Full Text
JUDGMENT
TAPAS KUMAR DATTA ... Appellant/Plaintiff
Through: Mr.S.S Ahluwalia and Mr. Jatin Teotia, Advocates.
…Respondents/Defendant
Through: Mr. Dig Vijay Rai and Mr. Pulkit Tyagi, Advocate.
1. The appellant has challenged the impugned judgment and decree dated 09.06.2016 in CS NO. 371/16/07 by which the appellant‟s suit was dismissed by the Court of learned Additional District Judge-16, Central District, Tis Hazari, Delhi.
2. This case has a long and tumultuous history. The appeal before this Court has reached after having gone through multiple forums. The controversy in the present case started when the appellant married with Smt.Nivedita Dutta on 10.12.1982 in Kolkata. On 09.03.1985 the appellant‟s wife succumbed to burn 2017:DHC:7803 injuries and the police filed a charge sheet against the appellant under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code (in short „IPC‟) read with Sections 3 & 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act. The appellant was convicted by the Sessions Court under Section 306/498 IPC read with Section 3 and 4 of the Dowry Prohibition Act on 25.04.1988. The High Court of Patna (Ranchi Bench) upheld the conviction of the appellant but reduced the sentence from 10 years Rigorous Imprisonment to 5 years Rigorous Imprisonment. The appellant then filed a SLP before the Hon‟ble Supreme Court against the judgment of the High Court being SLP (Crl.) No.947/1990 which was disposed off on 01.11.1996 and the conviction of the appellant was upheld but the sentence was reduced to the period he had already undergone.
3. As a consequence to the appellant being convicted by the Sessions Court vide order dated 25.04.1988, he was dismissed from service as per Rule 30 of the CDA Rules, 1977 vide office order dated 10.05.1988. The appellant filed an appeal against this order of dismissal after a gap of 9 years on 11.01.1997. The appeal was dismissed by the Appellate Authority i.e. Respondent no.1 vide order dated 24.06.1997. The appellant preferred a Writ Petition before the Calcutta High Court on 23.07.1998 being W.P(C) No.14193/1997 challenging the original order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 and the order of the Appellant Authority dated 24.06.1997. On 23.07.1988, the High Court of Calcutta without going into the merits of the case directed the Appellate Authority to decide the appeal afresh after giving the appellant a fresh hearing.
4. On 06.11.1998, the Appellate Authority after giving a hearing to the appellant dismissed the appeal and upheld the order dated 10.05.1988. This order was challenged by the appellant by filing a Writ Petition in the High Court of Calcuta being W.P(C) 22263/1998. This Writ Petition came to be dismissed on 14.11.2002 due to lack of territorial jurisdiction. This order of the Single Judge was challenged by the appellant before a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court by way of MAT No.604/2003 (CAN 2294/2003) along with an application under Section 5 of the Limitation Act. This appeal came to be dismissed vide order dated 22.04.2003 on the ground of limitation and lack of territorial jurisdiction. This order of dismissal by the Division Bench was challenged by way of a SLP before the Hon‟ble Supreme Court of India being SLP(C) No.12201/2003 which was dismissed on 09.07.2003.
5. The appellant then allegedly filed several complaints and representations before the Appellate Authority and the Directorate of Public Grievances, New Delhi claiming that the original order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 was never supplied to him. The appellant is also stated to have approached the Calcutta High Court Legal Services Committee with a request for starting conciliation proceedings with the Respondents. In the conciliation proceedings, the appellant took the plea that he was never supplied with the copy of the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988, which according to the respondent was provided.
6. In response to the letter to the Directorate of Public Grievance, the Ministry of Steel (MoS) sent a letter dated 25.05.2004 to Respondent No.1, 3 & 5 asking for a clarification on the same. SAIL informed the Ministry of Steel (MoS) that Respondent no.1 had duly considered the appellant‟s appeal after giving him an opportunity to represent himself and thereafter his order of dismissal was upheld.
7. The appellant is alleged to have written letters to Secretary, Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievance on 12.07.2005 and 26.07.2006 but to no avail.
8. The appellant then filed a Suit for Declaration, Permanent Injunction and Mandatory Injunction on 12.01.2007 before the City Civil Court at Calcutta being Suit No.80/2007, which was returned on 30.04.2007 under Order VII Rule 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (in short „CPC‟) for filing the same before the appropriate Court i.e. District Courts at Tis Hazari. The present suit then came to be filed before Tis Hazari Courts, Delhi which was dismissed vide impugned order dated 09.06.2016 as the Trial Court found that the suit was not within the limitation period of 3 years as prescribed by the Part III of the Schedule to the Limitation Act.
9. Shri S.S Ahluwalia, learned counsel for the appellant had argued that the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 is contrary to the principles of natural justice and not in accordance with the CDA Rules and therefore is liable to be set aside.
10. He further contended that the suit was filed within the prescribed limitation period for filing a Suit for Declaration. He argued that Section 14 of the Limitation Act, 1963 prescribes for exclusion of the time during which the plaintiff has been proceeding bona fide in a court without jurisdiction and therefore the time during which the appellant was pursuing conciliation before the Calcutta High Court Legal Services Committee has to be excluded while calculating the limitation period.
11. He further argued that the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 was never supplied to him which is against the principles of natural justice and therefore deserves to be set aside.
12. Per contra, Mr. Dig Vijay Rai, learned counsel for the respondents contended that the impugned judgment was based on the correct proposition of law and therefore does not warrant any interference.
13. He contended that the appellant‟s suit was correctly dismissed being barred by time as the appellant waited for 9 years to file an appeal against the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 which shows that the appellant was not diligent in pursuing the remedy available to him.
14. I have the learned counsel for the parties.
15. This appeal raises two points for consideration which are:i. Whether the suit filed by the appellant was within the limitation period for a suit for declaration as given under Article 58, Part III of the Schedule of the Limitation Act, 1963. ii. Whether the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 was supplied to the appellant. Point No.1:
16. Article 58, Part III of the Schedule of the Limitation Act, 1963 states that the limitation period to obtain any other declaration which is not provided by other parts of the Act is 3 years from the date from which the right to sue first accrued to the plaintiff. The Appellate Authority had upheld the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 vide order dated 06.11.1998. Therefore the period of limitation which is 3 years must be deemed to have started from this date i.e. 06.11.1998. The contentions of the appellant with regard to the issue of limitation can be summed up and simplified with the help of the following table:- Sl. No.
DATE PROCEEDINGS
1. 6.11.1998 Appellate Authority upholds the original order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988.
2. 1998 W.P(C) 22263/98 filed against the order of the Appellate Authority.
3. 14.11.2002 W.P(C) 22263/98 dismissed for lack of territorial jurisdiction.
4. 22.4.2003 MAT No.604/2003 (CAN 2294/2003) dismissed by a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court of the ground of lack of Territorial Jurisdiction.
5. 9.7.2003 SLP (C) 12201/2003 against the order of the Division Bench dismissed.
6. 18.12.2003 Appellant wrote letters to the Calcutta High Court Legal Services Committee requesting conciliation with the Respondents.
7. 24.3.2004 The counsel appearing on behalf of the respondent company in conciliation proceedings refused to supply the appellant with a copy of the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 as he stated that the matter had been finally put to rest with the dismissal of SLP (C) 12201/2003 filed by the appellant.
17. The appellant has claimed that the right to sue first accrued to him on 24.03.2004 i.e. the date on which the conciliation proceedings finally concluded and that the period of limitation should be calculated from this date in view of Section 14 of the Limitation Act, 1963.
18. The Hon‟ble Supreme Court in State of Punjab v. Gurdev Singh, (1991) 4 SCC 1 while elaborating as to when the right o sue accrues in favour of the plaintiff, held as under:
(i) Mt. Bolo v. Mt. Koklan [AIR 1930 PC 270: 57
IA 325: 1930 ALJ 1188] and (ii) Gannon Dunkerley and Co. Ltd. v. Union of India [(1969) 3 SCC 607: AIR 1970 SC 1433: (1970) 3 SCR 47] ).” (Emphasis supplied)
19. In light of Gurdev Singh’s case, it is clear that the right to sue accrues as soon as a person can approach a Court to seek relief by legal means when right asserted is infringed or when there is clear threat to infringe the right. In the present case, the appellant‟s right to sue accrued to him as soon as the Appellate Authority dismissed his appeal vide order dated 06.11.1998. The appellant then went on a course the reasons for which are best known to him by filing a Writ Petition being WP(C) No.22263/2003 and LPA being MAT.NO.604/2003 (CAN No.2294/2003) before the Calcutta High Court which were dismissed due to a lack of territorial jurisdiction as the disciplinary proceedings had taken place in Ranchi and then the appellant filed an SLP which was dismissed vide order dated 09.07.2003.
20. To appreciate the appellant‟s arguments with regard to the applicability of Section 14 of the Limitation Act, 1963, it would be profitable to reproduce Section 14 below:
21. A perusal of Section 14 clearly shows that this section applies to proceedings in which the plaintiff has been prosecuting with due diligence in another civil proceeding, whether in a court of first instance or appeal or revision against the defendant in good faith in a court which does not have jurisdiction to entertain the case. A conciliation proceeding does not come within the ambit of Section 14 as this Section only talks of civil proceeding, whether in a court of first instance or appeal or revision and not conciliation proceeding.
22. Therefore the appellant‟s best case would be that the limitation period to file the suit before the correct jurisdictional forum would start to run from the date on which SLP (C) 12201/2003 filed against the order of the Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court was dismissed on 09.07.2003. The period of limitation being 3 years would come to an end on 09.07.2016. This suit was filed on 15.05.2007 and would therefore be barred by limitation. Point No.2
23. Even if the appellant contention that the suit was filed within the prescribed limitation period is believed to be true, the contention of the appellant that the dismissal order dated 10.05.1988 was not supplied to him cannot be sustained because the appellant had indeed filed an appeal against the very order dated 10.05.1988 before the Appellate Authority/Chairman, Steel Authority of India Ltd. which he claims was never served upon him. A perusal of this appeal dated 11.01.1997 filed by the appellant clearly shows that he never took this plea of not receiving the dismissal order dated 10.05.1988 in the appeal but only challenged the said order on merits. Appellant himself had enclosed the copy of the order dated 10.05.1988 along with his appeal dated 11.01.1997.
24. A perusal of the appellant‟s written submissions filed before the Appellate Authority after the Calcutta High Court disposed off W.P(C) 14193/97 with the direction to the Appellate Authority to decide the matter afresh after giving the appellant a hearing also brings out the falsity in the appellant‟s claim that he was never served with the order of dismissal dated 10.05.1988 as the grounds that have been taken in this appeal could only be formulated after one has gone through the order dated 10.05.1988. Ground No.2(d) in the appeal brings out the falsity in the appellant‟s contention that he was not communicated the order dated 10.05.1988 and is reproduced below: “No reason is recorded in the above said order no. RD-1(4850/85-E) dated 10.05.1988 to the effect that a lesser penalty is not sufficient to meet the ends of justice, though the Rule 30 of the CDA Rules, 1977 of the Company provides also for a lesser penalty in the circumstance of conviction of an employee.” This ground clearly shows that the appellant was aware of the contents of the order dated 10.05.1988 as there is no other way by which the appellant could have found out if reasons were recorded regarding a particular finding or not. Hence the appellant‟s plea of not being supplied with the order dated 10.05.1988 cannot be believed.
25. In light of the above facts and circumstances, I find no infirmity in the judgment of the Trial Court and the same is upheld and the present appeal as well as CM No.35138/2016 are dismissed with costs throughout.
JUDGE DECEMBER 14, 2017 //