Baselius Mar Thoma Mathewa v. Paulose Mar Athanasius
1979-08-10
P.N.SHINGHAL, V.R.KRISHNA IYER
body1979
DigiLaw.ai
Judgment KRISHNA IYER, J.:- The Malankara Sabha, on the Kerala Coast, is an ancient Church with a legendary past, and has a phenomenal following of a million and a half orthodox Sypian Christians with over a thousand parish churches to nourish the spiritual life of the flock. Schismatic pathology which ordinarily affects secular institutions struck this ecclesiastical organisation resulting inter alia in bitter litigative battles of several years standing. Some 250 suits manifesting this litigious syndrome, are stated to be pending in the several courts of Kerala. The members of this church are not new to forensic struggles and have, on earlier occasions, fought right up to the SC. The prolongation of such a plurality of court cases in a community at once influential, important and numerous, has many deleterious social consequences and it was wise of the High Court and the Government of Kerala to have though in terms of selecting eight of the most significant suits of the spate of cases and constituting an Additional District Courts specially for disposal of these socially sensitive cases. Thanks to this imaginative measure the eight suits which were made over to the specially appointed District Judge made headway steadily forwards. An Additional District Judge, by name, Shri. N. Vishwanath Iyer was first put in charge of these suits and he examined several witnesses. When he was transferred from Ernakulam, which is the venue of the District Court, another judicial officer by name, Shri S. Ananthasubramainan was posted in his place. The latter kept up the progress of the case and actually finished recording the entire evidence. Hardly had the arguments commenced when an application for transfer was made to the High court under S. 24 (1) of the Civil Procedure Code praying for making over the suits to some other court for disposal. Certain aspersions suggestive of bias were made therein but the High Court (Mr. Justice Bhaskaran) eventually and rightly dismissed the petition. A petition to appeal by special leave was filed to this Court but, after making some submissions, counsel withdrew that petition when we indicated our reaction. Another petition had been filed under S. 24 (1) (b) of the Code for withdrawal of the suits to the file of the High Court, which was heard by another Judge of the High Court (Mr. Justice Khalid).
Another petition had been filed under S. 24 (1) (b) of the Code for withdrawal of the suits to the file of the High Court, which was heard by another Judge of the High Court (Mr. Justice Khalid). The learned Judge dismissed that petition, and against that order the present petition for special leave has been moved. 2. We are deeply disturbed that an important community in the State of Kerala should be locked in litigation for long years and if amity can be restored by an end of the crop of cases which drive a wedge between sections of the same community it is a consummation devoutly to be wished. But all that courts can do is to adjudicate cases with the utmost speed and that has apparently been attempted successfully in the present instance. The short point is whether, at this stage and in these circumstances, the eight suits concerned should be called up to the High Court and disposed of. 3. The learned Judge considered the various grounds urged before him for withdrawal of the suits to the High Court and was unimpressed by them. Merely because a considerable section of the public was tensely interested in these litigations the court was not prepared to withdraw them to the High Court nor was the circumstances that importance and intricate question of law were involved sufficient for such transfer in its view. A massive volume of oral evidence had been recorded by the specially appointed Judge and so the High Court felt that it would be "Proper for the court that recorded the evidence to hear the arguments also." We are not inclined to fault the learned Judge in the view he has adopted. But there are many buts to any general proposition. 4. Shri Tarkunde appearing for the respondent, stressed before us, as an additional consideration that if the cases were withdrawn to the High Court had tried, as was likely by a Division Bench of that court his clients might lose a statutory right of appeal and would have to depend upon the chancy jurisdiction under Art. 136 of the Constitution. A Single appeal, as of right, would be taken away, was his apprehension. 5.
A Single appeal, as of right, would be taken away, was his apprehension. 5. Shir Nariman, appearing for the petitioners appellants has prudently though belatedly withdrawn the Special Leave Petition which made reference to bias, focussed on the advantage both sides would derive by an early determination of the litigation at the High Court level. He also submitted that there was hardly any doubt that questions of law of considerable public importance were involved and an appeal to the SC, as of right, both under Article 133 and S. 110 C. P. C., was a certainty. He further emphasised that Section 24 (1) (b) would become a dead letter if Shri Tarkundes objection that an automatic right of appeal to the SC would be imperilled in the event of the High Court withdrawing suits, were to be accepted. 6. We agree with the learned Judge of the High Court that some of the grounds put forward for withdrawal of the suits to the High Court were without merit and were rightly rejected. But we are not inclined to exaggerate the importance of the demeanour of witnesses observed by the trial Judge, especially when years have lapsed, heaps of evidence have been recorded and judicial memory with hyper-psychic sensitivity may, for a case like this, be said to be more in the books than in the were and tear of life. What weighs with us is the importance of shortening the longevity of these quasipublic litigations, reducing the enormous expenditures involved for both sides and entrusting even the first determination, now that all evidence has been recorded, to the highest deck of Justice in the State. 7. It is indubitable that after the decision by the District Court, appeals will inevitably be carried to the High Court. It is predictably reasonable to expect, from all that has been presented to us and all that we have been able to gather from the records, that the case involves questions of public moment and are likely to spiral up the SC on final appeal. In this jurisdiction, the approach has to be pragmatic, not theoretic, without whittling down the basics of law bearing on transfer of cases. 8.
In this jurisdiction, the approach has to be pragmatic, not theoretic, without whittling down the basics of law bearing on transfer of cases. 8. We do not for a moment countenance the suggestion that the district Judge is not equal to the legal intricacies or factual challenges of these or other cases, the procedural law having vested him with unlimited jurisdiction and the High Court having committed these cases to his seisin. Hints of bias are also out of bounds, as we have indicated. It these suits, at this stage of early arguments which have yet to begin effectively, are transferred to the High Court a spell of few years in the stressful life on the litigation will be saved. Taking copies of a bunch of decrees by the District Court, followed by preliminaries and filing of appeals, service of notices and other ripening processes, may consume considerable time and money. And then the High Court would begin de novo the entire arguments and appreciation of the whole range of facts and law as in first appeal it is bound to do in a case of this type. Where lakhs of people are excitedly affected by the ultimate decision and the fate of a few hundred suits and a thousand churches is to be settled by adjudication, the elimination of some years and duplication of hearings and full arguments at the commanding height of the High Court is a wise measure, all things considered. The social savings of abbreviation of laws delays are important to social justice. 9. We do not tarry to dilate on the many dimensions to this transfer petition except to state that we feel the advancement of public justice will be promoted by the High Court itself at this stage, proceedings to hear the suits. We, therefore, direct that all the suits covered by the transfer petition be transferred to the High Court and tried from the present stage post-haste, since expeditious termination is the driving force behind this order for transfer. 10. A last thought before we part with this case. When sacerdotal institutions are litigious fights double, disaster threatens society because the souls of the votaries not only suffer spiritual neglect but are maddened by the passions unleashed by forensic disputation.
10. A last thought before we part with this case. When sacerdotal institutions are litigious fights double, disaster threatens society because the souls of the votaries not only suffer spiritual neglect but are maddened by the passions unleashed by forensic disputation. We leave this lis with the deep wish that the High Court will give the suits high priority in its agenda of postings and finish this unhappy chapter, if persuasively possible, by both sides burying the hatchet, adjuring litigative pugilistic and restoring a modus vivendi which will heal old wounds, brings new harmony and please the Spirit of Christ. That is the highest justice the several lakhs of good Christians, now locked in long years of suits and appeals, sincerely hunger for. 11. We allow the appeal as indicated above. Appeal allowed. For Citation : AIR 1979 SC 1909