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Promoting Harmony
Daaman
Article 226 can’t be used for deciding disputes for which civil and criminal remedies are available
Roshina T Vs Abdul Azeez KT & Ors
Supreme Court
03/12/2018
CIVIL APPEAL NO.11759 OF 2018 (Arising out of S.L.P.(C) No. 30465 of 2017)
About/from the judgment:
‘The remedy under Article 226 of the Constitution shall not be available except where violation of some statutory duty on the part of statutory authority is alleged. ‘
Setting aside a Kerala High Court judgment, the Supreme Court has observed that a regular suit, and not a writ petition, is the appropriate remedy for settlement of the disputes relating to property rights between private persons.
The Kerala High Court, in this case, had allowed a writ petition filed by a person, who was forcefully dispossessed by police, seeking restoration of possession.
HC Approach: Cannot ask a ‘victim’ to follow a due process of law against those who are precisely guilty of violating the due process of law’
Abdul Azeez, who lived in a flat owned by Roshina, had approached the high court alleging that he was dispossessed from his house by the police, despite there being a civil case pending between him and the land lady.
Kerala High Court Division Bench noted that the court has two options: “(1) tell Azeez to go before a civil court under Section 6 of the Specific Relief Act; or (2) to grant relief under its extraordinary jurisdiction, which has all the facets of an equitable remedy.” The bench, which said that the police ‘facilitated the eviction,’ also observed that “it puts a premium on dishonesty to ask Azeez, a victim, to follow a due process of law against those who are precisely guilty of violating the due process of law”.
The bench then directed the landlady to restore possession to Azeez giving her liberty to have recourse to due process of law to recover her possession.
Ought To Have Been Dismissed In Limine
In the appeal filed by the land lady, the bench comprising Justice Abhay Manohar Sapre and Justice Indu Malhotra observed that this writ petition seeking relief of restoration of the possession of the flat in question was not maintainable and the same ought to have been dismissed in limine as being not maintainable.
Disagreeing with the approach adopted by the high court, the bench said: “It unnecessarily went into all the questions of fact arising in the case on the basis of factual pleadings in detail (43 pages) and recorded a factual finding that it was the respondent No. 1 (writ petitioner) who was in possession of the flat and, therefore, he be restored with his possession of the flat by the appellant.”
It said that the remedy under Article 226 of the Constitution shall not be available except where violation of some statutory duty on the part of statutory authority is alleged. “In such cases, the Court has jurisdiction to issue appropriate directions to the authority concerned. It is held that the High Court cannot allow its constitutional jurisdiction to be used for deciding disputes, for which remedies under the general law, civil or criminal are available. This Court has held that it is not intended to replace the ordinary remedies by way of a civil suit or application available to an aggrieved person. The jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution being special and extraordinary, it should not be exercised casually or lightly on mere asking by the litigant.”
“First, there did exist a dispute between the appellant and respondent No. 1 as to who was in possession of the flat in question at the relevant time; Second, a dispute regarding possession of the said flat between the two private individuals could be decided only by the Civil Court in civil suit or by the Criminal Court in Section 145 Cr.P.C proceedings but not in the writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution…,” the bench said and directed the parties to pursue remedies before civil court.
Read the Judgment
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