17 December 1976
Supreme Court
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GOVINDBHAI GORDHANBHAI PATEL & ORS. Vs GULAM ABBAS MULLA ALLIBHAI & ORS.

Bench: SINGH,JASWANT
Case number: Appeal Civil 1860 of 1968


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PETITIONER: GOVINDBHAI GORDHANBHAI PATEL & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: GULAM ABBAS MULLA ALLIBHAI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/12/1976

BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT BENCH: SINGH, JASWANT RAY, A.N. (CJ) BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1019            1977 SCR  (2) 511  1977 SCC  (3) 179

ACT:             Indian  Contract  Act, 1872, s. 56, doctrine of frustra-         tion, when  applicable.             Bombay  Tenancy  and Agricultural Lands  Act,  1948,  s.         63(1), Permission for sale, whether administrative, judicial         or quasi-judicial act.             Civil Procedure Code, doctrine of res judicata,  whether         applicable to proceeding dismissed for formal defect  Wheth-         er debars authority exercising concurrent jurisdiction  from         entertaining subsequent proceedings for same relief.

HEADNOTE:             The  respondents agreed to sell their agricultural  land         to  the  appellants. The title deeds and possession  of  the         land  were given to the appellants and both parties  jointly         applied to the District Deputy Collector, Thana Prant, under         s.  63  of the Bombay Tenancy and  Agricultural  Lands  Act,         1948,  seeking permission for the sale.  The permission  was         refused  on  the ground that  the  intending  purchaser  had         failed to obtain a certificate from the Collector under Rule         36(f)  of  the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural  Lands  Rules         1956, that he intended to take to the profession of agricul-         ture  and was capable of cultivating land  personally.   The         appellants  thereafter obtained the requisite sanction  from         the  Additional Collector, Thana, in spite of  the  respond-         ents’  non-cooperation.  A suit by the respondents  for  de-         claring  the agreement void in law was decreed by the  Trial         Court.   In  appeal, the High Court opined  that  the  Prant         Officer’s refusal to permit the sate had rendered the agree-         ment impossible of performance.         Allowing the appeal, the Court.             HELD:  (1)  The  parties are governed by s.  56  of  the         Contract Act according to which a contract becomes void only         if something supervenes after its execution which renders it         impracticable  or impossible of performance.  The  order  of         the Prant Officer was not of such a catastrophic  character.         [519A-C]             Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. & Anr. [1954]         SCR  310;  Smt.  Sushila Devi & Anr. v. Hari  Singh  &  Ors.         [1971] 2 S.C.C. 288 and Tamplin Steamship Co. Lid v.  Anglo-         Mexican Petroleum products Co. Ltd. [1916] 2 A.C. 397,  403,

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       applied.             Joseph  Constantine  Steamship  Line  Ltd.  v.  Imperial         Smelting  Corporation Ltd. [1942] A.C. 154 at 168,  referred         to.             (2)  The function which the Collector or the  authorised         officer  discharges  under the proviso to s.  63(1)  of  the         Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act is an  administra-         tive one and not judicial or quasi-judicial.  [519G-H]             The State of Madras v. C.P. Sarathy & Anr. AIR 1953 S.C.         53;  A.K.  Bhaskar v. Advocate General AIR 1962  Kerala  90;         Shantanand  v.  Advocate General AIR 1955 All. 372; Shrimali         Lal v. Advocate General AIR 1955 Raj. 166 and Abdul Kasim v.         Md. Dawood AIR 1961 Mad. 242. similarity marked.             (3) The dismissal of a proceeding by an authority not on         merits  but  merely on account of a formal defect  will  not         attract  the applicability of the general principles of  res         judicata and will not debar the authority exercising concur-         rent jurisdiction from entertaining the subsequent  proceed-         ings  for  the  same  relief and passing  proper  orders  on         merits.  [520 F-H]             Putali Mehati v. Tulia I.L.R. 3 Bom. 223 and  Pethaparu-         mal v.  Murugandi  18 Mad. 466, applied.         512

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1860 of 1968.              (Appeal  by Special Leave from the Judgment and  decree         dated  the 29th January, 1968, of the Bombay High  Court  in         Appeal No. 472/ 60).         R.P.  Bhatt, B.R. Agarwala and Janendra Lal, for the  appel-         lants.              Sachin  Chaudhary, Prakash Mehta, Ravinder  Narain  and         K.L.  John of M/s. 1. B. Dadachanji & Co. for  the  respond-         ents.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by--              JASWANT SINGH, J. This appeal by special leave which is         directed  against the judgment and decree dated January  29,         1968,  of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay involves  a         question  of the applicability or otherwise of the  doctrine         of  frustration embodied in section 56 of the  Contract  Act         which  to use the words of Viscount Maugham in  Joseph  Con-         stantine Steamship Line Limited v. Imperial Smelting  Corpo-         ration Ltd. (1) "is only a special case of the discharge  of         contract  by an impossibility of performance  arising  after         the contract was made" or to use the language of  Mukherjea,         J.  in Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangut & Co. &  Anr.(2)         "is  really  an aspect or part of the law off  discharge  of         contract by reason of supervening impossibility or illegali-         ty of the act agreed to be done and hence becomes within the         purview of section 56 of the Indian Contract Act."              The  facts  giving rise to this appeal lie in  a  short         compass and may be briefly stated:  The respondents who  are         the owners of four plots of agricultural land admeasuring  7         acres and 13 gunthas and a bungalow standing thereon situate         in  village Majwade, near Pokhran Talao Road, Thana,  having         bought the same from Homi D. Dubash under a sale deed  dated         September 9, 1953 agreed to sell the same to the  appellants         in  lieu of Rs. 25,000/- vide agreement dated May 16,  1957,         relevant clauses whereof provided as follows :--                               "5. If the purchasers shall insist  on                       any  requisitions  or  objections  as  to  the                       title, evidence of title, conveyance,  posses-                       sion, receipt of rent or any other matters  on

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                     the abstract of or this agreement or connected                       with  the  sale  which the  Vendors  shall  be                       unable or on any ground unwilling to remove or                       comply  with, the Vendors shall be at  liberty                       notwithstanding any negotiation or  litigation                       in  respect of such requisition or  objection,                       to give to the Purchasers or their  Solicitors                       notice  in writing of their intention  to  re-                       scind  the   contract  for  sale  unless  such                       requisition  or objection be withdrawn and  if                       such  notice be given and the  requisition  or                       objection  be  not withdrawn within  ten  days                       after  the day on which the notice  was  sent,                       the contract shall, without further notice  be                       rescinded.  The Vendors shall thereupon return                       to the purchasers the deposit but without  any                       interest,costs  of investigating the title  or                       other compensation or payment whatever.                       (1)  [1942]  A.C.  154,  168.              (2)                       [1954] S.C.R. 310.                       513                           6.  if  the title be not approved  by  the                       Purchaser’s  attorneys or if the  purchase  is                       not  completed within the said period of   two                       months  owing to any default on  the  Vendors’                       part,  it shall be at the option of  the  Pur-                       chaser  to rescind this agreement and in  that                       event  the  Purchaser  shall  be  entitled  to                       receive  back the earnest money from the  Ven-                       dors,  together    with out  of  pocket  costs                       incurred  in the preparation of this    agree-                       ment  and investigation of  title,  advertise-                       ment,  Bataid,   correspondence etc.   But  in                       ease  of the Vendors wilful default  the  Ven-                       dors shall also pay to the Purchasers interest                       at  6%    per annum on the amount  of  earnest                       money from the date   hereof fill the date  of                       return of the earnest money and all   costs of                       the Purchasers.                          7. If the sale is not completed within time                       provided for completion owing to the fault  of                       the Purchaser, the Vendors   shall be entitled                       to  put  an end to this contract and  to  for-                       feit   the earnest money."           Pursuant  to  the aforesaid  agreement,  the  respondents’         attorneys delivered the documents of title to the appellants         attorneys on May 17, 1957 for investigation of title and  in         the third week of May, 1957 the respondents gave  possession         of the aforesaid property to the appellants in part perform-         ance  of  the said agreement.  On August 22, 1957,  the  re-         spondents  and the appellants made a joint  ,application  to         the District Deputy Collector, Thana Prant, under section 63         of  the  Bombay  Tenancy and Agricultural  Lands  Act,  1948         (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) seeking permission to         sell and purchase the aforesaid agricultural land.   Section         63 of the Act reads:                           "63. (1) Save as provided in this Act-                           (a) no sale (including sales in  execution                       of  a decree of a Civil Court or for  recovery                       of  arrears  of  land revenue  or  for    sums                       recoverable as arrears of land revenue), gift,                       exchange    or lease of any land  or  interest                       therein, or                           (b)  no mortgage of any land  or  interest                       therein, in which the possession of the  mort-

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                     gaged  property is delivered to the    mortga-                       gee,                       shall  be valid in favour of a person  who  is                       not an agriculturist (or who being an agricul-                       turist will after such sale, gift,   exchange,                       lease  or mortgage, hold land  exceeding  two-                       thirds   of the ceiling area determined  under                       the Maharashtra Agricultural Lands (Ceiling on                       Holdings)  Act, 1961 or who is   not an  agri-                       cultural labourer):                           Provided that the Collector or an  officer                       authorised  by  the State Government  in  this                       behalf  may grant permission for   such  sale,                       gift,  exchange,  lease or mortgage,  on  such                       conditions as may be prescribed  ........"             It  may be mentioned that the conditions alluded  to  in         the  proviso to the above quoted section 63 have  been  pre-         scribed by Rule 36         514         of  the  Bombay Tenancy and Agriculutral Lands  Rules,  1956         (hereinafter  referred to as ’the Rules’) the relevant  por-         tion whereof is to the following effect:                             "36. Conditions on which permission  for                       sale,  etc., of land under section 63  may  be                       granted.--                             (1)  The  Collector  or  other   officer                       authorised under the proviso to sub-section (1                       ) of section 63 shall not grant permission for                       sale, gift, exchange, lease or mortgage of any                       land  in favour of a person who is not  either                       an  agriculturist or agricultural labourer  or                       who,  being an agriculturist, cultivates  per-                       sonally  laud not less than the  ceiling  area                       whether as owner or tenant or partly as  owner                       and partly as tenant unless any of the follow-                       ing conditions are satisfied........                             (f) the land is required for cultivating                       it  personally by a person, who, not being  an                       agriculturist, intends to take to the  profes-                       sion of agriculture and to whom the  Collector                       after  having regard to the order of  priority                       mention  in clause (c) of sub-section  (2)  of                       section  32-P,  has given a  certificate  that                       such person intends to take to the  profession                       of  agriculture and is capable of  cultivating                       land personally;  ......  "             By  means of communication No. TNC.48 dated December  8,         1958,  the  Prant Officer, Thana, informed  the  respondents         that their request to sell the aforesaid lands to  appellant         No.  1 could not be granted as the intending  purchaser  had         not  obtained  the  certificate from the  Collector  to  the         effect  that "he intends to take to the profession of  agri-         culture and is capable of cultivating land personally."   On         January  21, 1959, the respondents’ attorneys wrote  to  the         appellants  informing them that no effect could be given  to         the  aforesaid agreement of sale dated May 17, 1957  as  the         permission under the Act to sell the suit property had  been         refused by the Prant Officer by his letter dated December 8,         1958  (supra)  for appellant No. 1’s failure to  obtain  the         certificate  to the effect that he intended to take  to  the         profession  of  agriculture and was capable  of  cultivating         land  personally.   The respondents’ attorneys  also  called         upon  the appellants by means of the said  communication  to         return the tite deeds adding that on the return of the title         deeds, the earnest money paid by them at the time of  execu-

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       tion  of the aforesaid agreement would be returned to  them.         On  March  4, 1959, the appellants’ advocate  wrote  to  the         respondents’  attorneys  requesting them  to  authorise  the         appellants  to approach the higher authorities for  securing         the  necessary permission.  On March 14, 1959, the  respond-         ents’ attorneys wrote to the appellants’ attorneys evasively         replying that no useful purpose would be served by approach-         ing  the higher authorities having regard to the  provisions         of  the Act. On the respondents’ refusal to  cooperate  with         the  appellants  in the matter of  obtaining  permission  or         sanction under the Act, appellant No. 1 made an  application         to  the Collector, Thana District, Thana on April  8,  1959,         bringing  the  above mentioned facts to his notice  and  re-         questing him to grant him a certificate of an  agriculturist         and the necessary permission to purchase the aforesaid plots         of  land.  Acceding to the request of appellant No.  1,  the         Additional Collector. Thana         515         by  his order dated June 6, 1959 granted to the  former  the         requisite certificate under Rule 36 of the Rules as also the         permission to purchase the aforesaid plots of land from  the         respondents as required under section 63(1) of the Act  read         with  Rule 36 of the Rules.  The said order ran  as  follows         :--                                                               No.                       CB/TNC, 1800                                                         Collector’s                       Office, Thana,                                                      Thana,      6th                       June, 1959.                       Read:  Application of the applicant Shri  G.G.                       Patel, dated the 8th April, 1959.                         Read: Papers ending with Mamlatdar,  Thana’s                       No.  TNC. SR. 400 dated the 11th May, 1959.                       ORDER                           A  certificate is hereby granted  to  Shri                       Govindbhai Gordhanbhai Patel residing at House                       No. 404, Majiwade, Taluka Thana on his  appli-                       cation  dated 8th April, 1959 under  subclause                       ’C’ of clause 1 of Rule 36 that he intends  to                       take to the profession of Agriculture.   After                       having gone through the merits of the priority                       list  mentioned in clause (C) of section 2  of                       section  32-P,  through the  Mamlatdar  Thana,                       permission is hereby granted to Shri  Govindb-                       hai  Gordhanbhai  Patel to purchase  the  land                       mentioned  below  from  Shri  Ibrahim   Ismail                       Jetpurwala etc. under section 63(1) read  with                       Rule 36 under the Bombay Tenancy and  Agricul-                       tural  Lands  (Amendment)  Act,  1955  on  the                       conditions as mentioned under :-                       Village                   S.  No.     H.   No.                       Area                       Majiwade                    415           Part                       6-51/4                                               289        2    (Part)                       0-36 1/2                                               280        1    (Part)                       0-7                                               280                  4                       0-5                                                                         7- 13                       3/4                       Conditions :--

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                      Permission  to  purchase the  land  mentioned                       above  is   granted subject to  the  condition                       that if the applicant Shri  G.G. Patel  ceases                       to cultivate the land personally or  transfers                       his  interest in the said land by sale,  gift,                       exchange,  lease   or  mortgage  without   the                       previous  sanction  of  the  Collector,    the                       permission  given under sub-section ( 1  )  of                       section  63  shall   be deemed  to  have  been                       cancelled.                                                                        Sd/ -                                                        For Addition-                       al Collector,                                                                        Tha na"         516             On June 25, 1959, the appellants’ attorneys addressed  a         communication  to  the  respondents’  attorneys   forwarding         therewith  a  copy of the aforesaid  order  No.  CB/TEC/1800         dated  June 6,1959, made by the Additional Collector,  Thana         granting permission to  appellant No. 1 for the purchase  of         the  aforesaid plots of land and requesting the  respondents         to  let them know as to when their clients would  desire  to         complete  the sale and further asking them whether they  had         got  the property transferred to their names in the  records         of the Collector of Thana, whereupon the respondents’  advo-         cate  by  his letter dated June 30, 1959  addressed  to  the         appellants’ attorneys replied saying that his clients  could         not take notice of the aforesaid permission. Thereafter  the         respondents served a notice on the appellants on August  25,         1959  calling  upon them to return the title  deeds  and  to         restore  possession of the aforesaid  property.   Thereupon,         the appellants’ advocate wrote to the respondents  attorneys         on November 24, 1959 pointing out to them that appellant No.         1 having obtained the requisite sanction from the Collector,         the  respondents  were  bound to complete the  sale  and  to         execute the conveyance in favour of appellant No. 1 and that         the  aforesaid agreement could not be put an end to  in  the         manner in which the respondents were attempting to do.   Not         heeding the aforesaid communication of the appellants  dated         November 24, 1959, the respondents filed a civil suit, being         suit No. 36 of 1959 on November 17, 1959 in the Court of the         Civil  Judge, Senior Division, Thana, for  declaration  that         the  aforesaid agreement dated May 16, 1957 was void in  law         and  of no legal effect and for possession of the  aforesaid         property  as also for compensation at the rate of Rs.  150/-         per mensem for wrongful retention of the property from June,         1957  till delivery of possession thereof.  In spite of  the         stout  resistance put up by the appellants, the trial  Court         decreed  the  suit in favour of the respondents  subject  to         their  paying to the appellants or depositing in Court   the         earnest  money of  Rs. 5,000/- and  the compensation  amount         of  Rs. 882.25 holding inter alia that the aforesaid  agree-         ment  dated  May 16,  1957 which was void  ab  initio  being         violative  of  section 63 of the Act was discovered  by  the         respondents  to be void in June, 1957 when they  found  that         the  permission under section 63 of the Act  was  necessary.         Aggrieved  by the judgment and  decree of the  trial  Court,         the  appellants took the matter in appeal to the High  Court         of  Bombay but their appeal remained unsuccessful. The  High         Court held that the aforesaid agreement to sell was not void         ab  initio  as section 63 of the Act itself  envisaged  sale         etc. in favour of a nonagriculturist with the permission  of         the Collector or an officer authorised by the State  Govern-

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       ment  in that behalf subject to the conditions which may  be         prescribed and Rule 36 of he Rules prescribed only a certif-         icate  by  the  relevant authority to the  effect  that  the         intending  purchaser intended to adopt the profession of  an         agriculturist.  The  High Court, however,  opined  that  the         aforesaid  agreement became incapable of being performed  on         December 8, 1959 when the Prant Officer declined  permission         to  the respondents to sell the property to the  appellants.         Rejecting  the contention advanced on behalf of  the  appel-         lants the effect that the aforesaid letter dated January 21,         1959  written by the respondents to the appellants  did  not         terminate  or rescind the agreement, the High Court  further         held  that the said letter amounted to cancellation  of  the         agreement.         517             Appearing  in support of the appeal, Mr. Bhatt,  counsel         for the appellants, has vehemently urged that the  aforesaid         order passed by the Prant Officer refusing permission to the         respondents  to  sell the lands did not  make  the  contract         impossible  of performance;  that the said order was  merely         administrative  in character and did not bar the  making  of         the second application by the appellants under section 63 of         the Act; that the said agreement was subsisting on June  25,         1959  when the appellants obtained the requisite  permission         and  the certificate from the Additional  Collector,  Thana,         and  that  section  56 of the Indian Contract  Act  was  not         attracted in the present case as the contract had not become         impossible of performance.             Mr. Sachin Chaudhary, counsel for the respondents,  has,         on  the  other  hand, contended that  the  agreement  became         impossible  of performance and as such void on  December  8,         1958, when the  Prant Officer refused to permit the respond-         ents  to sell the suit property to the appellants, and  that         the Prant Officer who had co-ordinate jurisdiction with  the         Collector  under  section 63 of the Act  having  refused  to         grant permission to the respondents to sell the suit proper-         ty by his order dated December 8, 1958, which was of  quasi-         judicial  character  and had not been set  aside  either  in         appeal  or  revision, it was not open to  the  Collector  to         grant the permission to the appellants.             Two questions arise for determination in this case---(1)         whether  the  order of the Prant Officer dated  December  8,         1958,  rendered the aforesaid agreement dated May  16,  1957         impossible of performance and as such void under section  56         of  the Indian Contract Act  and (2) whether in view of  the         aforesaid order of refusal by the Prant Officer, Thana dated         December  8, 1958, the  Additional Collector, Thana, was not         competent to grant the  sanction and  the certificate  under         section 63 of the Act and Rule 36 of the Rules.  The answer         to  the first question depends on the  construction of   the         expression ’impossible of performance’ occurring in  section         56   of  the  Indian Contract Act which lays down:                              "56. An agreement to do an act impossi-                       ble in itself is void--A contract to do an act                       which  after  the contract  is  made,  becomes                       impossible, or, by reason of some event  which                       the  promisor  could  not  prevent,  unlawful,                       becomes  void when the act becomes  impossible                       or unlawful.                              Where  one  person has promised  to  do                       something  which he knew, or, with  reasonable                       diligence,  might  have known, and  which  the                       promisee  did  not know to  be  impossible  or                       unlawful, such promisor must make compensation                       to  such  promisee  for any  loss  which  such

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                     promise  sustains through the  non-performance                       of the promise."             The  meaning of the aforesaid expression ’impossible  of         performance’  as used in the above quoted section  would  be         clear from the, following observation made by Lord  Loreburn         in Tampfin Steamship         518         Co.  Ltd. v.Anglo-Mexican  Petroleum Products   Co.   Ltd(1)         403  which is generally considered to contain a classic  and         terse exposition of the law relating to frustration:                             "The  parties shall be excused  if  sub-                       stantially the whole contract becomes impossi-                       ble  of performance or in other words  imprac-                       ticable  by some cause for which  neither  was                       responsible."             We  find  ourselves in complete accord  with  this  view         which also finds support from the decisions of this Court in         Satyabrata  Ghose  v.  Mugneerarn Bangur and  Co.  and  Anr.         (supra)  and  Smt. Sushila Devi and Anr. v. Hari  Singh  and         Ors.(2) where it was held that the performance of a contract         becomes  impossible  if it becomes  impracticable  from  the         point  of view of the object and the purpose which the  par-         ties  had  in  view and if an untoward event  or  change  of         circumstances totally upsets the very foundation upon  which         the  parties rested their bargain, it can very well be  said         that the promisor found it impossible to do the act which he         promised  to do.  It would be advantageous at this stage  to         refer  to the following observations  made by Mukherjee,  J.         Satyabrata  Ghose  v.  Mugneerarn Bangur and  Co.   and  Anr         (supra)  which  is  a leading authority on  the  subject  of         frustration:                             "The first paragraph of the section lays                       down  the law in the same way as  in  England.                       It  speaks  of something which  is  impossible                       inherently  or by its very nature, and no  one                       can  obviously be directed to perform such  an                       act.  The second paragraph enunciates the  law                       relating to discharge of contract by reason of                       supervening impossibility or illegality of the                       act  agreed to be done.  The wording  of  this                       paragraph  is  quite general  and  though  the                       illustrations  attached to it are not  at                       all  happy,  they  cannot  derogate  from  the                       general  words  used in the  enactment.   This                       much  is clear that the word "impossible"  has                       not been used here in the sense of physical or                       literal impossibility.  The performance of  an                       act may not be literally impossible but it may                       be impracticable and useless from the point of                       view   of   the  object  and   purpose   which                       the  .parties had in view; and if an  untoward                       event  or  change  of  circumstances   totally                       upsets  the  very foundation  upon  which  the                       parties rested their bargain, R can very  well                       be said that the promisor found it  impossible                       to do the act which he promised to do.                             Although  various  theories  have   been                       propounded  by the Judges and jurists in  Eng-                       land  regarding  the  judicial  basis  of  the                       doctrine  of  frustration, yet  the  essential                       idea upon which the doctrine is based is  that                       of  impossibility of performance of  the  con-                       tract:  in fact impossibility and  frustration                       are  often  used as  interchangeable   expres-                       sions.   The   changed  circumstances,  it  is

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                     said,  make  the performance of  the  contract                       impossible  and the parties are absolved  from                       the further                       (1) [1916] 2 A.C. 397.           (2) [1971]  2                       S.C.C. 288.                       519                          performance of it as they did not  promise.                       to. perform  an impossibility."              In  the instant case, there is no term or condition  in         the  agreement in question which stipulates that the  agree-         ment would be treated  as having become impracticable on the         refusel  of the Prant Officer to grant the permission  under         section  63 of the Act.  The parties are,’  therefore,  gov-         erned purely by section 56 of the Contract Act according  to         which  a contract becomes void only if something  supervenes         after its execution which renders it impracticable.  On  the         contention advanced on behalf of the respondents, the  ques-         tion  that arises is whether the above quoted order  of  the         Prant Officer, Thana Prant, dated December 8, 1958, rendered         the contract impracticable.  The answer to this question  is         obviously  in  the  negative.  The said order,  it  will  be         noted,  was not of such a catastrophic character as  can  be         said to have struck at the very root of the whole object and         purpose  for which the parties had entered into the  bargain         in  question or to have rendered the contract  impracticable         or  impossible  of performance.  A careful  perusal  of  the         order  would show that it was neither conclusive nor was  it         passed  on  the merits of the  aforesaid  application.   The         permission  was  refused by the Prant Officer  only  on  the         technical  ground that  the appellants had not obtained  the         requisite  certificate as contemplated by rule 36(f) of  the         Rules.   It did not in any way prohibit the appellants  from         making  a fresh application to the Collector,  Thana  Prant,         who in view of the Phraseology of section 63 of the Act read         with  clause (f) of rule 35 of the Rules appears to  be  the         only authority competent to grant the requisite certificate.         The said order also did not put any fetter on the appellants         to  apply to the Collector  or the Additional Collector  for         grant  of the requisite permission for sale and purchase  of         the  land after obtaining the aforesaid  certificate.    We,         are,  therefore,  clearly of the opinion  that  no  untoward         event  or  change of circumstances supervened  to  make  the         agreement factually or legally impossible of performance  so         as, to attract section 56 of the Contract Act.              The  answer to the second question turns on the  answer         to  two  subsidiary questions (i) whether  in  according  or         declining to accord permission under the proviso to  section         63  (1) of the Act, the Collector or the officer  authorised         by  the State Government in that behalf acts in an  adminis-         trative capacity or a judicial or  a  quasi-judicial capaci-         ty  and (ii) whether the aforesaid order dated  December  8,         1958 passed by the Prant Officer, Thana was one on merits or         otherwise.  Turning  to the question (i), it has to  be  ob-         served  that  there is nothing in section 63 of the  Act  to         indicate  that  in  exercising his  jurisdiction  under  the         proviso to sub-section (1) of the section, the Collector  or         the authorised officer has to act judicially or in conformi-         ty  with   the recognised judicial norms.    There  is  also         nothing  in the aforesaid Section of the Act  requiring  the         Collector  or the authorised officer to determine any  ques-         tion  affecting the right of any party.  The function  which         the  Collector  or the authorised officer  discharges  under         the  aforesaid proviso is, therefore, an administrative  one         and not judicial or quasi-judicial.  It will be apposite  to         advert to a few decisions 17 --1546 SCI/76

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       520         bearing  on  the  matter.   In  A.K.  Bhaskar  v.   Advocate         General(1)  a full Bench of the Kerala High Court held  that         the  decision of  the Advocate General granting or  refusing         to grant the sanction  under section 92 of the Civil  Proce-         dure  Code was neither judicial nor  quasijudicial  notwith-         standing the fact that he has to form an opinion and come to         conclusion one way or the other.  To the similar effect  are         the  decisions  of Allahabad and Rajasthan  High  Courts  in         Shantanand v. Advocate General(2) and Shrimali Lal v.  Advo-         cate General(3). In Abdul Kasim v. Md. Dawood(4) it was held         that  in  granting or withholding sanction to  file  a  suit         under section 55(2) of the Muslim Wakfs Act, 1954, the  Wakf         Board does not act in, a judicial or quasijudicial  capacity         but  only  in an administrative capacity.  In The  State  of         Madras v.C.P. Sarathy and Anr.(5). It was held by this Court         that  the act of the Government in making a reference  under         section  10  of the Industrial Disputes Act  was  merely  an         administrative  act and the fact that the Government  before         making  a  reference under section 10(1) of the Act  had  to         satisfy itself on the facts and circumstances brought to its         notice  that an industrial dispute existed did not make  the         act judicial or quasi-judicial.             In  regard to question (ii), it may be stated  that  al-         though the Prant Officer may have been exercising concurrent         jurisdiction  with  the Collector, Thana Prant, he  did  not         pass  any orders on the merits of the  previous  application         made  by  the  respondents and endorsed  by  the  appellants         seeking  permission to sell and purchase the suit  property.         The  order,  as  already stated, was passed by  him  on  the         ground  that  the intending purchaser had not  obtained  the         certificate  required under rule 36(f) of the Rules.  It  is         well  recognised  that the dismissal of a proceeding  by  an         authority  not on merits but merely  on account of a  formal         defect  will  not attract the applicability of  the  general         principles of Res judicata and will not debar the  authority         exercising  concurrent  jurisdiction from  entertaining  the         subsequent  proceedings for same relief and  passing  proper         orders on merits. (See Putali Meheti v. Tulja.(6) where  the         rejection of a previous suit for the plaintiff’s omission to         produce  a certificate of the Collector under section  6  of         the  Pensions Act was held not to bar a second suit  on  the         same  cause  of action, and  Pethaperumal  v.   Murugandi(7)         where rejection of the first suit for recovery of money  for         plaintiff’s failure           (1) A.I.R. 1962 Ker. 90.       (2) A..I.R. 1955 All. 372           (3) A.I.R. 1955 Raj. 166.      (4) A..I.R. 1961 Mad. 244.           (5) A.I.R. 1953 S.C. 53        (6) I.LR. 3 Born. 223.           (7) 18 Mad. 466.         521         to  produce  succession certificate was held not  to  bar  a         second  proceeding for the same relief.  We are,  therefore,         of  the opinion that the previous order passed by the  Prant         Officer being merely an administrative order and not  having         been  passed on the merits of the case, it did not,  in  the         absence of a statutory prohibition, impair the power of  the         Collector  to pass the impugned order on the merits  of  the         matter  under  proviso to section 63 (1) of the Act  on  the         grant  of the requisite certificate under rule 36(f) of  the         Rules.             For  the  foregoing reasons, we allow  the  appeal,  set         aside the judgments and decrees passed by the Courts   below         and  dismiss the respondents’ suit but in the  circumstances         of the ease without any order as to costs.         M.P.                                    Appeal allowed.

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