JUDGEMENT
SANJIB BANERJEE, J. -
(1.) THE primary similarity in these two references is in their
posing the identical ultimate question: whether a petition under Article 227 of the
Constitution of India ought to be entertained in either case.
(2.) BEFORE any discussion even on the circumstances in which these references came to be made, some ground rules need to be established by the reiteration of a few
axiomatic principles. To begin with, every High Court exercises plenary powers of
superintendence over all Courts and tribunals throughout the territories in relation
to which it exercises jurisdiction. This overwhelming prerogative - not necessarily
to merely correct orders but to keep the subordinate fora within the bounds of their
authority - is subject to a self-imposed restraint exercised by the High Courts in
ordinarily not entertaining any matter for judicial review under Article 227 of the
Constitution of India if there is an efficacious alternative remedy available to the
person seeking to invoke the jurisdiction. It is fundamental that the existence of an
efficacious alternative remedy does not make a petition otherwise amenable under
Article 227 of the Constitution to be not maintainable; it is just that the High Court
will not allow this extraordinary jurisdiction to be invoked if it recognises that there
is another effective mode of redressing the perceived wrong complained of. Secondly,
the right of appeal is a substantive right which is only created by a statute and such
right does not inhere in any person. Unlike under section 9 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 which has room enough to accommodate all civil complaints by
way of a suit unless expressly prohibited by law or barred by inescapable necessary
implication, there is no implied right of appeal unless it is expressly conferred. Thirdly,
if there is a specific provision in any law for a particular purpose, the general or
residuary provision in the same body of law or elsewhere cannot be invoked for the
same purpose. Finally, notwithstanding how a petition is intituled, or its
nomenclature, and despite an erroneous reference to the source of authority in any
petition or an order thereon, it is only the nature of the petition and the character of
the order that have a telling impact on the purport thereof, particularly in determining
whether the order is amenable to an appeal.
Co No. 1862 of 2011 is a petition under Article 227 of the Constitution arising out of an interlocutory order passed in course of an appeal from a preliminary decree
in a partition suit. The authority of the Appellate Court to make an interlocutory
order of injunction was invoked by referring to Order 39 Rules 1 and 2 of the Code
read with section 151 there of Upon the petition under Article 227 of the Constitution
being received on July 14,2011, the Single Bench noticed that there were two recent
Division Bench decisions of this Court reported at (2007) 3 CHN 166 (Ja.mu.na
Chakraborty vs. Sital Chakraborty) and at (2011) 2 Cal LT 144 (HC) (Shrimati
Mamata Guha vs. Pranab Kumar Das), which held that in similar situations no
appeal would be available from an interlocutory order of injunction passed by an
Appellate Court. It was also observed that a contrary view was taken in two other
Division Bench judgments reported at (2004) 1 CHN 1 (Sushil Kumar De vs. Chhaya
De) and at AIR 2007 Cal 154 (Raj Kumar Rowla vs. Manabendra Banerjee). The
question formulated for the reference is as follows:
"Whether, having regard to the facts and circumstances involved in this revisional application, an appeal is maintainable against the impugned order under Order 43 Rule l(r) of the Civil Procedure Code or not?"
(3.) IN CO No. 2310 of 2011, in proceedings under sections 73 and 74 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882, an interlocutory application invoking Order 39 Rules 1 and 2 read
with section 151 of the Code was filed. From the order on such application, a petition
under Article 227 of the Constitution has been carried to this Court. Upon such
petition being taken up, the reference made in CO No. 1862 of 2011 was noticed and
it was observed that,
"The question as to whether a revisional application would be maintainable against
an order of injunction passed in a misc. case is unsettled in view of conflicting
opinions expressed by two sets of Division Bench decisions of this Court.
"... Having regard to the similarity of issue involved herein i.e. whether this revisional application is maintainable or not, this application may also be placed for consideration..." ;
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