19 January 1977
Supreme Court
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NARAYANA PRABHU VENKATESWARA PRABHU Vs NARAYAN PRABHU KRISHNA PRABHU & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1763 of 1968


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PETITIONER: NARAYANA PRABHU VENKATESWARA PRABHU

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: NARAYAN PRABHU KRISHNA PRABHU & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/01/1977

BENCH: BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH BENCH: BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH RAY, A.N. (CJ) SHINGAL, P.N.

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1268            1977 SCR  (2) 636  1977 SCC  (2) 181

ACT:             Code  of Civil Procedure--s.  11  Explanations  II   and         Vl--Scope   of--Existence of  right of appeal--If a  bar  of         res-judicata.

HEADNOTE:             Explanation  II  to s. 11 C.P.C. provides that  for  the         purposes of the section, the competence of a Court shall  be         determined  irrespective of any provision as to a  right  of         appeal  from  the decision of such  Court.   Explanation  VI         provides that where persons litigate bona fide in respect of         a  private  right   claimed  in common  for  themselves  and         others, all persons interested in such right shall, for  the         purposes  of this section be deemed to claim under the  per-         sons so litigating.             The  respondents and the appellant were  brothers.   The         respondents filed a suit for partition of the family proper-         ties  in  the  Court of Additional  Sub-Judge  of  competent         jurisdiction.  The appellant on the other hand filed a money         suit  against one of the brothers in the Court of a  Munsiff         in  which he impleaded his other brothers.  Ultimately,  the         money  suit was transferred to the Court of  the  Additional         Sub-Judge, where the partition suit was Rending and both the         suits were tried together.  In appeal, the High Court  heard         and  decided both the appeals together and pronounced  sepa-         rate judgments in continuation  but under separate  headings         and  a  separate decree was prepared in  each   appeal.  The         appellant filed an appeal in this Court under Art. 133(1)(a)         of  the  Constitution before its amendment, as a  matter  of         right, against the judgment of the High Court in the  parti-         tion suit.             A preliminary objection was taken by the respondents  in         this  Court  that the appeal was barred by  res-judicata  in         that  the  appellant  did not file an   appeal  against  the         judgment and decree in the money suit.  The appellant on the         other  hand contended that neither in law nor in equity  was         he barred by res-judicata because he filed the appeal in the         partition suit as a matter of right, which was not available         to him in the money suit.         Dismissing the appeal,             HELD: The preliminary objection is supported by s. 11 of

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       the  Code  of Civil Procedure read in the light of  Explana-         tions II and VI.  [644 B]             1(a)  Section 11 enables a party to raise the  statutory         plea  of  res-Judicata if the conditions given  therein  are         fulfilled.   Section  11 contains, in statutory  form,  with         explanations,  a very salutary principle of  public  policy.         [641 C-D]             In  the instant case, the incompetence of the Court,  in         which the money suit was initially filed, to try the  parti-         tion suit did not matter when the actual hearing of both the         cases  took place in the same Court.  That Court was  compe-         tent  to try both the suits.  After the money suit had  been         transferred, the second Additional Sub-Judge actually  tried         and  decided both  of  them.  That  was enough to  make  the         difference  in  the jurisdiction of the Court in  which  the         suits were initially filed, quite immaterial.  Similarly the         High Court was competent to hear the appeals from  judgments         in both cases.  It heard and decided  the appeals  together.         [642 A-C]         Narhari  & Ors. v. Shankar & Ors. [1950] S.C.R. 754  distin-         guished.             Lortankutty   v.   Thomman  &  Anr.,  A.I.R.   1976   SC         1645=[1976] Supp. S.C.R. 74 followed.         637             Sheoparsan Singh v. Ramnandan Prasad Singh, .AIR 1916 PC         78=43 I.A. 91, Govind Bin Lakshmanshet Anjorlekar v. Dhondba         ’Ea’  V Bin Ganba’ RA ’17’ ’V’ Ta’ Mbve, ILR Vol. XV  Bombay         104  and Avanasi Gounden & Ors. v. Nachammal, ILR 29  Madras         195 referred to.         Bhugwanbutti  Chowdhrani v. A.H. Forbes ILR 28 Cal.  72  ap-         proved.             (b) The expression "former suit" in Explanation I of  s.         11  makes it clear that, if a decision is given  before  the         institution  of  the   proceeding  which  is  sought  to  be         barred  by  res-judicata, and that decision is  allowed   to         become final or becomes final by operation of law, a bar  of         res-judicata would emerge. [643 B]             (c) One of the tests in deciding whether the doctrine of         res-judicata  applies  to  a particular case or  not  is  to         determine  whether two inconsistent decrees will conap  into         existence  if it is not applied.  In a partition  suit  each         party  claiming that the property is joint asserts  a  right         and litigates under a title  which  is common to others  who         make  identical claims.  If that very issue is litigated  in         another  suit  and decided, there is no  reason  why  others         making  the  same claim cannot be held to  be  claiming  the         right in common for themselves and others. Each of them  can         be  deemed, by reason of Explanation VI, to  represent   all         those  the nature of whose claims and interests  are  common         or   identical.   To hold otherwise would  mean  that  there         would be two inconsistent decrees. [643 G-H]             In the instant case, the fact that the other suit was  a         money  suit between the appellant and one of  his  brothers,         who was also the respondent in the partition suit, does  not         make any difference to the applicability of the principle of         res-judicata.  [643 C]             Kumaravelu Chettiar & Ors. v.T.P. Ramaswamy Ayyar & Ors,         A/R 1933 PC 183 followed.             Sheodhan  Singh v. Smt. Daryao Kunwar, [1966] 3  S.C  R.         300   and  Bai Lakshmi Rani & Ors. v. Banamali Sen  &  Ors.,         [1953] S.C.R. 154 referred to.             2.  The question whether there is a bar of  res-judicata         does not depend on the existence of a right of appeal of the         same  nature against each of the  two decisions, but on  the         question  whether the same’ issue, under  the  circumstances

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       given in s. 11, has been heard and finally decided. [642  C-         D]             In  the instant case, the High Court heard  and  finally         decided both the appeals before it.  The mere fact that  the         appellant  could  come  up  to  this Court in appeal  as  of         right  by means of a certificate of fitness under the  unaa-         mended Art. 133(1)(c) in the partition suit, could not  take         away  the finality of the decision so far as the High  Court         had  determined  the money suit and no attempt was  made  to         question  the correctness or finality of that decision  even         by means of an application for special leave.  [642 D-E]             3. The appellant’s application for condonation of  delay         in  applying  for leave to appeal against the  High  Court’s         judgment in the money suit must be  dismissed.  His delay in         waking  up  to the existence of the bar of  res-judicata  is         much  too  long to be condoned.  The judgment  of  the  High         Court  based  on the admissions of the  appelant,  does  not         disclose  any  error of law so as to deserve  the  grant  of         special leave to appeal.  The partition suit was  instituted         as long ago as 1947.  If there is a case in which the  prin-         ciple  that   litigation   should have an  end  ought’to  be         applied, it is this.  [644 C-F]

JUDGMENT:             CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil  Appeal  No.   1763         of 1968.             (From the Judgment and Decree dated the 28th July,  1964         of the Kerala High Court in Appeal Suit No.. 843 of  1960).             T.C. Raghavan, Sardar Bahadur Saharya and V.B.  Saharya,         for the appellant.         T.S.  Krishnamoorthy Iyer and M.R. Pillai,.  for  Respondent         No. 1.             T.S. Krishnamoorthy, P.K. Pillai and N. Sudhakaran,  for         Respondent No. 2.         638         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             BEG,  J.  This is a defendent’s  appeal  by  Certificate         granted by the Kerala High Court under Article 133(1)(a)  of         the Constitution as a matter of course before its  amendment         because the High Court had modified a decree in a  partition         suit  and the subject matter  satisfied the requirements  of         the unamended Article 133.             The  parties to the partition  suit are descendants   of         Narayana  Prabhu  (hereinafter referred to  as  ’Narayana’).         Krishna,  the plaintiff (now dead) was the 3rd son of  Nara-         yana.  The defendant-appellant, Venkateswara, was the eldest         of the  four  sons of Narayana.  The partition suit  related         to  72  items  mentioned in  schedule  ’A’  to   the  plaint         claimed  by the plaintiff to be joint family  property.   It         appears  that  there was no dispute with regard  to  certain         items,  but, the defendant-appellant claimed other items  as         his  exclusive  property on  the ground that they  had  been         purchased  from his personal income. due to his  own  enter-         prise and exertions and ability in carrying on business. The         Trial Court had accepted the case of the defendant-appellant         that  all  items, except No. 35 and a part of  item  No.  52         which belonged, to the 3rd defendant, were the self-acquired         properties  of the defendant-appellant.  The High Court  re-         versed  this  finding on the ground that there  was  "little         reliable: evidence on record as to. the exact source of the.         fund with which the first defendant started the trade".  The         High  Court rejected the submission of the  defendant-appel-         lant  that,  when the Tobacco business  under  consideration

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       was  started,  Narayana being the Karta of the  family,  the         fact that the eldest son, Venkateswara, the defendant-appel-         lant,  was carrying on the business, raised  a   presumption         that it was the separate or self acquired business of Venka-         teswara.   The  High Court relying  on  certain  documentary         evidence, including the letter-heads showing the business as         that of "P. N. Venkateswara Prabhu & Brothers" held that the         business was joint family business.             The  partition  suit  was filed  originally  in  another         Court but was sent to the Court of the Second Additional Sub         Judge  of Alleppey in 1957, and the preliminary  decree  was         passed  on  5th  August, 1960. The High  Court  allowed  the         appeal, modifying the decree to the extent that 3/4th  share         of items 4 to 72 of the schedule, except item 35 and part of         52 standing in the name of the 3rd defendant, were held  to,         be  partible properties as part of Joint  family   business,         but it  excluded assets which came into. existence after the         filing  of  the. partition suit which operated  as  a  clear         unequivocal  expression of intention to separate.  It  also,         left the extent of mesne profits of landed properties to  be         decided in proceedings for the passing of the final decree.             It appeals that the defendant-appellant had also filed a         money suit in the Court of the Munsif only against defendant         No.  3,  one  of the four brother’s, but all  of  them  were         impleaded in the partition  suit. The money suit was, howev-         er, transferred to the file of the Additional Sub Judge  and         tried  together with the partition suit  and was   also  de-         creed  by the Additional Sub Judge of Alleppey on  the  same         date  as the partition suit.  The  plaintiff-respondent  had         appealed  against both the decrees in the High  Court.   The         two  appeals were  heard  and decided together by  the  High         Court.  The High Court,  after  pro-         639         nouncing  judgment in the partition suit, proceeded to  give         judgment,  under a new heading and number of the  appeal  in         the money suit.  It said, in this separate judgment:                           "The  suit that gave rise to. this  appeal                       has been instituted by the respondent  against                       the  appellant for money due on 14-10-1123  on                       account  of tobacco delivered to the  latter’s                       shop.  The defence was that the trades  run by                       both   the  brothers were parts of  the  joint                       family trade, and not separate to foster  such                       a  claim by the respondent on  the  appellant.                       The  court  below, having found in  the  other                       suit the shops run by the parties to belong to                       the  concerned  individuals, has  decreed  the                       suit.   As  we have reversed that  finding  in                       A.S. No. 843 of 1960 and found the shop stand-                       ing in the name of each brother to be a branch                       of  the  joint family trade.  in  tobacco  and                       directed  ascertainment  of  the  assets   and                       liabilities of the entire trade to be  settled                       as  on  2-3-1124, the date of  that  partition                       suit, this suit has to be dismissed".         The  judgments were, therefore, two. separate ones given  in         one  continuation  but under’ separate  headings.   Separate         decrees were prepared in each appeal relating to a  separate         case.             As  the defendant appellant did not seek  leave to  file         any  appeal against the High Court’s judgment and decree  in         the money suit and there is no appeal before us against  the         decree in the money suit,  a preliminary objection is  taken         on  the  ground that  the  defendant’s appeal now before  us         is barred by res-judicata.

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           Learned  Counsel for the defendant-appellant urges  that         the   two suits were different in nature and were  filed  in         different  Courts  originally so that the Court  trying  the         partition  suit  and the Court in which the money  suit  was         triable  were not Courts of coordinate jurisdiction. It  was         also.  objected that the partition suit was earlier and  the         money suit having been filed sixteen days later could not be         deemed  to be a suit decided earlier.  Furthermore,  it  was         pointed  out  that the  judgment was common.   It  was  also         urged that. all the four brothers were parties to the parti-         tion suit but the money suit was only between two brothers.             It is true that the appeals against both  the decrees of         the Trial Court were heard together in the High Court,  and,         although,  the appeal in the money suit is decided  under  a         separate. heading and the short judgment in it appears to be         practically  consequential on the judgment in the  partition         suit,  yet,  the  judgments in the two  appeals   decide   a         common issue and resulted in two decrees.             It is urged that, whereas the  defendant-appellant  had.         filed  an appeal on the strength of a certificate granted to         him as a matter of right, following upon the modification of         the decree of the Trial Court by the High Court, the defend-         ant-appellant   had no such  right of appeal in this  Court.         Hence,  it was submitted that neither in law nor  in  equity         could  the.  defendant-appellant  be.  barred  from  putting         forward his objections to the decree in the partition suit.         640             Certain  decisions were relied upon by learned   Counsel         for, the defendant-appellant Venkateswara in support of  the         contention that the plea of res-Judicata is not available as         a preliminary objection to the respondent to the hearing  of         the appeal before us in the circumstances of this case.   We         proceed to consider these cases.             Narhari  &  Ors. v. Shankar & Ors.,(1) is no  doubt  the         judgment of  the Supreme Court of India, although it was, if         one  may so put it, "the Hyderabad Wing" of it in a  transi-         tional  period when a learned Judge of this Court, Mr.  Jus-         tice  Mehr  Chand Mahajan,  presided over a bench  of  which         the  other two Members were formerly Members of His  Exalted         Highness  the  Nizam’s  Judicial  Committee.    Technically,         however, it was this Court’s judgment.  In that case,  Naik,         J. had followed a decision of the Judicial Committee of  the         Hyderabad State and held that, when there was only one  suit         and  the appeals had been disposed of by the same  judgment,         it  was  not  necessary to file two  separate  appeals.   It         elaborated the ratio of the decision as follows (at p.  757-         758):                           "It  is now well settled that where  there                       has  been  one  trial, one  finding,  and  one                       decision,  there need not be two appeals  even                       though two decrees may have been drawn up.  As                       has  been  observed  by Tek Chand  J.  in  his                       learned judgment in Mst. Lachmi v. Mst.  Bhuli                       (AIR  1927  Lah.  289)  mentioned  above,  the                       determining factor is not the  decree but  the                       matter in  controversy.  As he puts it   later                       in  his judgment, the estoppel is not  created                       by  the  decree but it can only be created  by                       the  judgment.   The question  of  resjudicata                       arises  only when there are two  suits.   Even                       when  there  are two suits, it has  been  held                       that a decision given simultaneously cannot be                       a  decision in the former suit. When there  is                       only  one suit, the question  of  res-Judicata                       does not arise at all and in the present case,

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                     both  the  decrees are in the  same  case  and                       based  on the  same  judgment, and the  matter                       decided  concerns the entire suit.   As  such,                       there is no question of the application of the                       principle  of res judicata. The same  judgment                       cannot  remain effective just because  it  was                       appealed against with a different number or  a                       copy of it was attached to a different appeal.                       The two decrees in substance are one".         It  seems to us that to be fair to confine the  ratio  deci-         dendi  of  the Hyderabad case to cases where there  is  only         one  suit.  In  the  case now before us, not only  were  the         decrees  different but the suits were different.   The  mere         fact that the judgments in  the two suits were given togeth-         er  or in continuation did not matter.  In  fact,  even   in         form. the judgment in the appeal relating to the money  suit         was  separate  from the rest of the judgment.  And,  in  any         case, there were two separate decrees.         (1) [1950] S.C.R. 754.         641             We  think that Section 11 Civil Procedure  Code  enables         the party to raise the statutory plea of res judicata if the         conditions  given  therein  are  fulfilled.   The  principle         embodied  in  the statute is not so much  the  principle  of         "estoppel by record", which the British Courts apply, as one         of  public policy, based on two maxims  derived from   Roman         jurisprudence:  firstly, interest reipublicoe ut  sit  finis         litium--it   concerns the State that there be an end to  law         suits;  and,  secondly, "nemo debet bis vexari  pro  una  et         eadem cause"--no man should be vexed twice over for the same         cause.             Sir  Lawrence Jenkings pointed out, in Sheoparsan  Singh         v. Ramnandan Prasad Singh(1), that the rule of res  judicata         "while rounded on ancient precedent, is dictated by a wisdom         which  is  for  all time". Litigation which has  no  end  or         finality  defeats its very object.  This object is  decision         of disputes or an end to each litigation.  But, if there  is         no  finality to it, the dispute cannot be said to be  really         decided  at  all.  It is the duty of the State to  see  that         disputes brought before its judicial organs by citizens  are         decided  finally as early  as possible. Hence, Section 11 of         our  Civil Procedure Code contains in statutory  form,  with         illuminating  explanations,  a very  salutary  principle  of         public  policy.  An "estoppel", even if it be  "by  record",         rests on somewhat different grounds.  Even such an  estoppel         savours  of an equity or justice created by actions of  par-         ties  the  results of which have  become  recorded  formally         behind which they are not allowed to go.             Reliance  was  also placed on Govind  Bin  Lakshmanshet-         Anjorlekar  v. Dhondba ’Ra’V Bin Ganba’ Ra’F’Ta’Mbye(2),  on         behalf  of the appellant.  Here, it was held that  decisions         in  previous  suits of the nature of small  cause  suits  in         which there was no right  of  second appeal could not  oper-         ate as res judicata in suits before  Courts  in which  ques-         tions were elaborately litigated and decided in cases  which         could  go to the High Court in second appeal.  We were  also         referred  to a Full Bench decision of the Madras High  Court         in  Avanasi  Gounden  & Ors. v. Nachamal(3),  where  it  was         similarly  held  that: "A decision in a previous suit  of  a         small  cause nature, in which  no  second appeal is  allowed         by  law, is no bar to a subsequent suit, in the same  Court,         which,  not  being  of a small cause  nature,  is  open   to         second appeal".  We have to remember that Small Cause juris-         diction   is   a limited one exercisable only  in  specified         matters.   Decisions   given beyond Jurisdiction to  try  an

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       issue cannot operate as res ]udicata.             Our  attention was drawn to explanation II  of   section         11,  on behalf of the respondents.  It reads:                           "Explanation II.  For the purposes of this                       Section,  the competence of a Court  shall  be                       determined irrespective of any provision as to                       a  right of appeal from the decision  of  such                       Court".         (1) A.I.R. 1961 P.C. 78=43 I.A. 91.         (2) I.L.R. Vol. XV Bombay 104.         (3) I.L.R. 29 Madras 195.         642           It  seems to us that section 11 itself refers to. a  Court         which actually tries the, two suits.  We think that, in  the         circumstances of the case before us, the incompetence of the         Court, in which the  money  suit was initially filed, to try         the partition suit did not matter when the actual hearing of         both  the  cases took place in the same Court.   That  Court         was,  obviously,  competent to try both the   suits.   After         the  money suit had been transferred from the Court  of  the         Munsif,  the Second Additional Sub Judge actually tried  and         decided  both of them.  This was enough to make the  differ-         ence in the jurisdictions of the Courts, in which the  suits         were   initially  filed, quite immaterial.   Similarly,  the         High  Court was competent to hear appeals from judgments  in         both.  It heard and decided the two appeals together.           So  far  as the question of appeal to this Court  is  con-         cerned,  it is true that no appeal lay as a matter of  right         against  the judgment in the appeal in the money suit,  but,         we  think  that the learned counsel for the  respondents  is         correct in submitting that the  question  Whether there is a         bar  of res judicata does not depend on the existence  of  a         right  of appeal of the same nature against each of the  two         decisions but on the question whether the same issue,  under         the  circumstances given in section 11, has been  heard  and         finally decided.  That was certainly purported to be done by         the  High  Court in both the appeals before it  subject,  of         course, to the rights of parties to  appeal.  The mere  fact         that the defendant-appellant could come up to this Court  in         appeal  as of right by means of a certificate of fitness  of         the case under the unamended Article 133(1)(c) in the parti-         tion suit, could not take away the finality of the  decision         so  far as the High Court had determined the money suit  and         no attempt of any sort was made to question the  correctness         or finality of that decision even by means of an application         for Special Leave to appeal.           Learned counsel for the respondents appears to us to  have         rightly   relied  upon  Bhugwanbutti  Chowdhrani   v.   A.H.         Forbes(1), where it was held that "in order to make a matter         res judicata it is not necessary that the two suits must  be         open to appeal in the  same  way".  He also relied on Lonan-         kutty  v.  Thomman  & Anr.(2), a recent  decision  of  three         Judges  of this Court, where Chandrachud, J.,  observed  (at         p. 1650):                            "Respondents  did  not file  any  further                       appeal  against the decree passed by the  Dis-                       trict  Court  in the appeals  arising  out  of                       their suit.  They filed a second appeal in the                       High  Court only as against the decree  passed                       by  the  District Court  in A.S.  66  of  1958                       which  arose out of the decree passed  by  the                       trial’  Court in the appellant’s suit.   Thus,                       the decision of the District Court rendered in                       the  appeal  arising out of  the  respondent’s                       suit became final and conclusive".

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                     It was also observed there:                           "The  decision of the District  Court  was                       given   in   an appeal arising out of  a  suit                       which, though instituted subse-                       (1) I.L.R. 28  Cal.  78.                       (2) A.I.R. 1976 S.C. 1645=[1976] Supp.  S.C.R.                       74.                       643                       quently, stood finally decided before the High                       Court   disposed  of the second  appeal.   The                       decision  was,  therefore, one  in  a  ’former                       suit’  within  the meaning  of   section   11,                       Explanation I, Civil Procedure Code".             The expression "former suit" according  to   explanation         I  of section 11, Civil Procedure Code, makes it clear that,         if  a decision is given before the institution of  the  pro-         ceeding  which is sought to be barred by res  judicata,  and         that  decision  is allowed to become final by  operation  of         law,  a bar of res judicata would emerge.  This  as  learned         counsel  for the respondents rightly submits,  follows  from         the decision of this Court in  Lonankutty’s case (supra).             The  only other point which we need consider is  whether         the   fact  that  the  money  suit  was  only  between   the         defendant-appellant  and one of his brothers, who was also a         respondent  in the partition suit, makes any  difference  to         the  applicability  of the  principle  of  res  judicata  in         this  case.  Learned Counsel for the appellant submits  that         the  defendant-appellant could not come within the ambit  of         Explanation  VI of section 11, Civil Procedure  Code   which         provides  as follows:                           "Where  persons  litigate  bona  fide   in                       respect  of  a public right or  of  a  private                       right  claimed in common for   themselves  and                       others,  all persons interested in such  right                       shall,  for the purposes of this  section,  be                       deemed to claim under the persons so  litigat-                       ing".         On  the other hand, learned counsel for the respondent  sub-         mits that the case of the respondents fully covered by  this         explanation   and relies on Kumaravelu Chettiar & Ors.  T.P.         Ramaswamy Ayyar & Ors. C) where it was held:                           "Explanation  6 is not confined  to  cases                       covered  by O. 1, R. 8 but extends to  include                       any  litigation in which  apart from the  Rule                       altogether, parties are entitled to  represent                       interested persons other than themselves".             We think that the submission made by the learned counsel         for  the  respondents is sound.  In a  partition  suit  each         party claiming  that the property is joint, asserts a  right         and  litigates under a title which is common to  others  who         make  identical claims.  If that very issue is litigated  in         another suit and decided we do not see why the others making         the  same  claim cannot be held to be claiming a  right  "in         common  for  themselves and others".  Each of  them  can  be         deemed, by reason of Explanation VI, to represent all  those         the  nature  of  whose claims and interests  are  common  or         identical.   If we were to  hold otherwise, it would  neces-         sarily  mean that there would be two  inconsistent  decrees.         One  of  the tests in deciding whether the doctrine  of  res         judicata applies to a particular case or not is to determine         whether two inconsistent decrees will come into existence if         it is not applied. We think this will be the case here.         (1) A.I.R. 1933 P.C. 183.         7--112SCI/77         644

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           We  need not deal with other cases of this Court  cited,         including  Sheodan  Singh v. Smt.  Daryao  Kunwar(1),  which         supports the respondents’ submissions, and Raj Lakshmi Bai &         Ors.  v. Banamali Sen & Ors.(-), which is not  directly  ap-         plicable inasmuch as that  was  a case in which the  general         principles of res judicata, and not section 11 Civil  Proce-         dure  Code, were applied.  The preliminary objection in  the         case  before  us is fully supported, for the  reasons  given         above, by section 11, Civil Procedure Code read in the light         of  the  Explanation  mentioned  above.   Consequently,  the         preliminary objection must prevail.             Learned  counsel  for the appellant,  conscious  of  the         difficulties  in  his way, filed after the  hearing  of  the         appeal  was begun before us, an application for  condonation         of  delay in applying for leave to appeal against the  judg-         ment  of  the High Court in the  money  suit.    He  submits         that,  in view of the uncertain position in law,  we  should         try  to extend equities as much as possible in his  client’s         favour.  On the other hand, learned counsel for the respond-         ents points out that  the objection based on the bar of  res         judicata  was taken as long ago as 1968 by the  respondents.         It seems to us that the delay in waking up to the  existence         of the bar on the part of the appellant is much too long  to         be condoned.  Moreover, we also find that the judgment of         the  High Court, based on the admissions of  the  appellant,         does not disclose any error of law so as to deserve grant of         special  leave  to appeal.  Indeed, in so far  as  we  could         express any opinion  at all upon the merits of the  judgment         of the High Court, based as it is upon documents  containing         admissions of the  defendant-appellant,  it seems to us that         the appellant would have a very uphill task indeed in  argu-         ing his appeal even in the partition suit.  We  may  mention         here  that the partition suit was instituted as long ago  as         1947 and was only given a new number in 1957. If there is  a         case  in which the principle that litigation should have  an         end ought to be applied, it is this on the face of facts  of         the  case apparent to us.  We, therefore, reject  the  Civil         Miscellaneous Petition No. 8585 of 1976, the application for         condonation of delay in the filing the Special Leave   Peti-         tion.  We dismiss the Civil Miscellaneous Petition No.  8586         of  1976 as well as the over-delayed special leave  petition         No. 2816 of 1976.             The  result  is that this appeal must be and  is  hereby         dismissed,  but, in the circumstances of the case, the  par-         ties will bear their own costs.         P.B.R.         Appeal dismissed.         (1) [1966] 3 S.C.R. 300         (2) [1953] S.C.R. 154.         645