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A foreign Court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognized in an Indian Court

LIYANA SHAJI ,
  27 August 2020       Share Bookmark

Court :
Mysore High Court
Brief :
A foreign Court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognised in an Indian  Court provided that the subject matter of the action is  property, whether movable or immovable within the jurisdiction of that Court. The  Mysore  Courts were not competent to give a Binding judgment in respect of the immovable  property situate in the State of Madras nor did they in fact give any judgment with respect to immovable property outside Mysore.
Citation :
Appellant: R. Viswanathan Respondent: Rukn-Ul-Mulk Syed Abdul Wajid Citation: 1 1963 SCR (3) 22

A foreign Court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognized in an Indian  Court provided that the subject matter of the action is  property, whether movable or immovable within the jurisdiction of that Court

Bench: Shah, J.C. 

Facts:

One  Ramalingam died at Bangalore leaving a will whereby  he devised considerable immovable and movable properties in the States of  Mysore and Madras. The  executors applied for Probate of  the  will and it was granted  by  the  District judge. Thereupon the  sons  of Ramlingam  instituted  two  suits  in  the  District  Court, Bangalore and the District Court Civil and Military  Station for possession of the immovable properties in Mysore and the movable properties  devised by the will and a suit  in the Madras High Court for possession of movable  and  immovable properties in Madras devised by the will. The    movable included certain shares of the India Sugars  and  Refineries Ltd., a company with its registered  office  at Bellary  in the  State  of Madras. The suits were based on the  ground that all  the properties were joint family  properties and Ramalingam  had no power to dispose of the property  by his will. The Madras suit was stayed pending the disposal  of the  Bangalore Suits. The District  judge decreed the suit  holding that the property devised by the will was of the joint family  of Ramalingam  and his sons and the will was on  that  account inoperative.  The executors preferred appeals to the  Mysore High Court. The HC dismissed the appeals. The case was referred to a full Bench and appeals were allowed and the suit holding that the property was  the self-acquired property of Ramalingam was dismissed. Thereafter, in  the  Madras  suit the executors  urged that the judgment of the Mysore High  Court was binding upon the parties and the suit was barred as res judicata.  The plaintiff contended that as to the immovables in Madras the Mysore Court could not and did not  adjudicate upon  their claim and that in any event the Mysore  judgment which  was a  foreign judgment was not conclusive  as the proceedings in the Mysore High Court were opposed to natural justice within the meaning of s. 13 of the Code  of  Civil Procedure   the bench showed bias before and during the  hearing of the appeals and were incompetent to sit on the Full Bench and  their judgment was coram non judice. The Trial  judge held  that the judgment of Mysore High Court was  coram non judice and was nonconclusive under s. 13 of the  Code and that all the properties movable and immovable disposed of by Ramalingam  belonged to the joint family and he     accordingly decreed the suit. On appeal the High Court held that it was not  established  that the Mysore Full Bench was  coram  non judice, that  the  properties in  suit were  joint  family properties which Ramalingam was incompetent to dispose of by his  will,  that the Mysore judgment  did  not  affect the immovable in Madras but it was conclusive with respect  to the   movables even  outside  the  State  of Mysore and accordingly  modified  the  decree of  the  trial  Court  by dismissing  the suit  with respect to the  movables  which consisted mainly of shares of the India Sugars &  Refineries Ltd.

Issues:

1.  Whether the Judgment of the Mysore High Court was conclusive
2.  Whether a foreign court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognized in an Indian Court  

Contentions raised by the Appellant:

The appellant contended that the judgment of the Mysore Fall Bench is not conclusive between parties in the Madras suit, for the Mysore Court was not a court of competent jurisdiction as to property movable and immovable outside the territory of the Mysore State, that the judgment was not binding because the Judges who presided over the Full Bench were not competent by the law of the Mysore State to decide the dispute and that in any event it "was coram non judice" because they were interested or biased and the proceedings before them were conducted in a manner opposed to natural justice.

Contentions raised by the Respondent:

The respondent submitted that the judgment was and the Madras High Court was competent to decide whether the immovables in Madras were not acquired out of the earnings of that business.

Judgment:

The judgment  of the Mysore High Court was  not  conclusive between the parties in the Madras suit with respect to the immovable  properties  in Madras but was conclusive with respect to the shares of the Company in the State of Madras.

A foreign Court has jurisdiction to deliver a judgment in rem which may be enforced or recognised in an Indian  Court provided that the subject matter of the action is  property, whether movable or immovable within the jurisdiction of that Court. The  Mysore  Courts were not competent to give a Binding judgment in respect of the immovable  property situate in the State of Madras nor did they in fact give any judgment with respect to immovable property outside Mysore.

 
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