Mirza Ali Akbar Kashani Vs. United
Arab Republic & ANR [1965] INSC 144 (5 August 1965)
05/08/1965 GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION: 1966 AIR 230 1966 SCR (1) 319
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC 202 (8) D 1987 SC 9 (17) F 1991 SC
814 (2)
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, s. 86(1)-Suit
against foreign State Consent of Central Government whether necessary -'Ruler
of a foreign State' whether distinguishable from foreign State for the purpose
of the section.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant filed a suit for breach of
contract against the respondents on the Original Side of the Calcutta High
Court. The first respondent was the United Arab Republic while the second
respondent was one of its departments. The suit was filed without obtaining the
consent of the Central Government under s. 86(1) of the Code of Civil
Procedure, but the High Court granted leave to the appellant under cl. 12 of
the Letters Patent. The respondents entered appearance but claimed that leave
under cl. 12 of the Letters Patent be cancelled and the plaint be rejected.
Their contention was that the suit was
incompetent inasmuch as the suit was in substance against the Ruler of the
United Arab Republic and consent of the Central Government under s.
86(1) was necessary before it was filed. They
also urged that respondent no. 1 was a sovereign State and as such it enjoyed
absolute immunity from being sued under the Rules of International Law adopted
and applied by the municipal law of India. The trial court did not accept
either of these contentions and passed a decree in favour of the appellant.
The respondents appealed under the Letters
Patent to the Division Bench of the High Court. The Division Bench agreed with
the trial court that s. 86(1) wag not applicable to the appellant's suit
because the said section referred to the Ruler of a foreign State and not to a
foreign State as such.
In This connection the High Court observed
that only in the case of a monarchical State could the Ruler be taken to be
identical with the State. However, on the alternative plea of the respondent
based on immunity under International Law, the Division Bench differed from the
trial court and decided in favour of the respondents. Consequently the
appellant's plaint stood rejected. With certificate from 'the High Court the
appellant came to this Court.
HELD : (i) As a matter of procedure it would
not be permissible to draw a sharp distinction between the Ruler of a foreign
State and a foreign State of which he is the Ruler. This is apparent from the
fact that s. 87 provides that even when a Ruler of a State sues or issued, the
suit must be in the name of the State. It is also remarkable that though the
heading of ss. 84-87B does not in terms refer to foreign States at all, s. 84
in terms empowers a foreign State to bring a suit in a competent court;
obviously the Legislature did not think that
the case of a foreign State would not be included under 'he heading of this
group of sections. [328 A-D] (ii)Section 86 is a counterpart to s. 84. Whereas
s. 84 confers a right on a foreign State to sue, s. 86(1) in substance imposes
a liability on foreign States to be sued.
The foreign State can sue, as laid down in
the proviso to s. 84 to enforce a private right vested in the Ruler of such
State 320 or in any officer of such State in his public capacity. By 'private
right' in this context is meant rights which can be enforced in the municipal
courts of a foreign State as distinguished from a political or territorial
rights which must be settled under International Law by agreement between
States. As a counterpart, s. 86(1) proceeds to prescribe a limited liability
against foreign States. The first limitation is that such a suit cannot be
instituted except with the consent of the Central Government. The second
limitation is that the Central Government shall not give consent unless it
appears that the case falls under one or the other cls. (a) to (d) of s. 86(2).
Having provided for this limited liability to be sued the Legislature has taken
care to save Ruler of a foreign State from arrest, except with the consent of
the Central Government and has directed that no decree shall be executed
against the property of any such Ruler; that is the effect of s. 86(3). What is
exempted here is the separate property of the Ruler himself and not the
property of the Ruler as head of the State. [332 B-H] HajonManick v. Bur Sing,
II Cal. 17, referred to.
(iii)When s. 86(i) refers to a Ruler of a
foreign State, it refers to the Rulerin relation to the said State, and means
the person who is for the time being recognised by the Central Government to be
the head of that State. In view of the definition of 'Ruler' in s. 87 (1) (b)
it is difficult to accept the argument that the expression 'the Ruler of a
foreign State under s. 86(1) can take in cases only of Rulers of foreign States
which are governed by a monarchical form of Government. In view of the
definition, when s. 86(1) refers to Rulers of foreign State, it refers to Rulers
of all foreign States whatever be their form of Government whether monarchical
or republican. [330 H-331 A] Besides, on principle, there is no reason why it
should be assumed that the Code of Civil Procedure always made a distinction
between Rulers of foreign States governed by monarchical form of Government and
those which were governed by Republican form of Government. The Legislature
which framed the relevant provisions of the Code was aware that there were
several States in which the monarchical form of Government did not prevail. It
could not have been the intention of the framers of the Code of Civil Procedure
that monarchical States should be liable to be sued under s. 86(1) subject to
the consent of the Central Government in the municipal courts of India, whereas
foreign States not so governed should fall outside s. 86(1) and thus be able to
claim immunity under International Law. When s. 87(1) (b) was introduced in
1951 it must have been intended that the definition of 'Ruler' therein should include
all heads of foreign States whatever their form of Government. [331 E-F]
(iv)The effect of the provisions of s. 86(1) appears to be that it makes a statutory
provision covering a field which would otherwise be coveredby the doctrine of
immunity under International Law. Every sovereign State is competent to make
its own laws in relation to the rights and liabilities of a foreign State to be
sued within its own municipal courts. Just as an independent sovereign State
may statutorily provide for its own rights and liabilities to sue and be sued,
so can it provide for the rights and liabilities of foreign States to sue and
be sued in its municipal courts. That being so it would be legitimate to hold
that the effect of s. 86(1) is to modify to a certain extent the doctrine of
immunity recognised by International Law. This section provides that foreign
States can be sued within the municipal courts of India with the consent of the
Central Government and when such consent is granted as required by s. 86(1), it
would not be open to a foreign State to rely on the doctrine of immunity under
International Law because the municipal courts in India would be 321 bound by
the statutory provisions, such as those contained in the Code of Civil
Procedure. [333 B-E] Chandulal Khushalji v. Awad Bin Umar Sultan Nawaz Jung
Bahadur, I.L.R. 21 Dom. 351 referred to.
(v)Section 86(1) thus applies to cases where
suits are brought against Rulers of foreign States and foreign States fall
within its scope whatever be their form of Government.
The Section applied to the present suit, and
the consent of the Central Government not having been obtained before it was
filed, the suit was barred. [334 B-C] [in view of the decision that s. 86(1)
barred the suit, the Court did not find it necessary to deal with the question
whether the respondents were justified in claiming absolute immunity under
International Law.] [334 C]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 220 of 1964.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
April 17, 1961 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Original Order No. 11
5 of 1960.
R.Chowdhury, S. Mukherjee and S. N.
Mukherjee, for the appellant.
B.Sen, V. A. Seyid Muhammad, P. K. Das and P.
K. Bose for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Gajendragadkar, C.J. This appeal arises out of a suit filed by the appellant,
Mirza Ali Akbar Kashani, against the two respondents, the United Arab Republic,
and the Ministry of Economy, Supplies, Importation Department of the Republic
of Egypt at Cairo, on the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court. By his
plaint, the appellant claimed to recover from the respondents damages assessed
at Rs. 6,07,346 for breach of contract. According to the appellant, the
contract in question was made between the parties on March 27, 1958.
Respondent No. 2 which was a party to the
contract had agreed to buy tea from the appellant upon certain terms and
conditions; one of these was that respondent No. 2 would not place any further
orders in India for purchase of tea with anyone else during the tenure of the
contract and that it would, in every case, give the appellant the benefit of
the first refusal for respondent No. 2's additional requirements. The appellant
alleged that during the tenure of the contract, the respondents had wrongfully
placed an order for the supply of tea with a third party without giving the
appellant a chance to comply with the said requirement. That is how the
respondents had committed a breach of a material term of the contract.
322 Formerly, the Republic of Egypt and the
Republic of Syria were two independent sovereign States. They, however, merged
and formed a new Sovereign State on February 22, 1958. This new sovereign State
is known as the United Arab Republic and is referred as respondent No. 1 in the
present appeal. This new State has been recognised by the Government of India.
Respondent No. 2 has been working as a department of respondent No. 1 and is a
part and parcel thereof. The present suit was instituted on August 10, 1959. It
is common ground that the appellant did not obtain the consent of the Central
Government to the institution of the suit under s. 86 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The appellant, however, applied for leave under Clause 12 of the
Letters Patent in view of the fact that a part of the cause of action had
arisen within the jurisdiction of the Calcutta High Court. This leave was
granted to the appellant by the learned trial Judge.
On December 3, 1959, the respondents entered
appearance in the suit; and on December 17, 1959, they applied for an order
that the leave granted under Clause 12 of the Letters Patent should be revoked,
the plaint should be rejected and further proceedings in the suit should be
stayed. According to the respondents, the trial Court had no jurisdiction to
entertain the suit inasmuch as the President of the United Arab Republic was
its Ruler and the suit was, in reality, and in substance, a suit against him
and as such, it was barred under S. 86 of the Code. It was further averred on
their behalf that no part of the alleged cause of action had arisen within the
jurisdiction of the Court; and so, leave could not be granted under Clause 12.
At the hearing of this petition, the respondents were allowed to urge an
additional ground in support of their plea that the leave should be revoked;
they urged that respondent No. 1 was a foreign sovereign State and as such it
enjoyed absolute immunity from being sued in the trial Court under the Rules of
International Law as adopted and applied by the municipal law of India.
These pleas were controverted by the
appellant, It was urged that S. 86 of the Code was not a bar to the present
suit, as the said section created a bar only against a Ruler of a foreign State
and the present suit clearly did not fall in that category. According to the
appellant, the immunity from being sued without the sanction of the Central
Government to which s. 86 of the Code referred could not be invoked by a
foreign State such as respondent No. 1. The appellant also urged that in view of
the fact that the transaction which has given rise to the present suit has
nothing to do with the governmental functions of respondent No. 1, no immunity
323 could be claimed by the respondents under the doctrine of International
Law. The appellant further contended that by appearing in the present
proceedings and by filing pleas thereafter, the respondents had submitted to
the jurisdiction of the Court and had waived their objection to its
jurisdiction.
The learned trial Judge held that s. 86 did
not bar the present suit. He accepted the contention of the appellant that that
bar could be invoked only against the Ruler of a foreign State and not against
respondent No. 1 which was an independent sovereign State. On the question of
the plea raised by the respondents under International Law, the trial Judge
held that having regard to the nature of the transaction which has given rise
to the present suit, the plea of immunity raised by the respondents cannot be
sustained. He also found against the respondents on the question of waiver. In
the result, the application made by the respondents for revoking leave was
dismissed by the trial Judge.
The respondents then took the matter before
the Court of' Appeal of the Calcutta High Court under the Letters Patent.
Both the learned Judges who constituted the
Court of Appeal have upheld the finding of the trial Judge that s. 86 of the
Code does not create a bar against the present suit. They have, however,
reversed the trial Judge's conclusions on the question of immunity claimed by
the respondents under International Law as well as on the question of waiver.
They have held that it was not shown that the
application made by the respondents challenging the jurisdiction of the trial
Judge to entertain the suit could be reasonably construed as submission to the
jurisdiction of the Court by them; and they have come to the conclusion that
the doctrine of International Law which recognises the absolute immunity of
sovereign independent States from being sued in foreign courts created a bar
against the present suit. In the result, the appeal preferred by the
respondents has been allowed, the order passed by the trial Judge has been set
aside, and the plaint filed by the appellant has been rejected under prayer (b)
of the Master's Summons. The appellant has applied for and obtained a
certificate from the Court of Appeal and it is with the said certificate that
he has come to this Court in appeal.
Mr. R. Chaudhry for the appellant has
contended that the view taken by the Court of Appeal about the scope and effect
of the doctrine of immunity on which the respondents relied is erroneous in
law. In support of his argument, he has urged that the trend of recent
decisions and the tendency of the development of Inter- 324 national Law in
recent times indicate that the doctrine of immunity in question can no longer
be regarded as an absolute and unqualified doctrine. He suggests that in modem
times, States enter into commercial transactions and it would be inappropriate
to allow such commercial transactions the protection of the doctrine of
immunity of sovereign States from being sued in foreign countries. In support
of his argument, Mr. Chaudhry has very strongly relied on the observations made
by H. Lauterpacht who has ,edited the eighth edition of Oppenheim's
International Law.
Says Editor Lauterpacht, "The grant of
immunity from suit amounts in -effect to a denial of a legal remedy in respect
of what may be .a valid legal claim; as such, immunity is open to objection.
The latter circumstance provides some explanation of the challenge to -which it
has been increasingly exposed-in addition to the circumstance that the vast
expansion of activities of the modem State in the economic sphere has tended to
render unworkable a rule which grants to the State operating as a trader a
privileged position as compared with private traders. Most States, including
the United States, have now abandoned or are in the process of abandoning the
rule of absolute immunity of foreign States with regard to what is usually
described as acts of a private law nature. The position in this respect in
Great Britain must be regarded as fluid" (p. 273).
Even Dicey in his Conflict of Laws while
enunciating, Rule 17 in relation to such immunity in unqualified form, has made
some comment to which Mr. Chaudhry has invited our attention. It is true that
Rule 17 says, inter alia, that the Court has no jurisdiction to entertain an
action or other proceeding against any foreign State, or the head of government
or any ,department of the government of any foreign State. Commenting on this
rule, the learned author observes that "the immunity is derived ultimately
from the rules of Public International Law and from the maxim of that law, par
in parem non habet imperium. The relevant rule of Public International Law has
become part of English law. It is not impossible, however, that English law
goes further than the international legal system demands in this regard".
Then the learned author subjects the English
decisions to a close analysis and concludes that it may well be that the system
of international law as a whole is moving towards a "functional"
concept of jurisdictional immunities which would confine their scope to matters
within the field of activity conceived as belonging essentially to a person of
that system of whatsoever category(1).
(1)Dicey's Conflict of Laws, 7th Ed. pp.
132-33.
325 Mr. Chaudhry naturally lays emphasis on
these observations of Dicey. He has conceded that the general consensus of
opinion as disclosed in the English decisions bearing on the point is not in
his favour, though the voice of dissent raised by Lord Denning in Rahimtolia v.
Nizam of Hyderabad(1) distinctly supports Mr. Chaudhry's plea. That, in
substance, is how Mr. Chaudhry has attempted to present his case on the
interesting question about the immunity of sovereign States under International
Law.
Whilst we were hearing Mr. Chaudhry on this
point, we enquired from him whether be supported the finding of the courts
below that the present suit was not barred under s. 86 of the Code, and he
contended that his case was that that finding was clearly right and the present
appeal would have to be dealt with on the footing that s. 86 created no
difficulty against the appellant. Mr. Chaudhry did not dispute the correctness
of the finding recorded by the Court of Appeal on the question of waiver.
Mr. B. Sen who appeared for the respondents,
however, urged that he wanted to challenge the correctness of the finding
recorded by the Calcutta High Court as to the applicability of s. 86 of the
Code. He conceded that the trial Judge as well as the two learned Judges who
heard the Letters Patent Appeal had agreed in holding that s. 86 was not a bar
against the present suit; but Mr. Sen's argument was that the said finding was
plainly inconsistent with the true scope and effect of s. 86. He also urged
that the view taken by the Court of Appeal as to the applicability of the
doctrine of immunity under International Law was right.
During the course of the hearing of this
appeal, it thus became clear that two questions fall to be considered by us;
the first is in relation to the application
of s. 86 of the Code; and the second in regard to the scope and effect of the
doctrine of immunity under International Law.
Logically, the effect of s. 86 has to be
considered first, because it is common ground that if we were to hold that s. 86
was a bar to the present suit, then the interesting point about immunity under
International Law may not have to be considered. The appeal would, in that
view, be liable to be dismissed on the ground that the suit was barred by s.
86.
After hearing both Mir. Chaudhry and Mr. Sen,
we have come to the conclusion that the learned Judges of the Calcutta High
Court were, with respect, in error in holding that s. 86 does not create a bar
against the present suit. That being our view, we do not propose to consider
whether the Court of Appeal was right in (1) [1959] A.C. 379.
326 upholding the respondents' plea of
absolute immunity under International Law. Let us, therefore, deal with the
problem raised under s. 86 of the Code.
The relevant provisions are to be found in
sections 83-87B of the Code. The heading of these provisions is "Suits by
aliens and by or against foreign Rulers, Ambassadors and Envoys". The
present sections have been introduced by s. 12 of the Code of Civil Procedure
(Amendment) Act, 1951 (No.
11 of 1951). Prior to the amendment, the
relevant sections were 83-87. As a result of the amendment, cases of the Rulers
of former Indian States are now dealt with by s. 87B, and the remaining
provisions deal with foreign States and Rulers of foreign States. It is a
matter of history that the Rulers of Indian States who could claim the benefit
of the provisions contained in sections 84 and 86 under the Code of 1908 have
ceased to be Rulers and are now entitled to be described as Rulers of former
Indian States. That is why a specific and separate provision has been made in
regard to Rulers of former Indian States by s. 87B. That, broadly stated, is
the main distinction between the schemes of earlier sections 83-87 and the
present sections 83-87B.
The learned Judges of the Calcutta High Court
who have repelled the respondents' contention that the present suit is barred
under s. 86 of the Code, appear to have taken the view that s. 86(1)refers to
Ruler of a foreign State and not to a foreign State as such. We will presently
cite the relevant sections and construe them; but, for the present, we are
indicating the main ground on which the decision of the learned Judges is
founded. Section 86(1) says that no Ruler may be sued except with the consent
of the Central Government; and the learned Judges thought that a Ruler must be
distinguished as from a State and s. 86(1) cannot be extended to a case of the
State. The reference to a Ruler made by s. 86(1) was contrasted with the
reference to a foreign State made by s. 84; and this contrast was pressed into
service in support of the conclusion that s. 86 cannot be invoked against a
foreign State. Similarly, s. 86(3) grants exemption to a Ruler from arrest
except with the consent of the Central Government. A similar argument is based
on this provision to take the case of a foreign State outside the purview of s.
86. Likewise, s. 85 refers to a Ruler while authorising the Central Government
to appoint any person to act on behalf of such Ruler, and it is said that this
provision also brings out the fact that the Ruler of a foreign State is treated
as apart from the State itself.
317 It appears from the judgments of the
learned Judges that they were prepared to concede that in regard to a State
which is governed by a monarchical form of Government, it would not be
permissible to make a distinction between the State as such and its Ruler; and
so, it was thought that in regard to a monarchical State, s. 86 may conceivably
apply, though the words used in s. 86(1) do not, in terms, refer to a State. On
this view, the court of Appeal naturally considered the question about the
immunity of the respondents under the provisions of International Law. The
point which arises for our decision thus lies within a narrow compass; was the
Calcutta High Court right in holding that the ?resent suit does not fall under
the purview of s. 86(1)? It is clear that if the answer to this question is in
the negative, the suit would be bad because it has been filed without the
consent of the Central Government.
The decision of this question depends
primarily on the con- struction of s. 86(1) itself; but before construing the
said section, it is necessary to examine s. 84. The present s. 84 reads thus:-
"A foreign State may sue in any competent court : Provided that the object
of the suit is to enforce a private right vested in the Ruler of such State or
in any officer of such State in his public capacity".
The predecessor of this section in the Code
of 1882 was s. 431 it read thus :- "A foreign State may sue in the Courts
of British India, provided that- (a) it has been recognised by Her Majesty or
the Governor-General in Council, and (b) the object of the suit is to enforce
the private rights of the head or of the subjects of the foreign State.
The Court shall take judicial notice of the
fact that foreign State has not been recognised by Her Majesty or by the
Governor- General in Council." 1908, s. 84(1) took the place of s. 431. In
enacting this section, an amendment was made in the structure of the section
and two provisos were added to it. We will presently refer to the purpose which
was intended to be served by the second proviso.
It is plain that s. 84 empowers a foreign
State to sue. In other words, it confers a right on the foreign State to bring
a suit, 328 whereas s. 86 imposes a liability or obligation on the Ruler of a
foreign State to be sued with consent of the Central Government, It is
remarkable that though the heading of these sections does not in terms refer to
foreign States at all, s. 84 in terms empowers a foreign State to bring a suit
in a competent Court. It is true that too much emphasis cannot be placed on the
significance of the heading of the sections; but, on the other hand, its
relevance cannot be disputed; and so, it seems to us that the Legislature did
not think that the case of a foreign State would not be included under the
heading of this group of sections.
In this connection, it is necessary to bear
in mind that ever when the Ruler of a State sues or is sued, the suit has to be
in the name of the State; that is the effect of the provision of S. 87, so that
it may be legitimate to infer that the effect of reading sections 84, 86 and 87
together is that a suit would be in the name of the State, whether it is a suit
filed by a foreign State under s. 84, or is a suit against the Ruler of a
foreign State under s. 86 As a matter of procedure, it would not be permissible
to draw a sharp distinction between the Ruler of a foreign State and a foreign
State of which he is the Ruler. For the purpose of procedure, in every case the
suit has to be in the name of a State. That is another factor which cannot be ignored.
Then in regard to the scope of the suit which
may be filed by a foreign State under s. 84, the proviso makes it clear that
the suit which can be filed by a foreign State must be to enforce a private
right vested in the Ruler of such State or in any office. -of such State in his
public capacity. It will be recalled that s. 431(b) of the Code of 1882 had
provided that the object of the suit which could be filed under s. 431 should
be to enforce the private rights of the head or of the subjects of the foreign
State. It appears that this clause gave rise to some doubt as to whether a suit
could be brought by a foreign State in respect of the private rights of the
subjects of that State; and in order to remove the said doubt, the Code of 1908
inserted the second proviso to s. 84(1) which took the place of s. 431 of the
Code of 1882. This proviso made it clear that the object of litigation by a
foreign State cannot be to enforce the right vesting in subject as such as a
private subject;
it must be the enforcement of a private right
vested in the head of a State or in any office of such State in his public
capacity. In other words, the suit which can be filed under s. 84 and which
could have been filch under s. 431 of the Code of 1882, must relate to a private
right. vested in the head of the State or of the subjects meaning some 329
public officers of the said State. The private right properly so called of an
individual as distinguished from the private right of the State, was never
intended to be the subject-matter of a suit By a foreign State under the Code
of Civil Procedure at any stage.
That takes us to the question as to what is
the true meaning of the words "private rights". In interpreting the
words "private rights", it is necessary to bear in mind the fact that
the suit is by a foreign State; and the private rights of the State must, in
the context, be distinguished from political rights. The contrast is not
between private rights or individual rights as opposed to those of the body
politic : the contrast is between private rights of the State as distinguished
from its political or territorial rights. It is plain that all rights claimed
by a foreign State which are political and teritorial in character can be
settled under International Law by agreement between one State and another.
They cannot be the; subject-matter of a suit in the municipal courts of a
foreign State. Thus, the private right to which the proviso refers is, on them
ultimate analysis, the right vesting in the State; it may vest in the Ruler of
a State or in any officer of such State in his public capacity; but it is a
right which really and in substance vests in, the State. It is in respect of
such a right that a foreign State is authorised to bring a suit under s. 84.
In Hajon Manick v. Bur Sing(1) a Division
Bench of the Calcutta High Court had occasion to consider the denotation of the
words "private rights" spoken of in s. 431, clause (b) of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1882, and it was held that the said words do not mean individual
rights as opposed to those of the body politic or State, but those private
rights of the State which must be enforced in a Court of Justice, as
distinguished from its political or territorial rights, which must, from their
very nature, be made the subject of arrangement between one State and another.
They are rights which may be enforced by a foreign State against private
individuals as distinguished from rights which one State in its political
capacity may have as against another State in its political capacity.
That takes us to s. 86. Section 86(1) with
which we are directly concerned reads thus :- "No Ruler of a foreign State
may be sued in any court otherwise competent to try the suit except with the
consent of the Central Government certified in writing by a Secretary to that
Government." (1)11 Cal. 17.
330 There is a proviso to this section with
which we are not concerned in the present appeal. Section 86(2) deals with the
question of consent which the Central Government is authorised to give, and it
lays down how the consent can be given and also provides for cases in which
such consent shall not be given. Section 86(3) refers to the question of arrest
and provides that no Ruler of a foreign State shall be arrested except with the
consent of the Central Government and no decree shall be executed against the
property of any such Ruler. Section 86(4) extends the preceding provisions of
s. 86 to the three categories of Officers specified in clauses (a), (b) and
(c).
Section 86(1) as it stood prior to the
amendment of 195 1, read thus :- "Any such Prince or Chief, and any
Ambassador or Envoy of a foreign State, may, with the consent of the Central
Government, certified by the signature of a Secretary to that Government but
not without such consent, be sued in any competent Court." So far as the
other provisions are concerned, there does not appear to be any material change
made by the Amending Act.
The form of the section and its structure
have however been altered.
Then follows s. 87 to which we have already
referred. This section provides that the Ruler of a foreign State may sue, and
shall be sued, in the name of his State. This provision of the present section
is substantially the same as in s. 87 which occurred in the Code of 1908. The
said section provided that a Sovereign Prince or Ruling Chief may sue, and
shall be sued, in the name of his State. This provision naturally conforms to
s. 86(1) as it then stood.
Section 87A(1) which has been added for the
first time by the Amending Act of 1951, prescribes the definitions of
"foreign State" and "Ruler". Section 87A(1)(a) provides
that in this Part "foreign State" means any State outside India which
has been recognised by the Central Government;
and (b) "Ruler", in relation to a
foreign State, means the person who is for the time being recognised by the
Central Government to be the head of that State.
Reverting then to S. 86, there can be no
difficulty in holding that when s. 86(1) refers to a Ruler of a foreign State,
it refers to the Ruler in relation to the said State, and means the person who
is for the time being recognised by the Central Government to be 3 31 the head
of that State. In view of the definition prescribed by s. 8 7A (1) (b), it
seems difficult to accept the argument that the expression "the Ruler of a
foreign State" under s. 86(1) can take in cases only of Rulers of foreign
States which are governed by a monarchical form of Government. In view of the
definition of a foreign Ruler, it is plain that when s. 86(1) refers to Rulers
of foreign States, it refers to Rulers of all foreign States whatever be their
form of Government. If the form of Government pre- vailing in a foreign State
is Republican, then the Ruler of the said State would be the person who is
recognised for the time being by the Central Government to be the head of that
State. In other words, the definition of a Ruler clearly and unambiguously
shows that whoever is recognised as the head of a foreign State would fall
within the description of Ruler of a foreign State under s. 86. That being so,
we do not think in reading s. 86(1), it would be permissible, to import any
terms of limitation; and unless some terms of limitation are imported in
construing s. 86(1), the argument that the head of a Republican State is not a
Ruler of that State cannot be upheld.
Besides, on principle, it is not easy to
understand why it should be assumed that the Code of Civil Procedure always
made a distinction between Rulers of foreign States governed by monarchical
form of Government and those which were governed by Republican form of
Government. Both forms of Government have been in existence for many years
past, and the Legislature which framed the relevant provisions of the Code was
aware that there are several States in which monarchical form of Government
does not prevail. Could it have been the intention of the framers of the Code
of Civil Procedure that monarchical States should be liable to be sued under s.
86(1), subject to the consent of the Central Government, in the municipal courts
of India, whereas foreign States not so governed should fall outside s. 86(1)
and thus be able to claim the immunity under International Law ? In our
opinion, no valid ground has been suggested why this question should be
answered in the affirmative.
There is one more circumstance to which we
may refer in this connection. We have already noticed that while amending the
provisions, the Amending Act of 1951 has dealt with the question of Rulers of
former Indian States separately under s. 87B, and having made some formal and
some substantial changes in the rest of the provisions, the Legislature has
introduced s' 87A which is a definition section. At the time when s. 87A(1)(b)
defined "Ruler", it must have been plain to the Legislature that 332
this definition would take in all heads of foreign States whatever the form of
government prevailing in them may be;
and so, it would not be unreasonable to hold
that the object of the definition was to make it clear that Rulers of foreign
States to which s. 86(1) applied would cover Rulers of all foreign States,
provided they satisfied the requirements of the definition of s. 87A(1)(b).
Incidentally, the construction which we are
inclined to place on s. 86(1) is harmonious with the scheme of the Code on this
point. Section 84 authorises a foreign State to sue in respect of the rights to
which its proviso refers.
Having conferred the said right on foreign
States, s. 86(1) proceeds to prescribe a limited liability against foreign
States. The limitation on the liability of foreign States to be sued is
twofold. The first limitation is that such a suit cannot be instituted except
with the consent of the Central Government certified in writing by a Secretary
to that Government. This requirement shows the anxiety of the Legislature to
save foreign States from frivolous or unjustified claims. The second limitation
is that the Central Government shall not give consent unless it appears to the
Central Government that the case falls under one or the other of clauses (a) to
(d) of s. 86(2). In other words, the Legislature has given sufficient guidance
to the Central Government to enable the said Government to decide the question
as to when consent should be given to a suit being filed against the Ruler of a
foreign State. Having provided for this limited liability to be sued, the
Legislature has taken care to save the Ruler of a foreign State from arrest,
except with the consent of the Central Government similarly certified and has
directed that no decree shall be executed against the property of any such
Ruler; that is the effect of s. 86(3).
It is true that this provision exempts the
property of any such Ruler from execution of any decree that may be passed
against a Ruler, and apparently, the High Court thought that this tends to show
that the Ruler of a foreign State within the contemplation of s. 86(1) must be
the Ruler himself and not the State. In our opinion, this view is not well-
founded. The provision that a decree passed against the Ruler of a foreign
State shall not be executed against the property of such Ruler, rather tends to
show that what is exempted is the separate property of the Ruler himself and
no*, the property of the Ruler as head of the State. A distinction is made
between the property belonging to the State of which the Ruler is recognised to
be the head, and the property belonging to the Ruler individually. We are,
therefore, satisfied 333 that s. 86(1) applies to cases where suits are brought
against Rulers of foreign States and that foreign States fall within its scope
whatever be their form of Government.
We have already indicated that whenever a
suit is intended to be brought by or against the Ruler of a foreign State, it
has to be in the name of the State, and that is how the present suit has, in
fact, been filed.
The effect of the provisions of s. 86(1)
appears to be that it makes a statutory provision covering a field which would
otherwise be covered by the doctrine of immunity under International Law. it is
not disputed that every sovereign State is competent to make its own laws in
relation to the rights and liabilities of foreign States to be sued within its
own municipal courts. Just as an independent sovereign State may statutorily
provide for its own rights and liabilities to sue and be sued, so can it
provide for the rights and liabilities of foreign States to sue and be sued in
its municipal courts. That being so, it would be legitimate to hold that the
effect of s. 86(1) is to modify to a certain extent the doctrine of immunity
recognised by International Law. This section provides that foreign States can
be sued within the municipal of India with the consent of the Central
Government and when such consent is granted as required by s. 86(1), it would
not be open to a foreign State to rely on the doctrine of immunity under
International Law, because the municipal courts in India would be bound by the
statutory provisions, such as those contained in the Code of Civil Procedure.
In substance, s. 86(1) is not merely procedural; it is in a sense a counter-
part of s. 84. Whereas s. 84 confers a right on a foreign State to sue, s.
86(1) in substance imposes a liability on foreign States to be sued, though
this liability is circumscribed and safeguarded by the limitations prescribed
by it. That is the effect of s. 8 6 (1 ).
In Chandulal Khushalji v. Awed Ritz Umar
Sultan Nawaz Jung Bahadur(1), Strachey, J., had occasion to consider this
aspect of the matter in relation to the provisions of s. 433 of the Code of
1882. What s. 433 does, said the learned Judge, "is to create a personal
privilege for sovereign princes and ruling chiefs and their ambassadors and
envoy,,.
It is a modified form of the absolute
privilege enjoyed by independent sovereigns and their ambassadors in the Courts
in England, in accordance with the principles of international law. The
difference is that while in England the privilege is unconditional, dependent
only on the will of the sovereign or his representative, in India it is
dependent upon the consent of the Governor General in Council, which can (1)
I.L.R.21 Bom. 351 at pp. 371-2- sup.CI/65---7 334 be given only under specified
conditions. This modified or conditional privilege is, however, based upon
essentially the same principle as the absolute privilege, the dignity and independence
of the ruler, which would be endangered by allowing any person to sue him at
pleasure, and the political inconveniences and complications which would be
result'. We are inclined to think that this view correctly represents the
result of the provisions of S. 433 as much as of those contained in s. 86(1).
In view of. our conclusion that s. 86(1)
applies to the present ,suit, it follows that in the absence of the consent of
the Central Government as prescribed by it, the suit cannot be entertained. ,On
that view of the matter, it is not necessary to deal with the other question as
to whether the respondents were justified in claiming absolute immunity under
International Law. It is common ground that if there is a specific statutory
provision such as is contained in s. 86(1) which allows a suit to be filed
against a foreign State subject to certain conditions, it is the said statutory
provision that will govern the decision of the question as to whether the suit
has been properly filed or not. In dealing with such a question, it is
unnecessary to travel beyond the provisions of the statute, because the statute
determines the competence of the suit.
The result is, the appeal fails and is
dismissed. In view of the fact that we are affirming the decision of the Court
of Appeal on ,a ground which did not succeed before that Court, we direct that
parties should bear their own costs throughout.
Appeal dismissed.
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