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Badridas Agarwalla v. Sohan Lal Oswal And Another

Badridas Agarwalla v. Sohan Lal Oswal And Another

(High Court Of Judicature At Calcutta)

CALCUTTA HIGH COURT | 17-01-1940

Khundkar, J.This is a reference u/s 438, Criminal P.C., by the learned Sessions Judge of the Assam Valley Districts in which he recommends that a part of an order passed by a trying Magistrate in proceedings u/s 147, Criminal P.C., should be set aside. One Sohan Lal and another had been called upon to show cause why they should not be restrained from interfering with a right of way claimed by the first party, one Badridas Agarwala. The case for the first party was that he was the owner of a latrine which was connected with the public road by means of a narrow pathway over which the municipal sweepers used to pass and which was the only access which the sweepers had to this latrine. Upon the evidence in the case the learned Magistrate found as a fact that the first party had established a right of way over this pathway, and he thereupon went on to pass the order which is the subject, matter of this reference and which is in the following terms:

I accordingly direct that the above sweepers passage, viz., a strip of land 2 it. wide running from Badris present pucca enclosure, alongside the southern pucca wall of Hanuman Bux, through the fencing in Dag 476, right up to the road in the west, be opened for use of the first partys latrine and that the 2nd party be prohibited from interfering with its use, until the whole thing is decided by a Civil Court of competent jurisdiction.

2. It is stated and not denied that the second party had erected a fencing over the pathway thus interfering with the right of way claimed on behalf of the first party, and it is contended that the order just quoted is really a mandatory injunction by reason of which the second party has been ordered to remove the fencing. The learned Sessions Judge is of the opinion that such an order cannot be passed u/s 147(2) of the Code and he has drawn our attention in his letter of reference to two decisions of this Court reported respectively in Hari Mati Dasi Vs. Hari Dasi Dasi, and Tarini Mohan De Sarkar and Another Vs. Dwarak Nath Banikya Poddar and Others, . The matter has been argued at some length before us and we are indebted to Mr. Carden Noad who appears in support of the reference for yet another decision which is reported in Haradhone Mukerjee Vs. Brojendra Nath Rai Choudhury and Another, . The case reported in Tarini Mohan De Sarkar and Another Vs. Dwarak Nath Banikya Poddar and Others, is also reported in 38 CWN 476.

3. In Hari Mati Dasi Vs. Hari Dasi Dasi, it was held that Sub-section (2) of Section 147, Criminal P.C., does not give a Magistrate any power of directing one of the parties to do a positive act by way of mandatory injunction. In that case the facts were that the first party complained that the second party had raised a pucca wall on her land blocking the windows in the house of the first party and thereby shutting out light and air from the western room in that house. The Magistrate directed that the second party, Hari Dasi Dasi should demolish the new wall within the period of one month from the date of the order and that she should not put up another wall blocking the windows of Hari Matis house till she was adjudged by a competent Court to have the right to do so. In the judgment of this Court it was pointed out that if the order of the Magistrate were to stand, the second party would have to bring a suit for a declaration that she had the right to rebuild the wall after demolishing it in obedience to the order of the Magistrate, which would be a suit of a somewhat novel character in which, if successful, the plaintiff could get no relief for the loss caused by the demolition. We are convinced that in the special facts of that case the order passed by this Court was the only order which could have been made. In so far, however, as that decision purported to lay down that a mandatory order could not in any circumstances be passed under Sub-section (2) of Section 147 of the Code there is, as will presently be seen, a conflict of judicial opinion. This case was followed by the case in Tarini Mohan De Sarkar and Another Vs. Dwarak Nath Banikya Poddar and Others, in which the mandatory order was for the removal of a structure described as a chapra which we have been given to understand was a shed with a corrugated iron roof. The learned Judges who disposed of Tarini Mohan De Sarkar and Another Vs. Dwarak Nath Banikya Poddar and Others, would seem to have considered themselves bound by the decision in Hari Mati Dasi Vs. Hari Dasi Dasi, . In Haradhone Mukerjee Vs. Brojendra Nath Rai Choudhury and Another, it was observed that there was nothing in Section 147 which would entitle the Magistrate to direct the petitioner to pull down a wall which was said to obstruct the passage of water.

4. Mr. Santosh Kumar Basu, who appears to oppose this reference, has drawn our attention to a number of cases which were decided before Section 147 was amended. In Pashupati Nath v. Nanda Lal (01) 28 Cal. 734 [LQ/CalHC/1901/45] where it was found that the first party had a right to the flow of water for the purpose of irrigation from a certain channel passing through the village of the second party who had obstructed such flow by erecting a bundh, it was held that, u/s 147, Criminal P.C., a Magistrate was competent to direct that the obstruction should be removed. In the same volume of the Calcutta Weekly Notes at p. 335 is reported the case of Lalit Chandra Niyogi v. Tarini Prosad Gupta (01) 5 C.W.N. 335 in which it was laid down that, where one party has any right of way over the land of another who obstructs such right by erecting certain huts and there is a likelihood of the breach of the peace in consequence of such obstruction, the Magistrate is competent under the provisions of Section 147 of the Code to direct that the obstruction be removed. In Ambica Prosad Singh v. Gur Sahay Singh (12) 39 Cal. 560 [LQ/CalHC/1912/29] it was held that the Magistrate had jurisdiction u/s 147 of the Code, on being satisfied that a party had a right to have an opening in an al for the purpose of draining off the surplus water from his lands and that he had exercised the right for several years, to pass an order requiring the opposite party to make the opening within a reasonable time and, on his failure to do so, directing the police to make the same.

5. As just stated, these decisions were u/s 147 as it stood before the amendment. We have given anxious consideration to the language of the old Section and to that of the new, and we are not prepared to say that the alteration brought about by the amendment makes any difference to the power conferred upon Magistrates in matters of this kind. In this connexion, we consider it to be most significant that the amendment of the Section was not accompanied by an amendment of Form 24 in Schedule 5 to the Code. Our attention has been drawn to the decision of a Single Judge of the Madras High Court in Venkanna v. Venkata Surya Neeladri Rao (30) A.I.R.1930 Mad. 865 [LQ/MadHC/1930/46] and we think it would be advantageous to quote a portion of the judgment in that case as, in our opinion, the reasoning which the passage embodies is both illuminating and helpful:

Section 147, Criminal P.C., before it was amended in 1923, dealt, like the present Section, with disputes concerning the right of use of any land or water and it enabled the Magistrate, if such right was found to exist, to make an order permitting such a thing to be done or directing that such a thing should not be done. The corresponding provision of the Section as it now stands is that, if the dispute exists regarding any alleged right of user of any land or water the Magistrate is empowered on his being satisfied about the existence of such a right, whether it be claimed as an easement or otherwise, to make an order prohibiting any interference with the exercise of such rights. The order under the old Section was directed to the person alleging that he was entitled to the right. The order under the new Section is where the right exists directed to the person who is interfering with the right. Such an order is valid so long as it merely prohibits the interference with the exercise o the rights. I do not see how from this difference any inference is to be derived as to the propriety or otherwise of, what may be generally called mandatory injunctions. Indeed Form No. 24 in Schedule 5, Criminal P.C., seems rather to favour the argument that what might in effect amount to a mandatory injunction is permissible. In that form, in para. 2, the words of the order that the Magistrate may pass are I do order...shall not take (or retain) possession of the said land (or water) to the exclusion of the enjoyment of the right of use aforesaid.

That form is applicable to the use of land or water and it contemplates an order against a person who has interfered with another mans use of land or water that he shall not retain possession of that land or water in violation of that user. In one sense it may be said that that is a mandatory injunction because it requires a person enjoined to give up possession to the other party. I do not see what objection can be raised to using the same form as against a person who has put up an obstruction to the flow of water to which another man is entitled, modified in the following way : I order that...shall not retain any obstruction to the flow of water along the said channel to the exclusion of the enjoyment of the right of user of...or words to that effect : or alternatively. I order that...shall not retain possession of the said water to the exclusion of the enjoyment of the right of user of...Either form would amount to the same thing in effect and involve upon the person enjoined the removal of any obstruction which he had put up. I am therefore unable to say that the amendment of Section 147 has had any effect in so far as making the decision in Karuppana Kownden v. Kandaswami Kowndan (14) AIR 1914 Mad. 712 inapplicable.

6. Following the reasoning set out in the passage just quoted, we are of opinion that, in the present case, the Magistrate might, in accordance with Form 24 in Schedule 5, have framed his order in the following words : I do order that the second party shall not retain possession of the pathway with the fence thereon to the exclusion of the right of user of the first party. Had the order been in these terms, it would, in our view, have nonetheless amounted, in the facts of this case, to a direction to the second party to remove the fencing, The last case to which our attention has been drawn by Mr. Basu is a decision of this Court u/s 147 as it now stands after the amendment. It is the case in Khajer Naskar and Another Vs. Tabrej Ali Naskar, . C.C. Ghose J., Acting Chief Justice as he then was, held that it was impossible to lay down a hard and fast rule, that in every case the final order of the Magistrate should be in exactly the same words as are used in the Section. Each case must depend upon its own facts. He also held that, where it was found that by reason of the erection of a wall, an obstruction to the right of the complainant was caused, an order directing removal of the obstruction though not exactly in terms of Section 147(2) was valid. In the course of his judgment the learned Acting Chief Justice observed as follows:

If the Magistrate says to the party who is obstructing the exercise of the right alleged by the complainant that he should be prohibited from interfering with the exercise of such right, and if he translates the order in a manner which would be effective by saying that you the party obstructing must remove the obstruction, that is the same thing as is indicated in the terms of the clause referred to above.

7. We prefer to follow the decisions in which it has been held that Section 147(2) does in a proper case cover the power to order a person to do something or, in other words, the power to direct a mandatory in junction. We are fortified in this view by the manifests intention of the Legislature that Section 147 off the Code may be invoked in proper cases for the purpose of preventing a breach o$ the public peace. In a case such as that with which we are now dealing we can imagine nothing more likely to embitter the feelings of the successful party and thereby aggravate the possibility of a breach of the peace, than to make an order to the effect that he is entitled to use the disputed passage and at the same time to render the exercise of the right impossible by refusing to remove the obstruction which impedes the exercise of the right. On the analogy off Section 145 of the Code, the obvious intention off the Legislature was to allow the free exercise of the right which had been established in this summary proceeding until the final rights of the contending parties had been ultimately decided in the Civil Court, and it seems to be clear that it would be impossible to give effect to this intention in many cases without issuing some order oft a mandatory nature. The language of Sub-section (2) of Section 147 is sufficiently wide to confer a discretion upon the Magistrate as to the nature of the order that he may make in prohibiting any interference with the right of the successful party. In a situation such as that with which the learned Judges were dealing in Hari Mati Dasi Vs. Hari Dasi Dasi, it would have been unreasonable to direct the demolition, of a pueca structure when some slight delay would have secured a full adjudication of: the rights of the parties in the Civil Court. But the circumstances are clearly different in the case of the obstruction of a sweepers passage by a fence, and, in our view, in sudb5 a case it is both reasonable and legal to hold that an order prohibiting any interference with the right to use the passage; should involve a direction to the effect that the obstruction should be removed. This reference is accordingly rejected.

Edgley, J.

8. I agree.

Advocate List
Bench
  • Khundkar, J
  • Edgley, J
Eq Citations
  • AIR 1940 CAL 545
  • LQ/CalHC/1940/13
Head Note

Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) — Section 147 — Mandatory injunction — Scope —Held, that a Magistrate may, in appropriate cases, pass a mandatory order under Section 147(2) of the CrPC — In the instant case, the Magistrate had directed the removal of a fence that obstructed a sweeper’s passage, which was held to be a valid order — The language of Section 147(2) is sufficiently wide to confer