Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)

Special Leave Petition (Civil), 4339 of 2017, Judgment Date: Mar 03, 2017

                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

           SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO.             OF 2017
                                              (CC 4339/2017)

Sasi (D) Through Lrs.                                         Petitioner (s)

                                   Versus

Aravindakshan Nair and Others                                  Respondent(s)


                               J U D G M E N T

Dipak Misra, J.

      In this special leave petition, the challenge is to  the  order  dated
9th March, 2012, passed by the learned Single Judge of  the  High  Court  of
Kerala at Ernakulam in R.S.A. No.345  of  2012  and  the  order  dated  26th
October, 2016, passed in Review Petition No.886 of 2012.
2.    Ordinarily,  we  would  have  passed  a  short  order  in  the  matter
dismissing the special leave petition which would have paved  the  path  for
extinction for the litigation, for it is devoid of any merit warranting  any
interference but, an eloquent one,  the  circumstances  impel  us  to  state
something more.
3.    A Regular Second Appeal was preferred  before  the  High  Court  under
Section 100 of the Code of Civil  Procedure  challenging  the  judgment  and
decree passed in Appeal Suit No.149 of 2008, which had given  the  stamp  of
approval  to  the  judgment  and  decree  passed  by  the  learned  Munsiff,
Alappuzha in O.S. No.518 of 2003.  The learned  Single  Judge  of  the  High
Court dismissed the  Second  Appeal  on  9th  March,  2012.   The  appellant
therein filed a review petition  under  Order  47  Rule  1  C.P.C.  on  20th
September, 2012.  The review was barred by limitation  and  eventually,  the
same was not entertained on merits.
4.    We are really not concerned with the entertaining  of  an  application
for review with some delay, but  what  is  perplexing  is  that  the  review
petition preferred in 2012, was kept pending  for  almost  four  years  and,
thereafter, the High Court has dismissed  the  same  by  observing  that  an
effort has been made to seek review of the main  judgment  as  if  the  High
Court was expected to exercise appellate jurisdiction while dealing with  an
application for review.
5.    Order 47 Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure reads as follows:-
“1.   Application for review  of  judgment.-   (1)  Any  person  considering
himself aggrieved -

(a)   by a decree or order from which an appeal is allowed, but  from  which
no appeal has been preferred.

(b)   by a decree or order from which no appeal is allowed, or

(c)   by a decision on a reference from a Court of Small Causes,

and who, from the discovery of new and important matter or  evidence  which,
after the exercise of due diligence was not within his  knowledge  or  could
not be produced by him at the time when  the  decree  was  passed  or  order
made, or on account of some mistake or error apparent on  the  face  of  the
record, or for any other sufficient reason, desires to obtain  a  review  of
the decree passed or order made against him,  may  apply  for  a  review  of
judgment to the Court which passed the decree or made the order.

(2)   A party who is not appealing from a decree or order may  apply  for  a
review of judgment notwithstanding the pendency of an appeal by  some  other
party except where the ground of such appeal is common to the applicant  and
the appellant, or when, being respondent, he can present  to  the  Appellate
Court the case on which he applies for the review.

Explanation.- The fact that the decision on a question of law on  which  the
judgment of the Court  is  based  has  been  reversed  or  modified  by  the
subsequent decision of a superior Court in any other case, shall  not  be  a
ground for the review of such judgment.

6.    The grounds enumerated  therein  are  specific.   The  principles  for
interference in exercise of  review  jurisdiction  are  well  settled.   The
Court passing the order is entitled to review  the  order,  if  any  of  the
grounds specified in the aforesaid provision are satisfied.
7.    In Thungabhadra Industries Ltd. v. Govt. of A.P.[1], the  Court  while
dealing with the scope of review had opined:-
“What, however, we are now concerned with is whether the  statement  in  the
order of September 1959 that  the  case  did  not  involve  any  substantial
question of law is an ‘error apparent on the face of the record’). The  fact
that on the earlier occasion the Court held on an identical state  of  facts
that a substantial question of law arose would not  per  se  be  conclusive,
for the earlier order itself might be  erroneous.  Similarly,  even  if  the
statement was wrong, it would not follow that it was an ‘error  apparent  on
the face of the record’, for there is a distinction which  is  real,  though
it might not always be capable  of  exposition,  between  a  mere  erroneous
decision and a decision which could be characterised as vitiated  by  ‘error
apparent’. A review is  by  no  means  an  appeal  in  disguise  whereby  an
erroneous decision is reheard  and  corrected,  but  lies  only  for  patent
error.”

8.    In Parsion Devi v. Sumitri  Devi[2],  the  Court  after  referring  to
Thungabhadra  Industries  Ltd.  (supra),  Meera  Bhanja  v.  Nirmala  Kumari
Choudhury[3] and Aribam Tuleshwar Sharma v. Aribam  Pishak  Sharma[4],  held
thus:-
“Under Order 47 Rule 1 CPC a judgment may be open to review  inter  alia  if
there is a mistake or an error apparent on the face of the record. An  error
which is not self-evident and has to be detected by a process of  reasoning,
can hardly be said to be an  error  apparent  on  the  face  of  the  record
justifying the court to exercise its power of review under Order 47  Rule  1
CPC. In exercise of the jurisdiction under Order 47 Rule 1  CPC  it  is  not
permissible for an erroneous decision  to  be  “reheard  and  corrected”.  A
review petition, it must be remembered has a limited purpose and  cannot  be
allowed to be “an appeal in disguise””.

9.    The aforesaid authorities clearly spell  out  the  nature,  scope  and
ambit of power to be exercised.  The error has to  be  self-evident  and  is
not to be found out by a process of reasoning.   We  have  adverted  to  the
aforesaid aspects only to highlight the nature of review proceedings.
10.   In the case  at  hand,  be  it  clearly  stated,  we  are  really  not
concerned with the exercise of the power of review  and  its  limitation  by
the court.  We are concerned with the delay in disposal of  the  application
for review which was kept pending for a span of four years.
11.   An application for review, regard being had to its limited scope,  has
to be disposed of as expeditiously as possible.  Though we do not intend  to
fix any time limit, it has to be the duty of  the  Registry  of  every  High
Court to place the matter before  the  concerned  Judge/Bench  so  that  the
review application can be dealt with in quite promptitude.  If a  notice  is
required to be issued to the opposite party in the application  for  review,
a specific date can be given on which day the matter can be  dealt  with  in
accordance with law.  A reasonable period can be spent for disposal  of  the
review, but definitely not four years.  We are compelled to say  so  as  the
learned counsel for the petitioner has submitted that there is  a  delay  of
1700 days in preferring the special leave  petition  against  the  principal
order as he was prosecuting the remedy of review before the High Court.  The
situation is not acceptable.
12.   We are obliged to observe certain aspects.  An  endeavour  has  to  be
made by the High Courts to dispose  of  the  applications  for  review  with
expediency.  It is the duty and obligation of a litigant to  file  a  review
and not to keep it defective as if a defective petition can  be  allowed  to
remain on life support, as per his desire.  It  is  the  obligation  of  the
counsel filing an application for review to cure or remove  the  defects  at
the earliest.  The prescription of limitation for filing an application  for
review has its own sanctity.  The Registry of the High Courts has a duty  to
place the matter before the Judge/Bench with defects so that  there  can  be
pre-emptory orders for removal of  defects.   An  adroit  method  cannot  be
adopted to file an application for review and wait till its  rejection  and,
thereafter, challenge the orders in the  special  leave  petition  and  take
specious and mercurial plea asserting that delay had  occurred  because  the
petitioner was  prosecuting  the  application  for  review.   There  may  be
absence of diligence on the part of the litigant, but the  Registry  of  the
High Courts is required to be vigilant.  Procrastination  of  litigation  in
this manner is nothing but a subterfuge taken recourse to in a  manner  that
can epitomize “cleverness” in its conventional sense.  We  say  no  more  in
this regard.
13.   We request the High Courts not to keep  the  applications  for  review
pending as that is likely to delay  the  matter  in  every  court  and  also
embolden  the  likes  of  the  petitioner  to  take  a  stand  intelligently
depicting the same in the application for condonation of delay.
14.   Let a copy of this order be sent to the Registrar General of  each  of
the High  Courts  so  that  it  can  be  placed  before  the  learned  Chief
Justice/Acting Chief Justice of the High Court to  do  the  needful  in  the
matter.
15.   As earlier indicated, the special leave petition has to pave the  path
of dismissal and accordingly it stands dismissed,  both  on  the  ground  of
delay, as well as also on merits.


                                 .........................................J.
                                                            (Dipak Misra)



                                 .........................................J.
                                                (Mohan M. Shantanagoudar)

New Delhi;
March 03, 2017.
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[1]     AIR 1964 SC 1372
[2]     (1997) 8 SCC 715
[3]     (1995) 1 SCC 170
[4]     (1979) 4 SCC 389