Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NEMI CHAND AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE EDWARD MILLS CO. LTD.AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/11/1952
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1953 AIR 28 1953 SCR 197
ACT:
Court-Fees Act (VII of 1870), s. 12-Civil Procedure Code,
1908, s. 2(ii), 0. VII, r. 11-Decision as to court-fee-
Finality-Scope of s. 12-Dismi ssal for non-payment of court-
fee-Power of appellate Court to consider whether decision
about court-fee was right-- Declaratory suit with prayer for
consequential relief-Appeal giving up prayer for
Consequential relief-Maintainability-Courtfee.
HEADNOTE:
In a plaint the following reliefs were asked for, viz.,
(i) that it be declared that the appointment of’defendant
No. 2 as chairman of the board of directors of a company is
illegal, invalid and ultra vires and that he has no, right
to act as chairman, managing director etc., and (ii) that a
receiver be appointed to take charge of the management of
the company. The ’plaint bore a court-fee stamp of Rs. 10
only but, the objection of the defendants, ad valorem fee
was paid Rs. 51,000 which was the valuation of the suit.
The suit was dismissed and the plaintiff preferred an appeal
giving up the second relief and paying a court-fee of Rs. 10
only. The appellate Court ordered payment of ad valorem
court-fee and non-compliance rejected the memorandum of
appeal, 0n further appeal:’
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Held, (i) that it was o pen to the appellant to give up the
second relief in appeal and, as the subject-matter of the
appeal was of & purely declaratory nature, the memorandum of
appeal was properly stamped;
(ii)that the first relief was of a purely declaratory nature
and did not involve any consequential relief ;
(iii)that s. 12 of the Court-Fees Act did not preclude the
Court from considering the correctness of the order of the
low er appellate court rejecting the appeal the ground
that the memorandum of appeal was not properly stamped.
The finality imposed by s. 12 of the Court-Fees Act deci-
sions relating to court-fee attaches only to decisions
concerning valuation simpliciter; it does not attach to
decisions relating to the category under which a suit or
appeal falls for purposed of court-fees.
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Section 12 of the Court-Fees Act when it says that such a
decision shall be final between the parties only makes the
decision of the court a question of court-fee non-
appealable and places it the same footing as other
interlocutory non-appealable orders under the Code and does
no more than that. If a decision under s. 12 is reached by
assuming jurisdiction which the court does not possess or
without observing the formalities which are prescribed for
reaching such a decision, the order obviously would be
revisable by the High Court in the exercise of revisional
powers. Similarly, when a party thinking that a decision
under s. 12 is palpably wrong takes the risk of his plaint
being rejected or suit dismissed and then appeals from the
order rejecting the plaint or from the decree dismissing the
suit but not from the decision the question of court-fee,
then it is open to him to challenge the interlocutory order
even the question of court-fee in the suit or appeal. The
word " finality " construed in the limited sense in which it
is often used in statutes means that no appeal lies from an
order of this character as such and it means no more than
that.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 105 of 1950.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated March 22, 1945, of
the Court of the Judicial Commissioner, Ajmer-Merwara, Ajmer
(Davies J. C.) in Civil First Appeal No. 16 of 1944, arising
out of the Judgment and Decree dated March 13, 1944, of the
Court of the Judge, Small Causes, Ajmer, and Additional
District Judge, Ajmer, in Civil Suit No. 28 of 1942.
S. S. Deedwania for the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, (J. N,
Sharma, with him) for the respondents,
199
1952. November 10. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MAHAJAN’J.-This is an appeal by special leave granted by the
Privy Council and limited to the question of court-fee,
viz., whether the memorandum of appeal presented to the
High Court court-fee was payable under section 7 (iv) (e) or
article 17 of Schedule II of the Court-Fees Act.
The question whether the memorandum of appeal was properly
stamped arose in the following circumstances: Edward-Mills
Co. Ltd. is a joint stock company situate in Beawar, Ajmer-
Merwara. In accordance with the provisions of the articles
of the company one Seth Gadh Mal Lodha and Rai Sahib Moti
Lal (respondent No. 2) were its chairman and managing
director respectively since 1916. Seth Gadh Mal Lodha
represented his family ’firm of Kanwal Nain Hamir Singh,
while Rai Sahib Moti Lal represented the joint family firm
of Champa Lal Ram Swaroop, 1st July, 1938, Rai Sahib Moti
Lal and his firm were adjudged insolvents by the Bombay High
Court. The result was that respondent No. 2 had to vacate
the office of managing director and -the members of his firm
also became ineligibleforit. By a resolution of the board
of direetors passed 18th July, 1938, Gadh Mal Lodha was
appointed to take the place of Rai Sahib Moti Lal as
managing director. Gadh Mal Lodha died llth January,
1942, and the board of directors then appointed Seth
-Sobhagmal Lodha to act as chairman as well as managing
director till the, appointment was made by the company. An
extraordinary meeting of the company was called for the 8th
February, 1945, for the election of the chairman. At this
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meeting conflict &rose between the two groups represented by
Sobhagmal Lodha and Moti Lal. The chairman therefore
dissolved the meeting but the supporters of Moti Lal
continued to hold it and passed a resolution appointing him
as the sole agent and chairman for a period of twenty years
a remuneration equal to ten per cent of the profits of the
company It-is this
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resolution of the 8th February, 1942, which has led to the
present dispute.
Seth Sobhagmal in the situation that arose approached the
District Judge of Ajmer with the prayer that a general
meeting of the company may be held under the supervision of
the court. This request was allowed 11th February, 1942,
and the court ordered that the meeting be held 12th
February, 1942, under the chairmanship of Seth Sobhagmal.
Respondent No. 2 being aggrieved by this order, filed an ap-
plication in revision in the Court of the ’judicial
Commissioner impugning the order. The learned Judicial
Commissioner allowed the revision and directed that the
resolution of the 8th February, 1942, should be acted upon.
Having failed to get redress in the summary proceedings, the
appellant then filed the suit out of which this appeal
arises for quashing the resolution of the 8th February,
1942. In the plaint he asked for the following relies:-
1. That it be declared that the appointment of
defendant No. 2 is illegal, invalid and ultra vires and that
he has no right to act as chairman, managing director etc.
of defendant No. 1;
2. That a receiver be appointed to take charge
of the management of the company, until a properly qualified
chairman managing director etc. are duly appointed as
required by the memorandum and articles of the company.
The plaint bore a court-fee stamp of Rs. 10 only, but the
objection of the respondents that court-fee was payable
relief No. 2 the appellants paid ad valorem fee Rs. 51,000
which was the valuation of the suit for purposes of
jurisdiction.
The Additional District Judge dismissed the suit the
preliminary ground that it was not maintainable as it
related to the internal management of the company and that
the, appellants had no right to bring it without impleading
the directors who were necessary parties to it.
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Aggrieved by this decision of the trials Judge, the
appellants preferred an appeal to the Court of the Judicial
Commissioner, Ajmer-Merwara, at Ajmer. The memorandum of
appeal was Stamped with a courtfee stamp of Rs. 1 0 and it
was expressly stated therein that relief No. 2 of the plaint
was given up. An objection was raised regarding the amount
of courtfee paid the memorandum of appeal. The Judicial
Commissioner ordered that proper court-fees be paid thereon
in a month. In this order no reasons were given for this
decision. The additional fee demanded was not paid, and the
Judicial Commissioner dismissed the appeal with costs 22nd
March, 1945. An application was made for leave to appeal to
the Privy Council against this order but, it was refused.
In the order refusing leave it was said as follows:-
" appeal to this court, the memorandum was again stamped
with a ten rupee stamp only and the respondents therefore
objected. It having been conceded by plaintiffs earlier
that the relief for the receivership was consequential to
the relief for the declaration, the appellants were directed
to pay the same stamp as had been -paid in the trial Court.
They objected stating that they had expunged from their
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memorandum of appeal the request that the court should
appoint a receiver and that they were not, therefore, liable
to pay the same amount this a notice was issued and
counsel were beard.
It being clearly set out in section 42 of the Specific
Relief Act that no court shall grarant a declaration only
where the plaintiff being able to seek further relief than a
mere declaration of title omits to do so, the appellants
were directed to pay as earlier ordered the same amount as
bad ultimately been paid the plaint. They had earlier
sought a consequential relief and the court ’was, therefore,
entirelv unable to hold that the plaintiffs were unable to
seek a further relief, they having sought the relief in the
lower court and it having been refused to them. The amount
of-the stamp was not paid and the appeal was therefore dis-
missed with costs."
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The reasons for demanding additional court-fee, though not
mentioned in the original order, are stated in this order.
The question for determination in this appeal is whether the
order of the Judicial Commissioner demanding additional
court-fee can be sustained in law. A memorandum of appeal,
as provided in article 1 of Schedule I of the Court-Fees
Act, has to be stamped according to the value of the
subject-matter in dispute in appeal; in other words, the
relief claimed in the memorandum of appeal determines the
value of the appeal for purposes of court-fee. The only
relief claimed in the memorandum of appeal was the first one
mentioned in the plaint. This relief being purely of a
declaratory character, the memorandum of appeal was properly
stamped under article 17 of Schedule II
It is always open to the appellant in appeal to give up a
portion of his claim and to restrict it. It is further open
to him; unless the relief is of such a nature that it cannot
be split up, to relinquish a part of the claim and to bring
it within the amount of court-fee already paid: Brahnmnandam
v. Secretary of State for India(1); Ram Prasad v. Bhiman(2);
Karam Chand v. Jullundur Bank Ltd(1); Neelachalam v. Nara-
singha Das(4); Sah Bamehand v. Pannalal(5); Chuni Lal v.
Sheo Charanlat Lalman(1). The plaintiffs in express terms
relinquished the second relief,they had claimed in the
plaint, in their memorandum of appeal. For the purpose of
deciding whether the memorandum of appeal was properly
stamped according to the subjectmatter of the appeal, it was
not open to the Judicial Commissioner to canvass the
question whether the suit with the second prayer eliminated
from it fell within the mischief of the proviso to section
42 of the Specific Relief Act. That was a question which
related to the merits of the appeal and did not concern its
proper institution this ground, therefore, the Judicial
Commissioner had no jurisdiction to demand
(I) (1930) I.L.R. 53 Mad. 48
(2) (1905) I.L.R. 27 All. 151.
(3) A.I.R. 1927 Leh. 543.
(4) A.R. 1931 Mad 716.
(5) A.I.R. 1929 All. 308.
(6) (1925) I.L.R. 47 All. 756.
203
additional fee from the plaintiffs and the appeal could not
be dismissed for failure to meet it. We are thus of the
opinion that the order demanding additional court-fee the
memorandum of appeal as it stood,’ that is, minus the second
prayer, was erroneous and we hold that the memorandum of
appeal was properly stamped, as the subject-matter of the
appeal was purely of a declaratory character.
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Mr. Setalvad for the respondents contended that the first
relief claimed in the plaint, and which was the subject-
matter of the appeal included within it consequential relief
and was not purely declaratory in nature and therefore the
Judicial Commissioner was right in demanding additional
court-fee the value of the consequential relief. It was
said that the words that respondent No. 2 "had no right to
act as chairman and managing director" amounted to a claim
for consequential relief. We are unable to agree. The
claim contained in the first relief of the plaint is to the
effect that it be declared that defendant No. 2 has no right
to act as chairman an managing director because of his
appointment being illegal, invalid, and ultra vires. The
declaration claimed is in negative form that defendant No. 2
has no right to act as chairman and managing director. No
claim for a consequential relief can be read within this
prayer. The words "that defendant 2 has no right to act as
chairman.......’’ are mere repetition and reiteration of
what is contained in the opening sentence of the paragraph.
This contention of Mr. Setalvad, therefore, cannot be
sustained.
It was next contended that in view of the provisions of
section 12 of the Court-Fees Act it should be held that the
decision of the Judicial Commissioner’ was final, and could
not be challenged in appeal. Section 12 of the Court-Fees
Act enacts as follows:
"Every question relating to Situation for the purpose of
determining the amount of any fee chargeable under this
chapter a plaint or memorandumu
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of appeal shall be decided by the court in which such plaint
or memorandum, as the case may be, is filed, and such
decision shall be final as between the parties ’to the
suit."
The provisions of this section have to be read and construed
keeping in view the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Order VII, Rule 11, Civil Procedure Code,
provides as follows:-
"The plaint shall be rejected-
(b) where the relief claimed is undervalued and the
plaintiff, being required by the court to correct the
valuation within a time- to be fixed by the court, fails to
do so;......
(d) where the relief claimed is properly valued, but the
plaint is written upon paper insufficiently stamped, and the
plaintiff, being required by the court to supply the
requisite stamp paper within a time to be fixed by the
court, fails to do so."
An order rejecting a plaint is a decree as defined in
section 2; sub-section (ii), and is appealable as such.
There is an apparent conflict between the provisions of the
Code of Civil Procedure and the provisions of section 12
which make the order relating to valuation final and efforts
to reconcile the provisions of the Court-Fees Act and the
Code have resulted in some divergence of judicial opinion
the construction of the section. In a number of decisions
the Calcutta High Court took the view that the finality
declared by section 12 of the Court-Fees Act had been taken
away by the relevant provisions of the Code, as the order
rejecting a plaint was appealable as a decree, no matter
whether the dispute related to the category under which the
same falls for purposes of court-fee or only to valuation
pure and simple under a particular category: Vide In re
Omrao Mirza v. Mary Jones(,) and Tara Prasanna Chongdar v.
Nrisingha Moorari Pal(1). This extreme view has not been
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maintained in later decisions and it has been held that the
finality declared by section 12 is limited only to the
question
(1883) 12 C.L.R. 148.
(2) (1924) I.L..R. 51 Cal. 216.
205
of valuation pure and simple and does not relate to the
category under which a certain suit falls: Tariman Khatun v.
Secretary o State for India in Council(1). The Allahabad
High Court in its earlier decisions took the extreme view:
Vide Muhammad Sadik v. Muhammad Jan(2). Later that -court
veered round to the view that the finality declared by
section 12 only related to matters of, appraisement. The
High Court of Lahore has placed a similar construction
the meaning of the expression "valuation" in section 12 and
has held that the finality attaches only to a decision which
concerns valuation simpliciter and no finality attaches when
a court decides a question whether a case falls within one
or other category of the cases mentioned in the different
sections and schedule of the Court Fees Act: Vide Mahna
Singh v. Bahadur Singh(1); Mst. Parmeshri v. PannaLal(1).
Thisviewhasconsistentlybeenheldin thatcourt. The Madras
High Court took the same view in Lakshmi Amma v. Janamajayam
Nambiar(5); Annamalai Chetty V. Cloete(6); and Narasimhalu
Chetty v. Bamayya Naidu(7). Mr. Setalvad drew our attention
to the recent Full Bench decision of that court in Madana
Mohana Naiko v. Krupasindhu Naiko(1). That case, however,
concerned the second part of section 12 and was not
concerned directly with the construction to be placed the
first part of the section. It, however, contains certain
observations indicating that in the opinion of the judges
there was no ground for this restricted construction of the
word " valuation " in section 12 and that the finality
declared bysection 12 attached not only to valuation pure
and simple but also attached to decisions relating to
category under which a suit or appeal falls for purposes of
court-fee. These obiter observations, however, cannot be
said to ,,overrule the earlier Full Beach decision of that
court in Lakshmi Amma v. Janamajayam Nambiar(5). In a
(1) I.I.R.(1940) 2 Cal. 166.
(2) (1889) I.L.R. II All. 91, F.B.
(3) 1919 Punjab Record 16.
(4) A I.R. 1931 Lah. 378.
27
(5) (1894) 4 M.L.J. 183, F.B.
(6) (1882) I.L.R. 4 Mad. 204.
(7) A.I.R. 1942 Mad. 502.
(8) A.I.R. 1937 Mad. 81.
206
later decision in Narasimhalu Chetty v. Bamayya Naidu(1),
the decision of the Full Bench was explained as not in any
way overruling the decision in Lakshmi Amma v. Janamajayam
Nambiar(2). All recent decisions of the Bombay High Court
have taken the same view: Vide Dada v. Nagesh(3); Krishnaji
Bari Dhandhere v. Gopal Narain Dhandhere(4). Mr. Setalvad
drew our attention to an earlier decision of the Bombay High
Court in Vithal Krishna v. Balakrishna Janardan(5). In that
case the court undoubtedly held that no appeal lay and the
finality declared by section 12 was comprehensive enough to
include all questions whether relating to category or
valuation pure and simple. It was, however, held that the
High Court could correct an erroneous decision in the
exercise of its revisional powers. Thus the finality
declared by section 12 was destroyed by the exercise of
powers of appeal under the guise of exercising revisional
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jurisdiction. In Patna and Oudh the game view has been
taken as in Lahore. Vide Chandramoni Koer v. Basdeo Narain
Singh (6); Gumani v. Banwari(7). It thus appears that the
consensus of judicial opinion is against the construction
suggested by Mr. Setalvad. We think that the construction
given to the language in section 12 in these decisions is
right, and our reasons for saying so are these:
The difference in the phraseology employed in sections 5 and
12 of the Court-Fees Act indicates that the scope of section
12 is narrower than that of section 5. Section 5 which
declares decisions questions of court-fee whenever they
arise in the chartered High Courts as final makes a decision
as to the necessity of paying a fee or the amount thereof
final. Whereas section 12 makes a decision every question
relating to valuation for the purpose of determining the
amount of any fee payable under chapter 3 a plaint or
memorandum of appeal final. Had section 12 been drafted
somewhat as follows
(i) A.I.R. 1942 Mad. 502.(5) (1886) I.L.R. lo Bom. 610,
F.B,
(2) (1894) 4 M.L.J. 183 F.B.(6) (1921) 4 P.L.J. 57.
(3) (1899) I.L.R. 23 Bom. 486.(7) (1920) 54 I.C. 733.
(4) A.I.R. 1936 Bom. 166.
207
"If any dispute arises as to the amount of any fee
chargeable under this chapter a plaint or memorandum of
appeal, it shall be decided by the court in which such
plaint or memorandum is filed and such decision shall be
final as between the parties$),
then the construction contended for by Mr. Setalvad might
have been upheld. When the two sections in the same Act
relating to the same subject matter have been drafted in
different language, it is not unreasonable to infer that
they were enacted with a different intention and that in one
case the intention was to give finality to all decisions of
the taxing officer or the taxing judge, as the case may be,
while in the other case it was only intended to give
finality to questions of fact that are decided by a court
but not to questions of law. Whether a case falls under one
particular section of the Act or another is a pure question
of law and does not directly determine the valuation of the
suit for ’purposes of court-fee. The question of
determination of valuation or appraisement only arises after
it is settled in what class or category it falls.
It has been argued in some decisions that it is absolutely
necessary to decide the category in which a case falls
before assessing its value and therefore the determination
of the question of category is necessarily involved in the
determination of the valuation of the suit for purposes of
courtfee. This argument, though plausible, does not seem
sound. The actual assessment of the value depends either
arithmetical calculations or upon a valuation by an expert
and the evidence led in the case, while the decision of
the question of category is one of law and may well be said
to be an independent question antecedent but not relating to
valuation. The expression " valuation" interpreted in its
ordinary meaning Of "appraisement", cannot be said to
necessarily include within its ambit the question of
category which is a matter of law. The construction placed
this section by a long course of decisions is one which
208
reconciles the provisions of the Court-Fees Act with that of
the Code of Civil Procedure and does not make those
provisions nugatory and is therefore more acceptable than
the other constructions which would make the provisions of
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either one or the other of these statutes nugatory. Perhaps
it may be possible to reconcile the provisions of the two
statutes by holding that the finality declared by section 12
of the Court-Fees Act means that the parties cannot impugn
such a decision by preferring an appeal but that it does not
confer such decisions a complete immunity from examination
in a higher court. In other words section 12 when it says
that such a decision shall be final between the parties only
makes the decision of the court a question of court-fee
nonap pealable and places it the same footing as other
interlocutory nod-appealable orders under the Code and it
does no more than that. If a decision under section 12 is
reached by assuming jurisdiction which the court does not
possess or without observing the formalities which are
prescribed for reaching such a) decision, the order
obviously would be revisable by the High Court in the
exercise of revisional powers. Similarly, when a party
thinking that a decision under section 12 is palpably wrong
takes the risk of his plaint being rejected or suit
dismissed and then appeals from the order rejecting the
plaint or from the decree dismissing the suit but not from
the decision the question of court-fee, then it is open to
him to challenge the interlocutory order even the question
of court-fee made in the suit or apppal. The word
"finality" construed in the limited sense in which it is
often used in statutes means that no appeal lies from an
order of this character as such and it means no more than
that.
Conceding for the sake of argument but not admitting-that
Mr. Setalvad is right in his contention that section 12 is
comprehensive enough to include within its ambit all
questions relating to court-fee whether they involve a
decision as to question of category or as to valuation
simpliciter, in the present
209
case the Judicial Commissioner decided none of these
questions and: his decision cannot be said to be one falling
within the ambit of section 12. All that the Judicial
Commissioner decided was that as the suit could not be
maintained without asking for relief No. 2, the same fee was
payable the memorandum of appeal as the plaint. In
substance the court decided an issue regarding the
maintainability of the appeal without first deciding whether
the appeal had been properly instituted in that court. No
finality can attach to such a decision by the provisions of
section 12, as in reality it decides no question within, the
ambit of section 12 of the Court-Fees Act.
For the reasons given above the second objection raised by
Mr. Setalvad that no appeal lies from the order of the
Judicial Commissioner by special leave is without force and
is overruled.
The result, is, that the appeal is allowed, the decision of
the Judicial ’Commissioner dismissing the appeal is set
aside and the case remanded to him for decision in
accordance with law the basis that the memorandum of
appeal presented to him was properly stamped. The
appellants’ costs of this appeal will be costs in the appeal
in the Court of the Judicial Commissioner.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellant: Rajinder Narain.
Agent for the respondents: S P. Varma.
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