Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GUJARAT STATE FINANCIAL CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/s. NATSON MANUFACTURING CO. (P) LTD. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1978
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1765 1979 SCR (1) 372
CITATOR INFO :
F 1987 SC1950 (4,5)
R 1989 SC2113 (16,17,20,29)
ACT:
State Financial Corporations Ac (Act LXIII), 1951-
Nature of proceedings under Sections 31 and 32-Court Fee
payable on an application that may be made under Section
31(1) of the Act-Whether governed by Article l or 7 of
Schedule 1 or by Article l(c) of Schedule II of Bombay Court
Fees Act, 1959.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant Corporation, which grants or guarantees
the loan to be raised By industrial concerns either from the
scheduled banks or state Cooperative Banks or those floated
in public market, is entitled to make, for one or more of
the reliefs set out in Section 31 ( 1 ) of the state
Financial Cooperation Act, an application to the District
Judge within the limits of whose jurisdiction the industrial
concern carries on the whole or substantial part of its
business, when any such concern defaults in repayment of
loan or fails to comply with the terms of the agreement. The
Corporation made several applications purporting to be under
Section 31(1) of the Act in various district courts in the
State of Gujarat. question was raised in the District Courts
about the proper court fee payable on sch applications. ’
The Corporation contended that the application would be
governed k Article 1 (c) of Schedule II of the Bombay Court
Fees Act, 1959 and-a fixed court fee in the amount of 65
paise would be payable in respect of the application. But
the state contended that the application could be governed
either by Article I of Schedule I or at any rate Article 7
of Schedule I and the court fee payable would be ad-valorem
on the amount of value o the subject matter in dispute or on
the amount of the monetary gain or loss to be prevented
according to the scales prescribed under Article 1 of
Schedule I. All the district courts except Broach accepted
the contention of the state; but the Broach district court
opined that the application under Section 31(1) was in the
nature of an execution application and it would be governed
by Article I (c) of Schedule II. Both the Corporation and
state of Gujarat went in revision before the High Court. The
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High Court by a common judgment held that an appellation
under Section 31(1) should bear an ad valorem court fee. In
reaching this conclusion, the High Court treated the
application under Section 31(1) of the Act on par with a
suit by a mortgagee to enforce the mortgage debt by sale of
the mortgaged property which is being treated as a money
suit falling within the purview of Article I of Schedule I.
Alternatively, it was held the even if the application under
Section 31(1) is not plaint within the meaning of Article I
of Schedule I it would fall within the purview o Article 7
of Schedule I.
Allowing the appeal, by special leave the Court
^
HELD: 1. The form of the application, the nature of the
relief, the compulsion to make interim order, the limited
enquiry contemplated by sub-section (6) of Section 32 and
the nature of relief that can be granted and the manner of
execution clearly show that the application under Section 31
(1) is neither a plaint as contemplated by Article 1 of
Schedule I nor an application in the nature of a plaint as
contemplated by Article 7 of the Court-Fees Act. 1870. 182
B-C]
373
Once Article 7 of the Schedule I of the Court-Fees Act
is excluded there A was (and could be) no dispute that an
application under Section 31(1) of trill Act would be
covered by the residuary Article 1 (c) of Schedule II of the
Court Fees Act and it should bear a fixed court fee in the
sum of 65 paise. [382 D]
2. Section 31(1) of the Act prescribes a special
procedure for enrichment of the claims of the Financial
Corporation. The Corporation is to make an application for
the reliefs set out Indecision 31(1). The reliefs that a
Court can gram are the sale of the property mortgaged etc.
to a Financial Corporation as security for the loan or
advance; transfer of the management of the industrial
concern to the Financial Corporation; or restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or removing its
machinery or plant or equipment from the industrial concern
without the permission of the Board of the Financial
Corporation. An application for such a relief is certainly
not a plaint in a suit for recovery of mortgage loan. It is
not even something akin to a suit by a mortgage to recover
mortgage money by sale of mortgaged property. The
distinguishing features noticeable between a suit for
recovery of mortgage money by sale of mortgaged property and
an application under s. 31 for one or more of the relief
specified therein lares that even if the Corporation as
applicant so chooses, it cannot in the application, pray for
a preliminary decree for accounts or a final decree for
payment of money nor can it seek to enforce any personal
liability even if such one is incurred under the contract of
mortgage. At any rate in an application under Section 31 ( 1
) the Corporation does not and cannot pray for a decree for
its outstanding dues. It can make an application for one of
the three reliefs, none of which, if granted, results in a
money decree or decree for recovery of outstanding loans or
advance. The foreign of the relief by itself would not
attract one or the other Article of Court-Fees Act. Section
32 of the Act clearly points to the conclusion that the
proceedings under Section 31(1) of the Act are not in the
nature of a money recovery proceedings. Article 1 of
Schedule I would, therefore not be attracted. attracted
3. The whole conspectus of provisions in Section 32
coupled with the nature relief sought under s. 31(1) makes
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it clear that special provision is made for certain types of
reliefs that can be obtained by a Corporation by an
application under Section 31 ( I ) which could not be styled
as substantive relief for repayment of mortgage money by
sale of mortgaged property. Nor can it be said to be a
proceeding to obtain substantive relief capable of being
valued in terms of monetary gain or prevention of monetary
loss. The substantive myself in an application under Section
31(1) is something akin to an application for attachment of
property in execution of a decree at a stage posterior to
the passing of the decree. It may be that in the ultimate
analysis the result would be that the property will be sold
for repayment of the loan or advance taken by the industrial
concern from the Corporation but it could not be said that
it is substantive relief claimed by the Corporation which
can be valued in terms of monetary gain or prevention of
monetary loss as envisaged by Article 7 of Schedule I of
Court-Fees Act. [382 A-C & 381G-H]
Sub section (6) of Section 32 of the Act has to be read
in the context in which it is placed. It does not expand the
contest in the application as if it is suit between a
mortgagee and the mortgagor for sale of mortgaged property.
[38 I E]
374
Observation:
[When dealing With a question o court fee, the
perspective should be informed by the spirit of the magna
carta and of equal access to justice which suggests that a
heavy price tag on relief in Court should be regarded as
unplayable.] [382E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1553 of
977,
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 5-4-1977 of the Gujarat High. Court in Civil Revision
Application No. 847 of 1975.
Soli J. Sorabjee, Addl. So]. General and P. H. Parekh
for the Appellant.
D. V. Patel, Badri Das Sharma and M. N. Shroff for
Respondent No. 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. This appeal by special leave raises a narrow
but interesting question on the nature of proceedings under
section 31 and 2 of the State Financial Corporations Act,
1951 (’Act’ for short) which has a direct impact on the
question of court fees tc be paid on an application that may
be made under s. 31 of the Act. The question arose in the
context of the following facts:
The state of Gujarat set up the Gujarat state Financial
corporation (’Corporation’ for short), the appellant herein,
under s. 3 of the Act. The Corporation was set up inter alia
for granting or guaranteeing tile loans to be raised by
industrial concerns either from scheduled banks or state co-
operative banks or those floated in the public market. The
Corporation guaranteed numerous such loans, advanced to the
industrial concerns in the state of Gujarat on certain terms
and conditions agreed between the parties. When the
industrial concern defaults in repayment of loan or fails to
comply with the terms of the agreement the Corporation is
entitled to make an application to the District Judge within
the limits of whose jurisdiction the industrial concern
carries on the whole or substantial part of its business for
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one or more of the reliefs set out in s. 31(1) of the Act.
The Corporation appears to have, made applications
purporting to be under s. 31(1) of the Act in various
District Courts in the State of Gujarat against different
industrial concerns. A question was raised in the District
Courts about the proper court fee payable on such
applications. The Corporation contended that the application
would be governed by Article 1 (of Schedule II o the Bombay
Court) Fee Act, 1959, and a fixed court fee in the amount of
65 paise would be payable in respect of the application. On
the other hand, the State contended that application would
be governed either by
375
Article I Schedule I or at any rate by Article 7 of
Schedule I and the court fee payable would be ad valorem on
the amount of value of the subject matter in dispute or on
the amount of the monetary gain or loss to be prevented
according to the scale prescribed under Article I of
Schedule I. It appears that except for the Distt. Judge,
Broach, all other District Judges accepted the contention on
behalf of the State. The Distt. Judge, Broach was of the
opinion that the application under s. 31(1) was in the
nature of an execution application and it would be governed
by Article l(c) of Schedule II. The Corporation preferred
revision applications to the High Court questioning the
correctness of the decisions directing levy of ad valorem
court fee. The State of Gujarat also preferred a revision
application against the decision of the Distt. Judge, Broach
holding that the application under s. 31 (1) of the Act was
in the nature of an execution application. The High Court by
a common judgment held that the application under s. 31 (1)
should bear ad valorem court fee. In reaching this
conclusion the High Court treated the application under s.
31(1) of the Act on par with a suit by a mortgagee to
enforce the mortgage debtor sale of the mortgaged property
which is being treated as a money suit falling within the
purview or Article I of Schedule I. Alternatively, it was
held that even if the application under s. 31 (1) is not a
plaint within the meaning of Article 1 of Schedule I, it
would fall within the purview of Article 7 of Schedule I
which provides an ad valorem court fee on an application
made for obtaining substantive relief which is capable of
being valued in terms of monetary gain or prevention of
monetary loss because to all intents and purposes the
application is one for recovery of the outstanding claim of
the Corporation. In accordance with these findings the
revision applications preferred by the Corporation were
dismissed and the one preferred by the State was allowed.
Mr. Sorabji, learned counsel who appeared for the
appellant Corporation contended that the view taken by the
learned Judge of the High Court that on an analogy the
application under s. 31(1) by the Corporation is akin to a
suit by a mortgagee to enforce his mortgage debt by sale of
mortgaged property and, therefore, money suit, falling
within the purview of Article 1 of Schedule I of the Bombay
Court Fee Act, 1959, or the observation that the substantive
relief claimed in the application is one which is capable of
being value in terms of monetary gain or prevention of
monetary loss and would attract Article 7 of Schedule I, is
not correct.
The State Financial Corporations Act, 1951, was
enacted by the Parliament with a view to enabling the State
Governments to establish a Financial Corporation for
enhancing the pace of industrialisa-
376
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tion by providing credit on easy terms for setting up
industrial concerns and/or for expanding the activities of
the existing industrial concerns. Section 25 enables the
Financial Corporation to carry on and transact any of the
business set out therein which includes guaranteeing on such
terms and conditions as may be agreed upon (i) loans raised
by industrial concerns which are repayable within a period
not exceeding 20 years and are floated in the public market
or (ii) loans raised by industrial concerns from scheduled
banks or State Co-operative Banks. It can also underwrite
the issue of stock, shares, bonds or debentures by an
industrial concern. The Corporation can either guarantee the
loan raised by the industrial concern or may even grant
itself a loan on such terms and conditions as may be agreed
upon between the Corporation and the industrial concern.
Section 29 confers upon Financial Corporation, in case
of default by industrial concern, the right to take over the
management of possession or both of the industrial concern
as well as the right to transfer by way of lease or sale and
realise the property pledged, mortgaged, hypothecated or
assigned to the Financial Corporation, and any transfer of
property made by the Corporation in exercise of the power
conferred by s. 29 shall vest in it all rights in or to the
property transferred as if the transfer had been made by the
owner of the property.
The relevant two sections with which we are concerned
In this appeal are ss. 31 and 32. Section 31 provides as
under:-
"31. (1) Where an industrial concern, in breach of
any agreement, makes any default in repayment of any
loan or advance or any instalment thereof or in meeting
its obligations in relation to any guarantee given by
the Corporation or otherwise fails to comply with the
terms of its agreement with the Financial Corporation
or where the Financial Corporation requires an
industrial concern to make immediate repayment of any
loan or advance under section 30 and the industrial
concern fails to make such repayment, then, without
prejudice to the provisions of section 29 of this Act
and of section 69 of the Transfer of Property Act,
1882, any officer of the Financial Corporation,
generally or specially authorised by the Board in this
behalf may apply to the district judge within the
limits of whose jurisdiction the industrial concern
carries on the whole or a substantial part of it
business for one or more of the following reliefs,
namely:-
(a) for an order for the sale of the property
pledged, mortgaged, hypothecated or assigned
to the
377
Financial Corporation as security for the
loan or advance; or
(b) for transferring the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial
Corporation; or
(c) for an ad interim injunction restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or
removing its machinery or plant or equipment
from the premises of the industrial concern
without the permission of the Board, where
such removal is apprehended.
(2) An application under sub-section (1) shall
state the nature and extent of the liability of the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation, the
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ground on which it is made and such other particulars
as may be prescribed."
Section 32(1) provides that when an application is made
seeking reliefs mentioned in clauses (a) and (c) of sub-s.
(1) of s. 31, it is obligatory upon the District Judge to
pass an ad interim order attaching the security or so much
of the property of the industrial concern as would on being
sold realise an amount equivalent in value to the
outstanding liability of the industrial concern to the
Financial Corporation together with the costs of the
proceedings with or without an ad interim injunction
restraining the industrial concern from transferring or
removing its machinery, plant or equipment. If the applicant
seeks relief mentioned in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of
s. 31, the District Judge shall pass an order of ad interim
injunction restraining the industrial concern from
transferring or removing its machinery, plant or equipment.
A notice accompanied by copies of the interim order and the
application is required to be served upon the industrial
concern calling upon it to show cause why ad interim order
of attachment should not be made absolute or the injunction
confirmed or the management transferred to the Corporation.
If no cause is shown on or before the specified date, the
order is to be made absolute. Sub-section (6) of s. 32
provides that if the industrial concern shows cause, the
Distt. Judge is required to investigate the claim of the
Financial Corporation in accordance with the provisions
contained in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, in so far as
such provisions may be applied thereto. On completing the
investigation the District Judge may either confirm the
order or vary the order or release the property from
attachment. An order of attachment or sale of property has
to be carried into effect as far as practicable in the
manner provided in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, for
the attachment or sale of property in execution of a decree
as if the Financial Corporation were the decree holder.
378
Article 1 of Schedule I of the Court-fees Act provides
for ad valorem court fee on plaint or memorandum of appeal
(not otherwise provided for in the Act) or of cross-
objections presented to any civil or revenue court, to be
levied according to the scale set out in the Schedule on the
value of the subject-matter in dispute. Article 7 provides
for court-fees on a plaint or application or petition other
than those provided in the earlier Articles to obtain
substantive relief capable of being valued in terms of
monetary gain or prevention of monetary loss including cases
where an application or petition is treated either as a
plaint or a described as the mode of obtaining the relief as
aforesaid, the fee to be calculated on the amount of the
monetary gain or monetary loss to be prevented according to
the scale prescribed under Article 1.
Section 31(1) prescribes a special procedure for
enforcement of claims by the Financial Corporation The
Corporation is to make an application for the reliefs set
out in s. 31 (1) . The reliefs that a Court can grant under
s. 31(1) are the sale of the property mortgaged, etc. to a
Financial Corporation as security for the loan or advance;
transfer of the management of the industrial concern to the
Financial Corporation or restraining the industrial concern
from transferring or removing its machinery or plant or
equipment from the premises of the industrial concern
without the permission of the Board of the Financial
Corporation. An application for such a relief is certainly
not a plaint in a suit for recovery of mortgage money by
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sale of mortgaged property. On a breach of an agreement by
an industrial concern the Corporation can seek one or more
of the three reliefs set out in s. 31(1). If the Corporation
seeks the relief of transferring the management of the
industrial concern to the Financial Corporation it could
hardly be said that the application purports to be a plaint
for recovering the mortgage money by sale of mortgaged
properly. It would be inappropriate to say that on an
analogy an application under s. 31(1) is something akin to a
suit by a mortgagee to recover mortgage money by sale of
mortgaged property. At any rate, in an application under s.
31 (1) the Corporation does not and cannot pray for a decree
for its outstanding dues. It can make an application for one
of the three reliefs, none of which, if granted, results in
a money decree, or decree for recovery of outstanding loan
or advance. Section 31(1) of the Act, in the circumstances
therein set out, permits the Corporation to seek one or more
of the three reliefs therein stated. It is difficult to
comprehend that merely the form of relief would attract one
or the other Article of Court-fees Act. If relief of sale of
mortgaged property is sought which permits an argument that
the application is nothing but a suit for realising mortgage
money by sale of mortgaged property and, therefore,
379
ad valorem court-fees is payable, then what would be the
nature of the application when instead of sale of mortgaged
property the relief asked for is transfer of the management
of the industrial concern or an interim injunction
restraining the industrial concern from transferring or
removing its machinery, plant or equipment from the premises
cf the industrial concern without the permission of the
Board? In the last mentioned two cases the relief is
incapable of any monetary evaluation. The High Court got
over this difficult question by merely observing that this
need not be answered in the petitions before the High Court.
Frankly speaking, they shed some light on the nature of the
proceedings contemplated by s. 31, and s. 32 of the Act
clearly points to, the conclusion that the proceedings are
not in the nature of a money recovery proceedings. Article 1
of Schedule I would, therefore, not be attracted and we must
say in fairness to Mr. D.V. Patel, learned counsel for the
respondent State of Gujarat who specifically stated that the
application would not fall under Article I of Schedule I but
it would be governed by Article of Schedule. I.
Developing the contention, Mr. Patel urged that the
substance of the matter is that even if the Corporation
applies for an order of sale of mortgaged property, the
substantive relief is one of sale of mortgaged property so
that the Corporation may reimburse itself of the loan
advanced to the industrial concern thereby acquiring
monetary gain or at any rate preventing monetary loss. The
outward form, it was said may be different but the substance
of the matter is that the Corporation seeks to recover its
loan by sale of mortgaged property. It was said that at any
rate either the Corporation by the substantive relief seeks
to make a monetary gain of reimbursing itself in respect of
the loan advanced by it or prevents the loss that it may
suffer if the loan is not repaid, by bringing the mortgaged
property to court auction and appropriate the sale price
towards its loan.
Section 31(1) enables the Corporation in the event of
breach of agreement or default in payment of loan or advance
or an Instalment thereof to make an application not merely
for sale of mortgaged property but even for transferring the
management of the industrial concern to the Financial
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Corporation or merely injunct the industrial concern from
transferring or removing its machinery or plant or
equivalent from the premises of the concern without the
permission of the Board. An application for transfer of
management of the industrial concern could by no stretch of
imagination, be said to be an application for repayment of
the loan though Mr. Patel did say that the management can
only be retained till such time as the Corporation
reimburses itself. Further, if an application under s. 31(1)
is merely for an injunction restraining the industrial
concern from transferring or removing its machinery or plant
or equipment with-
380
out the permission of the Board, it could hardly, or even
remotely. be said that such a relief substantively provides
for repayment of the loan or it is a relief to prevent an
anticipatory loss. Let it he recalled at this stage that if
the Court-fees Act is a taxing statute its provisions have
to be construed strictly in favour of the subject litigant
(vide State of Maharashtra v. Mishrilal Tarachand Lodha &
ors.,) In a taxing statute the strict legal position as
disclosed by the form and not the substance of the
transaction is determinative of its taxability (vide Joint
Commercial Tax Officer, Harbour Div. II, Madras v. Young
Men’s Indian Association (Regd.), Madras & ors. If it is a
fee, the enormity of the exaction will be more difficult to
sustain. While we do not pronounce, we indicate the
implication of the High Court’s untenable view.
What then is the nature of proceedings contemplated by
s. 31(1) if it is not a suit by the mortgagee for recovery
of mortgage money by sale of mortgaged property. Section 31
would to some extent provide a clue to this question. On an
application under s. 31(1) being made it is obligatory upon
the Court to make an interim order attaching the security
with or without interim injunction restraining the
industrial concern from transferring or removing its plant.
machinery or equipment without the permission of the Board
of the Corporation. If the relief claimed in the application
is transfer of the management of the industrial concern to
the Corporation it is obligatory upon the Distt. Judge to
grant an ad interim injunction restraining the industrial
concern from transferring or removing its machinery, plant
or equipment. In either event a notice notifying the
industrial concern to show cause why the order should not be
made absolute is required to be served upon the industrial
concern.
It was said that if cause is shown by the industrial
concern it is obligatory upon the Distt. Judge to
investigate the claim of the Financial Corporation in
accordance with the provision contained in the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, in so far as such provisions may be applied
thereto. The contention is that once an industrial concern
shows cause and contests the application of the Corporation
there arises a lis between the parties which would include
the investigation of the monetary claim of the Corporation
and per se it would be a suit between the mortgagee and the
mortgagor in which the ultimate relief is sale of mortgaged
property for repayment of the mortgage money. Sub-s. (6) of
s. 32 of the Act has to be read in the context in which it
is placed. The claim of the Corporation is not the monetary
claim to be investigated though it may become necessary to
381
specify the figure for the purpose of determining how much
of the security should be sold. But the investigation of the
claim does not involve all the contentions that can be
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raised in a suit. The claim of the Corporation is that there
is a breach of agreement or default in making repayment of
loan or advance or instalment thereof and, therefore, the
mortgaged property should be sold. It is not a money claim.
The contest can be that the jurisdictional fact which
enables the Corporation to seek the relief of sale of
property is not available to it or no case is made out for
transfer of management of the industrial concern. Sub-s. (7)
of s. 32 prescribes what reliefs can be given after
investigation under sub-s. (6) is made, and it clearly gives
a clue to the nature of contest under Sub-s. (6). Sub-s. (8)
of s. 32 only prescribes the mode and method for executing
the order of attachment or sale of property as provided in
the Code of Civil Procedure. Sub-ss. (6), (7) and (8) of s.
32 read together would give an opportunity to the industrial
concern to appear and satisfy the District Judge what the
situation envisaged by s. 31(13 has not arisen and the
relief should not be granted. In the absence of a provision
giving such an opportunity to the industrial concern to
whose detriment the order is required to be made, a serious
question may arise about the constitutional validity of the
procedure prescribed under s. 31(1) inasmuch as it would be
violative of principles of natural justice and that too in a
proceeding in a Court of Law. The provision contained in
sub-s. (6) does not expand the contest in the application
made under s. 31(1) as to render the application to be a
suit between a mortgagee, and the mortgagor for sale of
mortgaged property. If that were so, the Corporation would
not be limited to specified reliefs only and if the contract
permits it may seek to enforce personal liability of
mortgage which it cannot enforce in an application under
Sec. 31 ( 1). It may be, as contended by Mr. Patel, that in
the ultimate analysis the result would be that the property
will be sold for repayment of the loan or advance taken by
the, industrial concern from the Corporation but it could
not be said that it is a substantive relief claimed by the
Corporation which can be valued in terms of monetary gain or
prevention of monetary loss as envisaged by Article 7 of
Schedule I of Court-fees Act. The substantive relief in an
application under s. 31(1) is something akin to an
application for attachment of property in execution of a
decree at a stage posterior to the passing of the decree. We
are unable to appreciate the view taken by the High Court
that the proceeding is not in the nature of execution of a
decree because the question of enforcement of the order of
attachment or sale would only arise after the same is made
absolute under Sub-s. (7). One has to look at the whole
conspectus of provisions in s. 32 coupled with the nature of
relief sought under s. 31(1)
382
and it becomes clear that special provision is made for
certain types of reliefs that can be obtained by a
Corporation by an application under s. 31(1) which could not
be styled as substantive relief for repayment of mortgage
money by sale of mortgaged property. Nor can it be said to
be a proceeding to obtain substantive relief capable of
being valued in terms of monetary gain or prevention of
monetary loss. The form of the application, the nature of
the relief, the compulsion to make interim order, the
limited enquiry contemplated by Sub-s. 6 of s. 32 and the
nature of relief that can be granted and the manner of
execution clearly show that the application under s. 31(1)
is neither a plaint as contemplated by Article 1 of Schedule
I nor an application in a nature of a plaint as contemplated
by Article 7 of Schedule I of Court-fees Act.
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Once Article 7 of Schedule I of the Court-fees Act is
excluded there was (and could be) no dispute that an
application under s. 31(1) of the Act would be covered by
the residuary Article l(c) of Schedule II of the Court-fees
Act and it should bear a fixed court fee in the sum of 65
paise. Therefore, the High Court was clearly in error in
holding that the application should bear ad valorem court
fee.
When dealing with a question of court fee, the
perspective should be informed by the spirit of the magna
carta and of equal access to justice which suggests that a
heavy price tag on relief in Court should be regarded as
unpalatable.
In this view of the matter this appeal is allowed and
the order made by the High Court as well as the orders made
by the various District Judges except the District Judge,
Broach, are set aside. On the question of costs, we looked
at the specimen applications filed by the Corporation
disclosing a clear lack of wisdom on the part of the
Corporation in asking for a decree for certain amount which
could not be granted under s. 31 (1). Therefore, there was a
misconception on either side and the proper order should be
that the parties shall bear their own costs.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
383