was right in setting aside the order
passed by the trial Judge and in holding that without
investigation as to the respective claims made by the
parties by their pleadings on the matters in dispute, the
suits could not be held as not maintainable. The decision
of the trial Judge affected the rights and obligations of
the parties directly. It was the decision on an issue
relating to the jurisdiction of the court to entertain the
suit filed by the respondent. The decision attracted cl.
(c) of s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Per Sarkar and Shah, JJ. The expression "case" is a word of
comprehensive import. It includes civil proceedings other
than suits and is not restricted by anything contained in s.
115 to the entirety of the proceedings in a civil court. To
interpret the expression "case"as an entire proceeding
only and not a part of the proceedingwould be to impose
an unwarranted restriction on the exerciseof powers of
superintendence and may result in certain cases in denying
relief to the aggrieved litigant where it is most needed and
may result in the ’perpetration of gross injustice.
The High Court is not obliged to exercise its jurisdiction
when a case is decided by a subordinate court and the
conditions in cls. (a), (b) or (c) of s. 115 are satisfied.
Exercise of the jurisdiction is discretionary and the High
Court is not bound to interfere merely because the
conditions are satisfied. The interlocutory character of
the order, existence of another remedy to the aggrieved
party by way of appeal from the ultimate order or decree in
the proceeding or by a suit, and the general equities of the
case being served by the order made are all matters to be
taken into account in considering whether the High Court
even in cases where the conditions which attract the
jurisdiction exist, should exercise its jurisdiction.
Revisional jurisdiction of the high Court may be exercised
irrespective of the question whether ;an appeal lies thereto
from the ultimate decree or order passed in the suit or not.
The expression "in which no appeal lies thereto" does not
mean that it excludes the exercise of the revisional
jurisdiction when an appeal may be competent to the High
Court from the final order.The use of the word "in" is not
intended to distinguish orders passed in proceedings not
subject to appeal from the final adjudication, from those
from which no appeal lies. If an appeal lies against the
adjudication directly to the -High Court or to another court
from the decision of which an appeal lies to the High Court,
411
it has no power to exercise its revisional jurisdiction
against the adjudication, but where the decision itself is
not appealable to the High Court directly or indirectly,
exercise of the revisional jurisdiction by the High Court
would not be deemed excluded.
Under Or. 14, r. 2, where issues both of law and fact arise
in the same suit and the court is of the opinion that the
case ,or part thereof could be disposed of on the issues of
law only, it shall try those issues first, and for that
purpose, may, if it thinks fit, postpone settlement of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 14
issues of fact until after the issues of law have been
determined. The jurisdiction to try issues of law apart
from the issues of fact may be exercised only where in the
opinion of the Court the whole suit may be disposed of on
the issues of law alone, but the Code of Civil Procedure
confers no jurisdiction upon the court to try a suit on
mixed issues of law and fact as preliminary issues.
Normally, all issues in the suit should be tried by the
Court; not to do so ,especially when the decision on issues
even of law depends upon the decision of issues of fact,
would result in a lop-sided trial of the suit.
Per, Hidayatullah, J.-A decision of the subordinate Court is
amenable to the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court
unless that jurisdiction is clearly barred by a special law
or an appeal lies therefrom. The expression "in which no
appeal lies" does not speak’ of the Appeal "under the Code".
The expression is a general one and applies to every
decision of a court subordinate to the High Court in which
no appeal lies, whether under the Code or otherwise.
The decision of the trial Judge was erroneous because he de-
nied himself the jurisdiction of holding that the suits were
not maintainable. The fact that he did not dismiss the
suits and did not draw up decrees for that purpose, was
itself an exercise of jurisdiction with material
irregularity, if not also illegality. In so far as the
parties were concerned, the suits were no longer live suits
as the decision had put an end to them.
The word "case" in s. 115 does not mean a concluded suit or
proceeding but each decision which terminates a part of the
controversy involving a matter of jurisdiction. Where no
question of jurisdiction is involved, the court’s decision
cannot be impugned under s. 115 because the court has
jurisdiction to decide wrongly as well as rightly.
Balakrishna Udayar v. Vasudeva Aiyar, L.R. 44 I.A. 261,
Ryots of Garabandho v. Zamindar of Parlakimedi, L.R. 70 I.A.
129; Budhulal v. Mewa Ram, I.L.R. 43, All. 564 (F.B.); Puro-
hit Swarupnaraian v. Gopinath, I.L.R. (1933) Raj.
483(Fl.B.), Pyarchand v. Dungar Singh, I.L.R. (1953) Raj.
608 and Rex v. Nat Bell Liquors Ltd., [1922] 2 A.C. 128,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 320 of 1963.
412
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 26, 1962, of the Punjab High Court at Delhi in Civil
Revision Nos. 525 and 526-D of 1960.
N.C. Chatterjee, M.K. Ramamurthy, R.K. Garg, S.C. Agarwal
and D.P. Singh, for the appellant (in both the appeals).
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, Bakshi Shiv Charan Singh and S.N.
Anand, for the respondent (in both the appeals). August 14,
1963. The judgment of A.K. Sarkar and J.C. Shah, JJ., was
delivered by Shah, J. M. Hidayatullah, J.delivered a
separate Opinion.
SHAH, J.-Brig. F.J. Dillon and Major S.S. Khanna hereinafter
called ’Dillon’ and ’Khanna’ respectively carried on
business in partnership as Construction Engineers. They
agreed to dissolve the partnership with effect from February
15, 1956. By the deed of dissolution it was agreed that
Dillon was to take over all the assets and properties of the
partnership as absolute owner and to pay all the debts and
to discharge all the liabilities of the partnership and to
keep Khanna indemnified against all demands and claims in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 14
relation to the partnership business.
But the deed did not terminate the disputes between the
partners, and Khanna commenced an action against Dillon in
the Court of the Subordinate judge, 1st Class, Delhi "for
dissolution of the partnership and rendition of accounts".
On January 12, 1957, the parties arrived at a compromise
(which was incorporated into a decree of the Court)
confirming the earlier dissolution of the partnership,
subject to a scheme of winding up, under which all
outstanding realised from the debtors of the firm and the
sale proceeds of certain assets were to go into a banking
account to be opened in the joint names of Dillon and Khanna
and were to be applied in the first instance to meet the
liabilities of the dissolved firm, and the balance in that
joint account was to belong to Dillon. Some outstanding of
the dissolved partnership were collected by Dillon and were
deposited in the joint account of Dillon and Khanna.
Dillon filed a suit in the Court of the Subordinate judge at
Delhi for a decree for Rs. 54,250.00 with future
413
interest alleging that between the months of May 1957 and
November 1957 he had, at the request of Khanna, advanced in
three sums an aggregate amount of Rs. 46,000.00 as short-
term loans which Khanna had promised to but had failed to
repay. Khanna pleaded that he did not borrow any loans-
from Dillon, and that the amounts claimed in the action
being advanced, even on the pled of Dillon. out of joint
funds belonging to the two partners, action for recovery of
those amounts was, in law not maintainable.
Out of the issues raised by the Trial Court in the suit the
third,issue viz:
"Whether this suit is not maintainable and the plaintiff is
not entitled to institute this suit, as alleged in paras
Nos. 15, 16, 17, 18 of the written statement was at the
request of Khanna tried as a preliminary issue, and it was
held that the suit being by a partner against another
partner of a dissolved firm which was in the process of
winding up, and in respect of advances from the partnership
assets, was not maintainable.
The High Court of Punjab in exercise of its revisional
jurisdiction set aside the order, and directed that the suit
be heard and disposed of according to law.
With special leave this appeal is preferred by Khanna.
The jurisdiction of the High Court to set aside the order in
exercise of the power under s. 115 Code of Civil Procedure
is challenged by Khanna on three grounds :-
(i) that the order did not amount to "a case
which has been decided" within the meaning of
s. 115 Code of Civil Procedure
(ii)that the decree which may be passed in
the suit being subject to appeal to the High
Court the power of the High Court was by the
express terms of s. 115 excluded ; and
(iii) that the order did not fall within any
of the three clauses (a), (b) and (c) of s.
115. The validity of the argument turns upon
the true meaning of s. 115 Code of Civil
Procedure, which provides :
"The High Court may call for the record of any
case which has been decided by any Court
subordinate to such High Court and in which no
appeal lies thereto, and if such subordinate
Court appears-
414
(a) to have exercised a jurisdiction not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 14
vested in it by law, or
(b) to have failed to exercise a
jurisdiction so vested, or
(c) to have acted in the exercise of its
jurisdiction illegally or with material
irregularity,
the High Court may make such order in the case
as it thinks fit."
The section consists of two parts : the first, prescribes
the conditions in which jurisdiction of the High Court
arises i.e. there is a case decided by a subordinate Court
in which no appeal lies to the High Court ; the second, sets
out the circumstances in which the jurisdiction may be
exercised. But the power of the High Court is "exercisable
in respect of "any case which has been decided". The
expression "case" is not defined in the Code, nor in the
General Clauses Act. It is undoubtedly not restricted to a
litigation in the nature of a suit in a Civil Court : Bala-
krishna Udayar v. Vasudeva Aiyar(1) ; it includes a
proceeding in a Civil Court in which the jurisdiction of the
Court is invoked for the determination of some claim or
right legally enforceable. On the question whether an order
of a Court which does not finally dispose of the suit or
proceeding amount to a "case which has been decided", there
has arisen a serious conflict of opinion in the High Courts
in India, and the question has not been directly considered
by this Court. One view which is accepted by a majority of
the High Courts is that the expression "case" includes an
interlocutory proceeding relating to the rights and
obligations of the parties, and the expression "record of
any case" includes so much of the proceeding as relates to
the order disposing of the interlocutory proceeding. The
High Court has therefore power to rectify an order of a
Subordinate Court at any stage: of a suit or proceeding even
if there be another remedy open to the party aggrieved i.e.
by reserving his right to file an appeal against the
ultimate decision, and making the illegality in the order a
ground of that appeal. The other view is that the
expression "case’ does not include an issue or a part of a
suit or proceeding and therefore the order on an issue or a
part of
(1) L.R. 44 I.A. 261.
415
a suit or proceeding is not a "case which has been decided",
and the High Court has no power in exercise of its re-
visional jurisdiction, to correct an error in an
interlocutory order.
An analysis of the cases decided by the High Courts their
number is legion-would serve no useful purpose. In every
High Court from time to time opinion has fluctuated. The
meaning of the expression "case" must be sought in the
nature of the jurisdiction conferred by s. 115, and the
purpose for which the High Courts were invested with it.
By their constitution the High Courts of Calcutta, Madras
and Bombay were within Presidency towns, as successors to
the respective Supreme Courts competent to issue writs of
certiorari, mandamus and ’prohibition. This was so because
the jurisdiction of the Courts of King’s Bench and Chancery
in England to issue those writs was conferred upon the three
Supreme Courts. But exercise of this jurisdiction which was
established by Charters of the British Crown, was (except as
to British subjects and servants of the Company) restricted.
The jurisdiction did not ordinarily extend to the
territories beyond the Presidency towns : Ryots of
Garabandho v. Zamindar of Parlakimedi(1). The appellate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 14
Courts, called the Sudder Adalats, which exercised appellate
powers over the East India Company’s Courts in the mofussil
of the three Presidencies were not the Courts of the King of
England : they were the creatures of Regulations, and did
not administer the law of England. These Courts had no
power to issue any of the prerogative writs-except probably
the writ of habeas corpus. But the power to superintend the
exercise of jurisdiction by the mofussil Courts was found
essential to the proper functioning of the Sudder Courts,
and the Sudder Courts were accordingly invested by express
legislative enactments with authority to rectify orders of
the mofussil Courts subordinate thereto. Bombay Regulation
11 of 1827 of Ch. 1 s. 5(2) authorised the Sudder Court at
Bombay to call for the proceedings of any subordinate civil
court and to issue such orders thereon as, the case’ may
require. No Regulation was however enacted elsewhere
conferring revisional jurisdic
(1) L.R. 70 I.A. 129.
416
tion upon the Supreme Court or the Sudder Court in respect
of adjudication by subordinate courts. The Code of 1859
contained no provision for the exercise of revisional powers
by the Sudder Courts, but by s. 35 of Act XXIII of 1861 the
Sudder Courts were invested with the power call for the
record of any case decided in appeal by the subordinate
courts and in which no further appeal lay, when it appeared,
that a subordinate court had exercised jurisdiction not
vested in it by law. With the set tin’ up of the High
Courts in the Presidency ’towns of:, Calcutta, Madras and
Bombay power of superintendence was conferred by s. 15 by
the Charter Act (24 & 25 Vict. Ch. 104) upon the High
Courts over subordinate Courts. By s. 622 of the Code of
1877 revisional jurisdiction of. the High Court was defined,
and made exercisable in the conditions set out in cls. (a) &
(b) of the present s. 115. Clause (c) was added by the
Amending Act XII of 1879. This jurisdiction was exercisable
suo motu as well as on application to the High Court. It
was conferred in the widest terms. The jurisdiction was
supervisory and visitorial and was complementary to the
powers conferred by cl. 15 of the Charter Act, 1861, and the
subsequent Constitution Acts, and was conceived in the
interest of maintaining effective control over Courts
subordinate to the High Courts. It had to be so conferred
because in the historical evolution of the powers of the
diverse High Courts supervisory jurisdiction to issue writs
of certiorari, and prohibition could not be effectively made
in respect of the mofussil Courts.
The necessity arising out of the peculiar circumstances to
invest the High Courts with the powers to rectify errors
committed by subordinate Courts in the exercise of their
jurisdiction and the consequent investiture of power are
indicative of the extent of that power. The power being one
of superintendence and visitorial and vested because the
supervisory jurisdiction to issue writs of certiorari’ and
prohibition over subordinate Courts in the mofussil could
not be exercised, it would be reasonable to hold that it was
intended in the absence of any overriding reasons disclosed
by the statute (and none such appears on an examination of
the statute) to be analogous- with the jurisdiction to issue
the high prerogative writs and the
417
power of supervision under the Charter Act and its successor
provisions in the Constitution Acts.
The expression "case" is a word of comprehensive import : it
includes civil proceedings other than suits, and is not
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 14
restricted by anything contained in the section to the
entirety of the proceeding in a civil court. To interpret
the expression "case" as an entire proceeding only and’ not
a part of a proceeding would be to impose a restriction upon
the exercise of powers of superintendence which the
jurisdiction to issue writs, and the supervisory ju-
risdiction are not subject, and may result in certain cases
in denying relief to an aggrieved litigant where it is most
needed, and may result in perpetration of gross injustice.
It may be observed that the majority view of the High Court
of Allahabad in Buddhulal v. Mewa Ram(1) founded upon the
supposition that even though the word "case" has a wide
signification the jurisdiction of the High Court can only be
invoked from an order in a suit, where the suit and not a
part of it is decided, proceeded upon the fallacy that
because the expression "case" includes a suit, in defining
the limits of the jurisdiction conferred upon the High Court
the expression "suit" should be substituted in the section
when the order sought to be revised is an order passed in a
suit. The expression "case" includes a suit, but in
ascertaining the limits of the jurisdiction of the High
Court, there would be no warrant for equating it with a suit
alone.
That is not to say that the High Court is obliged to
exercise its jurisdiction when a case is decided by a
subordinate Court and the ’conditions in cls. (a), (b) or
(c) are satisfied. Exercise of the jurisdiction is discre-
tionary : the High Court is not bound to interfere merely
because the conditions are satisfied. The interlocutory
character of the order, the existence of another remedy to
an aggrieved party by way of an appeal from the ultimate
order of decree in the proceeding or by a suit, and the
general equities of the case being served by the order made
are all matters to be taken into account in considering
whether the High Court, even in cases where the conditions
which attract the jurisdiction, exist, should excr-
(1) I.L.R. 43 All. 564 (F.B.)
418
cise its jurisdiction.
The Subordinate Judge in the present case held by an
interlocutory order that the suit filed by Dillon for re-
covery of the amounts advanced to Khanna was not main-
tainable. That was manifestly a decision having a direct
bearing on the rights of Dillon to a decree for recovery of
the loan alleged to have been advanced by him, which he says
Khanna agreed to repay, and if the expression "case"
includes a part of the case, the order of the Subordinate
Judge must be regarded as a "case which has been decided".
The next question which falls to be determined is whether
the High Court has power to set- aside an order which does
not finally dispose of the suit, and when from the decree or
from the final order passed in the proceeding an appeal is
competent. Relying upon the ’Use of the expression "in
which no appeal lies thereto" in s. 115 Code of Civil
Procedure it was urged that the High Courts jurisdiction to
entertain a petition in revision could be exercised only if
no appeal lay from the final order passed in the proceeding.
But once it is granted that the expression "case" includes a
part of a case, there is no escape from the conclusion that
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court may be exercised
irrespective of the question whether appeal lies from the
ultimate decree or order passed in the suit. Any other view
would impute to the Legislature an intention to restrict the
exercise of this salutary jurisdiction to those
comparatively unimportant suits and proceedings in which the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 14
appellate jurisdiction of the High Courts is excluded for
reasons of public policy. Nor is the expression "in which
no appeal lies thereto" susceptible of the interpretation
that it excludes the exercise of the revisional jurisdiction
when an appeal may be competent from the final order. The
use of the word "in" is not intended to distinguish orders
passed in proceedings not subject to appeal from the final
adjudication from those from which no appeal lies. If an
appeal lies against the adjudication directly to the High
Court, or to another Court from the decision of which an
appeal lies to the High Court, it has no Power to exercise
its revisional jurisdiction, but where’ the decision, itself
it not appealable to the High Court directly or indirectly,
exer-
419
cise of the revisional jurisdiction by the High Court would
not be deemed excluded. The judgment of the Rajasthan High
Court in Purohit Swarupnain v. Gopinath and another(1) on
which strong reliance was placed by the appellant does not,
in our judgment, correctly interpret s. 115 of the Code. In
that case the Court relying upon an earlier judgment of a
Division Bench Pyarchand and others v. Dungar Singh(2) held
that "where it is open to a party to raise a ground of
appeal under s. 105 of the Code from the final decree or
order, with respect to any order which has been passed
during the pendency of a suit, it should be held that an
appeal in that case lies to the High Court within the
meaning of the term ’in which no appeal lies thereto’
appearing in s. 115 Civil Procedure Code", and the exercise
of revisional jurisdiction of the High Court is excluded.
’It was observed in that case that the use of the word "in’
instead of the word "from" in s. 115 Code of Civil Procedure
indicated an intention that if the order in question was one
which could come for consideration before the High Court in
any form in an appeal that may reach the High Court in the
suit or proceeding in which the order was passed, the High
Court has no revisional jurisdiction. But the argument is
wholly inconclusive, if it be granted that the word cc "
includes a part of case. Again on the footing case that the
use of the expression "in" and not "from" indicates some
discernible legislative intent, it must be remembered that
the word "in" has several meanings a preposition and as an
adverb. The use of the preposition "from"-in the sense of a
source or point of commencement or distinction-would not in
the context of the clause, yield to greater clarity, because
the relation established thereby would be between "case" and
appeal, and not "decided" and appeal. If the use of the
expression "in" is inappropriate to express the meaning
that’ the orders not appealable to the High Court were
subject to the revisional jurisdiction, the substitution of
"from" for "in" does not conduce to greater, lucidity.
In considering whether the revisional jurisdiction of
(1) I.L.R. [1953] Raj. 483 F.B.
(2) I.L.R. [1953] Raj. 608.
420
the High Court was intended to cover decisions, which did
not dispose of the suit or proceeding, possibility of delay
arising in the disposal of some cases because of in-
vestigation commenced by the High Court is not, in our
judgment, a sound ground for presuming, that, the juris-
diction was to be limited to those matters which were
finally disposed of.
For the effective exercise of its superintending and
visitorial powers, revisional jurisdiction is conferred;
upon the High Court and it would be putting an unwarranted
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 14
restriction upon the jurisdiction of the High Court to
restrict it to those cases only where no appeal would reach
the High Court from the final order passed in the pro-
ceeding. We are therefore unable to agree with the view
which prevailed with the Rajasthan High Court that there is
a restriction placed upon the power of the High Court in the
exercise of the revisional jurisdiction as would limit the
exercise of that power only to cases where no appeal is
competent from the final order passed in the suit or
proceeding.
The third question may now be dealt with. By the order
passed by the Court of First Instance on the third issue it
was held that the suit filed by Dillon was not maintainable.
That decision, in our judgment, affected the rights and
obligations of the parties directly. It was a decision on
an issue relating to the jurisdiction of the Court to
entertain the suit filed by Dillon. In any event the
decision of the Court clearly attracted cl. (c) of s. 115
Code of Civil Procedure, for the Court in deciding that "the
suit was not maintainable as alleged in paragraphs 15, 16,
17 and 18 of the written statement" purported to decide what
in substance was an issue of fact without a trial of the
suit on evidence. Dillon alleged in his plaint that at the
request of Khanna, he had advanced diverse loans (from the
funds lying in deposit in the joint account) and that the
latter had agreed to repay the loans. The cause of action
for the suit was therefore the loan advanced in
consideration of a promise to repay the amount of the loan,
and failure to repay the loan. By his written statement
Khanna had pleaded in paragraph 15 that Dillon had not
advanced any money to him and that Dillon had not claimed
the amount for himself and there-
421
fore he was not entitled to file a suit for recovery of the
amounts. By paragraph 16 he pleaded that Dillon having
admitted in the plaint that the amounts in suit were to be
paid back to the joint account he was not entitled to file
the suit. By paragraph 17 it was pleaded that a suit by one
joint owner against the other joint owner for recovery of
the Joint Fund or any item of the joint fund was not
maintainable and by paragraph 18 he pleaded that Dillon
could not institute a suit against him because the amount
was not repayable. All these contentions raised substantial
issues of fact which had to be decided on evidence, and
Dillon could not be non-suited on the assumption that the
pleas raised were correct. At the threshold of the trial
two problems had to be faced :
(1) Whether in a suit to enforce an
agreement to repay an amount advanced in
consideration of a promise to repay the same,
the question as to the ownership of the fund
out of which the amount was advanced is
material ; and
(2) if the answer is in the affirmative,
whether the fund in fact belonged jointly to
Dillon and Khanna.
The Judge of the Court of First Instance unfortunately
assumed without a trial an affirmative answer to both these
questions. Under 0. 14 r. 2, Code of Civil Procedure, where
issues both of law and of fact arise in the same suit, and
the Court is of opinion that the case or any part thereof
may be disposed of on the issues of law only, it shall try
those issues first, and for that purpose may, if it thinks
fit, postpone the settlement of the issues of fact until
after the issues of law have been determined. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 14
jurisdiction to try issues of law apart from the issues of
fact may be exercised only where in the opinion of the Court
the whole suit may be disposed of on the issues of law
alone, but the Code confers no jurisdiction upon the Court
to try a suit on mixed issues of law and fact as preliminary
issues. Normally all the issues in a suit should be tried
by the Court ; not to do so, especially when the decision on
issues even of law depend upon the decision of issues of
fact, would result in a lop-sided trial of the suit.
422
We are at this stage not expressing any opinion on the
question whether the allegations made by Dillon and Khanna
are true ; we are only concerned to point out that what was
regarded as an issue of law as to maintainability of the
suit could only be determined after several questions of
fact in dispute between the parties were determined. In
proceeding to decide the third issue merely on the pleadings
and on the assumption that the allegations made by the
defendant in his written statement were true and those made
by the plaintiff were not true, and on that footing treating
the- joint account as of the common ownership of the two
partners, the trial Judge acted illegally and with material
irregularity in the exercise of his jurisdiction.
The High Court was therefore right in setting aside the
order passed by the Trial Court and in holding that without
investigation as to the respective claims made by the
parties by their pleadings on the matters in dispute the
suit could not be held not maintainable.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
There will be one hearing fee for this appeal and also C.A.
321 of 1963.
HIDAYATULLAH J.-I have had the advantage of pursuing the
judgment of my learned brother Shah, J. I agree with him
that these appeals should be dismissed with costs, but I
propose to give my reasons in brief in a separate judgment.
The facts have been stated in detail by my learned brother
and I need not repeat them. For the purpose of my judgment
I shall mention only the essential facts.
Khanna (the appellant) and Dillon (the respondent) entered
into a partnership to do business but in February 1956, they
agreed to dissolve it. A deed was drawn up and it was
agreed that Dillon was to take over all the assets and
liabilities of the partnership keeping Khanna indemnified
from all liability. Later, a suit -was filed for the dis-
solution of the partnership and rendition of accounts but it
ended in a compromise. The compromise nearly reaffirmed the
terms of the earlier deed, but included a condition that all
realizations of the old partnership would be converted into
cash and placed in a joint account in the name of the two
partners before being paid towards
423
liabilities of the partnership.
These appeals arise out of two suits which were filed by
Dillon against Khanna for recovery of certain amounts
aggregating to Rs. 46,000/- and interest which amounts
Khanna allegedly obtained as loan from the joint account.
Khanna countered the suits by contending that as the money
was still in the joint names of the two partners, the suits
between partners were not maintainable. This plea led to an
issue in each suit which substantially read as follows :
"Whether the suit is not maintainable and the plaintiff is
not entitled to institute as alleged in paragraphs Nos. 15,
16, 17 and 18 of the written statement."
These issues were tried as preliminary and the decision of
the trial judge was in favour of Khanna in both the suits.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 14
The trial judge held that the suits? were not maintainable,
but, instead of dismissing the suits there and then, he set
them down for a future date. Revision applications under s.
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure were filed in the High
Court by Dillon and were allowed, and the present appeals
have been filed by Khanna by special leave against the
orders of the High Court.
The short question that arises in this case is whether the
High Court was right in exercising its jurisdiction under s.
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Strong reliance was
placed before us upon two decisions of the Rajasthan High
Court reported in Purohit Swarupnarain v. Gopinath and
another(1) and Pyarchand and others v. Dungar Singh(2) in
which it was held that the jurisdiction under s. 115 of the
Code of Civil Procedure can only be exercised in a case in
which no appeal lies to the High Court either directly or
indirectly after other appeals. It was contended that in
the present cases appeals would have lain to the High Court
directly from the decrees, because both involved large
amounts and were tried on the regular side and that s. 115
could not be invoked. This has led to a discussion as to
the jurisdiction of the High Court created by s. 115 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
The Trial Judge concluded that the suits were for con-
tribution between partners of a dissolved firm which was in
the process of winding up and that not being suits for
(1) I.L.R. [1953] Raj. 483 F.B. (2) I.L.R. [1953] Raj. 608.
424
general accounts, were not maintainable. There can be no
doubt that by this decision, if it was erroneous, the trial
Judge denied to himself a jurisdiction to try the suits.
Further it is plain that the suits, in so far as the trial
judge was concerned, were also over notwithstanding the fact
that he had fixed them on a subsequent date "for further
proceedings." The High Court was of the opinion that the
suits were plainly to recover the amounts borrowed by Khanna
from the joint account. The High Court was right in this.
Under the compromise, Dillon was required to recover the
assists, convert them into cash and put them into a joint
account not only on behalf of himself but under a power of
attorney from Khanna also on the latter’s behalf, but the
cash was at the disposal of Dillon provided he applied it
first in liquidation of the joint liability. Khanna had no
share in it except to see that the liabilities were first
discharged. A borrowing from this joint account must be
regarded as a loan given by Dhillon to Khanna and the suits
were, therefore, not for contribution but for recovery of
loans advanced from the joint account. The High Court was
also right in holding that the trial judge had no
jurisdiction to keep the suits pending before himself for
"further proceedings" when he had held them to be not
maintainable. The decision of the trial judge being
erroneous and that of the High Court right, the only ques-
tion is whether the High Court properly exercised its juris-
diction under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure to
correct the error.
Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads as follows
:
"The High Court may call for the record of any
case which has been decided by any Court
subordinate to such High Court and in which no
appeal lies thereto, and if such, subordinate
Court appears-
(a) to have exercised a jurisdiction not
vested in it by law, or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 14
(b) to have failed to exercise of its
jurisdiction so vested, or
(c) to have acted in the exercise of its
Jurisdiction illegally or with material
irregularity,
the High Court may make such order in the case
as it thinks fit".
425
The power which this Section confers is clearly of the
nature of a proceeding on a writ of Certiorari’. But it
differs from that power in many ways. Certiorari has many
different forms which may be classified as follows
(1) Certiorari’ to re move for trial ;
(2) Certiorari for judgment or indictment;
(3) Certiorari to quash;
(4) Certiorari’ for purposes of execution or coercive
process;
(5) Certiorari to remove orders etc., on case stated;
(6) Certiorari’ to remove Depositions for Bail; and
(7) Certiorari to remove Record for use as evidence.
In English Common Law Certiorari to quash issues in a
completed case and the Common Law is now crystallised by
Order 58 of the Rules of the Supreme Court. In America
Certiorari has been differently understood and is a means of
review. That arises from the Special Appellate jurisdiction
of the United States Supreme Court created by Statute (See
U.S.C.A. Tit. 28, para 1254) and from the fact that the
Supreme Court must of necessity exercise this power as a
part of its appellate jurisdiction.
This supervisory power of the High Court under the English
Law is not to be confused with visitorial power of the High
Court exercisable by the writ of Mandamus. Mandamus issues
to Courts only when justice is delayed and is a command to
them to hear and dispose of the case. There is also the
writ of Prohibition which issues to a Court to stop it from
taking upon itself to examine a cause and to decide it
without legal authority. The writ of Mandamus was evolved
much later than the writ of Certiorari’ and by Mandamus the
Courts were not directed to give any particular judgment but
merely to give Judgment. An erroneous judgment could be set
aside on appeal or quashed by Certiorari’. Prohibition lay
to prevent assumption of jurisdiction but only before an
order was passed. Certiorari’ to quash lay in a completed
case on a question of jurisdiction and an error of law
apparent on the face of the record. As Lord Sumner observed
in Rex v. Nat Bell Liquors Ltd.(1) :
"Its jurisdiction is to see that the inferior
Court has not
exceeded its own, and for that very reason it
is bound
(1) [1922] 2 A.C. 128, 156.
28-2 S. C. India/64
426
not to interfere in what has been done within
that jurisdiction, for in so doing it would
itself, in turn, transgress the limits which
its own jurisdiction of supervision, not of
review, is confined. That supervision goes to
two points; one is the area of the inferior
jurisdiction and the qualifications and
conditions of its exercise; the other is the
observance of the law in the course of its
exercise".
From the above discussion it is apparent that
interference with a case before an inferior
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 14
Court by Prerogative writs could take place
under the English Law:
(a) by stopping proceedings before the case
was decided by a writ of Prohibition;
(b) ordering the trial of a case and the
delivery of judgment by Mandamus.
(c) quashing an order in a completed case
for want of jurisdiction or for an error of
law apparent on the face of the record.
The power given by s. 115 of the Code is clearly limited to
the keeping of the subordinate courts within the bounds of
their jurisdiction It does not comprehend the power
exercisable under the writs of Prohibition or Mandamus. It
is also not a full power of Certiorari in as much as it
arises only in a case of jurisdiction and not in a case ,of
error. It has been ruled by the judicial Committee and also
by this Court that the section is concerned with juris-
diction and jurisdiction alone involving a refusal to exer-
cise jurisdiction where one exists or an assumption of
jurisdiction where none exists and lastly acting with
illegality or material irregularity. Where there is no
question of jurisdiction in this manner the decision cannot
be corrected for it has also been ruled that a Court has
jurisdiction to ,decide wrongly as well as rightly. But
once a flaw of jurisdiction is found the High Court need not
quash and remit as is the practice in English Law under the
writ of Certiorari but pass such order as it thinks fit.
Judged from this angle, the decision of the trial judge
being erroneous for the reasons pointed out by my learned
brother Shah, J., the trial judge was clearly denying a
jurisdiction by holding that the suits were not maintain-
able. The only question is whether these. can be said to be
"cases" "decided" by the Subordinate Judge and whether
427
the suits answer the description "in which no appeal lies",
It may be noticed that the last phrase does not speak of an
appeal ’under the Code’. The description therefore is a
general one and applies to every decision of a court sub-
ordinate to the High Court in which no appeal lies, whether
under the Code or otherwise. A decision of the Subordinate
Court is therefore amenable to the revisional jurisdiction
of the High Court unless that jurisdiction is clearly barred
by a special law or an appeal lies therefrom.
The decision in this case was clearly one which put an end
to the suits and the fact that the Subordinate Judge still
kept the suits pending before himself for ’further pro-
ceedings’ for reasons not very clear did not alter the
nature of the decision. Indeed as the High Court also
pointed out, the fact that the Subordinate Judge did not
dismiss the suits and did not draw up decrees for that
purpose, is itself an exercise of jurisdiction with material
irregularity if not also illegality. In so far as the
parties were concerned the suits were no longer live suits
since the decision, such as it was, had put an end to them.
It is however contended on the authority of the two
decisions of the Rajasthan High Court that the words ’in
which no appeal lies’ indicate a case in which no appeal
lies to the High Court from the final determination either
directly or ultimately and it is pointed out that in these
suits there would ultimately have been decrees of dismissal
which would have been appealable. It is thus urged that the
power under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure could not
rightly be invoked. The opinion of the Rajasthan High Court
has not been accepted in the other High Courts and it has
been held in a very large number of cases that the words
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 14
’case decided’ and the phrase "in which no appeal lies"
refer not only to the final decision but are wide enough to
include certain interlocutory orders involving jurisdiction
and from which no appeal lies under the Code or otherwise.
The words "record of any case...... decided" in this context
refer to the record of the proceedings leading upto a
decision in which there is an assumption of unwarranted
jurisdiction or a denial of an existing one or a material
irregularity or illegality in the exercise of jurisdiction.
Where, however, an appeal lies from the final determination
to itself or to another court, the High Court
428
in the exercise of its discretion may decline to interfere
at the interlocutory stage unless interference at the
earlier stage tends to prevent reparable injury is otherwise
manifestly just and expedient. Since decisions in most
cases tried by the Subordinate Courts are subject to one or
more appeals and one such appeal is to the High Court, and
where there is no appeal there are special provisions giving
even wider powers of interference to the High Court by way
of revision than those under s. 115, the interpretation put
by the Rajasthan High Court on the section of the Code would
make the power available in a remarkably small, number of
cases. This general power as shown above was intended to be
used otherwise and the word case does not mean a concluded
suit or proceeding but each decision which terminates a part
of the controversy involving a matter of jurisdiction.
Where no question of jurisdiction is involved the Court’s
decision cannot be impugned under s. 115 for it has been
said repeatedly a Court has jurisdiction to decide wrongly
as well as rightly.
In my opinion, the construction generally accepted in the
High Courts is more in keeping with the letter and spirit
of the section considered as a whole than the view accepted
inthe two cited cases. As I pointed out earlier, the
sectionconfers a power analogous to the power to issue a
writof Certiorari’ but only with a view to keeping
SubordinateCourts within the bounds of their
jurisdiction. This poweris exercisable in respect of all
orders involving jurisdiction in which no appeal lies to the
High Court. The present cases answer the description as the
Orders of the Subordinate Judge were erroneous in denying a
Jurisdiction and no appeal lay to the High Court against
them. Even otherwise, the trial judge was in error in not
dismissing the suits. His decision that the suits were not
maintainable and yet keeping them pending was itself an
exercise of jurisdiction with a material irregularity. If
the trial judge had dismissed the suits and passed decrees
there would undoubtedly have been appeals and no revision
would have lain. But the order actually passed by him was
not a decree nor even an order made appealable by s. 104 of
the Code. Involving as it did a clear question of
jurisdiction it was revisable and the High Court was within
its rights in correcting it by the exercise
429
of its powers under s. 115 of the Code.
The appeals must therefore fail and I agree with the order
proposed by my learned brother Shah, J.
Appeals dismissed.