Madras High Court
S.A. Kuppammal vs Parthasarathy @ Govindaswamy (Died) ... on 5 April, 1991
Equivalent citations: (1991)2MLJ106
Author: D. Raju
Bench: D. Raju
ORDER D. Raju, J.
1. The above revision petitions are dealt with in common, since they concern a common property and have been dealt with at all relevant points of time in common.
2. The petitioner herein has filed two suits, O.S. Nos. 6070 and 6071 of 1971 on the file of the City Civil Court, Madras, O.S. No. 6070 of 1971 was filed for a declaration that the first defendant (Pandurangan) was a tenant under the plaintiff in respect of the suit land and for recovery of possession of the same from the defendants and also for recovery of a sum of Rs. 430 towards arrears of rent and damages for use and occupation and also for future damages. O.S. No. 6071 of 1971 was filed for a declaration that the first defendant (Parthasarathy alias Govindasamy) was a tenant under the plaintiff of the suit land and also for recovery of Rs. 430 being the arrears of rent and damages for use and occupation and for recovery of future damages at Re. 1 per day from 1.6.1971. It is not necessary at this stage to dwell into the details of the claims of parties on merits. Suffice it to state that on 22.3.1974 (a) O.S. No. 6070 of 1971 was decreed with a declaration that the first defendant was a tenant under the plaintiff of the plaint schedule land marked in red colour in the plan and for recovery of possession of the same from the defendants and (b) O.S. No. 6071 of 1971 was also decreed granting a declaration that the first defendant was a tenant under the plaintiff of the plaint schedule land marked in red colour in the plan and for recovery of possession of the same from the defendants. In both the suits, the decrees also granted mesne profits, past and future. As against the same, the respective first defendants filed A.S. Nos. 18 and 34 of 1975 and by a judgment and decree dated 18.9.1976, the appeals came to be dismissed. It appears that the second appeals filed thereafter also failed and were rejected.
3. While matters stood thus, it appears that a declaration was made under Section 3 of the Tamil Nadu Slum Area (Improvement and Clearance) Act, 1971 declaring the suit property as a slum area. When execution petitions were filed to execute the decrees in the year 1977, objections were raised that the decree are not executable in view of the said notification and having regard to the provisions contained in Section 29 of the said Act, which inhibited such dispossession unless the decree-holder obtained the permission of the prescribed authority under the Act as notified by the Government. The objections were overruled and the execution of the decree was ordered to go on further. The first defendant in each of the suits filed C.R.P. Nos. 309 and 334 of 1979 before this Court and a Division Bench of this Court, in its decision made on 17.10.1979, set aside the order of the executing Court directing delivery of the property holding at the same time that "It is however, made clear that the respondent can levy execution of the decree obtained by him after obtaining the requisite permission of the prescribed authority as required under Section 29. With these observations, both the civil revision petitions are allowed. No costs."
4. While so, W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 was filed in this Court by One Naziruddin, Muthavalli of the Diwan Sahib Burial Ground, the owner of the property, impleading the State of Tamil Nadu and the Chairman, Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board as respondents praying for the issue of a writ of Certiorari to call for and quash the proceedings in G.O.Ms. No. 378, Housing, dated 2.11.1972, in so far as the petitioner was concerned. It may be noticed that this was the notification which made the provisions of the Slum Clearance set applicable to the case and rendered the decrees in executable without obtaining the permission of the prescribed authority, originally by an order dated 8.6.1982, the Court passed an order as follows:
It is ordered that interim suspension granted by the order of this Court, dated 19.2.1982 and made herein is hereby made absolute and that the operation of the notification G.O.Ms. No. 378, Housing, dated 2.11.1972 on the file of the 1st respondent do continue to be suspended pending W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 on the file of this Court.
Taking advantage of the said orders, E.P. Nos. 948 of 1982 in O.S. No. 6071 of 1971 and 649 of 1982 in O.S. No. 6070 of 1971 were filed for effecting delivery of possession in execution of the decrees in O.S. Nos. 6070 and 6071 of 1971. The first respondent in the execution applications filed their counter affidavit opposing the claim of the petitioners on several grounds. The Court below, by its common order dated 27.4.1983, dismissed the execution petitions. In substance, the view taken by the Court below was that in view of the earlier orders in C.R.P. Nos. 309 and 334 of 1979 (since reported in 93 L.W. 143), without complying with the provisions of Section 29 of the Slum Clearance Act by obtaining the permission of the prescribed authority, the decrees could not be executed and possession recovered and the Court below also reserved the right of the petitioner to comply with the requirement of Section 29 and proceed thereafter. Aggrieved, the petitioner has filed C.R.P. No. 2642 of 1984 against E.P. No. 948 of 1982 in O.S. No. 6071 of 1971 and C.R.P. No. 2643 of 1984 against E.P. No. 949 of 1982 in O.S. No. 6070 of 1971.
5. For purpose of completion of the facts and subsequent developments, it is necessary to point out also that the main writ petition No. 1230 of 1982 itself came up for final disposal before a learned single Judge of this Court and by an order dated 17.9.1988, S. Ramalingam, J., allowed the writ petition and thereby quashed the Government Order in G.O.Ms. No. 378, Housing dated 2.11.1972. The learned Judge of course gave liberty to the Government to follow the prescribed statutory procedure and proceed afresh, if so desired. There is no claim before this Court at this stage that any such notification came to be issued afresh or that the order of the learned single Judge in W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 has been superseded in any manner known to law.
6. Mr. N. Kannadasan, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner contended that the order of the court below cannot be sustained, in that, it has ignored the legal consequences of an order of stay granted by the High Court which has direct bearing on the matter in issue. That apart, it was contended that this Court ultimately allowed W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 thereby quashing the notification in question as an inevitable consequences of which the provisions of the Slum Clearance Act ceased to have application any longer and no more governed the rights of parties in relation to the property in question. Consequently, according to the learned Counsel, having regard to the subsequent event which requires to be taken into account in order to render effective justice as well as to avoid multiplicity of future proceedings, the order of the Court below requires to be set aside and the Court below should be ordered to proceed with the execution. In controverting the plea of absence of knowledge on the part of the respondents, it was submitted on behalf of the petitioner that the pendency of the proceedings have been disclosed with sufficient details in the Court below and the pretended ignorance cannot in any manner help the respondents to get over the legal effect of the order passed in the writ petition.
7. On behalf of the respondents, Mr. P. Venkatachalapathy, learned Counsel submitted that (a) it is not open to the petitioner to ignore the effect of the judgment rendered in 93 L.W. 143, binding between the parties : (b) the decision of this Court in W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 cannot be pressed into service as a subsequent event since the decision rendered therein is not between the parties to the present proceedings; (c) the decision in question cannot be considered to be a subsequent event in the pending revision proceedings by taking, the parties by surprise; (d) in any event having regard to the ratio of the decision reported in A.J.R. 1954 Travancore Cochin 526, the point in question cannot be taken into account in the pending revision and that the points raised do not fall within the scope of Section 115, C.P.C.
8. I shall now refer to the various case laws referred to by the counsel on either side before taking up for consideration the points raised for determination in the above proceedings. In Pasupuleti v. Motor Traders , the Supreme Court had an occasion to consider the question as to whether it can mould reliefs in an appeal by taking into account the facts subsequent to the institution of proceedings. The Apex Court expressed the view that for making the right or remedy, claimed by the party just and meaningful as also legally and factually in accord with the current realities, the Court can, and in many cases, must take cautious cognisance of events and developments subsequent to the institution of the proceedings of course observing the rules of fairness to both sides. In Dosabai v. Muthirdas the apex Court held that while it is true that events and changes in the law occurring during the pendency of an appeal require to be taken into consideration in order to do complete justice between parties and emphasised the necessity to mould the decree so as to accord with the changed statutory situation, at the same time, the Court observed that the right obtained by a party under a decree cannot be allowed to be defeated by delay in the disposal of the appeal against the decree, if it is possible to save the decree by moulding it to conform to the statutes subsequently coming into force.
9. In M.M. Quasim v. Manohar Lal Sharma , the apex Court once again considered the question regarding the taking into account of the subsequent events, and after referring to the case law on the subject, held as follows:
To sum up, there was a proper and regular application to meet with the requirements of Order 41, Rule 27, C.P.C. for additional evidence inviting the Court's attention to a subsequent event of vital importance cutting at the root of the plaintiffs right to continue the action. Coupled with it, there was evidence in the form of a certified copy of the decree showing that the plaintiffs, even if they had some shade of title to commences action, they having lost all interest in the property and the property having become one of exclusive ownership of a person not a party to the proceedings, were not more entitled to continue the proceedings for their own benefit.
In Hasmat Rai v. Raghunath Prasad , the Apex Court once again emphasised the necessity as well as justification for taking into account the subsequent events to mould the trial Court's decree.
10. In Suryaprakash Gupta v. The Madras Piece Goods Merchants Charitable Trust 93 L.W. 132, a Division Bench of this Court had an occasion to consider the effect of a Government Order issued under the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act, 1960 on the executability of a civil Court's decree for eviction. That was a case in which on the date when the suit for eviction was filed before the civil Court, the building under consideration was outside the scope of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent Control) Act. The suit was decreed on the basis of a compromise between the parties. But by the time execution proceedings came to be initiated to execute the decree, by virtue of an amendment introduced by the Tamil Nadu Act 11 of 1964 the building came within the subject matter of the Rent Control Act. The execution petition came to be rejected on the ground that the decree became inexecutable by virtue of the amended provision of law. Subsequent to this, the Government passed G.O.Ms. No. 1998,Home, dated 12.8.1974, in exercise of its powers under Section 29 of the Rent Control Act, exempting the buildings owned by charitable Trusts without reference to any religion. Thereupon, execution proceedings were instituted afresh. In that context, the Division Bench held that the moment the building in question was exempted from the provisions of the Act, the decree, which continued to exist, became executable and, therefore, the proceedings instituted for executing the decree was not only justifiable but maintainable.
11. In Vineet Kumar v. Mangal Sain , the Supreme Court was considering the question of introducing a new fact by means of an amendment petition and held that the premises which was not of 10 years old on the date of the suit and, therefore, was exempted from the operation of th6 Rent Act, can beheld to be governed by the Rent Act on account of subsequent lapse of time and such a fact can be brought on record irrespective of the period of limitation provided therefor.
12. Learned Counsel for the respondents referred to paragraphs 4 and 5 of the decision , and submitted that the Court was exercising powers under the provisions of the Andhra Pradesh Rent Control Act and not under Section 115, C.P.C. Placing reliance upon the decision reported Rameshwar v. Jot Ram , it was contended that where rights have already vested in a party, they cannot be nullified or negated by subsequent events save where there is a change in law and it is made applicable at any stage. This case, which is based upon a well-accepted principle that vested rights cannot be divested except where there is specific intention of law so expressed in clear terms have no relevance or application to the case on hand. Here, the question is whether there still exists any impediment in executing the decree of the competent civil Court which is rendered inexecutable except with the permission of the prescribed authority by virtue of Section 29 of the Slum Clearance Act as a consequence of the notification issued thereunder. Where the said notification itself has been set at naught and nullified, the impediment has been once and for all cleared end the decision in 93 L.W. 143, which equally reserved the right of the plaintiff to secure permission and proceed further, if so permitted, does not help the respondents to preserve the notification not withstanding the indisputable fact that the same has been set aside by a competent Court.
13. The decision in Managing Director (M.I.G.) Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd., Hyderabad v. Ajit Prasad Tarway , has been next referred to. That was a case where pending a challenge to an order of suspension pending enquiry interim orders of stay sought for was refused by the trial Court but granted on appeal by the appellate Court. When such an interlocutory order was challenged the Apex Court held that so long as the first appellate Court had jurisdiction in the matter the interlocutory order passed, be it in accordance with or not in accordance with law, does not call for interference in exercise of powers under Section 115, C.P.C. There is no comparison between the case decided by the Supreme Court and the present case and this Court can, on the facts and circumstances of the case, interfere in exercise of its powers under Section 115, C.P.C. In Pappathi Ammal v. Sivagannam A.I.R. 1954 Travancore Cochin 526, a Full Bench of the Travancore Cochin High Court expressed the view that sitting in revision the Court is concerned with the correctness of the order when it was passed. This view is to be confined to the peculiar type of the case under consideration before that Court, and it cannot be said as an invariable proposition of law that in no case can the subsequent event be taken into account in a revision petition to mould the relief. If such were to be the ratio of the said decision, it will be running counter to the several decisions of the Apex Court as well as this Court referred to above and consequently cannot be of any assistance to the respondents in this case. It has since been repeatedly held that it is not only for any error of jurisdiction but also for such exercise of jurisdiction with material irregularity as well as for the rectification of any error of the Court below occasioning failure of justice or causing irreparable injury, the powers under Section 115, C.P.C. can be resorted to. That being the position, the objection raised on behalf of the respondents does not carry much weight of significance and I am not persuaded to sustain the same.
14. Learned Counsel for the respondents vehemently contended that the order of this Court in finally disposing of W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 cannot be pressed into service or relied upon against the respondents, inasmuch as none of the respondents or their predecessor-in-interest were parties to the said judgment In other words, learned Counsel submitted that it cannot be said to be a judgment in rem so as to bind the whole world. It is the plea of the learned Counsel that at best it is a judgment in personam and, therefore, it maybe binding between parties thereto and not otherwise. No doubt the general principle is res inter alias Judicata Nullur inter alios prejudicium pacit (A matter adjudicated upon between one set of persons does not in any way prejudice another set of persons). But having regard to the scheme ol the provisions contained in Sections 40 to 44 of the Indian Evidence Act, Courts have often considered the efficacy as well as the relevance of judgments not inter partes in several cases. It has been often held that the law attributes an unerring verity to the substantive as opposed to the judicial portions of the record. All Judgments are conclusive of their existence as distinguished from their truth; so every judgment is conclusive evidence for or against all persons whether parties, privies or strangers of its legal effect as distinguished from the accuracy of the decision rendered. If the object was merely to prove the existence of the judgment, its date or legal consequences, the production of the record or a certified copy of the said judgment is conclusive evidence of the facts against the whole world, the reason being that a judgment as a public transaction of solemn nature must be presumed to be faithfully recorded.
15. In Ramji Ratanji v. Manohar (1959) 62 Bom L.R. 322, a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court had an occasion to consider the matter at length and Raju, J. speaking for the Bench, declared the position as hereunder:
A judgment in another suit which is not inter partes may be evidence for certain purposes, namely, to prove the fact of the judgment; to show who the parties to the suit were; to show what was the subject-matter of the suit; to show what was decided or declared by the judgment; to show what documents had been filed by the parties in the proceedings; to establish the transaction referred to in the judgment; as evidence to show the conduct of the parties or particular instances of the exercise of a right or assertion of title vide : Harihar Prasad Singh v. Must. Of Munshi Nath Prasad (1956) S.C.R. 1, 6), or to identify property; or to show how property had been previously dealt with; to establish a particular transaction in which a right is asserted and the name of the person, if any, who is declared in the judgment as entitled to possession; but the judgment is not evidence to establish the truth of the matters decided in that judgment.
In State of Bihar v. Radhakrishan Singh , the Supreme Court had an occasion to consider the position and declared the law in the following terms:
A judgment in rem, e.g. judgments or orders passed in admiralty, probate proceedings etc., would always be admissible irrespective of whether they are inter partes or not. A judgment which is not inter partes is inadmissible in evidence except for the limited purpose of proving as to 'who the parties were and what was the decree passed and the properties which were the subject matter of the suit. The recitals in a judgment like findings given in appreciation of evidence made or arguments or generalogy referred in the judgment would be wholly inadmissible in a case where neither the plaintiff nor the defendant were parties.
[emphasis supplied] The said view was expressed in respect of matters relating to a decision rendered in regular civil proceedings.
16. So far as the decision rendered on a writ petition is concerned, a Division Bench of the Orissa High Court in a decision reported in Bhupendra Kumar v. State of Orissa A.I.R. 1960 Ori. 46, had an occasion to directly consider the extent of the binding nature or the relevancy of such a judgment. The Court ultimately came to the following conclusion:
(13). A judgment of a superior court or record like a High Court has effect on two classes of persons. Firstly, as between the parties to the judgment and their privies it is binding and conclusive unless reversed by a superior court of appeal or amended by the Court itself, according to law. Moreover, the original cause of action on the basis of which the action commenced, is merged in the judgment and its place is taken by the rights created between the parties by virtue of the judgment. (See Halsbury, Third petition, Vol. 22 pages 780 and 781). But as regards persons, who are not parties to the judgment, it becomes a valuable precedent on any disputed point of law, not merely as a guide but as an authority to be followed by all courts or co-ordinate or inferior jurisdiction administering the same system until it is overruled by a Court of superior jurisdiction or by a validly enacted statute. As pointed out in Halsbury, Third Edition, Volume 22 at page 796, "the enunciation of the reason or principle on which the question before a Court has been decided, is alone binding as a precedent. This underlying principle is often termed the 'ratio decidendi', that is to say, the general reasons given for the decision or the general grounds on which it is based, detached or abstracted from the specific peculiarities of a particular case which gives rise to the decision. The correct decision alone is binding between the parties to it, but it is the abstract ratio decidendi, ascertained on a consideration of the judgment in relation to the subject-matter of the decision which alone has the force of law.
Thus, this Court's judgment in Bhupendra Kumar Bose v. The State O.F.C. No. 72 of 1958 (Orissa), is binding as between the parties, namely, the petitioner Sri Bhupandra Kumar Bose on the one hand and the State of Orissa and the elected Councillors of Cuttack Municipality on the other and new rights as between them were created by the judgment itself. This is irrespective of the ratio decidendi of the judgment. But the judgment is also an authority to be followed by all Courts in Orissa on the disputed points of law decided therein if and when they arise in any pending or future litigation.
It was further held by the said Court as hereunder:
(14) A half-hearted attempt was made to show that the aforesaid observations in Halsbury apply to "Judgments' where the rights to property are involved and not to judgments of this Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. In fact, the learned Advocate General went to the extent of saying that the petitioner obtained no rights whatsoever by virtue of the decision in O.J.C. No. 72 of 1958 (Orissa). But at page 740 of Halsbury (cited above) it was pointed out that the term 'judgment' or 'order' in its widest sense may be said to include any decision given by a Court on a question or questions at issue between the parties in a proceeding properly before it, and at page 741 it was further pointed out that judgments and orders considered in that title were those of the Queen's Bench and Chancery Division of the High Court and orders of the Court of Appeal.
I am in respectful agreement with the views expressed by the Bombay High Court and the Orissa High Court in the decisions referred to above. In the light of the statement of law referred to above, I am not persuaded to countenance the plea on behalf of the respondents that the order in W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 cannot be pressed into service in the present case. Having regard to what has been stated above, in my view, the judgment can be relied upon both as a precedent and also as a document to show that this Court in a proceeding instituted challenging the Government Order, which has been the basis of the claim of defence of the respondents in the Court below, came to set aside the order of the Government and consequently the said order no longer survives to enure to the respondents the benefits of the Slum Clearance Act. Consequently, the court is not only entitled to take into account the said judgment but also has to decide the case having regard to the legal consequences flowing from the said judgment.
17. Coming to the facts and circumstances of the case, I am of the view that the revisions have to be accepted and allowed. Having regard to the emphatic statement of law declared by the Supreme Court, the decision in W.P. No. 1230 of 1982 becomes relevant and required to be taken into account for the purpose of noticing the vital and essential fact that G.O.Ms. No. 378, Housing, dated 2.11.1972 stood abrogated and does not any longer grant to the property in question the coverage or protection of the provisions of the Slum Clearance Act, including the one contained in Section 29 of the said Act, since the notification issued by the Government covers other properties also, the order in the writ petition has to be necessarily restricted to the petitioner meaning thereby properties in respect of which the petitioner sought relief. It is also to be noticed that the said writ petition seems to have been filed by the petitioner therein, as the Muthavalli of the Burial Ground in question. Not only the fact regarding the pendency of the writ petition was brought to the notice of the respondents even in the court below, but before the hearing of the case, the copy of the order in the writ petition was also furnished to the counsel for the respondents and sufficient opportunity was accorded to the respondents to meat the situation after it was informed that the petitioner would place reliance upon the said decision of this Court, in furtherance of their claim in the revision petitions before me. Therefore, it could not be said that any real or genuine prejudice has been caused to the respondents in meeting the case projected before me at the time of hearing. The fact that there was an abortive attempt on the part of the Wakf Board also to evict the respondents does not undermine the decrees obtained by the petitioner or their executability. As noticed supra, the only impediment which stood in the way of the execution of the decree was Section 29 of the Slum Clearance Act, which contemplated the obtaining of a prior permission from the prescribed authority. This contingency which was necessitated by the issue of a notification in G.O.Ms. No. 378, Housing, dated 2.11.1972, ceased the moment the High court granted orders of suspension of the said notification. That part, after the writ petition has been finally disposed of and the notification itself was struck down, the question of obtaining any prior permission did not aries, since the authorities under the said Act themselves lost their control or powers contemplated under Section 29 of the Act on account of the supervening fact that the Government's notification itself has since been struck down. The reasoning of the Court below that notwithstanding the orders of this Court which suspended the operation of the notification of the Government, the execution proceedings cannot be pursued except with the permission under Section 29 of the Act and such a consequence was the result of the decision of this Court in 93 L.W. 143, itself is neither correct in law nor appropriate but is wholly unsustainable. By virtue of the supervening fact, the obtaining of prior permission under Section 29 of the Slum Clearance Act became unnecessary and rendered superfluous. Be that as it may, now that the writ petition challenging the notification itself has since been allowed and the notification has been abrogated, there is no obstacle whatsoever in pursuing the execution proceedings on account of Section 29 or any other provisions of the Slum Clearance Act. The orders of the Court below, therefore, require to be set aside.
18. For what has been staled above, the objections on behalf of the respondents do not merit my acceptance and the orders of the Court below are set aside and the Court below is directed to restore the execution petitions to its file and proceed fur her in accordance with law. The civil revision petitions consequently shall stand allowed; but in the circumstances, there will be no order as to costs.