Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
P. MOHAMMED MEERA LEBBAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THIRUMALAYA GOUNDER RAMASWAMY GOUNDER AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/08/1965
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 430 1966 SCR (1) 574
ACT:
Kerala High Court Act 1958 (5 of 1959), s. 5-Jurisdiction of
Single Judge to hear appeals raised from Rs,. 1,000 under
earlier law to Rs. 10,000 -Appeal valued at Rs. 3,000 filed
before, but heard after, change of law -Appellant whether
can claim to be heard by Division Bench.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s suit for recovery of possession of property
and mesne profits filed in 1950 was substantially decreed by
the trial court. The appellant however filed an appeal
before the Kerala High Court against the decree in so far as
it went against him. The appeal was heard in 1960 after the
Kerala High Court Act 5 of 1959 had been passed and under
its provisions the appeal was heard by a single judge. When
the appellant had filed his suit, and later on his appeal,
the Travancore-Cochin High Court Act of 1949 was in force
and under that Act the appeal would have been heard by a
Division Bench. On the judgment of the High Court going
against him the appellant came to the Supreme Court by
special leave. It was contended on his behalf on the basis
of kadhakrishan’s case that the Kerala High Court Act 5 of
1959 could not retrospectively take away his right to be
heard by a Division Bench, which he had under the law as it
stood when he filed his suit and appeal. Reliance was also
placed on Grikapati Veeraya’s case for the proposition that
the institution of a suit carries with it the implication
that all rights of appeal then in force are preserved to the
parties thereto till the rest of the career of the suit.
HELD : No party has a vested right to be heard by a
specified number of judges. The Travancore-Cochin High
Court Act of 1949 did not confer any right of appeal on the
appellant which has been taken away by the later Act. It
only provided for procedural matters which are dealt with by
several High Courts under the Letters Patent. The con-
tentions based on Radhakrishan’s case and Garikapati
Veeraya’s case must therefore be rejected. [578 B-G]
Radhakrishan v. Shridhar, I.L.R. 1950 Nag. 532, disapproved.
Mahendra v. Darsan, I.L.R. 31 Pat. 446 and Garikapati
Veeraya v. N. Subbaiah Choudhury, [1957] S.C.R. 488,
referred to.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
Ittavlra Mathai v. Varkey Varkey & Anr. [1964] 1 S.C.R. 495,
followed.
It could not also be said that by depriving the appellant
of the right to have his appeal heard by a Division Bench
his further right of appeal to this Court under Art. 133 had
been affected. Once it is held that no party has a vested
right to have his appeal heard by more than one Judge of the
High Court, no right to prefer an appeal under Art. 133 can
be said to vest in him, the said right being unavailable in
a ease heard and disposed of by a single Judge of the High
Court. [579 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeal No. 383 of 1963.
575
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
August 10, 1960 of the Kerala High Court in Appeals Suit
Nos. 577 and 751 of 1958 and 40 of 1959.
T. N. Subramania lyer, M. S. K. Sastri and M. S.
Narasimhan, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, S. N. Amjad Nainar and R.
Thiagarajan, for respondent No. 1.
M. R. K. Pillai, for respondents Nos. 4 and 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mudholkar, J. This is an appeal from a judgment of a single
Judge of the Kerala High Court dismissing the appellant’s
suit for recovery of possession of certain property and for
mesne profits. It is not disputed that the only question of
law which arises in this appeal is whether the appeal could
be heard and disposed of by a single Judge of the High
Court. The other questions raised are purely questions of
fact. Article 133, cl. (3) of the Constitution clearly
provides that notwithstanding anything in the article no
appeal shall lie to the Supreme Court from a judgment,
decree or final order of one Judge of a High Court unless
Parliament by law otherwise provides. Parliament has passed
no law rendering the judgment of a single Judge appealable
to the Supreme Court. Though this provision does not
detract from the power of this Court under Art. 136 to
entertain an appeal from a decision of a single Judge, it is
the settled practice of this Court not to interfere with a
finding of fact arrived at by the High Court unless it is
satisfied that in arriving at the finding of fact the High
Court had been guilty of -rave errors. We gave opportunity
to learned counsel to point out to us if the findings
arrived at by the learned single Judge of the High Court are
vitiated by any grave errors. But he was unable to point
out any. We, therefore, declined to permit him to address
us on the findings of fact.
As regards the question of law it is desirable to set out
how, according to the appellant, it arises. The suit was
instituted on February 10, 1950 in the district court of
Kottayam which was later transferred by it to the court of
the Subordinate Judge, Meenachil sometime in the year 1956
and was substantially decreed in the appellant’s favour on
July 30, 1958. Three appeals were preferred against it.
One was by Tirumalaya Gounder, the first defendant, and
another in January, 1959 by H. B. Mohammad Rowther, 8th
defendant. The appellant had also preferred an
576
appeal against that part of the decree which was adverse to
him. All these -appeals were heard together and disposed of
by a ,common judgment on August 10, 1960 and the appeals
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
preferred. by defendants I and 8 were allowed by the High
Court while the appeal preferred by the appellant was
dismissed. At the time the suit was instituted the
Travancore-Cochin High Court Act 5 of 1125 M.E.
(Corresponding to 1949 A.D.) was in force. Under s. 20 of
that Act read with S. 21 all appeals to the High Court
valued at an amount in excess of Rs. 1,000 had to be heard
by a Division Bench consisting of two Judges of the High
Court. T he appellant’s suit and the appeals taken by the
respondents from the District Court and the Subordinate
Judge were both valued at Rs. 3,000 and, therefore, had ss.
20 and 21 of the Act been in force on the date on which the
appeals were instituted unquestionably they would have had
to be beard by a Division Bench of two Judges. The
aforesaid Act was, however, repealed by the Kerala High
Court Act, 1958 being Act No. 5 of 1959 which received the
assent of the President on February 6, 1959 and came into
force on March 3, 1959. The appeals were placed for hearing
before a single Judge overruling, we are informed by learned
counsel, the appellant’s plea that they should be only heard
by a Division Bench. The reason why the appeals were heard
by a single Judge and not Placed before a Division Bench was
that under s. 5 of the Kerala High Court Act 5 of 1959 the
jurisdiction of a single Judge of the High Court to hear and
dispose of appeals from an original- decree was extended to
appeals in which the value of the subject matter did not
exceed Rs. 10,000. According, to learned counsel the right
to have the an-peals heard by a Division Bench conferred by
the Travancore-Cochin High Court Act which was in force not
only when the suit but also when the appeals were filed, was
not taken away expressly by Kerala Act 5 of 1959 and could
not be taken away by implication. In support of his
contention he placed strong reliance upon the decision in
Radhakrishan v. Shridhar(1). In that case, just -,is here,
the jurisdiction of a single Judge to hear an appeal of a
value over Rs. 2,000 was challenged, even though by an
amendment to an earlier rule made by the High Court in
exercise of its power under el. 26 of the Letters Patent on
May 27, 1948 all appeals from an appellate decree of a
District Court were to be ordinarily heard and disposed of-
by a single Judge. A contention was raised on behalf of the
appellant’s counsel in that case that in the absence of any
express provision rendering the amendment retrospective the
amendment did not touch the right of an appellant which bad
(1) I.L.R. [1950] Nag. 532.
577
accrued to him earlier to have his appeal heard by a
Division Bench. The contention was upheld by the High
Court. This decision was not approved of in Mahendra v.
Darsan(1) on the ground that the right of a party to have an
appeal heard by a Division Bench was merely a matter of
procedure and could, therefore, be taken away
retrospectively by implication. Learned counsel for the
appellant also placed reliance upon a decision of this Court
in Garikapati Veerara v. N. Subbaiah Choudhury(2) in which
the following propositions were laid down :
"(1) That the legal pursuit of a remedy, suit,
appeal and second appeal are really but steps
in a series of proceedings all connected by an
intrinsic unity and are to be regarded as one
legal proceeding.
(2) The right of appeal is not a mere matter
of procedure but is a substantive right.
(3) The institution of the suit carries with
it the implication that all rights of appeal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
then in force are preserved to the parties
thereto till the rest of the career of the
suit.
(4) The right of appeal is a vested right
and such a right to enter the superior court
accrues to the litigant and exists as on and
from the dater the lis commences and although
it may be actually exercised when the adverse
judgment is pronounced such right is to be
governed by the law prevailing at the date of
the institution of the suit or proceeding and
not by the law that prevails at the date of
its decision or at the date of the filing of
the appeal.
(5) This vested right of appeal can be taken
away only by a subsequent enactment, if it so
provides expressly or by necessary intendment
and not otherwise."
and learned counsel particularly laid stress on the third
proposition. We are in respectful agreement with what has
been laid down by this Court. But it is difficult to
appreciate what benefit the appellant can obtain from what
has been laid down by this Court. For, this is not a case
where any right of appeal conferred by law upon the
appellant has be-en taken away. The right to prefer an
appeal from the judgment of the court of first instance is
derived from the provisions of s. 96 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The learned counsel, however, contended that in
the instant case it is traceable to the provisions of
Travancore-
(1) I.L.R. 31 Patna 446.
(2) [1957] S.C.R. 488
578
Cochin High Court Act of 1949. That Act as its preamble
shows was enacted for making provision regulating the
business of the High Court of Travancore-Cochin for fixing
the jurisdiction of single Judges, Division Benches and Full
Benches and for certain other matters connected with the
functions of the High Court. It did not purport to confer a
right of appeal on the parties, but merely dealt with
procedural matters, matters which are dealt with by several
High Courts under the Letters Patent. Even the Travancore-
Cochin Civil Courts Act, 1951 the provisions of which relate
to civil courts subordinate to the High Court does not
confer any right of appeal though it divides civil courts
into four classes and defines their respective
jurisdictions.
An objection somewhat similar to the one raised by the
appellant before us was raised before this Court in Ittavira
Mathai v. Varkey Varkey & another(1). Dealing with it this
Court has observed at p. 514 :
"That reason is that an appeal lay to a High
Court and whether it is to be heard by one,
two or a larger number of judges is merely a
matter of procedure. No party has a vested
right to have his appeal heard by a specified
number of judges. An appeal lay to the High
Court and the appeal in question was in fact
heard and disposed by the High Court and,
therefore, no right of the party has been
infringed merely because it was heard by two
judges and not by three judges. No doubt in
certain classes of cases, as for instance,
cases which involve an interpretation as to
any provision of the Constitution, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
Constitution provides that the Bench of the
Supreme Court hearing the matter must be
composed of judges who will not be less than
five in number. But it does not follow from
this that the legal requirements in this
regard cannot be altered by a competent body.
We, therefore, overrule the contention of the
learned counsel and hold that the appeal was
rightly heard and decided by a Bench of two
judges."
In the circumstances, therefore, we must reject the
appellant’s contention based upon the decision in
Radhakishan’s case. (2)
Learned counsel, however, contended that by de-Driving the
appellant of the right to have his appeal heard by a
Division Bench his further right of appeal to this Court
under Art. 133 was affected and that since that right also
vested in him when he instituted
(1)[1964] 1 S.C.R. 495 (2) I.L.R. (1950) Nag. 532.
579
the suit it could not be taken away retrospectively except
by an express provision. There is a simple answer to this
contention. The answer is that once it is held that no
party has a vested right to have his appeal to be heard by
more than one judge of the High Court, no right to prefer an
appeal under Art. 133 can be said to vest in him, the right
under which being unavailable in case heard And disposed of
by a single judge of the High Court. The argument of
learned counsel thus fails.
One more point was sought to be urged by learned counsel for
the appellant. The point is based upon the fact that one of
the contesting respondents had raised a question as the
maintainability of the suit. According to learned counsel
that person being in pari delicto with the plaintiff, ought
not to have been permitted to raise that question. Since
the point was not raised by the appellant in either of the
two courts below we declined to permit it to be raised for
the first time before us.
For these reasons we dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
580