THE HON'BLE SRI
JUSTICE V.V.S.RAO
Civil Revision
Petition No.1913 of 2006
20-06-2006
Lokara Om Kumar, S/o.late
Amarnath Rao
Baikan Satyanarayana, S/o.Late
Baikan Mallaiah
and others
Counsel for Petitioners: Mr.K.Mohan
Counsel for the Respondents 1 to
4: Mr.V.V.N.Narayana Rao for Mr.G.Dhanamjai
:ORDER:
This is a civil revision petition filed
under Article 227 of Constitution of India.
It is filed by the defendant in O.S.No.2053 of 2003 on the file of the
Court of the Principal Junior Civil Judge, Ranga Reddy District at L.B.Nagar, Hyderabad. The suit is filed for injunction simpliciter
by the respondents herein. Along with
the written statement, it appears, the petitioner filed a sale deed dated
24.5.1995. The same was however not
marked as an exhibit in the evidence.
The petitioner, therefore, filed an application being I.A.No.387 of 2006
under Order XIII Rule 7 (2) of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC). He prayed for return of the sale deed and
certified copy of the General Power of Attorney dated 24.6.1991. He stated in the affidavit accompanying the
said application that he requires the documents to avail bank loan. This application was opposed. Taking a view that unless and until the suit
is disposed of, the request of the petitioner for return of the documents
cannot be accepted, the trial Court dismissed the application. This is challenged as one vitiated by grave
error apparent on the face of record.
Learned Counsel
for the petitioner placed reliance on subrule (2) of Rule 7 of Order XIII of
CPC in support of the contention that the documents not admitted in evidence
can be returned to the person producing the same. Per contra, the learned Counsel for the
respondents/plaintiffs opposed the civil revision petition. He would urge that as the petitioner desires
to raise bank loan by creating a charge on the property, he is not entitled for
return of the documents.
A short but
interesting question that requires an answer is whether a document not admitted
in evidence and which does not form part of the record can be returned before
conclusion of the suit to the party who produced such document.
It is needless to point out that every
party to the suit has required to produce all the documents relied on as
evidence - (i) At the stage of presenting pleadings (see Order VII Rule 14 and
Order VIII Rule 1A of CPC); (ii) At the stage of trial on or before settlement
of the issues; and (iii) During the trial during the cross-examination. It is however not necessary for the trial
Court to mark all the documents produced by the parties to the suit. Only such documents admissible in evidence,
which are properly stamped and registered (if
necessary), can be received as
evidence and marked as exhibits. Only
those documents, which are admitted in evidence and marked as exhibits, form
part of the court record. All other
documents either generated by the registry of the Court during the process of
the suit or during the proceedings - like copies of the summons, notices and
other administrative forms; and the documents produced by the parties to the suit, which are not
admitted in evidence and which are not marked as exhibits, do not form part of
the record. It is only such documents
including the original copies of the plaint, written statement, the documents
admitted in evidence, proceedings of the Court and office copies of the orders
of the Court, which form part of the record.
This record has to be retained by the Court till the matter is finally
disposed of. No purpose would be served
by retaining the documents, which are not admitted in evidence. This is made clear by Rule 9 of Order XIII,
which reads as under.
9. Return of
admitted documents.- (1) Any person, whether a party to the suit or not,
desirous of receiving back any document produced by him in the suit and placed
on the record shall, unless the document is impounded under rule 8, be entitled
to receive back the same,- (a) where the suit is one in which an appeal is not
allowed, when the suit has been disposed of, and
(b) where the
suit is one in which an appeal is allowed, when the Court is satisfied that the
time for preferring an appeal has elapsed and that no appeal has been preferred
or, if an appeal has been preferred, when the appeal has been disposed of:
Provided that a document may be
returned at any time earlier than that prescribed by this rule if the person
applying therefor-
(a) delivers to the proper
officer for being substituted for the original,-
(i) in the case of a party to the
suit, a certified copy, and
(ii) in the case of any other
person, an ordinary copy which has been examined, compared and certified in the
manner mentioned in sub-rule (2) of rule 17 of Order VII, and
(b) undertakes to produce the
original, if required to do so:
Provided also, that no document
shall be returned which, by force of the decree, has become wholly void or
useless.
(2) On the return of a document admitted in
evidence, a receipt shall be given
by the person receiving it.
A
plain reading of the above rule would show that any person whether a party to
the suit or not desirous of receiving back any document produced by him in the
suit and placed on record is entitled to receive the same - (i) when the suit
has been disposed of; (ii) where the suit is one in which appeal is not
allowed; (iii) where the suit is one in which the appeal is allowed, but no
appeal has been preferred within the time prescribed by law and appeal has been
disposed of. Now a reference may also be
made to Order XLI of CPC, which deals with appeal from original decrees. After receiving the appeal, the appellate
Court is required to call for the record of the suit from the trial Court. The record that is sent for is only such
record and documents which form part of the suit and not otherwise.
There is yet another reason to come to
the conclusion as above. Under Order XVI
of CPC, the Court can issue summons to any witness to take his evidence or to produce records. In a case where a person is summoned to
produce only records (documents) and if some of the documents are not marked by
the party summoning the witness to produce records, it would cause any amount
of prejudice if the documents, which are
not admitted in evidence, are not returned immediately to the person who
produced such documents. In such a case
whether the party is likely to use the
returned document as a security to raise the loan
or is likely to part with the
subject matter of the document, are irrelevant while considering an application
under Order XIII Rule 7(2) of CPC. As
noticed herein above, as per Rule 9 of Order XIII of CPC, only those documents,
which are admitted and marked as evidence, cannot be returned till the disposal
of the suit.
Further more a reference to the
Destruction of Records Act, 1917 (the Act,for brevity) and the Rules made
thereunder by High Court of A.P., would also support the view that there is no
necessity for the Court to keep unmarked documents in the records or become a
custodian of such unmarked documents unwillingly. Destruction of Records Act, 1917, empowers
the competent authority; High Court in the case of judiciary - to make
Rules. In exercise of powers under
Section 3(3) of the Act, High Court of Andhra Pradesh made the
Rules. The relevant Rules are Rules 2 and 3, which
read as under.
2. Records to be divided in to
parts - Every record shall, after its completion and immediately before it is
deposited in the record room, be divided into parts as shown in the table given
in part-B of the Appendix, and to facilitate this division, each paper shall,
so soon as it is filed with the record, be numbered and marked off in the index
as appertaining to one or another of such parts. Unfiled documents to be kept apart and
destroyed - Other documents which have been produced by parties but have either
not been tendered in evidence, or having, been tendered in evidence, have been
rejected, shall be kept apart from the record of the suit or other proceeding
to which they belong and entered in the register of unfilled documents and
shall, if not reclaimed by the party who produced them, be retained in the
court in which they were produced for a period of one year from the date of the
final order of the court in the suit or proceeding in which the documents were
produced, and shall, at the expiration of that period be destroyed in the
manner prescribed by rule 8 infra.
Provided that notice of destruction
shall be given in the manner prescribed by rule 6 infra in the month of January
or July succeeding the date of expiry of the period of one year preferred to in
this rule and also be affixing to the notice board of the Court (at the time of
publication in the Gazette) a copy of the notice published in the District
Gazette. Rule 10 infra shall not apply
to such documents. No application is necessary for the return of the documents
produced, which have either not been tendered in evidence, or if tendered, have
been rejected. It is sufficient if a
receipt for their return is taken in the list with which have been put up.
3. Periods of retention of records - The parts
of records described in the table given in Part C of the Appendix shall be
retained for the periods respectively specified against them from the date of
their completion provided that in any case the presiding officer may, for
reasons to be recorded in writing, direct that any of the papers in any one
part be transferred to any other part for which a longer period of retention is
prescribed; in which case the fact shall be noted in the index and the papers
dealt with as if they had belonged from the commencement to the part to which
they were so transferred. Processes to defendants in ex-parte suits - The
processes issued to defendants or respondents who are ex-parte in suits or
appeals falling under sub-heads 1 to 4 of Part C.1 shall be transmitted by the
District Court to Subordinate Courts at the time of the destruction of Part-I
so that they may be included in Part I of the execution record, in cases in
which the execution is not complete. If
at the time of destruction of Part-I execution is complete, the record-keeper
should include the said processes in Part I execution record.
As per Regulation 2, unfilled
documents, which have been tendered in evidence or those documents, which have
been tendered in evidence, have been rejected, have to be returned to the party
who produced such documents. If those
documents are not reclaimed by the party, who produced them, then only they
have to be retained in the Court for a period of one year from the date of
final order. This only means that there is no necessity to keep the unmarked
documents in the case file. In the
eventuality of the party producing the unmarked documents not reclaimed them
then only such documents have to be retained in the Court for a period of one
year. Therefore, the view taken by the
learned Principal Junior Civil Judge, Ranga Reddy District at L.B.Nagar, is
unsustainable in law.
For the above reasons, the civil
revision petition must succeed, as the learned trial Judge has committed a
grave error apparent on the face of record. The Civil Revision Petition is
allowed with costs.
1 comment:
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