Would anyone clearly tell me where does the appeal lie when a judgement is delivere by a subordinate judge, though designated as a district judge as per section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act
Ramakrishnan.V (Lawyer) 25 June 2009
Would anyone clearly tell me where does the appeal lie when a judgement is delivere by a subordinate judge, though designated as a district judge as per section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act
Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil) 25 June 2009
Appeal will lie before the High Court.
N.K.Assumi (Advocate) 25 June 2009
With due respect to the view of Dr.Tripathi, let me also submit that, right of appeal being a creature of statue and being a right conferred by statue cannot be inferred by implication. An appeal is not a mere matter of procedure but is a substantive rights. As to the appellate forum of appeal against adjudication by courts other than principal Civil Court of Original jurisdiction, such subordinate courts being invested by notification to matrimonial proceedings under the HMA are not District Court proper and irrespective of valuation an appeal would not lie against the decrees of such Courts to the High Courts. From the view expressed by Dr.Tripathi, it appears that there are divergents of opinion among the various High Courts on this score.
Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil) 25 June 2009
Dear Mr Assumi, subject to correction in view of any local Law, I suggested for appeal to High Court on the basis that: 1. the subordinate judge in this case is in the capacity of District Judge and 2. the query refers to subordinate judge therefore it appears that Family court has not been established in the concerned district . however, if it is order of family court under Family Courts Act, appeal will lie to high Court under s 19 of Family Courts Act.
Note: In our High Court we are accustomed to proceed in accordance with Family Courts Act
Ramakrishnan.V (Lawyer) 26 June 2009
You are not correct in the light of the judgement of the Gujarth High Court in the case of Ramjibhai Lalbhai Patel vs Shantaben on 25/4/1984 where the court has observed as
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Ramjibhai Lalbhai Patel vs Shantaben on 25/4/1984 JUDGMENT 1. The appellant. Ramjibhai Lalbhai Patel of Talod Taluka Prantij. District Sabarkantha. is the husband of the respondent Smt. Shantaben. daughter of Manilal Kashkanbhai Patel; The appellant had filed H. M. P. No. 18/ 79 in the Court of the Civil judge (S-D). Ahmedabad (Rural) at Nerol under: Sec 13(1)(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 as amended by Act No. 68 of 1976. to obtain a decree of divorce of his marriage with the respondent on the ground that she had deserted him for a continuous period of not less than two years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition. The perusal of the Rajnama discloses that on 19-9-1980 the record and proceedings were transferred from the Court of the Civil Judge (S. D.). Narol to the Extra Assistant Judge Narol under the orders of the District Judge. The matter was there after conducted and decided by the Extra Assistant Judge. Narol who by his judgment and order dated 17-8-1981 dismissed the petition with costs. Hence, the appellant has preferred this appeal.) (Paras 2 to 8 * * * * * *) 9. When I started delivering the judgment Mr, R. N. Shah interrupted to submit that he wanted to raise a question about the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain and hear this appeal. He submitted that in the circumstances of the present case appeal from the judgment of the Extra Assistant Judge Narol will not lie in the High Court but that it would lie in the District Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decision of the Extra Assistant Judge in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. Although the issue was raised belatedly, I heard both the learned Advocates on the issue as it was a jurisdictional issue. 10. A similar issue was raised in First Appeal No. 1158/81 which I decided on 2-4-1984: (reported in AIR 1984 NOC 258 (Guj)). It was also a matrimonial matter and divorce was sought on the ground of legal cruelty and desertion for a continuous period exceeding two Years immediately preceding the presentation of the Petition. It was also a petition which was decided by the Extra Assistant Judge Narol. Mr. G. D. Bhatt. Advocate .appeared for the respondent in ,that matter and he raised a preliminary issue about the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain and hear the appeal from the judgment and order of the Extra Assistant judge. The contention was that an appeal would lie to the District Judge at Narol and not to the High Court It was also submitted that the appeal before the High Court was not competent. It was submitted in that appeal that in paragraph 17 of the original application it was stated that for the purpose of court-fees, advocate-fees and jurisdiction the valuation was made at Rs. 5/- and a fixed court-fees stamp of Rs. 37-50 was utilised for the purpose of court-fees. My attention was invited to Sees. 16. 24. 25 and 26 of the Bombay Civil CourtsAct. 1869. Section 16 reads as under:- "16. original Jurisdiction of Assistant Judge. - The District Judge may refer to anv Assistant Judge subordinate to him original suits of which the subject-matter (is of any) amount or value, (applications or references under Special Acts) and miscellaneous applications. The Assistant Judge shall have jurisdiction to try such suits and to dispose of such applications (or references). Where the Assistant Judge's decrees and orders in such cases are appealable, the appeal shall lie to the District Judge or to the High Court according as the amount or value of the subject-matter does not exceed or exceeds twenty thousand rupees." 11. Section 24 of the said Act refers to jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division and jurisdiction of Civil Judge (Junior Division). It is prescribed that the jurisdiction of a Civil Judge (Senior Division) extends to all original suits and proceedings of a civil nature and the jurisdiction of a Civil judge (Junior Division) extends to all original suits and proceedings of a civil nature where in the subject-matter does not exceed in amount or value twenty thousand rupees. Section 25 refers to the jurisdiction of Civil Judge (Senior division), and states that a Civil Judge (Senior Division) in addition, to his ordinary jurisdiction shall exercise a special jurisdiction in respect of such suits and proceedings of a civil nature as may arise within the local jurisdiction of the Courts in the district presided over by Civil Judges (Junior Division) and wherein the subject-matter exceeds the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil judge (Junior Division) as defined by Section 24. Section 26 of the said Act refers to appeal from the decision of a Senior Division Judge of which the amount or value of the subject-matter exceeds twenty thousand rupees the appeal from his decision shall lie direct to the High Court. 12. So far as the appeals from the orders and decrees of the Assistant Judge is concerned. I have ascertained that under Section 16 it is prescribed that the appeal shall lie to the District Judge or to the High Court according as the amount or value of the subject-matter does not exceed or exceeds twenty thousand rupees. The appellate provisions with regard to the appeals from orders and decrees of the Civil Judge (S. D.) and from the decrees and orders of the Assistant Judge are in pari materia. 13. My attention was then drawn to Sections 8 and 9 of the Suits Valuation Act. 1887. Section 8 relates to those cases wherein court-fee value and jurisdiction value are to be the same. Section 9 is relevant for our purpose. Sec tion 9 runs as under:- "9. When the subject-matter of suits of any class other than suits mentioned in the Court-fees Act 1870. Section 7, paragraphs v and vi and paragraph x, clause (d) is such that in the opinion of the High Court it does not admit of being satisfactorilv valued. the High Court may with the previous sanction of the State Government. direct that suits of that class shall for the purposes of the Court-fees Act. 1870 and of this Act and any other enactment for the time being in force be treated as if their subject-matter. were of such value as the High Court thinks fit to specify in this behalf." Reading Section 9. it becomes clear that the Plaintiff or the applicant as the case may be is entitled to put his own valuation for the purpose of determining the jurisdiction under Section 9 of the Suits valuation Act. 1887. In the above stated appeal that was precisely what the applicant had done at paragraph 17 of his application. He had valued the suit for the purpose of jurisdiction at 5/-. Under Section 16 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act. 1869. referred to above, the appeal from the decision of the Assistant Judge would lie to the District Judge and not the High Court as the amount or value of the subject-matter as fixed by the appellant in his application does not exceed Rs. 20,000/-. Under Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. "District Court" is defined as under :- "3. (b) "district court" means in any area for which there is a city civil court that court and in any other area the principal civil court of original jurisdiction and includes any other civil court which may be specified by the State Government by notification in the official Gazette, as having jurisdiction in respect of the matters dealt with in this Act:" It is true that so far as the provisions of the Hindu Marriage Act and the proceedings thereunder are concerned, an Assistant Judge would indeed be a District Judge under Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act but he would not be a District Judge for the purpose Of determining the forum of appeal as that question does not fall within the ambit of the Hindu Marriage Act. 1955. Section 28 of the Hindu Marriage Act is very clear on this point. Section 28 runs as under :- "28. Appeals from decrees and orders.(1) All decrees made by the court in any proceeding under this Act shall subject to the provisions of sub-section (3). be appealable as decrees of the Court made in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. and every such appeal shall lie to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of the Court given in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. (2) Orders made by the Court in any proceeding under this Act under See. 25 or Section 26 shall. subject to the Provisions of sub-section (3). be appealable if they are not interim orders. and every such appeal shall lie to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of the Court given in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction." Under Section 28(1). the appeal lies to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decision of the Court given in the exercise Of its original civil jurisdiction. The forum of appeal is prescribed under Section 16 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act and therefore for determining the forum of appeal we must make a reference to Section 28 of the Hindu Marriage Act. 1955 read with Section 16 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act. 1869 and that the forum would not be determined by the definition of "district Court" under Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. 14. The above-stated Proposition finds support from the decision of the Bombay High Court in the case of Gangadhar Rakhamaji v. Manjulal Gangadhar, AIR 1960 Bom 42 wherein this question has been considered fully. The decision of the Division Bench in Appeal No. 234/ 58 was decided on 29-10-1958 and therefore the ratio of the above judgment is binding on me. In Gangadhar's case (supra). the Division Bench considered the submission placed before it that the Court of the Civil Judge (S. D.) was a District Court under the definition of the "district Court" as given in Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 and that the appeal would lie directly to the High Court. but that submission was negatived by the Division Bench. 15. In First Appeal No. 11581/81 upheld the preliminary objection raised by Mr. G. D. Bhatt and I decided that the appeal which was filed in this Court was not maintainable. Accordingly the direction was given that the appeal memo and the papers filed with it be returned to the appellant for presentation to the proper Court and the memo of the cross-objections be returned to the respondent. 16. Mr. R. N. Shah submitted that my decision in First Appeal No. 1158 of 1981 applied to the present appeal also. He submitted that the appeal could have been Preferred only to the District Court at Narol and that appeal in the High Court was not competent. 17. Mr. R. N. Shah referred me to several judgments besides my own in First Appeal No. 1158/81 to elaborate the point. He referred me to Gangadhar Rakhamaji's case (AIR 1960 Bom 42 (supra). The head-notes therein run as under :_ "Where in a Petition under the Hindu Marriage Act a decree is Passed by the Court of the Civil Judge, Senior Division of Ahmednagar which Court was notified by the State Govt. as having jurisdiction in respect of matters dealt with in the Act the appeal lies to the District Court of Ahmednagar and not to the High Court. The Court of the Civil judge. Senior Division which is notified by the State Government as having jurisdiction in matters dealt with under the Hindu Marriage Act is a "district Court" within the definition of Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act but it is not principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction nor does it exercise its jurisdiction as such principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction. Section 28 of the Hindu Marriage Act leaves the forum of appeal to be determined under the law for the time being in force, which in the present case is the Bombay Civil Courts Act. The forum of appeal from the order or decree of the Court of the Civil Judge, Senior Division under the Bombay Civil Courts Act is the Court of the District Judge of the District. In the present case therefore, which was decided by Civil Judge. Senior Division appeal lies to the Judge and not to the High Court." 18. Mr. Shah then referred me to another Division Bench ruling of the Bombay High Court in the case of Ambi Pundalik v. Pundalik Shankar. AIR 1960 Bom 521. It is observed that when there is no notification under S. 3(b), Hindu Marriage Act specifying any other Civil Court as a District Court for the purpose of that Act and the petition for restitution of conjugal rights under the Act is decided by the Additional District Judge who is part and parcel of the District Court then under clause (c) of S. 20 C. P. and Berar Courts Act the appeal from such a decision will lie to the High Court and not to the District Court. It is to be noted that in that case the decision was by the Additional District Judge who is considered as part and parcel of the District Court. It was further observed therein that Section 20 (b) (i) and (ii) of C. P. and Berar Courts Act read with R. 311 framed under S. 9 of the Suits Valuation Act will not apply to such a case because while those provisions speak of suits the proceeding under the Hindu Marriage Act is not a suit. It was also observed that a special Court having been created as the Court having exclusive jurisdiction under Hindu Marriage Act it is not necessary to put a pecuniary valuation on the relief clamed under that Act and the Proceedings do not fall under Section 20. C. P. and Berar Courts Act. It is clear that I am not required to go into the discussion of this reported case since the original decision was by the Additional District Judge which was considered as part and parcel of the District Court whereas in the present case the original decision is by the Extra Assistant Judge. I may in passing note that the conclusion reached by the Division Bench that the provisions of the Suits Valuation Act will not apply to such matters because the matter was initiated by an application and not a suit and that a Special Court was created as the Court having exclusive jurisdiction under the Hindu Marriage Act is not followed by other Courts as per example the Full Bench decision reported in AIR 1961 All 395 and the Division Bench decision of the Orissa High Court reported in AIR 1978 Orissa. 163. A similar view was also taken in the case of Mallappa v. Mallava, AIR 1960 Mys 292. It was observed therein as under (at p. 293):- "Though the Court of the Civil Judge, Senior Division, which is notified by the State Government as having jurisdiction in matters dealt with under the Hindu Marriage Act, is a District Court within the definition of Sec. 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act. it is not principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction nor does it exercise its jurisdiction as such principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction. Where therefore. a Civil Judge. Senior Division dismisses a petition under Section 12 of the Act. under Section 28. the forum of appeal has to be determined under 'the law for the time being in force, which in the present case is the Bombay Civil Courts Act and under Section 8 of the Bombay Act an appeal from the order of that Court lies to the District Judge of the District and not to the High Court." The Division Bench followed the principle laid down by the judgment of the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in Gangadhar's case (AIR 1960 Bom 42) (supra):-- 19. A subsequent decision of a single Judge in the case of Dhulappa Shivaraj Molke v. Krishnabai. AIR 1962 Mys 172. has followed the judgment of the Division Bench in Mallappa's case (AIR 1960 Mys 292) (supra). 20. Similar is the effect also of a decision of a single Judge in the case of B. Balaji Singh v. B. Raj Kumari. AIR 1972 Mad 278. Maharajan. J. observed therein as under.- "If the Petition under Section 25 or 26 of Hindu Marriage Act is disposed of either by the principal Judge of the City Civil Court- or by the Additional Judge thereof an appeal would lie straightway to the High Court if on the other hand, it is, disposed of by an Assistant Judge of the City Civil Court an appeal shall lie only to the Principal Judge especially in a proceeding where the amount or value of the subject-matter does not exceed Rs. 5.000/-." 21. A Division Bench of the Orissa High Court considered the question fully in the case of Nrusingh Charan Nayak v. Smt. Hemant Kumari Nayak. AIR 1978 Orissa. 163. The observations are pertinent. The Division Bench observed as under:- "Courts other than the principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction which by notification made under Section 3(b) of the Act are conferred with jurisdiction to entertain proceedings under the Act are not "District Court proper" and irrespective of valuation an appeal would not lie against decrees of such Courts to the High Court. The appellate forum has to be determined in accordance, with the provisions of the local Civil Courts statute in the instant case the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act. Therefore an appeal, valued at Rs. 100/- against the decision in a suit for restitution of conjugal rights would lie in the Court of District Judge. The first appeal in the High Court would not be maintainable." Thus the Division Bench therein has taken a view on the question of valuation for the jurisdictional, purpose different from the view taken by the Division Bench in Ambi Pundelik's case (AIR 1960 Bom 521) (supra). The Division Bench in Nrusingh Charan's case (supra) held as under:- "(1) Courts other than the Principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction which by notification made under Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act are conferred with jurisdiction to entertain proceedings under the Act are not "District Court proper" and irrespective of valuation an appeal would not lie against, decrees of such courts to the High Court. (2) The appellate forum has to be determined in accordance with the provisions of the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil. Courts Act. Where the dispute is valued up to Rs. 5000/-, the appeal would lie to the District Judge when the impugned decree is of a Court other than the Principal Civil Court of original Jurisdiction. In a case where the valuation is above Rs. 5,000/- and the decree is by a Court other than the Principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction the appeal would lie to the High Court and (3) Where no valuation has been put in the proceeding and there is no material to indicate that the appeal is valued at more than Rs. 5,000/- the appeal would also lie to the District Court and not to the High Court because under the provisions of the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act only on a stated valuation. first appeals lie to the High Court." 22. Thus the view taken by me in First Appeal No. 1158/81 stands supported by the judgments of the other High Courts as well. 23. However, there is a pertinent point of distinction between the facts of First Appeal No. 1158/81 and the facts of the present case. In First Appeal No. 1158/81. the applicant had valued the application for the purpose of jurisdiction at Rs. 5/- and a fixed court-fees of Rs. 37-50 was utilized for the purpose of court-fees whereas in the present case the applicant has stated at paragraph 16 of the application that "the court-fees stamp of Rs. 37.50 is affixed on this petition and Vakalatnama and copy of the petition are filed herewith." Thus the applicant has not put his own valuation on this application for the purpose of Jurisdiction. A view was sought to be canvassed before me that in such a case the appeal would lie to the High Court and not to the District Court. A reference was made to a Full Bench judgment of the Allahabad High Court in the case of Paras Ram v. Janki Bai, AIR 1961 All .395. Delivering the decision of the, Full. Bench Desai. Acting C. J. Observed at page 396 as under:- "A proceeding under See. 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act is to. be treated as an, original. suit. Consequently an appeal from an order of a civil judge Passed in such a proceeding lies to the District Judge if a certain condition is fulfilled and to the High Court if it is not. The residuary power is thus vested in the High Court and an appeal lies to the District Judge only if the condition if, fulfilled. The value placed on the memorandum of appeal is of no consequence .Every plaint must bear the value of the object matter of the suit for the purposes of jurisdiction and of court-fees. When See. 8 does not apply. See. 9 applies and the value of the subjct matter of the suit is to be fixed in accordance with the Rules made by the High Court. No rules made by this court in, exercise of the Power conferred by Section 9 -have been brought to our notice. Consequenty there is no law directing how the value of the subject matter of a petition under See. 10 for the Purpose of jurisdiction is to be fixed. The appellant, though by See. 21 of the Act read with 0. 7. R. 1 (i) Civil P. C. to state the value of the subject matter. did not state it. Presumably because be did not know how it was to be fixed." 24. This judgment runs counter to the view taken by the Division Bench of this Court consisting of P. N. Bhagwati C. J. (as be then was) and D. A. Desai. J. (as he then was) in the case of Chhagin Karsan v. Bhagwanji Punjab reported in (1972) 13 Guj LR 835: (AIR 1973 Guj 165). It is, necessary for me to discuss this judgment at length because I am required to follow the view taken of this question in it. 25. The appellant (the original plaintiff) filed Civil Suit No. 168/68 in the Court of the Civil Judge (C. D.) Jamnagar claiming permanent injunction res- training the respondents from obstructing the appellant in the exercise of his right of way of his fields bearing Survey Nos. 719 and 732 through the Sbedba, that is the boundary line of the field's of the respondent. Since the field of the respondents over which the right of way was claimed by the appellant was situate in the sir (sic) of Jamnagar. but outside its municipal limits, the suit fell within Clause (c) of See. 6(iv)(c). of the Bombay Court-fees Act. , 1959 and a fixed court-fee of Rs. 15/- was accordingly paid by the appellant On the plaint. The Civil Judge (Senior Division). Jamnagar referred the suit for disposal to the second Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division). Jamnagar and after the suit was transferred to him, written statements were filed on behalf of the respondents in answer to the suit. Though several contentions were taken in the written statement. none of them challenged the jurisdiction of the Second Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division). Jamnagar to try and dispose of the suit. The Second Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division). Jamnagar heard the suit on merits and taking the view that on the evidence. the appellant had failed to establish the right of wav claimed by him dismissed the suit. The appellant there upon preferred Civil Appeal No. 18 of 1969 in the District Court. Jamnagar against the decision of the Second Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division). Jamnagar. In the appeal also no contention was raised on behalf of any of the Parties that the Second Joint Civil Judge (Junior Division) Jamnagar, had no jurisdiction to try and dispose of the suit and the decree passed by him was. therefore a nullity and must be set aside. The appeal was heard by the District Judge on merits and after considering the evidence on record. the District Judge came to the conclusion that the right of way claimed by the appellant was not etablished and he accordingly dismissed the appeal. This led to the filing of the Second Appeal in this Court. When the Second appeal came up for hearing before M. U. Shah. J. a new contention was sought to be advanced on behalf of The appellant that -the subiect'- matter of the suit was not -susceptible of monetary evaluation and therefore it could not be predicated that the suit was one wherein the subject matter did not exceed in amount or value Rs. 10,000/-and consequently the Second Joint Civil judge (junior Division). Jamnagar had no jurisdiction to try and dispose of the suit. The suit could be, tried and disposed of only by the Civil Judge (Senior Division), Jamnagar. This contention was supported by a decision given by S. H. Sheth. J. sitting as a single Judge in Khimji Jiva v. Narendrakumar (1972) 13 Gui LR 23: (AIR 1972 Cuj 280) M. U. Shah. J. framed two questions and referred them for decision to a Division Bench. Those questions were "(1) Whether the Civil Judge, Junior Division has power to deal with and decide the suit. wherein the subject matter is incapable of monetary evaluation having regard to the provisions contained in See. 24 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act. - 1869 (Act No. XIV of 1869) ? (2) If the objection as to jurisdiction of the Civil Judge junior Division. under Section 24 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act 1869 is not taken at an earlier stage in the Court below then whether a plea of want of jurisdiction can be allowed to be raised for the first time in appeal?" The Division Bench. speaking through Bhagwati C. J., has observed that having regard to the provisions of the Bombay Civil Courts Act. so far as valuation for the Purpose of jurisdiction is concerned, there is no such thing as subject matter being incapab7e of monetary evaluation. as in every case whatever be the nature of the suit the subject matter has to be valued in terms of money for the purpose of jurisdiction. A short reference was made to the scheme of the Bombay Civil Court's Act and in the light of the provisions of that Act it was observed that if the subject matter of the suit or proceedings does not exceed in amount or value 10,000/- rupees the Civil judge, Junior Division, would have jurisdiction to try and dispose of the suit or Proceedings and on the other hand if the subJect-matter (of the suits) or proceeding is exceeds in amount or value Rs. 10.000/-, the Civil Judge (junior Division) would have no jurisdiction and the suit or proceedings would be triable only by the Civil Judge (Senior Division). The difficulty would arise where the subject matter of the suit or Proceedings is not capable of monetary evaluation. An argument was advanced before the Division Bench that the second paragraph of Section 24 confers jurisdiction on a Civil Judge (Senior Division) to try and dispose of all original suits and proceedings of a civil nature without any limit or restriction and. therefore. every suit or proceeding of a Civil nature would be within the jurisdiction of a Civil Judge (Senior Division) irrespective of whether the value of its subject-matter exceeds or does not exceed ten thousand rupees. It was further argued that where the subject matter of the suit or proceedings is not capable of monetary evaluation. it cannot be Predicated that the subject-matter of the suit or proceedings does not exceed in amount or value Rs. 10.000/and in that event the condition defining the jurisdiction of the Civil Judqe (Junior Division) would not be satisfied and the suit or proceeding would be outside the jurisdiction of the Civil judge (Junior Division),. It was further contended that a suit or proceeding in which the subject matter is not susceptible of monetary evaluation would not fall within the jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (junior Division) under the third paragraph of Section 24 and would consequently be triable only by the Civil Judge (Senior Division) who exercises full and unrestricted jurisdiction to try and dispose of all suits and proceedings of a civil nature by virtue of the second paragraph of Section 24. The Division Bench negatived this argument after referring to the relevant Provisions of the Bombav Civil Courts Act. particularly Sees. 22A to 25. The Division Bench observed as under -- "The combined effect of Secs. 24 and 25. therefore. is that the second Paragraph of See. 24 confers ordinarv jurisdiction and Section 25 confers special Jurisdiction on a Civil judge (Senior Division). The ordinary jurisdiction extends to all original suits and proceedings of a civil nature. arising within the local limits of his ordinary jurisdiction fixed bv the State Government under See. 22A. It makes no difference for the purpose of ,his ordinarv jurisdiction whether the subject matter of the suit or proceedings exceeds or does not exceed in amount or value ten thousand rupees- The special jurisdiction extends to such suits and Proceedings of a civil nature as may arise within the local jurisdiction of the Courts in the district presided over by Civil Judges (junior Division) that is, outside the local limits of the ordinary jurisdiction and in which the subject matter exceeds in amount or value ten thousand rupees. that being the limit of the peculiarly jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Junior Division). The third Paragraph of See. 24 provides for the ordinary jurisdiction of a Civil Judge (junior Division). whether he is presiding over a Civil Court in the district or is a joint Civil Judge appointed or deputed to assist in the court of another Civil Judge. If a Civil judge (Junior Division) is presiding over a Court in the district, his ordinary jurisdiction would be confined to the local limits specified by the State Government under See. 22A. But if he is appointed or deputed to assist in the Court of another Civil Judge he would have no separate territorial jurisdiction specified for him but he would dispose of such civil business within the limits of his pecuniary jurisdiction as may, subject to the control of the District Judge be referred to him by the Judge of the Court to which he is appointed or deputed to assist. The pecuniarv jurisdiction of a Civil judge (Junior Division), in neither case would be limited to suits and proceedings in which the subject matter does not exceed in amount or value ten thousand rupees." In the background of the above said framework of the constitution of the Court of Civil Judge (Senior Division) and the Court of the Civil Judge (junior Division). the Division Bench considered the question as to what would happen if the subject-matter of the suit or proceeding is not susceptible to monetary evaluation. If the argument is correct that where the subject matter of the suit or proceeding is not capable of monetary evaluation it cannot be predicated that the subject matter does not exceed in amount or value ten thousand rupees and ,therefore, the suit or proceeding would not fall within the jurisdiction of account of the Civil Judge (junior Division) under the third paragraph of Section 24. The same argument must equally apply to negative the special jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division) in respect of the suit or proceeding under See. 25. The special jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division) under Section 25 is attracted only where the subject matter of the suit or proceeding exceeds the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Junior Division) that is ten thousand rupees, and if the subject matter of the Suit or proceeding is incapable of monetary evaluation how can it be predicated that the subject matter exceeds in amount or value ten thousand rupees and if it cannot be so predicated. The condition defining the special jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division) would not be satisfied and the Civil Judge (Senior Division) would have no jurisdiction to try and dispose of the suit or proceeding. This would create an anomalous situation as neither the Civil judge (Senior Division) nor the Civil Judge (junior Division) would have jurisdiction to try such a matter. The Division Bench stated that the answer to such a situation was clear. All suits and proceedings of civil nature are divisible only into two classes one class of those where the subject-matter does not exceed in amount or value ten thousand rupees and the other, of those where the subject-matter exceeds in amount or value ten thousand rupees. The reason is that in every suit or proceeding of a civil nature. the subject matter has to be valued in terms of money for the purpose of jurisdiction. So far as the valuation for the purpose of jurisdiction is concerned there has to be an evaluation of the subject matter. The Suits Valuation Act.1887 lays down the principle for valuation of the subject-matter of a suit for the purpose of jurisdiction .But there may be suit where the subject matter may be capable of being satisfactorily valued in terms of money and rules having been made by the High court under sec.9 no guidance may be furnished by the Suits Valuation Act. 1887, as to how the subject matter such valuation may be accepted by the Court as prime facie true unless the Court is satisfied that it is defective on account of some improper motive in which case the court would always consider what should be regarded to be the proper value. So, either the suit may be valued for the purpose of jurisdiction as subject matter of the suit exceeding Rs.10,000/- or below 10,000/- Where the subject -matter is incapable of evaluation. The principle is clear that the plaintiff may put his own valuation of the subject matter in the plaint and that would normally be accepted unless the valuation is a male fide one. So,. in either case the suit cab be valued and it is not correct to say that " the subject matter is incapable of monetary evaluation." The result is that if valuation does not exceed ten thousand rupees. The suit or proceeding would be within the jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Junior Division) if it exceeds ten thousand rupees , the suit or proceedings would be within the special jurisdiction of the Civil Judge(Senior division) . The same position would also obtain in case of a suit arising within the local limits of the ordinary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division). Having been discussed thus for the Division Bench observed: "The real question therefore. Which have to be answered for the purpose of determining which is the Court having jurisdiction to try a suit or proceeding is whether the subject matter of the suit or preceding is beyond the limit of the pecuniary jurisdiction the Civil judge not exceed the limit of the pecuniary jurisdiction(Junior Division) would have no jurisdiction to the suit or proceeding and it would have to go before the Civil Judge (Senior Division) in the exercise of his special jurisdiction. Now. where the subject of may be suits where the subject matter suit or proceeding is not susceptible of monetary evaluation it may not be possible to predicate that the may not be capable of being satisfactorily subject matter exceeds the iii-nit of Pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil judge (Junior Division) and in that event it valued in terms of money and no rule should not fall within the special jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division but would come within the having been made by the High Court ordinary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Junior Division). If it cannot, be said of the subject matter. whatever be the reason , that it does not exceed the limit of the Pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Junior Division). St must follow as a necessary corollary that it is within the limit of the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge ( Junior Division). It will. therefore be seen that though the test set out in the third paragraph of Section 24 is well formulated in negative terms. it is really a Positive test which has to be applied and that test is whether the that in such cases the plaintiff may subject matter is within the Pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (junior Division) which is ten thousand rupees.. To determine this we must ask the question whether the subject matter exceeds ten thousand rupees if it and such valuation may be accepted by does. the suit or Proceedings would be liable only by the Civil Judge (Senior Division) but if it does it would be within the Court as prime facie true unless there would be within the pecuniary jurisdiction. of the Civil Judge (junior Division) and would be liable by him. The Court is satisfied that it is defective division Bench observed: "If this be the correct construction of the third paragraph of Section 24 in its inter-relation with See. 25. it must also which case the court would always could good when we read the third Paragraph with the second Paragraph of S. 24. This view which we are taking is also supported by the fifth paragraph of Sec- 23 where it has been Provided that a Joint Civil Judge (Junior division ) shall dispose of such civil business within the limits of his pecuniary jurisdiction as may be referred to be valued for the purposes of jurisdiction. The civil business referred to him must be within the limits of his Pecuniary jurisdiction, it should (not) transgress those limits. It is, Therefore clear that even if we are wrong, in the first Part of our reasoning, a suit or Proceeding in which the subject matter is not susceptible of monetary evaluation would fall within the ordinary jurisdiction of the Civil of Judge (junior Division) under the third paragraph of See. 24 and the civil Judge (junior Division) would be competent to try and dispose it of". b2 As seen above. the Division Bench has observed that where it cannot be predicated that the subject matter exceeds the limits of the Pecuniary jurisdiction o f the Civil Judge (J. D.), for whatever reasons. the suit would not fall within the pecuniary jurisdiction civil Judge(Senior Division) but it would fall within the Pecuniary jurisdiction of the Civil judge(senior division). The term "whatever may be the reason " would include a case in which the plaintiff has not valued the subject matter of the suit for the purpose of jurisdiction. Where the subject -matter is capable of monetary evaluation .The term "whatever be the reason" for coming to the conclusion that the subject matter does not exceed to the limit of the pecuniary jurisdiction of the civil judge (junior division) is a pointer for deciding the question of jurisdiction of the court and consequently for deciding the venue of appeal. The Division bench has read Section 24 paragraph 3 and Section 25 together and then has observed that the conclusion must hold good when the third paragraph of Sec.24 is read with second paragraph of Sec. 24. Thus the conclusion reached by the Division Bench is clear in its effect so far as the present appeal is concerned. The Pecuniary limits for jurisdiction are now changed and therefore where the subject-matter of the suit exceeds the valuation or Rs. 20.000/- it comes within the ordinary jurisdiction of the Civil Judge (Senior Division): where it does exceed Rs. 20.000/- it could come within the. competence of the Civil judge (junior Division). The plaintiff is entitled to Put his valuation of the subject matter of the suit and therefore normally there would be no difficulty in evaluating the value of the subject matter of the suit for the purpose of jurisdiction; Where. however the Plaintiff has not Put his own valuation, on the suit and if the subject matter of a suit or proceeding is not susceptible of monetary evaluation. the suit or Proceeding would fall within the pecuniary Jurisdiction of the Civil Judge -(Junior Division) and, not within the competence of the Civil Judge (Senior Division) and this would be the effect reached by reading section 24(3) and section 25 together as well as by reading section 24(3) and section 24(2) together. 26. The original petition is decided by the Extra Assistant Judge, Narol. Now, see. 16 of the Bombay Civil Courts Act, 1869 provides that where the Assistant Judge's decrees and orders in such cases are appealable, the appeal shall lie to the District Judge or to the High Court according as the amount or value of the subject-matter does not exceed or exceeds twenty thousand rupees. Since the appellant did not put his valuation in the petition for the purpose of jurisdiction I am bound to follow the effect of the judgment of the Division Bench in Chagan Karsan's case (AIR 1973 Guj 165) (supra). I must uphold the objection raised by Mr. R. N. Shah about the want of jurisdiction of this Court to hear the appeal although it is raised at a belated stage. 27. In the result, the present appeal filed in this suit is held not sustainable for want of jurisdiction and therefore I direct that the appeal memo and the papers with it be returned to the appellant for presentation to the proper forum. There shall be no order for costs of this appeal. 28. After the arguments on the question of jurisdiction were over, Mr. M. F. Thakkar submitted- an application for amendment of the petition by Civil Application No. 757/84. The amendment sought for is that "this petition is valued at Rs. 30, 100/- for the purpose of jurisdiction and advocate's fees and hence this petition is triable by this Court." The application was strongly resisted by Mr. R. H. Shah. He has filed an affidavit-in-reply of the respondent Shantaben. ' 29. Mr. Thakkar submitted that the application deserved to be allowed as it is not a mala fide application. The valuation for the purpose of jurisdiction was not placed in the petition through inadvertence and the application for amendment is submitted to cure the defect. If this application is allowed, it will nof affect the original trial as the matter would be triable only by the Assistarit Judge. No fresh evidence is required to be taken. The original relief is also not changed. The respondent is not likely to be prejudiced in any way. In any case costs Will cure the grievance of the other side. 30. As against that, Mr. R. N. Shah submitted that this application is given at an extremely belated stage and only with a view to confer jurisdiction on this Court to hear the appeal. The amendment is not covered by order 6, Rule 17 of the Civil Procedure Code. 0. 6, R. 17 of the Civil Procedure Code runs as under : - "The Court may at any stage of the proceedings allow either party to alter or amend his pleadings in such manner and on such terms as may be just, and all such amendments shall be made as may be necessary for the purpose of determining the real question in controversy between the parties". 31. Mr. Shah submitted that this amendment has no reference to the real question in controversy between the parties. What it seeks to cure is the defect in the application relating to the valuation of the subject-matter for the purpose of jurisdiction. This question cannot be said to be a real question in controversy between the parties., 32. Mo. Shah also submitted that if the application for amendment is allowed, it will have the effect of depriving the, opponent of a right to second appeal. Such deprivation of a right of second appeal cannot be compensated by the order for costs. 33. Mr. Shah further submitted that the Division Bench judgment in Chhagan Karsan's case AIR 1 973 (Guj 165(supra) indicates that a party co-Inot be perinitied to place his own valtuation of the subject matter of the proceedings for the purpose of jurisdiction where the intention is to bring the matter within the competence of a particular Court. The Division Bench has referred to a passage from the judgment of the Division Bench in the case of Jasoda v. Chhotu, (1909) 11 Bom LR 1352. Chandavarkar J. delivering thejudgment of the Division Bench observed (at Pp. 17071) :- It is contended before us on the authority of Aklemannessa 'Bibi v. Mahomed Hatem, (1904) ILR 31 Cal. 849, that the suit for restitution of conjugal rights, out of' which the second appeal arises, did not lie in the court of the Second Class Subordinate Judge, by whom it was tried, because, according to the Bombay Civil -Courts Act, that Court has jurisdiction to try no suit other than that the subject matter of which is of the value of less than Rs. 5,000/-, whereas a suit for restitution of conjugal rights (it is urged) is not one the subject- matter of which can be valued. What is meant by this argument is, as we understand it, that a suit for restitution of conjugal rights is not one the subject matter of which can be precisely and definitely valued. In such cases the law leaves it to the plaintiff to put his own valuation on the plaint and accepts it for the purposes of jurisdiction unless it is vitiated by some improper motive such as a deliberate design to give the court jurisdiction which it has not. As was said in the case of Lakshman Bhatkar v. Babaji Bhatkar, (1906) ILR 8 Bom 31, what prima facie determines the jurisdiction is the claim or subject matter of the claim as estimated by the plaintiff, and this determination having given the jurisdiction, the jurisdiction itself continues unless a different principle comes into operation to prevent such a result or to make the proceedings from the first abortive." The Division Bench in Chhagan Karsan's case AIR 1973 Guj 165 (supra) has also taken the similar view. It has observed that it is now well-settled that in such cases the plaintiff may put his own valuation on the subject-matter and such valuation would ordinarily be accepted by the court as the correct valuation of the subject-matter for the purposes of jurisdiction, unless the court comes to the conclusion that a wrong valuation has been put by the plaintiff out of improper motive, in which case the court would de6ide what should be considered to be the proper valuation. 34. It -is clear that the appellant has submitted his application for amendment only with a view that this Court would have the jurisdiction to hear the appeal. 35. Mr. Shah also cited the case of Hans Raj Kalra v. Kishan Kalra, AIR 1977 NOC 267 (Delhi) reported in the AIR 1977 Notes Section. F. S. Gill, J. observed as under:- "A court having no jurisdiction over the suit, inherent or pecuniary, is not competent to allow amendment of the plaint, even if -the amendment sought brings the suit within the court's jurisdiction." In that case also, the defendants contended that the High Court had no pecuniary jurisdiction to try the suit, that the suit was not one for declaration simpliciter but included consequential reliefs flowing from the declaratory reliefs sought, that therefore it fell under S. 7(iv)(c) of the Court Fees Act 1870 so that under S. 8 of the Suits Valuation Act, valuation given for court-fee purposes was the valuation for jurisdictional purpose as well. The plaintiff sought to amend the valuation portion to change jurisdictional value of declaration. The plaintiff pleaded that since due to oversight valuation for court fee purposes had not been given in the prayers, the amendment should be allowed and that this would bring the suit within the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Court. Upholding the defendant's plea it was held that the amendment could not be allowed since the suit as originally brought was not within the pecuniary jurisdiction of the court. The plaintiffs contention that valuation for court-fee purposes was not given due to omission was rejected stating that court-fee of Rs. 20/- having been paid the plaintiff must be taken to have valued the prayer for purpose of court-fee at Rs. 200/- by necessary implication. The change of value of declaratory relief was in respect of value for jurisdictional purpose and not for court fee purpose. (The same is the case in the Present case). The valuation given for court-fee purpose held good for jurisdictional purpose for the suit of this kind by reason of S. 8 of the Suits Valuation Act. plaintiff's artificial valuation of declaration relief at Rs. 50,000/- for jurisdictional purpose could not be accepted in the place of valuation At Rs. 200/-, i. e. value fixed by plaintiff for court-fee purpose. 36. In the light of the view taken in Chhagan Karsan's case AIR 1973 Guj 165 (supra) and Jasoda's case (1909-11 Bom LR 1352) (supra), I am of the view that the present application for amendment cannot be sustained. Mr. K. F. Thakkar referred me to the observations made in the case of Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal v. National Building Material Supply, AIR 1969 SC 1267. The observations therein are to the effect that rules of procedure are intended to be a handmaid to the administration of justice and a party cannot be refused just relief merely because of some mistake, negligence, inadvertence or even infraction of the rules of procedure. Here, it is not a question of the refusal of a just relief to the appellant. The present application for amendment relates to a question of jurisdiction and even if the amendment is disallowed the effect will not be to refuse just relief to the appellant, but the effect will be that the matter will go to the correct forum for deciding the appeal. 37. The application for amendment is dismissed for the grounds above-stated. 38. This is an old appeal of 1982. The original petition was presented by the appellant on 29-6-1979 as disclosed by the copy of the Rojnama which is before me .The matter is, therefore, required to be expeditiously dealt with. 1, therefore direct that the Court before which the appeal is presented shall give this appeal a top priority and that it shall be disposed of within six months of its presentation. 39. Order accordingly.
Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil) 26 June 2009
Thank you mr ramkrishnan for citing a 25 years old ruling of single judge of high court that was delivered before enactment of Family Courts Act, 1985. It is true that forum of appeal can not be other than one specifically provided in the statute. Therefore, where Family Courts have not been established, a combined reading of relevant local Civil Courts Act and Hindu Marriage Act/ relevant matrimonial Law is necessary for ascertainment of proper appellate forum.
What a strange conflicting legal system within our country or even within States where Law defers from district to district. In one district cases are heard by magistrate/civil judge and appeal before DJ and in another, similar cases are heard by Family Court (DJ rank) and appeal before two judges of the High Court !!!!!!!!!!
Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil) 26 June 2009
The basis of above cited judgment - pecuniary jurisdiction !!! Technically all right !!!! And the valuation of matrimonial life of couples [petition under under s 13 (1) (b)] : Rs. 5/- only. !!!! Technically all right !!!
Ramakrishnan.V (Lawyer) 28 June 2009
would you be able to clarify the difference between domcile and residence in respect of matrimonial causes
Ramakrishnan.V (Lawyer) 28 June 2009
Thi Madras High Court judgement will help
Valliammal Ammal vs Periaswami Udayar on 3/3/1959 ORDER Ramachandra Iyer, J. 1. These matters have been referred by the office for directions as to the maintainability of the above appeals. S. R. No. 37109 is an appeal against an order for judicial separation under S. 10(1) of the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955. The petition for judicial separation was filed by the husband on 10-9-1957 in the Sub-Court, Tanjore. S. R. No. 14179 is an appeal against an order dismissing an application for divorce. That petition was filed by the husband who is the appellant on 17-12-1956 in the District Court of Tiruchirapalli. The petition was later transferred by the District Judge to the Subordinate Judge of Tiruchirapalli, who passed an order dismissing the petition. S. R. No. 27783 is a C. M. S. A. against an order of the District Judge of South Arcot at Cuddalore, reversing the order of the Sub-Court and granting a decree for restitution of conjugal rights. The application was filed in the year 1956 originally in the District Court It was later transferred for disposal to the Subordinate Judge. The Subordinate Judge dismissed the application. On an appeal filed to the District Court by the husband an order for restitution of conjugal rights was passed. A C. M. S. A. is sought to be preferred to this Court against the order. 2. These references raise a question as to whether an appeal against an order passed by the Subordinate Judge under Sections 10, 13 or 9 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 would lie to the appropriate District Court or to the High Court direct. Prior to the passing of the Central Act XXV of 1955, there was a legislation in this State in respect of certain matrimonial disputes amongst Hindus. The Madras Hindu Bigamy Prevention and Divorce Act of 1949 declared all bigamous marriages by a Hindu void and punishable. It also provided for dissolution of certain marriages. Jurisdiction under that Act was given to the Subordinate Judges, District Judges and City Civil Judges within the limits of whose jurisdiction the marriage was solemnised or the respondent resided. Against any order passed on the petition by anyone of the aforesaid Judges an appeal was declared to lie directly to the High Court. 3. The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, Act XXV of 1955, was passed to codify the Hindu Law of Marriage. By so doing it has effected important changes in the marriage law. It granted rights of divorce, judicial separation and permanent alimony. It is unnecessary for the present purpose to refer to the Other changes introduced by the Act in regard to the Hindu law relating to marriages. The Act also provided for remedy in respect of the new rights created by it. The Act dealt with the preexisting rights of either of the spouses to sue in a civil court for restitution of conjugal rights. Section 9 provided for restitution of conjugal rights; Section 10 for judicial separation. Sections 11 and 12 related to void and avoidable marriages and Section 13 related to divorce. 4. Section 19 prescribed the court to which a petition under the Act should be made: It runs as follows: "Every petition under the Act shall be presented to the District Court within the local limits of whose ordinary original civil jurisdiction the marriage was solemnised or the husband and wife reside or last resided together." The term "District Court" has been defined in Section 3(b) of the Act as meaning "In any area for which there is a City Civil Court, that Court, and in any other area the Principal Civil Court of Original Civil Jurisdiction and: includes any other civil courts which may be specified by the State Government by notification in the official gazette as having jurisdiction in respect of masters dealt in this Act." Under the authority conferred by this Act the State-Government has issued G. O. 221, Home, dated 29-1-1957, empowering the Subordinate Judges of the various places to hear proceedings arising under the Act within their respective jurisdiction. Section 28 of the Act deals with the execution of orders passed by the court and also provides for a right of appeal. That section states "All decrees and orders made by the court in any proceeding under this Act shall be enforced in like manner as the decrees and orders of the court made in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction ore enforced and may be appealed from under any law for the time being in force; provided that there shall be no appeal on the subject of costs only." 5. On a reading of Section 19, it is clear that the jurisdiction under the Act is given to an existing, civil court. It is no doubt true that rights un- known previously to the Hindu law are created by the Act. But the remedy in respect of those rights which are civil rights are given to the existing courts and should therefore be deemed to be an extension of their jurisdiction. Section 21 provides for the application of the rules of civil procedure in the absence of any special rules being made by the High Court for the conduct of the trial of petitions under the Act. Section 28 which I have set out above also emphasises this aspect. 6. Section 28 while it gives a right of appeal to the aggrieved spouse does not prescribe the forum. It simply says that appeals would lie as if they were decrees or orders of the court. Section 28 recognised the well-established principle in regard to procedure when a new jurisdiction was given to an existing court. The rule has been stated by Viscount Haldane, Lord Chancellor in National Telephone Co. v. Postmaster General, L.R. 1913 AC 546, thus: When a question is stated to be referred to an established court it, in my opinion, imports that ordinary incidents of the procedure of that court are to attach and also that any general right of appeal from its decision likewise attaches." In Secretary of State v. Chellikani Rama Rao, ILR 39 Mad 617; (AIR 1916 PC 21) jurisdiction to decide certain disputes under the Forests Act was given to the District Judge. There was no provision under the Madras Forests Act for an appeal. The question arose whether an appeal would lie against an order by the District Judge under that Act. At page 624 (of ILR Mad): (at p. 23 of AIR), Lord Shaw observed: "When proceedings of this character reach the District Court, that Court is appealed to as one of the ordinary courts of the country with regard to whose procedure, orders and decrees the ordinary rules or civil procedure can be applied." To the same effect is the judgment of the Privy Council in Adaikappa Chettiar v. Chandrasekhara Thevar, ILR 1948 Mad 505: (AIR 1948 PC 12), where their Lordships held that where a legal right was in dispute and the ordinary courts of the country were seized of such dispute the courts were governed by the ordinary rules of procedure applicable thereto and an appeal could lie if authorised by such rules notwithstanding that the legal right claimed arises under a special statute which did not in turn confer a right of appeal. 7. Under the Hindu Marriage Act, the Statute does give a right of appeal, but it does not prescribe the forum to which such appeals would lie. A question would also arise whether there would be only one appeal, or there would be a right of further appeal from a decree or order of the appellate court. These questions would, in my opinion, be governed by the principle of the cases referred to above; that is the procedure of the court, to which that jurisdiction under the Act is given, would apply in regard to the appeals. It follows that both under the provisions of Section 28 of the Act, as well as the general principles of law an appeal would lie against a decree in a matrimonial cause to that court, to which appeals generally lie from a decree or order of the Court to which jurisdiction is granted. Section 13 of the Madras Civil Courts Act states: "Regular or special appeals shall when such appeals are allowed by law lie from the decrees and orders of the District Court to the High Court, Appeals from the decrees and orders of Subordinate Judges and District Munsifs shall when such appeals are allowed by law, lie to the District Court, except when the amount or value of the subject matter of the suit exceeds Rs. 10,000, in which case the appeals shall lie to the High Court." It is unnecessary for the present purpose to refer to the three provisos to the section. In regard 'o a matrimonial dispute, it cannot be stated that the subject matter of the dispute exceeds Rs. 10,000. That is a matter which is not capable of valuation. It would, therefore, appear that if a Subordinate Judge were given jurisdiction under the Act, an appeal from his decision would under Section 13 of the Madras Civil Courts Act lie only to the District Judge. As the decision in the matrimonial disputes under Sections 9, 10, 11, 12 or 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act should be deemed to be a decree, a further appeal would lie from the decision of the District Judge on appeal. 8. It is, however, contended for the appellant in the first two of the above cases that an appeal from the Subordinate Judge would only lie to the High Court, and not to the District Court. The argument is that a Subordinate Judge who obtains jurisdiction by virtue of the notification made by the State Government under Section 3(b) of the Act should be deemed to be a District Court for the purpose of exercising the jurisdiction under the Act, and being deemed to be a District Court it is contended that an appeal from any order or decree of that court should necessarily lie only to the High Court, and not to any subordinate authority. I cannot, however, agree with this contention. 9. Under the Act jurisdiction in regard to the adjudication of matrimonial disputes is given to a particular class of civil courts. These have been compendiously described in the Act as a District Court, vide Section 3(b). The definition of a District Court under Section 3(b) does not mean, that a court which is notified by the State Government becomes a District Court. What the section provides is that ordinarily it is the City Civil Court or the District Court that would have jurisdiction to adjudicate disputes under the Act. But power is given to the State Government to designate by notification other courts as well. By virtue of the notification other courts will have jurisdiction as such courts and not as a District Court, and it cannot be held that for the purpose of the Act, courts other than the District Court would by virtue of the notification become a District Court. It would, therefore, follow that if by virtue of the notification under Section 3(b) a court other than the District Court is given jurisdiction under the Act it is only an extension of jurisdiction of that court and appeals under Section 28 of the Act would lie only to that forum to which appeals generally lie from the decree and orders of that court. 10. In Venkatarama Iyer v. Srinivasa Sastrigal, 1943-2 Mad LJ 352 : (AIR 1944 Mad 31), a question arose as to what was the proper forum of appeal in regard to an application under Rules 7 and 9 made under the Madras Agriculturists Relief Act. Rule 9 simply provided that an order declaring the amount of debt duo under Rule 7 would be subject to appeal and second appeal as if it were a decree in an original suit. The learned Judges held that the rule attracted by the procedure relating to appeals including the provisions governing the appellate jurisdiction of the courts which were essentially a matter of procedure. It, therefore, held that Section 13 of the Madras Civil Courts Act would apply and the forum of appeal would be determined in accordance with it. In Prabhakar v. Usha Prabhakar, , a question arose as to the proper forum of an appeal in a case under the Bombay Hindu Divorce Act of 1947. Originally under Section 5 of the Act jurisdiction was given only to the District Judge. Later by an amendment the District Courts were enabled to transfer the matrimonial disputes to an Assistant or a civil Judge in the District. In that case a suit under the Act was instituted prior to the amendment. But after the amendment the matter was transferred to the civil Judge and he passed a decree for divorce. The learned Judges held that by virtue of the provisions of Section 5-A the suit transferred to the court of the Civil Judge should be regarded as a suit originally instituted in the court for the purpose of exercising powers and jurisdiction in respect of trial of the suit and that an appeal from that court would lie only to the District Judge, notwithstanding the fact that the suit was originally filed in the District Court, and later transferred to the Civil Judge, An exception, however, was made to this rule in regard to a suit which was instituted before the coming into force of the amended section giving jurisdiction to the civil judge. In such a case it was held that the appeal would lie directly to the High Court. I am of opinion that the principle of the decision in that case would apply to the present one. 11. The notification of the State Government investing jurisdiction in the Sub-Courts in regard to cases arising under the Hindu Marriage Act was made on 29-1-1957. The decree or order of the Sub-Court in regard to petition instituted thereafter being given in the exercise of its own jurisdiction. Section 13 of the Civil Courts Act would apply to the case and an appeal would lie only to the appropriate District Court. I have already indicated that on such matters there is no question of valuation. So appeals from decrees in respect of petitions instituted in the Sub Court after 29-1-1957 would lie only to the District Court. The forum will be the same even if the petition had been instituted in the District Court after that date and transferred by that court for disposal to the Sub Court. 12. S. R. No. 37109 would, therefore, be returned to the appellant for being presented to the proper district court. 13. S. R. No. 14179 was filed on 17-12-1956 in the District Court and after the notification, was transferred to the Sub Court for disposal. An appeal is sought to be filed directly to this Court against the decree of the lower court. It is now well settled that a right of appeal to a superior Tribunal is a vested right in a litigant and such a right could not be taken away except by statute either expressly or by necessary implication taking away such a right. In the instant case on the date on which the petition was presented to the District Court, the Sub Court had no jurisdiction. An appeal would, therefore, He to the High Court in respect of proceedings initiated before the notification. Such a right of appeal would be a vested one. In Colonial Sugar Refining Co. v. Irving, 1905 AC 369, an application was made to the Privy Council to dismiss an appeal from the judgment of the Supreme Court of Queensland on the ground that the power of the court to give leave to appeal had been abrogated by an Act. The action in respect of which the appeal was brought was commenced prior to the passing of that enactment, though leave to appeal was given subsequently. Lord Machaghten observed at page 372 ; "As regards the general principles applicable to the case there was no controversy. On the one hand, it was not disputed that if the matter in question be a matter of procedure only, the petition is well founded. On the other hand, if it be mere than a matter of procedure, if it touches a right in existence at the passing of the Act, it was conceded that, in accordance with a long line of authorities extending from the time of Lord Coke to the present day, the appellant would be entitled to succeed. The Judiciary Act is not retrospective by express enactment or by necessary intendment. And therefore the only question is was the appeal by His Majesty in Council a right vested in the appellants at the date of the passing of the Act, or was it a mere matter of procedure? It seems to their Lordships that the question does not admit of doubt. To deprive a suitor in a pending action of an appeal to a superior tribunal which belonged to him as of right is a very different thing from regulating procedure." The Privy Council, therefore, dismissed the application holding that the leave was properly granted. 14. In the instant case the appellant had a right on the date of the notification by the Government to file an appeal to the High Court. That right could only be taken away by a provision in the statute. There is no such provision in the Hindu Marriage Act. The effect of Section 3(b) is only to empower the State Government to invest certain courts with jurisdiction under the Act. Such a notification cannot mean that the right of appeal to a particular court winch inhered in a party prior to its coming into force has been either expressly or impliedly taken away. Indeed the State Government would appear to have no such power as the only power given to them under Section 3(b) is to prescribe a court and not to modify other provisions of the Act. On this principle S. R. No. 14179 should be held to be properly filed in this court and the appeal will be numbered. 15. S. R. No. 26783 : In this case the petition was filed before the notification was made by the Government on 29-1-1957. The petitioner would, therefore, have a right of appeal to the High Court on the date when the application was filed. During the pendency of the petition in the District Court, the State Government made the, notification referred to already and as a result thereof the District Judge transferred the petition to the Sub Court. The Subordinate Judge dismissed the application. On the principles set out above an appeal would lie from the decision of the Subordinate Judge only to this court. The petitioner filed an appeal in a court which had no jurisdiction and that court purporting to act under an appellate jurisdiction set aside the order of the Sub Court. The respondent to the application has filed the appeal as the lower appellate court had no jurisdiction. The proper way o correcting that error is by second appeal to this court. The District Judge purported to act as appellate court and the question whether he had jurisdiction so to act is a matter in respect of which a second appeal would lie. It, therefore, follows that S. R. 27783 has been properly filed as a C.M.S.A It would be admitted and numbered.
Ramakrishnan.V (Lawyer) 28 June 2009
This judgement of the Allahabhad Court will also answer the point
Smt. Shalu Sharma vs Ajay Sharma on 4/10/2002 ORDER 1. Heard Sri M.K. Gupta counsel for the petitioner. 2. By his writ petition the petitioner has prayed for quashing of the order dated 27-8-2002 passed by the XIII Additional District Judge, Ghaziabad in Civil Appeal No. 45 of 2002 by which the application of the petitioner 13-C challenging the jurisdiction of the appellate Court has been rejected. 3. Facts giving rise to this writ petition, briefly stated, are: The petitioner filed a petition for divorce in the Court of the Civil Judge (Senior Division), Ghaziabad which are registered marriage petition No. 679 of 2000. In paragraph 11 of the plaint it was mentioned that the suit is tentatively valued at Rs. 1,00,000/-and Court-fees of Rs. 37.50 for divorce and Rs. 37.50 for return of articles have been separately paid. The 3rd Additional Civil Judge (Senior Division) vide its judgment dated 31-1-2002 granted decree of divorce and also directed for return of articles as mentioned in the plaint. Against the judgment and decree dated 31-1-2002 passed by the 3rd Additional Civil Judge (Senior Division), Ghaziabad a Civil Appeal No. 45 of 2002 was filed by the defendant-respondent in the Court of the District Judge, Ghaziabad. In the aforesaid appeal an application 13-C was filed by the petitioner who was respondent in the appeal stating that the District Judge has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. XIII Additional District Judge heard the counsel for the parties and rejected the application of the petitioner 13-C vide its order dated 27-8-2002. Petitioner by this writ petition has challenged the order dated 27-8-2002. Sri M. K. Gupta counsel for the petitioner raised the following submission in support of the writ petition:-- 1. A petition under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act for divorce is not capable of giving any pecuniary valuation hence appeal against the judgment and decree of 3rd Additional Civil Judge (Senior Division) will lie to the High Court since it is the High Court which has residuary power or hearing the appeal. Reliance has been placed on a Full Bench Judgment of this Court in 1961 All LJ 232 : (AIR 1961 All 395), Paras Ram v. Janki Bai alias Savitri. 2. The valuation of suit given by the petitioner in Marriage Petition No. 679 of 2000 of amount of Rs. 1,00,000/- was irrelevant and the said valuation cannot be determinative of the forum of appeal and such a valuation is to be ignored as a petition under Section 13 of Hindu Marriage Act is incapable of valuation in the existing law. 4. I have heard counsel for the petitioner and perused the record. The only question raised in the writ petition is as to whether the appeal against the judgment and decree of the 3rd Additional Civil Judge (Senior Division) dated 31-1-2002 will lie to the District Judge or to the High Court? 5. For considering the question raised in the writ petition it is necessary to have a look over the statutory provision governing the right of appeal under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. Section 28 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 relates to appeal from decrees and orders. Section 28 of the Act is extracted below:-- "28. Appeal from decrees and orders,-- (1) All decrees made by the Court in any proceeding under this Act shall, subject to the provisions of Sub-section (3), be appealable as decrees of the Court made in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction, and every such appeal shall lie to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of the Court given in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. (2) Orders made by the Court in any proceeding under this Act under Section 25 or Section 26 shall, subject to the provisions of Sub-section (3), be appealable, if they are not Interim orders, and every such appeal shall lie to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of the Court given in exercise of its original civil jurisdiction, (3) There shall be no appeal under this section on the subject of costs only. (4) Every appeal under this section shall be preferred within a period of thirty days from the date of the decree or order." 6. The words governing the forum of the appeal are contained in Section 28(1), which are "such appeal shall lie to the Court to which appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of the Court given in the exercise of its original civil Jurisdiction. Thus for finding out as to in which Court the appeal shall He, it has to be looked into, to which Court appeal ordinarily lies from the decision of the Court given in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. Section 3(b) defines "District Court" in following manner:-- "3(b). "District Court" means, in any area for which there is a city Civil Court, that Court, and in any other area the principal Civil Court of original jurisdiction, and includes any other Civil Court which may be specified by the State Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, as having jurisdiction in respect of the matters dealt with in this Act." 7. There is no dispute that the Court of Civil Judge has been notified by the State Government as District Court having jurisdiction in the matters dealt with in this Act. Admittedly in the present case petition for divorce was filed before the Court of Civil Judge. The classes of the Court and the forum for filing appeal against the judgment and decree from the original civil jurisdiction are governed by the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Court Act, 1887. Section 3 of the aforesaid Act, provided classes of Civil Court, Section 3 of the said Act is quoted below:-- "3. Class of Courts, ........... .There shall be following classes of Civil Courts under this Act, namely; 1. The Court of the District Judge; 2. The Court of the Additional Judge; 3. The Court of the Subordinate Judge; and 4. The Court of the Munsif. 8. In its application to the State of Uttar Pradesh, in item (3) of Section 3 the word "Subordinate" has been substituted by the word "Civil Court". Thus in the State of Uttar Pradesh the third category of Court is a Court of Civil Judge. Section 21 of the Act provides for appeal from subordinate Judge and Munsif. Section 21 of the Act is quoted below;-- "21. Appeals from Subordinate Judges and Munsifs.--(1) Save as aforesaid, an appeal from a decree or order of a Subordinate Judge shall be- (a) to the District Judge where the value of the original suit in which or in any proceeding arising out of which the decree or order was made did not exceed five thousand rupees; and (b) to the High Court in any other case; (2) Save as aforesaid an appeal from a decree or order of a Munsif shall lie to the District Judge. (3) Where the function of receiving any appeals which lie to the District Judge under Sub-section (1) or Sub-section (2) has been assigned to an Additional Judge, the appeals may be preferred to the Additional Judge. (4) The High Court may, with the previous sanction of the State Government direct, by notification in the Official Gazette, that appeals lying to the District Judge under Sub-section (2) from all or any of the decrees or orders of any Munsif shall be preferred to the Court of such subordinate Judge as may be mentioned in the notification, and the appeals shall thereupon be preferred accordingly. 9. With regard to State of Uttar Pradesh by U.P. Amendment the pecuniary limit mentioned in Section 21(1)(a) has been raised as Rs. 5,00,000/-. The aforesaid provision of Section 21 clearly spells out that if the value of the original suit does not exceed Rs. 5,00,000/- the appeal wilt lie to the District Judge and in any other case it will He to the High Court. 10. The next question to be considered is as to how the petitions under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 are to be valued. Rules have been framed under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 in exercise of powers under Sections 14 and 21 by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad. Rule 5 of the Hindu Marriage and Divorce Rules, 1956 provides for contents of petition. The relevant portion of Rule 5 of the said Rules is quoted below:-- "5. Contents of petition In addition to the particulars required to be given under Order VII, Rule 1 of the Code and Section 20(1) of the Act, every petition for judicial separation, nullity of marriage and divorce shall contain the following particulars:-- (a) the place and date of marriage; (b) .............,.........." 11. Rule 7 provides that statement contained In civil petition shall be verified by the petitioner or some other competent person in the manner required by the Court for verification of the plaint. Order VII, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure to which reference has been made under Rule 5 provides for particulars which have to be contained in the plaint. Order 7, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure is extracted below.- 1. Particulars to be contained in plaint, The plaint shall contain the following particulars:-- (a) the name of the Court in which the suit is brought; (b) the name, description and place of residence of the plaintiff; (c) the name, description and place of residence of the defendant, so far as they can be ascertained; (d) where the plaintiff or the defendant is a minor or a person of unsound mind, a statement to that effect; (e) the facts constituting the cause of action and when it arose; (f) the facts showing that the Court has jurisdiction; (g) the relief which the plaintiff claims; (h) where the plaintiff has allowed a set-off or relinquished a portion of the claim, the amount so allowed or relinquished; and (i) a statement of the value of the subject-matter of the suit for the purposes of jurisdiction and of Court-fees, so far as the case admits." 12. Section 21 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 provides that all the proceedings under this Act shall be regulated, as far as may be, by the Code of Civil Procedure. Section 20(2) of the Hindu Marriage Act further provides that the statements contained in every petition under this Act shall be verified by the petitioner or some other competent person in the manner required by law for the verification of plaints, and may, at the hearing, be referred to as evidence. 13. From the provisions of the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887 It appears that the forum of appeal depends on pecuniary jurisdiction. Thus the valuation of the suit determines the jurisdiction of the Court and the forum for filing the appeal. The valuation of the suit is governed by the Suits Valuation Act; 1887. Sections 8 and 9 of the Suits Valuation Act are relevant for the purpose. Section 8 provides that where in suits other than those referred to in Section 4, Court-fees are payable ad valorem under the Court-fees Act, 1870 as in force for the time being in the Uttar Pradesh, the value as determinable for the computation of the Court-fees and the value for purposes of jurisdiction shall be the same. With regard to petition under the Hindu Marriage Act Article 21 of the Court-fees Act. 1870 as applicable in U. P. provides:-- __________________________________________________________________ 21-A Application, petition or Memorandum under the Special Marriage Act, 1954. or the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 Third-seven rupees and fifty naya paise. __________________________________________________________________ 14. Thus there is fixed Court-fees with regard to a petition under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 i.e. Rs. 37.50. Section 8 of the Suits Valuation Act is not applicable. Thus the valuation with regard to petitions under the Hindu Marriage Act is governed by Section 9 of the Suits Valuation Act which provides.- "9. Determination of value of certain suits by High Court, ...... When the subject-matter of suits of any class other than suits mentioned in Section 4 or 8 is such that in the opinion of the High Court it does not admit of being satisfactorily valued, the High Court may, with the previous sanction of the State Government, direct that suits of that class shall, for the purposes of the Court-fees Act, 1870, and of this Act and any other enactment for the time being in force, be treated as if their subject-matter were of such value as the High Court thinks fit to specify in this behalf." 15. It has been submitted by the counsel for the petitioner that no Rules have been framed by the High Court under Section 9 hence there are no rules governing the question of valuation. The counsel for the petitioner elaborating his submission stated that the petitions under the Hindu Marriage Act including the petition for divorce are not capable of pecuniary valuation nor there are any rules laying down any criteria for valuation hence the valuation given in the petition under the Hindu Marriage Act is irrelevant and has to be ignored. 16. The question with regard to valuation of suits incapable of being given any pecuniary valuation has been engaging attention of this Court as well as other High Courts in several cases. 17. The words "valuation of suits' both occur in Sections 19 and 21 of the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887. Full Bench of our Court in (1906) ILR 28 All 545 (All), Zair Husain Khan v. Khursheed Jan, considered the provisions of the Suits Valuation Act and the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887 in a case pertaining to suit for restitution of conjugal rights. The Full Bench in the aforesaid case held:-- "In my opinion the word "valued in Section 19 of Act No. XII of 1887 is capable of bearing the interpretation which has been hitherto put upon It, namely, the valuation put by the plaintiff on the relief sought by him." 18. The Full Bench considering the suit for restitution of conjugal rights observed:-- "It was argued before the learned Judges that a suit for restitution of conjugal rights was incapable of being valued, and this contention found favour with them. In the case before us the suit has been valued, and therefore, I think that it is scarcely correct to say that such a suit is incapable of being valued. It appears to me that it would be more accurate to characterize a suit of this nature as one, the subject-matter of which does not admit of being satisfactorily valued. The Legislature (vide Section 9 of the Suits Valuation Act, 1887) has recognised the existence of classes of suits the subject-matter of which does not admit of being satisfactorily valued, and has given power to the High Court, with the previous sanction of the local Government, to direct that such suits shall "be treated as if their subject-matter were of such value as the High Court thinks fit to specify in this behalf. There are numerous classes of suits other than suits for restitution of conjugal rights which do not admit of being satisfactorily valued. For example, suits to set aside an adoption and suits to obtain a declaratory decree where no consequential relief is claimed. This High Court has not as yet exercised the power given to it by Section 9 of the Suits Valuation Act. Until this is done I see no reason why the existing practice, by which a plaintiff is allowed to put his own valuation on such a suit, subject to the power of the Court to refuse to accept the valuation If in its opinion it is not bona fide, should not be adhered to. After careful study of the language of the Bengal Civil Courts Act, I am of opinion that the legislature took it for granted that a money value of some kind, it may be an arbitrary value, can be placed on all suits. I think this view is supported by the language of Section 21 of the Act, which provides that an appeal from a decree or order of a subordinate Judge shall lie to the District Judge where the value of the original suit did not exceed five thousand rupees and to the High Court in any other case." 19. Following the Full Bench judgment of our Court in Zair Husain Khan's case (1906 ILR 22 All 545) (supra), the Division Bench of Gujarat High Court in AIR 1973 Guj 165, Chhagan Karsan v. Bhagwanji Punja, has also laid down that where the suit is of such nature that its subject-matter may not be capable of being satisfactorily valued in terms of money, the plaintiff Is at liberty to put its own value of plaint and such valuation may ordinarily be accepted by the Court as a correct valuation of the subject-matter for the purposes of jurisdiction unless the Court comes to the conclusion that a wrong valuation has been put by the plaintiff out of Improper motive in which case the Court has to decide what to be considered the proper valuation. It was held in paragraph 6 by the Division Bench:-- "6. The answer is fairly clear. The third paragraph of Section 24 and Section 28 postulate that all suits and proceedings of a civil nature are divisible only into two classes. One class of those where the subject-matter does not exceed in amount or value of ten thousand rupees and the other of those where the subject-matter exceeds in amount or value of ten thousand rupees. The former class is dealt with in the third paragraph of Section 24 while the latter in Section 25. There is no third class of suits or proceedings contemplated by the legislature where the subject-matter may be incapable of monetary evaluation so that it is not possible to say whether the value of the subject-matter exceeds or does not exceed ten thousand rupees. The reason is that in every suit or proceeding of a civil nature the subject-matter has to be valued in terms of money for the purpose of jurisdiction. It may be that under the Bombay Court- fees Act, 1959 where the subject-matter of a suit or proceeding is not susceptible of monetary evaluation, the legislature may have provided a fixed Court-fee, but so far as valuation for the purpose of jurisdiction is concerned, there has to be a valuation of the subject-matter. The Suits Valuation Act, 1887 lays down the principles for valuation of the subject-matter of a suit for the purpose of jurisdiction. But there may be suits where the subject-matter may not be capable of being satisfactorily valued in terms of money and no rules having been made by the High Court under Section 9 no guidance may be furnished by the Suits Valuation Act, 1887, as to how the subject-matter of such a suit should be valued. Can the Court throw up its hands in such cases and say that the subject- matter shall have no valuation? The answer is clearly no. It is now well settled that in such cases the plaintiff may put his own valuation on the subject-matter and such valuation would be accepted by the Court as prima facie true unless the Court is satisfied that it is defective on account of some improper motive in which case the Court would always consider what should be regarded to be the proper value. This was laid down as far back as the beginning of the present century by the Allahabad High Court in Zair Husain Khan v. Khursheed Jan, (1906) ILR 28 All 545 and by the Calcutta High Court in Jan Mohamed v. Mahar Bibi, (1907) ILR 34 Cal 352. The same view was also taken by a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court in the early case of Jasodav. Chhotu, (1909) 11 Bom LR 1352." 20. From the aforesaid provisions as noted above, it is clear that a person filing a petition under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 is also required to mention valuation of the case for purposes of Jurisdiction. It is true that the petitions as contemplated under the Hindu Marriage Act are not capable of determination of pecuniary valuation but that does not in any manner estopped a petitioner to mention the value as thought proper by him. The plaintiff or applicant who is filling a petition is free to give valuation for purposes of jurisdiction and if the valuation has been given by a person the same cannot be said to be irrelevant or immaterial. The submission of the counsel for the petitioner that the pecuniary valuation mentioned regarding a divorce suit is irrelevant and cannot be taken into consideration for determining the appellate forum, cannot be accepted. According to the provisions of Section 21 of the Act No. 12 of 1887 the appellate jurisdiction is dependent on valuation of suit. Counsel for the petitioner raised apprehension that if valuation is to be given at the instance of the plaintiff then with regard to identical dispute parties may choose to give different valuation so as to choose different forum of appeal. Elaborating his submission, the counsel for the petitioner has stated an instance that a case in which a petition is filed by husband under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act valuing the petition at Rs. 6,00,000/- and the wife filed a petition under Section 10 of the Act for restitution of conjugal rights and for return of articles valuing at Rs. 50,000/- and both the cases were decided by a common judgment by a District Court, the forum of appeal being dependent on the valuation will be different in both the cases. He contended that the above cannot be the intention of the legislature. It is to be noted that although the valuation of suit is one which plaintiff chooses to put upon it but this is subject to power of the Court to accept the valuation, if it is in its opinion bona fide as observed by the Division Bench of Gujarat High Court in Chhagan Karsan v. Bhagwanji Punja case, AIR 1973 Guj 165 (supra). The valuation given by the plaintiff for the purposes of jurisdiction is to be ordinarily accepted unless the Court comes to conclusion that wrong valuation has been put by the plaintiff out of improper motive in which case the Court should decide what should be considered to be the proper valuation. The apprehension raised by the counsel for the petitioner is thus unfounded. The Court has ample power to correct the valuation. All these questions pertaining to valuation can very well be raised before the Court concerned and be decided in accordance with law. Thus merely because the cases arising out of matrimonial matter are not capable of being given pecuniary valuation, it cannot be said that the valuation need not be given or the valuation given in any such petition is irrelevant. The mention of valuation is necessary ingredient which is required to be given in the petition under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act read with Rule 5 of the Hindu Marriage and Divorce Rules, 1956 and the Order VII, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure. 21. Such reliance has been placed by the counsel for the petitioner on Full Bench Judgment of this Court in 1961 All LJ 232 : (AIR 1961 All 395); Paras Ram v. Janki Bai alias Savitri. In the case before the Full Bench a petition under Section 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act was filed by the husband against the wife in the Court of the District Judge who transferred it for disposal to the 1st Civil Judge. No valuation was given on the petition at all. The order was passed by the Civil Judge that further proceedings on the petition of the husband shall remain stayed so long as he did not pay the wife the sum of Rs. 250/- for her cost of defending the proceedings. The husband filed an appeal to the High Court against the said order. Appeal was valued at Rs. 250/-. In the appeal before the High Court the question was raised as to whether the appeal will He to the High Court or to the District Court. The Full Bench took the view that since residuary power to entertain the appeal vests in the High Court the appeal will lie to High Court, the Full Bench ultimately held:-- "In the result I hold that an appeal from an order passed under Section 24 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 by a Civil Judge, who is a District Court within the meaning of the Act, in a proceeding commenced on a petition under Section 10 of the Act which (petition) does not mention any value on the face of it, lies to the High Court." 22. Immediately after the Full Bench Judgment again the question arose before the Division Bench in 1964 All LJ 186 : (AIR 1965 All 46), Major Dal Chand Singh Pratap v. Mrs. Swarn Pratap. Before the Division Bench case wife filed petition under Section 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act. The petition under Section 10 has been valued at Rs. 1,000/-. Single Judge referred the following question for consideration of the Division Bench:-- "Whether in a petition under the Hindu Marriage Act valued at less then Rs. 1000/-an appeal lies to the High Court or not?" 23. The Division Bench (which consisted of Hon'ble M. C. Desai, J. who gave judgment in Paras Ram's case (AIR 1961 All 395) (supra) Full Bench) while deciding the aforesaid case took the view that since in the case in question valuation of Rs. 1000/- was given hence the appeal would lie before the Court of District Judge. The Division Bench considered provisions of Code of Civil Procedure, provisions of Suits Valuation Act and the Bengal, Agra and Assam Civil Courts Act, 1887 as well as the rules framed under the Hindu Marriage Act. The Division Bench held at page 189.- "The opening words of Rule 5 are relevant for our purposes. They are:-- 5. Contents of petitions. In addition to the particulars required to be given under Order VII, Rule 1 of the Code and Section 20(1) of the Act every petition for judicial separation nullity of marriage and divorce shall contain the following particulars....." This rule clearly makes the provisions of Order VII, Rule 1, C.P.C. applicable to the petitions described in that rule. From this also it is clear that Order 7, Rule 1, C.P.C. applies to a petition made under Section 10 of the Act. Section 28 of the Act, which we have already reproduced earlier, clearly provides that "all decrees and orders made. ..... under this Act shall be enforced in a like manner as the decrees and orders of the Court made in the exercise of its original civil jurisdiction are enforced." This would also show that a proceeding under Section 10 or other sections of the Act is in the nature of a regular suit, with the result that the provisions of Order 7, Rule 1, C.P.C. would be applicable on this ground also. Clause (1) of Order 7, Rule 1, C.P.C. requires "statement of the value of the subject-matter for purposes of jurisdiction and Court-fees so far as the case admits" to be given. Consequently, it is clear that the valuation of the subject-matter has to be given in every petition under the Act. It is contended that the subject-matter of a petition for judicial separation is incapable of being valued in terms of money. That does not, however, mean that no valuation can be fixed in such cases or in cases of restitution of conjugal rights. Actually in the latter class of cases valuation has always been fixed. Inasmuch as the Court-fees on a petition under Section 10 of the Act is a fixed one (Rs. 37.50 np), the provision of Section 9 of the Suit Valuation Act would apply. Rules have been framed for U.P. also under that provision. We need not, however, go into this question at any length because admittedly in the case before us the subject-matter has been valued at the figure of Rs. 1,000/-. Consequently, it is not a case where no valuation has been given. Once the subject-matter has been valued at a certain figure, that figure would be determinative of the forum of appeal." 24. The Division Bench of our Court in Major Dal Chand Singh Pratap v. Mr. Swarn Pratap's case (AIR 1965 All 46) (supra) was also followed by the Division Bench of Orissa High Court in AIR 1978 Orissa 163, Nrusingh Charan Nayak v. Smt. Hemant Kumar Nayak. The Division Bench of Orissa High Court has also noted the case of Full Bench of our High Court in Paras Ram v. Janki Bai alias Savitri (AIR 1961 All 395) (supra). The counsel for the petitioner has laid emphasis on following observations of the Full Bench:-- "According to the principle applied in all the cases discussed above, when the subject-matter in appeal is not capable of pecuniary valuation, the appeal will not He to the District Judge." 25. The judgment of Full Bench in Paras Ram v. Janki Bai alias Savitri (supra) is not applicable in the facts of the present case. The present case is not a case in which no pecuniary valuation has been given in the suit filed by the petitioner. In the present petition admittedly the valuation of Rs. 1,00,000/- has been mentioned in paragraph 11 of the petition for the purposes of jurisdiction of the Court. The above mentioned observations were made by the Full Bench in the facts of that case in which there was no valuation given in the petition. The submission of counsel for the petitioner that the petition under Section 13 and other petitions under the Hindu Marriage Act are not capable of giving any pecuniary valuation hence appeal will not lie to district Court is, too, wide to be accepted. If the above submission is accepted that the cases under the Hindu Marriage Act since are incapable of being given pecuniary valuation all cases in which where valuation is given or not, the appeal will lie only to the High Court there will be no case in which appeal will lie to District Judge, which interpretation is contrary to express provision of Appeal given under Section 21 of the Act XII of 1887 and also there can be no second appeal. This interpretation is also not in consonance with intendment of Section 28 of Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, cannot be accepted. The Full Bench in Paras Ram v. Janki Bai Savitri's case (supra) was distinguished in the Division Bench's case in Major Dal Chand Singh Pratap v. Mrs. Swaran Pratap's case (supra) and the facts of the present case are similar to the aforesaid Division Bench Judgment in which also like present case valuation was given. Thus the Full Bench authority cited by the petitioner is clearly distinguishable. 26. Another D.B. of this Court reported in 1981 All WC 135 : (AIR 1981 All 230), Chandra Swaroop Singh v. Smt. Manorama Sinha considered the controversy. In the aforesaid Division Bench petition was filed for divorce which was valued at Rs. 1000/-. The Division Bench laid down in paragraphs 13, 14 and 15 as under :-- " 13. Another question that arises for consideration in this matter is as to whether an appeal shall lie to the District Judge or to the High Court in the instant case. The contention of the learned counsel for the appellant was that under the provisions of the Act there is only one District Court and an appeal would lie to the District Judge from the decree passed by another Court which also is a "District Court" within the meaning of the Act. Precisely the same question had arisen in Major Dal Chandra Singh Pratap v. Swaran Pratap, AIR 1965 All 46, where a Division Bench of this Court held that there is a vital distinction between the District Judge and the 'District Court'. The District Court as provided in Bengal. Agra & Assam Civil Courts Act provides several categories of Courts which are collectively called civil Courts which include the Court of District Judge, Civil Judge and the Munsiff. The words which are used in the Act are the 'District Court and the same have been defined as a Court of original civil Jurisdiction or any other Court. The Court of original civil jurisdiction of course is a Court of the District Judge but if any other Court was also Invested with the powers under the Act then the same powers can be exercised by a Civil Judge also. There is thus no conflict in the provisions if the decree passed by the Civil Judge exercising jurisdiction as 'District Court' under the Act is appealed against before the District Judge who can decide the matter as an appellate Court. 14. The above decision clearly covers the point sought to be raised in this appeal and we need not dilate on this issue any further. Suffice it to say that the petition for divorce had been valued at Rs. 1,000/- in the trial court and as such the appeal would He only to the District Judge and not to the High Court. Appeal from the decree of the Civil Judge can lie to the High Court only if the valuation of the Original Suit was more than Rs. 20,000/-. The appellant himself had chosen to give valuation of the petition which he was required to give under Rule 5 of the Rules framed by this Court under the Act. The jurisdiction of the Court will, therefore, be determined on that basis alone. In this case since the petition was valued at Rs. 1,000/- obviously the appeal would lie before the District Judge and not to the High Court. 15. In view of the above, we answer the reference accordingly and direct that F.A. No. 80 of 1978 filed in this Court is not competent and the appeal could be only before the District Judge, Varanasi. The memorandum of appeal shall be returned for presentation to the proper Court." 27. Another Full Bench of this Court had occasion to consider Section 28 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 with regard to question as to whether a Second Appeal is maintainable from the appellate decree in proceedings under the Hindu Marriage Act. The Full Bench has laid down that against a decree of the civil Court which is valued at Rs. 20,000/- an appeal lies to the District Judge and thereafter the second appeal to the High Court. The Full Bench in 1984 All LJ 392 Smt. Premlata Sharma v. Bhagwat Prasad Sharma, Dehradun held in paragraphs 21 and 22 :-- "21. Interpreting Sub-sections (1) and (4) of Section 28 of the Act, learned counsel appearing for the respondents contended that as the legislature intended to provide for only one appeal, it provided limitation in respect of one appeal and not for two. He urged that had the Legislature thought of providing two appeals against the decree contemplated by Sections 9, 10, 11 and 13, it would have enacted Section 28 differently and had similarly provided for ninety days limitation for filing appeal to the High Court. We are unable to accept this submission. Section 28(1) provides that all decrees passed by the Court in every proceeding under this Act are appealable to the Court to which an appeal lies from the trial Court in its original civil jurisdiction. As against a decree of a civil Court which is dealing with a suit below Rs. 20,000/- an appeal lies to the District Judge and, thereafter second appeal to the High Court. In case of valuation of a petition below Rs. 20,000/- the application would lie before a Civil Judge provided that such a Court is notified under Section 3(b) of the Hindu Marriage Act to be a District Court. Section 3(b) of the aforesaid Act defines the words district Courts' as follows :-- (c) "district Court" means, in any area for which there is a city civil Court, that court and in any other area the principal civil Court of original jurisdiction, and Includes any other civil Court which may be specified by the State Government by notification in the Official Gazette, as having jurisdiction in respect of the matters dealt within this Act." 22. From a perusal of the definition, it would appear that other courts of civil jurisdiction could also be invested with the jurisdiction to decide the cases under Hindu Marriage Act by means of notification by the State Government in the Official Gazette. In a case, therefore, where a Civil Judge is notified under Section 3(b) by the State Government to be a District Court, that could have jurisdiction to entertain the petition and the question of entertainability of an appeal and, thereafter, second appeal will depend on the valuation of the subject matter given by the petitioner filing such an application. It is correct that no rule, perhaps as it was not possible to do so, has been made in accordance with which a petition could be valued. In the absence of such a rule, in a petition where valuation was below Rs. 20,000/- an appeal could lie to the District Judge whereas in another to the High Court. Similar anomalies may be in existence in other jurisdictional proceedings. That itself will not rule out the interpretation of Section 28(1) that the right of appeal would be governed in the same manner as decree of a Civil Court made in exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. The expression "as" used in Section 28(1) is indicative of the intention of Parliament that a decree made by the Court in any proceeding under the Hindu Marriage Act should receive the same treatment with regard to the appealability as decree made in exercise of its original civil jurisdiction. This expression means "like to" "of the same kind," "in the same manner," in the manner in which ." 28. The view which is being taken in the present case is fully supported by view taken in the Full Benches of this Court namely Full Bench decision in Zair Husain Khan (1906 ILR 28 All 545) and Full Bench decision in Prem Layta Sharma (1984 All LJ 392) (supra). 29. The counsel for the petitioner has also contended that since the decree was passed by the 3rd Additional Civil Judge for return of articles amounting to Rs. 4,88,500/-whlch if added with the valuation of the petition of Rs. 1,00,000/-, District Judge loses the jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The above submission of the petitioner is misconceived. Petitioned has filed the petition before the Additional Civil Judge praying for decree of divorce and the valuation was given In paragraph 11 as Rs. 1,00,000/- when the petitioner herself gave the valuation in her petition as Rs. 1,00,000/- she cannot be allowed to say that the valuation is not relevant or the valuation is much more. It does not appear that at point of time the petitioner raised any objection regarding valuation of the petitioner before the trial Court. It was open to the petitioner to raise the objection of valuation. The memo of appeal has also been filed as Annexure 3 to the writ petition which memo also shows that the valuation of the appeal is Rs. 1,00,000/-, the appeal, as filed before the District Judge is thus fully maintainable. Further, the forum of Appeal depends on the valuation given in suit petition originally. 30. From the aforesaid discussion the submission raised by the counsel for the petitioner cannot be accepted. The appeal filed by the respondent before the District Judge was fully maintainable and the application 13-C filed by the petitioner has rightly been rejected. No good grounds have been made out to interfere with the order of the learned Additional District Judge dated 27-8-2002. 31. The writ petition lacks merit and is dismissed.
Swami Sadashiva Brahmendra Sar (Nil) 28 June 2009
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