14 January 1966
Supreme Court
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SHEODAN SINGH Vs SMT. DARYAO KUNWAR

Case number: Appeal (civil) 802 of 1963


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PETITIONER: SHEODAN SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT.  DARYAO KUNWAR

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/01/1966

BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) RAMASWAMI, V. SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1332            1966 SCR  (3) 300  CITATOR INFO :  R          1971 SC 664  (24)  RF         1974 SC1320  (7)  RF         1976 SC1645  (21)  RF         1977 SC1268  (21)

ACT: Code  of  civil  Procedure (Act 5 of  1908),  s.  11-Appeals dismissed  as time barred, failure to print  records-If  res judicata in connected appeals.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant  filed two suits in the Court  of  the  Civil Judge, one for declaration of his title to the suit property and  the second for other reliefs.  While these  suits  were pending the respondent instituted two suits in the  Munsif’s court against the appellant claiming joint ownership to  the suit property and other reliefs.  The four suits were  tried together by the Civil Judge.  Some of the issues were common to  all the suits and one of the common issues  relating  to the  title  of  the  parties were found  in  favour  of  the respondent.  The Civil Judge dismissed the appellant’s title suit,  decreed  his other suit partly, and decreed  the  two suits  of  the  respondent.   The  appellant  filed  appeals against  teh decree in each suit.  The High Court  dismissed the  two appeals arising out of the respondent’s sutis,  one as  time  barred,  and the other for failure to  apply   for translation and printing of the record.  As  th title of the respondent  to the suit property had become final on account of such  dismissal, the respondent prayed for the  dismissal of  the  other  two appeals  also,  as  the  main   question involved   therein,  was the same.  The High  court   agreed that the appeals  were barred by res judicata  and dismissed them.  against  these  orders of  dismissal,  the  appellant filed  appeals  to this Court, and contended  that  (i)  the title to the property was not directly-and substantially  in issue  in  the respondent’s suits; (ii) The  Munsif’s  Court could  not try the title suit filed by the appellant;  (iii) it  could  not  be  said that appeals  arising  out  of  the respondent’s  suits  were  former  suits  and  as  such  the decision  therein  would be res judicata and  (iv)  the  two

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appeals  dismissed-one on the ground of limitation, and  the other  on the ground of not printing the records, could  not be said to be heard and finally decided. HELD : The appeals must be dismissed. (i)The  contention  that  the issue as to  title  was  not directly  and  substantially in issue  in  the  respondent’s suits  must  be rejected.  The judgment of the  Civil  Judge showed that this issue was raised in the respondents  suits, that  it  was directly and substantially in issue  in  those suits  also,  and  did arise out of  the  pleadings  of  the parties. [306 C] (ii)It  is  the court which decides the former  suit  whose jurisdiction  to the subsequent suit has to  be  considered, and  not  the court in which the former suit may  have  been filed.  Though the respondent’s suits may have been filed in the  Munsif’s court, they were transferred to the  court  of the  Civil  Judge and were decided by him.   Therefore,  the contention  that  the Munsif before  whom  the  respondent’s suits were filed, could not try the subsequent title suit of the appellant had no force. [306 E] (iii)The  High  Court’s  decision in  the  two  appeals arising from the respondent’s suits were undoubtedly earlier and  therefore the condition that there should have  been  a decision in a former suit to give rise to res judicata in  a subsequent suit was satisfied in the present case. [307 C] 301 Nahari v.  Shanker, [1950] S.CR. 754, distinguished. (iv)Where  the  trial court has decided  two  suits  having common  issues  on  the merits and  there  are  two  appeals therefrom  and one of them is dismissed on some  preliminary ground,  like  limitation or default in printing,  with  the result that the trial court’s decision stands confirmed, the decision  of the appeal court will be res judicata  and  the appeal  court  must  be deemed to  have  heard  and  finally decided  the  matter.   In such a case  the  result  of  the decision  of the appeal court is to confirm the decision  of the  trial  court given on merits, and if that  is  so,  the decision  of the appeal court will be res judicata  whatever may  be  the  reason  for the  dismissal.   It  would  be  a different matter, however, where the decision of the  appeal court does not result in the confirmation of the decision of the  trial court given on the merits, as for example,  where the   appeal  court  hold  that  the  trial  court  had   no jurisdiction and dismisses the appeal, even though the trial court  might have dismissed the suit on the merits. [308  D, G; 309 A] Shankar  Sahai  v. Bhagwat Sahai, A.I.R. 1946  Oudh  33  and Obedur Rahman v. Darbari Lal, A.I.R. 1927 Lah. 1, overruled. Case law discussed.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 802 and 803 of 1963. Appeals by special leave from the judgment and decree  dated November  30,  1962  of the Allahabad High  Court  in  First Appeals Nos. 365 and 366 of 1951. M. V. Goswami and B. C. Misra, for the appellant. Prayag Das and J. P.  Goyal, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Wanchoo.   J. These are connected appeals by  special  leave against the judgment of the High Court of Allahabad, and the only  question raised herein is one of res  judicata.   They will be dealt with together.  The appellant’s father brought

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suit  No.  37 of 1950 against the respondent,  Smt.   Daryao Kunwar,  for  a  declaration .hat he was the  owner  of  the properties  in suit and for possession in  the  alternative. The  appellant  was also a party to the suit as  a  proforma defendant.    Since  his  father  is  dead,  he   has   been substituted  in  his  place.  The case put  forward  in  the plaint   was  that  Harnam  Singh  was  the  uncle  of   the appellant’s  father.   Ram  Kishan was the  adopted  son  of Harnam  Singh,  and  the  respondent  is  his  widow.    The appellant  and  his father were living jointly  with  Harnam Singh  and  his adopted son Ram Kishan and on the  death  of Harnam  Singh  and his adopted son, the  appellant  and  his father   became   owners   of  the   joint   properties   by survivorship;  but the names of the widows of  Harnam  Singh and  Ram  Kishan were entered in revenue  papers  for  their consolation,  though they had no right or title to any  part of the property in dispute.  There were other allegations in the  plaint with which we are however not concerned  in  the present appeals. 302 Shortly afterwards the appellant’s father filed another suit No.  42 of 1950 against the respondent and one other  person claiming  the price of the crops which stood on certain  sir and khudkashat plots in two villages on the allegation  that the  respondent  had  cut  and  misappropriated  the   crops standing  on these plots without having any right, title  or interest  therein.   The  respondent  Smt.   Daryao   Kunwar contested  both the suits.  Her main defence was that  there had  been  complete partition in the family as a  result  of which Harnam Singh and after him his adopted son Ram  Kishan were  the sole owners of their separated shares.  After  the death  of  Ram Kishan, the respondent inherited  his  entire property  as his widow.  Both these suits had been filed  in the court of the Civil Judge. While  these suits were pending, the  respondent  instituted two  suits of her own, Nos. 77 and 91 of 1950,  against  the appellant  and his father.  Suit No. 77 was for recovery  of the price of her share of the crop grown on certain sir  and khudkashat  plots which had been cut and misappropriated  by the  appellant and his father.  Suit No. 91 was also  for  a similar relief in respect of the respondent’s share of crops grown on certain sir and khudkashat plots in another village which had also been cut and misappropriated by the appellant and his father.  Her case was that the plots in question  in both  the villages belonged to the parties jointly  and  the crop  was jointly sown by them and she was entitled to  half of the said crops.  Further in suit No. 77 of 1950 she  also claimed  the relief of permanent injunction restraining  the appellant  and  his father from letting out the  said  plots without  her  consent.  These two suits were  filed  in  the court  of  the Munsif while suits filed by  the  appellant’s father had been instituted in the court of the Civil  Judge. Subsequently  by  an order of the District  Judge,  the  two suits filed by the respondent were transferred to the  court of  the  Civil Judge.  Thereafter all the  four  suits  were consolidated and tried together by the Civil Judge with  the consent of the parties.  All these suits were disposed of by a common judgment but separate decrees were prepared in each suit.  In all these suits five issues were common.  In addi- tion  there  were other issues in each case  respecting  the particular merits thereof.  One of the common issues related to  respective rights of the parties to the  suit  property. The  finding of the Civil Judge on this issue was that  Smt. Daryao Kunwar was entitled to the properties claimed by  the appellant’s  father in his suit No. 37 of 1950.   The  Civil

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Judge therefore dismissed that suit.  Further in view of the finding  on  the question of title in suit No. 37  of  1950, suit No. 91 of 1950 was decreed in favour of the respondent. Further  suit  No. 42 by the appellant’s father was  on  the same finding decreed to the extent of half only; suit No. 77 of  1950  was  decreed  also to the extent  of  half  and  a permanent injunction was granted                             303 in favour of the respondent Smt.  Daryao Kunwar as prayed by her in that suit. The  appellant’s  father  was aggrieved  by  these  decrees. Consequently  he filed two first appeals in the High  Court. Appeal No. 365 of 1951 was against the dismissal of suit No. 37 while appeal No. 366 of 1951 was against the dismissal of suit No. 42.  The appellant’s father also filed two  appeals in the court of the District Judge against the judgments and decrees  in the suit filed by the respondent,  Smt.   Daryao Kunwar.   Appeal No. 452 of 1951 was against the  decree  in suit  No.  77 while appeal No. 453 of 1951 was  against  the decree  in suit No. 91.  By an order of the High Court,  the two appeals pending in the court of the District Judge  were transferred to the High Court.  Thereafter appeal No. 453 of 1951  arising out of suit No. 91 was dismissed by  the  High Court on October 9, 1953 as being time-barred while,  appeal No. 452 of 1951 arising out of suit No. 77 was dismissed  by the  High Court on October 7, 1955 on the ground of  failure of  the  appellant’s  father to apply  for  translation  and printing of the record as required by the rules of the  High Court.   It may be mentioned that appeals Nos. 452  and  453 were-given different numbers on transfer to the High  Court; but  it is unnecessary to refer to those number for  present purposes. After appeals Nos. 452 and 453 had been dismissed, an appli- cation  was made on behalf of the respondent,  Smt.   Daryao Kunwar, praying that first appeals Nos. 365 and 366 of  1951 be dismissed, as the main question involved therein, namely, title  of  Smt.   Daryao Kunwar to the  suit  property,  had become  final  on account of the dismissal  of  the  appeals arising  out  of suits Nos. 77 and 91 of  1950.   When  this question came up for hearing before a learned Single  Judge, the following question, namely-"whether the appeal is barred by  section  11  of the Code of Civil Procedure  or  by  the general  principles of res judicata as the  appeals  against the decisions in suits Nos. 77 and 91 of 1951 were  rejected and dismissed by this Court and those decisions have  become final  and  binding between the parties" was referred  to  a Full Bench for decision in view of some conflict between two Division Benches of that court. The Full Bench came to the conclusion that two matters  were directly  and substantially in issue in all the four  suits, namely(i)  whether  Harnam  Singh and his  adopted  son  Ram Kishan  died in a state of jointness with the appellant  and his father, and (ii) whether the property in suit was  joint family  property of Ram Kishan and the  appellant’s  father. The  decision  of the Civil Judge on both these  issues  was against  the appellant and his father and in favour of  Smt. Daryao  Kunwar.  The Full Bench held that though there  were four  appeals originally before the High Court, two of  them had been dismissed and the very same issues which arose in 304 first appeals Nos. 365 and 366 had also arisen in those  two appeals  which  had been dismissed.  The  Full  Bench  found further  that  the  terms  of s. 11 of  the  Code  of  Civil Procedure were fully applicable and therefore the two  first appeals Nos. 365 and 366 were barred by res judicata to  the

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extent of the decision of the five issues which were  common in  four  connected appeals.  In the result the  Full  Bench returned that answer to the question referred to it. After this decision of the Full Bench, the matter went  back to  the  learned Single Judge for  decision,  who  thereupon dismissed  the  appeals as barred by s. II of  the  Code  of Civil Procedure.  The appellant then obtained special  leave from  this  court; and that is how the matter  has  come  up before us. We may at the out set refer to the relevant provisions of s. 11  of  the  Code of Civil Procedure  insofar  as  they  are material for present purposes.  They read thus :               "No Court shall try any suit or issue-in which               the matter directly and substantially in issue               has  been directly and substantially in  issue               in a former suit between the same parties,  or               between parties under whom they or any of them               claim,  litigating under the same title, in  a               Court competent to try such subsequent suit or               the   suit  in  which  such  issue  has   been               subsequently  raised, and has been  heard  and               finally decided by such Court.               "Explanation  I-The expression  ’former  suit’               shall  denote  a suit which has  been  decided               prior  to the suit in question whether or  not               it was instituted prior thereto.               It  is  not necessary to refer  to  the  other               Explanations.               A  plain  reading  of s.   11  shows  that  to               constitute   a   matter  res   judicata,   the               following   conditions  must   be   satisfied,               namely-               (i)The matter directly and substantially in               issue in the subsequent suit or issue must  be               the   same  matter  which  was  directly   and               substantially in issue in the former suit;               (ii)The  former suit must have been  a  suit               between  the same parties or between,  parties               under whom they or any of them claim;               (iii)The  parties must have  litigated  under               the same title in the former suit;               (iv)The court which decided the former  suit               must   be  a  court  competent  to   try   the               subsequent  suit  or the suit  in  which  such               issue is subsequently raised; and               (v)The matter directly and substantially in               issue  in the subsequent suit must  have  been               heard and finally decided 305               by  the  Court  in the  first  suit.   Further               Explanation I shows that it is not the date on               which  the suit is filed that matters but  the               date  on  which the suit is decided,  so  that               even  if a suit was filed later, it will be  a               former  suit if it has been  decided  earlier.               In  order therefore that the decision  in  the               earlier  two  appeals dismissed  by  the  High               Court operates as res judicata it will have to               be  seen  whether  all  the  five   conditions               mentioned above have been satisfied.               Four contentions have been urged on behalf  of               the appellant in this connection.  They are-               (i)that title to property was not directly and               substantially in issue in suits Nos. 77 and  9               1 ;

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             (ii)  that  the court of the Munsif could  not               try the title suit No.37 of 1950;               (iii) that  it  cannot be  said  that  appeals               arising  out  of  suits Nos. 77  and  91  were               former suits and as such the decision  therein               would be res judicata;               (iv)that  it  cannot be said  that  the  two               appeals  from suits Nos. 77 and 91 which  were               dismissed by the High Court, one on the ground               of  limitation and the other on the ground  of               not  printing  the  records,  were  heard  and               finally decided. So  it  is contended that the conditions necessary  for  res judicata  to arise under s. 11  have not been satisfied  and the High Court was in error in holding that its dismissal of the  two appeals arising from suits Nos. 77 and 91  amounted to  res  judicata so far as appeals Nos. 365  and  366  were concerned. Re. (i). The judgment of the Additional Civil Judge shows that  there were five issues common to all the four suits, and the  main point raised in these common issues was whether Harnam Singh and his adopted son Ram Kishan were joint with the appellant and  his  father and whether Ram Kishan died in a  state  of jointness with them.  This main question was decided against the  appellant  and  his  father and  it  was  held  by  the Additional Civil Judge that Harnam Singh and Ram Kishan were separate  from  the appellant and his father  and  that  Ram Kishan  did not die in a state of jointness with  them.   On this  view  of the matter, the Additional Civil  Judge  held that  the respondent, Smt.  Daryao Kunwar, succeeded to  Ram Kishan on his death and was entitled to the separated  share of Ram Kishan and the appellant and his father had no  right to  the  property  by  survivorship.  In  the  face  of  the judgment  of  the Additional Civil Judge  which  shows  that there  were  five common issues in all the four  suits,  the appellant cannot be heard to say that these 306 issues were not directly and substantially in issue in suits Nos. 77 and 91 also.  Further this contention was not raised in  the High Court and the appellant cannot be permitted  to raise  it  for the first time in this  Court.   Besides  the question  whether  these  common issues  were  directly  and substantially  in issue in suits Nos. 77 and 91 can only  be decided after a perusal of the pleadings of the parties.  In the  paper  book  as originally  printed  the  pleadings  at all.Later  he  filed copies of the plaints  an  application. Even  now we have not got copies of the  written  statements and  replications,  if  any of suits Nos.  77  and  91.  the appellant  did not include  only with  written-state In  the circumstances we must accept from the fact that the judgment of  the Additional Civil Judge shows that these five  issues -were  raised  in  suits  Nos. 77 and  91,  that  they  were directly and substantially in issue in those suits also  and did arise out of the pleadings of the parties.  We therefore reject  the  contention  that issues as to  title  were  not directly and substantially in issue in Suits Nos. 77 and 91. Re. (ii). There  is  no substance in the contention  that  the  Munsif before  whom suits Nos. 77 and 91 were filed could  not  try the  title  suit  No.  37 and therefore,  there  can  be  no question of res judicata, as the title suit No. 37, assuming it  to  be  a subsequent suit, could not  be  tried  by  the Munsif’s court which tried the former suit.  It is true that suits  Nos. 77 and 91 were filed in the Munsif’s court;  but

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they  were transferred to the court of the Additional  Civil Judge and in actual fact were tried by the Additional  Civil Judge.  It is the court which decides the former suit  whose jurisdiction to try the subsequent suit has to be considered and  not  the court in which the former suit may  have  been filed.  Therefore, though suits Nos. 77 and 91 may have been filed  in the Munsif’s court, they were transferred  to  the court of the Additional Civil Judge and were decided by him. There is no dispute that the court which decided the  former suits,  namely  suits Nos. 77 and 91 (assuming  them  to  be former suits) had jurisdiction to try the title suit No. 37. The contention that the Munsif before whom suits Nos. 77 and 91 were filed, could not try the subsequent suit No. 37  has therefore  no  force  in the circumstances  of  the  present litigation. Then  it is urged that all the four suits were  consolidated and  decided on the same day by the same judgment and  there can therefore be no question that suits Nos. 77 and 91  were former  suits  and thus the decision as to  title  in  those suits  became res judicata.  It is not in dispute  that  the High  Court’s  decision in the appeals arising  ’from  suits Nos. 77 and 91 was earlier.  Reliance in this  connection is placed   on  the  decision  of  this  Court  in  Nahari   v. Shankar(1). 1.   [1950] S.C.R. 754.                             307 That  case  however has no application to the facts  of  the present case, because there the suit was only one which  was followed  by two appeals.  The appeals were  heard  together and disposed of by the same judgment though separate decrees were  prepared.   An  appeal was taken against  one  of  the decrees.   In  those circumstances this Court held  that  as there  was only one suit, it was not necessary to  file  two separate  appeals and the fact that one of the  appeals  was time-barred did not affect the maintainability of the  other appeal  and  the  question of res judicata did  not  at  all arise.  In the present case there were different suits  from which  different appeals had to be filed.  The High  Court’s decision  in the two appeals arising from suits Nos’ 77  and 91 was undoubtedly earlier and therefore the condition  that there  should have been a decision in a former suit to  give rise  to res judicata in a subsequent suit was satisfied  in the  present case.  The contention that there was no  former suit in the present case must therefore fail. Re. (iv). This  brings  us to the main point that has  been  urged  in these appeals, namely, that the High Court had not heard and finally decided the appeals arising out of suits Nos. 77 and 91.  One of the appeals was dismissed on the ground that  it was  filed beyond the period of limitation while  the  other appeal  was  dismissed  on the  ground  that  the  appellant therein  had  not taken steps to print the records.   It  is therefore  urged that the two appeals arising out  of  suits Nos. 77 and 91 had not been heard and finally decided by the High  Court, and so the condition that the former suit  must have been heard and finally decided was not satisfied in the present case.  Reliance in this connection is placed on  the well-settled  principle that in order that a matter  may  be said to have been heard and finally decided, the decision in the  former suit must have been on the merits.   Where,  for example,  the former suit was dismissed by the  trial  court for  want  of jurisdiction, or for default of  plaintiff  ’s appearance,  or on the ground of non-joinder of  parties  or misjoinder of parties or multifariousness, or on the  ground that  the  suit  was badly framed, or on  the  ground  of  a

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technical  mistake,  or  for  failure on  the  part  of  the plaintiff to produce probate or letters of administration or succession  certificate when the same is required by law  to entitle the plaintiff to a decree, or for failure to furnish security  for costs, or on the ground of improper  valuation or for failure to pay additional court fee on a plaint which was  undervalued  or for want of cause of action or  on  the ground  that it is premature and the dismissal is  confirmed in  appeal  (if any), the decision not being on  the  merits would not be res judicata in a subsequent suit.  But none of these  considerations  apply in the present  case,  for  the Additional  Civil  Judge decided all the four suits  on  the merits  and decided the issue as to title on merits  against the  appellant  and his father.  It is true  that  the  High Court dismissed the appeals arising 308 out of suits Nos. 77 and 91 either on the ground that it was barred  by  limitation or on the ground that steps  had  not been  taken  for  printing the records.  Even  so  the  fact remains that the result of the dismissal of the two  appeals arising from suits Nos. 77 and 91 by the High Court on these grounds  was that the decrees of the Additional Civil  Judge who decided the issue as to title on merits stood  confirmed by the order of the High Court.  In such a case, even though the  order of the High Court may itself not be on the  merit the  result of the High Court’s decision is to  confirm  the decision  on the issue of title which had been given on  the merits by the Additional Civil Judge and thus in effect  the High  Court confirmed the decree of the trial court  on  the merits, whatever may be the reason for the dismissal of  the appeals  arising  from  suits  Nos. 77  and  91.   In  these circumstances though the order of the High Court itself  may not  be  on  the  merits, the decision  of  the  High  Court dismissing  the appeals arising out of suits Nos. 77 and  91 was  to  uphold the decision on the merits as  to  issue  of title  and therefore it must be held that by dismissing  the appeals  arising out of suits Nos. 77 and 91 the High  Court heard  and finally decided the matter for it  confirmed  the judgment  of the trial court on the issue of  title  arising between  the  parties and the decision of  the  trial  court being  on  the merits the High Court’s  decision  confirming that  decision must also be deemed to be on the merits.   To hold  otherwise would make res judicata impossible in  cases where  the trial court decides the matter on merits but  the appeal court dismisses the appeal on some preliminary ground thus  confirming the decision of the trial court on the  me- rits.  It is well-settled that where a decree on the  merits is appealed from, the decision of the trial court loses  its character  of finality and what was once res judicata  again becomes  res  subjudice and it is the decree of  the  appeal court  which  will  then  be  res  judicata.   But  if   the contention  of the appellant were to be accepted and  it  is held  that if the appeal court dismisses the appeal  on  any preliminary ground, like limitation or default in  printing, thus  confirming  into the trial court’s decision  given  on merits,  the appeal court’s decree cannot be  res  judicata, the  result  would be that even though the decision  of  the trial court given on the merits is confirmed by the  dismis- sal of the appeal on a preliminary ground there can never be res  judicata.   We cannot therefore accept  the  contention that even though the trial court may have decided the matter on  the  merits there can be no res judicata if  the  appeal court  dismisses the appeal on a preliminary ground  without going  into  the  merits,  even though  the  result  of  the dismissal of the appeal by the appeal court is  confirmation

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of  the  decision of the trial court given  on  the  merits. Acceptance of such a proposition will mean that all that the losing  party has to do to destroy the effect of a  decision given by the trial court on the merits is to file an  appeal and let that appeal be dismissed on some preliminary ground, with  the result that the decision given on the merits  also becomes useless as between the parties.  We 30 9 are  therefore of opinion that where a decision is given  on the  merits  by the trial court and the matter is  taken  in appeal  and  the  appeal is dismissed  on  some  preliminary ground,  like limitation or default in printing, it must  be held  that such dismissal when it confirms the  decision  of the  trial court on the merits itself amounts to the  appeal being  heard and finally decided on the merits whatever  may be the ground for dismissal of the appeal. It  now  remains to refer to certain  decisions  which  were cited at the bar in this connection.  The first decision  on which  reliance  is  placed on behalf of  the  appellant  is Sheosagar Singh v. Sitaram.(1) In that case there was a suit for  a declaration that the defendant was not the son  of  a particular  person.   It  appeared that  in  a  former  suit between  the  same  parties, the issue so  raised  had  been decided  against  the  plaintiffs by the  trial  court.   In appeal  the  only thing finally decided was that in  a  suit constituted  as  the former suit was, no decision  ought  to have been pronounced on the merits.  In those  circumstances the Privy Council held that the issue had not been heard and finally decided in the former suit.  These facts would  show that  that case has no application to the present case.   In that case the finality of the judgment of the trial court in the  former  suit  had been destroyed by  the  appeal  taken therefrom  and  the appeal court decided  that  no  decision ought  to have been pronounced on the merits in  the  former suit  constituted as it was.  It was in those  circumstances that  the  Privy Council held that the issue  had  not  been beard and finally decided in the former suit.  The facts  in that,  case therefore were very different from the facts  in the present case, for the very decision of the appeal  court showed  that nothing had been decided in that case  and  the decree  of the trial court on the merits was not  confirmed. In the case before us though the decision of the High  Court was  on a preliminary point the decision, on the  merits  of the trial court was confirmed and that makes the decision of the High Court res judicata. The next case to which reference has been made is Ashgar Ali Khan  v.  Ganesh  Das.(2)  In that  case  the  appellant  in pursuance of a deed of dissolution of partnership,  executed a bond for the payment of some money to the respondent.   He sued  to  set  aside the bond on the  ground  of  fraudulent misrepresentation as to the amount due.  The trial court and on appeal the District Judge held that the alleged fraud was not  established,  and dismissed the suit.  Upon  a  further appeal  to  the Judicial Commissioner it  was  held  without entering into the merits, that the appellant could not avoid the  bond as he did not claim to avoid the deed.  The  final court of appeal thus refused to determine the issue of fraud and  dismissed the suit on another ground.  In a  subsequent suit  by the respondent upon the bond, the appellant  raised as a defence the same case of (1) L.R. (1896) 24 1. A. 50. (2) L.R. (1917) 44 I.A. 213. 310 fraud.  It was held that the issue raised by the defence was not  res  judicata  since the matter had  not  been  finally

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decided by the final court of appeal.  That case also has no application  to the facts of the present case, for  in  that case  the final court of appeal did not decide the  question of fraud and dismissed the suit on another ground.  In  such a case it is well-settled that there can be no res judicata. where  the final appeal court confirms the decision  of  the courts below on a different ground or On one out of  several grounds  and does not decide the other ground.   The  reason for this is that it is the decision of the final court which is  res judicata and if the final’ court does not decide  an issue  it cannot be said that that issue has been heard  and finally  decided.  In the present case, however, the  result of the decision of the High Court in dismissing the appeals, arising from suits Nos. 77 and 91 is to confirm the judgment of  the trial court on all the issues which were common  and thus  it  must be held that the High Court’s  decision  does amount to the appeals being heard and finally decided. Then  strong  reliance  has been placed  on  behalf  of  the appellant  on  Shankar Sahai v. Bhagwat Sahai(1).   In  that case  it  was  held that where two suits  between  the  same parties  involving  common issues were disposed  of  by  one judgment  but  two  decrees, and  an  appeal  was  preferred against the decree in one but it was either not preferred in the other or was rejected as incompetent, the matter decided by  the   latter decree did not become  resjudicata  and  it could  be reopened in appeal against the former.  This  case certainly   supports  the  view  urged  on  behalf  of   the appellant.  This case also over-ruled an earlier view of the Oudh Chief Court in Bhagauti Din v. Bhagwat(2).  The  reason given for the main proposition in this decision is that  the court  must look at the substance of the matter and  not  be guided by technical considerations.  In view of what we have said  above,  we cannot agree with the view taken  in,  that case,  and must hold that it was wrongly decided insofar  as it  holds  that  even where the appeal from  one  decree  is dismissed, there will be no res judicata. The  next  case  to which reference may be  made  is  Obedur Rahman  v.  Darbari  Lal(3). In that case  there  were  five appeals  before the High Court, three of which  had  abated. There  was a common issue in all the five  appeals,  namely, whether a certain lease had expired or not and it was  urged that  in view of the abatement of the three  other  appeals, the  decision  of that issue had become res  judicata.   The contention  was  over-ruled by the observation  that  "where there   has  been  an  appeal,  the  matter  is  no   longer resjudicata  but res sub judice and where an appeal  is  not finally  heard  and  decided  any  matters  therein   cannot possibly  be  said to be res judicata".  This  view  in  our opinion is incorrect.  We may in this connection (1)  A.I.R. 1 46 Oudh 33.                        (2)  A.I.R. 1933 Oudh 531. (3)  A.I.R. 1927 Lah.  1.                             311 refer to Syed Ahmad Ali Khan Alavi v. Hinga Lal(1) where  it was  held  that where the appeal was struck  off  as  having abated, the decision would operate as res judicata.  If  the view  taken by the Lahore High Court is correct, the  result would  be  that there may be inconsistent decisions  on  the same issue with respect to the point involved in that  case, namely, whether a certain lease had expired or not and  the’ very   object  of  resjudicata  is  to  avoid   inconsistent decision.   Where therefore the result of the  dismissal  or abatement  of  an appeal is to confirm the decision  of  the trial court on the merits such dismissal must amount to  the appeal being heard and finally decided and would operate  as

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resjudicata. The  next case to which reference has been made is  Ghansham Singh v. Bhola Singh(2).  In that case there was a suit  for sale  on  a mortgage and the trial court gave  a  decree  in favour of the plaintiff but awarded no costs.  The plaintiff appealed against the decree insofar as it disallowed  costs. The  defendant  also appealed as to the amount  of  interest allowed  to  the  plaintiff.  Both the  appeals  were  heard together  and decided by one judgment, and both the  appeals were  allowed.   The plaintiff appealed to  the  High  Court against  the decree in the defendant’s appeal below but  did not  appeal against the decree which was in his favour  with respect  to  costs.   It was held that  the  fact  that  the plaintiff  had  not  appealed against the  decision  in  his appeal  was no bar to the hearing of the appeal against  the decree  passed in the defendant’s appeal below.  We  do  not see  how this case can help the appellant.  The  matters  in the  two appeals were different, one relating to  costs  and the other relating to interest; the rest of the judgment  of the  trial court was not disputed and had become final.   In such a case there was no question of the plaintiff appealing from  a  decision in his own favour as to  costs  and  there could  be no question of the decision as to costs being  res judicata in the matter of interest.  The facts of that  case were  therefore  entirely  different and  do  not  help  the appellant.  It may also be added that that was a case of one suit from which two appeals had arisen and not of two suits. The  next case to which reference has been made  is  Manohar Vinayak v. Laxman A nandrao(3).  In that case two suits were consolidated  by  consent  of the  parties  and  there  were certain  common issues.  Appeal was taken from the  decision in  one suit and not from the decision in the other, and  it was  urged in the High Court that the decision in the  other suit had become final.  The High Court applied the principle that  resjudicata could not apply in the same proceeding  in which  the decision was given and added that by a parity  of reasoning  it could not apply to suits which  were  consoli- dated.  We may indicate that a contrary view has been  taken in (1) I.L.R. (1946) 21 Luck. 586.           (2) I.L.R.  (1923) 45 All. 506. (3) A.I.R. 1947 Nag. 248. 10 Sup CI/66-7 31 2 Mrs. Gertrude Oates v. Mrs. Millicent D’Silva(1) and Zaharia v.  Debia.(2) We need not consider the correctness of  these rival  views  as they raise the question as to  whether  one decision or the other can be said to be former where the two suits  were decided by the same judgment on the  same  date. This  question does not fall to be decided before us and  we do  not  propose to express any opinion  thereon.   But  the Nagpur  decision is of no help to the appellant, for in  the present case res judicata arises because of earlier decision of the High Court in appeals arising from suits Nos. 77  and 91.  Panchanada  Velan v. Vaithinatha Sastrial(3)  and  Mst. Lachhmi  v. Bhulli(4) are similar to the Nagpur case and  we need express no opinion as to their correctness. The   next  case  to  which  reference  has  been  made   is Khetramohan  Baral v. Rasananda Misra(5), In that  case  six suits were heard together mainly because an important common issue was involved even though the parties were not the same and  the  properties in dispute were  also  different.   The decision  in one of the suits was not challenged  in  appeal while  appeals were taken from other suits.  The High  Court held  that  in such circumstances the decision in  one  suit

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from which no appeal was taken would not be res judicata  in other  suits from which appeals were taken.  In these  cases the  parties  and properties were different and  we  do  not think  it  necessary  to  express  any  opinion  about   the correctness of this decision.  The facts in the present case are  clearly different for the parties are the same and  the title  to the properties in dispute also depended  upon  one common question relating to jointness or separation. A  consideration  of  the  cases  cited  on  behalf  of  the appellant therefore shows that most of them are not  exactly in  point  so  far  as the facts of  the  present  case  are concerned.   Our conclusion on the question of res  judicata raised  in  the present appeals is this.  (Where  the  trial court  has  decided two suits having common  issues  on  the merits  and there are two appeals therefrom and one of  them is dismissed on some preliminary ground, like limitation  or default in printing, with the result that the trial  court’s decision stands confirmed, the decision of the appeal  court will be res judicata and the appeal court must be deemed  to have  heard and finally decided the matter.  In such a  case the result of the decision of the appeal court is to confirm the decision of the trial court given on merits, and if that is so, the decision of the appeal court will be  resjudicata whatever may be the reason for the dismissal.  It would be a different matter, however, where the decision of the  appeal court does not result in the confirmation of the decision of the trial court (1)  A.I.R.  1933  Pat.  78.                     (2)  I.L.R. (1911) 33 All. 51. (3)  I.L.R.  (1906)  29 Mad.  333.               (4)  I.L.R. (19271 Lah. 384. (5)  A.I.R. 1962 Orissa 141.                             313 given on the merits, as for example, where the appeal  court holds that the trial court had no jurisdiction and dismisses the appeal even though the trial court might have  dismissed the  suit  on the merits.) In this view of the  matter,  the appeals  must fail, for the trial court had in  the  present case decided all the four suits on the merits  including,the decision  on the common issues as to title.  The  result  of the  dismissal  on a preliminary ground of the  two  appeals arising out of suits Nos. 77 and 91 was that the decision of the  trial  court was confirmed with respect to  the  common issues  as to title by the High Court.  In  consequence  the decision  on  those  issues became  resjudicata  so  far  as appeals Nos. 365 and 366 are concerned and s. 11 of the Code of  Civil  Procedure would bar the hearing of  those  common issues  over  again.   It  is not in  dispute  that  if  the decision  on the common issues in suits Nos. 77 and  91  has become res judicata, appeals Nos. 365 and 366 must fail. We  therefore  dismiss the appeals with costs,  one  set  of hearing fee. Appeals dimissed. 314