STATE OF KERALA Vs. MOIDEEN
LAWS(KER)-1993-7-7
HIGH COURT OF KERALA
Decided on July 13,1993

STATE OF KERALA Appellant
VERSUS
MOIDEEN Respondents

JUDGEMENT

Viswanatha Iyer, J. - (1.)THERE is no merit in this review petition. The appeal had been dismissed as belated as early as on 1st February, 1980. The present petition for review has been filed under S. 8c (2) of the Kerala Private Forests (Vesting and assignment) Amendment Ordinance 39/83 now replaced by the Kerala Private Forests (Vesting and assignment) Amendment Act, 1986, which is deemed to have come into force on the 191h day of November, 1983.
(2.)THE review petition has been filed beyond the normal period of limitation prescribed for a review and it is sustainable only if it is liable to be brought within the purview of S. 8c (2), the order sought to be reviewed being an order in an appeal filed under S. 8a of the Act. $. 8c (2) provides for a review only in three specified circumstances as could be seen from it. We shall extract S. 8c (2):- "notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, or in the Limitation Act, 1963 (Central Act 36 of 1963), or in any other law for the time being in force, or in any judgment, decree or order of any court or other authority, the Government, if they are satisfied that any order of the high Court in an appeal under S. 8a (including an order against which an appeal to the Supreme Court has not been admitted by that Court) has been passed on the basis of concessions made before the High Court-without the authority in writing of the Government or due to the failure to produce relevant data or other particulars before the High Court on hat an appeal against such order could not be filed before the Supreme Court by reason of the delay in applying for and obtaining;! certifie d copy of such order, may during the period beginning with the commencement of the Keral a Private Forests (Vesting and assignment) Amendment Act, 1986 and ending on the 31st day of March 1987, make an application to the High Court for review of such order. " One or other of the three conditions mentioned should be proved to exist before the petitioners could sustain an application for review under this provision. THEre is no case for the petitioners that the third ground namely that an appeal could not be filed before the Supreme Court by reason of the delay in applying for and obtaining a certified copy of this court's order exists in this case. THE appeal having been dismissed out of time, the second ground namely failure to produce relevant data or other particulars before this court also cannot be stated to exist for the reason that this court's order was hot passed by reason of such failure, but because of the default on the part of the appellants in filing the appeal in time. THE ground on which the learned Government Pleader laid much stress was that (his court's order had been passed on the basis of concessions made before it without the authority in writing of the Government. THE contention is that the very filing of an appeal out of lime is a concession, bringing the case within the first of the three grounds mentioned in S. 8c (2 ). We arc unable to agree. Concession is an act of conceding, granting or yielding. It contemplates a positive act on the part of the person making the concession by which a benefit is derived by the person in whose favour it is made. Omission to take any action or some default is not ipso facto a concession. That the concession envisaged by S. 8c (2) envisages a positive act is evident it is one to be made before this court. In other word's, there should be first a concession and secondly that concession should be before this court, in order to afford a ground for review under S. 8c (2 ). Delay in filing an appeal, be it for whatever reasons, is not a concession made before this court.
At best and even going by the arguments of the government Pleader, it may be a concession made to the party concerned, but certainly not one before this court. We arc not therefore satisfied that the delayed filing of an' appeal or its dismissal as such is on the basis of concessions made before this court. The first ground of review contemplated by S. 8c (2) also does not exist.

Since the petition for review under the extra-ordinary provision can be sustained only if one or other of the grounds mentioned in S. 8c (2)exists and since in our opinion none of them exists, this petition for review entails dismissal, ii is accordingly dismissed. . .

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