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Tuesday, June 14, 2016

In the present case, it can be stated with certitude that no ingredient of Section 420 IPC is remotely attracted. Even if it is a wrong, the complainant has to take recourse to civil action.

                                                                  REPORTABLE
                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION
                   WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 30 OF 2015


Dr. Rini Johar & Anr.                   ... Petitioners
                                   Versus
State of M.P. & Ors.                    ... Respondents


                               J U D G M E N T

Dipak Misra, J.
      The petitioner no.1 is a doctor and she is presently  pursuing  higher
studies in United States of  America  (USA).   She  runs  an  NGO  meant  to
provide services for South Asian Abused Women in USA.   Petitioner  no.2,  a
septuagenarian lady, is a practicing Advocate in the District Court at  Pune
for last 36 years.  Petitioner no.1 is associated with  M/s.  Progen,  a  US
company.
2.    As the facts would unveil, the informant, respondent no.8 herein,  had
sent an email to the company for purchase of machine Aura Cam,  6000,  which
is an Aura Imaging Equipment, in India and the  concerned  company  sent  an
email  to  the  respondent  making  a  reference  to  the  petitioner  no.1.
Thereafter, the said respondent  sent  an  email  asking  her  to  send  the
address where he could meet her and have details  for  making  payment.   He
also expressed his interest to become a distributor.
3.    The informant visited the petitioner no.1 at Pune and received a  demo
of Aura Cam 6000 and being satisfied decided  to  purchase  a  lesser  price
machine i.e. “Twinaura Pro” for a total sum of Rs.2,54,800/-.    He  paid  a
sum of Rs.2,50,000/- for which a hand  written  receipt  was  given  as  the
proof  of  payment.   During  the  course  of  the  said  meeting,  the  8th
respondent expressed his desire to purchase  a  laptop  of  M/s.  Progen  of
which the petitioner no. 1 was the  representative.   In  pursuance  of  the
discussion, the laptop was given to him who acknowledged it by stating  that
he owed a sum of Rs.4,800/- as balance consideration towards  the  Aura  Cam
and an amount of USD 350 towards the laptop.  An  assurance  was  given  for
remitting the money within a short time.  As averred,  the  respondent  no.8
had never raised any  grievance  relating  either  to  the  machine  or  the
laptop.   Certain transactions between the  informant  and  the  US  company
have been mentioned and the allegations  have  been  made  against  the  8th
respondent that he represented himself as  the  sole  distributor  in  India
which was brought to the notice of the concerned  police  in  the  State  of
M.P. by the competent authority of the company.  The said  facts  really  do
not have much relevance to the lis which we are going to adjudicate  in  the
present writ petition.
4.    When the matter stood thus, the  respondent  no.8  filed  a  complaint
before the Inspector General of Police, Cyber  Cell,  Bhopal  alleging  that
the petitioner no.1 and Mr. Guy Coggin had committed  fraud  of  US  10,500.
On the basis of the complaint made, FIR no. 24/2012 under  Section  420  and
34 of the Indian Penal Code  (IPC)  and  Section  66-D  of  the  Information
Technology Act, 2000 (for brevity, ‘the Act’)  was  registered  against  the
petitioners by Cyber  Police  Headquarters,  Bhopal,  M.P.   The  respondent
no.2, I.G. Cyber Cell, issued  an  order  on  20.11.2012  which  is  to  the
following effect:-
“Cyber state police having registered FIR 24/2012 under S 420, 34 of  Indian
Penal Code and 66 D  of  IT  Act  search  and  information  the  undersigned
persons are asked to go to Pune.
1. R.R. Devendra Sisodia
2. R.R. (Lady) Ishrat Praveen Khan
3. RR (Lady) Valari Upadhyay”

5.    On 21.11.2012, Dy. S.P. State Cyber Police, Bhopal proceeded  to  pass
the following order:-
“Cyber state police having registered FIR 24/2012 under  S  420,  34  Indian
Penal Code and S 66 D of IT Act accused Rini Johar and Gulshan Johar  should
be arrested and for that lady constable Ishrat Khan has  been  deputed  with
case diary with address from where they are to be found and arrested and  it
is ordered that they be brought to Bhopal.  In reference to which  you  have
been given possession of the said case diary.”

6.    We have reproduced the  said  orders  in  entirety  as  the  same  has
immense relevance to the relief sought for by the petitioners.
7.    As the narration would unfurl, on  27.11.2012,  the  petitioners  were
arrested from their residence at Pune.  Various assertions  have  been  made
as regards the legality of the arrest  which  cover  the  spectrum  of  non-
presence of the witnesses at the time of arrest  of  the  petitioners,  non-
mentioning of date, and arrest by unauthorized officers, etc.   It  is  also
asserted after they were arrested, they were taken from Pune  to  Bhopal  in
an  unreserved  railway  compartment  marked  –   ‘viklang’   (handicapped).
Despite request, the petitioner no.2, an  old  lady,  was  not  taken  to  a
doctor, and was compelled to lie on the cold floor of the train  compartment
without any food and  water.   Indignified  treatment  and  the  humiliation
faced  by  the  petitioners  have  been  mentioned  in  great  detail.    On
28.11.2012, they were produced before the learned Magistrate at  Bhopal  and
the petitioner no. 2 was enlarged on bail after being in custody  for  about
17 days and the petitioner no.1 was released after more  than  three  weeks.
There is allegation that they were forced to pay Rs.5  lakhs  to  respondent
no.3,  Deepak  Thakur,  Dy.  S.P.  Cyber  Cell,  Bhopal.    On   18.12.2012,
chargesheet was filed and thereafter a petition under Section 482  CrPC  has
been filed before the High Court for quashment of the FIR.
8.    At this stage,  it  is  pertinent  to  state  that  on  19.2.2015  the
petitioners filed an application for discharge and  the  learned  Magistrate
passed an order discharging  the  petitioners  in  respect  of  the  offence
punishable under Section 66-D of the Act.  However, learned  Magistrate  has
opined that there is prima facie  case  for  the  offence  punishable  under
Section 66-A(b) of the Act read with Section 420 and 34 of the IPC.
9.    Ordinarily, we would  have  asked  the  petitioners  to  pursue  their
remedy before the High Court. But,  a   disturbing  one,  petitioners  while
appearing in person, agonizingly submitted that this Court should look  into
the manner in which they have been arrested, how the  norms  fixed  by  this
Court have been flagrantly violated and how their dignity has  been  sullied
permitting the atrocities to reign.  It was urged  that  if  this  Court  is
prima facie satisfied that violations are absolutely impermissible  in  law,
they would be entitled to compensation.   That apart, it was contended  that
no case is made out against them  and  the  order  of  discharge  is  wholly
unsustainable.  Regard being had to the said submission,  we  appointed  Mr.
Sunil Fernandes as Amicus Curiae to assist the Court.
10.   In this writ  petition,  first  we  shall  address  to  the  challenge
relating to the validity and  legality  of  arrest,  advert  to  the  aspect
whether the petitioners  would  be  entitled  to  any  compensation  on  the
bedrock of public law remedy and thereafter finally  to  the  justifiability
of the continuance of the criminal proceedings.   Be  it  stated  here  that
this Court on 7.12.2015, taking note of the submissions of  the  petitioners
that they are not interested to prosecute their petition under  Section  482
CrPC directed that the said petition is deemed to  have  been  disposed  of.
It is also requisite to note here that despite efforts  being  made  by  the
petitioners as well as the State of M.P, respondent  no.8,  who  belongs  to
Jabalpur, M.P. could not be served.  This Court is inclined  to  infer  that
the said respondent is really not interested to appear and contest.
11.   As stated earlier, first we shall advert to  the  legality  of  arrest
and detention.  Mr. Saurabh Mishra, learned counsel appearing for the  State
of M.P. has submitted that as the State Government had already conducted  an
enquiry  in  this  regard  and  initiated  proceedings   against   the   3rd
respondent, the matter should not be adjudicated at this stage.  We are  not
disposed to accept the said submission, for  initiation  of  a  disciplinary
proceeding  or  criminal  prosecution  should  not  be  an  impediment   for
delineation as regards the violation of procedure of arrest and  curtailment
of liberty.
12.   We consider it imperative to refer to the enquiry made  by  the  State
and the findings arrived at by the enquiry officer.  It is asserted  in  the
counter  affidavit  that  the  petitioners  had  made  a  complaint  to  the
Lokayukta Police (M.P. Special Police Establishment)  alleging  that  Deepak
Thakur, respondent no.3 herein, demanded a bribe of Rs.10 lakhs for  letting
them go and pursuant to the said demand, initially a  sum  of  Rs.2,50,000/-
was paid and subsequently a  sum  of  Rs.2,50,000/-  was  also  given.   The
Lokayukta Police had already registered a preliminary  enquiry  no.  33/2015
and after enquiry submitted an enquiry report dated 18.6.2015  stating  that
prima facie case had been made out against Deepak Thakur,  Dy.  S.P.,  Cyber
Cell, Bhopal, Ishrat Khan, Head Constable,  Cyber  Cell,  Bhopal,  Inderpal,
Writer, Cyber Cell Bhopal and Saurabh Bhat, Clerk, Cyber Cell, Bhopal  under
Section 13(1)(d) and Section 13(2) of  the  Prevention  of  Corruption  Act,
1988 and Section 120B IPC.  Based on the said  preliminary  enquiry  report,
FIR No. 273/2015 dated 27.3.2015 has been  registered  against  the  accused
persons in respect of the said offences and further  steps  under  the  CrPC
are being taken.   Be it clarified, we are not at  all  concerned  with  the
launching of said prosecution and accordingly we shall  not  advert  to  the
same.
13.   It is perceivable that the State in its initial affidavit  had  stated
that the Director  General  of  Police  by  its  order  dated  8.7.2015  had
appointed Inspector General of Police, CID to enquire into  the  allegations
as regards the violation of the provisions enshrined under Section  41-A  to
41-C of CrPC.  It needs to be stated here that in  pursuance  of  the  order
passed by the Director General, an enquiry has been conducted  by  Inspector
General of Police Administration,  CID,  Bhopal.   It  has  been  styled  as
“preliminary enquiry”.  The said report dated 19.08.2015  has  been  brought
on record. The Inquiring Authority has recorded the statement of Ms.  Ishrat
Praveen Khan.  The part of her statement reads as follows:-
“… When I received the order, I requested DSP Shri Deepak Thakur that I  was
not in the District Police  Force.   I  do  not  have  any  knowledge  about
IPC/Cr.P.C./Police Regulation/Police Act and Evidence Act, IT Act as I  have
not obtained any training in Police Training  School,  nor  do  I  have  any
knowledge in this regard, nor do  I  have  any  knowledge  to  fill  up  the
seizure memo and arrest memo.  Even  after  the  request,  DSP  Shri  Deepak
Thakur asked in  strict  word  that  I  must  follow  the  order.  The  duty
certificate was granted to me on 26.11.2012, on  which  Report  No.567  time
16.30 was registered, in which there are clear  directions.   In  compliance
with this order, we reached Kondwa Police Station  in  Pune  Maharashtra  on
27.11.2012 with my team and 2 constables and 1 woman constable were sent  to
assist us from there.  The persons of the  police  station  Kondwa  came  to
know reaching Lulla Nagar that the said  area  does  not  fall  under  their
police station area so the police of Kondwa phoning Banwari  Police  Station
got to bring the force for help Banwari Police Station.   I  had  given  the
written application in PS Banwari.  The entire team  reached  the  house  of
Rini Johar and 01 laptop of  Dell  Company  and  1  data  card  of  Reliance
Company were seized. Rini Johar called her mother  Gulshan  Johar  from  the
Court furnishing information to her about  her  custody.   Thereafter,  Shri
Rini Johar had called up  the  Inspector  General  of  Police,  State  Cyber
Police Shri Anil Kumar Gupta. I and my team had taken Miss  Rini  Johar  and
Smt. Gulshan  in  our  custody.   I  and  Constable  Miss  Hemlata  Jharbare
conduced robe search of Miss Rini Johar and Smt. Gulshan Johar. Nothing  was
found on their body.”

14.   He has also recorded the statement of Devender  Sisodia,  Ms.  Vallari
Upadhyay, Ms. Hemlata Jharbare and thereafter recorded  his  findings.   The
findings arrived at in the preliminary enquiry read thus:-
“24.  Finding  of  the  preliminary  inquiry:-  It  was  found  during   the
preliminary enquiry that  Crime  No.24/12  had  been  registered  after  the
inquiry of one written complaint of the applicant Shri  Vikram  Rajput,  but
this complaint inquiry report during the investigation of  the  offence  has
been kept as the relevant evidence.  The crime was registered on  27.11.2012
under Section 420, 34 IPC read with Section 66D IT  Act,  2000  against  the
named accused persons.  The offence  was  to  the  effect  that  though  the
alleged accused persons obtained Rs.5.00  lakh,  they  did  not  supply  the
camera etc and they supplied the defective articles.  This sale  –  purchase
was conducted through the online correspondence, due to  which  the  section
of IT Act was imposed.  It was found on the preliminary  inquiry  that  Shri
Vikram Rajput gave the payment of Rs.2.50 lakh by the  bank  draft  and  the
remaining payment by cash.  The facts of the  payment  and  supply  are  now
disputed and the trial of Crime No.24/12 is pending in the competent  Court.
 Therefore, to give any inquiry finding on it would not be  proper.   It  is
clear from the documents attached to the case diary  and  the  statement  of
Shri Deepak Thakur that Shri Deepak Thakur sent 2  notices  respectively  by
the post and through the Deputy Commissioner, Economic Crime and Cyber  Pune
respectively to  Miss  Rini  Johar  on  01.06.2012  and  02.07.2012  in  the
investigation  of  the  offence,  but  they  did  not  appear   before   the
Investigator.  It has not been written above both the notices if the  notice
has been issued under Section 41A of Cr.P.C. It is also  not  clear  whether
or not these both notices were severed to Miss Rini Johar.
25. This case is related to the alleged  cheating  between  two  persons  in
respect of sale and purchase of goods.  The maximum sentence in Section  420
is the period upto 7 years and  similarly  when  the  reasons  mentioned  in
Section 41 (1)(B) are not found, the suspects of the crime  should  be  made
to appear for the interrogation  in  the  investigation  issuing  notice  to
them.  Justice Late Krishna Ayyer has held in Jolly George Varghese v.  Bank
of Cochin[1] that “No one shall  be  imprisoned  merely  on  the  ground  of
inability to fulfill a contractual obligation”.  Section  41(2)  of  Cr.P.C.
grants power to the Investigator that if the suspect  does  not  appear  for
the investigation despite the  notice,  he  can  be  arrested,  though  this
reason having been mentioned in the case diary  should  have  been  produced
before the Magistrate, but no reason for the arrest has  been  mentioned  in
the case diary.  No notice has been sent  to  the  old  woman  Smt.  Gulshan
Johar (aged about 70 years), nor has she played any role in  committing  any
offence.  Only the draft of Rs.2.50 lakh had been deposited in her  account.
 No binding ground has been mentioned in respect of her arrest in  the  case
diary.”

And again:-
“28. It has not been mentioned anywhere in the arrest memo  and  case  diary
that the information of the arrest of both women was  furnished  to  any  of
their relatives and friends.  It has become clear from the  statements  that
when both the women  were  arrested  physically  they  were  brought  to  PS
Banwari Pune, where the arrest memo was prepared.  There  is  the  signature
of Shri Amol Shetty as the witness of the seizure memo.  Shri Deepak  Thakur
has stated in his statement that the handwriting of the seizure memo  is  of
the constable Shri Indrapal. Shri Indrapal did not go as  a  member  of  the
arresting persons to Pune.  The seizure memo does not have the signature  of
Amol Shetty as well, which proves prima facie that the seizure memo was  not
prepared on 27.11.2012 in Pune.  The report  no.29/12  dated  27.11.2012  of
seeking police help in  PS  Banwari  is  recorded,  but  no  information  is
recorded at the police station that MP Police are taking by arresting  these
citizens with them.  As a result, the information of  the  arrested  persons
was neither furnished in the District Police Control Room Pune, nor  was  it
published there.  It has also been  clarified  in  the  preliminary  inquiry
that the accused persons after they were arrested were not  produced  before
the Local Judge and they were brought to Bhopal by rail.  Miss  Ishrat  Khan
stated  that  she  did  not  obtain  the  rail  warrant   of   neither   the
policepersons nor the accused during return due to paucity of time.”

And finally:-
“As such, the facts  of  arresting  both  the  suspected  women  and  making
seizure memo searching their houses not fully  following  the  procedure  of
arrest by the Investigator and police team have come  to  the  fore  in  the
preliminary enquiry prima facie.”

15.   Keeping the aforesaid facts in view, we may refer to the decisions  in
the field and the submissions canvassed by  Mr.  Fernandes,  learned  Amicus
Curiae.
16.   In Joginder Kumar v. State of U.P.[2] while considering the misuse  of
police power of arrest, it has been opined:-
“No arrest can be made because it is lawful for the  police  officer  to  do
so. The existence of the power to arrest is  one  thing.  The  justification
for the exercise of it is quite another. … No arrest should be made  without
a reasonable  satisfaction  reached  after  some  investigation  as  to  the
genuineness and bona fides of a complaint and a reasonable  belief  both  as
to the person’s complicity and even so as to  the  need  to  effect  arrest.
Denying a person of his liberty is a serious matter.”

17.   In the  said  case,  the  Court  also  voiced  its  concern  regarding
complaints of human rights  pre  and  after  arrests  and  in  that  context
observed:-
“The horizon of human rights is expanding. At the same time, the crime  rate
is also increasing. Of late, this Court has been receiving complaints  about
violations of human rights because of indiscriminate arrests. How are we  to
strike a balance between the two?

      A realistic approach should be made in  this  direction.  The  law  of
arrest is one of balancing individual rights, liberties and  privileges,  on
the one hand, and individual duties,  obligations  and  responsibilities  on
the other; of weighing and balancing the rights,  liberties  and  privileges
of the single individual and those of individuals  collectively;  of  simply
deciding what is wanted and where to put the weight  and  the  emphasis;  of
deciding which comes first — the criminal or society, the  law  violator  or
the law abider ….”

      After so stating, certain procedural requirements were set down.
18.   In D.K. Basu v. State of W.B.[3], after referring to  the  authorities
in Joginder Kumar (supra), Nilabati Behera v. State of Orissa[4]  and  State
of M.P. v. Shyamsunder Trivedi[5] the Court laid down certain guidelines  to
be followed in cases of arrest and detention till legal provisions are  made
in that behalf as preventive measures. The said guidelines read as follows:-

“(1)  The  police  personnel  carrying  out  the  arrest  and  handling  the
interrogation of the  arrestee  should  bear  accurate,  visible  and  clear
identification and name tags with their  designations.  The  particulars  of
all such police personnel who handle interrogation of the arrestee  must  be
recorded in a register.
(2) That the police officer carrying out the arrest of  the  arrestee  shall
prepare a memo of arrest at the time  of  arrest  and  such  memo  shall  be
attested by at least one witness, who may either be a member of  the  family
of the arrestee or a respectable person  of  the  locality  from  where  the
arrest is made. It shall also be countersigned by  the  arrestee  and  shall
contain the time and date of arrest.
(3) A person who has been arrested or detained and is being held in  custody
in a police station or interrogation  centre  or  other  lock-up,  shall  be
entitled to have one friend or relative or other  person  known  to  him  or
having interest in his welfare being informed, as soon as practicable,  that
he has been arrested and is being detained at the particular  place,  unless
the attesting witness of the memo of arrest is himself such a  friend  or  a
relative of the arrestee.
(4) The time, place of arrest and venue of custody of an  arrestee  must  be
notified by the police where the next friend or  relative  of  the  arrestee
lives outside the district or town through the  Legal  Aid  Organisation  in
the District and the police station of the  area  concerned  telegraphically
within a period of 8 to 12 hours after the arrest.
(5) The person arrested must be made aware of this  right  to  have  someone
informed of his arrest or detention as soon as he is put under arrest or  is
detained.
(6) An entry must be made in the diary at the place of  detention  regarding
the arrest of the person which shall also disclose  the  name  of  the  next
friend of the person who has been informed of the arrest and the  names  and
particulars of the police officials in whose custody the arrestee is.
(7) The arrestee should, where he so requests, be also examined at the  time
of his arrest and major and minor injuries, if any present on his/her  body,
must be recorded at that time. The “Inspection Memo” must be signed both  by
the arrestee and the police  officer  effecting  the  arrest  and  its  copy
provided to the arrestee.
(8) The arrestee should be subjected to medical  examination  by  a  trained
doctor every 48 hours during his detention in custody by  a  doctor  on  the
panel of approved doctors appointed by  Director,  Health  Services  of  the
State  or  Union  Territory  concerned.  Director,  Health  Services  should
prepare such a panel for all tehsils and districts as well.
(9) Copies of all the documents including the memo of  arrest,  referred  to
above, should be sent to the Illaqa Magistrate for his record.
(10) The arrestee may be permitted to meet his lawyer during  interrogation,
though not throughout the interrogation.
(11) A police control room should be provided  at  all  district  and  State
headquarters, where information  regarding  the  arrest  and  the  place  of
custody of the arrestee shall be communicated by  the  officer  causing  the
arrest, within 12 hours of effecting the arrest and at  the  police  control
room it should be displayed on a conspicuous notice board.”


19.   Mr. Fernandes, learned Amicus Curiae, in a tabular chart  has  pointed
that none of the requirements had been complied with.  Various reasons  have
been ascribed for the same.   On  a  scrutiny  of  enquiry  report  and  the
factual assertions made, it is limpid that some of the guidelines have  been
violated. It is strenuously urged by Mr. Fernandes that Section  66-A(b)  of
the Information Technology Act, 2000 provides   maximum  sentence  of  three
years  and  Section  420  CrPC  stipulates  sentence  of  seven  years  and,
therefore, it was  absolutely  imperative  on  the  part  of  the  arresting
authority to comply with the procedure postulated in  Section  41-A  of  the
Code of Criminal Procedure.  The Court in Arnesh Kumar  v.  State  of  Bihar
and another[6], while dwelling upon the concept of arrest, was compelled  to
observe thus:-
“Arrest brings  humiliation,  curtails  freedom  and  casts  scars  forever.
Lawmakers know it so  also  the  police.  There  is  a  battle  between  the
lawmakers and the police and it seems that the police  has  not  learnt  its
lesson: the lesson implicit and embodied in CrPC. It has  not  come  out  of
its colonial image despite  six  decades  of  Independence,  it  is  largely
considered as a tool of harassment, oppression and surely not  considered  a
friend of public. The need for caution in exercising the  drastic  power  of
arrest has been emphasised time and again by the courts but has not  yielded
desired result. Power to arrest greatly  contributes  to  its  arrogance  so
also the failure of the Magistracy to check it. Not only this, the power  of
arrest is one of the lucrative sources of police  corruption.  The  attitude
to arrest first and then proceed with the rest is despicable. It has  become
a handy tool to the  police  officers  who  lack  sensitivity  or  act  with
oblique motive.”

20.   Thereafter, the Court referred to Section 41 CrPC  and  analyzing  the
said provision, opined that a person accused of an offence  punishable  with
imprisonment for a term which may be less than  seven  years  or  which  may
extend to seven years with or  without  fine,  cannot  be  arrested  by  the
police officer only on his satisfaction that such person had  committed  the
offence.  It has been further held that a police officer before  arrest,  in
such cases has to be further satisfied that  such  arrest  is  necessary  to
prevent such person from committing  any  further  offence;  or  for  proper
investigation of the case; or  to  prevent  the  accused  from  causing  the
evidence of the offence to disappear; or tampering  with  such  evidence  in
any manner; or to prevent such person from making any inducement, threat  or
promise to a witness so as to dissuade him from  disclosing  such  facts  to
the court or the police officer; or unless such accused person is  arrested,
his presence in the court whenever required cannot  be  ensured.  These  are
the conclusions, which one may reach based on facts.  Eventually, the  Court
was compelled to state:-
“In pith and core, the police officer before arrest must put a  question  to
himself, why arrest? Is it really required?  What  purpose  it  will  serve?
What object it will achieve? It is only after these questions are  addressed
and one or the other conditions as enumerated above is satisfied, the  power
of arrest needs to be exercised. In fine, before  arrest  first  the  police
officers should have reason to believe  on  the  basis  of  information  and
material that the accused has committed the offence. Apart  from  this,  the
police officer has to be satisfied further that the arrest is necessary  for
one or the more purposes envisaged by sub-clauses (a) to (e) of  clause  (1)
of Section 41 CrPC.”

21.   In the said authority, Section 41-A CrPC, which has been  inserted  by
Section 6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure  (Amendment)  Act,  2008  (5  of
2009) was introduced and in that context, it has been held that Section  41-
A CrPC makes it clear that where the arrest of  a  person  is  not  required
under Section 41(1) CrPC, the police officer is  required  to  issue  notice
directing the accused to appear before him at a specified  place  and  time.
Law obliges such an accused to appear  before  the  police  officer  and  it
further mandates that if such an accused complies with the terms  of  notice
he shall not be arrested, unless for reasons  to  be  recorded,  the  police
officer is of the opinion that the arrest is necessary. At this stage  also,
the condition precedent for arrest as envisaged under Section  41  CrPC  has
to be complied and shall be subject to the same scrutiny by  the  Magistrate
as aforesaid.
22.   We have referred  to  the  enquiry  report  and  the  legal   position
prevalent in the field.  On a studied scrutiny of the report,  it  is  quite
vivid that the arrest of the petitioners  was  not  made  by  following  the
procedure of arrest.  Section 41-A CRPC as  has  been  interpreted  by  this
Court has not been followed.  The  report  clearly  shows  there  have  been
number of violations in the arrest, and seizure.  Circumstances in  no  case
justify the manner in which the petitioners were treated.
23.   In such a situation, we are inclined to think that the dignity of  the
petitioners,  a  doctor  and  a  practicing  Advocate  has  been   seriously
jeopardized.  Dignity, as has  been  held  in  Charu  Khurana  v.  Union  of
India[7], is the quintessential quality  of  a  personality,  for  it  is  a
highly cherished value.  It is also clear that  liberty  of  the  petitioner
was curtailed in violation of law.  The freedom of  an  individual  has  its
sanctity.  When the individual liberty is curtailed in an  unlawful  manner,
the victim is likely to feel more anguished,  agonized,  shaken,  perturbed,
disillusioned and emotionally torn.  It is an assault on  his/her  identity.
The said identity is sacrosanct  under  the  Constitution.   Therefore,  for
curtailment of liberty, requisite norms are to  be  followed.   Fidelity  to
statutory safeguards instil faith of the collective in the system.  It  does
not require wisdom of a seer to visualize that for  some  invisible  reason,
an attempt has been made to corrode  the  procedural  safeguards  which  are
meant to sustain the sanguinity of liberty.  The  investigating  agency,  as
it seems, has put its sense of accountability  to  law  on  the  ventilator.
The two ladies have been arrested without following the  procedure  and  put
in the compartment of a  train  without  being  produced  before  the  local
Magistrate from Pune to Bhopal.  One need not be Argus –  eyed  to  perceive
the same.  Its visibility is as clear as the cloudless noon day.   It  would
not be erroneous to say  that  the  enthusiastic  investigating  agency  had
totally forgotten the golden words of Benjamin Disraeli:
“I repeat …. that all power is a trust – that we  are  accountable  for  its
exercise – that, from the people and for the people,  all  springs  and  all
must exist.”

24.   We are compelled to say so as liberty which is basically the  splendor
 of beauty of life and bliss of growth, cannot be allowed to  be  frozen  in
such a contrived winter.  That would tantamount  to  comatosing  of  liberty
which is the strongest pillar of democracy.
25.   Having  held  thus,  we  shall  proceed  to  the  facet  of  grant  of
compensation.  The officers of the State had played with the liberty of  the
petitioners and, in a way, experimented with it.  Law does  not  countenance
such kind of experiments as that causes trauma and pain.  In Mehmood  Nayyar
Azam v. State of Chhattisgarh[8],  while  dealing  with  the  harassment  in
custody, deliberating on the concept of harassment, the Court stated thus:-
“22. At this juncture, it becomes absolutely necessary  to  appreciate  what
is meant by the term “harassment”. In P. Ramanatha Aiyar’s Law Lexicon,  2nd
Edn., the term “harass” has been defined thus:
“Harass.—‘Injure’ and ‘injury’ are words having numerous  and  comprehensive
popular meanings, as well as having a legal import.  A  line  may  be  drawn
between these words and the word ‘harass’, excluding the latter  from  being
comprehended within the word ‘injure’ or ‘injury’. The synonyms of  ‘harass’
are:  to  weary,  tire,  perplex,  distress  tease,  vex,  molest,  trouble,
disturb. They all have relation to mental annoyance, and a troubling of  the
spirit.”

The term “harassment”  in  its  connotative  expanse  includes  torment  and
vexation. The term “torture” also engulfs the concept of torment.  The  word
“torture” in  its  denotative  concept  includes  mental  and  psychological
harassment.  The  accused  in  custody   can   be   put   under   tremendous
psychological pressure by cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.”

26.   In the said case, emphasizing on dignity, it has been observed:-

“…..The majesty of law protects the  dignity  of  a  citizen  in  a  society
governed by law. It cannot be forgotten that the welfare State  is  governed
by the rule of law which has paramountcy. It has been said by Edward  Biggon
“the laws of a nation form the most instructive  portion  of  its  history”.
The Constitution as the organic law of the land has  unfolded  itself  in  a
manifold manner like a living organism  in  the  various  decisions  of  the
court about the rights of a person under Article 21 of the  Constitution  of
India. When citizenry rights are sometimes dashed against  and  pushed  back
by the members of City Halls, there  has  to  be  a  rebound  and  when  the
rebound takes place, Article 21 of the Constitution springs up to action  as
a protector….”

27.   In the case at hand, there has been violation of Article  21  and  the
petitioners were compelled to face  humiliation.   They  have  been  treated
with an  attitude  of  insensibility.   Not  only  there  are  violation  of
guidelines issued in the case of D.K. Basu (supra), there are also  flagrant
violation of mandate of law enshrined under Section 41 and Section  41-A  of
CrPC.  The investigating officers in no  circumstances  can  flout  the  law
with brazen proclivity.  In such a situation, the public  law  remedy  which
has been postulated in Nilawati  Behra  (supra),  Sube  Singh  v.  State  of
Haryana[9], Hardeep Singh v.  State  of  M.P.[10],  comes  into  play.   The
constitutional courts taking note of suffering and humiliation are  entitled
to grant compensation.  That has been regarded as a redeeming  feature.   In
the case at hand, taking  into  consideration  the  totality  of  facts  and
circumstances, we think it appropriate  to  grant  a  sum  of  Rs.5,00,000/-
(rupees five lakhs only) towards compensation to each of the petitioners  to
be paid by the State of M.P. within three months hence.  It will be open  to
the State to proceed against the erring officials, if so advised.
28.   The controversy does not  end  here.  Mr.  Fernandes,  learned  Amicus
Curiae would urge that it was a case  for  discharge  but  the  trial  court
failed to appreciate the factual  matrix  in  proper  perspective.   As  the
matter remained pending in this court for some time, and we had  dealt  with
other aspects, we thought it apt to hear the learned counsel for the  aspect
of continuance of the criminal prosecution.  We have narrated the  facts  at
the beginning.  The learned Magistrate by order dated  19.2.2015  has  found
existence of prima facie case for the offences punishable under Section  420
IPC and Section 66-A(b) of I.T. Act, 2000 read with Section 34 IPC.   It  is
submitted by Mr. Fernandes that Section 66-A of the I.T. Act,  2000  is  not
applicable.  The submission need not detain us any further, for Section  66-
A of the I.T.  Act,  2000  has  been  struck  down  in  its  entirety  being
violative of Article 19(1)(a) and not saved under Article  19(2)  in  Shreya
Singhal v. Union of India[11].  The only offence,  therefore,  that  remains
is Section 420 IPC.  The learned Magistrate  has  recorded  a  finding  that
there has been no impersonation.  However, he  has  opined  that  there  are
some material to show that the petitioners had intention  to  cheat.   On  a
perusal of the FIR, it is clear to us that the dispute is purely of a  civil
nature, but a maladroit effort has been made to give it a  criminal  colour.
In Devendra v. State of U.P.[12], it has been held thus:-
“.. it is now well settled that the High  Court  ordinarily  would  exercise
its jurisdiction under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure if  the
allegations made in the first information report, even if given  face  value
and taken to be correct in their entirety, do  not  make  out  any  offence.
When the allegations made in the first information report or  the  evidences
collected  during  investigation  do  not  satisfy  the  ingredients  of  an
offence, the superior courts would not encourage harassment of a  person  in
a criminal court for nothing”.
29.   In the  present  case,  it  can  be  stated  with  certitude  that  no
ingredient of Section 420 IPC is  remotely  attracted.   Even  if  it  is  a
wrong, the complainant has to take recourse to civil action.   The  case  in
hand does not fall in the categories where cognizance of the offence can  be
taken by the court and the accused can be  asked  to  face  trial.   In  our
considered opinion, the entire case projects a  civil  dispute  and  nothing
else.  Therefore, invoking the principle laid down in State  of  Haryana  v.
Bhajan Lal[13], we quash the proceedings initiated at the  instance  of  the
8th respondent and set aside the order negativing the prayer  for  discharge
of the accused persons.  The prosecution initiated against  the  petitioners
stands quashed.
30.   Consequently, the writ petition is allowed  to  the  extent  indicated
above.  There shall be no order as to costs.


                                  ........................................J.
                             [DIPAK MISRA]

                                  ........................................J.
                                        [SHIVA KIRTI SINGH]
NEW DELHI
June 03, 2016.

-----------------------
[1]    AIR 1980 SC 470
[2]    (1994) 4 SCC 260
[3]    (1997) 1 SCC 416
[4]    (1993) 2 SCC 746
[5]    (1995) 4 SCC 262
[6]    (2014) 8 SCC 273
[7]     (2015) 1 SCC 192
[8]      (2012) 8 SCC 1
[9]     (2006) 3 SCC 178
[10]    (2012) 1 SCC 748
[11]    (2015) 5 SCC 1
[12]    (2009) 7 SCC 495
[13]    1992 Supp. (1) SCC 335

-----------------------
27


Monday, May 30, 2016

Specific Relief Act, 1963: Sections 14 and 41-Contract for employment-Whether enforceable against employer-Damages- Whether a ramedy for breach of personal contract. A contract of employment cannot ordinarily be enforced by or against an employer. The remedy is to sue for damages. The grant of specific performance is purely discretionary and must be refused when not warranted by the ends of justice. Such relief can be granted only on sound legal principles. In the absence of any statutory requirement, courts do not ordinarily force an employer to recruit or retain in service an employee not required by the employer. There are, of course, certain exceptions to this rule, such as in the case of a public servant dismissed from service in contravention of Article 311 of the Constitution; reinstatement of a dismissed worker under the Industrial Law; a statutory body acting in breach of statutory obligations, and the like.

PETITIONER:
NANDGANJ SIHORI SUGAR CO. LTD., RAE BARELI AND ANR.

Vs.

RESPONDENT:
BADRI NATH DIXIT AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT24/04/1991

BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
BENCH:
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
SHETTY, K.J. (J)
YOGESHWAR DAYAL (J)

CITATION:
 1991 AIR 1525  1991 SCR  (2) 468
 1991 SCC  (3) 54  JT 1991 (2) 338
 1991 SCALE  (1)794


ACT:
     Specific Relief Act, 1963: Sections 14 and 41-Contract
for employment-Whether enforceable against employer-Damages-
Whether a ramedy for breach of personal contract.



HEADNOTE:
     The  first respondent instituted a suit  for  mandatory
injunction  to enforce a contract  alleged  to  have been
entered into between him and the appellant, officers of the
second respondent Corporation, for appointment to the post
of  Instrumentation Foreman in the appellants' company, and
for  consequential  reliefs. He contended that he  had been
sponsored  by  the  Chairman and Managing  Director  of the
second respondent Corporation, which was the holding company
of the appellants'company by his two letters for appointment
as an Apprentice Engineer in terms of a scheme formulated by
the  Government of  India. The appellants  and the  second
respondent denied the existence of any contract.
     The trial court dismissed the suit. However, on appeal,
the first appellate court decreed the suit and directed the
first appellant to appoint the first respondent to the post
of  Apprentice Engineer under the scheme sponsored  by the
Government  of India. This was confirmed, in appeal, by the
High Court, which held the first respondent was entitled  to
be  appointed  to the post of Instrumentation  Foreman with
effect from the date on which the former incumbent of that
post had resigned.
     In the  appeal  before this Court, on  behalf  of the
appellants  it was contended that there was no evidence  of
the contract having been entered into by the appellant with
the first respondent; nor was there any evidence of a scheme
of  the Government  of India, which  entitled him  to  be
appointed to any post in the appellants' company, and  that,
in  any view, he was not qualified for appointment  as  an
Apprentice, much less to the higher post of  Instrumentation
Foreman.
      469
     On  behalf  of the first respondent it  was  contended
that  the letters addressed by the second respondent in his
capacity  as Chairman, and Managing Director of the  holding
company,  to the appellants, the officers of the  subsidiary
company, made  it obligatory on the part of  the  latter  to
appoint him in terms of the Government of India scheme,  as
so  found  by both the first Appellate court  and  the high
Court.
     Allowing the appeal, this Court,
     HELD: 1.1 A contract of employment cannot ordinarily be
enforced  by or against an employer.  The remedy is  to sue
for  damages.  The grant of specific performance  is  purely
discretionary and must be refused when not warranted by the
ends  of justice.  Such relief can be granted only on  sound
legal principles.   In  the  absence of   any   statutory
requirement,  courts do not ordinarily force an employer  to
recruit or  retain in service an employee not required  by
the  employer. There are, of course, certain exceptions  to
this rule, such as in the case of a public servant dismissed
from  service  in  contravention  of  Article  311  of the
Constitution; reinstatement of a dismissed worker under the
Industrial  Law;  a  statutory body  acting  in  breach  of
statutory obligations, and the like. [475-E]
     B.N. Tiwari v. District Board, Agra, AIR 1964 SC  1680;
U.P.  State Warehousing Corporation v. C.K. Tyagi, [1970]  2
SCR  250  and Executive Committee of Vaish  Degree  College,
Shamli and  Ors. v. Lakshmi Narain and Ors., [1976]  2 SCR
1006, referred to.
     Indian Contract and Specific Relief Acts, by  Polock  &
 Mulla, Tenth Edn., page 983 and Halsbury's Laws of England.
Fourth Edn., Volume 44, paragraphs 405 to 420, referred to.
     1.2  In the instant case, neither from the plaint nor
from  the evidence is it possible to identify and  concluded
contract   to which the first respondent is a party or which
he  can enforce.  There is no specific plea or evidence  as
regards the particulars of the scheme of the Government  of
India  in  terms of which he seeks relief whether  it  is  a
statutory  scheme, and if so, what are the provision  relied
on by him and whether a duty is cast on the appellants and a
benefit is conferred on persons like the first respondent.
Assuming  that such a scheme existed or any  such  contract
bound the parties, it would be violative of all basic  norms
of  law  to  decree a suit for specific  performance  of  a
contract of personal service.[472E-G]
    470
     1.3  Courts  do not ordinarily enforce  performance  of
contracts  of a personal character, such as a contract  of
employment.   Subject to certain well defined categories  of
exceptions, law does not permit, and the Specific Relief Act
does  not contemplate, the enforcement of a contract  of  a
personal  nature by a decree for specific performance. The
facts of  the instant  case do  not fall  within the
exceptions. [472A, 474D]
     Rigby  v. Connol, [1880] 14 ChD 482, 487 and  Executive
Committee  of  Vaish Degree College, Shamli  and  Others  v.
Lakshmi Narain and Ors., [1976] 2 SCR 1006 at 1020, referred
to.
     Cheshire, fifoot and Furmston's Law of Contract, 11th
ed.,  p. 614 and Halsbury's Laws of England Fourth  Edition,
Volume 44, at page 407, referred to.
     1.4 Even if there was a contract in terms of which the
first respondent was entitled to seek relief, the only which
was   available in  law  was  damages and   not   specific
performance.   Breach of contract must ordinarily  sound  in
damages,  and  particularly  so in  the  case of  personal
contracts.  Assuming that a contractual relationship   arose
consequent   upon  the letters addressed  by the   second
respondent  to the first appellant, the first respondent was
a   total  stranger  to any  such  relationship,   for  no
relationship  of a fiduciary character existed between the
first respondent   and  the  second  respondent   or the
appellants.   Neither  on principles of law  or equity nor
under  any  statute  did the  first  respondent acquire  an
enforceable right by reason of the letters exchanged between
the  appellant and  second respondent, nor  did   he have
private of any kind to their relationship.   No  collateral
contract  to which he was a party did arise on the facts  of
this  case  and at no time was the second respondent  acting
as  his agent. There is no express  or  implied  contract
which is enforceable by him. [475-H, 476-B]
     In the circumstances, the decrees of the High Court and
the  first  appellate Court are set aside and  that  of the
trial court  is restored.[476D]



JUDGMENT:
     CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3644  of
1989.
     From  the Judgment and Order dated 10.10.1988  of the
Allahabad High Court in S.A. No. 194 of 1987.
     Yoeshwar  Prasad  and  Mrs.  Shobha  Dikshit  for the
Appellants.
  471
     B.D.  Agarwala,  Gopal  Subramaniam,  Ms. Bina  Gupta,
Arvind Verma, Ms. Monika Mohil, R.K. Srivastava and P. Misra
for the Respondents.
     The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
     THOMMEN,  J. This appeal is by defendants 1 and 2 in  a
suit for mandatory injunction. The appellants are  officers
of Nandganj Sihori Sugar Co. Ltd., Rae Bareli, of which the
third defendant, the U.P. State Sugar Corporation Ltd. (the
second respondent herein) is the holding company. The State
of  Uttar  Pradesh  (the third respondent)  is the  fourth
defendant.   The  plaintiff,  Badri Nath  Dixit (the  first
respondent), instituted the suit for mandatory injunction to
enforce a  contract  alleged  to  have been  entered into
between the plaintiff and defendants 1 & 2 for appointment
of  the plaintiff to the post of Instrumentation Foreman  in
the defendants company and for consequential reliefs. The
plaintiff  contended   that he had been sponsored  by the
Chairman  and Managing Director of the third  defendant,  by
his letters dated 18 October, 1982 and 14 December, 1982 for
appointment by defendants 1 & 2 as an Apprentice Engineer in
terms  of a scheme formulated  by the Government  of  India,
but  such  appointment was not made by defendants  1  &  2.
The   plaintiff  prayed  for an   injunction  compelling
defendants   1 &  2  to  appoint  him to  the   post  of
`Instrumentation Foreman', which post, according to him, was
at  the time of the suit lying vacant. In effect, what the
plaintiff   seeks  is  a  decree  to  compel  the   specific
performance of a contract of personal service.
     Defendants 1  to 3  filed a  joint  written  statement
denying the  allegations.   They stated that there  was  no
contract,  as  alleged, and there was no vacancy    for any
post  to which the plaintiff was qualified to be  appointed.
They   further stated  that the   plaintiff  had been
conditionally offered appointment  as  a   Fitter   Trade
Apprentice,   subject  to  his possessing   the   requisite
qualifications and his selection by the  Apprentice  Board,
Kanpur.   The plaintiff  was not  qualified  and was,
therefore,  not selected.   They  further  contended that
neither as an Apprentice nor as Instrumentation Foreman was
the  plaintiff qualified  to be appointed.   The  suit was
dismised  by  the trial court. However, on  appeal  by the
plaintifif it was decreed by the learned Additional District
Judge  who directed defendant 1 to appoint the plaintiff  to
the post of Apprentice Engineer under the s cheme  sponsored
by  the Government of India.  This  decree was confirmed  in
appeal by the High Court by the impugned judgment.  The High
Court further held
   472
that   the  plaintiff was entitled to be appointed   to the
post of Instrumentation Foreman with effect from the date on
which the former incumbent of that post had resigned.
     Counsel  for the appellants (defendants 1 & 2 )  submit
that  there  is no evidence of the alleged  contract  having
been entered into by the defendants with the plaintiff; nor
is there any evidence of a scheme of the Government of India
which entitled the plaintifif to be appointed to any post in
the defendants' company.  Counsel states that, in any  view,
the  plaintiff was  not qualified for appointment  as  an
Apprentice   and   much  less to  the  higher   post  of
Instrumentation Foreman.
     The  plaintiff's  counsel, however,  submits  that the
letters addressed by the third defendant in his capacity  as
Chairman  and  Managine Director of the holding company  to
defendants  1 & 2, the officers of the subsidiary  company,
made it obligatory on the part of the latter to appoint the
plaintiff  in terms of the Government of India scheme.  It
was  so found by the first Applleate Court   and  the High
Court. That finding is not liable to be impeached  in the
present proceeding.   He  says that  the  defendants are,
therefore,  liable to be compelled by means of a  mandatory
injunction  to honor  the offer held out  by  them  to the
plaintiff,  who is entitled to enforce the contract  founded
on such offer by seeking specific performance of it.
     We are surprised that the first Appellate Court and the
High Court should have proceeded on the assumption that any
enforceable  contract existed. Neither from the plaint nor
from  the evidence is it possible to identify and  concluded
contract  to  which the plaintiff is a party  or  which the
plaintiff can enforce. The defendants deny the existence of
any  contract  or any other relationships  which  gives the
paintiff any cause of action against the defendants.   There
is no specific plea or evidence as regards the particulars
of the alleged scheme of the Government of India in terms of
which the plaintiff seeks relief.  Whether it is a statutory
scheme, and if so what are the provisions relied on by the
plaintiff, and whether a duty is cast on the defendants and
a  benefit  conferred  on persons  like the  plaintiff,  is
neither pleaded nor spoken  to inevidence.   Assuming that
any  such  scheme  existed or any such contract  bound the
parties, to have decreed a suit for specific  performance of
a  contract of personal service on the facts alleged by the
plaintiff,  was to  violate all basic norms of law.   Courts
do  not ordinarily enforce performance of  contracts  of  a
personal character, such as a contract of  employment.  In
the words of Jessel M.R.:
     473
"The courts have  never  dreamt   of   enforcing
agreements  strictly  personal in  their   nature,
whether they are  agreements of hiring and service,
being the  common relation of master and  servant
..." [Rigby v. Connol, [1880] 14 ChD 482, 487; see
Cheshire,  Fifoot and Furmston's Law  of  Contract,
11th ed., p. 614]."
     In the joint  written statement filed by defendants  1
to  3, representing the holding and  subsidiary  companies,
the  alleged  contract has been clearly denied. We fail  to
see how the letters addressed by the Chairman of the holding
company to the officers of the subsidiary company  advising
the  appointment  of the plaintiff to a post  which  he was
found to be not qualified to hold could have resulted in any
contract  between  the defendants of the one  part  and the
plaintiff  of  the other part. Assuming  that the  letters
written by the Chairman of the holding company were  in the
nature of  a  direction  which a  subsidiary company was
compelled  to carry out, we fail to see how on the facts  of
this  case, the plaintiff, who had no privity whatever to  a
contract,  assuming there was a contract, could enforce any
right under it. In the first place, the letters sent by the
Chairman  of the holding company are merely in nature of  an
advise giving rise to no contractual relationship.  Even  if
the  advise is taken to be of the character of a  direction
which  the subsidiary company is bound to comply  with, any
obligation arising from such direction is not enforceable at
the  instance of a total stranger.  The Chairman  was in  no
sense acting as  a  trustee of  the plaintiff  and  no
relationship of a fiduciary character whatever is alleged or
proved to have existed between them.  Assuming that the then
Chairman  was personally interested in the  plaintiff, that
was not an interest which is legally enforceable against the
defendants.   Such predilection on the part of the  Chairman
of  a  holding company,  whatever be  its  impact   on the
subsidiary  company, does not give rise to  any  actionable
claim. There is  no evidence,  whatsoever, as  to the
existence of a Government scheme, apart from a reference  to
it  in the Chairman's letter. The plaintiff has  not shed
any  light  upon it.  The defendants have not  admitted any
such scheme.  Even if a scheme existed, there is no evidence
that it was enforceable at the instance of a person  seeking
its  benefit. Nor has the plaintiff  pleaded estoppel  or
adduced any evidence to support any such contention.
     In the  absence  of any specific plea or evidence  as
regards the nature and other particulars of the scheme,  it
is preposterous that the courts below should have thought it
fit   to  issue a  mandatory  injunction  to compel the
performance of the alleged contract of service in terms
474
of  or pursuant to an unknown scheme. Subject to  certain
well  defined  categories of exceptions, the  law  does not
permit, and the Specific Relief Act does  not contemplate,
the  enforcement  of a contract of a personal  nature  by  a
decree for specific performance.  The facts of this case  do
not  fall  within the exceptions.  Assuming  that  the fact
alleged by the plaintiff to be true-as stated earlier, there
is  no evidence whatever to support them-the  plaintifif  is
not entitled to any relief other than damages in the even of
his being in a position to prove that he has been damnified
by  reason  of the defendants' failure to  carry  out the
obligations arising under what he calls a  contract.
     In Halsbury's Laws of England, Fourth Edition,  Volume
44, at page  407, it is stated:
"407. Contracts for personal work or services.-  A
judgment for specific performance of a contract for
personal work or services is not pronounced, either
at the suit of the employer or the employee. The
court does  not  seek to      compel
persons  against their will to maintain  continuous
personal and confidential relations.  However, this
rule is not absolute and without exception.  It has
been  held that an employer may be restrained from
dismissing  an employee in breach of contract  if
there is no loss of confidence between employer and
employee   or if  (at least in  a  contract  of
employment to carry out a public duty) the employee
has  been  dismissed  in a manner  which  does not
comply with statutory or  contractual regulations
governing dismissal.  No court may, whether by way
of  an order of specific performance of a  contract
of  employment  or  an  injunction  restraining  a
breach or  threatened breach of such a  contract,
compel an employee to do any work or attend  at any
place for the doing of any work.
This  principle applies not merely to contracts  of
employment, but to all contracts which involve the
rendering   of continuous services by one person to
another,  such as a contract to work a  railway
line..."
(emphasis supplied)
     As stated by this Court in  Executive   committee  of
Vaish Degree College, Shamli and Others v. Lakshmi and Ors.,
[1976] 2 SCR 1006 at 1020:
   475
"....a  contract   of personal   service   cannot
ordinarily  be specifically enforced and  a  Court
normally  would  not give a  declaration  that the
contracts  subsists  and the  employee even  after
having been removed from service can be deemed  to
be  in service against the will and consent of the
employer.  This rule, however, is subject to  three
well  recognised  exceptions; (i)  where  a  public
servant  is  sought to be removed from service  in
contravention of the provisions of Art.311 of the
Constitution  of  India;  (ii) where  a  worker  is
sought to be reinstated on being  dismissed  under
the  Industrial  Law; and (iii) where a  statutory
body  acts in breach or violation of the  mandatory
provisions of the statute."
(emphasis supplied)
     A contract of employment cannot orodinarily be enforced
by  or against an  employer. The remedy  is to  sue for
damages.   (See section  14 read with section 41  of the
Specific Relief Act; see Indian Contract and Specific Relief
Acts,  by Polock & Mulla, Tenth Edn., page 983).  The  grant
of specific performance is purely discretionary and must  be
refused when  not warranted by the ends of  justice. Such
relief can be granted only on sound legal  principles.  In
the  absence  of any statutory requirement,  courts  do not
ordinarily force an employer to recruit or retain in service
an  employee  not required by the employer.  There  are,  of
course, certain exceptions to this rule, such as in the case
of a public servant dismissed from service  in contravention
of  Article  311  of the Constitution; reinstatement  of  a
dismissed worker under the Industrial Law; a statutory body
acting in  breach of statutory obligations, and  the  like.
(B.N. Tiwari v. District Board, Agra, AIR 1964 SC 1680; U.P.
State  Warehousing Corporation v. C.K. Tyagi, [1970]  2 SCR
250; Executive Committee of Vaish Degree College, Shamli and
Ors.  v.  Lakshim Narain and  Ors., [1976] 2  SCR  1006 see
Halsbury's   Laws  of  England, Fourth Edn., Volume 44,
paragraphs 405 to 420.)
     On the facts of this case, the High court was  clearly
wrong  in  issuing  a mandatory injunction  to appoint the
plaintiff.   Even if there was a contract in terms of  which
the plaintiff was entitled to seek relief,  the only  relief
which  was  available in law was damages  and  not  specific
performance.   Breach of contract must ordinarily  sound  in
damages,  and  particularly  so in  the  case of  personal
contracts.   Assuming that a contractual relationship  arose
consequent upon the letters addressed by the third defendant
to the 1st  defendant, the plaintiff was a total stranger to
any  such relationship, for, on the facts of this  case,  no
relationship  of a fiduciary character existed between the
plaintiff and
   476
the  third  defendant  or  other  defendants. Neither  on
principles  of law or equity nor under any statute  did the
plaintiff  acquire  an enforceable right by  reason  of the
letters exchanged between the first and  third defendants.
The   plaintiff had  no  privity  of  any  kind  to   their
relationship.  No collateral contract to which the plaintiff
was a party did arise on the facts of this case.  At no time
was the third defendant acting as an agent of the plaintiff.
There is no express or implied contract which is enforceable
by the plaintiff.  (See Halsbury's Laws of England.,  Fourth
Edn., Volume 9, paragraphs 334 to  342).
     The  plaintiff's  counsel suggests that  the  claim  is
justifiable  on the basis of  legitimate  expectations for
appointment.   There  is  no specific plea  or evidence  to
support any such contention.  Whatever expectations  might
have   arisen from the letters of the third defendant, they
could not have in law given rise to any right enforceable by
specific performance.
     For all these reasons we hold that the plaintiff's suit
for  mandatory injunction, on the facts of  the  case, was
rightly dismissed by the trial court and wrongly decreed  by
the first Appellate Court and the High Court.  We set  aside
the decrees of the High Court and the first Appellate  Court
and  restore that of the trial court.  The plaintiff's suit
shall accordingly   stand dismissed  and  the defendants'
appeal allowed with  costs throughout.
N.P.V.     Appeal allowed.
      477
   477



omission of a single material fact leads to an incomplete cause of action and the statement or plaint becomes bad. Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure lays down an independent remedy made available to the defendant to challenge the maintainability of the suit itself, irrespective of his right to contest the same on merits. The real object of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure is to keep out of courts irresponsible law suits and in case Court is prima facie persuaded of the view that the suit is an abuse of the process of the court, in the sense that it is a bogus and irresponsible litigation, the jurisdiction under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure can be exercised."

CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil)  448 of 2004

PETITIONER:
Sopan Sukhdeo Sable & Ors.

RESPONDENT:
Assistant Charity Commissioner & Ors.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/01/2004

BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT

JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 20366/2002)




ARIJIT PASAYAT,J




Leave granted.


The appellants who were plaintiffs in a suit filed
before the learned Civil Judge, Senior Division, Srirampur
have questioned legality of the conclusions arrived at by
the Courts below holding that the plaint filed by them was
to be rejected in terms of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (in short the 'Code'). The plaintiffs
claimed to be tenants under respondent No.2, Shaneshwar
Deosthan Trust (hereinafter referred to as the 'trust'). Its
trustees and the Assistant Charity Commissioner (in short
the 'Commissioner') were the other defendants. Plaintiffs
claimed that they were tenants of the trust of which the
defendants Nos. 3 to 13 were the trustees. Alleging that
they have been forcibly evicted notwithstanding continuance
of the tenancy, the suit was filed for the following
reliefs:

A) Plaintiff no. 1 to 17, be declared as the
tenants of the properties described in the
plaint belonging to temple Trust, of which
defendant No.2 to 13 are trustees.

B) Defendant No.1 to 13, be permanently
restrained by an order of injunction not to
evict plaintiff No.1 to 13, forcibly with
the help of police and also not to
interfere in their business being carried on
by them in suit shops, and not to interfere
in the possession of suit shops in any
manner-whatsoever, either by themselves or
by their servants, agents, relatives or
anybody claiming through or under them.

C) Direct the defendant No. 2 to 13, to
pay compensation for the loss caused to the
plaintiffs on account of their acts of
omission and commission as described in the
plaint, committed by them prior to the
filing of the suit and during pendency of
suit for the damage that may be caused to
the plaintiffs.

D) Defendant No.1 be directed to enquire
into the illegal acts, committed by
defendant No.2 to 13, and issue appropriate
direction to that effect.    


The suit was numbered as R.C.S. No.160/1997 in the
trial Court. The stand of the plaintiffs-appellants
essentially was that the tenancy was for a period of 11
years and not for 11 months as claimed by the trust. An
application was filed by the trust raising a preliminary
plea that the plaint is liable to be rejected under Order
VII Rule 11 of the Code. With reference to Section 80 of the
Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950 (in short the 'Act') it was
urged that no Civil court had jurisdiction to decide or deal
with any question which by or under the Act is to be decided
or dealt with by any officer or authority under the Act and
in respect of which the decision or order of such officer or
authority has been made final and conclusive. The trial
Judge framed two preliminary issues, i.e. (a) whether the
suit was liable to be rejected under Order VII Rule 11 of
the Code for want of cause of action, and (b) whether the
suit was tenable against all the defendants. Findings in
respect of the preliminary issues were recorded against the
plaintiffs. A finding was recorded that the plaint does not
disclose any cause of action and also in view of the
specific provisions of the Act, the jurisdiction vests only
with the District Court to give direction to Commissioner
and in any event Section 80 of the Act took away
jurisdiction of the Civil Court and the plaint was rejected.
Challenging the judgment and decree dated 21.10.2000 passed
by the learned Civil Judge, Senior Division, Srirampur, an
appeal was preferred before the District Court which was
numbered as Regular Civil Appeal No.178 of 2000. The appeal
was dismissed and the decree passed by the trial Court was
confirmed by II Additional District Judge at Srirampur,
Ahmed Nagar District. The matter was carried in Second
Appeal before the High Court which by the impugned judgment
upheld the findings recorded by the Courts below. Before the
High Court, it was contended by the appellants that Sections
50, 51 and 80 of the Act had no application and the lease
being for 11 years, the action of the trust in dispossessing
the plaintiffs forcibly cannot have the approval of law. The
stand of the trust was to the effect that the plaintiffs
have not approached the Court with clean hands. They had
tried to get relief from the High Court by filing a petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, 1950 (in
short the 'Constitution'). They failed to comply with the
interim directions given by the High Court and before the
date posted before the High Court for consideration of the
interim orders, they filed the suit and prayed for
injunction. Subsequently, the writ petition was withdrawn.
The plaint filed by the plaintiffs did not disclose any
cause of action and in any event the relief sought for could
not have been granted by the Civil Court in view of the
specific provisions contained in Sections 50, 51 and 80 of
the Act. There was no forcible dispossession as claimed. The
Courts below were justified in rejecting the plaint.

 The High Court accepted the plea of the trust and
dismissed the second appeal affirming the conclusions
arrived by the Courts below.

In support of the appeal, Mr. V.A. Mohta, learned
senior counsel appearing for the appellants submitted that
the Courts below have lost sight of the nuances of Order VII
Rule 11 of the Code. Even if for the sake of arguments it is
conceded that some reliefs were to be dealt with by the
authorities under the Act, the reliefs were severable and
the Civil Court had jurisdiction to deal with them. The
dispute projected in the suit essentially related to the
question of tenancy and the relationship between the
plaintiffs and the defendant-trust vis-`-vis the question of
tenancy, the term of tenancy are matters intermittently
linked with these basic issues. Such issues cannot be
decided by the authorities under the Act. Therefore, the
rejection of the plaint under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code
cannot be maintained in law. The plaintiffs were
dispossessed illegally and a person dispossessed illegally
was entitled to protection. A person without title but in
'settled' possession as against mere fugitive possession,
can get back possession if forcibly dispossessed or rather
if dispossessed otherwise than by due process of law.

Per contra, Mr. A.V. Savant, learned senior counsel
appearing for the defendant-trust submitted that the Courts
below have concurrently found it as a matter of fact that
the plaint did not disclose a cause of action and the Civil
Court had no jurisdiction to deal with a matter,
specifically in view of what has been statutorily provided
in Section 80 of the Act. With reference to the judgment of
the High court it was pointed out that the plaintiffs had
not approached the Court with clean hands. They had adopted
dubious methods, did not comply with the directions of the
High Court for depositing the stipulated amount. By a ruse,
some reliefs have been sought for in the plaint totally out
of context with the main prayers which are to be dealt with
in terms of Sections 50 and 51 of the Act. There were no
pleadings about alleged forcible dis-possession and wholly
untenable plea about the period of tenancy has been rightly
rejected by the Courts below. Clauses (a) and (d) of Rule 11
have full application to the facts of the case. The whole
purpose in filing the suit was to somehow or other remains
in possession of the shops which were leased out to them for
certain periods. As a result of the actions of the
plaintiffs, the trust would have been put to huge financial
loss. All this according to him, disentitle the appellants
from any relief under Article 136 of the Constitution.

Order VII Rule 11 of the Code reads as follows:

Order VII Rule 11: Rejection of plaint.
The plaint shall be rejected in the
following cases :-

(a) where it does not disclose a cause of
action;

(b) where the relief claimed is
undervalued, and the plaintiff, on being
required by the Court to correct the
valuation within a time to be fixed by the
court, fails to do so;

(c) where the relief claims is properly
valued but the plaint is written upon paper
insufficiently stamped, and the plaintiff,
on being required by the Court to supply the
requisite stamp-paper within a time to be
fixed by the Court, fails to do so;

(d) where the suit appears from the
statement in the plaint to be barred by any
law;

(e) where it is not filed in duplicate;
(f) where the plaintiff fails to comply
with the provisions of rule 9.

Provided that the time fixed by the
Court for the correction of the valuation or
supplying of the requisite stamp-paper shall
not be extended unless the Court, for
reasons to be recorded, is satisfied that
the plaintiff was prevented by any cause of
an exceptional nature for correcting the
valuation or supplying the requisite stamp-
paper, as the case may be, within the time
fixed by the Court and that refusal to
extend such time would cause grave injustice
to the plaintiff."          


In the present case the respondent-trust has relied
upon clauses (a) and (d) of Rule 11.

Before dealing with the factual scenario, the spectrum
of Order VII Rule 11 in the legal ambit needs to be noted.

In Saleem Bhai and Ors. v. State of Maharashtra and
Ors. (2003 (1) SCC 557) it was held with reference to Order
VII Rule 11 of the Code that the relevant facts which need
to be looked into for deciding an application thereunder are
the averments in the plaint. The trial Court can exercise
the power at any stage of the suit - before registering the
plaint or after issuing summons to the defendant at any time
before the conclusion of the trial. For the purposes of
deciding an application under clauses (a) and (d) of Order
VII Rule 11 of the Code, the averments in the plaint are the
germane; the pleas taken by the defendant in the written
statement would be wholly irrelevant at that stage.

In I.T.C. Ltd. v. Debts Recovery Appellate Tribunal and
Ors. (1998 (2) SCC 70) it was held that the basic question
to be decided while dealing with an application filed under
Order VII Rule 11 of the Code is whether a real cause of
action has been set out in the plaint or something purely
illusory has been stated with a view to get out of Order VII
Rule 11 of the Code.

The trial Court must remember that if on a meaningful
and not formal reading of the plaint it is manifestly
vexatious and meritless in the sense of not disclosing a
clear right to sue, it should exercise the power under Order
VII Rule 11 of the Code taking care to see that the ground
mentioned therein is fulfilled. If clever drafting has
created the illusion of a cause of action, it has to be
nipped in the bud at the first hearing by examining the
party searchingly under Order X of the Code. (See T.
Arivandandam v. T.V. Satyapal and Anr. (1977 (4) SCC 467)

It is trite law that not any particular plea has to be
considered, and the whole plaint has to be read. As was
observed by this Court in Roop Lal Sathi v. Nachhattar Singh
Gill (1982 (3) SCC 487), only a part of the plaint cannot be
rejected and if no cause of action is disclosed, the plaint
as a whole must be rejected.

In Raptakos Brett & Co.Ltd. v. Ganesh Property (1998
(7) SCC 184) it was observed that the averments in the
plaint as a whole have to be seen to find out whether clause
(d) of Rule 11 of Order VII was applicable.

There cannot be any compartmentalization, dissection,
segregation and inversions of the language of various
paragraphs in the plaint. If such a course is adopted it
would run counter to the cardinal canon of interpretation
according to which a pleading has to be read as a whole to
ascertain its true import. It is not permissible to cull out
a sentence or a passage and to read it out of the context in
isolation. Although it is the substance and not merely the
form that has to be looked into, the pleading has to be
construed as it stands without addition or subtraction or
words or change of its apparent grammatical sense. The
intention of the party concerned is to be gathered primarily
from the tenor and terms of his pleadings taken as a whole.
At the same time it should be borne in mind that no pedantic
approach should be adopted to defeat justice on hair-
splitting technicalities.

Submission of learned counsel for respondent No.2-
trust was that requirement of law being reading the plaint
in its totality, the appellants cannot take the plea that
they would give up or relinquish some of the reliefs sought
for. That would not be permissible. The plea clearly
overlooks the basic distinction between statements of the
facts disclosing cause of action and the reliefs sought for.
The reliefs claimed do not constitute the cause of action.
On the contrary, they constitute the entitlement, if any, on
the basis of pleaded facts. As indicated above, Order VI
Rule 2 requires that pleadings shall contain and contain
only a statement in a concise form of the material facts on
which the party pleading relies for his claim. If the plea
of Mr. Savant, learned counsel for the respondent-trust is
accepted the distinction between the statement of material
facts and the reliance on them for the claim shall be
obliterated. What is required in law is not the piecemeal
reading of the plaint but in its entirety. Whether the
reliefs would be granted on the pleaded facts and the
evidence adduced is totally different from the relief
claimed. All the reliefs claimed may not be allowed to a
party on the pleadings and the evidence adduced. Whether
part of the relief cannot be granted by the Civil Court is a
different matter from saying that because of a combined
claim of reliefs the jurisdiction is ousted or no cause of
action is disclosed. Considering the reliefs claimed vis-a-
vis the pleadings would not mean compartmentalization or
segregation, in that sense. The plea raised by the
respondent-trust is therefore clearly unacceptable.

Keeping in view the aforesaid principles the reliefs
sought for in the suit as quoted supra have to be
considered. The real object of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code
is to keep out of courts irresponsible law suits. Therefore,
the Order X of the Code is a tool in the hands of the Courts
by resorting to which and by searching examination of the
party in case the Court is prima facie of the view that the
suit is an abuse of the process of the court in the sense
that it is a bogus and irresponsible litigation, the
jurisdiction under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code can be
exercised.

As noted supra, the Order VII Rule 11 does not justify
rejection of any particular portion of the plaint. Order VI
Rule 16 of the Code is relevant in this regard. It deals
with 'striking out pleadings'. It has three clauses
permitting the Court at any stage of the proceeding to
strike out or amend any matter in any pleading i.e. (a)
which may be unnecessary, scandalous, frivolous or
vexatious, or, (b) which may tend to prejudice, embarrass or
delay the fair trial of the suit, or, (c) which is otherwise
an abuse of the process of the Court.

Order VI Rule 2(1) of the Code states the basic and
cardinal rule of pleadings and declares that the pleading
has to state material facts and not the evidence. It
mandates that every pleading shall contain, and contain
only, a statement in a concise form of the material facts on
which the party pleading relies for his claim or defence, as
the case may be, but not the evidence by which they are to
be proved.

There is distinction between 'material facts' and
'particulars'. The words 'material facts' show that the
facts necessary to formulate a complete cause of action
must be stated. Omission of a single material fact leads to
an incomplete cause of action and the statement or plaint
becomes bad. The distinction which has been made between
'material facts' and 'particulars' was brought by Scott,
L.J. in Bruce v. Odhams Press Ltd. (1936) 1 KB 697 in the
following passage :
The cardinal provision in Rule 4 is that the
statement of claim must state the material
facts. The word "material" means necessary
for the purpose of formulating a complete
cause of action; and if any one "material"
statement is omitted, the statement of claim
is bad; it is "demurrable" in the old
phraseology, and in the new is liable to be
"struck out" under R.S.C. Order XXV, Rule 4
(see Philipps v. Philipps ((1878) 4 QBD
127)); or "a further and better statement of
claim" may be ordered under Rule 7.
The function of "particulars" under Rule 6
is quite different. They are not to be used
in order to fill material gaps in a
demurrable statement of claim - gaps which
ought to have been filled by appropriate
statements of the various material facts
which together constitute the plaintiff's
cause of action. The use of particulars is
intended to meet a further and quite
separate requirement of pleading, imposed in
fairness and justice to the defendant. Their
function is to fill in the picture of the
plaintiff's cause of action with information
sufficiently detailed to put the defendant
on his guard as to the case he had to meet
and to enable him to prepare for trial.

The dictum of Scott, L.J. in Bruce case (supra) has been
quoted with approval by this Court in Samant N. Balkrishna
v. George Fernandez (1969 (3) SCC 238), and the distinction
between "material facts" and "particulars" was brought
out in the following terms:
The word 'material' shows that the facts
necessary to formulate a complete cause of
action must be stated. Omission of a single
material fact leads to an incomplete cause
of action and the statement of claim becomes
bad. The function of particulars is to
present as full a picture of the cause of
action with such further information in
detail as to make the opposite party
understand the case he will have to meet.

Rule 11 of Order VII lays down an independent remedy made
available to the defendant to challenge the maintainability
of the suit itself, irrespective of his right to contest the
same on merits. The law ostensibly does not contemplate at
any stage when the objections can be raised, and also does
not say in express terms about the filing of a written
statement. Instead, the word 'shall' is used clearly
implying thereby that it casts a duty on the Court to
perform its obligations in rejecting the plaint when the
same is hit by any of the infirmities provided in the four
clauses of Rule 11, even without intervention of the
defendant. In any event, rejection of the plaint under Rule
11 does not preclude the plaintiffs from presenting a fresh
plaint in terms of Rule 13.

According to Mr. Mohta appearing for the appellants, as
noted above, the reliefs are separable and merely because
some of the reliefs cannot be granted by the Civil Court it
would entail an automatic rejection of the old plaint. In
fact he submitted that some of the reliefs would be given up
by the plaintiffs in the suit itself. It is true as
contended by Mr. Savant learned counsel appearing for the
respondent-trust by ingenious drafting a cause of action in
the nature of red herrings cannot be brought into judicial
arena. But a reading of the reliefs shows that some of them
can only be considered by the Civil Court.

Under Order II Rule 1 of the Code which contains
provisions of mandatory nature, the requirement is that the
plaintiffs are duty bound to claim the entire relief. The
suit has to be so framed as to afford ground for final
decision upon the subjects in dispute and to prevent further
litigation concerning them. Rule 2 further enjoins on the
plaintiff to include the whole of the claim which the
plaintiff is entitled to make in respect of the cause of
action. If the plaintiff omits to sue or intentionally
relinquishes any portion of his claim, it is not permissible
for him to sue in respect of the portion so omitted or
relinguished afterwards. If the plaintiffs as contended by
Mr. Mohta want to relinquish some reliefs prayer in that
regard shall be done before the trial Court. A reading of
the plaint and the reliefs along with the contents of the
plaint goes to show that the main dispute relates to the
question of continuance of tenancy and the period of
tenancy. They are in essence unrelated with the other
reliefs regarding enquiry into the affairs of the trust.
Such enquiries can only be undertaken under Section 50 of
the Act. For instituting the suit of the nature specified in
Section 50, prior consent of the Charity Commissioner is
necessary under Section 51. To that extent Mr. Savant is
right that the reliefs relatable to Section 50 would require
a prior consent in terms of Section 51. If the plaintiffs
give up those reliefs claimed in accordance with law, the
question would be whether a cause of action for the residual
claims/reliefs warrant continuance of the suit. The nature
of the dispute is to be resolved by the Civil Court. The
question of tenancy cannot be decided under Section 50 of
the Act. Section 51 is applicable only to suits which are
filed by a person having interest in the trust. A tenant of
the trust does not fall within the category of a person
having an interest in the trust.  Except relief in Para D of
the plaint, the other reliefs could be claimed before and
can be considered and adjudicated by the Civil Courts and
the bar or impediment in Sections 50 and 51 of the Act will
have no relevance or application to the other reliefs. That
being so, Sections 50 and 51 of the Act would not have any
application to that part of the relief which relates to
question of tenancy, the term of tenancy and the period of
tenancy. The inevitable conclusion therefore is that Courts
below were not justified in directing rejection of the
plaint. However, the adjudication in the suit would be
restricted to the question of tenancy, terms of tenancy and
the period of tenancy only. For the rest of the reliefs, the
plaintiffs shall be permitted within a month from today to
make such application as warranted in law for relinquishing
and/or giving up claim for other reliefs.

Another plea which has been raised with some amount of
vehemence by the appellant is the alleged forcible
possession. This plea is strongly disputed by learned
counsel for the respondent-trust who says that the
possession was taken in accordance with law and as noted
above, by voluntary surrendering by most of the tenants.
Much of this controversy revolves from the date till the
order of injunction passed by the trial Court operated.

There are two different sets of principles which have
to be borne in mind regarding course to be adopted in case
of forcible dispossession. Taking up the first aspect, it is
true that where a person is in settled possession of
property, even on the assumption that he has no right to
remain in property, he cannot be disposed by the owner
except by recourse of law.  This principle is laid down in
Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. That Section
says that if any person is dispossessed without his consent
from immovable property other wise than in due course of
law, he or any person claiming through him may, by suit,
recover possession thereof, notwithstanding any other title
that may be set up in such suit. That a person without title
but in "settled" possession as against mere fugitive
possession can get back possession if forcibly
dispossessed or rather, if dispossessed otherwise than by
due process of law, has been laid down in several cases.  It
was so held by this Court in Yashwant Singh v. Jagdish Singh
(AIR 1968 SC 620), Krishna Ram Mohate v. Mrs. Shobha Venkata
Rao, (1989 (4) SCC 131,at p.136), Ram Rattan v. State of
U.P. (1977 (1) SCC 188), and State of U.P. v. Maharaja
Dharmender Prasad Singh (1989 (2) SCC 505). The leading
decision quoted in these rulings is the decision of the
Bombay High Court in K.K. Verma v. Union of India (AIR 1954
Bom. 358).

Now the other aspect of the matter needs to be noted.
Assuming a trespasser ousted can seek restoration of
possession under Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963
can the trespasser seek injunction against the true owner?
This question does not entirely depend upon Section 6 of the
Specific Relief Act, but mainly depends upon certain general
principles applicable to the law of injunctions and as to
the scope of the exercise of discretion while granting
injunction? In Mahadeo Savlaram Sheike v. Pune Municipal
Corporation (1995 (3) SCC 33), it was held, after referring
to Woodrofe on "Law relating to injunction; L.C. Goyal 'Law
of injunctions; David Bean 'Injunction' Jayce on Injunctions
and other leading Articles on the subject that the appellant
who was a trespasser in possession could not seek injunction
against the true owner. In that context this Court quoted
Shiv Kumar Chadha v. MCD (1993 (3) SCC 161) wherein it was
observed that injunction is discretionary and that:

"Judicial proceedings cannot be used
to protect or to perpetuate a wrong
committed by a person who approaches the
Court".

Reference was also made to Dalpat Kumar v. Prahlad
Singh (1992 (1) SCC 719) in regard to the meaning of the
words 'prima facie case' and 'balance of convenience' and
observed in Mahadeo's case (supra) that:

"It is settled law that no injunction
could be granted against the owner at the
instance of a person in unlawful
possession."            

The question of forcible possession as claimed is also
a matter which can be pressed into service by the parties
before the trial Court and if raised the Court shall deal
with it considering its relevance to the suit and accept it
or otherwise reject the plea in accordance with law. We do
not think it necessary to express any opinion in that
regard.
 
Learned counsel for the respondent-trust has urged with
some amount of vehemence about the conduct of the plaintiffs
in not depositing the arrears of money and the effect of 22
of the tenants out of total 44 tenants surrendering
possession. This is a matter which can be considered in the
trial itself so far as it is relevant. It was submitted by
learned counsel for the trust that in any event the District
Court was the only Court having jurisdiction and not the
Court where the suit was filed. This aspect does not appear
to have been specifically urged before the Courts below. So
we do not think it appropriate to express our opinion
thereon.  As regards the question of arrears it shall be
open to the respondent-trust to move the trial Court for
such directions as are available in law. Looking into the
nature of dispute it would be appropriate if the trial Court
makes an effort to complete the trial within six months from
the date of the judgment. The parties are directed to
cooperate for disposal of the suit early within the
stipulated time. The appeal is allowed to the extent
indicated without any order as to costs.