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1961 DIGILAW 258 (MAD)

Ratilal U. Shah . . v. G. Subramania Pillai

1961-09-29

S.RAMACHANDRA.IYER

body1961
Judgment.- This petition arises out of the Order of the Additional District Munsif, Tirunelveli, declining to return the plaint as prayed for by the plaintiff. The plaintiff is the holder of a promissory note, dated 17th December, 1952. He had an option of filing the suit at Bombay or at Tirunelveli. On 2nd December, 1955, he filed a suit under the promissory note in the City Civil Court at Bombay. That Court took the view that it had no jurisdiction and returned the plaint for presentation to the proper Court. The petitioner contested the correctness of the order returning the plaint by appeal to the High Court at Bombay. In the meantime, he also took a return of the plaint and presented the same to the District Munsif’s Court at Tirunelveli, which duly registered the same as a suit. As stated earlier, the Tirunelveli Court, admittedly, had jurisdiction to entertain the plaint. On 3rd August, 1959 the Bombay High Court set aside the order of the City Civil Court returning the plaint, holding that the Bombay Court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit. Thereupon the plaintiff applied to the lower Court to return the plaint to enable him to present the same to the Bombay Court. The learned District Munsif had declined to grant the requsest. Hence this Revision Petition. I am of opinion that the learned District Munsif was correct when he held that the Court had no jurisdiction to return the plaint. Order 7, rule 10 Civil Procedure Code, which deals with the return of plaint, states that the plaint shall be returned at any stage of the suit to be presented to the Court in which the suit should have been instituted. Under that rule, the Court which is returning the plaint should have no jurisdiction to entertain the suit. In the present case, the District Munsif had jurisdiction to entertain the suit, and, therefore, the provisions of Order 7, rule 10, will not apply. Mr. P.N. Appuswami Ayyar, learned counsel for the petitioner, made an earnest appeal to me to exercise the powers under section 151, Civil procedure Code, and thus enable the petitioner to agitate his cause in the Court of his first choice. I am afraid that request cannot be acceded to. Section 151 is intended to prevent an abuse of process of Court. I am afraid that request cannot be acceded to. Section 151 is intended to prevent an abuse of process of Court. It cannot be stated that the entertainment of a suit by a Court competent to entertain the same is an abuse of process of Court. That Court was the choice of the petitioner himself, though it might be that it was only his second choice. It was perfectly open to the petitioner not to have presented the plaint to the Tirunelveli Court and waited for the decision of the Bombay High Court. Even if the decision of the Bombay High Court were to go against him, he could certainly have obtained an exclusion of the period spent in the Bombay Courts under section 14 of the Limitation Act, in the computation of the period of limitation, when he presented the plaint to the proper Court. But in the present case, the petitioner had a choice between two Courts. He first exercised his choice by filing the suit in the Bombay Court. He found some impediment ; so, he himself decided to exercise a second choice. The Court at Tirunelveli, which has been properly seized of the suit, cannot now be asked to return the plaint on the ground that the party now chooses to go back to Bombay. Mr.Appuswami Ayyar relied on the decisions in Nanu Mal v. Firm Shibba Mal Nand Kishore1 and Ramchandra v. Mohanlal2. In the former case, it was held that the plaintiff, to whom the plaint was returned for presentation to the proper Court, could present the plaint to the latter Court, and, at the same time, prosecute the appeal from the order returning the plaint. In that case, only one of the two Courts had jurisdiction to entertain the suit, and the question did not arise in the form in which it does now. The second case relied on is also to the same effect. Neither of the two cases deals with a case where the plaintiff, having a choice between two forums, first instituted a suit in one forum, and, after having got return of the plaint albeit under an order of Court, presented the same to the other forum, could get the plaint back so as to enable him to go to the first of the two Courts. To recognise such a power in the party will be to enable him to play with the Court at his whim or caprice and they cannot be allowed. The learned District Munsif was right when he declined to return the plaint as prayed for by the plaintiff. The Civil Revision Petition fails and is dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. R.M. ------------- Petition dismissed.