SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Sankar Dastidar
Vs
Banjula Dastidar and Another
Appeal (Civil) 5609 of 2006 (Arising Out of S.L.P. (Civil) No. 23472 of 2005)
(S. B. Sinha and Markandeya Katju, JJ)
05.12.2006
S. B. SINHA, J.
Leave granted.
What would be the period of limitation for raising a counter claim in respect
of wrongful detention of goods is the question involved in this appeal which
arises out of a judgment and order dated 19.01.2005 passed by the High Court of
Calcutta in F.A. No. 71 of 2002.
Appellant and late Kamakshya Kumar, husband of Dipti Dasgupta Respondent No. 2
herein are brothers. Banjula Dastidar, Respondent No. 1 herein is their sister.
They had one more sister Bulbul Dastidar (who died in November, 1987). A suit
was filed by Respondent No. 1 against the appellant inter alia for declaration
of title in regard to their residential house situate at P-824, New Alipore,
Kolkata. Allegedly, the appellant had put a lock, in a room where Respondent
No. 1 Banjula used to stay, on 16.03.1987. An inventory was made in the said
suit by appointing an Advocate Commissioner. A suit was filed by the appellant
thereafter. A counter claim was filed by Respondent No. 1 in the said suit
claiming damages for wrongful detention of her belongings on 24.06.1992. The
amount of claim was purported to have been made on an allegation that validity
of a National Saving Certificate could not be renewed and, thus, she had
suffered a loss of Rs. 88, 000/-. She also claimed damages to the tune of Rs. 50,
000/- for wrongful detention of her belongings including garments and personal
effects. The suit was withdrawn. The counter claim, however, was treated to be
a suit. It was decreed.
One of the questions which was raised in the appeal was as to whether the said
counter claim was barred by limitation.
The Division Bench of the High Court on the premise that Section 22 of the Limitation Act, 1963 shall be applicable proceeded to hold
that the suit was not barred by limitation.
One of the learned Judges of the Division Bench although opined that a
completed tort is not a continuing wrong, but held:
"It is of the very essence of a continuing wrong that it is an act
which creates a continuing source of injury and renders the doer of the act
responsible and liable for the continuance of the injury. If the wrongful act
causes an injury which is complete, there is no continuing wrong through the
damage resulting from the act may continue."
In support of its judgment, the Division Bench has placed strong reliance upon
a Division Bench decision of the Calcutta High Court in Sarat Chandra Mukherjee
v. Nerode Chandra Mukherjee and Others 1935 AIR(Cal) 405. It was a suit
for declaration of plaintiff's right in respect of user of the lands on which
certain sheds had been created as a passage which was obstructing thereto. It
was in that premise held to be a continuing wrong.
A suit for damages, in our opinion, stands on a different footing vis-'- vis a
continuous wrong in respect of enjoyment of one's right in a property. When a
right of way is claimed whether public or private over a certain land over
which the tort-feasor has no right of possession, the breaches would be
continuing one. It is, however, indisputable that unless the wrong is a
continuing one, period of limitation does not stop running. Once the period
begins to run, it does not stop except where the provisions of Section 22 would
apply.
Articles 68, 69 and 91 of the Limitation Act govern suits in respect of movable
property. For specific movable property lost or acquired by theft, or dishonest
misappropriation or conversion; knowledge as regards possession of the party
shall be the starting point of limitation in terms of Article 68. For any other
specific movable property, the time from which the period begins to run would
be when the property is wrongfully taken, in terms of Article 69. Article 91
provides for a period of limitation in respect of a suit for compensation for
wrongfully taking or injuring or wrongfully detaining any other specific movable
property. The time from which the period begins to run would be when the
property is wrongfully taken or injured or when the detainer's possession
becomes unlawful.
The possession was said to have been taken over the entire property on
16.03.1987 when the appellant had put a lock in the room. The counter claim was
filed by Respondent No. 1 on 24.06.1992, i.e., five years after the alleged
detention. In the peculiar facts and circumstances of a case of this nature, if
Article 91 of the Limitation Act would not apply, the residuary provision
would. The fact that the plaintiff had locker in the room where the almirah
containing the goods belonging to Respondent No. 1 was stored was known to
Respondent No. 1 on 16.03.1987. She knew thereabout. If she had to claim
damages for that act on the part of the appellant, she should have filed a suit
within a period of three years from the said date. Furthermore, Respondent No.
1 knew about the purported alleged wrongful act on the part of the appellant.
She filed an application in the nature of pro intersse suo in the earlier suit.
The same was rejected. Her cause of action was different and distinct from that
of her brother. One lis was in relation to the declaration of title as also
possession, another one was in respect of damages for wrongful detention of
specific movable properties. Only because in another legal proceedings by and
between the appellant and Respondent No. 2, an Advocate Commissioner was
appointed and inventory of the goods of the said room was prepared, the same,
in our opinion, would not give rise to a fresh cause of action for laying a
claim for damages. The matter might have been different if a suit for
possession of the goods had been filed.
We, therefore, are of the opinion that the impugned judgment cannot be
sustained which is set aside accordingly. The appeal is allowed. However, in
the facts and circumstances of this case, there shall be no order as to costs.