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[Cites 7, Cited by 6]

Patna High Court

Lala Mistry vs Ganesh Mistry And Anr. on 25 November, 1937

Equivalent citations: 174IND. CAS.769, AIR 1938 PATNA 120

JUDGMENT
 

Rowland, J.
 

1. This is an application in revision against an order ox the Munsif, First Court of Patna, whereby alter the rejection of an application by the petitioner to sue in forma pauperis, he refused to treat the application as a plaint and to accept the court lee stamps payable on it as a plaint and to treat the suit as Laving been instituted on the date on which the pauper application was presented. The case has something of a history. The petitioner's application to sue as a pauper was, to begin with, dismissed on April 20, 1936. Thereafter on May 18, 1936, the petitioner requested the leave of the Court to tile deficit court-fee which the Munsif refused on June 16, 1936. Thereafter the petitioner moved the High Court in revision and the previous order of the Munsif was set aside and the Munsif was ordered to make further enquiry and to dispose of the application to sue as a pauper in accordance with law. This order was passed on October 13, 1936, and the Munsif after some other proceedings passed an order on December 9, 1936, again refusing leave to sue as a pauper. The petitioner moved the High Court against this order, but his petition was rejected on March 10, 1937, without issuing notice to the opposite party. The petitioner's Advocate apparently understood that a direction would be given to receive the required court-fee treating the application as a plaint and thereafter proceeding as with an ordinary suit. Varma, J., however, in his order merely observed that the petitioner might move the Munsif. The petitioner did so on March 18. The Munsif called for the record and the officer before whom the case came directed the applicant to pay the court-fee by April 10, and the record to be put up on that date for orders. The court-fee of Rs. 112-8-0 was paid on April 10, but the Munsif on looking through the order sheet felt himself unable to accept the court-fee at that stage, at any rate without hearing both sides. After hearing both sides he passed on April 20, 1937, the order against which the petitioner has moved this Court, the substance of which is that the application is rejected. Among the grounds for this decision, the Munsif said that a similar petition had been rejected by his predecessor on June 16, 1936, and that no new circumstance had been brought to his notice to justify him in reviewing that order. He observed incidentally that the order passed by the Hon'ble High Court appeared to nave been passed in ignorance of that order. Besides this ground, he was of opinion that the law was as stated in the Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High Court in Chunna Mal v. Bhagwant Kishore A.I.R. 1936 All. 584 : 164 Ind. Cas. 305 : (1936) A.L.J. 760 : 1 L.R. (1937) All. 22 : 1936 A.L.R. 732 : 9 R.A. 145.

2. In revision it is pointed out that the Munsif should not have relied on the order of June 16, 1936, because that order was passed as a sequel to the order of April 20, 1936, dismissing the application to sue as a pauper and the order of April 20, having been set aside by the High Court on October 13, 1936, all the orders consequential to it must have fallen to the ground with it. This reasoning is quite correct and the Munsif erred in thinking that the order of June 16, barred him from considering the case on the merits and the suggestion in his judgment that the order of this Court was passed in consequence of ignorance, of the Munsifs order of June 16, is entirely uncalled for. The position bus to be examined with reference to the order of refusal of leave to sue as a pan per which was passed by the Munsif on December 9, 1936, and was affirmed by this Court on March 10. With reference to the view of law expressed by the Munsif it is contended that the law so far as this Court is concerned, is laid down by the decision of a Division Bench in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj 9 Pat. 439 : 118 Ind. Cas. 329 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 637 : 11 P.L.T. 55 : Ind. Rul.(1929) Pat. 521, and that the Munsif was not entitled to prefer the decisions of other High Courts even by Full Benches to a decision of a Division Bench of this Court. That is a correct statement of the duty of Subordinate Courts but we shall have to see what was decided in the Patna decision relied on and examine the law for ourselves in so far as points arise which the previous decision of this Court does not cover.

3. Before coming to this, however, I should indicate the substantial point on which there is some conflict of authority in the several High Courts in India. One view is that the application to sue as a pauper is not a plaint; it can only be treated as a plaint if it succeeds, and that when it fails there is nothing before the Court on which to proceed. Therefore on this view a Court has no jurisdiction after disposing of the application to make an order extending the time for filing the necessary court-fees for a plaint. The oilier view is that the application containing all the particulars which the law requires in a plaint as well as the prayer to be allowed to sue as a pauper is itself a plaint or a composite document including a plaint and the termination of the proceeding for leave to sue as a pauper does not if adverse to the applicant, amount to a rejection of the plaint which continues to be before the Court, on the same footing as a document on which proper court-fees have not been paid. On this view the same position would arise as when a plaint is presented on deficit court-fee stamp and the Court in such a case would be bound in duty to allow sometime for making good the deficit before rejecting the plaint under Order VII, Rule 11 of the Code. These are the two views and before I examine the authorities. I had better refer to the relevant provisions of the Civil Procedure Code.

4. Order 4, Rule I--"Every suit shall be instituted by presenting a plaint to the Court." Then of course Order VI, and Order VII, regulate the contents of a plaint and we have next to consider Order XXXIII, Rule 1, which says that subject to the provisions of the Order any suit may be instituted by a pauper and under Rule 2 every application for permission to sue as a pauper is required to contain particulars required in regard to the plaints in suit as well as a schedule of property belonging to the applicant. In certain circumstances the application is rejected under Rule 5, otherwise notice is issued and the parties are heard. When under Rule 8 the application is granted, it shall be numbered and registered and shall be deemed to be the plaint in the suit. There is nothing here to say that the application is deemed to be a plaint in. any other case except that in which the application is granted. The other statutory provision regarding the institution of a suit is in Section 3, Limitation Act, where ^he Explanation says that a suit is instituted in ordinary cases when a plaint is presented to the proper officer and in the case of a pauper when his application for leave to sue as a pauper is made. But that is not exhaustive as appears from the Privy Council decision in Stuart Skinner v. William Orde 2 A. 241 : 6 I.A. 126 : 3 Suther 627 : 4 Sar. 31(P.C.). Here the applicant during the pendency of his application for leave to sue as a pauper having acquired some property, tendered the court-fee on the plaint and was permitted to convert the application into plaint and was deemed to have instituted his suit on the date when his pauper application was presented. This is clear authority that at any time during the pendency of the application for leave to sue as a pauper, the applicant, provided that his application is in good faith and not fraudulent, can be permitted to pay the court-fees and convert his application into a plaint.

5. Now the decisions relied on in support of the argument that this power is not exhausted even when the application to sue as a pauper is rejected and that the Court may even thereafter extend the time, are to be found in a decision of a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Jagadishwari Debi v. Tinkari Bibi A.I.R. 1936 Cal. 28 : 160 Ind. Cas. 586 : 62 C. 711 : 8 R.C. 444, and two decisions each of a Single Judge of the Madras High Court, namely Sundarathammal v. Paramaswami Asari A.I.R. 1933 Mad. 883 : 146 Ind. Cas. 566 : 65 M.L.J. 781 : 6 R.M. 287 : 38 L.W. 865, decided by Walsh, J. and Balaguru Naidu v. Muthuratnam Iyer 76 Ind. Cas. 767 : A.I.R. 192 Mad. 118 : 46 M.L.J. 254 : 18 L.W. 451 : 33 M.L.T. 18 : (1923) M.W.N. 720, decided by Krishnan, J. In the Calcutta case Jagadishwari Debi v. Tinkari Bibi A.I.R. 1936 Cal. 28 : 160 Ind. Cas. 586 : 62 C. 711 : 8 R.C. 444, reliance is placed on the Privy Council decision in Stuart Skinner v. William Orde 2 A. 241 : 6 I.A. 126 : 3 Suther 627 : 4 Sar. 31(P.C.), which is quoted as having pronounced that the document mentioned as an application for permission to sue as a pauper is a plaint, but I am unable to find any such words in the decision of their Lordships. What their Lordships said was that they could see nothing which would oblige their Lordships to say that this petition which contains all the requisites which the statute requires for a plaint should not, when the money has been paid for the fees, be considered as a plaint from the date when it was filed. I think that the Privy Council decision was intended to be regarded as a case of petition being converted into a plaint and to this extent the reasoning in Jagadishwari Debi v. Tinkari Bibi A.I.R. 1936 Cal. 28 : 160 Ind. Cas. 586 : 62 C. 711 : 8 R.C. 444, does not appear to me to be entirely satisfactory. Reliance is also placed in that decision on a case of this Court in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj 9 Pat. 439 : 118 Ind. Cas. 329 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 637 : 11 P.L.T. 55 : Ind. Rul.(1929) Pat. 521, but the facts of that case were that the order granting time to file the requisite court-fee and the order refusing leave to sue as a pauper were passed simultaneously and this decision, therefore, does not apply to the case of a dismissal of the application to sue as a pauper followed at a later date by an application to be permitted to resume the proceedings on payment of the necessary court-fee. In Sundarathammal v. Paramaswami Asari A.I.R. 1933 Mad. 883 : 146 Ind. Cas. 566 : 65 M.L.J. 781 : 6 R.M. 287 : 38 L.W. 865, the opinion expressed by Walsh, J. was clearly an obiter dictum for he said that the matter did not really arise on the view which he took on the main question before him. He did, however, observe that "though the pauper application be dismissed the plaint is still pending until it is actually dismissed". In the other Madras case Bologuru Naidu v. Muthuratnam Iyer 76 Ind. Cas. 707 : A.I.R. 192 Mad. 118 : 46 M.L.J. 254 : 18 L.W. 451 : 33 M.L.T. 18 : (1923) M.W.N. 720, the facts are not fully stated but Krishnan. J. said:

it was not necessary that there should be a competent application to sue in forma pauperis on record before time can be given to pay court-fee, on the plaint filed ac the same time.

6. It had been held in an earlier Calcutta decision in Aubhoya Churn Dey Roy v. Bissesswari 24 C. 889, that assuming that the petition is treated as a plaint and the required court fee affixed to it, the suit will then be deemed to have been instituted on the date on which the court-fee was affixed. It was observed that under the Civil Procedure Code, the Court was bound either to allow or reject the application. If it allowed the applications it was to be numbered and registered as a plaint in the suit. If it was rejected, then the applicant could not again apply to sue as a pauper in respect of the same right but was at liberty to institute a suit in the ordinary manner. It is provided in the Limitation Act that in the case of a pauper the suit is instituted when the application for leave to sue as a pauper is died. That obviously applies only to a case in which the application is granted. It was held that the Subordinate Judge had no power, after the rejection of the application, to give time for the presentation of the plaint or to treat the application as a plaint in the suit. In this case Stuart Skinner v. William Orde 2 A. 241 : 6 I.A. 126 : 3 Suther 627 : 4 Sar. 31(P.C.), was distinguished on the ground that there had in that case been no order rejecting the application. In this Court the decision in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj 9 Pat. 439 : 118 Ind. Cas. 329 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 637 : 11 P.L.T. 55 : Ind. Rul.(1929) Pat. 521, has not, as far as I know, been read as authorizing the view that there is power to extend the time for filing the court fees even after the dismissal of an application for leave to sue as a pauper.; Too much should not be made of the observation that the application may be regarded as a composite document. In Sudhir Kumar Choudhuri v. Jagannath Marwari A.I.R. 1935 Pat. 193 : 156 Ind. Cas. 402 : 7 R.P. 727, it was pointed out by Wort, J., that an application to sue in forma pauperis is not for all purpose a plaint. It was pointed out that in Stuart Skinner v. William Orde 2 A. 241 : 6 I.A. 126 : 3 Suther 627 : 4 Sar. 31(P.C.), the application which was allowed to be treated as a plaint had not at the time which was material been rejected.

7. In the Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High Court in Chunna Mal v. Bhagwant Kishore A.I.R. 1936 All. 584 : 164 Ind. Cas. 305 : (1936) A.L.J. 760 : 1 L.R. (1937) All. 22 : 1936 A.L.R. 732 : 9 R.A. 145, the majority of the Judges held that leaving aside the applications rejected under Rule 5, Order XXXIII the application could not be considered and treated as a plaint and allowed to be regularized by permission to file the court-fee either at the time of the dismissal of the pauper application or thereafter. Allsop, J. however, was not prepared to go quite to this length. In, his view, the application did not, require two separate orders for its disposal, that is to say, an older refusing leave to sue as a pauper and a further order rejecting the plaint, but the order refusing leave finally disposes of the whole proceeding. This, in my opinion, is the cared view. Allsop, J. went en to express the opinion that the power to permit the application to be converted into a plaint by payment of court-fees, which the Court undoubtedly has during the pendency of the application, as held by the Judicial Committee, could be exercised at the time of rejecting the application, that is to say, if in one single order the Court declined leave to sue as a pauper and also gave time for tiling of court-fees, this would be within the discretion allowed by Section 149 but he agreed with tie other Judges that once an order finally disposing of the application for leave to sue as a pauper had been passed, it was no longer open to the Court to give any further time so as to revive the proceedings already completely disposed of and to permit them to be resumed.

8. I am inclined en a review of the Code and of the authorities to agree with the view expressed by Allsop, J. In my opinion it is not in conflict with the previous decision of this Court in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj cccccand it appears to me, to be also consonant with the view expressed by Wort, J. in Sudhir Kumar Chowdhuri v. Jagannath Marwari A.I.R. 1935 Pat. 193 : 156 Ind. Cas. 402 : 7 R.P. 727. On this view it is to be observed that the order of the Munsif dated December 9, 1936, was not coupled with any reservation of leave to the petitioner to file the court-fee within a stated time. It was, so far as the Munsif could make it, a final order, the effect of which would be to relegate the applicant to the position set forth in Order XXXIII, Rule 15, leaving him the liberty to institute the suit in the ordinary manner. Any application made thereafter to the Munsif would necessarily be beyond the power of that officer to entertain. There is nothing in the observation of Varma, J. made at the time of rejecting the petition of the applicant on March 10, 1937, to indicate that he had formed any opinion as to whether in the facts of the case an application before the lower Court, would prove maintainable or not. The order merely points out that the Munsif was the person to whom the application should be made. Indeed it is obvious that it would have been inappropriate in an order rejecting an application to embody an order modifying the decision moved against.

9. In the result it does not seem possible to interfere with the order of the Munsif which, though in parts unfortunately expressed, was the correct order. I would dismiss the application with costs. Hearing fee one gold mohur. As the court fee, Rs. 112-8-0 was deposited in response to a direction of the Munsif who subsequently declined to accept it, the petitioner may apply to the Munsif for a certificate entitling him to a refund.

Fazl Ali, J.

10. I am also of the opinion that this application should be dismissed with costs. An application for leave to sue in forma pauperis is sometimes described as a composite document, because it contains as is provided by Order XXXIII, Rule 2, Civil Procedure Code, all the particulars required in regard to plaint in a suit together with a prayer that the applicant may be allowed to sue as a pauper. It has however, been nowhere described as a plaint, in the Code and strictly speaking it is not a plaint but a mere application. Rule 8 of Order XXXIII only provides that where the application is granted, it shall be deemed to be the plaint in the suit, and therefore in such a case, it will not be necessary for the applicant to file any fresh plaint. There is also nothing in the Code to prevent the Court from treating the Application as a plaint, if, before it is rejected, the applicant asks the Court to treat it as such and either accepts from him then and there the proper court-fee for the suit upon the footing that it is a plaint or gives him time under Section 149, Civil Procedure Code, to pay the court-fee within a reasonable time. Where, however, the application has already been rejected, there is nothing before the Court which maybe treated as paint and therefore the only remedy which the unsuccessful applicant has, in such circumstances, is to bring a fresh suit as contemplated in Order XXXIII, Rule 15. It appears to me therefore that the view expressed by my learned brother is the only logical view which can be taken upon a consideration of the various provisions of Order XXXIII.

11. In a large number of cases, however, and particularly in those oases where the-Court is asked to exercise its power under Section 149, Civil Procedure Code, there may arise for decision a further question as to whether the suit should be deemed to have been filed on the date when the application for leave to sue in forma pauperis is treated as a plaint or on the date when the application was originally filed. It appears to me that a possible corollary of the view expressed above might be that the suit should be deemed to have been filed only on the date on which the Court decides to treat the application for leave to sue in forma pauperis as a plaint. Such a view, however, would seen to be opposed to the view which was expressed in Bank of Bihar Ltd v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj 9 Pat. 439 : 118 Ind. Cas. 329 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 637 : 11 P.L.T. 55 : Ind. Rul.(1929) Pat. 521, in these words:

Under Section 149, Civil Procedure Code, the Court may order the requisite stamp to be paid within a time fixed by it and after it has been done, the application which may be regarded as an unstamped plaint will be considered to have been validly presented on proper stamped duty on the date when it was originally filed.

12. Therefore as at present advised, I do not wish to lay down anything which might tend to bring our decision into conflict with the earlier decision of this Court especially as the view expressed in that decision is based on the decision of the Judicial Committee in Stuart Skinner v. William Orde 2 A. 241 : 6 I.A. 126 : 3 Suther 627 : 4 Sar. 31(P.C.). The matter, however, need not be pursued because I find that the present case can be decided on a totally different ground. It appears from the order-sheet that when the learned Munsif directed the petitioner to deposit the court fee by April 10, 1937, he did not purport to act under Section 149 not did he commit himself to the view that the court-fee would necessarily be accepted. The order which was passed on that date clearly shows that the matter was to be finally dealt with by the Munsif on a subsequent date. On the next date the learned Munsif after looking into the circumstances of the case came to the conclusion that the court fee could not be accepted and he finally passed an order to this effect after hearing the parties on April 26, 1937. Thus the Munsif has in effect refused to exercise his discretion under Section 149, Civil Procedure Code. As was pointed out in Bank of Bihar Ltd. v. Sri Ramchanderji Maharaj 9 Pat. 439 : 118 Ind. Cas. 329 : A.I.R. 1929 Pat. 637 : 11 P.L.T. 55 : Ind. Rul.(1929) Pat. 521, the question whether the Court should or should not have allowed the plaintiff to pay the proper court-fee and to treat the suit as having been presented on the date the application to sue as a pauper was filed is not a question of jurisdiction, for the Court has undoubtedly that jurisdiction vested by express provisions in the Code, but is only a question of discretion and the judicial exercise of that discretion. In this particular case I find that the Munsif refused to exercise the discretion in favour of a party who was guilty of concealing material facts, and in these circumstances, I have no hesitation in holding that the present application should not be entertained.