Supreme Court of India

Rameshwar Dayal vs Banda (Dead) Through His Lrs. And … on 13 January, 1993

Supreme Court of India
Rameshwar Dayal vs Banda (Dead) Through His Lrs. And … on 13 January, 1993
Equivalent citations: 1993 SCR (1) 198, 1993 SCC (1) 531
Author: P Sawant
Bench: Sawant, P.B.
           PETITIONER:
RAMESHWAR DAYAL

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
BANDA (DEAD) THROUGH HIS LRS.  AND ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/01/1993

BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
RAY, G.N. (J)

CITATION:
 1993 SCR  (1) 198	  1993 SCC  (1) 531
 JT 1993 (1)   213	  1993 SCALE  (1)126


ACT:
Res  Judicata--Suit  on	 basis of title	 by  sub-tenant	 for
nullity	   of	eviction   decree   and	  injunction	from
dispossession--Decision	 binding  inter	 parties--Held,	  to
operate as res judicata, the first finding must be on  issue
which was directly and substantially, and not  incidentally,
in  issue in that suit--Decision of Small Causes  Court	 not
referring  to issue, nor giving any finding, cannot  operate
as  res judicata--Question of jurisdiction of  Small  Causes
Court	to  decide  issue  of  title  to   property   merely
academic--Provincial Small Causes Court Act, S.23.
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908--S. 2(9), (2), (14), Order  XX
Rules  4(1)  and (5), Order XIV Rules  1  and  3--Provincial
Small Causes Court Act--S. 17(1)--Held, to be binding  order
of   the   court  disposing  of	 suit  must  amount   to   a
decree--Held, further, in a controversy between the parties,
only  judgment	could give rise to decree--Where  point	 for
determination  of  finding  not even stated,  it  is  not  a
judgment within S.2(9).



HEADNOTE:
The  appellant	claimed	 to have let  out  the	property  in
dispute	 as  owner in 1966.  In 1974, he filed	a  suit	 for
eviction of the tenant Habib and the sub-tenant Banda, first
respondent in this case.  This suit was decreed against both
Habib  and  Banda.  With the  respondent's  application	 for
setting	 aside	the  eviction  decree,	and  thereafter	 his
revision   petition  being  dismissed,	according   lo	 the
appellant   the	 eviction  decree  against  Habib  and	 the
respondent became final on that date.
However,  Banda filed the present suit on the basis  of	 his
tide as owner of the property and claimed two reliefs : that
the  eviction  decree was a nullity, and for  an  injunction
that the present appellant be restrained from  dispossessing
him from the property.	'The Trial Court dismissed the	suit
On  appeal the Civil Judge, District  Mazaffarnagar  decreed
the  suit  A second appeal by the present appellant  to	 the
High Court was dismissed.
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In  the	 Supreme  Court, the appellant	contended  that	 the
decree passed by a court of competent jurisdiction could not
be  declared as not binding on a person who was a  party  to
the suit; and the view that the judgment of the Small Causes
Court  did not operate as res judicata between	the  parties
because the Small Causes Court had no jurisdiction to decide
title to the suit property, is erroneous in law.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD  : 1. The bar of the res judicata is not applicable  to
the  determination of the issue with regard to the title  to
the property in the present suit (p.9) [204E]
To  operate as res judicata the first finding must be on  an
issue which has been directly and substantially in issue  in
the former suit.  If the finding given is Incidentally while
determining   another	issue	which	was   directly	 and
substantially in issue, such finding cannot be said to be on
an  issue which was directly and substantially in  issue  in
the former suit.(p.10) [205C]
Gangabai  w/o  Rambilas Gilda v.  Chhabubai  w/o  Pukharajji
Gandhi, [1982] 1 SCR 1176, followed.
The  so-called decision of the Small Causes Court  does	 not
refer to the present respondent or to the written  statement
riled by him where he had contended that he was the owner of
the property and the suit was decreed ex parte. [205D]
Not  only has the Small Causes Court not given any  finding,
it has not even referred to the said issue in its so  called
decision. (pp.8 and 11) [205D]
2.In  order  to	 be  binding,  the  order  of  the  court
disposing  of  the  suit  must	amount	to  a  decree.	 The
definitions of decree, order and judgment given in the	Code
show that decree or order as the case may be, can come	into
existence  only if there is an adjudication on the  relevant
issues,	 which	conclusively determines the  rights  of	 the
parties. (pp.11 and 12)
[205D, 206A]
'Points	  for  determination"  in  rule	 4(1)	are   issues
contemplated  by  Rules 1 and 3 of Order XIV  of  the  Code.
Since  the matters were in controversy between the  parties,
it  is	only  a judgment which could have given	 rise  to  a
decree.	 The decision of the Small Causes Court which has
200
not stated the points for determination and given a  finding
thereon	 is  not a judgment with S.2(9)	 of  the  CPC.(p.13)
[206G-H]
3.Under S.17(1) of the Provincial Small Causes Court  Act
also  it was obligatory for the Small Causes Court to  state
the  points  for  determination	 and  give  its	 finding  or
decision on each of the said points.(p.14) [207B]
4.The  decision of the Small Causes Court is non  est  as
far as the respondent is concerned.(p.14) [207C]
Mohammed  Fasi	v.  Abdul Qyayum, AIR  1978  Allahabad	470;
Alimuddin  v.  Mohammed Ishak, AIR 1974 Rajasthan  170;	 Ata
Mohammed  v. Ghera, AIR 196 H.P. 17; Nongthombam Mani  Singh
v. Puyam Chand Mohan Singh, AIR 1959 Manipur 14; Labhu	Rarn
v. Mool Chand AIR 1921 Lahore 91; Ganga Prasad v. Nandu	 Ram
AIR  1916  Patna 75; Smt.  Qaisari Begum v. Munney  &  Anr.,
(1981)	1  All India Rent Control Journal  549	and  Richpal
Singh & Ors. v. Dalip, [1987] 4 SCC 410, referred to.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 140 of 1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 23.7.1988 of the Allahabad
High Court in Second Appeal No. 1116 of 1986.
Shanti Bhushan and Vijay K. Jain for the Appellant.
P.P. Rao and Shakil Ahmed for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SAWANT, J. Leave granted.

2.The appellant claimed to be the owner of ‘Gher’
(property in dispute) in the town of Shameili and in that
capacity, according to him, he had let out the property to
one Habib as long ago as in 1966. He had filed suit No.
591/66 against Habib for recovery of rent and the suit was
decreed. According to the appellant, Habib sublet the
property to one Banda. In 1974, the appellant filed a suit
for eviction of both Habib and the subtenant Banda in the
Court of Small Causes. This suit was decreed against both
Habib and Banda.

Thereafter, Banda, filed an application for setting aside
the said
201
decree. His application was dismissed. The revision filed
by him before the Additional District Judge was also
dismissed on 26th September, 1977. Thus, according to the
appellant, the eviction decree against both Habib and Banda
became final on that date.

However, Banda filed the present suit on the basis of his
title as the owner of the property which has given rise to
the present appeal. In the suit, he claimed two reliefs,
viz., that the decree passed by the Small Causes Court in
Suit No. 45/1974 was nullity, and an injunction restraining
the defendant in the suit, namely, Rameshwar Dayal the
present appellant, from dispossessing him of the property.
The Trial Court dismissed the suit on 7th May, 1979 by
recording a finding that plaintiff Banda was not the owner
but it was the appellant before us, viz. Rameshwar Dayal
who was its owner. In support of its conclusion, the Trial
Court relied on a registered rent deed dated 7th December,
1956 under which the present appellant had let out the
property in dispute to some other tenant, earlier.

3.The judgment of the Trial Court was set aside in appeal
by the Civil Judge, District Muzaffarnagar by his decision
dated 13th December, 1985 the effect of which was to decree
the suit filed by the respondent Banda. The second appeal
filed by the appellant was dismissed by the High Court by
the impugned order.

4.Two contentions were raised before us by Shri Shanti
Bhushan, the learned counsel appearing for the appellant.
The first was that the decree passed by a court of competent
jurisdiction could not be declared as not binding on a
person who was a party to the suit, and the second was
that,the view taken by the lower appellate court that the
judgment of the Small Causes Court did not operate as res
judicata between the parties because the Small Causes Court
had no jurisdiction to decide the title to the suit
property, is erroneous in law.

5.In support of his contentions, Shri Shanti Bhushan
relied upon Mohammed Fasi v. Abdul Qyayum, AIR 1978
Allahabad 470; Alimuddin v. Mohammed Ishak, AIR 1974
Rajasthan 170; Ata Mohammad v. Ghera, AIR 1962 H.P. 17;
Nongthombam Mani Singh v. Puyam Chand Mohan Singh, AIR 1959
Manipur 14; Labhu Ram v. Mool Chand, AIR 1921 Lahore 91;
Ganga Prasad v. Nandu Ram, AIR 1916 Patna 75 and Smt.
Qaisari Begum v. Munney & Anr., (1981) 1 All India Rent
Control Journal 549 which is a decision of the Allahabad
High Court.

202

6.As against the aforesaid decisions, the learned counsel
Shri P.P. Rao appearing for the respondent has relied upon
two decisions, viz., Gangabai w/o Ram Bilas Gilda v.
Chhabubai w/o Pukharajji Gandhi, [1982] 1 SCR 1176 and
Richpal Singh & Ors. v. Dalip, [1987] 4 SCC 410.

7.In order to appreciate the rival contentions, it is
first necessary to reproduce Section 23 of the Provincial
Small Causes Court Act (hereinafter referred to as the
‘Act’).

“23. Return of Plants in suits involving
questions of title. (1) Notwithstanding
anything in the foregoing portion of this Act,
when the right of a plaintiff and the relief
claimed by him in a Court of Small Causes
depend upon the proof or disproof of a title
to immovable property or other title which
such a Court cannot finally determine, the
Court may at any stage of the proceedings
return the plaint to be presented to a Court
having jurisdiction to determine the title.
(2)When a Court returns a plaint under sub-
section (1), it shall comply with the
provisions of the second paragraph of section
57 of the Code of Civil Procedure and make
such order with respect to costs as it deems
just, and the Court shall, for the purposes
of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877, be deemed
to have been unable to entertain the suit by
reason of a cause of a nature like to that of
defect of jurisdiction.”

8.It is sought to be argued before us on the basis of the
aforesaid provisions of Section 23, that it is not
obligatory on the Small Causes Court to refer the issue of
title to immovable property to a Court having jurisdiction
to determine such title. The expression ‘The Court may at
any stage of the proceedings………………… suggests
that an option is given to the Small Causes Court to use its
discretion whether it would proceed to decide the title
itself or refer the question to the Court having
jurisdiction to do so. According to us, in the facts of the
present case, it is not necessary to go into that question
since the decision of the Small Causes Court nowhere
indicates that the Court had used. any such discretion, even
assuming that it is the discretion of the Court to refer or
not the question, to the Court of competent jurisdiction.
The decision which is contained in two paragraphs only,
reads as follows:

203

“This suit is for ejectment of the defendant
from a Gher (House) as per details given at
the foot of the plaint as well as for the
recovery of Rs. 1756.50 towards rent at Rs. 50
a month with effect from 7.6.1974 upto date of
delivery of possession. The defendant did not
turn up to contest the suit on the date fixed
for hearing. Hence, the case proceeded ex-
parte against him. The plaintiff has proved
his case by adducing necessary evidence.
The suit is ex-parte decreed with costs for
the ejectment of the defendants from the suit
property as well as for the recovery of Rs.
1756.50 as prayed. The plaintiff shall
further be entitled to recover mesne profits
with effect from 7.6.74 upto the date of
delivery of possession as permitted by law at
Rs. 50 a month on paying the requisite court-
fees on the execution side.’

9. In order to appreciate what the Small Causes Court has
and has not done, it is necessary to remember that in that
suit the present appellant was the plaintiff and both Habib
and the present respondent Banda were defendant Nos. 1 and 2
respectively. It is not disputed that the present
respondent had filed his written statement, and had in terms
contended that he was the owner of the property in question
being in possession of the same since the time of his
ancestors, and he had not been living in the property as
subtenant. However, the aforesaid so-called decision of the
Small Causes Court does not refer to the present respondent
or to the written statement filed by him and the plea taken
by him in the said written statement. It only states that
“the suit is for ejectment of the defendant (not defendants)
as per the details given at the foot of the plaint as well
as for the recovery of Rs. 175650 towards rent etc. etc It
also says that “the defendant (not defendants) did not turn
up to contest the suit hence the case proceeded ex-parte
against him (not them).” Then it proceeds to state that the
plaintiff has proved his case by adducing necessary
evidence.

In the second paragraph, the decision says that “the suit is
ex-parte decreed with costs for the ejectment of the
defendants from the suit property…..”.

10. It is, therefore, obvious that the Small Causes Court
proceeded to dispose of the suit as if what mattered in the
suit was only the presence or absence of the defendant
Habib. It did not take any cognizance of the
204
present respondent’s presence or absence, and of the written
statement filed by him. Had it taken cognizance of the
written statement, it would have become obligatory on its
part to set down the points for determination. Had it
further itself decided to proceed with adjudication of the
title instead of referring it to the Court of competent
jurisdiction, it could have done so after stating the points
for determination. What is more, the Court had to give its
decision on the point. The Small Causes Court did neither.
In fact, as is clear from the so-called decision the whole
of which is reproduced above, there is no reference to the
written statement or to the question of title to the suit
property raised, therein nor is there a decision on the
point even remotely, not to say incidentally.

11. In the circumstances, the controversy raised before us
as to whether the Small Causes Court is under an obligation
or not to refer the issue with regard to the title to the
property to a Court of competent jurisdiction and whether
the bar of res judicata would apply to the present suit
brought to establish title to the property, is purely
academic. It would be a travesty of justice to hold that by
the above order the Small Causes Court had even incidentally
decided the issue with regard to the title which fell for
determination directly and substantially in the subsequent
suit which has led to the present appeal.

12. We are, therefore, more than satisfied that the bar of
res judicata is not applicable to the determination of the
issue with regard to the title to the property in the
present suit. It is for these reasons that we do not think
it necessary to discuss in detail the decisions cited on
both sides. However, we may refer to a decision of this
Court Gangabai w/o Rambilas Gilda v. Chhabubai who
Pukharajji Gandhi [1982] 1 SCR 1176, which has a direct
bearing on the question as to when a finding on the question
of title to immovable property rendered by a Small Causes
Court would operate as res judicata. After discussing
various decisions on the point, this Court has held there as
follows :

“when a finding as to title to immovable
property is rendered by a Court of Small
Causes res judicata cannot be pleaded as a bar
in a subsequent regular civil suit for the
determination or enforcement of any right or
interest in immovable property. In order to
operate as res judicata the finding must be
one disposing of a matter directly and
substantially in issue in the
205
former suit and the issue should have been
heard and finally decided by the court trying
such suit. A matter which is collaterally or
incidentally in issue for the purpose of
deciding the matter which is directly in issue
in the case cannot be made the basis of a plea
of res judicata. A question of title in a
Small Cause suit can be regarded as incidental
only to the substantial issue in the suit and
cannot operate as res judicata in a subsequent
suit in which the question of title is
directly raised.”

This is a sufficient answer to the contention that when
Small Causes Court incidentally determines the question of
title, it operate as res judicata. The contention ignores
that to operate as res judicata the first finding must be on
an issue which has been directly and substantially in issue
in the former suit. If the finding is given incidentally
while determining another issue which was directly and
substantially in issue, such finding cannot be said to be on
an issue which was directly and substantially in issue in
the former suit. However, it is not necessary for us to
discuss this point at length since we have come to the
conclusion that not only the Small Causes Court has not
given any finding on the issue even incidentally, it has not
even referred to the said issue in its so-called decision.

13. The next question is whether the decision of the Small
Causes Court is binding on the respondent Banda. In order
to be binding, the order of the Court disposing of the suit
must amount to a decree. Section 2 (2) of Code of Civil
Procedure (the ‘Code’) defines decree as follows :

“(2) ‘Decree’ means the formal expression of
an adjudication which, so far as regards the
court expressing it, conclusively determines
the right of the parties with regard to all or
any of the matters in controversy in the suit
and may be either preliminary or
final……………….

The definition of ‘Order’ given in Section 2 (14) of the
Code is as follows:

(14) “Order’ means the formal expression of any decision of
a Civil Court which is not a decree.”

However, neither the order nor the decree should be confused
with judgment’ which is defined by Section 2 (9) of the Code
as “the statement
206
given by the Judge of the grounds of a decree or order’.
The definitions of decree, order and judgment given in the
Code show that decree or order as the case may be, can come
into existence only if there is an adjudication on the
relevant issues, which conclusively determines the rights of
the parties.

14. We have already pointed out earlier that the Small
Causes Court has not even noticed the matters in controversy
between the appellant and the respondent, and consequently,
there has been no adjudication or decision on the said
matters. There is thus no ‘formal expression of
adjudication…………. conclusively determining the
rights of the parties with regard to…………. the
matters in controversy in the suit”.

15. It must be remembered in this connection that
Rules 4 (1) and 5 of order XX of the Code are applicable to
the judgments of the Small Causes Court. The Rules are as
follows :

“4. Judgment of Small Causes Courts (1)
Judgments of a Court of Small Causes need not
contain more than the points for determination
and the decision thereon.

(2) Judgments of other Courts Judgments of
other courts shall contain a concise statement
of the case, the points for determination, the
decision thereon and the reasons for such
decision.”

“S. Court to state Its decision on each issue.
In suits in which issues have been framed, the
Court shall state its finding or decision,
with the reasons therefore, upon each separate
issue, unless the finding upon any one or more
of the issue is sufficient for the decision of
the suit.”

‘Points for determination” referred to in Rule 4(1)
are obviously nothing but ‘issues” contemplated by Rules 1
and 3 of Order XIV of the Code. The present decision of the
Small Causes Court which has not even stated the points for
determination and given finding thereon, is obviously not a
judgment within the meaning of Section 2 (9) of the Code.
Since the matters were in controversy between the parties,
it is only a judgment which could have given rise to a
decree. The so-called decision of the Small Causes Court,
therefore, does not amount to a decree within the me
207
of Section 2 (2) read with Section 2(9) and Rules 4(1) and 5
of Order XX of the Code.

16. It is not disputed that in view of the provisions of
Section 17 (1) of the Provincial Small Causes Court Act, the
Code is applicable to Small Causes Court except where it is
otherwise provided either by the Code or the said Act.
Apart from Rules 4 (1) and .5 of Order XX of the Code, on
this count also, it was obligatory for the Small Causes
Court, in the present case, to state the points for
determination and give its finding or decision on each of
the said points. Hence the present decision of the Small
Causes court is not a judgment and a decree in the eye of
law and is, therefore, non est as far as the respondent is
concerned.

17. In the circumstances, the appeal is dismissed with
costs.

U.R.				Appeal dismissed.
208