09 November 1984
Supreme Court
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SAMARIAS TRADING CO. PVT. LTD. Vs S. SAMUEL & ORS.

Bench: REDDY,O. CHINNAPPA (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 4416 of 1984


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PETITIONER: SAMARIAS TRADING CO. PVT. LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: S. SAMUEL & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT09/11/1984

BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) BENCH: REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J) SEN, A.P. (J) VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)

CITATION:  1985 AIR   61            1985 SCR  (2)  24  1984 SCC  (4) 667        1984 SCALE  (2)741  CITATOR INFO :  R          1985 SC 330  (1)  R          1986 SC 614  (6)

ACT:      Practice and Procedure-oral application made to a Judge in Chambers-  No. written  application filed-orders  passed- Neither facts  nor question  of law  reasons  given  in  the order-Propriety of.      A sitting in Chambers-When should be held.

HEADNOTE:      A single  Judge of  the Calcutta High Court, on an oral application made  in his  chamber  on  behalf  of  a  person professing to  be respondent  No. 1,  and on  giving an oral undertaking to  make a  written application  within 4  days, issued an  interim order directing maintenance of status quo in regard  to an  auction of a liquor shop held in favour of the appellant.  The said  order did  not make any attempt to indicate even  briefly the  facts, the  question of  law, if any, raised  before the Judge and the reasons which prompted him  to  make  such  an  interim  order.  On  receiving  the information about  the said  order, the  appellant contacted the High  Court and  got the information that the subsequent writ petition  filed by  respondent No.  I under Article 226 would be  taken up  for orders  at 2. 30 p.m. On 3. 4. 1984. While  the   representatives  of  the  appellant  and  their advocate were  wailing in  the court, they came to know that the matter  had been mentioned in the chamber of the learned Judge who  had earlier  granted stay  and that  the order of statues quo  had been  extended until  further  orders.  The appellant told  the learned  Single  Judge  that  they  were waiting in the Court and . were not informed that the matter was going to be mentioned in his chamber and in view of this they requested  the learned  Judge to  reconsider his order. But, the  Judge declined  to do so. There upon the appellant filed a  Writ Appeal.  The Writ Petition filed by respondent No. I along with the Writ Appeal of the appellant were heard together by a Division Bench which set aside the auction and directed that  a fresh  auction be  held on 19th April 1984. Aggrieved by  the said  order, the  appellant has  filed the present appeal.

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    Disposing of the appeal, ^      HELD:  There   is  hardly  any  justification  for  the entertainment of  an oral application and the issuance of an interim order  with no record whatever of what was submitted to the court of the reasons for the order made-by the court. To permit a procedure by which oral applications may be made and  internal   orders  obtained  without  any  petition  in writing, without any affidavit having been sworn to as prima facie proof  of allegations  and without  any record  before kept before  the court may lead to very serious abuse of the process   of the  court. Therefore, this Court expresses its disapprobation and forbids the 25 practice of  entertaining oral  applications by any court in matters of consequence A without any record before it. [29E- G]      (2) This  Court does  not mean  to  suggest  that  oral application may  never be  made. Often  during the course of the  hearing   of  a  case  it  becomes  necessary  to  make applications of  a formal  nature and  such application  are permitted by  the Presiding Judge. But in all such cases the court is  already seized  of the principal matter or dispute and there  is a record pertaining to it before the 13 court. Again, this Court does not mean to suggest that other urgent oral applications  may never  be  made.  If  urgent  interim orders  are   imperative,  at  least  skeletal  applications setting out  the bare facts and the questions invoked should be insisted  upon. A detailed application could be permitted to be filed later. If the matter is so urgent as not even to brook any  insistence upon  a written application, the judge should at  least take  The trouble and the care to record in his order  the facts  mentioned to  him and  the submissions made to him. It is essential that there be a contemporaneous record. Otherwise  the court ceases to be a court of record. [29G-H; 30A-B]      (3) A sitting in chambers could be held when both sides are represented  and the  sittings are  held openly  so that members of  the public,  if they  desire to attend, may have access even  in the chamber. To grant interim orders on oral applications in chambers when the judge is otherwise sitting in open  court for  other matters would seriously reflect on the fairness  of the procedure adopted by the courts and may have the  unpleasant effect of undermining public confidence in courts.  A public  hearing is one of the great attributes of a  court,  and  courts  of  this  country  are  therefore required to  administer justice  in public. Otherwise, there is a  risk that  justice may even be undone. It is not ’as a matter of policy but as a matter of law’ that The hearing of a cause be public except in the limited class of cases. That rule was  violated by the learned Single Judge in this case. [3lE;H; 32A.B]      Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar & ors. v. State of Maharashtra JUDGMENT: PC 246 referred to.      (4) In the instant case the Court allowed the reauction to be  held on  19th April 1984. Since the highest bidder in the reauction  did not  deposit the necessary amount in time as  required  under  the  Rules  the  Court  set  aside  the reauction. As  the appellant  offered to  take the  shop  on lease for  a sum of Rs. 30 lacs and the Additional Solicitor General appearing  for the  administration  of  Andaman  and Nicobar Islands accepted the offer. The Court sanctioned the lease in  favour of the appellant on the condition of making the necessary deposit within 10 days from that day. [36B; F-

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G]

&      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4416 of 1984      Appeal by  Special leave  from] the  Judgment and order dated 4th April, 1984 of the Calcutta High Court in F. M. A. T. No. 992 of 1983 26      Vasanta Pai,  Ms. S.  Vaidalingam and  P. J. George for the Appellant.      Bina Gupta for the respondent.      K. G. Bhagat’ Addl Sol. General. R. N. Poddar and M. N. Krishnumani, for the Respondent.      R.  Karanjawala   and  Miss   M.  Karanjawala  for  the applicant in Intervention appln.      K. Parasaran,  Atty. General and D. N. Sinha at request of Court.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      CHINNAPPA REDDY,  J. "Curiouser  and curiouser",  Alice would have  certainly exclaimed  with us had the mischievous state of  affairs of the present case come to her notice. We confess that  the state  of affair  is  but  the  inevitable consequence of  a most curious procedure said to be followed over the  years by the Calcutta High Court, a practice which we are  happy to  say, no  other High  Court in  the country follows, a  practice which  do put  in the  mildest terms is unhealthy and  likely to  lead  to  harm  and  abuse  and  a practice which  we now  propose to forbid in the exercise of our powers under Art. 141 of the Constitution. The practice, the consequences  and our  precept will reveal themselves as we proceed  to state the facts. We may mention at the Cutset Act in  response to  our  invitation  the  learned  Attorney General  very   graciously  addressed  us  and  indeed  made forceful submissions. We are grateful to him to his valuable assistance.      An auction  of the  right to  sell  liquor  at  Rangat, Andaman Islands  was  held  on  15.  2.  84  by  the  Deputy Commissioner, Port  Blair. One B. K. Hariwat was the highest bidder. M/s  Samarais Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. having an office at Port Blair, the petitioner before us in the Special Leave Petition, was one of the participants in the auction but not S. Samual,  S/o Swami  Das Pillai, 12, Cathral Road, Madras, who figures  before us  as the  first respondent.  As B.  K. Hariwat did not deposit fifty per cent of the license fee as clause 14  of the  terms and  conditions of the auction, the sale was  not confirmed  and the  shop had  to be  auctioned again. The  second auction  was held on 28. 3. 1984. At this auction M/s  Samarias  Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. was the highest bidder. The bid was for a 27 sum of  Rupees 25  lakhs. S. Samuel also participated in the auction A  but his  bid was  just over Rupees 17 Lakhs only. The highest  bidder (M/s  Samarias Trading  Co.  Pvt.  Ltd.) deposited sum of Rs. 10,000, 2,50,000 and 9,90,000 on 29. 3. 1984. 28. 3. 1984 and 29. 3. 1984 respectively. The sale was confirmed and  shop was  awarded to M/s Samarias Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. The license was to enure for the period 1. 4. 1984 to 31.  3. 1985.  In the meanwhile, things moved at Calcutta on 30. 3. 1984. When the Court was about to rise for the day Shri Shankardas  Banerjee Senior  Advocate  mentioned  to  a learned Single  Judge  of  the  Calcutta  High  Court  (Shri Justice Pyne)  that he desired to move an application before

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the judge  in his chambers after the court rose. The learned judge  granted   leave  and  accordingly  Sarvashari  S.  D. Banerjee, Ashoke  Kumar  Ganguly  and  K.  K.  Bandopadhyay, learned Advocate  purporting to appear on behalf of a person professing to be S. Samuel moved the learned Single Judge of the Calcutta  High Court  in his  chambers under Art. 226 of the Constitution  and obtained  an  ex-parte  order  in  the following terms:-          "On  the oral application of Mr. S. D. Banerjee and      upon his  undertaking to  move application  by  Tuesday      next there will be an order as follows.         The respondents  are directed to maintain status quo      in respect  of the  liquor shop  at  Rangat  in  Middle      Andaman and  not to proceed on the basis of the alleged      liquor auction  held on  28. 3.  1984. The  order  will      remain in  force till  Tuesday next.  Let a  plain copy      countersigned by  Asstt. Registrar  (Court) be given to      the learned Advocate to the petitioner.                                           Sd/R. N. Pyne."      The remarkable  fact worthy  of immediate  attention is that there  was no  written application  before the  learned Judge. The  order of  the learned  Judge was made on an oral application and  makes not the slightest attempt to indicate even briefly  the facts  told him,  the question  of law, if any, raised before him and the reasons which prompted him to make the  interim order  that he did. All that we can gather from the  proceedings and  the record  of the  court is that some oral  application was  made, an  oral  undertaking  was given to  make a written application within four days and an interim  order   was  issued   by  the  court-directing  the maintenance of status quo in regard to an. auction of liquor shops already held. 28 The order  does not  disclose that  the learned Single Judge was aware that the bid was for such a large amount as Rs. 25 lakhs, that at least Rupees Twelve and half lakhs would have been deposited  by the  time the order was made and that the license itself  was to take effect from 1. 4. 1984. What was to happen  to the  amount already deposited ? Who was to run the liquor  shop from  1. 4.  1994 ?  What security had been taken from  the petitioner  to protect  the revenue  and the other respondents ’? We get no indication from the order. In fact the order made no provision to protect any one from any resulting mischief.  And all  this on  an  oral  undertaking given by  an advocate  that a  petition would  be  filed  on behalf of  a party  whose very  existence  we  now  find  is doubtful, as  we shall have occasion to point out hereafter. No record,  not a  scrap of  paper, was  filed into court at that stage  and no  contemporaneous record  was prepared  by anyone containing  the barest  allegations constituting  the foundation of  the oral  application that was actually made, the written  application that  was proposed  to be filed and the interim order issued.A most curious procedure indeed for a court of record to follow ! And, a situation where a judge would have to turn witness if any dispute arose subsequently as to  what the  allegations were and shy the judge made the order !  Shri S.  S. Ray,  who appeared  before us  at  some stages of  the case,  informed us  that a  practice of  this nature of  obtaining interim  orders  on  oral  applications subject to undertaking being given proposing to file written applications later, had always been in vogue in the Calcutta High Court.  It was  a matter of great surprise to us that a court of justice and at that, a court of record, should have been following such a practice, The learned Attorney General informed us  that such  a practice  was not  followed in any

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other High  Court and  he placed  before us  substantial and compelling reasons  vigorously deprecating  such a practice, reasons which  have found  favour with  us. Shri  Lal Narain Sinha,  former   Attorney  General,   who  practiced  for  a considerable length  of time  in the  Patna High Court which generally inherited,  if we  may use such an expression, the practice and  procedure of  the Calcutta  High Court and who happened to  be present  before us  at another  stage of the hearing of  the cases and whose assistance we sought and for which we  are grateful  to him  told us  that  in  his  long experience he  was not  aware of  any such-practice and that such a  practice  was  never  followed  in  the  Patna  High Court..................................... We our selves are personally  familiar  with  the  practice  followed  in  the Madras, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and 29 Rajasthan High Courts and we can assert that such a practice is not  heard of  in these  courts. Some counsel from Bombay who .  were present  before us  also told  us that  no  such practice is followed in their High Court. We do not have the slightest doubt  that, if  the practice exists any where, it is a  most unwholesome  practice, likely  to lead to vicious and pernicious  results. It  is a  practice to  be  strongly deprecated, a  practice reminiscent  of the feudal days when the French  nobility could  procurea lettre  de cachet under the Sovereign’s  seal authorising  a subject’s  imprisonment with out  trial and  without mention  of any reason. It is a practice which  strikes at  the very  root of  the system of open and even handed justice as we know it and the sooner it is abandoned  the better  for the administration of justice. We express  our disapprobation  and forbid  the practice  of entertaining oral  applications by  any court  in matters of consequence without  any record before it. We do not mean to suggest  that   oral  application   may  never  be  made  or entertained by  a Court. Far from the contrary. For example, all applications  for adjournment are generally made orally. Often, during the course of the hearing of a case it becomes necessary to n make applications of a formal nature and such applications are  permitted by  the Presiding  judge. But in all such  cases the court is already seized of the principal matter or  dispute and  there is  a record  pertaining to it before the  court. But  we hardly  see any justification for the entertainment of an oral application and the issuance of an interim  order  with  no  record  whatever  of  what  was submitted to  the court or the reasons for the order made by the court.  To permit-a procedure by which oral applications may be made and interim orders obtained without any petition in writing,  without any  affidavit having  been sworn to as prima facie  proof of  allegations and  without  any  record being kept  before the  court may lead to very serious abuse of the  process of  the court.  In fact, we have come across instances in  the past  where the  Calcutta High  Court  had exercised jurisdiction  in matters  in which  no part of the cause of  action arose  within its jurisdiction, a situation which would  surely not  have arisen if a written and not an oral application  had been  made. Again,  we do  not mean to suggest that  other urgent  oral applications  may never  be made. If someone is going to be deported in a few minutes or if some  grossly inenquitous  act is about to be perpetrated and any  delay would  result  in  the  fait  accompli  of  a monstrosity, urgent  oral  applications  may  be  moved  and urgent interim  order issued.  If urgent  interim orders are imperative, at  least skeletal  applications setting out the bare facts 30

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and the  questions involve(1  should  be  insisted  upon.  A detailed application  could be  permitted to be filed later. Surely a Court would be in a more advantageous position with something  in   writing  from   a   party   who   can   take responsibility  for   the  statements   made  than  an  oral submission based  on oral instructions from "God knows who". If the  matter is  so  urgent  as  not  even  to  brook  any insistence upon  a written  application, the judge should at least take  the trouble  and the care to record in his order the facts  mentioned to him and the submissions made to him. It is  essential that  there be  a  contemporaneous  record. Otherwise the  Court ceases  to be  a court of record. After all there  are always two sides to a picture. In the absence of a  petition in  writing,  in  the  absence  of  an  order containing a  narration of the facts and the reasons for the orders, what  is an  affected person to do ? What allegation is he supposed to meet ? How is he to avert the mischief and damage which  may result from the order ? Is he to await the pleasure of  the petitioner  who having  obtained an interim order is  naturally interested  in not  filing  his  written petition till the very last minute so as to prolong the life of the  interim order  and the  mischief. One  may very well imagine a  case where  a party instructs an Advocate to move an oral application before a Judge, obtains an interim order and disappear  from the  scene without  filing  any  regular petition. What  is the under taking worth in such an event ? The facts  of this  very case, we shall presently point out, have led to such an abuse.      To resume  the  Stranger-than-fiction  story,  on  30th March  1984   itself,  Shri  K.K.  Bandhopadhyay,  Advocate, Calcutta  sent   a  telegram  to  the  Deputy  Commissioner, District Andaman,  Port Blair. informing him about the order of stay  granted by  the Calcutta  High  Court.  The  Deputy Commissioner duly  informed M/s  Samerias Trading  Co.  Pvt. Ltd. about  the stay  granted by  the Calcutta  High  Court. immediately   on    receipt   of    the   information,   the representative of  M/s Samarias  Trading Co.  Pvt. Ltd.  and their Advocate  went to  Calcutta on  2.4. 1984  where  they obtained confirmation  that a  learned Single  Judge of  the Calcutta High  Court had  made an  order such  as claimed by Shri  K.K.  Bandhopadhyay  in  his  telegram.  M/s  Samarias Trading Co.  Pvt. briefed  a senior Advocate, Shri Saktinath Mukherjee to  appear before  Shri Justice  Pyne on 3.4.1984. The information was that the writ petition would be taken up for  orders   at  2.30   P.M.   On   3.4.1984.   While   the representative of  M/s. Samarias  Trading Co.  Pvt. Ltd  and their advocate 31 were waiting  in the  court, they  came to  learn  that  the matter A  had been  mentioned to  Shri Justice  Pyne in  his chamber  by   Shri  Bhola   Nath  Sen  the  Senior  Advocate representing Mr.  S. Samuel and that the order of status quo had been  extended until  further orders. The representative of M/s Samarias Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. and their advocate and the Deputy  Commissioner  of  Andamans,  all  of  whom  were waiting in the Court were not told that the matter was going to be  mentioned in  the learned Judge’s chamber. As soon as they came  to know  about the  continuance of  the order  of status quo  they requested  Mr. Justice  Pyne to re-consider the order but the learned judge declined to do so.      Interrupting our  narrative here  for a  momemt, we are once again  constrained to comment on the peculiar procedure that was  adopted in  the case. The reason, we are told, for moving the  application in  the chamber of the learned judge instead of  in open  Court was  that Mr.  Justice  Pyne  was

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sitting on the original Side in Court and so the application which had  to made  on the Appellate Side had to be moved in his Chamber. We are unable to understand why it should be so and why  the application could not be moved in open court. A sitting in  chambers could  be  held  when  both  sides  are represented and the sittings are held openly so that members of the  public, if  they desire  to attend,  may have access even in  the  chamber.  To  grant  interim  orders  on  oral application in  chambers when the judge is otherwise sitting in open  court for  other matters would seriously reflect on the fairness  of the procedure adopted by the courts and may have the  unpleasant effect of undermining public confidence in courts.  Sometimes when  a learned  judge is sitting in a Division Bench or a Full Bench, some application may have to be made  to him  individually in  which case  permission  is always sought  in open  Court to move the application in the chamber. The  Registry then prepares a special list, puts it up on  the notice  board and  before and  before the Judge’s chamber and  also circulates  a copy to the Bar Association. This procedure is followed in some High Courts and if such a procedure is  followed then  alone can  we keep  up the high tradition of  open justice.  A public  hearing is one of the great attributes  of a court, and courts of this country are therefore  require   to  administer   justice   in   public. Otherwise, there  is a risk that justice may even be undone. As most  admirably expressed  by  Fletcher-Moulton  L.J.  in Scott v.  Scott Courts  of Justice  who are the guardians of civil liberties, ought 32 to be doubly vigilant against encroachment by themselves. It is not  as a  matter of  policy but as a matter of law’ that the hearing of a cause he public except in the limited class of cases with which we are not now concerned. Th It rule was violated by the learned Single Judge in this case.      After all  the administration  of justice  is  a  vital concern first  of public  more than  any private  party, the public has  a right  to  present  in  court  and  watch  the proceeding and  its conduct  except in  the very  rare cases where the very cause of advancement of justice requires that proceeding be  held in camera. In Naresh Shridhar Mirajkar & ors. v.  State of  Maharashtra &  Anr.(1) it was observed by this Court as follows:-         "It is  well-settled  that  in  general,  all  cases      brought before  the Courts,  whether civil, criminal or      others, must  be heard  in open  Court. Public trail in      open court  is undoubtedly  essential for  the healthy,      objective and  fair administration  of  justice.  Trial      held subject  to the public scrutiny and gaze naturally      acts as  a check  against judicial caprice or vagaries,      and  serves  as  a  powerful  instrument  for  creating      confidence of  the public in the fairness, objectivity,      and impartiality  of  the  administration  of  justice.      Public confidence  in the  administration of justice is      of such  great significance  that there  can be  no two      opinions on  the broad  proposition that in discharging      their functions  as  judicial  Tribunals,  courts  must      generally hear  causes in  open  and  must  permit  the      public admission  to the  court-room.  As  Bentham  has      observed:         "In the  darkness of  secrecy sinister interest, and      evil  in   every  shape,   have  full  swing.  Only  in      proportion as publicity has place can any of the checks      applicable to  judicial injustice  operate. Where there      is no  publicity there  is no justice. Publicity is the      very soul  of  justice.  It  is  the  keenest  spur  to

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    exertion, and  surest of all guards  against improbity.      It keeps the Judge himself while trying under trial (in      the  sense   that)  the   security  of   securities  is      publicity". (Scott v. Scott)      In Mc pherson v. Mc pherson, (2) the Judicial Committee observed      (1) [1966l 3 s.C.R 744.      (2) AIR 1936 PC 246. 33        "Moreover the potential presence of the public almost      necessarily invests the proceedings with some degree of      formality. And  formality is perhaps the only available      substitute for  the solemnity  by which, ideally at all      events such proceedings,...... should be characterised.      That potential presence is at least some guarantee that      there shall be ascertain decorum of procedure These are      some  of   the  considerations  which  have  led  their      Lordships to  take a  more serious  view the absence of      the public from the trial of this (divorce) action that      has obtained  in the  Courts below.  influenced by them      their Lordships have felt impelled to regard the inroad      upon the  rule of  publicity  made  in  this  instance-      unconscious thought  it was-as one not to b.. justified      and now  that it has been disclosed as one that must be      condemned so that it shall not again be permitted."      To resume  the narrative  M/s Samarias Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. immediately  filed a  Writ  Appeal  under  the  Letters Patent before the Division Bench consisting of Mr. Justice M M. Dutt  r. and Mr. Justice Ajit Kumar Sen Gupta. The matter was mentioned  before the  Division Bench  at 3  4S l’.M. By consent of  parties the  Writ Appeal  filed by  M/s Samaries Trading Co.  Pvt. Ltd. and the Writ Petition filed by Samuel were both  directed to  be listed for hearing b(fore them on 4. 4.  1984. With  great difficulty M/s Samarias Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd.  were able  to get  a copy of the writ petition at that stage.  The Division  bench disposed  of both  the writ petition and  writ appeal  finally on  4 4. 1984 itself. The order of Division Bench was in the following terms:         "By consent  of parties,  we treat  the appeal as on      day’s list.  As prayed for by the learned Advocates for      the parties,  we also  treat the  Writ Petition  as  on      day’s list.         After hearing  the learned Advocates for the parties      and after  considering the  facts and  circumstances of      the case,  we are  of the  view that  the  auction  for      vending of  liquor that  has been  held should  be  set      aside. Accordingly, we set aside the auction and direct      the Deputy Commis- 34      sioner of  Andaman and  Nicobar Islands to hold a fresh      auction on  the basis  of the  new terms and conditions      that have  already been  circulated, being  annexure to      the Writ  Petition. The  auction will  be held  on  the      19th, April,  1984 at  11 A. M. at the Conference Hall,      Deputy  Commissioner’s   office,  at  Port  Blair.  The      reserved price  for the  auction of  the liquor shop is      fixed at  Rs. 30,00000  (thirty lacs).  It must he made      clear that  the period  for which  the auction  of  the      liquor shop  will be  held will be from 22nd April,1984      till 31st of March, 1985.         The auction will be advertised once in the Statesman      in Calcutta and once in the Indian Express in Madras at      least five days before the auction.        In the event the reserved price of rupees thirty lacs      is  not   bid,  in   that  case,  the  writ  petitioner

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    undertakes to  this Court that he will take the license      at the reserved price of rupees thirty lacs and in that      event the  appellant under  takes to  this Court not to      carry on  the business  of liquor  after  the  21st  of      April, 1984.         The participants  in the  bid will  be at liberty to      take with them their respective Advocates          The  appellant  shall  be  liable  to  pay  to  the      Administra- tion  the proportionate license fee for the      days in  the month  of April  upto 21st  of April, 1984      during which he will carry on the business of liquor on      the basis  of his  offer already  made,  that  is,  Rs.      2500000 (Twenty  five lacs)  for one  year. The  Deputy      Commissioner is  directed to  refund to   the appellant      the amount  of the deposit which he has made in respect      of the  disputed auction loss the proportionate license      fee for the days for which he will carry on business in      the month  of April  upto 21st  April, 1984 immediately      the day  on which  the appellant starts vending liquor.      Further, the  Deputy Commissioner shall issue necessary      orders enabling  the appellant  to carry  on the liquor      business till 21st April, 1994. 35         The appeal  and the  writ appeal  are disposed of as      above. There will be no order for costs.         The appellant does not admit the allegations made in      the writ petition.         Let plain  copies of this order countersigned by the      Assistant Registrar  (Court) he  given to  the  learned      Advocates for the parties".      On the next day, the order was modified as follows:-         This matter  has been  mentioned by both the parties      for the  purpose of rectifying one clerical mistake. It      is directed in modification of our order dated April, 4      1984 that  in  the  event  the  reserve  price  of  Rs.      30,00000 (thirty  lacs) is  not bid,  in that case, the      writ petitioner  undertakes to  this Court that he will      take the  license at  the reserved  price of  30, 00000      and, in  that case,  the appellant  undertakes to  this      Court not to carry on the business of liquor at Rangat,      Middle Andmans,  pursuant to the existing license after      the 21st  April, 1984.  If, however, any new license is      granted to  the appellant  pursuant to the auction that      will be  held on  the 19th  April, 1984,  the appellant      will, of  course, be  able to  carry on the business of      liquor at that place upto 31st March, 1985.         Our order  dated 4th  April, 1984 is modified to the      above extent  and the  rest  of  the  said  order  will      stand".      Aggrieved by  the order  of the Calcutta High Court M/s Samarias Trading  Co. Pvt.  Ltd.  filed  the  special  leave petition out  of which  the present  appeal arises on 11. 4. 1984. One  George Joseph  claiming to  be "working  for gain with  Respondent  No.  1,  Shri  Samuel"  filed  a  counter- affidavit purporting to be on behalf of Respondent No. 1. At the first  hearing of  the special  leave petition  on 17.4. 1984, Shri  S. S.  Ray, Senior  Advocate, appeared  for  the respondent No. 1. On that day, the learned counsel appearing for the  M/s Samarias  Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd. produced before us an  affidavit dated  16. 4. 1984 purporting to be that of S. Samuel in which he disclaimed that he ever instructed any one to file any writ peti- 36 tion  in  the  Calcutta  High  Court  on  his  behalf.  This affidavit appeared  to destroy  the very  foundation of  the

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order of  the Calcutta  High Court.  The genuineness  of the affidavit was  however, disputed  by Shri George Joseph, who Was  present  in  court  and  S.  S.  Ray,  senior  advocate appearing on  behalf of  S. Samuel.  In  that  situation  we directed the  issue of  notice to all parties and bound over George Joseph  to appear  before us  at the next hearing. We directed that  S. Samuel  should be present before us at the next hearing.  We also  directed  that  the  re-auction,  as ordered by  the Calcutta High Court, should be held on April 19, 1984,  but that  the sale  should not  be confirmed. The matter came  before us again on April 26, 1984. We were told that the re-auction had fetched a bid of Rs. 36 lakhs and 80 thousand .  We were  also told that because of our direction that the  sale should  not be confirmed, the amount required to be  deposited within 48 hours could not be deposited. We, therefore, directed the highest bidder to deposit the amount required to  be deposited under the rules on or before April 30,1984. Fresh  notices were  issued to  S.  Samuel  and  we instructed the  Registry to  mention in  the notice  that if Samuel failed  to appear at the next hearing, a non-bailable warrant would  be issued  for his  arrest. We  also issued a notice to  Dr. D.  K. Banerjee,  Advocate who  prepared  the affidavit filed by Mr. S. Samuel, in the Calcutta High Court to appear  before us on may 3, 1984. George Joseph was bound over to  appear before  us. He  was also directed to file an affidavit setting  out the full facts of the case which were within his  knowledge. At  the next hearing on May 3, 19..4, we  were   informed  that   Subramaniam  had   breached  the undertaking given  to us  on April  26, 1984  that he  would deposit the  amount required  to be  deposited by  the rules before April  30, 1984.  We, therefore, had no option but to set aside  the auction..  Fortunately the  petitioner,  M/s. Samarias Trading  Co. Pvt.  Ltd. offered to take the shop on lease for  a  shop  of  Rs.  30  lakhs  and  the  Additional Solicitor General  appearing for  the administration  of the Andaman and  Nicobar Islands  accepted the  offer. The lease was sanctioned  by us  subject to  the petitioner making the necessary deposit within 10 days from that day.      On August  7, 1984,  George  Joseph  failed  to  appear before us  notwithstanding  that  he  had  executed  a  bond undertaking to  be present before us. We therefore, directed the issue  of a  non-bailable warrant  against him  for  his production before  us on August 23, 1984 Mr. Samuel was also bound over to appear before us on August 37 23, 1984.  On that  day,  Shri  K.K.  Bandopadhyay  filed  a statement before  us seeking  to explain  the  circumstances under which  he appeared  before Mr.Justice  Pyne to  assist Shri Ashok Kumar Ganguly. He is a junior advocate working in the chambers  of Shri Mahitosh Majumdar at whose instance it was that  he was  asked to  assist Shri A.K. Ganguly. He was told that Shri S.D. Benerjee, senior advocate, would make an oral application.  He met  a group  of people,  one of  whom claimed to  be S.  Samuel. A  consultation was  held by Shri A.K. Ganguly and the gentleman holding himself out as Samuel with Shri  S.D.  Banerjee  in  his  presence  in  the  court premises at about 3.15 p.m. On the same day. Thereafter Shri S.D. Banerjee entered the court room of Mr. Justice Pyne and moved an  unlisted motion  before the  hon’ble judge at 4.00 p.m. when  the court  was about  to rise. Shri S.D. Banerjee sought the  permission of  the hon’ble  judge  to  move  the matter in the chamber of the hon’ble judge by way of an oral application. Leave was granted and the application was moved before the  learned judge  in his  chamber at 4.10 p.m. Shri A.K. Ganguly  and Shri K.K Bandyopadhyay appeared along with

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Shri S  D. Banerjee.  That evening  the gentleman  who  held himself out  as S.  Samuel and  two or three others met Shri K.K. Bandyopadhyay  and the latter requested Shri M. Lahiri, advocate to  draft a writ petition. The two of them prepared the writ  petition and  got it  ready for  filing  on  April 3,1984. S.  Samuel also handed over a Vakalatnama to him. On 3rd,  the   said  gentleman   appeared   before   the   oath Commissioner and  the papers were duly lodged as Mr. Justice Pyne was  sitting on  the  original  side  on  April  3,1984 according to Shri Bandyopadhyay. The oral application had to be moved  in the  chamber of the learned judge. Accordingly, Shri B.N.Sen, senior counsel, moved the application assisted by Shri  Lahiri and Shri Bandyopadhyay. Later the matter was mentioned in  court on  behalf of  M/s. Samarias Trading Co. Pvt. Ltd.  before the  Division Bench and an oral prayer was made for  suspending the order of Mr. Justice Pyne. Both the writ petition  and the  appeal were directed to be listed on the next day.      As we  thought it  imperative that George Joseph should be present  before us,  we adjourned  the matter  to  August 23,1984 for  his production.  On August  23,1984,  when  the matter was  next taken  up, George  Joseph continued  to  be absent and  a non-bailable warrant was issued for his arrest and production  on September  11, 984.  Mr. Samuel  was also bound over to be present in the court 38 on September  11, 1984.  We also  now  have  before  us  the affidavi- ts of  S/Shri S.  D. Banerjee, B. N. Sen, M. Mazumdar and A. K. Ganguly  of the  Calcutta Bar  explaining the  facts  and circumstances pertaining  to the proceedings that took place in  the   Calcutta  High   Court.  Their   affidavits  which confirming the  facts already  narrated by us, disclose that none of  them personally  knew Samuel, as indeed one may not expect an  advocate to  know every client of his personally. They were  like others,  taken for  a ride,  if one  may  be permitted to  use so  common an expression. Their affidavits only  emphasise   what  we   have  already  said  about  the undesirability of  making oral  applications of  consequence before courts  with nothing  placed in the court’s record to vouch for the authenticity of the facts forming the basis of the representations  made to  the court, etc. So far as this appeal is  concerned, there is nothing further to be done by us we  have now  sanctioned the  lease of the liquor shop in favour of the appellants for the year April 1, 1984 to March 31, 1985.  We are,  however, informed by the petitioner that though the  lease has  been confirmed  in their  favour from April l,  1984 to  March 31, 1985 for a sum of Rs. 30 lakhs, the  administration  of  the  Andaman  Nicobar  Islands,  is demanding from  them a  sum of  Rs. One lakh and odd towards the lease  for the  few days  that they  ran the liquor shop after April 1, 1984 under the orders of Calcutta High Court, calculated at  the rate  of Rs.  25 lakhs  per year.  We are unable to  see any  justification for  the demand  since the lease as  sanctioned and  as confirmed is admittedly for the entire period  April 1,  1984 to  March 31,  1985 for Rs. 30 lakhs. The demand is directed to be withdrawn. The appeal is allowed in  the terms indicated. A notice will however issue to George  Joseph  to  show  cause  why  he  should  not  be committed  for   contempt  of   court  for   breaching   the undertaking given  by him.  A nonbailable  warrant will also issue for  his production  before us.  Since the real Samuel has disclaimed all responsibility in the matter and since we do not  know who  was the  person who represented himself as Samuel before  the Calcutta  High Court,  we are  unable  to

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award costs against anyone. M.L.A.                        Appeal disposed of accordingly 39