Case Summary
Citation | Sangram Singh v. Election Tribunal, Kotah AIR 1955 SC 425 |
Keywords | Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution |
Facts | Bhurey Lal initiated an election petition pursuant to Section 100 of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 against Sangram Singh, the appellant, seeking to invalidate his election. On the specified date of hearing, the appellant and his three engaged counsels failed to appear, prompting the Tribunal to proceed ex-parte. Bhurey Lal and two witnesses were examined and one day after their examination five additional witnesses were also examined, and the case was adjourned for a later date. When one of the appellant’s counsels appeared on the day fixed the Tribunal denied his participation, citing the ongoing ex-parte proceedings. Later, the appellant applied for setting aside the ex-parte proceedings under Order 9 Rule 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC). The Tribunal rejected the application, stating that the appellant had failed to prove any justifiable reason for his absence between 17th March and 19th March 1953. Subsequently, the appellant filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Rajasthan, leading to a stay of further proceedings before the Tribunal. On 17th July 1953, the HC dismissed the petition, citing two grounds:Firstly, the Tribunal was the competent authority to determine the sufficiency of reasons, and Secondly, the counsel for the petitioner displayed gross negligence by not appearing on the scheduled hearing date. Five months later, the HC granted a certificate under Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution, allowing an appeal to the SC. |
Issues | Whether the Tribunal was right in refusing to allow the appellant’s counsel to appear and take part in the proceedings date fixed after adjournment? Whether there is sufficient ground to give the High Court jurisdiction to entertain a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution? |
Contentions | |
Law Points | Order IX Rule 13 of CPC: Setting aside decree ex-parte against defendant.—In any case in which a decree is passed ex-parte against a defendant, he may apply to the Court by which the decree was passed for an order to set it aside; and if he satisfies the Court that the summons was not duly served, or that he was prevented by any sufficient cause from appearing when the suit was called on for hearing, the Court shall make an order setting aside the decree as against him upon such terms as to costs, payment into Court or otherwise as it thinks fit, and shall appoint a day for proceeding with the suit: Provided that where the decree is of such a nature that it cannot be set aside as against such defendant only it may be set aside as against all or any of the other defendants also: Provided further than no Court shall set aside a decree passed ex-parte merely on the ground that there has been an irregularity in the service of summons, if it is satisfied that the defendant had notice of the date of hearing and had sufficient time to appear and answer the plaintiff’s claim. Explanation.— Where there has been an appeal against a decree passed ex-parte under this rule, and the appeal has been disposed of an any ground other than the ground that the appellant has withdrawn the appeal, no application shall lie under this rule for setting aside that ex-parte decree. |
Judgement | The SC set aside the order of tribunal and asked the Election Commission to reconstitute a tribunal to hear this case. |
Ratio Decidendi & Case Authority | SC said that the tribunal was not justified in refusing the appellant’s counsel to appear and take part in the proceedings when he appeared. The only consequence of the appellant counsel not being able to give just or unavoidable reason preventing his appearance on 17th to 19th but that would not prevent him to participate in further proceedings. The court considered these grounds satisfactory to set aside the order of tribunal under Order IX Rule 13 of CPC. |
Full Case Details
[The second respondent Bhurey Lal filed an election petition under Section 100 of the Representation of the People Act against the appellant Sangram Singh and two others for setting aside Sangram Singh’s election. The proceedings commenced at Kotah and after some hearings the Tribunal made an order on 11-12-1952 that the further sittings would be at Udaipur from 16th to 21st March, 1953. It was discovered later that the 16th was a public holiday, so on 5-1-1953 the dates were changed to “from the 17th March onwards” and the parties were duly notified. On the 17th the appellant did not appear nor did any of the three counsel whom he had engaged, so the Tribunal proceeded ex parte after waiting till 1.15 p.m. The Tribunal examined Bhurely Lal and two witnesses on the 17th, five more witnesses on the 18th and on the 19th the case was adjourned till the 20th. On the 20th one of the appellant’s three counsel, Mr. Bharat Raj, appeared but was not allowed to take any part in the proceedings because the Tribunal said that it was proceeding ex parte at that stage. Three more witnesses were then examined. On the following day, the 21st, the appellant made an application asking that the ex parte proceedings be set aside and asking that he be allowed to cross-examine those of Bhurely Lal’s witnesses whose evidence had already been recorded].
VIVAN BOSE, J. – 7. The Tribunal heard arguments and passed an order the same day rejecting the application on the ground that the appellant had:
“failed to satisfy ourselves that there was any just or unavoidable reason preventing the appearance of Respondent 1 himself or of any of his three learned advocates between the 17th and the 19th of March, 1953”,
and it added:
“at all events, when para 10 of the affidavit makes it clear that Shri Bharatraj had already received instructions to appear on 17-3-1953 there was nothing to justify his non-appearance on the 18th and 19th of March, 1953, if not, on the 17th as well”.
8. The appellant thereupon filed a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Rajasthan and further proceedings before the Tribunal were stayed.
9. The High Court rejected the petition on 17-7-1953 on two grounds:
(1) “In the first place, the Tribunal was the authority to decide whether the reasons were sufficient or otherwise and the fact that the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the reasons set forth by counsel for the petitioner were insufficient cannot be challenged in a petition of this nature.” and
(2) “On the merits also, we feel no hesitation in holding that counsel for the petitioner were grossly negligent in not appearing on the date which had been fixed for hearing, more than two months previously.”
Five months later, on 16-12-1953, the High Court granted a certificate under Article 133(1)(c) of the Constitution for leave to appeal to this Court.
10. The only question before the High Court was whether the Tribunal was right in refusing to allow the appellant’s counsel to appear and take part in the proceedings on and after the 20th of March, 1953, and the first question that we have to decide is whether that is sufficient ground to give the High Court jurisdiction to entertain a writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution. That, in our opinion, is no Longer res integra. The question was settled by a Bench of seven Judges of this Court in Hari Vishnu v. Ahmad Ishaque [AIR 1955 SC 233, 249] in these terms:
“Certiorari will also be issued when the court or tribunal acts illegally in the exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction, as when it decides without giving an opportunity to the parties to be heard, or violates the principles of natural justice.”
That is exactly the position here.
11. It was urged that that cannot be so in election matters because of Section 105 of the Representation of the People Act of 1951, a section which was not considered in the earlier case. It runs thus:
“Every order of the tribunal made under this Act shall be final and conclusive.”
It was argued that neither the High Court nor the Supreme Court can itself transgress the law in trying to set right what it considers is an error of law on the part of the court or tribunal whose records are under consideration. It was submitted that the legislature intended the decisions of these tribunals to be final on all matters, whether of fact or of law, accordingly, they cannot be said to commit an error of law when, acting within the ambit of their jurisdiction, they decide and lay down what the law is, for in that sphere their decisions are absolute, as absolute as the decisions of the Supreme Court in its own sphere. Therefore, it was said, the only question that is left open for examination under Article 226 in the case of an Election Tribunal is whether it acted within the scope of its jurisdiction.
12. But this, also, is no Longer open to question. The point has been decided by three Constitution Benches of this Court. In Hari Vishnu v. Ahmad Ishaque, the effect of Section 105 of the Representation of the People Act was not considered, but the Court laid down in general terms that the jurisdiction under Article 226 having been conferred by the Constitution, limitations cannot be placed on it except by the Constitution itself: see pages 238 and 242. Section 105 was, however, considered in Durga Shankar Mehta v. Raghuraj Singh [AIR 1954 SC 520, 522] and it was held that that section cannot cut down or affect the overriding powers of this Court under Article 136. The same rule was applied to Article 226 in Raj Krushna Bose v. Binod Kanungo [(1954) SCR 913] and it was decided that Section 105 cannot take away or whittle down the powers of the High Court under Article 226. Following those decisions we hold that the jurisdiction of the High Court under Article 226 is not taken away or curtailed by Section 105.
13. The jurisdiction which Articles 226 and 136 confer entitles the High Courts and this Court to examine the decisions of all tribunals to see whether they have acted illegally. That jurisdiction cannot be taken away by a legislative device that purports to confer power on a
moment the tribunal chooses to say they are legal. The legality of an act or conclusion is something that exists outside and apart from the decision of an inferior tribunal. It is a part of the law of the land which cannot be finally determined or altered by any tribunal of limited jurisdiction. The High Courts and the Supreme Court alone can determine what the law of the land is vis-à-vis all other courts and tribunals and they alone can pronounce with authority and finality on what is legal and what is not. All that an inferior tribunal can do is to reach a tentative conclusion which is subject to review under Articles 226 and 136. Therefore, the jurisdiction of the High Courts under Article 226 with that of the Supreme Court above them remains to its fullest extent despite Section 105.
14. That, however, is not to say that the jurisdiction will be exercised whenever there is an error of law. The High Courts do not, and should not, act as courts of appeal under Article 226. Their powers are purely discretionary and though no limits can be placed upon that discretion it must be exercised aLong recognised lines and not arbitrarily; and one of the limitations imposed by the Courts on themselves is that they will not exercise jurisdiction in this class of case unless substantial injustice has ensued, or is likely to ensue. They will not allow themselves to be turned into courts of appeal or revision to set right mere errors of law which do not occasion injustice in a board and general sense, for, though no legislature can impose limitations on these constitutional powers it is a sound exercise of discretion to bear in mind the policy of the legislature to have disputes about these special rights decided as speedily as may be. Therefore, writ petitions should not be lightly entertained in this class of case.
15. We now turn to the decision of the Tribunal. The procedure of these tribunals is governed by Section 90 of the Act. The portion of the section that is relevant here is sub-section (2) which is in these terms:
Subject to the provisions of this Act and of any rules made thereunder, every election petition shall be tried by the Tribunal, as nearly as may be, in accordance with the procedure applicable under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908) to the trial of suits.
16. Now a code of procedure must be regarded as such. It is procedure, something designed to facilitate justice and further its ends: not a penal enactment for punishment and penalties; not a thing designed to trip people up. Too technical a construction of sections that leaves no room for reasonable elasticity of interpretation should therefore be guarded against (provided always that justice is done to both sides) lest the very means designed for the furtherance of justice be used to frustrate it.
17. Next, there must be ever present to the mind the fact that our laws of procedure are grounded on a principle of natural justice which requires that men should not be condemned unheard, that decisions should not be reached behind their backs, that proceedings that affect their lives and property should not continue in their absence and that they should not be precluded from participating in them. Of course, there must be exceptions and where they are clearly defined they must be given effect to. But taken by and large, and subject to that proviso, our laws of procedure should be construed, wherever that is reasonably possible, in the light of that principle.
18. The existence of such a principle has been doubted, and in any event was condemned as unworkable and impractical by O’sullivan, J. in Harriram v. Pribhdas [AIR 1945 Sind. 98]. He regarded it as an indeterminate term “liable to cause misconception” and his views were shared by Wanchoo, C.J. and Bapna, J. in Rajasthan: Sewa Ram v. Misrimal [AIR 1952 Raj. 12]. But that a law of natural justice exists in the sense that a party must be heard in a court of law, or at any rate be afforded an opportunity to appear and defend himself, unless there is express provision to the contrary, is, we think, beyond dispute. See the observations of the Privy Council in Balakrishna Udayar v. Vasudeva Ayyar [ILR 40 Mad. 793] and especially in T.M. Barret v. African Products Ltd. [AIR 1928 PC 261] where Lord Buckmaster said:
“[N]o forms or procedure should ever be permitted to exclude the presentation of a litigant’s defence.”
Also Hari Vishnu case which we have just quoted.
In our opinion, Wallace, J. was right in Venkatasubbiah v. Lakshminarasimham [AIR
1925 Mad. 1274] in holding that:
One cardinal principle to be observed in trials by a court obviously is that a party has a right to appear and plead his cause on all occasions when that cause comes on for hearing.
and that:
It follows that a party should not be deprived of that right and in fact the court has no
option to refuse that right, unless the Code of Civil Procedure deprives him of it.
19. Let us now examine that Code; and first, we will turn to the body of the Code. Section
27 provides that
Where a suit has been duly instituted, a summons may be issued to the defendant to appear and answer the claim.
Section 30 gives the court power to
(b) issue summonses to persons whose attendance is required either to give evidence or to produce documents or such other objects as aforesaid.
Then come the penalties for default. They are set out in Section 32 but they are confined to cases in which a summons have been issued under Section 30. There is no penalty for a refusal or an omission to appear in response to a summons under Section 27. It is true certain consequences will follow if a defendant does not appear and, popularly speaking, those consequences may be regarded as the penalty for non-appearance, but they are not penalties in the true sense of the term. They are not punishments which the court is authorised to administer for disregard of its orders. The antithesis that Section 32 draws between Section 27 and Section 30 is that an omission to appear in response to a summons under Section 27 carries no penalty in the strict sense, while disregard of a summons under Section 30 may entail punishment. The spirit of this distinction must be carried over to the First Schedule. We deprecate the tendency of some Judges to think in terms of punishments and penalties properly so called when they should instead be thinking of compensation and the avoidance of injustice to both sides.
20. We turn next to the Rules in the First Schedule. It is relevant to note that the Rules draw a distinction between the first hearing and subsequent hearings, and that the first hearing can be either (a) for settlement of issues only, or (b) for final disposal of the suit. First, there is Order 5 Rule 1:
[A] summons may be issued to the defendant to appear and answer the claim on a day to be therein specified.
This summons must state whether the hearing is to be for settlement of issues only or for final hearing (Rule 5). If it is for final hearing, then (Rule 8):
[I]t shall also direct the defendant to produce, on the day fixed for his appearance, all witnesses upon whose evidence he intends to rely in support of his case.
Then comes Order 8, Rule 1 which expressly speaks of “the first hearing”. Order 9 follows and is headed “Appearance of parties and consequence of non-appearance.”
21. Now the word “consequence” as opposed to the word “penalty” used in Section 32 is significant. It emphasises the antithesis to which we have already drawn attention. So also in Rule 12 the marginal note is “Consequence of non-attendance” and the body of the Rule states that the party who does not appear and cannot show sufficient cause
shall be subject to all the provisions of the foregoing Rules applicable to plaintiffs and defendants, respectively, who do not appear.
The use of the word “penalty” is scrupulously avoided.
22. Our attention was drawn to Rule 6(2) and it was argued that Order 9 does contemplate the imposition of penalties. But we do not read this portion of the Rule in that light. All that the plaintiff has to do here is to pay the costs occasioned by the postponement which in practice usually means the cost of a fresh summons and the diet money and so forth for such of the witnesses as are present; and these costs the plaintiff must pay irrespective of the result.
23. Rule 1 of Order 9 starts by saying:
“On the day fixed in the summons for the defendant to appear and answer….”
and the rest of the Rules in that Order are consequential on that. This is emphasised by the use of the word “postponement’ in Rule 6(1)(c), of “adjournment” in Rule 7 and of “adjournment” in Rule 1. Therefore, we reach the position that Order 9 Rule 6(1)(a), which is the Rule relied on, is confined to the first hearing of the suit and does not per se apply to subsequent hearings: see Sahibzada Zeinulabdin Khan v. Sahibzada Ahmed Raza Khan [5 IA 233].
24. Now to analyse Rule 6 and examine its bearing on the first hearing. When the plaintiff appears and the defendant does not appear when the suit is called on for hearing, if it is proved that the summons was duly served–
“(a) …the court may proceed ex parte”.
The whole question is, what do these words mean? Judicial opinion is sharply divided about this. On the one side is the view propounded by Wallace, J. in Venkatasubbiah v. Lakshminarasimham that ex parte merely means in the absence of the other party, and on the other side is the view of O’sullivan, J., in Hariram v. Pribhdas that it means that the court is
at liberty to proceed without the defendant till the termination of the proceedings unless the defendant shows good cause for his non-appearance. The remaining decisions, and there are many of them, take one or the other of those two views.
25. In our opinion, Wallace, J. and the other Judges who adopt the same line of thought, are right. As we have already observed, our laws of procedure are based on the principle that, as far as possible, no proceeding in a court of law should be conducted to the detriment of a person in his absence. There are of course exceptions, and this is one of them. When the defendant has been served and has been afforded an opportunity of appearing, then, if he does not appear, the court may proceed in his absence. But, be it noted, the court is not directed to make an ex parte order. Of course the fact that it is proceeding ex parte will be recorded in the minutes of its proceedings but that is merely a statement of the fact and is not an order made against the defendant in the sense of an ex parte decree or other ex parte order which the court is authorised to make. All that Rule 6(1)(a) does is to remove a bar and no more. It merely authorises the court to do that which it could not have done without this authority, namely, to proceed in the absence of one of the parties. The contrast in language between Rules 7 and 13 emphasises this.
26. Now, as we have seen, the first hearing is either for the settlement of issues or for final hearing. If it is only for the settlement of issues, then the court cannot pass an ex parte decree on that date because of the proviso to Order 15 Rule 3(1) which provides that that can only be done when
“the parties or their Pleaders are present and none of them objects.”
On the other hand, if it is for final hearing, an ex parte decree can be passed, and if it is passed, then Order 9 Rule 13 comes into play and before the decree is set aside the court is required to make an order to set it aside. Contrast this with Rule 7 which does not require the setting aside of what is commonly, though erroneously, known as “the ex parte order”. No order is contemplated by the Code and therefore no order to set aside the order is contemplated either. But a decree is a command or order of the court and so can only be set aside by another order made and recorded with due formality.
27. Then comes Rules 7 which provides that if at an adjourned hearing the defendant appears and shows good cause for his “previous non-appearance”, he can be heard in answer to the suit
“as if he had appeared on the day fixed for his appearance”.
This cannot be read to mean, as it has been by some learned Judges, that he cannot be allowed to appear at all if he does not show good cause. All it means is that he cannot be relegated to the position he would have occupied if he had appeared.
28. We turn next to the adjourned hearing. That is dealt with in Order 17 Rule 1(1) empowers the court to adjourn the hearing and whenever it does so it must fix a day “for the further hearing of the suit”, except that once the hearing of the evidence has begun it must go on from day to day till all the witnesses in attendance have been examined unless the court considers, for reasons to be recorded in writing, that a further adjournment is necessary. Then follows Rule 2 –
Where, on any day to which the hearing of the suit is adjourned, the parties or any of them fail to appear, the court may proceed to dispose of the suit in one of the modes directed in that behalf by Order 9 or make such other order as it thinks fit.
29. Now Rule 2 only applies when one or both of the parties do not appear on the day fixed for the adjourned hearing. In that event, the court is thrown back to Order 9 with the additional power to make “such order as it thinks fit”. When it goes back to Order 9 it finds that it is again empowered to proceed ex parte on the adjourned hearing in the same way as it did, or could have done, if one or other of the parties had not appeared at the first hearing, that is to say, the right to proceed ex parte is a right which accrues from day to day because at each adjourned hearing the court is thrown back to Order 9 Rule 6. It is not a mortgaging of the future but only applies to the particular hearing at which a party was afforded the chance to appear and did not avail himself of it. Therefore, if a party does appear on “the day to which the hearing of the suit is adjourned”, he cannot be stopped from participating in the proceedings simply because he did not appear on the first or some other hearing.
30. But though he has the right to appear at an adjourned hearing, he has no right to set back the hands of the clock. Order 9 Rule 7 makes that clear. Therefore, unless he can show good cause, he must accept all that has gone before and be content to proceed from the stage at which he comes in. But what exactly does that import? To determine that it will be necessary to hark back to the first hearing.
31. We have already seen that when a summons is issued to the defendant it must state whether the hearing is for the settlement of issues only or for the final disposal of the suit (Order 5 Rule 5). In either event, Order 8 Rule 1 comes into play and if the defendant does not present a written statement of his defence, the court can insist that he shall, and if, on being required to do so, he fails to comply –
“the court may pronounce judgment against him, or make such order in relation to the suit as it thinks fit.” (Order 8 Rule 10).
This invests the court with the widest possible discretion and enables it to see that justice is done to both sides; and also to witnesses if they are present: a matter on which we shall dwell later.
32. We have seen that if the defendant does not appear at the first hearing, the court can proceed ex parte, which means that it can proceed without a written statement; and Order 9 Rule 7 makes it clear that unless good cause is shown the defendant cannot be relegated to the position that he would have occupied if he had appeared. That means that he cannot put in a written statement unless he is allowed to do so, and if the case in one in which the court considers a written statement should have been put in, the consequences entailed by Order 8 Rule 10 must be suffered. What those consequences should be in a given case is for the court, in the exercise of its judicial discretion, to determine. No hard and fast rule can be laid down. In some cases an order awarding costs to the plaintiff would meet the ends of justice: an adjournment can be granted or a written statement can be considered on the spot and issues framed. In other cases, the ends of justice may call for more drastic action.
33. Now when we speak of the ends of justice, we mean justice not only to the defendant and to the other side but also to witnesses and others who may be inconvenienced. It is an
unfortunate fact that the convenience of the witness is ordinarily lost sight of in this class of case and yet he is the one that deserves the greatest consideration. As a rule, he is not particularly interested in the dispute but he is vitally interested in his own affairs which he is compelled to abandon because a court orders him to come to the assistance of one or other of the parties to a dispute. His own business has to suffer. He may have to leave his family and his affairs for days on end. He is usually out of pocket. Often he is a poor man living in an out of the way village and may have to trudge many weary miles on his feet. And when he gets there, there are no arrangements for him. He is not given accommodation; and when he reaches the court, in most places there is no room in which he can wait. He has to loiter about in the verandah or under the trees, shivering in the cold of winter and exposed to the heat of summer, wet and miserable in the rains: and then, after wasting hours and sometimes day for his turn, he is brusquely told that he must go back and come again another day. Justice strongly demands that this unfortunate section of the general public compelled to discharge public duties, usually at loss and inconvenience to themselves, should not be ignored in the overall picture of what will best serve the ends of justice and it may well be a sound exercise of discretion in a given case to refuse an adjournment and permit the plaintiff to examine the witnesses present and not allow the defendant to cross-examine them, still less to adduce his own evidence. It all depends on the particular case. But broadly speaking, after all the various factors have been taken into consideration and carefully weighed, the endeavour should be to avoid snap decisions and to afford litigants a real opportunity of fighting out their cases fairly and squarely. Costs will be adequate compensation in many cases and in others the court has almost unlimited discretion about the terms it can impose provided always the discretion is judicially exercised and is not arbitrary.
34. In the Code of 1859 there was a provision (Section 119) which said that –
“No appeal shall lie from a judgment passed ex parte against a defendant who has not appeared.”
The Privy Council held in Zeinulabdin Khan v. Ahmed Raza Khan that this only applied to a defendant who had not appeared at all at any stage, therefore, if once an appearance was entered, the right of appeal was not taken away. One of the grounds of their decision was that
The general rule is that an appeal lies to the High Court from a decision of a civil or subordinate Judge, and a defendant ought not to be deprived of the right of appeal, except by express words or necessary implication.
The general rule, founded on principles of natural justice, that proceedings in a court of justice should not be conducted behind the back of a party in the absence of an express provision to that effect is no less compelling. But that apart, it would be anomalous to hold that the efficacy of the so-called ex parte order expends itself in the first court and that thereafter a defendant can be allowed to appear in the appellate court and can be heard and can be permitted to urge in that court the very matters he is shut out from urging in the trial court; and in the event that the appellate court considers a remand necessary he can be permitted to do the very things he was precluded from doing in the first instance without getting the ex parte order set aside under Order 9 Rule 7.
35. Now this is not a case in which the defendant with whom we are concerned did not appear at the first hearing. He did. The first hearing was on 11-12-1952 at Kotah. The appellant (the first defendant) appeared through counsel and filed a written statement. Issues were framed and the case was adjourned till 16th March at Udaipur for the petitioner’s evidence alone from 16th to 21st March. Therefore, Order 9 Rules 6 and 7 do not apply in terms. But we have been obliged to examine this Order at length because of the differing views taken in the various High Courts and because the contention is that Order 17 Rule 2 throws one back to the position under Order 9 Rules 6 and 7, and there, according to one set of views, the position is that once an ex parte “order” is “passed” against a defendant he cannot take further part in the proceedings unless he gets that “order” set aside by showing good cause under Rule 7. But that is by no means the case.
36. If the defendant does not appear at the adjourned hearing (irrespective of whether or not be appeared at the first hearing) Order 17 Rule 2 applies and the court is given the widest possible discretion either
“to dispose of the suit in one of the modes directed in that behalf by Order 9 or make such other order as it thinks fit”.
The point is this: The court has a discretion which it must exercise. Its hands are not tied by the so called ex parte order; and if it thinks they are tied by Order 9 Rule 7 then it is not exercising the discretion which the law says it should and, in a given case, inference may be called for.
37. The learned Judges who constituted a Full Bench of the Lucknow Chief Court Tulsha Devi v. Sri Krishna [AIR 1949 Oudh 59] thought that if the original ex parte order did not ensure throughout all future hearings it would be necessary to make a fresh ex parte order at each succeeding hearing. But this proceeds on the mistaken assumption that an ex parte order is required. The order sheet, or minutes of the proceedings, has to show which of the parties were present and if a party is absent the court records that fact and then records whether it will proceed ex parte against him, that is to say, proceed in the absence, or whether it will adjourn the hearing; and it must necessarily record this fact at every subsequent bearing because it has to record the presence and absence of the parties at each hearing. With all due deference to the learned Judges who hold this view, we do not think this is a grave or a sound objection.
38. A much weightier consideration is that the plaintiff may be gravely prejudiced in a given case because, as the learned Rajasthan Judges point out, and as O’Sullivan, J. thought, when a case proceeds ex parte, the plaintiff does not adduce as much evidence as he would have if it had been contested. He contents himself with leading just enough to establish a prima facie case. Therefore, if he is suddenly confronted with a contest after he has closed his case and the defendant then comes forward with an army of witnesses he would be taken by surprise and gravely prejudiced. That objection is, however, easily met by the wide discretion that is vested in the court. If it has reason to believe that the defendant has by his conduct misled the plaintiff into doing what these learned Judges apprehend, then it might be a sound exercise of discretion to shut out cross-examination and the adduction of evidence on the defendant’s part and to allow him only to argue at the stage when arguments are heard. On the other hand, cases may occur when the plaintiff is not, and ought not to be, misled. If these considerations are to weigh, then surely the sounder rule is to leave the court with an unfettered discretion so that it
can take every circumstance into consideration and do what seems best suited to meet the ends of justice in the case before it.
39. In the present case, we are satisfied that the Tribunal did not exercise its discretion because it considered that it had none and thought that until the ex parte order was set aside the defendant could not appear either personally or through counsel. We agree with the Tribunal, and with the High Court, that no good cause was shown and so the defendant had no right to be relegated to the position that he would have occupied if he had appeared on 17-3-1953, but that he had a right to appear through counsel on 20-3-1953 and take part in the proceedings from the stage at which they had then reached, subject to such terms and conditions as the Tribunal might think fit to impose, is, we think, undoubted. Whether he should have been allowed to cross-examine the three witnesses who were examined after the appearance of his counsel, or whether he should have been allowed to adduce evidence, is a matter on which we express no opinion, for that has to depend on whatever view the Tribunal in a sound exercise of judicial discretion will choose to take of the circumstances of this particular case, but we can find no justification for not at least allowing counsel to argue.
Now the Tribunal said on 23-3-1953:
The exact stage at which the case had reached before us on the 21st of March, 1953 was that under the clear impression that Respondent 1 had failed to appear from the very first date of the final hearing when the ex parte order was passed, the petitioner must have closed his case after offering as little evidence as he thought was just necessary to get his petition disposed of ex parte. Therefore, to allow Respondent 1 to step in now would certainly handicap the petitioner and would amount to a bit of injustice which we can neither contemplate nor condone.
But this assumes that the petitioner was misled and closed his case “after offering as little evidence as he thought was just necessary to get his petition disposed of ex parte”. It does not decide that that was in fact the case. If the defendant’s conduct really gave rise to that impression and the plaintiff would have adduced more evidence than he did, the order would be unexceptional but until that is found to be the fact a mere assumption would not be a sound basis for the kind of discretion which the Court must exercise in this class of case after carefully weighing all the relevant circumstances. We, therefore, disagreeing with the High Court which has upheld the Tribunal’s order, quash the order of the Tribunal and direct it to exercise the discretion vested in it by law aLong the lines we have indicated. In doing so the Tribunal will consider whether the plaintiff was in fact misled or could have been misled if he had acted with due diligence and caution. It will take into consideration the fact that the defendant did enter an appearance and did file a written statement and that issues were framed in his presence; also that the case was fixed for the “petitioner’s” evidence only and not for that of the appellant; and that the petitioner examined all the witnesses he had present on the 17th and the 18th and did not give up any of them; that he was given an adjournment on 19-3-1953 for the examination witnesses who did not come on that date and that examined three more on 20-3-1953 after the defendant had entered an appearance through counsel and claimed the right to plead; also whether, when the appellant’s only protest was against the hearings at Udaipur on dates fixed for the petitioner’s evidence alone, it would be legitimate for a party acting with due caution
and diligence to assume that the order side had abandoned his right to adduce his own evidence should the hearing for that be fixed at some other place or at some other date in the same place.
[The Tribunal will also consider and determine whether it will be proper in the circumstances of this case to allow the appellant to adduce his own evidence. The Tribunal will now reconsider its orders of the 20th, the 21st and the 23rd of March, 1953 in the light of our observations and will proceed accordingly. The records will be sent to the Election Commission with directions to that authority to reconstitute the Tribunal, if necessary, and to direct it to proceed with this matter aLong the lines indicated above].