Judgment :- 1. The plaintiffs in a suit for partition are the revision petitioners. The suit was filed in 1969. Pending suit some of the plaint schedule properties were acquired under the Land Acquisition Act for some public purpose. Thereafter the plaint was amended so as to include a prayer for declaration of the plaintiffs' right to a share in the compensation amount. Some of the defendants had filed a written statement to the original plaint in which one of the contentions was that proper court-fee has not been paid for the plaint. But this contention was not pressed for consideration either before or after the amendment of the plaint. Both parties let in evidence on the issues raised on the pleadings and the case was posted for final hearing. One. of the issues raised in the case was whether the court-fee paid is not sufficient. After the final hearing the learned Munsiff entered a finding on this issue alone by holding that the valuation for the purpose of court-fee and for the purpose of jurisdiction is not correct and that the plaint if properly valued for purpose of jurisdiction will exceed the pecuniary jurisdiction of the Munsiff's Court. Consequently the lower court held that the plaint should be returned for presentation to the proper court having jurisdiction over the subject matter. He did not enter a finding as regards the exact court-fee payable on "the valuation. Time to re-present the plaint in the proper court was fixed as one month. Before the expiry of this period of one month the plaintiffs filed an application to amend the plaint by withdrawing the declared relief in respect of the compensation amount awarded for some of the plaint properties acquired pending suit. This was rejected by the learned Munsiff stating that after the earlier order directing return of the plaint for presentation to the proper court having jurisdiction over the subject matter no plaint is there to amend. This is objected to in this revision petition. 2. According to the learned counsel for the revision petitioner the view of the lower court that there is no plaint before that Court to amend after the order for return of the plaint to the proper court having jurisdiction, is not correct. In support of his contention he referred to Order VII R.10(2), C.P.C. which is in the following terms : 10.
In support of his contention he referred to Order VII R.10(2), C.P.C. which is in the following terms : 10. Return of plaint [1] x x x [2] On returning a plaint the judge shall endorse thereon the date of its presentation and return, the name of the party presenting it, and a brief statement of the reasons for returning it." and contended that since such an endorsement has not been made in the plaint by the Munsiff at the time when or before the amendment application was filed the learned Munsiff is still in seisin of the plaint. He also referred to Explanation I to S.14 of the Limitation Act and the decision in Brij Mohandas v, Narsinghdas (AIR. 1971 M. P. 243) where it has been held that the civil proceeding can be deemed to have ended only by the endorsement made as per Order VII R.10 (2) CPC. No doubt R.10 (2) of Order VII provides that the judge must endorse on the plaint the date of its presentation and return and the brief statement of the reasons for the return of it and this is a judicial act to be performed by the Court. But the absence of such an endorsement is a mere irregularity and it cannot be said that the court is is seisin of the plaint, after the order for return, to enable it to make any amendment in the plaint. Even if the suit is to be deemed pending until such an endorsement, that is only for the purpose of calculating the period of exclusion under S.14 of the Limitation Act. Once the plaint has been ordered to be returned, there is nothing remaining to be done by the court except to make an endorsement and the omission in making such an endorsement is only irregular and does not make the order for return ineffective or incomplete. An order for return is final so far as that court is concerned and such an order is also appealable as an appealable order. In this case the learned Munsiff has passed an order directing the return of the plaint and the time for representation is also fixed. That effectively makes the court functus officio in all matters except for the limited purpose of making an endorsement.
In this case the learned Munsiff has passed an order directing the return of the plaint and the time for representation is also fixed. That effectively makes the court functus officio in all matters except for the limited purpose of making an endorsement. Again the reasons for the return as provided for in R.10 (2) of Order VII need not be on the back of the plaint itself. The order for return containing the reasons serves the purpose of an endorsement as required under S.10 (2). 3. The learned counsel next submitted that even after the order for return is passed, the court can consider an application for amendment and in support of this position he relied on the decisions of the Madras High Court in Ponnapundan v. Authimoola Ponnapundnn (ILR. 33 Madras 262), Ramachandrayya v. Venkataratnam (AIR. 1926 Madras 133) and Chendrayya v. Seethanna (AIR. 1939 Madras 397) In Ponnapundan v. Authimoola Ponnapundan (ILR. 33 Madras 262) there was an enquiry as to the value of the subject matter and the suit was found undervalued and so the plaint was returned for presentation to the proper court. The plaintiff amended his plaint by correcting the valuation and striking of some of the properties so as to leave the case in the jurisdiction of the District Munsiff. The District Munsiff thereupon re-admitted the plaint and the question for decision was whether this was right. In the Letters Patent Appeal the court held that he has the power. This is followed in the other cases referred to. But there is a line of cases which take the view that once the Court finds that it has no jurisdiction over a suit it cannot pass any valid order in such a suit except the orders which the Statute expressly empowers to pass such as the order to return the plaint to be presented to the proper court and orders as to costs - See Kannuswami Pillai v. Jagathambal (AIR. 1919 Madras 1071). After the order for return of the plaint if any amendment is made by the plaintiff in the plaint and re-presents it, it is really a fresh plaint which the court has always power to receive. This is different from saying that a court which has held that it has no jurisdiction over the suit can thereafter amend it so as to make it a suit within its jurisdiction.
This is different from saying that a court which has held that it has no jurisdiction over the suit can thereafter amend it so as to make it a suit within its jurisdiction. This is also the view taken in the Single Bench decision of the Bombay High Court in Shobha v. Mahale (AIR. 1969 Bombay 370). The principle is stated thus at page 372, Para.7: "As long as the Court has not given a finding that it had no jurisdiction and the plaint should be returned for presentation to the proper court it is seized of the matter because the Court has the right to decide the question of its own jurisdiction even if the decision ultimately be that it has no jurisdiction. As long as the Court is seized of the matter it is open to a party at any Time to abandon a part of the claim by a unilateral act by making a statement to that effect which the Court must record if thereafter the suit is within its jurisdiction, the Court would proceed to bear it." I respectfully agree with this principle and I hold that the court has no power to order an amendment of the plaint after it has passed an order directing return of the plaint for presentation to the proper court having jurisdiction. In the result I do not find any reason to interfere with the order passed by the learned Munsiff. The Civil Revision Petition is dismissed, but in the circumstances I make no order as to costs.