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Bawa Amrita Nand Gir, v. The Advocate-General, Punjab & Others,
Structured Summary of the Opinion
Factual and Procedural Background
This opinion arises from a long-running dispute over trusts/charitable property (Dharamshala Chainpuri / Bagichi Chainpuri and attached shops and temples) and several successive suits and applications concerning rights, management and possession. Key events recited in the opinion (in chronological order) are:
- On or about 10 December 1946, Nanak Chand and others filed a suit seeking a declaration that a gift in favour of Amrita Nand Gir (the present petitioner) was unlawful and that the petitioner had no right in the property. That suit was dismissed by the trial judge on 7 December 1948 for not framing issues on merits; the High Court set aside that dismissal on 12 October 1955 and remanded for proper trial.
- On remand, the trial court on 16 January 1956 held that the gift held good so long as certain conditions persisted; the plaintiffs appealed but their appeal was dismissed for non-prosecution on 14 August 1957.
- Gian Chand and others obtained written consent under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure from the Advocate-General (dated 28 November 1960) and filed a suit; that suit was dismissed on 29 October 1962 and the appeal was dismissed for non-prosecution on 20 October 1965.
- Respondents 2–6 (not parties to the previous suits) applied to the Advocate-General for sanction under Section 92 to file a suit for removal of the petitioner from management of Bagichi Chainpuri and related reliefs. The petitioner filed written objections. The Advocate-General (Shri Hira Lal Sibal) granted the sanction and directed the respondents to file a plaint by 15 August 1970.
- The plaint was filed by the Advocate-General; in response the present writ petition was filed on 19 September 1970 by Bawa Amrita Nand Gir to quash the Advocate-General's order (Annexure 'J') as illegal, without jurisdiction, unconstitutional and improper.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether an order of the Advocate-General of a State giving written consent under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure to the institution of a suit is a judicial or quasi-judicial act (and therefore amenable to judicial review by writs such as certiorari under Article 226 of the Constitution).
- Whether a permission under Section 92 is equivalent to instituting a representative suit that binds persons who were not parties to the earlier litigation (the petitioner relied on the contention that Section 92 suits are representative and create constructive res judicata against the petitioner).
- Whether, if the Advocate-General refuses to grant permission under Section 92 for extraneous or irrelevant reasons, the High Court may issue a writ of mandamus to compel him to perform the statutory duty.
Arguments of the Parties
Petitioner's Arguments (Chaudhry Roop Chand)
- The Advocate-General lacked jurisdiction to grant permission under Section 92 because the respondents are bound by earlier competent civil court judgments on principles of constructive res judicata.
- Reliance on Ahmad Adam Sait v. M. E. Makhri (AIR 1964 SC 107): submitted that a suit filed under Section 92 is as much a representative suit as one under Order I Rule 8 of the Code and therefore binds everyone whether or not they were a party to the suit.
- Challenged the Advocate-General's order as illegal, without jurisdiction, unconstitutional and improper, and sought quashing of that order under Article 226.
Respondents' Arguments (H.L. Mital)
- The Advocate-General, in granting permission under Section 92, does not decide the rights of contesting parties; he merely opens the door of the court for those who have the Advocate-General's sanction. Any pleas, including constructive res judicata, can and should be raised by the defendant-petitioner in the suit as defences on merits.
- The Advocate-General's decision is a purely administrative decision and not a judicial or quasi-judicial act; therefore this Court has no jurisdiction under Article 226 to quash the Advocate-General's order by certiorari.
- Relied on precedents from the Allahabad and Rajasthan High Courts and other authorities which hold that the functions of the Advocate-General under Section 92 are administrative/executive rather than judicial/quasi-judicial.
Table of Precedents Cited
Precedent | Rule or Principle Cited For (as stated in the opinion) | Application by the Court in this Opinion |
---|---|---|
Ahmad Adam Sait v. M. E. Makhri, AIR 1964 SC 107 | Submitted by petitioner to show a suit under Section 92 is representative and binds all, like a suit under Order I Rule 8. | Cited as petitioner’s principal authority for the contention that Section 92 suits bind non-parties; the Court did not accept that the Advocate-General's consent thereby becomes judicial in nature for purposes of Article 226. |
Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh v. Mangalgir, Mohatmim Dera, AIR 1956 Pepsu 65 | Held that an Advocate-General's order under Section 92 is amenable to writ of certiorari (took the view the function is quasi-judicial). | The Court observed that this decision was based on Abu Backer Adam Sait and that, because Abu Backer was later overruled, the Pepsu decision's foundation was undermined and could not be treated as sound. |
Abu Backer Adam Sait v. Advocate-General of Travancore Cochin State, AIR 1954 Trav Co 331 | Held the Advocate-General's order under Section 92 to be quasi-judicial and amenable to writ of certiorari. | Noted as original authority supporting writ review of Advocate-General orders; later expressly overruled by the Kerala Full Bench in A.K. Bhaskar, and thus the Court declined to follow Abu Backer. |
Dhian Das v. Jagat Ram, 1910 Pun Re 104 (8 Ind Cas 1160) | Held that the Collector's order under the earlier corresponding provision was an executive/administrative order and not subject to revision (i.e., not judicial/quasi-judicial). | Referred to as an early authority holding such orders administrative; the Court treated value of this line of authority as supporting the administrative view. |
Shrimali Lal Kasliwal v. Advocate-General, AIR 1955 Raj 166 | Rajasthan High Court view that the Advocate-General's function under Section 92 is not judicial/quasi-judicial and is not revisable under Article 227 nor subject to certiorari under Article 226. | Identified as part of the consensus of High Court authorities the Court was inclined to follow; the Court accepted this line of authority as persuasive on the administrative nature of the function. |
Swami Shantanand Saraswati v. Advocate-General, U.P., AIR 1955 All 372 | Allahabad High Court Division Bench held the Advocate-General's consent under Section 92 to be an administrative/executive act not amenable to certiorari under Article 226. | The Court treated this as a major authority forming the consensus that the function is administrative and adopted this view in reaching its conclusion. |
A.K. Bhaskar v. Advocate-General, AIR 1962 Ker 90 (Full Bench) | Full Bench of Kerala High Court overruled Abu Backer and held that the Advocate-General's consent under Section 92 is not judicial/quasi-judicial and is not subject to Article 226 review. | The Court relied on and followed the Kerala Full Bench decision as having overruled the contrary Travancore Cochin view, and treated that overruling as decisive against the Pepsu decision. |
Raju v. Advocate-General, Madras, AIR 1962 Mad 320 | Madras High Court (Single Judge) followed the view that an Advocate-General's consent under Section 92 is not judicial and cannot be quashed under Article 226. | Noted as part of the High Court consensus which the Division Bench found persuasive and inclined to follow. |
K. M. Abdul Kasim v. P. M. N. Mohamed Dawood, AIR 1961 Mad 244 | Decision under Section 55(2) of the Muslim Wakfs Act: holding permission to file a suit was administrative, not equivalent to a judicial/quasi-judicial decision affecting rights, and therefore outside scope of certiorari. | Cited to support the proposition that permissive acts of allowing suits to be filed are administrative; the Court regarded this as supporting the administrative-character view. |
Province of Bombay v. Khushaldas S. Advani, AIR 1950 SC 222 | Supreme Court exposition of the distinction between administrative/executive acts and judicial/quasi-judicial acts; sets tests for characterisation. | The Court applied the tests from this Supreme Court authority to conclude that the Advocate-General's consent under Section 92 is administrative, not judicial/quasi-judicial. |
Shavax v. Syed Masood Hosain, AIR 1965 Andh Pra 143 | Andhra Pradesh High Court held that the grant of consent in writing by the Advocate-General does not amount to a judicial function. | Referred to as consistent authority supporting the Court's conclusion that the Advocate-General's action is administrative. |
Court's Reasoning and Analysis
The Court's analysis proceeded in distinct steps, confined to the materials and authorities set out in the opinion:
- Recognition of a direct conflict of authorities among various High Courts on whether an Advocate-General's written consent under Section 92 is judicial/quasi-judicial (and thus amenable to certiorari under Article 226) or administrative (and thus not amenable).
- The Single Judge initially felt this was a matter requiring a Division Bench because the resolution of this legal question would effectively determine the fate of the petition and an appeal to the Letters Patent would lie as of right.
- The Division Bench examined the relevant authority lines:
- One line (Travancore Cochin's Abu Backer and the Pepsu decision which followed it) treated the Advocate-General's order as quasi-judicial and reviewable by certiorari.
- Another line (Allahabad, Rajasthan, Madras, Kerala Full Bench, Andhra Pradesh, and other decisions) treated the function as administrative/executive and therefore not the proper subject of certiorari under Article 226.
- The Court observed that Abu Backer (Travancore Cochin) had been overruled by the Kerala Full Bench in A.K. Bhaskar (AIR 1962 Ker 90). Because the Pepsu decision (Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh) rested on Abu Backer, the Court held that Pepsu's basis had been undermined.
- Applying the tests articulated by the Supreme Court in Province of Bombay v. Khushaldas S. Advani (AIR 1950 SC 222), the Court considered whether the Advocate-General, when giving consent under Section 92, decides rights or affects parties' substantive interests in a way that makes his act judicial/quasi-judicial.
- The Court concluded that the Advocate-General does not decide the merits or determine the rights of the parties when giving consent under Section 92; rather, he assesses whether there is a prima facie case that should be allowed to go to a court. The actual rights and defences remain to be adjudicated by the civil court in the suit itself.
- Consequently, the Court held that giving consent under Section 92 is administrative/executive in character, not judicial/quasi-judicial; therefore, an order granting consent is not amenable to quashing by certiorari under Article 226.
- The Court nevertheless qualified its view: it left open the possibility that where an Advocate-General plainly refuses to exercise the duty enjoined by Section 92 for extraneous or irrelevant reasons (i.e., a failure to perform a statutory duty), the High Court might issue a writ of mandamus directing performance of that duty. But an order granting consent was described as “impregnable” to challenge by certiorari under Article 226.
Holding and Implications
Holding: The writ petition challenging the Advocate-General's order granting consent under Section 92 was dismissed. The Court held that the Advocate-General's act of giving consent under Section 92 is administrative/executive, not judicial or quasi-judicial, and therefore an order granting consent is not amenable to a writ of certiorari under Article 226 of the Constitution. The petition was dismissed with costs.
Implications:
- Direct effect on the parties: The petitioner's application to quash the Advocate-General's order under Article 226 failed; the respondents were permitted to proceed with the suit filed with the Advocate-General's sanction.
- Procedural consequence emphasized by the Court: Defences available to the petitioner (such as constructive res judicata) are to be raised and decided in the substantive suit filed in the civil court rather than in a pre-emptive certiorari petition challenging the Advocate-General's grant of permission.
- Limits on judicial review articulated by the Court: While the Court regarded the grant of consent as not open to certiorari under Article 226, it left open a separate and narrower remedy — a writ of mandamus — in circumstances where the Advocate-General refuses to perform a statutory duty under Section 92 for extraneous or irrelevant reasons.
- No broader or novel legal principle was asserted beyond the reasons given: the Court resolved the matter by following the consensus of High Court authorities and applying established tests for distinguishing administrative acts from judicial/quasi-judicial ones (as set out in Province of Bombay v. Khushaldas S. Advani).
Disposition recorded in the opinion: "Petition dismissed." Costs were awarded (the precise order as to costs appears in the text: "dismissed with costs").
1. On or about Dec. 10, 1946, Nanak Chand and four others filed a suit against Amrita Nand Gir Petitioner and one Somwar Gir alias Jiwan, for a declaration to the effect that the gift made by Somwar Gir (defendant No.2 in that suit) in favour of the petitioner (defendant No. 1 in that suit) regarding Dharamshala Chainpuri together with shops and temples attached thereto situate in bazar Nauhrian and the shops and houses situate in bazar Bhairon within the abadi of Jullundur City, was unlawful and null and void, and based on wrong facts and that Amrita Nand Gir defendant (petitioner before me) could have no right in the aforesaid property mentioned in the deed of gift. Annexure 'A' to the writ petition is a copy of the plaint of that suit. The suit was dismissed by Shri Tek Chand, Senior Subordinate Judge, Jullundur, on December 7, 1948. without framing issues on merits as it was held that the plaintiffs should have brought a suit for possession as the property was not proved to be wakf property and the plaintiffs were out of possession. That judgment was later set aside by the High Court on October 12, 1955, on the finding that the case had not been properly tried and that comprehensive issues covering all the points in dispute between the parties should have been framed and decision given upon them. The suit was remanded to the trial Court for decision accordingly.
2. In the post-remand proceedings, the suit was disposed of by Shri Chetan Dass Jain, Senior Subordinate Judge. Jullundur, on January 16, 1956. A copy of that judgment is Annexure 'B' to the writ petition. It was held that the gift by defendant No. 2 in favour of defendant No. 1 held good so long as the Bhaikh did not intervene and so long as some public spirited Sevak of the institution did not take necessary action under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure for the removal of defendant No. 1(writ-petitioner) from the institution on account of his unworthy acts in claiming adverse title to it. Nanak Chand and others, the plaintiffs in that suit, preferred Regular First Appeal 78 of 1956, against the judgment and decree of the trial Court dismissing their suit. That appeal was, however, dismissed by Tek Chand J; on August 14. 1957, on account of non-prosecution, as the plaintiffs-appellants had failed to deposit the printing charges for the preparation of the appeal paper-book despite grant of several opportunities. Annexure 'C' is a copy of the High Court order.
3. Gian Chand and four others then moved the Advocate-General for the State of Punjab for his consent in writing under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure for instituting a suit for removal of the writ-petitioner and for dispossessing him from the management of Dharmashala Chainpuri. The requisite sanction was granted by Shir S.M. Sikri (now the Chief Justice of India), the then Advocate-General on November 28, 1960. A copy of the plaint of the suit which was then filed in pursuance of the said sanction is Annexure 'E' to the petition. That suit was ultimately dismissed by the judgment of Shri Ranjit Singh Sood, Subordinate Judge First Class, Jullundur, date October 29, 1962(Annexure 'F'). Regular First Appeal 102 of 1963, preferred by the plaintiffs in that suit was dismissed by a Division Bench of the High Court (S.B. Capoor and I.D. Dua, JJ.) on October 20, 1965, on account of non-prosecution, A copy of that order is Annexure 'G' to the petition.
4. Thereafter the present respondents 2 to 6(none of whom was plaintiff in either of the two previous suits) made an application (copy Annexure 'H') to the Advocate-General, Punjab, for his sanction under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure for filing a suit for the removal of the defendant (the writ-petitioner) from the management of the trust property known as Bagichi Chainpuri, and for the appointment of a new Manager of the institution and vesting the property in the new Manager and for directing the defendant to deliver possession of the trust property, and render accounts etc. The present petitioner filed written objections to the grant of permission under Section 92. A copy of those objections is Annexure 'I' to the petition. After hearing counsel for both sides. Shir Hira Lal Sibal, Advocate-General, Punjab, passed a detailed order (copy Annexure 'J') granting the sanction prayed for and directing respondents 2 to 6 to file a plaint in the office of the Advocate-General, Punjab, by the 15th August, 1970.
5. It is the common case of the parties that the plaint was filed, signed by the Advocate-General, and suit in pursuance thereof (copy Annexure R-1) filed in the Court of the District Judge, Jullundur. It is at this stage that the present petition was filed by Bawa Amrita Nand Gir on September 19, 1970, to quash the order of the Advocate-General (Annexure 'J') under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure as being illegal, without jurisdiction, unconstitutional and improper.
6. The only ground on which the petition has been pressed before me by Chaudhry Roop Chand, the learned Advocate for the Petitioner, is that the Advocate-General had no jurisdiction to grant permission under section 92 of the code to the respondents, as they are deemed to be bond by the judgment of the competent Civil Court in the two previous cases on principles of constructive res judicata. It may be noticed that though the suit filed by Nanak Chand etc; was a representative suit filed under Order 1, Rule 8 of the Code, the second suit has not been filed in a representative capacity. Chaudhry Roop Chand, however, submitted that according to the law laid down by their Lordships of the Supreme Court in Ahmad Adam Sait v. M. E. Makhri, AIR 1964 SC 107(paragraphs 15 to 17 of the AIR report), a suit filed under section 92 of the code is as much a representative suit as one field under Order 1, Rule 8 of the Code and binds everyone, irrespective of his being or not being a party to the suit. Mr. H.L. Mital, learned Counsel for respondents 2 to 6 has on the other hand argued that in giving permission under section 92 of the code, the Advocate-General has not given any decision on the rights of the contesting parties which are affected by the permission, but has merely opened the gates of the Court for his clients, and that all pleas like that of constructive res judicata can be taken by the writ petitioner in his defence to the suit on merits. He has further urged that in any event this Court has no jurisdiction in exercise of its powers under Article 226 of the Constitution to set aside the order of the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code, as that is a purely administrative decision which is not amenable to a writ in the nature of certiorari. Mr. Roop Chand has tried to repell that argument on the basis of the judgment of a learned Single Judge of the Pepsu High Court (Mehar Singh J; as he then was) in Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh v. Mangalgir, Mohatmim Dera, AIR 1956 Pepsu 65. Following the judgment of the Travancore Cochin High Court in Abu Backer Adam Sait v. Advocate-General of Travancore Cochin State. AIR 1954 Trav Co 331, and differing from the view which had been taken by the Chief Court of Lahore in Dhian Das v. Jagat Ram, 1910 Pun Re 104(also reported in 8 Ind Cas 1160), as also the view taken by the Rajasthan High Court and the Allahabad High court in Shrimali Lal Kasliwal v. Advocate-General. AIR 1955 Raj 166, and Swami Shantanand Saraswati v. Advocate-General. U.P. Allahabad, AIR 1955 All 372, respectively, the learned Judge held that the functions of the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code are judicial in nature and not administrative or executive, and therefore, such decisions are amenable to a writ under Article 226 of the Constitution on a question of jurisdiction, or on account of there being a patent error of law apparent on the face of the record.
7. Besides relying on the judgments of the Allahabad and Rajasthan High Courts to which reference has already been made. Mr. H.L. Mital has referred me to the Full Bench judgment of the Kerala High Court in A.K. Bhaskar v. Advocate-General, AIR 1962 Ker 90(FB), wherein the law laid down by the Travancore Cochin High Court in the case of Abu Backer Adam Sait. AIR 1954 Trav Co 331(supra) was expressly overruled, the law laid down by the learned Single Judge of the Pepsu High Court was not approved, and the view of the Allahabad and Rajasthan High Court was adopted. Wanchoo, C.J. (As he then was), who prepared the judgment of the Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court in the case of Shrimali Lal Kasliwal AIR 1955 Raj 166(supra), observed that the function of the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code cannot be called a judicial or quasi-judicial function, and, therefore, there is no question of revising it under Article 227, or issuing a Writ under Article 226 compelling him to do anything. The view taken by the Travancore Cochin High Court was expressly dissented from by the Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court in that case. Swami Shantanand Saraswati's case AIR 1955 All 372(supra) had been decided by a Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court consisting of Raghubar Dayal and Aggarwala, JJ. They had taken the same view after dissenting from the view of the Travancore Cochin High Court and approving the view of the Lahore High Court in 1910 Pun Re 104(supra). In Dhian Das's case, Sir Arthur Reid. C. J; had declined to entertain a revision petition against an order of the Collector under Section 539 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1882(corresponding to Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure. 1908), on the ground that the order was an executive or administrative one, and, therefore, it could not be said that any case of which record could be called for and dealt with in revision had been decided.
8. There is an apparent conflict of authorities between the various High Courts on the question whether the order of the Advocate-General of a State under section 92 of the code s or is not amenable to a writ under Article 226 of the Constitution. As already indicated, the Division Benches of the Allahabad and Rajasthan High court have taken a view in favour of the respondent. A learned Single Judge of the Madras High Court has also taken the same view in Raju v. Advocate-General, Madras, AIR 1962 Mad 320. The judgment of the Travancore Cochin High Court does not exist in the eye of law as it has already been overruled. Though I am substantially inclined to follow the concensus of authorities on this point. I feel that it is not proper for me sitting in Single Bench to differ from the view taken by the learned Single Judge of the Pepsu High Court (who later became a Judge and then the Chief Justice of this Court). It would, in the circumstances of the case, be appropriate if this point, on the decision of which practically the fate of the whole case hangs, should be decided by a Division Bench in the very first instance particularly when an appeal under Clause 10 of the Letters Patent would lie against my judgment whichever way it goes, as a matter of right.
9. I, therefore, direct that the papers of this case may be laid before my Lord, the Chief Justice for passing appropriate orders under proviso (b) to Rule 1 of Chapter 3-B of Volume V of the Rules and Order of this Court. The costs of the present proceedings shall abide the result of the writ-petition.
JUDGMENT OF THE DIVISION BENCH Narula, J.
10. My order, dated September 1, 1971. whereby I directed that the papers of this case may be laid before the learned Chief Justice for constituting a Division Bench for the hearing and disposal of this writ petition, may be read as a part of this judgment. I had asked for the assistance of another learned Judge of this Court to decide the writ petition because I was prima facie not in agreement with the view taken by the learned Single Judge of the Pepsu High Court (Mehar Singh, J; as he then was) in AIR 1956 Pepsu 65 and I was more inclined to agree with the view taken by the High Courts of Allahabad, Rajasthan, Madras, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh, on the question whether the written consent given by the Advocate-General of a State under Section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure to file a suit covered by that section can or cannot be quashed by a writ in the nature of certiorari. It is the common case of both sides that the impugned order of the Advocate-General would be amenable to such a writ only if it can be considered to be a judicial or quasi-judicial order. No question of quashing the order by a writ in the nature of certiorari can arise if the consent given by the Advocate-General in writing under section 92 of the code amounts to a mere administrative order.
11. As early as in 1910, the question whether such an order is only an executive or administrative one came up for consideration before the Chief Court of Punjab in 1910 Pun Re 104(also reported in 8 Ind Cas 1160). While rejecting a petition for revision of an order passed by the Collector of a district granting permission under Section 539 of the Code of Civil Procedure. 1882(corresponding to Section 92 of the 1908 Code) to institute a suit for the removal of a Mahant, it was observed by Reid, c. J., that the order of the Collector was only an executive or an administrative order and was therefore, no 'case' of which the record could be called for and dealt with in a petition for revision under Section 70(1)(a) of the Punjab Courts Act (XVIII Act (XXV of 1899). It was held that while granting permission to file the suit the collector (who was ordinarily a Court) did not act as a Court, but exercised the powers vested in the Advocates-General in the Presidency towns. In AIR 1955 All 372, a Division bench of the Allahabad High Court (Raghubar Dayal and Agarwala. JJ.) dismissed a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution and refused to quash the order of the Advocate-General giving his consent to the institution of a suit under section 92 of the code on the main ground that the said order constituted merely an administrative or an executive act and could not be called a quasi-judicial one. It was observed that neither Section 92 nor any other provision of the Code required the Advocate-General to hold any enquiry or to give any opportunity of hearing to the party which might be affected by the giving of his consent. It was held that where an officer or other authority is not bound by any rule of law to hold an enquiry and to act strictly in accordance with the facts and circumstances of the case as they appear from the enquiry, he cannot be said to be acting judicially or quasi-judicially. It was further observed that a judicial or a quasi-judicial act must involve a decision as to the rights of the parties and must affect the interests of one or the other of the parties; and in giving his consent under Section 92, the Advocate-General is not expected to decide the rights of the contending parties even if he has to hold an enquiry, but he has merely to see whether there is or is not a prima facie case that should be allowed to go to a Court of law. He does not affect the rights of the person against whom the suit is intended to be filed as such a person has full opportunity to present his case before the Court in which the suit is filed. The Court is not to be influenced in deciding the case by the fact that the Advocate-General has given his content to the institution of the suit.
12. A Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court (Wanchoo, C.J; and Sharma, J.) held in AIR 1955 Raj 166, that the function of the Advocate-General under, section 92 of the code cannot be called a judicial or quasi-judicial one, and, therefore, there is no question of revising such an order of the Advocate-General under Article 227 or issuing a writ under Article 226 compelling him to do anything under that provision. The application under section 92 of the code was pending before the Advocate-General at the time of the filing of that writ petition. The writ petitioners approached the Rajasthan High Court for a suitable writ, order or direction to the State Government to appoint some other officer under section 93 of the code as the Advocate-General, who was otherwise the only authority to deal with the matter, was alleged to be biased against the petitioners. Reliance was placed before their Lordships of the Rajasthan High Court on the judgment of the Travancore Cochin High Court in AIR 1954 Trav Co 331(hereinafter referred to as Abu Backer's case) wherein it had been held that the order passed by the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code is quasi-judicial, and is, therefore, amenable to a writ in the nature of certiorari under Article 226 of the Constitution. The Rajasthan High Court declined to accept the view of the Travancore Cochin High Court taken in Abu Backer's case, and held that inasmuch as the Advocate-General himself can file a suit under section 92 of the code or in the alternative give permission to two or more persons to do so, such a function exercised by the Advocate-General cannot be called judicial or quasi-judicial.
13. In K. M. Abdul Kasim v. P. M. N. Mohamed Dawood, AIR 1961 Mad 244, the decision of the Muslim Wakfs Board under Section 55(2) of the Muslim Wakfs Act, 1954, permitting another person to file a suit was held to be not equivalent to a judicial or a quasi-judicial decision affecting the rights of the parties. The decision to permit another person to file a suit was described as an administrative act, and, therefore, held to be outside the purview of correction by the issue of a writ of certiorari. Reliance for that decision was placed on the judgment of the Rajasthan High Court in the case of Shrimali Lal Kasliwal, AIR 1955 Raj 166(supra) and on the judgment of the Allahabad High Court in Swami Shantanand Saraswati's case AIR 1955 All 372(supra). The learned Single Judge of the Madras High Court did not apply to the case before him the law which had been laid down in Abu Backer's case AIR 1954 Trav Co. 331. The same view was taken by another learned Single Judge of the Madras High Court in AIR 1962 Mad 320. While dismissing a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution for quashing an order of the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code on the ground that the same was not maintainable. Abu Backer's case was dissented from and the Allahabad view in Swami Shantanand Saraswati's case (supra) was followed.
14. The view taken by the Travancore Cochin High Court in Abu Backer's case AIR 1954 Trav Co 331 was subsequently overruled by a Full Bench of the Kerala High Court (successor to Travancore Cochin High Court in AIR 1962 Ker 90. It was observed that notwithstanding the fact that the Advocate-General has to form an opinion and has to come to a conclusion one way or the other while acting under section 92 of the code, his decision under that provision does not amount to a judicial or a quasi-judicial order as he does not decide anybody's rights and does not affect the right of the defendants to the proposed suit to defend the same on all possible grounds available to them in law. On that basis it was held that the action of the Advocate-General under section 92 of the code giving or declining to give his consent cannot be judicially reviewed by the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. A Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court took the same view in Shavax v. Syed Masood Hosain, AIR 1965 Andh Pra 143, while holding that the grant of the consent in writing by the Advocate-General does not amount to a judicial function.
15. The case of Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh, AIR 1956 Pepsu 65(supra) decided by the Pepsu High Court is the only case in which the order of an Advocate-General under section 92 of the code was held to be amenable to a writ of certiorari. That judgment was expressly based on the law which had be then been laid down in Abu Backer's case AIR 1954 Trav Co 331. The judgment of the Travancore Cochin High Court in Abu Backer's case having since been overruled by the successor High Court of that Court, the very bottom of the judgment of the learned Single Judge in the case of Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh (supra) has been knocked out. With the greatest respect to the learned Judge who decided the case of Sadhu Singh Sunder Singh, I am, therefore, constrained to hold that the view taken by the Pepsu High Court in that case cannot be said to be sound. I am unable to agree with Chaudhry Roop Chand that in spite of the basis of the judgment of the learned Single Judge of the Pepsu High Court having subsequently been knocked out, that judgment alone lays down the correct la, and the view taken by the Allahabad, Rajasthan, Madras, Kerala and Andhra Pradesh high Courts is incorrect.
16. So far as the nature of the functions of an Advocate-General in such matters is concerned, it appears to me to be beyond that while acting under that provision and Advocate-General does not give any decision on the merits of the controversy one way or the other and it is open to the Court in which the action permitted by the Advocate-General is brought to entertain and decide any questions of law or of fact which are raised before it by the concerned parties. The distinction between administrative or executive functions and order on the one hand and judicial or quasi-judicial functions on the other has been succinctly brought out by the Supreme Court in the Province of Bombay v. Khushaldas S. Advani. AIR 1950 SC 222. Applying those tests I hold that the Advocate-General while giving his consent to the institution of a suit to two or more persons does not act either judicially or in a quasi-judicial capacity.
17. Though observations have been made in some of the judgments referred to above to the effect that any order of an Advocate-General under section 92 of the code is not subject to the scrutiny of a High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution, it is neither necessary for me to go so far, nor am I in fact inclined to hold that even in a case where an Advocate-General refuses to exercise the duty enjoined on him by the statute (Section 92) for reasons which are either extraneous or irrelevant or non-existent, this Court would be helpless. As at present advised, I am of the view that in such an eventuality it would be open to this Court to issue to the concerned Advocate-General a writ in the nature of mandamus directing him to do the duty enjoined on him by Section 92. So far as an order giving his consent to the institution of a suit is, however, concerned. I am firmly of the view that it is impregnable in proceedings under Article 226 of the Constitution.
18. For the foregoing reasons this petition must fail and is accordingly dismissed with costs.
Sharma, J.
I agree.
19. Petition dismissed.
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