Vidyacharan Shukla Vs. Khubchand
Baghel & Ors [1963] INSC 261 (20 December 1963)
20/12/1963 AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA AYYANGAR,
N. RAJAGOPALA SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION: 1964 AIR 1099 1964 SCR (6) 129
CITATOR INFO :
E 1969 SC 872 (17) R 1970 SC1477 (6) F 1974
SC 480 (11,3,14,16) RF 1977 SC 56 (6) RF 1989 SC1477 (12)
ACT:
Election-Appeal to High Court under s.
116-A-Whether in computing period of limitation for filing an appeal to High
Court, time provided by s. 12 of Limitation Act for getting a copy of the order
can be excluded-Whether s. 29(2)(a) applied to cases of appeal preferred under
s. 116-ARelationship between the two limbs of s. 29(2) of Limitation
Act-Limitation Act, 1908 (9 of 1908), ss. 12, 29(2), First Schedule, Art,
156-Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951), v. 116-A.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was elected to the House of the
People from a constituency in the State of Madhya Pradesh. The respondents were
the ,other contesting candidates.
Respondent No. 1 filed an election petition
challenging the election of the appellant. That election petition was dismissed
by the Election Tribunal. Against the order of the TribunaL the first
respondent preferred an appeal to the High Court under s. 116-A 134-159 S.C.-9.
130 of the Representation of the People Act,
1951. Admittedly, the appeal was filed more than 30 days after the order of the
Election Tribunal.. If the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the order of
the Tribunal was excluded, the appeal was filed within 30 days. However, if
that was not 'done, the appeal was out of time. The contention of the appellant
before the High Court was that the respondent No. 1 was not entitled in law to
exclude the time taken by him in obtaining the copy of the order of the
Tribunal. That contention was rejected by the High Court. The High Court also
found that the appellant was guilty of two, corrupt practices and hence his
election was set aside. The appellant came to this Court by special leave.
The only question raised before this Court
was whether for 'the purpose of computing the period of 30 days prescribed
under s. 116-A(3) of the Act, the provisions of s. 12 of the Limitation Act
could be invoked or not. Dismissing the appeal, Held: (per B. P. Sinha, C.J.,
K. Subba Rao, Raghubar Dayal and N. Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ.) (i) The exclusion
of time provided for by s. 12 is permissible in computing the period of
limitation for filing.the appeal in the High Court.
Per B. P. Sinha, C.J., K. Subba Rao and N.
Rajagopala Ayyangar JJ.) (ii) Though the right of appeal is conferred by s.
116-A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, and it is by virtue
thereof that the appeal was filed by respondent in the High Court, it is still
an appeal " under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, to the High
Court". To attract Art. 156 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act,
it is not necessary for an appeal to be an "appeal under the Code of Civil
Procedure" that the right to prefer the appeal should be conferred by the
Code of Civil Procedure. It is sufficient if the procedure for the filing of
the appeal and the power of the Court for dealing with the appeal, when filed,
are governed by the Code.
Per Raghubar Dayal and Mudholkar JJ.--There
is no warrant for holding that an appeal which is not given by the Code of
Civil Procedure is still an appeal under the Code merely because its procedural
provisions govern its course. Where a right of appeal is given by some other
law, the appeal must be regarded as one udder that law and not under the Code
of Civil Procedure. There is no reason for construing the words "under the
Code of Civil Procedure" as meaning "governed in the matter of
procedure by the Code of Civil Procedure".
Held:(iii) (per B. P. Sinha, C.J., N.
Rajagopala Ayyangar and Raghubar Dayal JJ.) The entire sub-s. (2) of s. 29 of
the Limitation. Act has to be read as an integrated provision and the
conjunction "and" connects the two parts and makes it necessary for
attracting cl. (a) that the conditions laid down by the opening words of sub-s.
(2) should be satisfied.
131 Per Subba Rao and Mudholkar JJ.-The
second limb of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 is wide enough to include a suit, appeal or
an application under a special or local law which is of a type for which no
period of limitation is prescribed in the First Schedule.
Per Subba Rao J.-The use of the word
"any" clearly shows that the second part of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 does
not depend on the first part or vice versa. The second part of sub-s. (2) is an
independent provision providing for that category of proceedings to which the
first part does not apply.
Held: (i) that s. 116-A does not provide an
exhaustive and exclusive code of limitation for the purpose of appeals against
orders of Tribunals and also does not exclude the general provisions of the
Limitation Act. Section 29(2)(a) of the Limitation Act speaks of express
exclusion and there is no express exclusion in s. 116-A(3) of the
Representation of the People Act, 1951. Moreover, the proviso to s. 116A(3)
from which an implied exclusion is sought to be drawn does not lead to any such
necessary implication. The proviso only restores the power denied to the Court
under s.
29(2)(b) of the Limitation Act. If this
proviso had not been there, s. 29(2)(b) would have excluded the operation of s.
5 of the Limitation Act with the result that even if a sufficient cause for the
delay existed, the High Court would have been helpless to excuse the delay.
(ii)S. 12(2) of the Limitation Act applies to
an appeal to the High Court against the order of the Tribunal. An order made
under s. 98 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, if it contains also
the reasons for it, is a composite document satisfying the definition of a
judgment as well as that of an order and thereby attracting the relevant
provisions of s. 12 of the Limitation Act. Section 12(2) does not say that the
order mentioned therein shall be only such order as is defined in the Civil
Procedure Code. If a statute provides for the making of an order and confers a
right of appeal to an aggrieved party against that order within a prescribed
time, the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the order can be excluded. The
Act of 1951 empowers the Tribunal to make an order and gives a right of appeal
against that order to the High Court and therefore s. 12(2) is directly
attracted without any recourse to the definition of an order in the Code of
Civil Procedure.
Per Mudholkar J.-The first limb of s. 29(2)
is concerned only with the proceedings under special or local law for which a
period of limitation is prescribed in the First Schedule to the Limitation Act.
If for such a proceeding the period to be found in the First Schedule is
different from that prescribed under a special or local law, certain consequences
will follow under the provision. No inconvenience is to be caused by giving a
literal and natural interpretation to the expression used by the legislature in
the first portion of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 because cases of other kind can easily
come under the second portion thereof. Case Law referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:, Civil Appeal
No. 815 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from judgment and
order dated April 23, 1963, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in 1st Appeal No.
23 of 1963.
G.S. Pathak, B. A. Musodkar, S. N. Andley and
Rameshwar Nath, for the appellant.
M. S. Gupta, for respondent No. 1.
December 20, 1963.
The following Judgments were delivered:
AYYANGAR J.-On behalf of the Chief Justice
and himself) We have had the advantage of perusing the judgment of our brother
Subba Rao J. and we agree with him that the appeal should be dismissed.
The justification for this separate judgment,
however, is because of our inability to agree with him in his construction of
the relative scope of the two limbs of s. 29(2) of the Indian Limitation Act.
The facts of the case have been set out in
detail in the judgment of Subba Rao J. and it is therefore unnecessary to
repeat them. There were three principal points that were urged before us on
either side which require to be considered and all of them turn on the proper
construction of s. 29(2) of the Indian Limitation Act which we shall for
convenience set out here:
"29(2) Where any special or local law
prescribes for any suit, appeal or application a period of limitation different
from the period prescribed there for by the first schedule, the provisions of
section 3 shall apply, as if such period were prescribed there for in that
schedule, and for the purpose of determining any period of limitation
prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any special or local law(a)
the provisions contained in section 4, sections 9 to 18, and section 22 shall
apply only in so far as, and to the extent to which, they are not expressly
excluded by such special or local law; and 133 (b) the remaining provisions of
this Act shall not apply." The learned Judges of the High Court have
proceeded on the basis that s. 29(2)(a) applies to the case of appeals
preferred under s. 116 A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 and on
that footing have held that the appeal presented to them by the respondent was
within time if computed after making the deductions permitted by s. 12 of the
Limitation Act. It is the correctness of this view that is challenged before.....us.
Proceeding now to deal with the question
whether the terms of s. 29(2) are apt to take in appeals under the Representation
of the People Act, the first matter to be considered necessarily is whether
that Act is a "special or local law" within the opening words of the
sub-section. As to this, however, Mr. Pathak raised no dispute and he conceded
that s. 116A was such a "special or local law." That this
"special or local law" prescribes "for an appeal a period of
limitation" is also evident. The first point of controversy, however, has
arisen as to whether "the period of limitation prescribed by the special
or local Law is different from the period prescribed therefor by the first
schedule." The contention urged strenuously before us by Mr. Pathak, the
learned counsel for the appellant, was that there would be "a different
period" only where for the identical appeal (to refer only to that
proceeding with which we are immediately concerned) for which a period of
limitation has been prescribed by the special or local Law, a period is
prescribed by first column of the first schedule. and there is a difference
between the two periods.
It was his further contention that where the
Indian Limitation Act made no provision for such an appeal, s. 29(2) and the
provision contained in its (a) and (b) were inapplicable. There have been
several decisions on this point but it is sufficient to refer to the decision
of the Bombay High Court in Canara Bank Ltd., Bombay v. The Warden Insurance
Co. Ltd., Bombay (1) where Chagla C.J. repelled this construction and held that
even where there was no provision in the first schedule for an (1) I. L. R.
1952 Bom. 1083.
134 appeal in a situation identical with that
for which the special law provides the test of "a prescription of a period
of limitation different from the period prescribed by the First Schedule is
satisfied. This Court in State of U.P. v.
Smt. Kaushaliya etc.(1) upheld this
construction and approved ,the judgment of Chagla C.J. in the Canara Bank case.
Apart from the decision of this Court, we consider the reasoning of Chagla C.J.
to be unexceptionable and we agree with Subba Rao J. in holding that the
requirement of a prescription by the special law "of a period
different" from that prescribed by the First Schedule is satisfied in the
present case.
The next point was one that arose on the
submission of counsel for the respondent and it was this. Assume that the
construction of the words "different from" urged by the appellant
were accepted, and this requirement would be satisfied only if the First
Schedule made provision for an identical appeal as that under the special law,
still it was submitted by the respondent that even this was satisfied in this
case. For this purpose he relied on Art. 156 of the first schedule which runs:
----------------------------------------------------------Time
from which "Description of Period of period begins to appeal limitation
run -----------------------------------------------------------156.-Under the
Code of Civil Ninety days The date of Procedure, 1908, to a High decree or
order Court, except in the cases appealed from." provided for by article
51 and article 153.
The argument was that though the right of
appeal in the case before us was conferred by s. 116A of the Representation of
the People Act and it was by virtue thereof that the appeal was filed by the
respondent to the High Court, it was still an appeal "under the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, to a High Court." For this submission learned
Counsel relied principally on two decisions--one of the Calcutta and the (1) A.
1. R. 1964 S. C. 416.
135 other of the Madras High Court, and they
undoubtedly support him. In Aga Mohd. Hamdani v. Cohen and Ors.(1) -as well as
in Ramasami Pillai v. Deputy Collector of, Madura(1) which followed it-the
Court held that to attract this article it was not necessary in order to be an
"appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure" within the meaning of
those words in Art. 156, that the right to prefer the appeal should be conferred
by the Code of Civil Procedure but that it was sufficient if the procedure for
the filing of the appeal and the powers of the court for dealing with the
appeal were governed by that Code. For adopting this construction the Court
relied on the reference in Art. 156 to Art. 151.
Article 151 dealt with appeals to the High
Court from judgment rendered on the original side of that Court. The right to
prefer these appeals was conferred by the Letters Patent constituting the
respective High Courts and not by the Code of Civil Procedure, though the Code
of Civil Procedure governed the procedure, jurisdiction and powers of the Court
in dealing with the appeals so filed. There would have been need therefore to
except cases covered by Art. 151 only if the words "under the Code of
Civil Procedure" were understood as meaning appeals for the disposal of
which the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure was made applicable. We
might mention that besides the Calcutta and the Madras High Courts a Full Bench
of the Allahabad High Court also has in Daropadi v. Hira Lal (3 ) adopted a
similar construction of the Article, the learned Judges pointing out that
several Indian enactments, among them the Indian -Succession Act, the Probate
and Administration Act, the Land Acquisition Act and the Provincial Insolvency
Act, proceeded on the basis of a legislative practice of conferring rights of
appeal under the respective statutes without prescribing any period of
limitation within which the appeal should be preferred, but directing the
application, of the provisions of the Civil Procedure Code to such appeals, the
intention obviously being that Art. 156 would furnish the period of limitation
for such appeals. We consider that these decisions (1) 1. L. R. 13 Cal. 221.
(3) 1. L. R. 34 Allahabad 496.
(2) 1. L. R. 43 Mad. 51.
136 correctly interpret Art. 156 and, in any
event, we are not prepared to disturb the decisions which have stood for so
long and on the basis of the correctness of which Indian legislation has
proceeded.
Mr. Pathak drew our attention to some
decisions in which a different construction was adopted of the word
"under" a particular enactment occurring in other Articles of the
Limitation Act and in particular some dealing with appeals in certain criminal
matters. In them the word 'under' was understood as meaning "by virtue
of". He was, however, unable to bring to our notice any decision in which
the construction adopted of Art. 156 which we have set out has been departed
from. In the cases dealing with the words "under the Criminal Procedure
Code" which he placed before us, the situation would obviously be
different, since the indication afforded by the mention of Art. 151 in Art. 156
does not figure in the Articles dealt with. Therefore that would be a circumstance
pointing to a different result.
If the construction adopted of Art. 156 in
the Calcutta and Madras decisions to which we have referred were upheld, there
could be no controversy that an appeal under s. 116A of the Representation of
the People Act would be "under the Code of Civil Procedure", for s.
116A(2) enacts, to read the material portion:
"116A. (2) The High Court shall, subject
to the provisions of this Act, have the same powers, jurisdiction and
authority, and follow the same procedure, with respect to an appeal under this
Chapter as if the appeal were an appeal from an original decree passed by a
civil court situated within the local limits of its civil appellate jurisdiction..............................
In this view even on the narrowest
construction of the words "different from those prescribed therefor in
first schedule" occurring the opening part of s. 29(2), the exclusion of
time provided for by Art. 12 of the Limitation Act would be permissible in
computing the period of limitation for filing the appeal to the High Court in
the case before us.
137 The last point which remains for
consideration is one which would be material only in the event of the two
points we have already dealt with being decided differently. This relates to
the relationship or inter-connection between the first and the second limbs of
s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act. The reason why we are dealing with it is
because of our inability to agree with the construction which our learned
brothers Subba Rao & Mudholkar JJ. have placed on this feature of the
sub-section. Sub-section (2), it would be seen, consists of two parts. The
first sets out the conditions to which the special law should conform in order
to attract section 3 and that part ends with the words 'as if such period were
prescribed there for in that schedule".
This is followed by the conjunction 'and'
that word by the second part reading "for the purpose of determining any
period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any
special or local law(a) the provisions contained in section 4, sections 9 to
18, and section 22 shall apply only in so far as, and to the extent to which,
they are not expressly excluded by such special or local law; and (b) the
remaining provisions of this Act shall not apply." The question that has
been debated before us is whether the condition postulated by the first limb,
namely the special or local law prescribing a period of limitation for a suit
appeal etc. different from the period prescribed there for by the first
schedule has to be satisfied in order to render the provisions of cl. (a)
applicable. If the conjunction 'and' was used for the purpose of indicating
that the two parts were cumulative, that is, if the two parts operated in
respect of the same set of circumstances, then unless the opening words of
sub-s. (2) were satisfied, there would be no basis for the application of cl.
(a) to the period prescribed for a suit, appeal or application applicable by
the special or local law. If on the other hand, the two parts of the
sub-section could be read independently as if they made provision for two
separate situations, the result would be that the words starting from "for
the purpose 138 of determining any period of limitation prescribed for any
suit, appeal or application by any special or local law" followed by
clauses (a) & (b) would be an independent provision unrelated to the first
part and therefore could operate unhampered by the condition set out in the
first part. In other words, if the latter construction were adopted for every
suit, appeal or application for which a period of limitation was prescribed by
a special or local law, the provisions in ss. 4, 9 to 18 & 22 would apply
unless excluded. Mr, Pathak urged that the conjunction 'and' could in the context
be construed only as rendering the second limb a part and parcel of the first,
so that unless the conditions laid down by the opening words of the sub-section
were satisfied, the provisions of the Limitation Act set out in cl. (a) would
not be attracted to "determine the period of limitation' prescribed by the
special or local law. The question of the import and function of the
conjunction 'and' was the subject of elaborate consideration by a Full Bench of
the Allahabad High Court in a decision in Sehat Ali Khan v. Abdul Qavi Khan(1).
The majority of the learned Judges held that the two parts of the sub-section
were independent and that "for the purpose of determining any period of
limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any special or
local law". cl. (a) would apply unless excluded. Raghubar Dayal J. then a
judge of that Court, however, dissented from this view and held that the entire
sub-s. (2) had to be read as an integrated provision and that the conjunction
'and' connected the two parts and made it necessary for attracting cl. (a) that
the conditions laid down by the opening words of sub-s. (2) should be
satisfied.
Mr. Pathak recommended for our acceptance the
dissenting judgment of Dayal J. We consider that the view expressed by Raghubar
Dayal J. as to the inter-relation of the two parts of the sub-section reflects
correctly our own construction of the provision. Raghubar Dayal J. has
approached this question of construction from several angles including the
grammar of the passage. Without going into any of them, we would rest our
decision on a shorter ground. In order that the second part might be held to be
independent ,of the first, the first part should itself be complete and be 1.
L. R. [1956]2 Allahabad 252.
139 capable of operating independently.
Unless this test were -satisfied, the conjunction 'and' would have to be read
as importing into what follows it, the conditions or consideration set out
earlier as otherwise even the first part would be incomplete. Let us now see
whether the first part could function without the second. The first part reads
"where any special or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or
application a period of limitation different from the period prescribed by the
first schedule the provision of s. 3 shall apply as if that period was
prescribed there for in that schedule." The question is what this,
standing by itself, would signify. If the conditions prescribed by the opening
words were satisfied, s. 3 of the Limitation Act would be attracted Section 3
reads:
"Subject to the provisions contained in
sections 4 to 25 (inclusive), every suit instituted, appeal preferred, and
application made, after the period of limitation prescribed there for by the
first schedule shall be dismissed, although limitation has not been set up as a
defence....................
In other words, if the special or local law
prescribed a period of limitation different from that prescribed by the first
schedule by the application of the first part of subs. (2), the court is
enabled to dismiss suits, appeals and applications filed beyond time. If this
is the only effect it would be seen that the provision is inane and redundant,
because even without it, by the very prescription of a period of limitation the
jurisdiction of the court to entertain the suit, appeal etc. would be dependent
on the same being filed in time.
It is possible, however, to construe the
reference to s. 3 in s. 29(2) to mean that the power to dismiss the suit,
appeal etc. if filed beyond the time prescribed, is subject to the modes of
computation etc. of the time prescribed by applying the provisions of ss. 4 to
25 which are referred to in the opening words of s. 3. On this construction
where a case satisfies the opening words of s. 29(2) the entire group of ss. 3
to 25 would be attracted to determine the period of limitation prescribed by
the special or local law.
Now let us test this with reference to the
second limb of s. 29(2) treating the latter as 140 a separate and independent
provision. That part starts with the words "for determining any period of
limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any special or
local law" (italics ours). The words italicised being perfectly general,
would manifestly be comprehensive to include every special or local law, and
among these must necessarily be included such special or local laws which
satisfy the conditions specified by the first limb of s. 29(2). We then have
this strange result that by the operation of the first part ss. 3 to 25 of the
Limitation Act are made applicable to that class of special and local laws
which satisfy the conditions specified by the first limb, whereas by the
operation of the second limb the provisions of section 3, 5, 6 to 8 & 19 to
21 & 23 to 25 would not apply to the same class of cases. A construction
which would lead to this anomalous result cannot be accepted and we, therefore,
hold that subject to the construction we have put upon sub-s. (2) of s. 29 both
the parts are to be read as one whole and that the words following the
conjunction 'and' "for the purpose of determining any period of
limitation" etc. attract the conditions laid down by the opening words of
the sub-section.
As we have pointed out earlier this does not
affect the result. We agree that the appeal fails and we direct that it be
dismissed with costs.
SUBBA RAO J.-This appeal by special leave
raises the question of true construction of the provisions of s. 29(2) of the
Indian Limitation Act, 1908 (9 of 1908), in the context of its application to
s. 116-A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (43 of 1951),
hereinafter called the Act.
The facts relevant to the question raised lie
in a small compass and they are not disputed. The appellant was elected to the
House of the People from the Mahasamund parliamentary constituency in the State
of Madhya Pradesh in the third general elections. The respondents were the
other contesting candidates. Respondent 1 filed an election petition before the
Election Commissioner of India under ss.
80 and 81 of the Act for setting aside the
election of the appellant and it was duly referred to the Election Tribunal.
The 141 Election Tribunal, by its order dated
January 5, 1963, dismissed the election petition. On February 11, 1963, the
first respondent preferred an appeal against the said order of the Election
Tribunal to the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur. Under sub-s. (3) of
s. 116-A of the Act every appeal under Ch. IVA of the Act shall be preferred
within a period of thirty days from the date of the order of the Tribunal under
s. 98 or s. 99 thereof. Admittedly, the appeal was filed more than 30 days from
the said order. If the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the order of the
Tribunal was excluded, the appeal was filed within 30 days;
but if in law it could not be excluded, the
appeal would certainly be out of time. The appellant contended before the High
Court that respondent I was not entitled in law to exclude the time so taken by
him in obtaining a copy of the order of the Tribunal, but that plea was
rejected by the High Court. On merits, the High Court held that the appellant
had committed two acts of corrupt practice as defined by s. 123(4) of the Act
and on that finding it declared the election of the appellant void. It is not necessary
to go into the details of the judgment ofthe High Court given on the merits of
the case,as nothingturns upon them in this appeal, for the learned,counsel
confined his argument only to the question of limitation. The present appeal
has been preferred by the appellant against the said order of the High Court
setting aside his ,election.
The only question, therefore, is whether for
the purpose of computing the period of 30 days prescribed under s. 116A (3) of
the Act the provisions of s. 12 of the Limitation Act can be invoked.
Mr. Pathak, learned counsel for the
appellant, in an elaborate argument placed before us the different aspects of
the question raised, and I shall deal with his argument in the appropriate
context in the course of my judgment. It would be ,convenient at the outset to
read the relevant provisions of the Act and those of the Limitation Act.
142 The Representation of the People Act,
1951.
Decision of the Tribunal Section 98. At the
conclusion of the trial of an election petition the Tribunal shall make an
order:(a) dismissing the election petition; or (b) declaring the election of
all or any of the returned candidates to be void; or Section 116-A. (1) An
appeal shall lie from every order made by a Tribunal under section 98 or
section 99 to the High Court of the State in which the Tribunal is situated.
(2)The High Court shall, subject to the
provisions of this Act, have the same powers, jurisdiction and authority, and
follow the same procedure, with respect to an appeal under this Chapter as if
the appeal were an appeal from an original decree passed by a civil court
situated within the local limits of its civil appellate jurisdiction.
(3)Every appeal under this Chapter shall be
preferred within a period of thirty days from the date of the order of the
Tribunal under section 98 or section 99:
Provided that the High Court may entertain an
appeal after the expiry of the said period of thirty days if it is satisfied
that the appellant had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal within
such period.
The Indian Limitation Act, 1908 Section
29.-(2) Where any special or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or
application a period of limitation different from the period prescribed there for
by the First Schedule, the provisions of section 3 shall apply, as if such
period were prescribed there for in that Schedule, and for the 143 purpose of
determining any period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or
application by any special or local law(a) the provisions contained in section
4, section 9 to 18, and section 22 shall apply only in so far as, and to the
extent to which, they are not expressly excluded by such special or local law;
and (b) the remaining provisions of this Act shall not apply.
Section 12.-(2) In computing the period of
limitation prescribed for an appeal, an application for leave to appeal and an
application for a review of judgment, the day on which the judgment complained
of was pronounced, and time requisite for obtaining a copy of the decree, sentence
or order appealed from or sought to be reviewed, shall be excluded.
(3)Where a decree is appealed from or sought
to be reviewed, the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the judgment on
which it is founded shall also be excluded.
Section 116-A of the Act confers a right of
appeal against an order of the Tribunal under s. 98 or s. 99 thereof; subs.(3)
thereof prescribes a period of limitation of 30 days for preferring such an
appeal. Section 29 of (the Limitation Act attracts, by fiction, the provisions
of s. 3 thereof to an appeal described in s. 29 of the said Act;
with the result, the provisions of sub-ss.
(2) and (3) of s. 12 of the Limitation Act are attracted thereto; and if those
sub-sections were attracted in computing the period of limitation prescribed
for an appeal the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the decree or order or
judgment on which it is founded shall be excluded. Learned counsel for the
appellant, therefore, contends that s. 29 of the Limitation Act does not apply
to an appeal under s. 116-A of the Act.
The first argument of learned counsel is that
for invoking sub-s.(2) of s. 29 of the Limitation Act the necessary condition
is that the First Schedule thereto shall prescribe a period of limitation for
an appeal and that a special law shall prescribe for the same type of appeal a
different period of limitation and that, as in the 144 present case the First
Schedule has not prescribed any period of limitation to an appeal under s.
116-A of the Act against an order of the Tribunal, sub-s. (2) of s. 29 of the
Act -is not attracted. This argument is met by learned counsel for the
respondents in two ways, namely, (i) that the First Schedule to the Limitation
Act has prescribed a period of limitation for such an appeal, and (ii) that subs.
(2) will apply even to a case where the First Schedule to the Limitation Act
has not prescribed any period of limitation for an appeal, but a special law
prescribed a period of limitation for such an appeal. I shall proceed to
consider the two limbs of the argument separately.
Has the First Schedule to the Limitation Act
prescribed a period of limitation for an appeal against an order of an Election
Tribunal under s. 98 or s. 99 of the Act? Article 156 of the First Schedule to
the Limitation Act says that to an appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908, to a High Court, except in the cases provided for by article 151 and
article 153, the period of limitation is 90 days from the date of the decree or
order appealed from; and article 151 referred to in article 156 provides for an
appeal against a decree or order of any of the High Courts of Judicature at
Fort William, Madras, and Bombay, or of the High Court of Punjab in the
exercise of its original jurisdiction. What does the expression "under the
Code of Civil Procedure" in art. 156 of the First Schedule to the
Limitation Act connote? Does it mean that a right of appeal shall be conferred
under the Code of Civil Procedure, or does it mean that the procedure
prescribed by the said Code shall apply to such an appeal? A comparison of the
terms of art. 156 and art. 151 indicates that the emphasis is more upon the
procedure applicable to an appeal than on 'the right of appeal conferred under
an Act. The heading of the first column in the First Schedule to the Limitation
Act is "Description of appeal". The phraseology used in art. 156
describes the nature of the appeal in respect of which a particular period of
limitation is prescribed. It does not refer to a right conferred under the Code
of Civil Procedure, but only describes the appeal with reference to the
procedure applicable thereto. Though the word "under" may support the
contrary view, the reference to 145 -art. 151 therein detracts from it. Article
151 is an exception to art. 156, indicating thereby that, but for the exception
art. 156 will apply to an appeal covered by art.
151: that is to say, an appeal under art. 151
is deemed to be an appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure. Though a right of
appeal is conferred under the Letters Patent, it is deemed to be an appeal
under the Code of Civil Procedure, because the Code of Civil Procedure governs
the said appeal.
As Rajamannar, C.J., observed in Kandaswami
Pillai v. Kannappa Chetty(1), "It is well established that the Limitation
Act and the Code are to be read together, because both are statutes relating to
procedure and they are in pari materia and, therefore, to be taken and
construed together as one system as explanatory of each other." So
construed it may reasonably be held that art. 156 provides for an appeal
governed by the procedure prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure. This view
was accepted by the Calcutta High Court as early as 1886 in Aga Mahomed
Hamadani v. Cohen(1). There, under s. 49 of the Burma Courts Act (XVII of 1875),
where the amount or value of a suit or proceeding in the Recorder's Court
exceeded Rs.
3,000, and was less than Rs. 10,000, an
appeal lay to the High Court. Under s. 97 of the said Act, "save as
otherwise provided by this Act, the Code of Civil Procedure shall be, and
shall, on and from the 15th day of April 1872, be deemed to have been in force
throughout British Burma". Section 540 of the Civil Procedure Code of
1882, which was in force at that time, read:
"Unless when otherwise expressly provided
by this Code or by any other law for the time being in force, an appeal shall
lie from the decrees or from any part of the decrees of the Courts exercising
original jurisdiction to the Courts authorized to hear appeals from the
decisions of those Courts." (1) A. T. R. 1952 Mad. 186.
134-159 S.C.-10.
(2) (1886) I. L. R. 13 Cal. 221.
146 The effect of this provision of the Code
on the Burma Courts Act was that where an appeal was not expressly excluded by
any special Act, an appeal lay to whatever court which under the enactment in
force was the appropriate court. But this section was overborne by the Burma
Courts Act to the extent it conferred a right of appeal from the Recorder's
Court to the High Court subject to certain conditions, for s. 49 of the Burma
Courts Act had taken away the right of appeal of value under a prescribed
amount and conferred such a right, when the subject-matter of the appeal was
between two prescribed amounts, from the decree of the Recorder's Court to the
High Court. It is, therefore, not correct to say, as contended by the learned
counsel, that a right of appeal was conferred under s. 540 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1882. After the passing of the Burma Courts Act, a right of appeal
was, conferred under s. 49 of that Act and not under s. 540 of the Code. It was
contended before the Calcutta High Court, as it is now contended before us,
that art. 156 of Schedule 11 of the Limitation Act did not apply to an appeal
under the Burma Courts Act, on the ground that the said appeal was not an
appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure. The learned Judges observed thus, at
p. 224:
"Now, what is meant by an appeal under
the Civil Procedure Code? A particular appeal was given by the Burma Courts Act
and the Burma Courts Act is still the only Act which prescribes to what Court
this appeal shall lie. If it had not been given by the Burma Courts Act then s.
540 of the Civil Procedure Code would have been sufficient to give it, provided
that some Court was by some enactment provided as the proper Court to hear the
appeal. The procedure in appeals in every respect is governed by the Code of
Civil Procedure, The Limitation Act, Schedule 11.
Art. 156, when it speaks of the Civil Procedure
Code is, on the face of it, speaking of a Code which relates to procedure, and
does not ordinarily deal with substantive rights:
and the 147 natural meaning of an appeal
under the Civil Procedure Code appears to us to be an appeal governed by the
Code of Civil Procedure so far as procedure is concerned." It is manifest
from this passage that the learned Judges did not repel the contention on the
ground that the right of appeal was conferred by s. 540 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, but expressly for the reason that the natural meaning of the
relevant expression in art. 156 of Sch. 11 of the Limitation Act was that the
appeal mentioned therein was one governed by the Code of Civil Procedure. This
decision was followed by a Division Bench of the Madras High Court in Ramaswami
Pilai v. The Deputy Collector of Madura(1). The learned Judges, Abdur Rahim and
Oldfield, JJ., held that art. 156 of the Limitation Act (IX of 1908) applied to
appeals filed under s. 54 of the Land Acquisition Act (1 of 1894). The right of
appeal was conferred under the Land Acquisition Act, but the procedure
prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure governed that appeal. The same
argument now raised before us was raised, but was repelled. After citing the
relevant part of the passage from the judgment of the Calcutta High Court
extracted above, the learned Judges stated at p. 55 thus:
"It seems to us that this is the correct
interpretation of article 156. There seems to be no good reason for saying that
an appeal under the Civil Procedure Code means only an appeal the right to
prefer which is conferred by the Code itself. On the other hand it would not be
straining the language of the article too much to hold that an appeal, the
procedure with respect to which, from its inception to its disposal, is
governed by the Civil Procedure Code, may rightly be spoken of as an appeal
under the Code." Then the learned Judges referred to art. 151 of the
Limitation Act and concluded thus:
(1) (1919) 1 L. R. 43 Mad. 51.
148 "That also tends to show that what
is meant by the legislature is appeals, the hearing and disposal of which is
governed by the rules of procedure laid down in the Civil Procedure Code."
Though about 77 years have passed by since the decision of the Calcutta High
Court and though the Limitation Act was amended a number of times, the Legislature
did not think fit to express its dissent from this view by amendment or
otherwise. No direct decision has been brought to our notice which has differed
from, or even questioned the correctness of, this decision. In this context we
may also refer to the decision of the Allahabad High Court in Dropadi v. Hira
Lal(1) where it is pointed out) that several Indian enactments, for instance,
the Succession Act, the Probate and Administration Act, the Land Acquisition
Act and the Provincial Insolvency Act, confer rights of appeal and direct the
application of the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure to such appeals,
but prescribed no period within which such appeals might be filed, the idea
being that art. 156 of the Limitation Act would furnish the period of
limitation for the filing of such appeals. Mr, Pathak, learned counsel for the
appellant, brought to our notice a number of decisions which considered the
forum to which an appeal shall lie against an order under s. 476 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure and the procedure to be followed therein.
In Nasaruddin Khan v. Emperor(1), where an
appeal under s. 476-B of the Code of Criminal Procedure from the Court of the
Munsif was heard in part by the District Judge, and on the next date of hearing
the appellant's pleader was not present in Court, it was held that the District
Judge was entitled to consider that the appeal had been abandoned and to
dismiss it under the provisions of Order XLI of the Code of Civil Procedure. In
Mt. Abida Khatoon v. Chote Khan(1), the Allahabad High Court held, under
similar circumstances, that an appellate court could set aside an order
dismissing an appeal for default. The Nagpur High Court in (1) (1912) I. L. R.
34 All. 496.
(2) (1926) I. L. R. 53 Cal. 827.
(3)A. I. R. 1956 All. 155.
149 Bholanath Balbhadra Sahai v. Achheram
Puran Kurmi(1), held that in such an appeal the appellate Court could exercise
its power under 0. XLI, r. 27 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In Chandra Kumar
Sen v. Mathuria Debya (2 ) , the Calcutta High Court applied to such an appeal
the period of limitation prescribed under art. 154 of the Limitation Act.
It is said that the combined effect of these
decisions is that the procedure applicable in an appeal against an order made
by a civil court under s. 476 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is that
prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure whereas the period of limitation is
that prescribed for an appeal under the Code of Criminal Procedure. But the
learned counsel himself conceded that there is a conflict of decisions on the
question whether to an appeal against the order of a civil court under s. 476-B
of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the civil procedure applies or the criminal
procedure applies and, therefore, the only decision which may have some bearing
on the question now raised is that in Chandra Kumar Sen v. Mathuria Debya(2).
There, an application was filed before the Subordinate Judge for filing of a
complaint against the petitioner under s. 476 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. That was rejected. The complainant preferred an appeal to the
District Judge more than 30 days prescribed under art. 154 of the Limitation
Act. The learned District Judge held that no question of limitation arose, for
the District Judge suo motu could lodge a complaint in the criminal court when
an offence in connection with the administration of civil justice came to his
notice. On that reasoning he instituted a complaint.
The High Court held that the appeal was filed
before he District Judge under s. 476-B of the Code of Criminal Procedure and
that under art. 154 of the Limitation Act it should have been filed within 30
days from the date of the order of the Subordinate court. It will be noticed
that no argument was raised in that case that the appeal was governed by the
Code of Civil Procedure and, therefore, the appropriate article of the
Limitation Act was not art. 154, (1) A. 1. R. 1937 Nag. 91.
(2) (1925) I. L. R. 52 Cal. 1009.
150 but art. 156 thereof, for the simple
reason that whichever article applied the appeal was clearly barred by
limitation.
It is not, therefore, permissible to read
into the decision the entire argument now advanced before us. The present
question was neither raised nor argued in that case. It may, therefore, be
safely held that for over 75 years the decision of the Calcutta High Court on
the construction of art. 156 of the Limitation Act stood the ground. Though it
must be conceded that the point is not free from difficulty, we are not
prepared to depart from the construction put upon the article as early as 1886
and which was not dissented from all these years. 1, therefore, hold that the
expression "appeal under the Code of Civil Procedure" in art. 156 of
the Limitation Act means an appeal governed by the Code of Civil Procedure.
Even so, it is contended that under s.
116-A(2) of the Act the High Court, though it has the same powers, jurisdiction
and authority of an appellate court governed by the Code of Civil Procedure, is
not empowered to follow the procedure prescribed under the Code in respect of
receiving the appeals. This argument is contrary to the express terms of sub-s.
(2) of s. 116-A of the Act. Under that sub-section, "The High Court shall,
subject to the provisions of this Act, have the same powers, jurisdiction and
authority and follow the same procedure, with respect to an appeal under this
Chapter as if the appeal were an appeal from an original decree passed by a
civil court situated within the local limits of its civil appellate
jurisdiction". Under the second part of sub-s. (2) of s. 11 6-A of the
Act, a fiction is created, namely, that though a right of appeal is conferred
by s. 116-A(1) of the Act, the appeal there under for the purpose of sub-s. (2)
will be deemed to be an appeal from an original decree passed by a civil court
situated within the local limits of its civil appellate jurisdiction.
The first part of the sub-section describes
the purposes for which the fiction is invoked, namely, the exercise of the
powers, jurisdiction and authority and the following of the procedure with
respect to such an appeal. The powers, jurisdiction and authority take in the
powers, jurisdiction and authority exercisable by an appellate tribunal in
regard to various matters prescribed in the Code of Civil 151 Procedure. What
does the word "procedure" mean? The procedure must necessarily be the
procedure governing such -an appeal. It means, inter alia, the manner of
receiving an -appeal in the court, the preparation of records of the appeal,
the posting of the appeal and the manner of its disposal. We find it impossible
to exclude from the word "procedure" the filing and receiving of an
appeal in the court. If that part was excluded, how could the appeal be
received in the High Court? The answer given is that the Government might make
rules under s. 169(1) of the Act.
When s. 168(2) confers a statutory power on
the High Court to follow the procedure prescribed by the Code of Civil
Procedure, we ,cannot invoke the general power of the Central Government to
make rules under s. 169(1) of the Act.
If so, the procedure prescribed by 0. XLI of
the Code of Civil Procedure, along with the other relevant provisions of the
said Code, equally applies to an appeal filed under s.
116-A (2) of the Act. The result is that
under s. 116-A(2) of the Act, the appeal, by fiction, is equated with an appeal
filed under the ,Code of Civil Procedure in the matter of not only the exercise
,of the powers, jurisdiction and authority but also in the matter ,of procedure
to be followed from the date of receipt of the :appeal to its final disposal.
For the aforesaid reasons, I hold that the special law, namely, the Act,
prescribes a period of limitation different from the period prescribed there for
by the First Schedule to the Limitation Act within the meaning of art. 29 (2)
of the Limitation Act. If so, s. 12 of the Limitation Act is attracted, and the
1st respondent was entitled to exclude the time taken by him for obtaining the
copy of -the order.
Even assuming that art. 156 of Schedule 1 to
the Limitation Act did not prescribe a period of limitation for the kind of
appeal under consideration, the question arises whether subs. (2) of s. 29 of
the Limitation Act would not be applicable if no period was prescribed by the
First Schedule for an appeal created by a special law but the special law prescribed
a period of limitation for the same. The history of this provision throws some
light on this question. The first Limitation Act was passed in the year 1859
(Act XIV of 1859). Section 3 of that act provided:
152 "When, by any law now or hereafter
to be in force, a shorter period of limitation than that prescribed by this Act
is specially prescribed for the institution of a particular suit, such shorter
period of limitation shall be applied notwithstanding this Act." The
provisions of the Act of 1859 were repealed by the Limitation Act IX of 1871.
Section 6 of that Act, which is relevant to the present inquiry, read:
"When, by any law not mentioned in the
schedule hereto annexed, and now or hereafter to be in force in any part of
British India, a period of limitation differing from that prescribed by this
Act is especially prescribed for any suits, appeals or applications, nothing
herein contained shall affect such law." The Limitation Act of 1871 was
replaced by Act XV of 1877.
Section 6 of this Act read:
"When, by any special or local law now
or hereafter in force in British India, a period of limitation is especially
prescribed for any suit, appeal or application, nothing herein contained shall
affect or alter the period so prescribed." The same provision was retained
in the Limitation Act IX of 1908, but it was amended in the year 1922 in the
present form. Before the amendment of 1922, there was a difference of view on
the following questions, namely, (1) whether the general provisions of the
Limitation Act, where the word "prescribed" alone without reference
to any Act, was used or even where that word was not used, would be applicable
to special or local laws, and (2) whether the general provisions of the
Limitation Act did not apply at all to the periods of limitation prescribed by
special or local laws.
Decisions holding that the general provisions
of the Limitation Act did not apply to periods of limitations prescribed by
other laws relied upon the expression "affect or alter" used in the
section as it then stood. Section 29 of the Limitation Act was amended to
remove the conflict with a view to make the 153 general provisions applicable
to the period of limitation prescribed by special or local laws. A comparison
of the phraseology of the earlier sections shows that while s. 3 of the
Limitation Act of 1859 used the words "shorter period", s. 6 of the
Act of 1871 used the expression "differing", and s. 6 of the Acts of
1877 and 1908 removed both the expressions. The result was that s. 6 of the Act
of 1871 saved all the special or local laws which prescribed a special period
of limitation from the operation of the provisions of the Limitation Act. As
the section then stood, it applied to all special or local laws prescribing a
-,period of limitation whether the Limitation Act prescribed any period of
limitation or not for suits or appeals similar to those governed by special or
local laws, or where the period of limitation so prescribed by special or local
laws was shorter or longer than that prescribed in the Limitation Act. Can it
be said that by the Amending Act of 1922, a conscious departure was made by the
Legislature to impose a condition for the application of sub-s. (2) of s. 29,
namely, that a period of limitation should have been expressly prescribed by
the First Schedule to the Limitation Act in respect of a suit or appeal
governed by the special or local law? There was no occasion for such a
departure.
To put it in other words, apart from
resolving the conflict, did the Legislature intend to exclude a particular
category of proceedings governed by special or local laws from the operation of
the benefit conferred by sub-s. (2) of s. 29? No justification was suggested
for such a departure and we find none.
The problem may be approached from a
different perspective.
The scheme of the Limitation Act may be
briefly stated thus:
The preamble to the Act shows that it was
passed to consolidate and amend the laws relating to the law of limitation in
respect of the proceedings mentioned in the Act. It applies to the whole of
India. Part 11 comprising ss. 3 to 11 deals with limitation of suits, appeals
and applications; Part III comprising ss. 12 to 25 provides for computation of
periods of limitation; and Part V deals with savings and repeals. We are not
concerned with Schedules II and III for they have been repealed. The First
Schedule consists of three divisions: the first division provides for the
period 154 of limitation for suits; the second division, for appeals;
and the third division, for applications.
Article 120 found in the first division prescribes for a suit for which no
period of limitation is prescribed elsewhere in the Schedule; art. 181 in the
third division prescribes for application for which no period of limitation is
prescribed elsewhere in the Schedule or by s. 48 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. But no such residuary article is found in the second division
dealing with appeals. The Limitation Act was conceived to be an exhaustive code
prescribing for every conceivable proceeding, whether suit, appeal or
application, subject to the saving in Part V thereof. It follows that there is
no period of limitation for an appeal not provided for in the second division
unless the special or local law prescribes for it. If so, it may reasonably be
said that, as the First Schedule of the Limitation Act prescribes no limitation
for an appeal not covered by arts. 150 to 157 thereof, under the Limitation Act
such a suit or appeal can be filed irrespective of any time limit.
With this background let us revert to the
construction of s. 29(2) of the Limitation Act. When the First Schedule of the
Limitation Act prescribes no time limit for a particular appeal, but the
special law prescribes a time limit to it, can it not be said that under the
First Schedule of the Limitation Act an appeal can be filed at any time, but
the special law by limiting it provides for a different period? While the
former permits the filing of an appeal at any time, the latter limits it to the
prescribed period. It is, therefore, different from that prescribed in the
former.
'This problem was considered by a Division
Bench of the Bombay High Court, consisting of Chagla C.J., and Gajendragadkar
J., in Canara Bank Limited, Bombay v. The Warden Insurance Company, Ltd.,
Bombay(1). Therein, Chagla C.J., speaking for the Court, observed at p. 1086
thus:
"The period of limitation may be
different under two different circumstances. It may be different if it modifies
or alters a period of limitation fixed by the first Schedule to the Limitation
Act. It may also be different in the (1) I. L. R. [1952] Bom. 1083.
155 sense that it departs from the period of
limitation fixed for various appeals under the Limitation Act. If the first
Schedule to the Limitation Act omits laying down any period of limitation for a
particular appeal and the special law provides a period of limitation, then to
that extent the special law is different from the Limitation Act. We are
conscious of the fact that the language used by the Legislature is perhaps not
very happy, but we must put upon it a construction which will reconcile the
various difficulties caused by the other sections of the Limitation Act and
which will give effect to the object which obviously the Legislature had in
mind, because if we were to give to s. 29 (2) the meaning which Mr. Adarkar
contends for, 'then the result would be that even s. 3 of the Limitation Act
would not apply to this special law. The result would be that although an appeal
may be barred by limitation, it would not be liable to be dismissed under s.
3".
A Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court, in
Sehat Ali Khan v. Abdul Qavi Khan(1) also dealt with this question. The learned
Judges expressed conflicting views. Mootham C.J., assumed that the first limb
of the sub-section ,did not apply to a case where the schedule omitted to
provide for a period of limitation. On that assumption he proceeded to consider
the second limb of the sub-section. DayalJ.. took the view that for the
application of the first part of s.29(2) the period of limitation should have
been prescribed by the First Schedule. Agarwala J., agreed with the view of the
Bombay High Court. Bhargava J., agreed with the view expressed by Mootham C.J.,
and Upadhya J., did not agree with the view of the Bombay High Court. A
Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Beharilal Chaurasiya v. Regional
Transport Authority (2) (1) I. L.R. (1956) 2 All. 252.
(2) A. 1. R. 1961 M. P. 75,77.
156 agreed with the view expressed by the
Division Bench of the Bombay High Court. Dixit C.P., speaking for (the Court,
stated thus:
"A special law may provide a period of
limitation and schedule I may omit to do so.
None the less the special law would be
different from the Limitation Act. Section 29 (2) of -the Limitation Act is not
very happily worded. It must be construed so as to avoid absurdity. The,
expression 'a period of limitation different. from the period prescribed
therefor by the first schedule' occurring in s. 29 (2) cannot be construed as
meaning that schedule 1 must also positively prescribe the period of
limitation.. Such a construction would not be in accordance with the intention
of the Legislature and would lead to an absurdity." The learned Chief Justice
proceeded to consider the anomalous position that would arise if a literal
construction was given to the provisions of the first part of the section. This
Court, in Kaushalya Rani v. Gopal Singh (1), had to. consider this question
incidentally in the context of the application of s. 29(2) of the Limitation
Act to an application for special leave to appeal against an order of acquittal
under sub-s. (3) of s. 417 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. This Court held
that s. 5 of the Limitation Act would not apply to an application for special
leave to appeal under sub-s. (3) of s. 417 of the Code of Criminal Procedure.
The Limitation Act does not provide any period of limitation for an application
for special leave to appeal from an order of acquittal under the said section.
If that be so, on the argument of learned counsel for the appellant, s. 29 of
the Limitation Act could not be invoked. But this Court held that s. 29(2) of
the Limitation Act applied, but that section excluded the application of s. 5
to the said application. Sinha C.J., speaking for the Court, observed:
"Hence it may be said that there is no
limitation prescribed by the Limitation Act for an (1) A. I. R. 1964 S. C. 260
157 appeal against an order of acquittal at the instance of a private prosecutor.
Thus, there is a difference between the Limitation Act and the rule laid down
in s. 417 (4) of the Code in respect of limitation affecting such an
application. Section 29(2) is supplemental in its character in so far as it
provides for the application of s. 3 to such cases as would not come within its
purview but for this provision." 'This observation clearly supports the
position that s.
29(2) would apply even to a case where a
difference between the special law and the Limitation Act arose by the omission
to provide for a limitation to a particular proceeding under the Limitation
Act.
1, therefore, hold that in the instant case
the Act provides a period of limitation different from that prescribed there for
by the First Schedule to the Limitation Act and, therefore, it is governed by
s. 29(2) of the said Act.
Even if my view on the construction of the
first limb of s. 29 of the Limitation Act were wrong, it would not help the
appellant, for his case squarely falls within the scope of the second limb of
the section., For convenience I restate the relevant part of the section:
"........... and for the purpose of
determining any period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal or
application by any special or focal law." Learned counsel for the appellant
relied upon the conjunction "and" in support of his contention that
the use of that conjunction makes the following sentence a limitation on the
first part of the section. He further argues that if it is not a limitation but
an independent clause, it will lead to the -anomaly of ss. 4 to 25 of the
Limitation Act applicable to proceedings failing under the first part and only
some of the provisions thereof, namely, ss. 4, 9 to 18 and 22 applying to the
second part of the section. Apart from the grammatical construction, which I
will consider presently, I do not see any anomaly in ss. 4 to 25 of the
Limitation Act applying to the first part of the section and only some of 158
them applying to the second part thereof. Those proceedings to which the first
part applies, by fiction the period prescribed in the special or local law is
treated as prescribed in the First Schedule itself. There cannot possibly be
any reason why s. 3 of the Limitation Act in to shall not apply to them. But
the same cannot be said in the case of the proceedings of a different type not
provided for in the First Schedule. So, the Legislature specified the sections
applicable to them and excluded the general sections which relate to legal
disabilities, acknowledgements, part-payments and others specified therein. The
Legislature may_ have -thought that such articles are not generally appropriate
to proceedings under special or local laws for reliefs not provided for in the
First Schedule.
Now, coming to the construction of the section,
the relevant rule of construction is well settled. "A construction which
will leave without effect any part of the language of a statute will normally
be rejected"; or to put it in a positive form, the Court shall ordinarily
give meaning to every word used in the section. Does the conjunction
"and" make the following clause a limitation on the preceding one? No
rule of grammatical construction has been brought to our notice which requires
an interpretation that if sentences complete by themselves are connected by a
conjunction, the second sentence must be held to limit the scope of the first
sentence. The conjunction "and" is used in different contexts. It may
combine two sentences dealing with the same subject without one depending upon
the other. But, if the interpretation suggested by the learned counsel be
accepted, we would not be giving any meaning at all to the word "any"
used thrice in the second part of the section, namely "any period",
"any suit" and "any special or local law". If the second part
is a limitation on the first part, the sentence should read, "for the
purpose of determining the period of limitation prescribed for such suit,
appeal or application by such special or local law." Instead of that, the
use of the word "any" clearly demonstrates that the second. part does
not depend upon the first part or vice versa. There is no reason why we should
attribute such a grammatical deficiency to the legislature when every word in
the second part of 159 the section can be given full and satisfactory meaning.
I would, therefore, hold that the second part is an independent provision
providing for the aforesaid category of proceedings to which the first part
does not apply. This is the view expressed by the majority of the judges of the
Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Sehat Ali Khan v. Abdul Qavi Khan(1).
I agree with the same.
It was then said that s. 116-A of the Act
provided an exhaustive and exclusive code of limitation for the purpose of
appeals against orders of tribunals and reliance is placed on the proviso to
sub-s. (3) of that section, which reads:
"Every appeal under this Chapter shall
be preferred within a period of thirty days from the date of the order of the
Tribunal under section 98 or section 99.
Provided that the High Court may entertain an
appeal after the expiry of the said period of thirty days if it is satisfied
that the appellant had sufficient cause for not preferring the appeal within
such period." The contention is that sub-s. (3) of s. 116-A of the Act not
only provides a period of limitation for such an appeal. but also the
circumstances under which the delay can be excused, indicating thereby that the
general provisions of the Limitation Act are excluded. There are two answers to
this argument. Firstly, s. 29(2)(a) of the Limitation Act speaks of express
exclusion but there is no express exclusion in sub-s. (3) of s. 116-A of the
Act; secondly, the proviso from which an implied exclusion is sought to be
drawn does not lead to any such necessary implication. The proviso has become
necessary, because, if the proviso was not enacted.
s. 29(2)(b) of the Limitation Act would have
excluded the operation of s. 5 of the Limitation Act, with the result that even
if a sufficient cause for the delay existed, the High Court would have been
helpless to excuse the delay. 1, therefore, hold that the proviso to sub-s. (3)
of s. 116-A of the Act only restores the power denied to the court under s.
29(2)(b) of the Limitation Act.
1) I. L. R. [1956] 2 All. 252.
160 Lastly, it is contended that s. 12(2) of
the Limitation Act, on its express terms, would not apply to an appeal to the
High Court against an order of the Election Tribunal under s. 98 of the Act.
Elaborating the argument it is said that in order to exclude the time for
obtaining a copy of the order appealed against, the original shall be a decree
or order within the meaning of s. 12(2) or judgment within the meaning of s.
12(3) of the Limitation Act and the order under s. 98 of the Act is neither a
decree nor an order or a judgment within the meaning of the said sub-sections
of s.
12 of the Limitation Act. Reference is made
to the definitions of decree, judgment and order in sub-sections (2), (9) and
(14) of s. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure, respectively, and it is contended
that the order under s. 98 of the Act does not fall under any of the said three
expressions as defined therein. Under sub-s. (9) of s. 2 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, "judgment" is defined to mean the statement given by the
judge of the grounds of a decree or order. Sub-section (14) of s. 2 of the said
Code defines "order" to mean the formal expression of any decision of
a civil court which is not a decree. It follows from the said definitions that
judgment is a statement of the reasons given by the judge and order is the
formal expression of his decision. Section 104 of the said Code says, "An
appeal shall lie from the following orders, and save as otherwise expressly
provided in the body of this Code or by any law for the time being in force,
from no other orders." Order XX of the Code deals with the manner of
pronouncing a judgment and decree. Under 0. XX, r. 20, of the Code,
"Certified copies of the judgment and decree shall be furnished to the
parties on application to the Court, and at their expense." Under s. 141
of the Code, "The procedure provided in this Code in regard to suits shall
be followed as far as it can be made applicable, in all proceedings in any
court of civil jurisdiction". The effect of these provisions is that a
decree is a formal expression of adjudication conclusively determining the
rights of parties with regard to all or any of the controversies in a suit,
whereas order is a formal expression of any ,decision of a civil court which is
not a decree. Judgment is a statement given by the judge of his grounds in
respect of ,a decree or order. Ordinarily judgment and order are en161 grossed
in two separate documents. But the fact that both are engrossed in the same
document does not deprive the statement of reasons and the formal expression of
a decision of their character as judgment or order, as the case may be.
With this background let me look at the
provisions of s.116A of the Act. Under sub-s. (1) thereof, an appeal shall lie
from every order made by a Tribunal under s. 98 or s. 99 to the High Court of
the State in which the Tribunal is situated. Under s. 98 of the Act, "At
the conclusion of the trial of an election petition the Tribunal shall make an
order(a) dismissing the election petition; or (b) declaring the election of all
or any of the returned candidates to be void; or (c)declaring the election of
all or any of the returned candidates to be void and the petitioner or any
other candidate to h ave been duly elected. " Part VI of the Act provides
for disputes regarding elections-, Ch. III thereof prescribes the procedure for
the trial of election petitions, and s. 90 therein says:
"(1)Subject to the provisions of this
Act and of any rules made there under, every election petition shall be tried
by the Tribunal, as nearly as may be, in accordance with the procedure
applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, to the trial of
suits." There is no provision in the Act defining how the decision should
be given. It could not have been the intention of the Legislature that the
Tribunal need not give the statement of reasons for its decision. As under s.
90 of the Act the Election Tribunal is directed to try election petitions as
nearly as may be in accordance with the procedure applicable under the Code of
Civil Procedure, it is the duty of the Election Tribunal to give a statement of
reasons for its decision. It is open to it to issue two documents--one
embodying the reasons for the decision and the 134-159 S.C.-11.
162 other, the formal expression of its decision:
the former will be its judgment and the latter, its order. It may issue both in
the same document in which case the judgment as well as the order is embodied
in the same document. If so it is manifest that an order made under s. 98 of
the Act, if it contains also the reasons for it, is a composite document
,satisfying the definition of a judgment as well as that of an ,order and
thereby attracting the relevant provisions of s. 12 of the Limitation Act. That
apart, a different approach to the question raised leads to the same
conclusion. Section 12(2) of the Limitation Act does not say that the order
mentioned therein shall be only such order as defined in the Civil Procedure
Code. If a statute provides for the making of can order and confers a right of appeal
to an aggrieved party -against that order within a prescribed time, sub-s. (2)
of s. 12 of the Limitation Act says that the time requisite for obtaining a
copy of such order shall be excluded. The Act em-powers the Tribunal to make an
order and gives a right of -appeal against that order to the High Court.
Section 12(2) of the Limitation Act is, therefore, directly attracted without
any recourse to the definition of an order in the Code of Civil Procedure. In
either view, s. 12 of the Limitation Act -applies and, therefore, the time
taken for obtaining a copy ,of the said order shall be excluded in computing
the period ,of limitation.
In the result, the appeal fails and is
dismissed with costs.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J.-I agree that the appeal be
dismissed, but for different reasons.
I am of opinion that the first part of s.
29(2) of the Limitation Act applies only when a special or local law prescribes
-a period of limitation for an appeal and when for that particular appeal a
period of limitation is prescribed in the First Schedule to the Limitation Act,
as omission to prescribe a period of limitation cannot be equated with the
prescribing ,of any positive period of limitation within which the appeal
should be filed, and that the second part of s. 29(2) of the Act is independent
of the first part and can apply to cases to which the first part does not
apply. I am also of ,opinion that art. 156 of the First Schedule applies to
appeals 163 which are instituted in view of the right of appeal conferred by any
special or local law and not in pursuance of the provisions of s. 96 C.P.C. I
do not elaborate my views as I agree with what my learned brother Mudholkar J.,
has said in construing the first part of s. 29 (2) of the Limitation Act and
art. 156 of the First Schedule and agree with my learned brother Ayyangar J.,
with respect to his construction of the second part of s. 29(2).
The proviso to s. 116(a) of the
Representation of the People Act gives discretion to the High Court to
entertain an appeal presented after the expiry of 30 days from the date of the
order of the Tribunal in case it is satisfied that there is sufficient cause
for the late presentation of the memorandum of appeal. The respondent has
applied in this Court for the condonation of the delay in filing the appeal in
the High Court. In the circumstances of the case, I consider it a fit case for
condoning the delay. There was a difference of opinion in the High Courts
regarding the applicability of s. 12 of the Limitation Act to such appeals. The
delay was of a few days. The Election Tribunal passed the order on January 5,
1963 and the appeal was filed on February 11, 1963.
A party can reasonably desire to obtain a
copy of the judgment for deciding, after studying it, whether it is worthwhile
appealing against it, and if so. on what grounds.
I am satisfied that there was sufficient
cause for the respondent's not presenting the appeal within the period of
limitation. I therefore condone the delay and confirm the order of the High
Court.
MUDHOLKAR J.-While I agree with my brother
Subba Rao J. that the appeal should be dismissed, I regret my inability to
agree with all the reasons which he has given.
I need not recapitulate the facts which have
been set out -fully in the judgment prepared by my learned brother but I would
only state the point which we have to consider in this appeal. The point is
whether for the purpose of computing the period of 30 days prescribed by s.
116A(3) of 164 the Representation of the People Act, 1951 under which an appeal
can be preferred from the decision of the Election Tribunal, the provisions of
s. 12, sub-s. (2) of the Limitation Act, whereunder the time requisite for
obtaining a copy of the decree and the day on which the judgment complained of
was pronounced can be excluded can be pressed in aid. It was contended before
us that the appeal should be deemed to be one under the Code of Civil
Procedure, in which case it would fall under art. 156 of the First Schedule to
the Limitation Act, and that though a shorter period of limitation is
prescribed for it by the Representation of the People Act the provisions of s.
12(2) of the Limitation Act would be attracted by reason of the provisions of
cl. (a) of s. 29(2). Reliance was ;)laced in this connection on the first limb
of s. 29(2). Alternatively it was argued that the first limb of s. 29, sub-s.
(2) of the Limitation Act would also apply to an appeal under the
Representation of the People Act even though it does not fall under art. 156 of
the Limitation Act since a different period of limitation was prescribed for it
from that prescribed for an appeal in the First Schedule of the Limitation Act
and that, therefore, cl. (a) thereof would attract s. 12(2) of the Limitation
Act. Finally it was argued that even if the appeal cannot be regarded as one
falling within the first limb of s. 29(2) sub-s. (2) of s. 12 would still apply
because the second limb of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 is wide enough in its ambit to
include a suit, appeal or application for which no period of limitation is
prescribed in the first schedule but a period of limitation has been prescribed
by a special or local law. My learned brother has held in his:
judgment that an appeal provided for by s.
116A of the Representation of the People Act would be an appeal under the Code
of Civil Procedure and thus fall under the first column of art. 156 of the
First Schedule of the Limitation Act. He has also held that the words
"where any special or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or
application a period of limitation different from the period prescribed there for
by the first schedule" occurring in the first limb of sub-s. (2) of s. 29
would include a suit or an appeal' even though it is not of a type for which a
period of limitation is prescribed in the First Schedule because it is enough
if the special law prescribes for such an appeal a period 165 which is
different from any period prescribed in the First Schedule. I regret I am
unable to agree with either of these views. Finally, however, my learned
brother has construed the second limb of sub-s. 2 of s. 29 "and for the
purpose of ,determining any period of limitation prescribed for any suit,
appeal or application by any special or local law" as being wide enough to
include a suit, appeal or an application under a special or local law which is
of a type for which no period of limitation is prescribed in the First
Schedule. With this last conclusion I agree. In my judgment what he has said on
the last point is enough for the purpose of disposing of the appeal in the way
proposed by him. As, however, I do not agree with what he has said on the first
two points I must briefly indicate my reasons for coming to different
conclusions.
In support of the conclusion that art. 156
applies, my learned brother has relied upon the decision in Aga Mahomed
Hamadani v. Cohen (1) which was followed by the Madras High Court in Ramasami
Pillai v. the Deputy Collector of Madura(1). The first of these two cases was
one from what was then British Burma. Under s. 49 of the Burma Courts Act, 1875
(XVII of 1875) an appeal Jay to the High Court from the decision in a suit or
proceeding before the Recorder's Court in which the amount or value was not
less than Rs. 3,000 and was not more than Rs. 10,000. Section 97 of that Act
said: "save as otherwise provided by this Act, the Code of Civil Procedure
shall be, and shall, on and from the 15th day of April, 1872, be deemed to have
been in force throughout British Burma." Section 540 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1882 which was in force at that time read thus:
"Unless when otherwise expressly
provided by this Code or by any other law for the time being in force, an
appeal shall lie from the decrees or from any part of the decrees of the Courts
exercising original jurisdiction to the Courts authorised to hear appeals from
the decisions of those courts." (1) (1886) 1. L. R. 13 Cal. 221 (2) (1919)
1. L. R. 43 Mad. 51 166 The question which the High Court had to consider in
that case was whether the appeal could be said to be in time as it fell to be
governed by art. 156 of the First Schedule to the Limitation Act. For deciding
this matter the High Court proceeded to consider what was-meant by an appeal
under the Code of Civil Procedure. While dealing with the matter the High Court
observed:
"A particular appeal was given by the
Burma Courts. Act and the Burma Courts Act is still the only Act which
prescribes to what Court this appeal shall lie. If it had not been given by the
Burma Courts Act then s. 540 of the Civil Procedure Code would have been
sufficient to give it. provided that some Court was by some enactment provided
as the proper Court to hear the appeal. The procedure in appeals in every
respect is governed by the Code of Civil Procedure. The Limitation Act, Sch. 1,
Art.. 156 when it speaks of the Civil Procedure Code is, on the face of it,
speaking of a Code which relates to procedure, and does not ordinarily deal
with substantive rights: and the natural meaning of an appeal under the Civil
Procedure Code appears to us to be an appeal governed by the Code of Civil
Procedure so far as procedure, is concerned." Referring to this, my
learned brother has observed:
"It is manifest from this passage that
the learned judges did not repel the contention on the ground that the right of
appeal was conferred by s. 540 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but expressely
for the reason that the natural meaning of the relevant expression in art. 156
of Sch. 1 of the Limitation Act was that the appeal mentioned therein was one
governed by the Code of Civil Procedur e." That is true. It is, however,
not material for my purpose to consider whether or not the High Court was right
in holding that the appeal before it was under the Burma Courts 167 Act. I
would assume that the High Court was right but it is necessary to point out
that the provisions of s. 29 of the Limitation Act as then in force did not
come for consideration in that case. The question would then be whether its
view that an appeal, though not provided by the Code of -Civil Procedure, would
yet be deemed to be an appeal under the Code for the purpose of art. 156 of the
Limitation Act,,, was right. With respect I do not think that there was any
warrant for holding that an appeal which was not given by, the Code would still
be one under the Code merely because the procedural provisions thereof would
govern its course-. Where the right of appeal is given by some other law, the
appeal must be regarded as one under that law and not under the Code. I see no
valid reason for construing the words 'under the Code of Civil Procedure' as
meaning 'governed in the matter of procedure by the Code of Civil Procedure'.
For, that is, in effect, what the High Court has done in this case. By reading
the article in the way it has done the High Court has virtually construed the
only provision in the Limitation Act dealing with normal civil appeals; to the
High Court as a residuary article which would take in all appeals by whatever
law they may be provided, merely because the procedure relating to appeals
contained in the Code of Civil Procedure was applicable to them. This would in
my judgment go against the plain intended of the Legislature. Indeed, while a
right to institute a suit or make an application is a wider kind of right.
there can be no right of appeal unless some statute confers it. That is why the
Legislature has expressly enacted residuary provisions, Arts. 120 and 180, for
suits and applications respectively in the Limitation Act. The First Schedule
is divided into three divisions. Article 156 is one of the eight article&
contained in the second division which deals with appeals. The first division
of that schedule deals with suits. There, provision is made for a variety of
suits including some under special laws.
but it was realised that it could not be exhaustive.
Therefore, art. 120 was provided therein,
which deals with "Suits for which no period of limitation is provided
elsewhere in this schedule." The third division of the First Schedule
deals with applications of different kinds.
Article 181 makes provision for applications
for which no 168 period of limitation is prescribed elsewhere in the Schedule.
In the second division, however, which deals with appeals, there is no
provision analogous to art. 120 and art. 181. Four of the eight articles deal with
appeals under the Code of Criminal Procedure and four with appeals other than
those under the Code of Criminal Procedure. As already stated, only one of
these articles deals with normal civil appeals to the High Court, namely, art.
156. It is not couched in language similar to that used in art. 120 and art.
181. Would we then be justified in reading the first column of art. 156 to mean
the same thing as is said in the first column of arts. 120 or 181? The
Legislature knew that appeals have been provided by various special laws; but
it made no provision for such appeals in this Schedule apparently for the
reason that a law which confers a right of appeal is expected to provide for
the period of limitation for such an appeal. That seems to be the explanation
for the absence of a residuary provision for appeals.
The first difficulty, therefore, in
interpreting art. 156 in the way contended for by -the respondents is that
where a different period of limitation for appeal is expressly provided by a
special law art. 156 will not in terms be attracted. To bring such an appeal
under it would clearly go against the express intention of 'the Legislature
which was to confine that article to appeals under the Code of Civil Procedure.
The next difficulty is that the entry deals with appeals "under" the
Code of Civil Procedure and not appeals arising out of proceedings to which the
Code of Civil Procedure applies. Nor again, does it include an appeal which is
only deemed to be under the Code of Civil Procedure. Be it noted that so far as
proceedings under the Representation of the People Act are concerned, the whole
of the Code of Civil Procedure does not apply but only so much of it as is
expressly made applicable by the provisions of the Representation of the People
Act. It was said that if the provisions of 0. XLI, of the Code of Civil
Procedure were not applicable to an appeal under the Representation of the
People Act there would be no provision whereunder the party could at all file
an appeal. It seems to me, however, that there can be no difficulty at all in
this matter as every 169 -High Court has made rules partly under the
Constitution -and partly in exercise of its inherent power to make suitable
provisions in regard to this and allied matters.
The Calcutta High Court, however, does not
appear to have given ,the full consideration in Cohen's case(1) to the ambit of
art. 156 and that is another reason why I find myself unable to accept the
correctness of the view it has taken in that case.
It was then said that the view should be
accepted on the ground of stare decisis. In this connection it was pointed out
thatso far no court has dissented from that view and indeed theview was fully
accepted in Ramasami Pillai's .case(1) bythe Madras High Court. In so far as
the principle of stare decisis is concerned it is nothing more 'than,. as
observed by Dowrick in Justice According to the English ,Common Lawyers (1961
ed. p. 195), a precipitate of the notion of legal justice. In other words it is
the principle that judicial decisions have a binding character.
But in India the position is not quite the
same. Here the decision of a High Court is not even always binding upon it in
the sense that it can be reconsidered by a Full Bench.
No doubt its decision may bind all courts
subordinate to it as also all Judges sitting singly or in division benches of
the High Court. It is also true that a decision of a Division Bench of a High
Court is binding on every other Division Bench of that High Court but there
again there have been cases where one Full Bench has reconsidered the decision
of an earlier Full Bench. In any case the decision of a High Court has no more
than persuasive character in so far as this 'Court is concerned. In that view
the decision of the Calcutta High Court, even though it may not have been
dissented from since the time it was rendered, cannot, in the proper sense of
the term be regarded as stare decisis.
What could be stare decisis in this Court
would be its own previous ,decisions. But even here instances are not wanting
where, unlike perhaps the House of Lords, we have considered ourselves free to
go back on previous decisions.
(See The Bengal Immunity Company Limited v.
The State of Bihar ors. 3 Finally, even where a decision has not been (1)
(1886) I. L. R. 13 Cal. 221 (2) (1919) I. L. R. 43 Mad. 51 (3) [1955] 2 S. C.
R. 603 170 dissented from for a long time, but has on the other hand been
followed, it is not entitled to be treated as immutable, particularly where it
deals only with a question appertaining to the adjective law, such as the law
of limitation. There may be a great deal to be said in favour of not disturbing
even erroneous decisions affecting substantive rights to property which have
stood undisturbed for a long time on the ground that such a course may unsettle
existing titles to property. But this or similar considerations which would
justify leaving such decisions undisturbed would not stand in the way of
overruling an erroneous decision on a matter appertaining to the adjective law
however ancient the decision may be(1). Therefore, I do not feel myself
persuaded to hold that the present appeal can be regarded as of a type falling
within the first column of art. 156 of the First Schedule to the Limitation
Act.
In order to deal with the second ground given
by my learned brother it is necessary to reproduce the provisions of s. 29,
sub-s. (2) of the Limitation Act. They run thus:
"Where any special or local law
prescribes for any suit, appeal or application a period of limitation different
from the period prescribed there for by the First Schedule, the provisions of
section 3 shall apply, as if such period were prescribed there for in that
Schedule, and for the purpose of determining any period of limitation
prescribed for any suit, appeal or application by any special or local law-.
(a) the Provisions contained in section 4.,
sections 9 to 18, and section 22 shall apply only in so far as, and to the
extent to which, they are not expressly excluded by such special or local law;
and (b) the remaining provisions of this Act shall not apply." (1) See
Allen, Law in the, making (5th edn.) p. 209 fn. 3 171 While expressing the view
that the legislature has not expressed itself happily while enacting this
provision he has agreed with the view taken in Canara Bank Ltd. v. The Warden
Insurance Co., Ltd., Bombay(1), which was followed by the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh in Beharilal Chaurasiya v. Regional Transport Authority(1). In that
case the Bombay High Court has held that art. 156 is attracted on the ground
that the period provided by the special law is different from that contained in
the First Schedule. With great respect to the learned Judges, I find it
difficult to strain the language used in the first limb of s. 29 (2) in this
manner. The legislature has in clear terms spoken of cases in which a special
or local law has prescribed for a suit, appeal or an application a period of
limitation "different" from that prescribed by the First Schedule.
Now, the governing words are "suit, appeal or application".
Therefore, what has to be seen is whether a
suit, appeal or application under a particular local or special law is of a
kind similar to one for which a period of limitation is prescribed in the First
Schedule. The first limb of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 is concerned only with
proceedings of this kind, that is, proceedings under special or local law for
which a period of limitation is provided in the First Schedule. If for such a
proceeding the period to be found in the First Schedule is different from that
prescribed under a special or local law certain consequences will follow under
the provision. I do not think that any inconvenience would be caused by giving
literal and natural interpretation to the expression used by the legislature in
the first portion of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 because cases of other kind can easily
come under the second portion thereof.
Since I agree with my learned brother about
what he has said regarding the second limb of sub-s. (2) of s. 29 the appeal
must be dismissed with costs as proposed by him.
(1) I. L. R. 1952 Bom. 1083.
Appeal dismissed.
(2) A.I.R. 1961 M. P. 75.
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