Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5693 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Adhyaatamam \026 Bhamini
RESPONDENT:
Jagdish Ambalal Shah
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/12/2006
BENCH:
H.K. SEMA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
Leave granted.
Heard the appellant in person and learned counsel
for the respondent.
1. The appeal challenges the order of the High Court of
Bombay in Review Petition No. 2 of 2005 in Civil Application
(M) No. 1 of 2004 in Family Court Appeal ST No. 40517 of
2003. The appellant had filed a petition in the Family Court
B-40 of 1992 seeking a declaration that she is a joint owner or
a half owner of the properties scheduled to the petition. The
appellant and the respondent were wife and husband. They
married on 15.11.1959. They were living together. They begot
two sons. The respondent filed a petition for divorce against
the appellant on 26.2.1990. The grounds urged were cruelty
and desertion attracting Sections 13(1)(ia) and 13(1)(ib) of the
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. The appellant in her turn filed the
present proceeding seeking a declaration of her half right to
the properties that stood in the name of her husband, her
husband and others and for a perpetual injunction restraining
the husband from alienating the properties.
2. The petition for divorce was allowed by the family
court sometime in 1993 by granting a decree for divorce on the
grounds put forward. The appellant challenged that decree
unsuccessfully in the High Court. The appellant thereafter
approached this Court by way of further appeal. This Court
confirmed the decree for divorce but modified the quantum of
alimony payable by the husband and raised it to Rs.5,000/-
per month from Rs.1,000/- per month. That was on 5.2.1997.
The marital relationship was thus finally put an end to by the
decree.
3. The appellant pursued her proceeding for
declaration and injunction relating to the properties. The
family court, after trial, by judgment dated 24.1.2003,
dismissed the claim. It held that the appellant had failed to
prove that the properties standing in the name of the
respondent and respondent and others, were joint acquisitions
or that she had a half share therein. It may be noted that this
Court had while confirming the decree for divorce, left open
the claim of the appellant regarding the properties, to be
pursued in the family court.
4. Feeling aggrieved by the dismissal of her claim in
respect of the immoveable properties, the appellant filed an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
appeal before the High Court of Bombay as Family Court
Appeal ST No. 40517 of 2003. That appeal was a delayed one.
The appellant therefore filed Civil Application (M) No. 1 of 2004
for condoning the delay of 81 days in filing the appeal. The
court found on a calculation, which had not been indicated in
the application by the appellant, that the delay was of 62 days.
The respondent resisted the application pleading that no
sufficient cause was made out for condoning the delay. The
High Court after noticing that in such matters a liberal
approach is generally adopted, held that in the case on hand,
the appellant had not made out sufficient cause for condoning
the delay. Before consequently disposing of the appeal as
belated, the High Court also heard learned counsel on merits
of the appeal in the light of the depositions of the witnesses
and the other relevant material produced. The High Court
found that there was no reason to differ from the conclusions
of the family court regarding the title to the properties and
that the finding that the appellant had no joint ownership in
the properties was justified. Thus, the application for
condoning the delay in filing the appeal and the appeal were
dismissed by the High Court.
5. The appellant thereupon filed R.P. No. 2 of 2005
seeking a review of the order in the application for condoning
the delay in filing the appeal. The Division Bench of the High
Court found no ground to review the order earlier made.
Thus, the review petition was dismissed. The appellant
challenges the order on the review petition passed on
13.7.2005 in this appeal.
6. Of course, this Bench has recently held in Kumaran
Silks Trade (P) Ltd. (2) Vs. Devendra and ors. [(2006) 8 SCC
555] that no Petition for Special Leave to Appeal under Article
136 of the Constitution of India can be maintained against an
order refusing to review a judgment. But in this case, taking
note of the circumstances as a whole including the extent of
the delay in filing the appeal, we have thought it appropriate to
consider whether the High Court was justified in refusing to
condone the delay in filing the appeal in the first instance.
7. The High Court has noticed that though originally
in the petition for condoning the delay, the cause therefor had
been put at the door of the appellant, in the petition for review
the delay is attributed to inaction on the part of the counsel
who was appearing for the appellant at the earlier stage. What
is seen is that the appellant received the certified copy of the
judgment of the family court, according to her, after some
effort. Thereafter, she left for the United States of America.
After she came back, the appeal was filed. Her case is that
she had entrusted the matter with her counsel for filing the
appeal in time even before she left for the United States of
America. On her return, she found that counsel had not filed
the appeal. Thereafter, she ensured that the appeal was filed
along with a petition for condoning the delay in filing the
same, which of course, she had signed. Her present case is
that due to the absence of care on the part of her counsel that
appeal was not filed in time. But in the application filed
earlier, the suggestion was that it was due to her illness and
her having to go to the United States that the delay occurred.
The High Court found that there was no sufficient cause made
out for condoning the delay. When she came up with a
different story and tried to put the blame on her counsel, the
High Court held that there was no ground made out for review
of its earlier order.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
8. It is true that the appellant came forward with an
inconsistent case when she sought the review of the earlier
order. But the fact remains that even while confirming the
decree for divorce, this Court had left open the claim of the
appellant in respect of the properties to be adjudicated in the
proceeding pending before the family court, namely, the
present proceeding. The family court has, on appraisal of the
materials before it, come to the conclusion that the appellant
has not made out her claim in respect of the properties. The
appeal sought to be filed by the appellant was no doubt
delayed by 62 days. It is also true that the High Court while
declining to condone the delay had also generally referred to
the merits of her claim on the evidence adduced.
9. The delay as found by the High Court was only of 62
days. No doubt, under Section 19 of the Family Courts Act,
1984, the time for filing an appeal is only 30 days from the
date of judgment or order of a family court. There is no
exclusion of the application of Section 5 of the Limitation Act.
Since the appeal is to the High Court, Section 5 of the
Limitation Act gets attracted on its own terms. There was no
objection that Section 5 of the Limitation Act was not
applicable. In that situation, the only question was whether
the appellant had made out sufficient cause for condoning the
delay in filing the appeal. We do find some inconsistency in
the case of the appellant as noticed by the High Court. We
also find that the High Court had made a cursory examination
of the merits of the claim of the appellant before dismissing
the application for condonation of delay. But, in the
circumstances, we feel that the appellant ought to be given an
opportunity to argue her appeal on merits. This is without any
reference to the merits or demerits of her appeal. But in view
of the varying stands adopted by her, we feel that it would be
appropriate to grant her that opportunity only by putting her
on terms. Considering the prior relationships between the
parties, we think that the costs to be paid by the appellant to
the respondent in this Court need not be a very substantial
sum, though obviously, it could not be an insignificant sum.
In that view, we order that this appeal will stand allowed, the
orders of the High Court will stand set aside and the delay in
the appellant filing the appeal before the High Court will stand
condoned on condition that the appellant deposits in the High
Court of Bombay, a sum of Rs. 10,000/- towards costs thrown
away within a period of six weeks from today. On the said
sum of Rs. 10,000/- being deposited, it will be open to the
respondent to immediately withdraw the same
unconditionally. In the event of the deposit being made within
time, the appeal would be heard afresh by the High Court on
merits and disposed of in accordance with law. In case, the
costs as indicated above are not deposited, the order of the
High Court challenged herein will stand confirmed and this
appeal will stand dismissed.