Sri Dadu
Dayal Mahasabha Vs. Sukhdev Arya & Anr [1989] INSC 349 (17 November 1989)
Sharma,
L.M. (J) Sharma, L.M. (J) Ramaswami, V. (J) II
CITATION:
1989 SCR Supl. (2) 233 1990 SCC (1) 189 JT 1989 (4) 382 1989 SCALE (2)1193
ACT:
Civil
Procedure Code, 1908: Sections 115 and 15I--Civil Court-Invoking of inherent
power to correct its own proceedings--When it is misled by any of the
parties--Revision--High Court could intervene when trial court failed to
exercise jurisdiction under Section 151 Practice and Procedure.' Courts--When
misled by any of the parties--Could invoke inherent power to correct its own
proceedings.
HEAD NOTE:
The
appellant, a registered society, instituted a suit through its Secretary in
respect of an immovable property.
Afterwards,
the election of the office bearers for the Society was held and one 'X'
claiming to be the Secretary of the Society filed an application for
withdrawing the suit and the trial court allowed the same.
In the
subsequent election, one 'Y' was elected as Secretary and he filed an
application for recalling the order of withdrawal and for restoring the suit.
The application was contested and the trial court rejected the application. The
appellant challenged the order before the High Court by way of a petition under
section 115 CPC. The High Court observed that the trial court had committed
several serious errors in deciding the question as to who was the elected
Secretary of the Society on the relevant date in favour of the respondent but
held that the mistake could not be corrected.
This
appeal by special leave, is against the High Court's judgment.
On
behalf of the appellant, it was argued that the trial court failed to
appreciate that 'X' was not the elected Secretary of the Society, as was held
by the Registrar of Cooperative Societies, and that 'X' did not also succeed
before the High Court in this regard. And hence, he was not competent to
withdraw the suit. It has been contended that the error committed by the trial
court ought to have been rectified by the High Court.
234
The respondents argued that the only remedy available to the appellant was to
file a fresh suit. It was contended that the High court rightly did not decide
the dispute finally regarding election of 'X' and left it to be settled by the Civil Court.
Allowing
the appeal and remitting the matter to the trial court, this Court,
HELD:
1.1 The position is well established that a court has inherent power to correct
its own proceedings when it is satisfied that in passing a particular order it
was misled by one of the parties. [237D]
1.2 If
a party makes an application before the Court for setting aside the decree on
the ground that he did not give his consent, the court has the power and duty
to investigate the matter and to set aside the decree if it is satisfied that
the consent as a fact was lacking and the court was induced to pass the decree
on a fradulent representation made to it that the party had actually consented
to it.
However,
if the case of the party challenging the decree is that he was in fact a party
to the compromise petition filed in the case but his consent had been procured
by fraud, the court cannot investigate the matter in the exercise of its
inherent power, and the only remedy to the party is to institute a suit. 1237F-G]
1.3 So
far as the finding of the trial court that X was the elected Secretary of the
appellant Society with authority to withdraw the suit is concerned, the same
suffers from several errors and requires reconsideration. Even in the view of
the High Court that is the position, but it declined to exercise its revisional
power on the assumption that it had no jurisdiction to do so. The courts below
were, therefore, not right in holding that the application of the appellant
invoking the inherent jurisdiction of the court was not maintainable. If the
appellant's case is factually correct that X was not its elected Secretary and
was, therefore, not authorised to withdraw the suit, the prayer for withdrawing
the suit was not made on behalf of the appellant at all and the impugned order
was passed as a result of the court being misled. Such an order cannot bind the
appellant and has to be vacated. High Court should have intervened in its revisional
power on the ground that the trial court had failed to exercise ajurisdiction
vested in it by law.
[238F-G;
D-E] Sadho Saran Rai and Ors. v. Anant Rai and Ors., AIR 1923 Patna 483; Vilakathala Raman v. Vayalil Pachu,
27 Madras Law Journal Reports 172 and Basangowda
Hanmantgowda Patil and Anr. v. 235 Churchugirigowda Yogangowda and Anr., I.LR
34 Bombay 408, approved.
CIVIL
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3901 of 1981.
From
the Judgment and Order dated 22.1.1987 of the Rajasthan High Court in S.B.
Civil Revision No. 672 of 1983.
V.M. Tarkunde
and L.K. Pandey for the Appellant.
J.P. Goyal,
R.K. Gupta, K.K. Gupta, (NP) and Rajesh, (NP) for the Respondents.
The
Judgment of the Court was delivered by SHARMA, J. This appeal by special leave
is directed against the judgment of Rajasthan High Court dismissing a civil revision
application filed by the appellant in the following circumstances.
2. The
appellant, a registered Society, filed the suit out of which this appeal arises
in the court of the District Judge, Jaipur City in respect of an immovable
property through its the then Secretary which was numbered as Suit No. 11 of
1973. The counsel engaged by the appellant were Sri Satya Narain Sharma and Sri
Shyam Bihari Agarwal. The suit was later transferred to the court of Additional
District Judge No. 1, Jaipur City where it was renumbered as Suit No. 116 of 1974. After the
institution of the suit, an election of the office bearers of the Society was
held on 1.6.1973 and according to the appellant's case one Sri Laxman Das Swami
was elected as the Secretary. On 4.9.74 a prayer for withdrawing the suit was
made by one Hari Narain Swami through another lawyer claiming to have been
elected as the Secretary of the Society. In support of his claim of having been
elected as the Secretary of the Society Hari Narain Swami produced certain
documents on the basis of which the Trial Court allowed the suit to be
withdrawn.
According
to the case of the appellant, Hari Narain Swami was not elected as the
Secretary and had no locus standi to withdraw the suit. Since no notice was
given of his application for withdrawal of the suit either to the then
Secretary Laxman Das Swami or to the learned advocates Sri Satya Narain Sharma
or Sri Shyam Bihari Agarwal, through whom the suit had been instituted, none of
them had any knowledge of the order passed by the court. Later, in the next
election, another Secretary named Jeeva Nand Swami was elected, and when he 236
learnt about the fate of the suit, an application was filed for recalling the
order of withdrawal and restoring the suit to its file. The prayer was
contested and the trial court rejected the application. The appellant Society
challenged the order before the High Court by a petition under s. 1 15 of the
Code of Civil Procedure which was also dismissed by the impugned judgment.
3. The
trial court after holding that the appellant's application filed under s. 15 1
of the Code of Civil Procedure, was not maintainable, proceeded further to
consider the question as to who was the duly elected Secretary of the Society,
entitled to prosecute or withdraw the suit and accepted the case of Hari Narain
Swami. The High Court has agreed with the trial court that the application
under s. 15 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not maintainable. While
agreeing with the argument of the appellant that the trial court had committed
several serious errors in deciding the question as to who was the elected
Secretary of the Society on the relevant date in favour of the respondent the
High Court observed that the mistake could not be corrected in the present situation.
4. It
has been contended by Mr. Tarkunde, the learned counsel for the appellant, that
the application under s. 15 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for restoration
of the suit was maintainable and the error committed by the trial court while
recording the finding on the merits of the case was such which the High Court
ought to have rectified. The learned advocate representing the respondents has
strenuously argued that the trial court has no jurisdiction to recall its order
permitting the withdrawal of the suit under its inherent power and the High
Court has rightly held that the only remedy of the appellant is to file a fresh
suit. The finding recorded by the trial court on the merits of the case has
also been relied upon.
5. The
learned counsel for the appellant has challenged the correctness of the trial
court's finding in favour of the respondent's case that Hari Narain Swami had
been duly elected as the Secretary of the appellant Society and had, therefore,
full authority to withdraw the suit, on several grounds. Since we are of the
view that the case has to go back to the trial court for reconsideration of the
evidence on this point, we do not propose to deal with the argument on behalf
of the appellant in detail, except mentioning one of them. It has been stated
that a dispute, relating to the election of the Secretary of the Society, had
arisen between the parties which ultimately went before the Registrar of the
Cooperative Societies, who decided the matter in 237 favour of Laxman Das Swami
and against Hari Narain Swami. A writ petition filed thereafter by Hari Narain
Swami before the High Court (registered as C.W.P. No. 1406 of 1975) was
dismissed. It is said that the trial court failed to appreciate the impact of
the judgments of the Registrar and the High Court which has vitiated' the
impugned decision. In reply, it has been argued by the learned counsel for the
respondents that the High Court in C.W.P. No. 1406 of 1975 did not decide the
dispute finally and left it to be settled by the civil court. Beyond pointing
out that even according to the impugned judgment of the High Court the errors
in the judgment of the trial court are serious, we do not consider it
appropriate to deal in detail with the arguments of the learned counsel, as the
disputed question has to go back for reconsideration.
6. The
main question which requires consideration, however, is whether the trial court
has jurisdiction to cancel the order permitting the withdrawal of the suit
under its inherent power, if it is ultimately satisfied that Hari Narain Swami
was not the Secretary of the appellant Society and was, therefore, not entitled
to withdraw the suit. The position is well established that a court has
inherent power to correct its own proceedings when it is satisfied that in
passing a particular order it was misled by one of the parties. The principle
was correctly discussed in the judgment in Sadho Saran Rai and Others v. Anant Rai
and Others, AIR 1923 Patna 483, pointing out the distinction in cases between
fraud practised upon the court and fraud practised upon a party.
7. Let
us consider the cases in which consent decrees are challenged. If a party makes
an application before the Court for setting aside the decree on the ground that
he did not give his consent, the court has the power and duty to investigate
the matter and to set aside the decree if it is satisfied that the consent as a
fact was lacking and the court was induced to pass the decree on a fraudulent
representation made to it that the party had actually consented to it. However,
if the case of the party challenging the decree is that he was in fact a party
to the compromise petition filed in the case but his consent has been procured
by fraud, the court cannot investigate the matter in the exercise of its
inherent power, and the only remedy to the party is to institute a suit. It was
succinctly summed up in the aforementioned case that the factum of the consent
can be investigated in summary proceedings, but the reality of the consent
cannot be so investigated. The principle has been followed in this country for
more than a century. In Vilakathala Raman v. Vayalil Pachu, 27 Madras Law
Jour238 nal Reports 172, the trial court had vacated its previous order
regarding satisfaction of decree on the ground that the same was obtained by
the judgment debtor's fraud on the court. The High Court, while confirming the
order, said that in the exercise of inherent power under s. 15 1 of the Code of
Civil Procedure a court can vacate an order obtained by fraud on it. Reliance
had been placed on an old decision of Bombay High Court of 1882 and a Madras
decision of 1880. In Basangowda Hanmantgowda Patil and Others v. Churchigirigowda
Yogangowda and Another, I.L.R. 34 Bombay 408, the defendant applied to the court to set aside a compromise
decree on the ground that he had not engaged the lawyer claiming to be
representing him and had not authorised him to compromise the suit. The court
accepted his plea and ruled that it is the inherent power of every court to
correct its own proceedings when it has been misled. Similar was the view of
the Calcutta High Court in several decisions mentioned in Sadho Saran's case
(supra). The ratio has been later followed in a string of decisions of several
High Courts. The same principle applies where a suit is permitted to be
withdrawn on the basis of a prayer purported to have been made on behalf of the
plaintiff. The courts below were, therefore, not right in holding that the
application of the appellant invoking the inherent jurisdiction of the court
was not maintainable. If the appellant's case is factually correct that Hari Narain
Swami was not its elected secretary and was, therefore, not authorised to
withdraw the suit, the prayer for withdrawing the suit was not made on behalf
of the appellant at all and the impugned order was passed as a result of the
court being misled. Such an order cannot bind the appellant and has to be
vacated. The trial court was thus clearly wrong in dismissing the appellant's
application as not maintainable, and the High Court should have intervened in
its revisional power on the ground that the trial court had failed to exercise
a jurisdiction vested in it by law.
8. So
far the finding of the trial court that Hari Narain Swami was not the elected
Secretary of the appellant Society with authority to withdraw the suit is
concerned, the same suffers from several errors and requires a reconsideration.
Even in the view of the High Court that is the position, but it declind to
exercise its revisional power on the assumption that it had no jurisdiction to
do so. We, therefore, allow the appeal, set aside the impugned judgments of the
trial court and the High Court and r. emit the matter to the trial court for
reconsideration of the case on merits. The parties shall be allowed to lead
further evidence in support of their cases. The costs will abide the final
result in the litigation.
G.N.
Appeal allowed.
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