30 January 1990
Supreme Court
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SMT. PATASIBAI & ORS. Vs RATANLAL

Bench: VERMA,JAGDISH SARAN (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1043 of 1990


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PETITIONER: SMT. PATASIBAI & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RATANLAL

DATE OF JUDGMENT30/01/1990

BENCH: VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J) BENCH: VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J) KANIA, M.H.

CITATION:  1990 SCR  (1) 172        1990 SCC  (2)  42  JT 1990 (3)    68        1990 SCALE  (1)279

ACT:     Code  of Civil Procedure: Order 7 Rules 11 and Order  23 Rule  3A--Maintainability  Of suit--Issuance of  summons  by trial court-Whether a bar to trial when no triable issue  is shown to arise.

HEADNOTE:     One  Motilal  who  owned Goyal Talkies  entered  into  a partnership with respondent Ratanlal representing the  joint family  firm of M/s. Ratanlal Damdoolal and Bros.,  for  the purpose  of  running the cinema business.  Later,  the  said Motilal  together with his wife and children filed  a  civil suit for dissolution of partnership, rendition of  accounts, etc.,  against respondent Ratanlal, as defendant No. 1,  the firm  "M/s Damdoolal and Bros." as defendant No. 2, and  one Puranmal  as defendant No. 3. Motilal subsequently filed  an application  for correction of the description of  defendant No. 2 firm, which was allowed.     The suit was compromised. According to one of the  terms of  the compromise, plaintiff was to pay to defendant  Nos.1 and  2  a  sum of Rs.15,700 in full  satisfaction  of  their claim, subject to final accounting. The plaintiff paid  this sum  within the specified period and thereupon the  receiver gave  possession.  Subsequently, the Court  passed  a  final decree  dated 16.11.1959 stating that the partnership  stood dissolved, and directing defendant Nos. 1 and 2 to refund to the  plaintiff the amount of Rs.5,470 which was  the  excess amount paid by the plaintiff to them. Defendant Nos. 1 and 2 filed  an  appeal against the final decree  which  was  dis- missed,  and their second appeal in the High Court was  also dismissed on 2.12.1972.     Thereafter,  Civil  Suit No. 1699 of 1980 was  filed  by Ratanlal, respondent herein, against the appellants, who are the legal representatives of Motilal, assailing the  consent decree  after  taking  the entire  benefit  thereunder.  The reliefs claimed were for a declaration that the final decree dated 16.11.1959 was a nullity, and for possession of  Goyal Talkies, etc. The appellants resisted the suit inter alia on the  ground that it was barred by res judicata, and  further that the suit was also barred by virtue of Rule 3A Order 23, C.P.C. The Trial Court framed a 173

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preliminary  issue  regarding maintainability and  held  the suit to be maintainable. The High Court dismissed the  civil revision against that order.     Before  this  Court it was contended on  behalf  of  the appellant  that the suit was barred by virtue of Rule 3A  of Order  23 and even otherwise tile plaint averments  did  not disclose  any  cause of action in order to raise  a  triable issue.  In  reply, it was contended that Rule  3A  of  Order C.P.C., had no application since the decree assailed in  the suit was a date much prior to insertion of Rule 3A by amend- ment  with  effect from 1.2.1977; and that the  question  of examining  the frame of the suit to determine its  maintain- ability  on any other ground did not arise since the  appel- lant’s  case was based on the bar under Order 23,  Rule  3A, and no specific objection for rejection of the plaint  under order 7 Rule 1 t C.P.C., was taken earlier.     During the course of hearing of the appeal, the respond- ent filed an application for amendment of the plaint. Allowing the appeal, this Court,     HELD:  (1)  On  the admitted facts  appearing  from  the record itself, counsel for the respondent was unable to show that  all or any of the averments in the plaint  disclose  a cause of action giving rise to a triable issue. [179F]       Since  the plaint suffers from this fatal defect,  the mere issuance of summons by the Trial Court does not require that the trial should proceed even when no triable issue  is shown to arise. Permitting the continuance of such a suit is tantamount to licensing frivolous and vexatious  litigation. This can not be done. [179G-H]     (3) It being beyond dispute that the plaint averments do not  disclose a cause of action, the plaint is liable to  be rejected  under Order 7 Rule i 1, C.P.C. without going  into the applicability of Order 23 Rule 3A, C.P.C. to the present suit. [180A]       There is no ground to allow the application for amend- ment of the plaint which apart from being highly belated, is clearly an afterthought fur the obvious purpose of  averting the inevitable consequence of rejection of the plaint on the ground  that  it does not disclose any cause  of  action  or raise  any triable issue. Moreover, the proposed  amendments in the plaint are to raise two grounds which are concluded 174 by the earlier adjudication ending with dismissal of  Ratan- lal’s Second Appeal against the impugned decree. [177E-F]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1043  of 1990.     From  the  Judgment  and Order dated  10.8.1989  of  the Bombay High Court in C.R.A. NO. 521 of 1985.     V.A.  Bobde, S.D. Mudaliar. Mrs. Ranjana Bobde and  C.K. Ratnaparkhi for the Appellants. V.P. Salve, and Ms. Bina Gupta for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VERMA, J. Special Leave granted.     The  short question involved is the  maintainability  of the  suit  which gives rise to this appeal.  The  appellants contend mat the Suit is not maintainable even on the  plaint averments. The Trial Court held the suit to be  maintainable and  the High Court has dismissed the  appellants’  revision affirming that view. Hence this appeal by special leave.     The appellants are the legal representatives of  Motilal who purchased the disputed property, namely, ’Goyal Talkies’

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at Kamptee in the year 1946. The said Motilal entered into a partnership  on 31.12.1953 with respondent  Ratanlal  repre- senting  the joint family firm "M,s. Ratanlal Damdoolal  and Bros."  for  the purpose of running the cinema  business  in ’Goyal  Talkies’.  Some disputes having arisen  between  the parties,  the said Motilal together with his wife and  chil- dren  filed  Civil Suit No. 19A of 1955 on 4.8.1955  in  the Court  of Civil Judge, Class I, Nagput,  against  respondent Ratanlal  as defendant No. 1, the firm "M/s.  Damdoolal  and Bros." as defendant No. 2 and one Puranmal as defendant  No. 3.  The suit was for the dissolution of partnership,  rendi- tion of accounts and ancillary reliefs. On discovery of  the misdescription  of defendant No. 2 firm, an application  was made by the plaintiff for correction of that misdescription. The  misdescription being obvious, the Trial  Court  allowed the plaintiff’s application on 19.8.1955 permitting  defend- ant  No. 2 firm to be correctly described as "M/s.  Ratanlal Damdoolal  and Bros." instead of "M/s. Damdoolal and  Bros." It appears that the correction even though permitted was 175 not  actually incorporated in the plaint. However, the  par- ties were not misled in any manner by the misdescription  of defendant  No. 2 made initially in the plaint which is  evi- dent  from the fact that defendant No. I Ratanlal who  filed the  separate  written statement in the suit  on  behalf  of defendant No. 2 also correctly described defendant No. 2  as "Ratanlal  Damdoolal  and Bros." This suit  was  compromised between the parties and a compromise petition dated February 20,  1956  signed by the plaintiff,  Motilal,  Ratanlal  for himself  as defendant No. 1 and also on behalf of  defendant No.  2 firm, and the counsel for defendant Nos. 1 and 2  was filed  in the Trial Court. This compromise was  recorded  by the Court on 5.3.1956 after the statements of defendant No.1 Ratanlal  and  the  counsel for defendant No.  2  firm  were recorded  accepting the compromise. One of the agreed  terms was that defendant No. 3 Puranmal should be discharged  from the suit apparently because he had no interest in the  suit. According  to the terms of the compromise, plaintiff was  to pay  to  defendant Nos. 1 and 2 a sum of Rs.15,700  in  full satisfaction  of  their claim subject to  final  accounting, which  included  the  sum of Rs.2,600 paid  to  Puranmal  by defendant  Nos. 1 and 2. It was also agreed that on  payment of  this amount by the plaintiff to defendant Nos. 1  and  2 within the specified period, the partnership would be deemed to be dissolved and that defendant Nos. 1 and 2 gave up  all their  rights including the interest acquired by  them  from defendant  No. 3, Puranmal under the sale-deed  executed  in their  favour.  It was agreed that the  plaintiff  would  be entitled to possession of the talkies immediately on payment of  the amount due to defendant Nos. 1 and 2.  The  Receiver Shri  K.S. Mishra Advocate, was required to act in terms  of the compromise between the parties which required  confirma- tion  of accounts from the accountbooks of  the  partnership and  thereafter  distribution  of the  surplus  between  the plaintiff and defendant Nos. 1 and 2.     The  plaintiff  paid this sum of Rs.15,700  on  5.3.1956 well  within  the specified period;  the  receiver  rendered accounts on 19.3.1956 and an application for correction  was made  on 3.4.1956. It may be mentioned that full  compliance having been made by the plaintiff on 5.3. 1956, the receiver gave possession of the Talkies to the plaintiff on 5.3. 1956 according  to the compromise since the Only thing  remaining to  be  done thereafter was to refund to the  plaintiff  the amount of Rs.5,470 paid in excess by plaintiff to  defendant Nos.  1 and 2. Accordingly, on 16.11.1959 the  Court  passed

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the  final decree in the suit stating that  the  partnership stood dissolved with effect from 27.4.1959 and the defendant Nos.  1 and 2 were directed to refund to the  plaintiff  the amount  of Rs.5,470 which was the excess amount paid by  the plaintiff to them. 176     Notwithstanding the above facts, defendant Nos. 1 and  2 filed an appeal against the final decree dated 16.11.1959 in the  Court  of the Extra Assistant Judge, Nagpur  which  was C.A.  No. 413 of 1962 decided on 27.12. 1962. Thereafter,  a second  appeal No. 293 of 1963 was also filed by  these  de- fendants  in  the  High Court which  too  was  dismissed  on 2.12.1972.  The final decree dated 16.11.1959 based  on  the compromise  which was fully satisfied become final  inasmuch as  the defendants did not challenge the same by  a  further appeal to this Court.     Thereafter, Civil Suit No. 1699 of 1980 in the Court  of Civil Judge, Senior Division, Nagpur, was filed by  respond- ent  Ratanlal  against  the petitioners who  are  the  legal representatives of the aforesaid Motilal assailing the above consent  decree after taking the entire benefit  thereunder. The reliefs claimed in this suit are for a declaration  that the  aforesaid final decree dated 16.11. 1959 passed on  the basis  of the order dated 5.3.1956 in Civil Suit No. 19A  of 1955  by  the  Civil Judge, Senior Division,  Nagpur,  is  a nullity;  that  the partnership under  the  partnership-deed dated  31.12.1953  between  the said  Ratanlal  and  Motilal continues  to subsist; that Ratanlal is entitled to  posses- sion  of  the said Goyal Talkies; and  the  other  ancillary reliefs.  This suit was contested by the petitioners,  inter alia on the ground that it was barred by res judicata by the earlier  adjudication between the parties and also  that  it was  not  maintainable. It would suffice to say  that  as  a result of the High Court’s direction, the Trial Court framed preliminary issue regarding maintainability of the suit  and by  its order dated 15.4.1985, it held the suit to be  main- tainable. On behalf of the petitioners the suit was  claimed to  be barred also by virtue of Rule 3A of Order 23,  C.P.C. The Trial Court rejected these contentions and held the suit to  be maintainable. The petitioners then preferred a  Civil Revision  in the High Court which has been dismissed by  the Order dated 10.8.1989. Hence this appeal by special leave.     The  contention of Shri V.A. Bobde, learned counsel  for the  appellant is that the suit is barred by virtue of  Rule 3A  of Order 23, C.P.C. and even otherwise the plaint  aver- ments do not disclose any cause of action in order to  raise a  triable  issue. He also contended that even  if  Rule  3A inserted  in Order 23, C.P.C. by the C.P.C.  Amendment  Act, 1976 with effect from 1.2.1977 does not apply to the present suit  challenging the decree passed prior to the  amendment, this  suit is barred also in accordance with  the  unamended provision  existing  earlier.  In reply,  Shri  V.P.  Salve, learned counsel for the respondent contended that Rule 3A of Order  23,  C.P.C. has no application since the  decree  as- sailed in the suit is of a date much prior to insertion of    177 Rule  3A  by amendment with effect from 1.2. 1977.  He  also contended  that the question of examining the frame  of  the suit  to determine its maintainability on any  other  ground does  not arise since the petitioners case was based on  the bar under Order 23, Rule 3A, C.P.C., which too was an objec- tion  raised  after the filing of the written  statement  in which  the plea of res judicata had been taken. However,  in all fairness Shri Salve made no attempt to contend that  the suit as framed raises any triable issue on the basis of  the

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only grounds on which the decree dated 16.11.1959 is alleged to  be a nullity. He urged only two additional grounds,  not pleaded in the existing plaint, which were raised unsuccess- fully  on  behalf  of the present respondent  in  the  First Appeal  and the Second Appeal against the compromise  decree to  contend that the suit is triable. He also urged that  no specific objection for rejection of the plaint under Order 7 Rule 11 C.P.C. was taken earlier and, therefore, the  matter be remanded for a fresh consideration on this basis.     To avoid protracting this litigation any longer, we gave opportunity to learned counsel for the respondent to prepare the case on this point. Shri Salve then filed an application for  amendment of the plaint on the next day in any  attempt to  plead the additional grounds on which alone  he  claimed the suit to be triable.     We may first dispose of the application for amendment to the  plaint filed by Shri Salve on January 12,  1990  during the  course  of hearing of the appeal. We do  not  find  any ground  to  allow this application which  apart  from  being highly belated, is clearly an after-thought for the  obvious purpose of averting the inevitable consequence of  rejection of  the plaint on the ground that it does not  disclose  any cause  of action or raise any triable issue.  Moreover,  the proposed  amendments  in the plaint, as summarised  by  Shri Salve,  are to raise two grounds which are concluded by  the earlier  adjudication  ending with dismissal  of  Ratanlal’s Second Appeal against the impugned decree. The first is  the consequence  of rejection of the plaint under Order 7,  Rule 11, C.P.C. in the earlier suit on 26.3.1959 and its  revival on  payment of court-fee by plaintiff, Motilal, in terms  of that order itself. It is sufficient to mention that the High Court’s  order dismissing the Second Appeal arising  out  of that  decree  considers and rejects this argument  and  that order has become final between the parties since it was  not challenged thereafter. The second point relates to  delivery of  possession  of  the Talkies on  5.3.1956  to  plaintiff, Motilal,  which is alleged to have been made under  a  wrong procedure.  The facts narrated above clearly  indicate  that delivery of possession by the 178 Receiver, Shri K.S. Mishra, Advocate, to plaintiff, Motilal, was  in pursuance of the Court’s order dated 5.3.1956  after plaintiff Motilal had already deposited the sum of Rs.15,700 which was really in excess of the amount required to be paid by  the plaintiff, Motilal, to. defendant Nos. 1 and  2  re- sulting  in subsequent refund of Rs.5,470 to  plaintiff  and the express compromise between parties which was accepted by Ratanlal  in his statement recorded by court on 22.2.  1956. This  contention also was rejected in the earlier  adjudica- tion  ending with the High Court’s dismissal of  the  Second Appeal which has become final. Moreover, this appeal is  not against that decision of the High Court. There is no  ground to allow the belated attempt to amend the plaint for  taking these grounds. The application for amendment is,  therefore, rejected.     We  do not consider it necessary to decide the  applica- bility  of Rule 3A of Order 23, C.P.C. to the  present  suit since  the  matter can be disposed of  even  otherwise.  The plaint  averments  specify the grounds on which  the  decree dated 16.11. 1959 is alleged to be nullity. The question is: whether  any of these grounds raises a triable issue in  the suit or in other words does the plaint disclose any cause of action?  The  specific  case of the  respondent  as  clearly mentioned  in Para 3 of the impunged order dated 10.8.  1989 of the High Court is as under:

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"The  plaintiff has never claimed that some fraud,  coercion or  misrepresentation is played. On the other hand, he  says that  due  to the lapses while deciding the  matter,  decree passed by the Court below has become a nullity. It  is, therefore, clear that the respondent/plaintiff  does not challenge validity of the decree dated 16.11.1959 on the ground of fraud, coercion or misrepresentation but merely on the basis of lapses in deciding the earlier suit which  have been specifically mentioned in para 6 of the plaint. It  is, therefore,  only on these limited grounds that the  question of maintainability of the present suit has to be decided.     We shall, therefore, now refer to the grounds  mentioned in  para 6 of the plaint which alone are relied on  to  dis- close  a cause of action for the suit. The first  ground  of nullity  averred in para 6 of the plaint is that the  decree was  passed against a non-existent person --"M/s.  Damdoolal and  Bros." It is not the respondent’s case that "M/s.  Dam- doolal  and  Bros." is a legal entity  distinct  from  "M/s. Ratanla Damdoolal and Bros." so that the decree was  against another  person As earlier stated, in the  written-statement filed by respondent Ratan- 179 lal, the description of defendant No. 2 was correctly  given by  respondent Ratanlal himself as "M/s. Ratanlal  Damdoolal and  Bros." and not "M/s. Damdoolal and Bros." Moreover,  an order  dated 19.8. 1955 was made by the trial court  permit- ting  the correction to be made even though it was not  duly incorporated  in  the plaint thereafter. It  is  significant that  the first appeal and the second appeal  filed  against the  compromise decree made by the respondent in  which  the firm  as  one of the appellants was correctly  described  as "M/s. Ratanlal Damdoolal and Bros." and not "M/s.  Damdoolal and Bros". The decree was, therefore, against "M/s. RatanIal Damdoolal  and  Bros."  and this is how  it  was  admittedly understood  throughout by the respondent himself who  repre- sented the firm at every stage of the earlier suit till  the final  decision by the High Court, describing the firm  cor- rectly as "M/s. Ratanlal Damdoolal and Bros." Obviously this ground is non-existent.     The  next ground of nullity pleaded is that  the  decree does  not  direct discharge of defendant  No.  3,  Puranmal. Admittedly, no relief was claimed or granted against defend- ant  No.  3, Puranmal who was treated by all to  be  only  a formal party. This ground also is, therefore,  non-existent. The next ground is that there is no consideration for  aban- donment of the interest of Puranmal which renders the corre- sponding term void. Admittedly, the terms of compromise show payment of Rs.2,600 to Puranmal and execution of a sale-deed by  Puranmal in favour of defendant Nos. 1 and 2  who  alone thereafter remained the interested parties. This is how Shri Salve,  learned  counsel for the respondent  summarised  the entire grounds of nullity pleaded in the plaint.     On the admitted facts appearing from the record  itself, learned counsel for the respondent, was unable to show  that all or any of these averments in the plaint disclose a cause of  action  giving rise to a triable issue.  In  fact,  Shri Salve was unable to dispute the inevitable consequence  that the plaint was liable to be rejected under Order 7 Rule  11, C.P.C. on these averments. All that Shri Salve contended was that the Court did not in fact reject the plaint under Order 7 Rule 11, C.P.C. and summons having been issued, the  trial must  proceed. In our opinion, it makes no  difference  that the Trial Court failed to perform its duty and proceeded  to issue  summons without carefully reading the plaint and  the High  Court  also overlooked this fatal  defect.  Since  the

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plaint suffers from this fatal defect, the mere issuance  of summons  by the Trial Court does not require that the  trial should proceed even when no triable issue is shown to arise. Permitting  the continuance of such a suit is tantamount  to licensing frivolous and vexatious litigation. This cannot be done. 180     It being beyond dispute that the plaint averments do  no disclose  a  cause  of action, the plaint is  liable  to  be rejected  under Order 7 Rule 11, C.P.C. without  going  into the applicability of Order 23 Rule 3A, C.P.C. to the present suit.  Having reached this conclusion, it is unnecessary  to adopt  the technical course of directing the Trial Court  to make  the consequential order of rejecting the  plaint  and, instead, we adopt the practical course of making that  order in  this  proceeding itself to avoid any needless  delay  in conclusion of this futile litigation.     Consequently, the appeal is allowed. The impugned orders of the Trial Court and the High Court holding the suit to be maintainable are set aside and the plaint is rejected  under Order 7 Rule 11, C.P.C. The respondent shall pay the  appel- lants’ costs throughout. R.S.S.                                 Appeal allowed. 181