SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Jayaramdas and Sons
Vs.
Mirza Rafaullah Baig
C.A.No.1814 of 2004
(R.C.Lahoti and A. S. Lakshmanan JJ.)
23.03.2004
JUDGMENT
R. C. Lahoti, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. A suit for issuance of permanent preventive injunction was filed by the
plaintiff-respondents against the defendant-appellants. The suit was decreed by
the trial court. The decree has been maintained by the First Appellate Court as
also by the High Court. Feeling aggrieved, the defendant-appellants have filed
this appeal by special leave.
3. The only submission made by Shri V.R. Reddy, the learned senior counsel for
the appellants, is that the First Appellate Court has committed a grave error
of law in rejecting the application filed by the appellants under Rule 27 of
Order XLI of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. It is submitted that if only
the application would have been allowed, the additional evidence sought to be
brought on record by the appellants would have made a material difference in
the findings arrived at by the First Appellate Court and the rejection of the
application has occasioned a failure of justice.
4. Before the First Appellate Court, the appellants sought to tender in
evidence three documents which are certified copies of public records. The
application was rejected by the Appellate Court forming an opinion that the
application was a bald application not setting out any facts relevant to the
exercise of jurisdiction by the Appellate Court by reference to any of the
clauses (a), (aa) and (b) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 27 of Order XLI. The prayer
was reiterated by the appellants in the High Court but it met with the same
fate and for the same reasons.
5. Shri V.R. Reddy, the learned senior counsel for the appellants, has pressed
for the admission of the same documents in additional evidence and for the
consequent remand to the First Appellate Court.
6. The prayer has been vehemently opposed on behalf of the respondents by their
learned counsel, led by Shri Kapil Sibal, Senior Advocate. At one stage it was
submitted on behalf of the respondents that the exercise sought to be indulged
into by the appellants, would be one in futility inasmuch as the documents
which the appellants are proposing to tender in evidence are already available
on record. In view of this submission, an adjournment was sought for on behalf
of the appellants. It appears that during the pendency of this special leave
petition and between the two dates of hearing, the appellants moved the First
Appellate Court seeking return of the documents which were filed by them in the
First Appellate Court as accompanying the application under Order XLI, Rule 27
of CPC. The First Appellate Court returned the documents on 10.02.2004 and thereafter
these documents have been brought to the notice of this Court by placing the
same at the hearing. Shri Reddy, the learned senior counsel, has been at pains
to demonstrate that the documents already available on record appear to be the
similar certified copies but a minute comparative study of the documents
reveals that the contents of the documents which the appellants were seeking to
be brought on record were at variance with the documents available on record
and, therefore, the admission of these documents in additional evidence was all
the more necessary inasmuch as the Court shall have to hold which of the two
documents carried reliability and that would obviously have a material bearing
on the findings of fact to be arrived at.
7. Shri Kapil Sibal, the learned senior counsel for the respondents, has
vehemently urged that Order XLI, Rule 27 of the CPC was an exception to the
ordinary rule of admitting evidence in civil cases. Inasmuch as the exercise of
discretion under Order XLI, Rule 27 of the CPC in favour of the party seeking
such exercise, has the result of almost re-opening the trial which has
otherwise stood concluded, care and caution is needed for exercise of such
discretion and the power cannot be exercised just for asking. It was obligatory
on the part of the appellants to have set out in the application such necessary
facts as would lay foundation for the applicability of one of the grounds
contemplated by the provision, failing which no fault can be found with the
discretion exercised by the First Appellate Court and upheld by the High Court,
submitted Shri Kapil Sibal, the learned senior counsel for the respondents.
8 On 19.03.2004, at the time of hearing, the learned counsel for the
appellants, produced for the perusal of the Court two out of three documents
which were sought to be tendered in evidence before the First Appellate Court
and the return whereof was secured by the appellants on 10.02.2004. Shri Reddy
submitted that the appellants are limiting their prayer to the admission of these
two documents in evidence and would not press for the third one. The two
documents have been placed in a closed cover after perusal by the Court.
9. It is true that additional evidence, whether oral or documentary, is not to
be admitted in Appellate Court unless a case for admission thereof is made out
by reference to clause (a) or (aa) of sub-rule (1) of Rule 27 or unless the
Appellate Court requires such evidence to enable it to pronounce judgment or
for any other substantial cause within the meaning of clause (b). A perusal of
the documents, brought to our notice by the learned counsel for the appellants
and their comparison with the documents already available on record, clearly
goes to show that the two are at variance and the effect of such variance
determined either way would have a material bearing on the crucial issue
arising for decision between the parties.
10. As already pointed out both the sets of documents are certified copies of
public documents. The appellants would not ordinarily suspect or doubt the
documents where the certified copies of public documents were secured from the
public officer having the custody of such public documents. It is only when it
came to their knowledge that the certified copies were at variance with the
originals or were not complete copies that they thought of securing another set
of certified copies and then seeking leave of the Court for producing the certified
copies obtained by them as an additional evidence in Appellate Court.
11. The case of the appellants for production of additional evidence falls within
clause (aa) of sub-rule (1), abovesaid. It would have been better if such
ground was set out specifically in the application so that the opposite party
could have had an opportunity of meeting the plea and the First Appellate Court
could also have had the provisions of clause (aa) of sub-rule (1) in its mind
for dealing with the appellants' application. However, still we feel that the
ends of justice demand the additional evidence being allowed to be produced de
hors the deficiency in the application filed by the appellants.
12. The appeal is allowed. The Judgment and decrees passed by the High Court
and the First Appellate Court are set aside. The two documents, filed by the
appellants in this Court, shall be forwarded by the Registrar (Judicial) of
this Court to the First Appellate Court in a sealed cover. The documents shall
be admitted in evidence by the First Appellate Court, subject to payment of
Rs.5000/- by way of costs by the appellants. The First Appellate Court shall,
after permitting the production of such two documents by way of additional
evidence, proceed to hear and decide the appeal afresh and in accordance with
law.
13. Before parting we make it clear that we have neither touched upon nor
expressed any opinion on the merits of the case. Only production of additional
evidence has been permitted. The First Appellate Court shall be free to form its
own opinion afresh on all the questions of facts and law arising for decision
in the appeal.
14. The parties, through their respective counsel, are directed to appear
before the First Appellate Court on 19.04.2004.