Bhawanipore Banking Corporation vs Gouri Shankar Sharma - Supreme Court Judgement 1950

Bhawanipore Banking Corporation vs Gouri Shankar Sharma - Supreme Court Judgement 1950

Supreme Court of India
Bhawanipore Banking Corporation vs Gouri Shankar Sharma on 14 March, 1950
Equivalent citations: 1950 AIR, 6 1950 SCR 25
Author: S Fazal Ali
Bench: Kania, Hiralal J. (Cj), Fazal Ali, Saiyid, Sastri, M. Patanjali, Mahajan, Mehr Chand, Das, Sudhi Ranjan
           PETITIONER:
BHAWANIPORE BANKING CORPORATION, LTD.

Vs.

RESPONDENT:
GOURI SHANKAR SHARMA

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/03/1950

BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN

CITATION:
 1950 AIR    6   1950 SCR   25
 CITATOR INFO :
 R     1974 SC 968 (9,44,49)


ACT:
    Limitation Act  (IX of .1908), .Art. 182, cls.  2 and
3'Execution  of decree--Limitation--Starting point--'  Where
there  has been a review ", meaning of--Application for re-
opening decree under s. 86, Bengal Money-lenders  Act dis-
missed for  default and appeal from  order  of dismissal--
Whether give fresh starting for limitation for execution  of
decree--Interpretation of Art. 189, cls. 2 and 3.



HEADNOTE:
  A preliminary decree on a mortgage was passed ex parte  on
the 21st August, 1940. The judgments debtor made an applica-
tion  under  s. 36 of the Bengal Money-lenders Act  for re-
opening the
26
decree and  the application wins dismissed for default  of
appearance  on the 20th December, 1941, and  an application
under O. IX, r. 9 C.P.C. for restoration of this application
was also dismissed on the 1st June, 1942.  In the  meanwhile
on the 22nd December, 1941, a final decree was passed. The
judgment-debtor preferred an appeal from the order  dismiss-
ing  his  application under O. IX, r. 9,  C.P.C.,  and this
appeal was dismissed for non-prosecution on the  3rd  July,
1944.  On the 9th April, 1945, the decree holder applied for
execution of the decree:
   Held that, even assuming that the word "review" has been
Used  in Art. 182 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908,  in  a
wide  sense  and  that the application under s. 36  of the
Bengal Money lenders Act was an application for review, cl.
3 of Art. 182 was not applicable to the case inasmuch as the
application  under. s. 36 having been dismissed for  default
the court had no occasion to apply its mind to the  question
whether the decree could or should be re-opened and it could
not. therefore be said that "there has been a review" of the
decree within the meaning of the said clause.Held also, that
the  words "where there has been an appeal " in cl.2 of Art
182  must  be read with the words "for the execution  of  a
decree or order" in the 1st column of the Article  and the
fact that there was an appeal from the order dismissing the
application  under O. IX, r. 9, made in connection with the
proceeding  under  s.  36 of Money-lenders  Act,  could not
therefore  give fresh starting point for  limitation  under
Art. 182, cl. 2,.



JUDGMENT:
Appeal from the High Court of Judicature at Calcut- ta: Civil Appeal No. LI of 1949.

Manohar Lal, (H.K. Mitter with him), for the appellant. B.C. Mitter, for the respondent.

1950. March 14. The judgment of the Court was deliv- ered by FAZL ALI J.---The only question to be decided in this appeal, which arises out of an execution proceeding, is whether the decree under execution is barred by limitation. The first court held that the decree was not barred, but the High Court has come to the opposite conclusion, and the decree-holder has, after obtaining a certificate under Section 110 of the Civil Procedure Code, appealed to this Court.

The facts may be briefly stated as follows. On the 21st August, 1940, a preliminary mortgage decree was passed ex parte in a suit instituted by the appellant to enforce a mortgage. On the 19th September, 1940, the judg- ment-debtor made an application under Order IX, rule 13, of the Civil Procedure Code for setting aside the ex parte decree, but this application was rejected on the 7th June, 1941. On the 11th July, 1941, the judgment-debtor filed an application under Section a6 of the Bengal Money lenders Act, for reopening the preliminary decree, but this applica- tion was dismissed for default of appearance on the 20th December, 1941. Thereafter, a final mortgage decree was passed in favour of the appellant, on the 22nd December. The judgment-debtor then made an application under Order IX, rule 9, of the Civil Procedure Code for the restoration of the proceedings under Section 36 of the Money lenders Act. The application. was however dismissed on the 1 st June, 1942, both on the ground that no sufficient cause for the nonappearance of the applicant and his failure to take steps in the proceedings was shown and on the ground that no purpose would be served by reopening the preliminary decree after the final decree had been passed. The judgment-debtor thereafter preferred an appeal to the High Court at Calcutta from the decision dismissing his application under Order IX, rule 9, but the appeal was dismissed for non-prosecution, on the 3rd July, 1944. On the 9th April, 1945, the appellant filed an application for executing the decree against the original judgment-debtor, though he had died previously, and this application was dismissed for default on the 11th May, 1945. On the 2nd June, 1945, the present application for execution was filed, and the question which we have to decide is whether this application is in time. It is quite clear that the application for execution having been made more than three years after the date of the final decree, it must be held to be timebarred, unless, as has been contended before us, the case falls under either clause 2 or clause 3 of article 182 of the Indian Limitation Act. 'Under these clauses, time to make the application begins to run from--

"2. (Where there has been an appeal) the date of the final decree or order of the appellate Court, or the with- drawal of the appeal, or

3. (Where there has been a review of judgment)the date of the decision passed on the review..."

It is contended that the case is covered by clause 3,and the ground urged in support of this contention is that the application made by the judgment-debtor for reopening the preliminary mortgage decree under Section 36 of the Money- lenders Act must be regarded as an application for review and time should be held to run from the date of the final order passed in the proceedings connected with that applica- tion. In our opinion, there is no substance in this conten- tion. The important words in clause 3 of article 182 are:(1) "where there has been a review" and (2) "the decision passed on the review ". These words show that before a case can be brought under article 182,clause 8, it must be shown firstly that the court had undertaken to review the relevant decree or order and sec- ondly, that there has been a decision.on.the review.In the present case, even if it be assumed that the word "review' has been used in article 182 in a large sense and that the application for reopening the decree under Section 36 of the Bengal Money lenders Act was an application for review, the appellant cannot succeed, because the court never undertook or purported to review the decree in question. What actual- ly happened was that the application under Section a6 for reopening the preliminary decree (not the final decree which is the decree sought to be executed) was dismissed for default and the application under Order IX, rule 9, of.the Civil Procedure Code for the restoration of the proceedings under Section 86 of the Money lenders Act was also dis- missed. Even if the fact that the judgment-debtor's appli- cation under Section 36 was directed against the preliminary mortgage decree is overlooked, that application having been dismissed for default, the court never had occasion to apply its mind to the question as to whether the decree could or should be reopened, and hence it cannot be said that ' 'there ha8 been a review" of the decree. The proceedings under Order II, rule 9, of the Code of Civil Procedure are not material to the present discus- sion, because they did not involve a review of the decree under execution but a review, if it is at all possible to call it a review, (which, in our opinion, it is not), of the order dismissing the judgment debtor's application under Section 36 for default.

It was also suggested by the learned counsel for the appellant that the case might be held to be covered by clause 2 of article 182 on the ground that, even though no appeal was preferred from the final mortgage decree, the words "where there has been an appeal" are comprehensive enough to include in this case the appeal from the order dismissing the application under Order IX, rule 9, of the Civil Procedure Code, made in connection with the proceed- ings under Section 36 of the Moneylenders Act. This argu- ment also is a highly far-fetched one, because the expres- sion "where there has been an appeal" must be read with the words in column 1 of article 182, viz., "for the execution of a decree or order of any civil Court ...... ", and, however broadly we may construe it, it cannot be held to cover an appeal from an order which is passed in a collater- al proceeding or which has no direct or immediate connec- tion with the decree under execution.

In our view, this appeal has no substance, and we ac- cordingly dismiss it with costs.

Appeal dismissed.

Agent for the appellant: P.K. Chatterji.

Agent for the respondent: R.R. Biswas.

Bhawanipore Banking Corporation vs Gouri Shankar Sharma - Supreme Court Judgements 1950

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