12 March 1980
Supreme Court
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VISHESH KUMAR Vs SHANTI PRASAD

Bench: PATHAK,R.S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2844 of 1979


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PETITIONER: VISHESH KUMAR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SHANTI PRASAD

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/03/1980

BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. BENCH: PATHAK, R.S. KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:  1980 AIR  892            1980 SCR  (3)  32  1980 SCC  (2) 378  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1980 SC1575  (1,2,4)  F          1987 SC 203  (22)  RF         1987 SC2323  (3,4,6,10,13)  E          1988 SC 812  (8,12,15,18,21,29)

ACT:      Code  of   Civil  Procedure-S.   115-State   amendments bifurcated revisional  jurisdiction between  High Court  and District   Court-High    Court-If    possesses    revisional jurisdiction from  an order  of District  Judge disposing of revision petition.      Provincial  Small   Cause  Courts  Act-Section  25-High Court-If possesses  jurisdiction under  section  115  C.P.C. against an  order of  District Judge under section 25 of the Act disposing of a revision petition.

HEADNOTE:      Section 115  of the  Code of Civil Procedure confers on the High Court of a State power to remove any jurisdictional error committed  by a  subordinate court  in cases where the error  cannot  be  corrected  by  resort  to  its  appellate jurisdiction. From its inception there was increasing resort to the  revisional jurisdiction  of the  High Court under s. 115. To  alleviate the  burden of  arrears  and  reduce  the volume of  litigation which  had  reached  an  insupportable point, s.  115 was  amended by  successive state amendments, each amendment  attempting to  close the  gap  left  by  its predecessor.    The    amendments    conferred    revisional jurisdiction both  on the  High Court and the District Court each enjoying  mutually  exclusive  revisional  powers.  The consistent object  behind the  successive amendments  was to divide the  work load of revision petitions between the High Court  and   the  District   Court  and   decentralise   the jurisdiction. A  proviso was  added to  s. 115  by the  U.P. Civil Laws Amendment Act, 1973 declaring that "in respect of cases.......arising out  of original  suits of any valuation decided by  the District Court the High Court alone shall be competent to make an order under this section."      The Code  of  Civil  Procedure  (Amendment)  Act,  1976 superseded  the   scheme  of   bifurcation   of   revisional jurisdiction  with  effect  from  1st  February  1977.  With certain modifications  the position  reverted to what it was

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under the  original s.  115. An  exception was  made where a revision petition  under s.  115  had  been  admitted  after preliminary hearing  before  1st  February  1977;  it  would continue to  be governed  by s.  115 as it stood before that date. But  the Code  of Civil Procedure (U.P. Amendment) Act 1978 substantially restored the status quo ante.      Section 25 of the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act was amended from time to time in its application to the State of U.P. The  first amendment substituted the District Judge for the High  Court. A  further amendment  made in  1972 added a proviso which  declared that in relation to any case decided by a  District Judge or Additional District Judge exercising jurisdiction of  a Judge  of Small Causes Court the power of revision under s. 25 would vest in the High Court. 33      The two  questions that  fell for  consideration were : (i)  whether   the  High   Court  possesses  the  revisional jurisdiction under  s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure in respect of  an order  of  the  District  Court  under  s.115 disposing of  a revision  petition and (ii) whether the High Court possesses revisional jurisdiction under s. 115 against an order  of District  Court under  s. 25  Provincial  Small Cause Courts Act disposing of a revision petition, ^      HELD :  The High  Court is  not vested  with revisional jurisdiction under  s. 115  Code of Civil Procedure over the revisional order  made by  the  District  Court  under  that section. [40 H]      (a) To  recognise a  revisional power in the High Court over the revisional order passed by the District Court would plainly defeat  the object  of the  legislative scheme.  The intent behind  the bifurcation of jurisdiction-to reduce the number of  revision petitions  filed in the High Court-would be frustrated.  The scheme  would lose  its  meaning.  If  a revision petition is permitted to the High Court against the revisional order of the District Court arising out of a suit of a  value less than Rs. 20,000 a fundamental contradiction would be  allowed to  invade and  destroy  the  division  of revisional power  between the  High Court  and the  District Court, for  the High  Court would  then enjoy jurisdictional power in  respect of  an order  arising out  of a  suit of a valuation of below Rs. 20,000/- [39 G-H]      (b) What  the proviso introduced in s. 115 by the Civil Laws Amendment Act, 1973, stated was that no matter what the valuation of  the original  suit, if  a case  arising out of such suit  was decided by the District Court, the case would be amenable  to the revisional power of the High Court. What is covered  by the  substantive provision  are cases arising out of  original suits  of a  value of Rs. 20,000/- or more. The other  category covered  by the  proviso  would  include those instances  where an original suit, although of a value making it  triable by a court subordinate, is transferred to the District  Court for trial. Orders passed by the District Court in  such a  suit could constitute a case decided by it and amenable  to the revisional power of the High Court. The test incorporated  in the  proviso is the fact that the case has been decided by the District Court. The valuation of the suit is  irrelevant. The  proviso  cannot  be  construed  to include the  case  of  a  revisional  order  passed  by  the District Court for that would be in direct conflict with the fundamental structure  itself  of  section  115.  A  proviso cannot be  permitted by  construction to  defeat  the  basic intent expressed in the substantive provision. [40 C-F]      M/s. Jupiter Fund (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Dwarka Diesh Dayal and others A.I.R. 1979 All. 218 approved.

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    2. (a)  An order  passed under  s. 25 of the Provincial Small Cause  Courts Act  by a District Court is not amenable to the  revisional jurisdiction  of the  High Court under s. 115 of the C.P.C. [42 F]      (b) An  examination of  the several  provisions of  the Provincial Small  Cause Courts  Act indicates  that it  is a self-sufficient code  so  far  as  the  present  enquiry  is concerned. The Legislature clearly intended that a decree or order made  by a  Court of  Small  Causes  should  be  final subject only  to correction  by the  remedies provided under the Provincial  Small Cause  Courts Act. All the indications contained in  the Act  point to  the conclusion  that a case falling 34 within the  Provincial Small  Cause  Courts  Act  was  never intended to  be subject to the remedies provided by the Code of Civil  Procedure. By way of abundant caution, s. 7 of the Code made  express provision  barring the application of ss. 96 to  112 and  115 of  the Code to courts constituted under the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act. Section 7 of the Code merely embodies  the general  principle  against  resort  to remedies outside  the Provincial  Small  Cause  Courts  Act. Although the  court of  the District  Judge is  not a  court constituted under the Act the general principle continues to take effects  No change  in the  principle was brought about merely because  revisional power  under s.  25,  before  the proviso was  added, was now entrusted to the District Judge. The  legislative  intention  behind  the  amendment  was  to relieve  the   High  Court   of  the  burden  of  exercising revisional jurisdiction  in respect  of cases  decided under the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act. Therefore the central principle continues  to hold,  notwithstanding the amendment effected in s. 25, that the hierarchy of remedies enacted in the Provincial  Small Cause Courts Act represents a complete and final  order of  remedies, and  it is  not  possible  to proceed outside  the Act  to  avail  of  a  superior  remedy provided by another statute. [4] E-42 A-D]      Bimla Rani  Kohli v. M/s. Bandu Motor Finance Pvt. Ltd. A.I.R. 1972 All. 342; over-ruled.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2844 of 1979.      Appeal by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and  Order dated  17-8-1979  of  the  Allahabad  High  Court  in  Civil Revision No. 1273 of 1976.      Pramod Swarup for the Appellant.      N. K. Agarwal for the Respondent (Amicus Curiae).      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      PATHAK, J.  This appeal  by special  leave and the four associated special leave petitions question the dismissal by the High Court of Allahabad of five revision petitions filed under Section  115, Code  of Civil  Procedure, on the ground that they are not maintainable.      Although the five cases before us must be considered in the context  of their  individual facts,  it is desirable to appreciate  the   relevant   jurisdictional   structure   of revisional power  enjoyed by  the High  Court from  time  to time. In  1970, the  provisions of  s. 115,  Code  of  Civil Procedure, read :      "115. Revision : The High Court may call for the record of any  case which has been decided by any court subordinate to such High Court, and in which no appeal lies thereto, and

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if such court subordinate appears :      (a)  to have  exercised a jurisdiction not vested in it           by law, or      (b)  to have exercised a jurisdiction so vested, or 35      (c)  to have  acted in the exercise of its jurisdiction           illegally with material irregularity, the High  Court may  make such order in the case as it deems fit."      A schematic analysis of the judicial hierarchy within a State indicates  that the  High Court,  as the apex court in the hierarchy, has been entrusted, not only with the supreme appellate power  exercised within  the State  but  also,  by virtue of s. 115, the power to remove, in order to prevent a miscarriage of  justice, any  jurisdictional error committed by a subordinate court in those cases where the error cannot be corrected  by resort  to its  appellate jurisdiction. The two salient features of revisional jurisdiction under s. 115 are, on  the one  hand, the closely limited grounds on which the court  is permitted  to interfere  and on the other, the wide expanse  of discretion  available to the court, when it decides to  interfere, in  making an  appropriate order. The intent is  that so  serious an error as one of jurisdiction, if committed  by a  subordinate  court,  should  not  remain uncorrected, and  should be removed and the record healed of the  infirmity   by  an   order  shaped  to  re-instate  the proceeding within  the proper jurisdictional confines of the subordinate court.  It is  a power  of superintendence,  and fittingly it  has been  conferred in terms enabling the High Court to  exercise it,  not only  when moved by an aggrieved person, but  also suo motu. While considering the nature and scope  of  the  revisional  jurisdiction,  it  is  necessary however, to advert to prime circumstance that in civil cases the jurisdiction  has been entrusted to the highest court of the State, demonstrating that broadly the order under s. 115 is to  be regarded,  in the  absence of  anything else, as a final order within the State judiciary.      From its  inception there  was increasing resort to the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court under s. 115. Over the years  the volume of litigation reached an insupportable point in  the pending  docket of the Court. To alleviate the burden, a  pattern of  decentralisation of  revisional power was adopted  and s.  115 was  amended  by  successive  State amendments, each  attempting to  close the  gap left  by its predecessor. In  its meandering  course from stage to stage, this is how s. 115 read :      1. From 7th April, 1970 :      By virtue  of s.  3, U.P.  Civil Laws  (Amendment) Act, 1970, s. 115 was amended and the result was that :           (i) The  High  Court  had  exclusive  jurisdiction under s.  115 in  a case  arising out of an original suit of the value of Rs. 20,000 and above; and 36           (ii) The  High Court  and the  District Court  had jurisdiction under s. 115 concurrently in other cases.      2. From 20th September, 1972:      S. 6,  U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1972 amended s. 115 further with effect from 20th September, 1972. Later, s. 115 was  amended by  s. 2,  U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1973 in  its application  to Uttar  Pradesh, retrospectively with effect from 20th September, 1972. In consequence:           (i)   The    High   Court    possessed   exclusive      jurisdiction under  s. 115  in  cases  arising  out  of      original suits  of the  value of  Rs. 20,000 and above,      including such  suits instituted before 20th September,

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    1972:           (ii)  The   District  Court   possessed  exclusive      jurisdiction under  s. 115 in any other case, including      a case  arising out  of  an  original  suit  instituted      before 20th September, 1972.      Provided that  in respect  of cases decided before 20th September, 1972  and also  all cases arising out of original suits of  any valuation,  decided by the District Court, the High Court  alone was competent to exercise revisional power under s. 115.      S.  2(e),  U.P.  President’s  Acts  (Re-enactment  with Modifications)  Act,  1974  repealed  the  U.P.  Civil  Laws (Amendment)  Act,  1973,  and  re-enacted  it  with  certain modifications  which,  however,  for  the  purposes  of  the present case are immaterial.      3. From 1st February, 1977:      S. 43,  Code of  Civil Procedure  (Amendment) Act, 1976 was enacted  by Parliament  and amended  s. 115  with effect from 1st  February, 1977 making substantial changes therein. Section  97(1)  of  the  Amendment  Act  provided  that  any amendment made,  or provision inserted, in the Code of Civil Procedure by  a State  Legislature before  the 1st February, 1978 would  stand repealed  except insofar as such amendment or provision  was consistent with the Code as amended by the said Amendment  Act. As  the Code  now amended  provided for revisional jurisdiction  in the High Court alone, the scheme embodied in s. 115 by the successive U.P. Amendment Acts was plainly inconsistent  with the  Code  as  now  amended,  and therefore stood  repealed, the position reverting to what it was under  the original  s. 115  before its amendment by the U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1970. But s. 97(2) provided that s.  115 as now amended by the Amendment Act, 1976 would not apply  to nor  affect any  proceeding for revision which had been admitted, after 37 preliminary hearing,  before 1st  February, 1977  and  every such proceeding  for revision  would be disposed of as if s. 43  had  not  come  into  force.  The  proviso  was  without prejudice to  the generality  of the  provisions  of  s.  6, General Clauses Act, 1897. In the result :      (i) The  High Court had exclusive jurisdiction under s. 115 in  a revision  petition filed  on and  after that date, irrespective of  the valuation  of the suit out of which the case arose :      (ii) A  revision petition  under s.  115 which had been admitted, after  preliminary hearing,  before 1st  February, 1977 would  continue to  be governed  by s.  115 as it stood before that date.      4. From 1st August, 1978:      Finally s.  3, Code  of Civil  Procedure (Uttar Pradesh Amendment), Act,  1978, which  was deemed  to have come into force on 1st August, 1978, amended s. 115 again and restored the bifurcation  of revisional jurisdiction between the High Court and the District Court. Accordingly now:      (i) The  High Court alone had jurisdiction under s. 115 in cases  arising out of original suits or other proceedings of the  value of  Rs. 20,000 and above, including such suits or other proceedings instituted before 1st August, 1978;      (ii) The District Court alone has jurisdiction under s. 115 in  any other  case, including  a case arising out of an original suit  or other  proceedings instituted  before  1st August, 1978;      (iii) The  High Court  has jurisdiction under s. 115 in respect of  cases, arising  out of  original suits  or other proceedings of any valuation, decided by the District Court.

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    (iv) A  revision proceeding  pending immediately before 1st August,  1978 of  the nature  in which  a District Court would exercise  revisional power  under s. 115 as amended by the Amendment, Act, 1978 if pending :      (a) in  the District  Court, would  be decided  by that court as  if the  Amendment Act of 1978 were in force at all material times ;      (b) in  the High  Court, would  be decided  by the High Court as  if the  Amendment Act  of 1978  had not  come into force.      The submissions made by learned counsel before us cover a wide field, but in the main, two questions arise :      (1)  Whether   the  High   Court  possesses  revisional jurisdiction under  s.  115,  Code  of  Civil  Procedure  in respect of  an order  of the  District Court  under  s.  115 disposing of a revision petition ? 38      (2)  Whether   the  High   Court  possesses  revisional jurisdiction under  s. 115  against an order of the District Court  under  s.  25,  Provincial  Small  Cause  Courts  Act disposing of a revision petition ?      As regards  the first question, it will be noticed that a revisional power was formerly entrusted exclusively to the highest court  in the  state,  the  High  Court.  The  State amendments now  divided it  between the  High Court  and the District Court.  The amendment effect by the U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1970 conferred exclusive jurisdiction under s. 115  in the  High Court  in cases arising out of original suits of  the value  of Rs. 20,000/- and above, and in other cases the  revisional jurisdiction  was concurrently  shared between the  High Court  and  the  District  Court.  It  was apparently supposed  that the  average litigant would prefer the less expensive and more convenient forum of the District Court. The  measure, it  seems, did  not  bring  the  relief expected, and  the State  Legislature found it necessary, by enacting the U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1972 to make a clear-cut division  of jurisdiction  between the  High Court and the  District Court,  resulting in  exclusive revisional jurisdiction to  the High  Court in  cases  arising  out  of original suits  of the  value of Rs. 20,000/- and above, and exclusive jurisdiction under s. 115 to the District Court in other cases.  There was  a sharp  bifurcation of  revisional jurisdiction, and  the High  Court and  District  Court  now enjoyed mutually  exclusive revisional powers. A controversy arose whether  a revisional  order under  s. 115 made by the District Court  was final  or was  itself amendable  to  the revisional power  of the  High Court under the same section. The point  was considered  by a full Bench of the High Court in Har Parasad Singh and others v. Ram Swarup and others and it was  held that no such revision petition was maintainable before the High Court. Further State amendments were made to s. 115  without materially disturbing the division of power. But a  proviso added  to s.  115  by  the  U.P.  Civil  Laws (Amendment) Act, 1973, followed by the U.P. President’s Acts (Re-enactment with Modifications) Act, 1974 stated :      "Provided that  in respect  of cases decided before the      20th day of September, 1972, and also all cases arising      out of  original suits  of any valuation decided by the      District Court, the High Court alone shall be competent      to make an order under this section." The proviso  reopened the  controversy  whether  a  revision petition lay  to the  High Court  against a revisional order passed by the Dis- 39 trict Court,  and on  a difference  of opinion  between  two

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learned judges  a third  learned judge of the Allahabad High Court now  held in Phool Wati and others v. Gur Sahai that a revision petition would lie.      The Code  of Civil  Procedure  (Amendment)  Act,  1976, however, superseded  the scheme of bifurcation of revisional jurisdiction with  effect from  1st February, 1977 and, with certain modification  the position  reverted to  what it was under the original s. 115. In other words, the entire sphere of revisional  jurisdiction was  restored to the High Court, no such  power being  now vested  in the  District Court. An exception was  made where  a revision  petition under s. 115 had been  admitted, after  preliminary hearing,  before  Ist February, 1977;  it would  continue to be governed by s. 115 as it  stood before  that date.  The situation  lasted  only briefly, for on 1st August, 1978 the Code of Civil Procedure (Uttar Pradesh  Amendment) Act,  1978 substantially restored the status quo ante.      The controversy whether it is open to the High Court to exercise revisional  power in  respect of a revisional order under  s.   115  of   the  District  Court  presents  little difficulty. The  basis for  determining that  question flows from the  principle incorporated  in the  bifurcation of the revisional jurisdiction.  And legislative  history comes  to our  aid.   The  consistent  object  behind  the  successive amendments was to divide the work load of revision petitions between  the   High  Court   and  the   District  Court  and decentralise that  jurisdiction. That  purpose was sought to be achieved  by classifying  all  cases  into  two  mutually exclusive categories  depending on the valuation of the suit out  of   which  they  arose.  In  determining  whether  the Legislature intended a further revision petition to the High Court,  regard  must  be  had  to  the  principle  that  the construction given  to a  statute should  be such  as  would advance the  object of  the  legislation  and  suppress  the mischief sought  to be  cured by  it. It seems to us that to recognise a  revisional power  in  the  High  Court  over  a revisional order  passed by the District Judge would plainly defeat the  object of  the legislative  scheme.  The  intent behind the  bifurcation of jurisdiction-to reduce the number of revision  petitions filed  in  the  High  Court-would  be frustrated. The  scheme would,  in large  measure, lose  its meaning. If  a revision  petition is  permitted to  the High Court against  the revisional  order of  the District  Court arising out  of a  suit of a value less than Rs. 20,000/-, a fundamental contradiction  would be  allowed to  invade  and destroy the  division of  revisional power  between the High Court and the District Court, for 40 the High  Court would  then enjoy  jurisdictional  power  in respect of  an order  arising out  of a  suit of a valuation below Rs. 20,000/-. That was never intended at all.      In  Phoolwati   (supra),  considerable  importance  was attached to  the proviso  introduced in  s. 115  by the U.P. Civil Laws  Amendment Act,  1973. The  proviso declared that "in respect of...... all cases arising out of original suits of any  valuation decided  by the  District Court,  the High Court alone  shall be  competent to make an order under this section". What it said was that no matter what the valuation of the  original suit, be it Rs. 20,000/- and above or below Rs. 20,000/-, if a case arising out of such suit was decided by the  District Court,  the case  would be  amenable to the revisional power  of the High Court. We are already familiar with the  category of  cases where  the  High  Court  wields revisional jurisdiction  over cases  arising out of original suits of  a value  of Rs.  20,000/- or  more.  That  is  the

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category already  covered by the substantive provision in s. 115. The other category covered by the proviso would include those instances, for example where an original suit although of a  value making  it triable  by a  court  subordinate  is transferred to  the District  Court for trial. Orders passed by the District Court in such a suit could constitute a case decided by  it and  amenable to  the revisional power of the High Court. What must be noted is that the test incorporated in the proviso is the fact that the case has been decided by the District Court. The valuation of the suit is irrelevant. But the proviso cannot be construed to include the case of a revisional order passed by the District Court for that would be in  direct conflict with the fundamental structure itself of s.  115 evidencing that a mutually exclusive jurisdiction has been  assigned to  the High Court and the District Court within  its   terms.  A   proviso  cannot  be  permitted  by construction to  defeat the  basic intent  expressed in  the substantive  provision.   Har  Prasad   Singh  (supra)   and Phoolwati (supra)  were considered  by a  Full Bench  of the High Court  in M/s  Jupiter Fund (Pvt.) Ltd. v. Dwarka Diesh Dayal and  others and in our judgment the High Court rightly laid down  there that  the phrase  "case arising  out of  an original suit"  occurring in  s. 115  does not  cover orders passed in revision.      We are  of opinion  on the first question that the High Court is  not vested  with revisional  jurisdiction under s. 115, Code of Civil Procedure-over a revisional order made by the District Court under that section. 41      We shall  now advert  to the second question, whether a revisional  order   of  the  District  Court  under  s.  25, Provincial Small  Cause  Courts  Act,  is  amenable  to  the revisional jurisdiction of the High Court under s. 115, Code of Civil Procedure. Section 25 originally provided:      "25. The  High Court,  for the  purpose  of  satisfying      itself that  a decree or order made in any case decided      by a  Court of  Small Causes  was according to law, may      call for  the case  and pass  such order  with  respect      thereto as it thinks fit." Section 25  was amended  in its  application to the State of Uttar  Pradesh  from  time  to  time.  The  first  amendment substituted the  District Judge  for the High Court, so that the District Judge became the repository of revisional power instead of  the High  Court. A  further amendment,  made  in 1972, added  a proviso,  which declared  that in relation to any case  decided by a District Judge or Additional District Judge exercising the jurisdiction of a Judge of Small Causes the power  of revision  under s.  25 would  vest in the High Court.      The question before us arises in those cases only where the District  Judge has  exercised revisional power under s. 25. Is  an order  so made open to revision by the High Court under s.  115, Code  of Civil  Procedure ? An examination of the several  provisions of the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act indicates  that it  is a  self-sufficient code so far as the  present  enquiry  is  concerned.  For  the  purpose  of correcting decrees or orders made by a Court of Small Causes the Act  provides for  an appeal  and a  revision  in  cases falling under  s. 24  and s. 25 respectively. Cases in which the District  Judge and the High Court respectively exercise revisional  power,   revisional  powers   are   specifically mentioned. A  complete set  of superior  remedies  has  been incorporated  in  the  Act.  Moreover,  s.  27  of  the  Act provides:      "27. Finality  of decrees  and orders.-Save as provided

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    by this Act, a decree or order made under the foregoing      provisions of this Act by a Court of Small Causes shall      be final." The Legislature clearly intended that a decree or order made by a  Court of  Small Causes should be final subject only to correction by  the remedies  provided under  the  Provincial Small Cause Courts Act. It is a point for consideration that had s.  25, in its application to the State of Uttar Pradesh continued in  its original  form the  High Court  would have exercised the  revisional power under s. 25, and no question could have  arisen of  invoking the  revisional power of the High Court  under s.  115 of  the Code.  All the indications point to the conclusion that a case falling within the 42 Provincial Small  Cause Courts  Act was never intended to be subject to  the remedies  provided  by  the  Code  of  Civil Procedure. By  way of abundant caution s. 7 of the Code made express provision  barring the  application of ss. 96 to 112 and  115  of  the  Code  to  courts  constituted  under  the Provincial Small  Cause Courts  Act. Section  7 of  the Code merely embodies  the general  principle  against  resort  to remedies outside  the Provincial  Small  Cause  Courts  Act. Although the  court of  the District  Judge is  not a  court constituted under the Act the general principle continues to take effect.  No change  in the  principle was brought about merely because  revisional power  under s.  25,  before  the proviso was  added, was now entrusted to the District Judge. It must  be remembered that the legislative intention behind the amendment was to relieve the High Court of the burden of exercising  revisional  jurisdiction  in  respect  of  cases decided under  the Provincial Small Cause Courts Act. We are of firm  opinion that  the central  principle  continues  to hold, notwithstanding  the amendment effected in s. 25, that the hierarchy  of remedies  enacted in  the Provincial Small Cause Courts  Act represents  a complete  and final order of remedies, and  it is not possible to proceed outside the Act to avail of a superior remedy provided by another statute.      These considerations were apparently not present before the High Court of Allahabad when it held in Bimla Rani Kohli v. M/s. Bandu Motor Finance (P) Ltd. that a revisional order of the  District Judge  under s.  25, Provincial Small Cause Courts Act  could be revised by the High Court under s. 115, Code of  Civil Procedure.  In our opinion, the view taken by the High Court is not correct.      Accordingly, we  hold that an order passed under s. 25, Provincial Small Cause Courts Act by a District Court is not amenable to  the revisional  jurisdiction of  the High Court under s. 115, Code of Civil Procedure.      In Civil  Appeal No.  2844 of  1979, S.L.P. No. 9104 of 1979, S.L.P.  No. 9142  of 1979 and S.L.P. No. 9752 of 1979, the High  Court has  rejected revision petitions filed under s. 115,  Code of  Civil Procedure,  against  the  revisional orders of  the District  Court under s. 25, Provincial Small Cause Courts  Act. On  the opinion  reached  by  us  that  a revision petition under s. 115 is not maintainable against a revisional order  under s. 25, the appeal and the associated special leave petitions must be dismissed. 43      S.L.P. No.  9031 of  1979 arises  out of an application for an  ad interim  injunction made in a pending suit. Since then the  suit has been dismissed, and an appeal against the decree is  pending. As the suit itself has been disposed of, all proceedings for grant of interim relief must be regarded as having  lapsed. The  Special Leave  Petition  has  become infructuous and must be dismissed accordingly.

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    It has  been urged by the appellant in Vishesh Kumar v. Shanti Prasad  (Civil Appeal  No. 2844 of 1979) that in case this Court  is of the opinion that a revision petition under s. 115,  Code of  Civil Procedure,  is not maintainable, the case should  be remitted to the High Court for consideration as a  petition under Article 227 of the Constitution. We are unable to  accept that  prayer. A revision petition under s. 115 is  a separate  and distinct  proceeding from a petition under Article  227 of  the Constitution,  and one  cannot be identified with the other.      In  the  result,  the  appeal  and  the  special  leave petitions are dismissed. There will be no order as to cost. P.B.R.                       Appeal and Petitions dismissed. 44