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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Devi v. Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy and Others (Bengal) [1946] UKPC 1 (30th July, 1946) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1946/1.html Cite as: [1946] UKPC 1 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 17 of
1945Bengal Appeal No. 15 of 1943
[1946] A.C.508
Srimati Bibhabati Devi Appellant
v.
Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy and others Respondents
FROM
THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT FORT WILLIAM IN BENGAL
_________________
J
UDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIALCOMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
DELIVERED THE 30th JULY 1946
_________________
Present at the hearing:
Lord Thankerton
Lord du Parcq
Sir Madhavan Nair
[Delivered by Lord Thankerton]
_________________
1. This is an appeal by special leave from a decree of the High Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal, dated the 25th November 1940, dismissing an appeal against a decree of the First Additional District Judge, Dacca, dated the 24th August 1936.
2. The present suit was instituted in the Court of the First Subordinate Judge at Dacca on the 24th July 1930, by the respondent Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy (hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff) against the present appellant and others. In the plaint, as subsequently amended on the 15th April 1931, the plaintiff sought (ka) a declaration that he is Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy, the second son of the late Rajah Rajendra Narayan Roy of Bhowal and (ka 1), that his possession should be confirmed in respect of the one-third share of the properties described in the schedule, or, if from the evidence and under the circumstances plaintiffs possession thereof should not be established, then possession thereof should be given to him. He further asked for injunctions against obstruction to his possession. The present appellant filed a written statement denying, inter alia, the identity of the plaintiff with Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy (hereinafter referred to as the Second Kumar), and alleging that the suit was barred by limitation. Issues were adjusted, and those now relevant are,
[32]
2. Is the suit barred by limitation?
4. Is the Second Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy alive?
5. Is the present plaintiff the Second Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy of Bhowal?
3. After a very long trial lasting for 608
days, the First Additional District Judge delivered an elaborate and careful
judgment in favour of the plaintiff on the 24th August 1936, and by his order of
the same date he ordered and decreed "that it be declared that the
plaintiff is the Kumar Ramendra Narayan Roy, the second son of the late Rajah
Rajendra Narayan Roy, Zamindar of Bhowal, and that he be put in possession of an
undivided one-third share in the properties in suit the share now in the
enjoyment of the first defendant (the present appellant) jointly with the
other defendants possession over the rest." On an appeal by the present
appellant, the appeal was heard by a Special Bench of the High Court, consisting
of Costello, Biswas and Lodge JJ., and by decree dated the 25th November (Lodge
J. dissenting) it was ordered and decreed "in accordance with the opinion
of the Majority of the Judges that the judgment and decree of the Court below be
and the same are hereby affirmed and this appeal dismissed."
4. It will be convenient to restate the
short account of the family history in the judgment of the trial Judge:- Rajah
Rajendra Narayan Roy, the Zamindar of Bhowal, one of the largest landed
proprietors of East Bengal, died on the 26th April 1901. The title was personal,
but the family was old, and though not entitled to fame, regarded as the premier
Hindu Zamindar family of Dacca. The family-seat is at Jaidebpur, a village about
20 miles from Dacca, and situate in the Pargana of Bhowal, a large and fairly
compact estate, spreading over the districts of Dacca and Mymensingh. The Rajah
had a residence at Dacca, but he ordinarily lived in his family home, and was
undoubtedly a local magnate of the highest position and influence. The rent-roll
of the estate was Rs. 6,48,353 in 1931. It could not have been much less in the
Rajahs time.
5. The Rajah died leaving him surviving,
his widow, Rani Bilasmani, and three sons and three daughters. The sons were:
Ranendra Narayan Roy, Ramendra Narayan Roy and Rabindra Narayan Roy. These,
mentioned in order of seniority, were known as Bara Kumar, Mejo Kumar and Chhoto
Kumar. The daughters were Indumayee, Jyotirmoyee, and Tarinmoyee. Indumayee was
the eldest child, Jyotirmoyee the second, then had come the sons, and then the
youngest child, Tarinmoyee Debi.
6. The Rajah had executed before his death
a deed of trust and a will, and, though the exact terms of these are not known,
their result, as agreed, was that the estate, upon his death, vested in the Rani,
his widow, in trust for the three sons. She managed as trustee till her death
which took place on the 21st January 1907. Upon that event the three sons became
the owners at law, as they had been in equity; and there is no question that the
Second Kumar owned a third share in the estate, and would be owning it still, if
he be alive, unless he has been prescribed against for the requisite period.
7. The three Kumars, after the death of
their mother, as before, lived as an undivided Hindu family, joint in mess,
property and worship. The eldest Kumar was married in 1901 to Sarajubala Debi,
the second defendant in this suit. The Second Kumar was married in 1902 to
Bibhabati Debi, the present appellant, and the third Kumar in 1904 to Ananda
Kumari Debi, the fourth defendant in this suit. The family lived at Jaidebpur,
and the three sisters, all married, lived as members of the family. Another
member of the family was the grandmother, Rani Satyabhama, who had survived her
son Rajah Rajendra. The Rajah had a sister, Kripamoyee, who survived him, and
who was practically a member of the family, though she lived in a separate block
with her husband. The first Kumar died in 1910; the Third Kumar died in 1913,
and his widow, the fourth defendant, adopted in 1919 a son, Ram Narayan Roy, who
is the third defendant. Indumayee and Kripamoyee died in 1920, and Satyabhama
died in 1922.
8. A brief outline of the contentions of
the parties is as follows:- there is no dispute that the Second Kumar and the
appellant, with a large party went from Jaidebpur to Darjeeling in April 1909,
arriving at the latter place on the 20th April, and took up their residence at a
house called "Step Aside", which had been rented for their stay; and,
further, that at that time the Second Kumar had gummatous ulcers on or about
both elbows and on his legs, being the tertiary stage of syphilis, which he had
contracted at some date subsequent to 1905. It is also agreed that he was taken
for dead on the 8th May 1909. The appellant maintains that the Second Kumar died
shortly before midnight and that the following morning his body was taken in a
funeral procession and was cremated with the usual rites at the new sasan at
Darjeeling. The plaintiff admits that there was a funeral procession and
cremation on the morning of the 9th May, but maintains that the body so cremated
was not that of the Second Kumar; his case is that the Second Kumar was taken
for dead about dusk, between seven and eight oclock, in the evening of the
8th May, that arrangements were at once made for cremation, that the body was
taken in funeral procession to the old sasan, and placed in position for
cremation, when a violent storm of rain caused the party to take shelter, and
that, on their return after the rain had abated, the body was no longer there;
that thereafter another body was procured and taken to "Step Aside",
and was the subject of the procession and cremation the following morning.
9. On the 10th May, the appellant, with
the rest of the party, left Darjeeling for Jaidebpur, where she had her ordinary
residence until April 1911, when she left for Calcutta, to live there
permanently with her mother and brother Satyendra in a rented house. She began
to enjoy her widows estate in the undivided one-third share of the Bhowal
estate, which the Second Kumar had owned, and she recovered the proceeds,
amounting to Rs. 30,000, of a life policy taken out by the Second Kumar, the
necessary certificates of his death having been provided. Soon after her
departure for Calcutta, the Court of Wards took charge of the appellants
share of the Bhowal estate, and an attempt by her to obtain its release having
been unsuccessful, her share remained in charge of the Court of Wards up to the
time of the decree in the present suit.
10. On the other hand, the plaintiffs
case is that while the funeral party were sheltering from the storm, he was
found to be still alive by four sanyasis (ascetics), who were nearby and had
heard certain sounds from the sasan, and who released him and took him away,
looked after him, and took him with them in their wanderings; that when he had
recovered from an unconscious state, he had lost all memory of who he was, where
he came from and of past events. He lived and garbed himself as a sanyasi would,
smeared himself with ashes and grew long matted hair and a beard. Some eleven
years later he recalled that he came from Dacca, but not who or what he was;
that in December 1920, or January 1921, he reached Dacca, and took up a position
on the Buckland Bund, a public walk on the margin of the river Buriganga, at
Dacca, where people promenade, morning and evening, for pleasure or health. He
could be found seated at the same spot, day and night, with a burning dhuni
(ascetics fire) before him. Then followed a period of gradual recognition or
suspicion of him as the Second Kumar by certain people, which culminated in the
removal of the ashes, and after greatly increased recognition of him as the
Second Kumar by relatives and others, a declaration by him of his identity as
the Second Kumar in the presence of many people on the 4th May 1921, and that
mainly on the insistence of his sister Jyotirmoyee, who accepted him as such and
was one of his principal witnesses. It is unnecessary, for the present purpose,
to say anything about the very large body of evidence, oral and documentary, as
to recognition of the plaintiff as the Second Kumar, or as to his identity with
the Second Kumar, mentally, culturally, or physically. It may be added that both
the trial Judge and the Judges of the High Court had the advantage of a personal
inspection of the plaintiff, which would not be available to this Board.
11. The appellant is at once faced with the
concurrent judgments of two Courts on a pure question of fact, and the practice
of this Board to decline to review the evidence for a third time, unless there
are some special circumstances which would justify a departure from the
practice. Their Lordships propose to review the decisions of the Board to
ascertain the practice as it now stands, as there can be no doubt that the later
decisions have somewhat modified the earlier form of the practice, and also in
order to discuss the nature of the special circumstances which will justify a
departure from the practice.
12. The earliest case to which reference
may be made is Mudhoo Soodun Sundial v. Suroop Chunder Sirkar Chowdry,
(1849) 4 Moore Ind. App. 431; Dr. Lushington, in delivering the judgment of the
Board, said (at p. 433) "Both the Courts below have decided against the
validity of the instrument; a fact which, considering the advantages the Judges
in India generally possess, of forming a correct opinion of the probability of
the transaction, and in some cases of the credit due to the witnesses, affords a
strong presumption in favour of the correctness of their decisions, but does
not, and ought not, to relieve this, the Court of last resort, from the duty of
examining the whole evidence, and forming for itself an opinion upon the whole
case." A similar statement was made by Lord Kingsdown, who delivered the
judgment, in Naragunty Lutchmeedavamah v. Vengama Naidoo, (1861) 9
Moore Ind. App. 66, at p. 87, and by Lord Cairns, in delivering the judgment in Tareeny
Churn Bonnerjee v. Maitland, (1867) 11 Moore Ind. App. 317, at p.
338, in which he states that the Courts below were unanimous.
13. In November 1886, in the judgment of
the Board, consisting of Lord Fitzgerald, Lord Herschell and Sir Barnes Peacock,
in Allen v. Quebec Warehouse Company, (1886) 12 App. Cas. 101,
Lord Herschell, who delivered the judgment, said (at p. 104) "Their
Lordships having arrived at the conclusion that there has been no error in point
of law, the sole question that remains for determination has been whether the
judgment of the Court below ought to be reversed on the ground that the judges
have taken an erroneous view of the facts. Now, it has always been the view
taken by this Committee, in advising Her Majesty, when the question for
determination has been whether the concurrent judgment of the judges who have
been unanimous below should be supported or reversed, that unless it be shewn
with absolute clearness that some blunder or error is apparent in the way in
which the learned judges below have dealt with the facts, this Committee would
not advise Her Majesty that the judgment should be reversed. That principle has
been laid down in many cases." After a reference to Naraguntys
case and Tareenys case, Lord Herschell proceeds, "Their Lordships
entirely adhere to the views thus expressed, and therefore they do not consider
that the question they have to determine is, what conclusion they would have
arrived at if the matter had for the first time come before them, but whether it
has been established that the judgments of the Courts below were clearly
wrong." In the cases so far cited, the Board examined the evidence, but a
month later than the decision in Allens case, a Board consisting of
Lord Hobhouse, Sir Barnes Peacock and Sir Richard Couch, decided the case of Thakur
Harihar Buksh v. Thakur Uman Parshad, (1886) 14 Ind. App. 7. Lord Hobhouse,
in delivering the judgment, said "Therefore their Lordships have not
considered it proper to go through the mass of oral evidence given in this case,
because, if the courts below concur in their conclusion upon such a matter as
family custom, their Lordships are very reluctant to disturb the judgment of
those Courts. If there had been any principle of evidence not properly applied;
if there had been written documents referred to on which the appellant could
shew that the Courts below had been led into error, their Lordships might
re-examine the case; but in the absence of any such ground they decline to do
so."
In 1894, in Umrao Begam v. Irshad Husain, (1894) 21 Ind. App. 163, Lord Hobhouse, who delivered the judgment, said (at p. 166) "This is not only a question of fact, but it is one which embraces a great number of facts whose significance is best appreciated by those who are most familiar with Indian manners and customs. Their Lordships would be specially unwilling in such a case to depart from the general rule, which forbids a fresh examination of facts for the purpose of disturbing concurrent findings by the lower Courts. The counsel for the appellant frankly admitted that they laboured under this difficulty, and that they must find some ground of law or general principle for impugning the decree. To do this, they made some comments on the use made by the Courts below of Razas oral statements; but these comments all resolved themselves into objections to the weight of evidence, and did not affect its admissibility." A similar opinion was expressed in Kunwar Sanwal Singh v. Rani Satrupa Kunwar, (1905) 33 Ind. App. 53, at p. 54. In Rani Srimati v. Khajendra Narayan Singh, (1904) 31 Ind. App. 127, at p. 131, Lord Lindley, in delivering the judgment, said, "The case is unquestionably one of great difficulty, but the appellants have failed to shew any miscarriage of justice, or the violation of any principle of law or procedure. Their Lordships, therefore, see no reason for departing from the usual practice of this Board of declining to interfere with two concurrent findings on pure questions of fact."
14. That the practice equally applies where
there is a dissent in the Appellate Court is made clear by two cases. In Atta
Kwamin v. Kobina Kufuor, (1914) A.I.R., P.C., 261, Lord Kinnear, in
delivering the judgment, said, "Their Lordships have seen no sufficient
reason for disturbing the judgment in this case. It raises some questions of
considerable difficulty. But the difficulties are occasioned by the obscurity of
the facts; and the learned judges below, from their familiarity with the customs
and sentiment of the natives, have an advantage for dealing with the evidence
which is wanting to this Committee. In such a case, it would not be consistent
with an approved rule to reverse the concurrent judgments of two Courts, unless
"it be shewn with absolute clearness", to use the language of Lord
Herschell, "that some blunder or error is apparent in the way in which the
learned judges below have dealt with the facts." It is true that Lord
Herschells rule applies in terms to those cases only in which the judges have
been unanimous; and one of the Judges of the Court of Appeal has dissented in
the present case. But this ought not to detract from the weight which is due to
the opinion of the majority on the matter of fact, since the dissent is not
based on a different view of the evidence, which indeed the learned Judge has
hardly considered, but upon grounds of law which their Lordships are unable to
adopt". And in Habibur Rahman Chowdhury v. Altaf Ali Chowdhury
(1921), 48 Ind. App. 114, Lord Dunedin, delivering the judgment (at p. 119)
said, "These two learned judges form a majority of the appellate Court.
That makes a concurrent finding, and it is not vitiated as such because, as
here, the other judge in the appellate court does not come to the same
conclusion in fact though coming to the same result in law arising from another
fact. Of course, to be concurrent findings binding on this Board, the fact or
facts found must be such as are necessary for the foundation of the proposition
in law to be subsequently applied to them." The concurrent finding there
referred to by Lord Dunedin was that the existence of a marriage was disproved.
Counsel for the appellant then argued that, assuming he could show a good
acknowledgment of legitimacy, that conferred the status of legitimacy and made
it irrelevant to enter into any enquiry as to the fact of marriage. On this Lord
Dunedin says, "The case might be disposed of by holding, as the majority of
the learned judges of the appellate Court did, that there was no proper
acknowledgment of legitimacy. There is not, however, as to this a concurrent
finding, for the learned trial judge thought otherwise, and it would be
necessary to examine the evidence before coming to the above conclusion."
15. A very important statement as to this
practice of the Board was made by Lord Dunedin, in delivering the judgment in Robins
v. National Trust Company (1927), A.C. 515, at p. 517, "The rule as
to concurrent findings is not a rule based on any statutory provision. It is
rather a rule of conduct which the Board has laid down for itself. As such it
has gradually developed. The judicature which has given greatest occasion for
its development has undoubtedly been the judicature of India, but the principle
is not in any way limited in its application to Indian legislation or Indian
law, be it Hindu or Moslem, as such. Indeed, it is obvious that if such a rule
is a good rule to be applied to the findings of the Courts in India, there could
be no reason for suggesting that the findings of the Courts of our great
self-governing Dominions should be entitled to less consideration. Their
Lordships wish it to be clearly understood that the rule of conduct is a rule of
conduct for the Empire, and will be applied to all the various judicatures whose
final tribunal is this Board." Later, referring to the use of the phrase
"miscarriage of justice" used in two earlier judgments of the Board,
Lord Dunedin says, "There was a faint attempt made in the present case to
argue that what the appellant considered a quite inadequate appreciation and an
unjustifiable belittling of a certain witness whom he regarded as all important
would amount to a miscarriage of justice. The expression means no such thing. It
means such a departure from the rules which permeates all judicial procedure as
to make that which happened not in the proper use of the word judicial procedure
at all. There is, however, also another way of preventing the application of the
rule. If it can be shewn that the finding of one of the Courts is so based on an
erroneous proposition of law that if that proposition be corrected the finding
disappears, then in that case there is no finding at all." Later (at p.
521), Lord Dunedin says, "Much was sought to be made of the unfair way in
which the appellant argued the trial judge had treated the evidence of a certain
Dr. Shurly. Some of the criticisms he made do not particularly recommend
themselves to their Lordships, but in the end he came to his result on a
consideration of the whole evidence. That the Court of Appeal looked at the
evidence in rather a different way matters not, for the rule is a rule as to
concurrent findings, and not a rule as to concurrent reasons. Thus in Ram
Anugra Narain Singh v. Chowdry Hanuman Sahai (1902), 30 Ind. App. 41,
at 43, the judgment of the Board states: "The rule (as to concurrent
findings) is none the less applicable because the Courts may not have taken
precisely the same view of the weight to be attached to each particular item of
evidence." The fact that the trial judge based his finding on the oral
evidence, while the High Court based their similar finding on the documentary
evidence, does not take the case out of the rule as is settled by Ram Anugra
Singhs case, just cited by Lord Dunedin, and Bhagwan Singh v. Allahabad
Bank (1926), 53 Ind. App. 268.
16. At the request of their Lordships, Mr.
Page, on behalf of the appellant, dealt with the cases in which the special
circumstances were held to justify a departure from the practice of the Board,
and which their Lordships will now consider. In Guthrie v. Abool
Mozuffer (1871), 14 Moore Ind. App. 53, in which the High Court had merely
stated that they saw no reason to differ from the finding of the Zillah Judge,
and which related to an allegation of duress by the purchaser in obtaining a
deed of sale, it was held by the Board that the findings of the Zillah Judge
were incomplete, as there was no finding as to the payment of the consideration,
that the inferences of the Zillah Judge from the facts before him could not be
justified, and that his judgment treated the judgment of the Cazee as reversed,
whereas it was confirmed on appeal. That case was very special, and can have no
bearing on the present case. In Hay v. Gordon (1872), 18
Sutherland W. R. (Cal) 480, it was held by the Board that, under the provisions
of the Statute of Limitations (Act XIV of 1859) there were not separate
judgments, as the decision of the trial judge was not binding until confirmation
by the High Court. This case is also of no assistance in the present case.
In Venkateswara Iyan v. Shekhari Varma (1881), 8 Ind. App. 143, at p. 150, Sir Arthur Hobhouse, who delivered the judgment, said, "It is true that upon this question there are concurrent decisions of the Courts below. But though the question may be called in its result one of fact, its decision turns upon the admissibility or value of many subordinate facts, and involves the construction of documents and other questions of law." Their Lordships are unable to hold, under the practice as now modified, that the question of the value of evidence, as apart from its admissibility, can constitute a reason for departure from the practice. In Thakur Harihar Buksh v. Thakur Uman Parshad (1886), 14 Ind. App. 7, Lord Hobhouse, whose judgment as to the alleged family custom has already been cited, proceeds (at p. 16) "Then the question comes back to the construction of the razinamah, and that is again divided into two branches. The Courts below have found that the razinamah ought to be construed to give an absolute interest, because it has been decided that it should be so construed, in fact that the matter is res judicata. Upon that point, it is unnecessary for their Lordships to express any opinion; but they wish it to be understood that they do not express any agreement with the Court below on this point, and it must be taken that, not having heard the argument on the other side, their minds are completely open upon it. They rest their opinion upon the terms of the razinamah itself." Their Lordships then said that the razinamah did confer an absolute interest, and they agreed with the decision of the Courts below, though not for the same reasons. This was a question of law, which was essential to the decision.
In Chitpal Singh v. Bhairon Bakhsh Singh (1905), 28 All. 219, at p. 222, Lord Macnaghten, who delivered the judgment, said, "It was urged that the Court had drawn a wrong inference from documents before it, and that this error had led to a miscarriage of justice. After all, however, it turns out that the case is an ordinary case of the concurrence of two judgments on a mere question of fact, involving many considerations, on some of which the two Courts are not agreed. But the mere fact that the two Courts do not agree on all the steps which lead to one and the same conclusion is no reason for disregarding the well known rule. The rule, however, is not an absolute rule; it presses upon the appellant with more or less weight, according to the circumstances of the case, and no doubt the fact that the Courts have differed on some important but subordinate questions is a matter to be taken into consideration in determining whether the evidence before the lower Courts should be reviewed in detail." Their Lordships are of opinion that, under the practice as subsequently modified, the latter part of that statement as a general statement is too wide. Harendra Lal Roy Chowdhuri v. Hari Dasi Debi (1914), 41 Ind. App. 110, was a case of no evidence, and a decision that there is no evidence to support a finding is a decision of law. Chaudri Satgur Prashad v. Kishore Lal (1919), 46 Ind. App. 197, was a case of legal inference from documents and not of finding of fact. In Tilakdhari Singh v. Kesho Prasad Singh, A.I.R. (1925) P.C. 122, it was held that, though the concurrent findings proceeded upon the examination of titles and facts, the rule applied. Lord Shaw, who delivered the judgment, said, "There is no ground for the suggestion that the Judges of the Courts below failed in this duty or introduced illegitimate considerations into their view upon the titles and the facts. They having done that which was strictly their duty, their Lordships are of opinion that what remained was a question of fact." The appeal was dismissed upon the ground of incompetency, a ground which is not in accordance with the usual procedure of the Board, which simply dismisses the appeal.
In Pope Appliance Corporation v. Spanish River Pulp and Paper Mills Ltd., A.I.R. (1929), P.C. 38, at p. 39, Lord Dunedin, who delivered the judgment, said, "The present appeal is brought by special leave. Their Lordships think it necessary to say that it must have been conveyed to their Lordships who granted the leave, that the case raised an important and general question. Speaking generally a patent case has to do with the construction and the infringement of one or more particular patents, and it cannot often be said that any general question is thereby raised. In such cases where there have been concurrent judgments of the Judge of first instance and the Court of Appeal, their Lordships would deprecate the idea that leave should be given to appeal to the King in Council." The practice in regard to patent cases, which is more fully explained in the ensuing part of the judgment, allows a departure from the practice, where the Trial Judge, being judge both of fact and law, has misdirected himself in law, and patent cases thus are subject to the general practice.
17. From this review of the decision of the
Board, their Lordships are of opinion that the following propositions may be
derived as to the present practice of the Board and the nature of the special
circumstances which will justify a departure from the practice:-
(1) That the practice applies in the case of all the various judicatures whose final tribunal is the Board.
(2) That it applies to the concurrent findings of fact of two Courts, and not to concurrent findings of the judges who compose such Court. Therefore a dissent by a member of the appellate court does not obviate the practice.
(3) That a difference in the reasons which bring the judges to the same finding of fact will not obviate the practice.
(4) That, in order to obviate the practice, there must be some miscarriage of justice or violation of some principle of law or procedure. That miscarriage of justice means such a departure from the rules which permeate all judicial procedure as to make that which happened not in the proper sense of the word judicial procedure at all. That the violation of some principle of law or procedure must be such an erroneous proposition of law that if that proposition be corrected the finding cannot stand; or it may be the neglect of some principle of law or procedure, whose application will have the same effect. The question whether there is evidence on which the Courts could arrive at their finding is such a question of law.
(5) That the question of admissibility of evidence is a proposition of law, but it must be such as to affect materially the finding. The question of the value of evidence is not a sufficient reason for departure from the practice.
(6) That the practice is not a cast-iron one, and the foregoing statement as to reasons which will justify departure is illustrative only, and there may occur cases of such an unusual nature as will constrain the Board to depart from the practice.
(7) That the Board will always be reluctant to depart from the practice in cases, which involve questions of manners, customs or sentiments peculiar to the country or locality from which the case comes, whose significance is specially within the knowledge of the Courts of that country.
(8) That the practice relates to the findings of the Courts below, which are generally stated in the order of the Court, but may be stated as findings on the issues before the Court in the judgments, provided that they are directly related to the final decision of the court.
18. In this appeal the concurrent finding
of fact is as follows "it is declared that the plaintiff is the Kumar
Ramendra Narayan Roy, the second son of the late Rajah Rajendra Narayan Roy,
Zamindar of Bhowal." It was for the plaintiff to prove that he is the
Second Kumar, and, in order to do so, he had to survive various tests, any one
of which, if he failed to surmount it, would almost inevitably destroy his whole
case. In these circumstances, in the opinion of their Lordships, the appellant
was entitled to maintain, as regards any one of such tests, that there were such
special reasons as would justify a departure from the practice of the Board.
Perhaps the most striking of these tests was whether the Second Kumar in fact
died at Darjeeling or survived. If he did die there, that fact would completely
negative the plaintiffs case. The seventh proposition above stated is
applicable to the circumstances of the present case. With these preliminary
observations, their Lordships will proceed to consider the contentions submitted
by Mr. Page on behalf of the appellant. A number of these contentions
related to subordinate matters of evidence, or that the Trial Judge had not
sufficiently taken into account particular oral or documentary evidence, or that
the Judges who formed the majority in the High Court had not formed their own
conclusions on the evidence. These subordinate matters of evidence, even if they
might be called important, do not afford any sufficient reason for departure in
this case from the practice as above explained by their Lordships, and their
Lordships are clearly of opinion that the criticisms of the Trial Judge and the
Judges of the High Court are quite unjustified. Further, their Lordships are
unable to find any defect in these judgments in considering the separate
compartments into which the evidence conveniently falls, and carefully
considering the inter-relation of such compartments and their reaction on each
other. There remain three contentions with which their Lordships find it
necessary to deal.
19. The first of these contentions relates
to the admissibility of the evidence of four witnesses, conveniently referred to
as the Maitra group, whom the learned Trial Judge accepted as unimpeachable
witnesses, and whose evidence he accepted as virtually conclusive proof of the
time of "death" as having taken place at dusk, between seven and eight
oclock. The time of death or apparent death at Darjeeling is crucial. If the
death took place shortly before midnight, and not at dusk, that fact would be
fatal to the plaintiffs case. The learned Judges of the majority in the High
Court placed the same reliance on this evidence. The evidence of these four
witnesses is described with sufficient accuracy by the Trial Judge as follows:-
"The evidence of these gentlemen is that one day they were seated in the
common room of the (Lewis Jubilee) Sanitarium before dinner that would be
about 8 p.m. chatting, each does not recollect all the rest, but each
recollects the day, and the fact they used to be in the common room before
dinner. They recollect the day, not the date or anything, but the day when a
certain thing happened. When they were so seated, and there were others too, a
man came with the news that the Kumar of Bhowal was just dead, and he made a
request for men to help to carry the body for cremation. Principal Maitra has a
distinct recollection of this request the news broke in upon the talk they
were having, and the thing has stuck in his memory." It should be added
that the man who so came into the common room has not been identified, and is
not a witness. It was, further, agreed that, according to the Hindu custom,
cremation would, when possible, follow immediately after the death.
20. Their Lordships are of opinion that the
statement and request made by this man was a fact within the meaning of sections
3 and 59 of the Indian Evidence Act of 1872, and that it is proved by the direct
evidence of witnesses who heard it, within the meaning of section 60; but it was
not a relevant fact unless the learned Judge was entitled to make it a relevant
fact by a presumption under the terms of section 114. As regards the statement
that the Kumar had just died, such a statement by itself would not justify any
such presumption, as it might rest on mere rumour, but, in the opinion of their
Lordships, the learned Judge was entitled to hold, in relation to the fact of
the request for help to carry the body for cremation, that it was likely that
the request was authorised by those in charge at Step Aside, having regard to
"the common course of natural events, human conduct and public and private
business", and therefore to presume the existence of such authority. Having
made such presumption, the fact of such an authorised request thereby became a
relevant fact, and the evidence of the Maitra group became admissible.
Accordingly, this contention fails.
21. The remaining two contentions relate to
the question of identity, the colour of the eyes and the indications of
syphilis.
22. It is agreed that the eyes of the
Second Kumar and the plaintiff are kata eyes, that is, of a shade lighter than
the normal dark brown eyes of a Bengalee; it is also common ground that the eyes
of the plaintiff are of a light brownish colour. The dispute is as to the colour
of the eyes of the Second Kumar. Mr. Pages contention rested upon the view
that the entry of their colour as "grey" in Dr. Caddys report to
the Insurance Company in 1905 in connection with the proposal of the Second
Kumar for life insurance could only mean that they were grey as distinguished
from brown, and that the report must be accepted as conclusive of the matter.
But this contention must fail, for not only was there conflicting evidence on
the point, having regard to the statement in the affidavit dated the 6th March
1910, given to the insurance company by Kali Prasanna Vidyasagar, who had long
been familiar with the Second Kumar, and therein stated that the latters eyes
were rather brownish, but the witness Girish Chandra Sen stated that Dr. Caddy
had asked him to look for any identification marks, and that he told the doctor
"grey eyes", thereby meaning kata eyes. It follows that it was a
question of value of evidence, and the learned Judge had before him evidence on
which he was entitled to hold that the eyes of the Second Kumar were brownish,
and therefore similar to the eyes of the plaintiff.
23. It is common ground that, when the
Second Kumar went to Darjeeling he had gummatous ulcers on both arms about the
elbows, and about both legs, representing the tertiary stage of syphilis, which
he had contracted on some date subsequent to Dr. Caddys examination of him in
1905. Further, it is not disputed that there was evidence on which the learned
Judge was entitled to find that the plaintiff is "an old syphilitic
individual". It is enough to say that the plaintiff has one scar on the
left arm and two on the right arm, in each case about the elbow; these clearly,
on the evidence, are a small proportion of the number of ulcers from which the
Second Kumar was suffering in 1909, but there was evidence on which the learned
Judge was entitled to hold that these three scars were the remains of some of
the Second Kumars ulcers. There was no definite evidence as to the
permanency, or otherwise, of scars left by gummatous ulcers. There does not seem
to have been any evidence which would enable the learned Judge to identify any
scars on the legs of the plaintiff as corresponding in position with the
position of the Second Kumars ulcers on his legs. Mr. Page sought to found on
a passage in the evidence of the plaintiffs witness, Dr. K. K. Chatterji, in
which he says, "If the ulcers of 1909, big ulcers on both arms and legs,
are not treated or dressed or washed, I would give three months to him. He would
get septic and die. Even if he is washed with water, but not anti-septic, it
will make no difference. If washed with anti-septics but no dressing or
treatment, his chance of life would increase 5 per cent. roughly speaking. If
washed, but not with anti-septic and covered up with cloth and not surgical
dressing, the chance would be less." The plaintiff stated in his evidence
that while with the Sanyasis, he had no treatment. But the doctors evidence
is a calculation of chances of recovery, which no doctor would maintain to be
without exception, and it is not surprising that he later states that there is
no normality in syphilis. The whole matter is one of the value of evidence, and
this contention also fails.
24. Accordingly, their Lordships are of
opinion that the appellant has failed to establish any valid ground for
departure from the practice of the Board.
25. Finally, the appellant rests on article
144 and section 28 of the Indian Limitation Act of 1908. On the supposed death
of the Second Kumar the appellant entered on her widows estate in the
undivided one-third share of the Bhowal estate, which belonged to her husband
and she thereafter enjoyed it after 1911, through the Court of Wards for
a period much exceeding the necessary twelve years, and the question is whether
her possession was adverse to her husband, he being in fact alive. Possession
must be adverse to a living person, and, as she was possessing under a mistake
as to his death, it is difficult to see how she can claim that by her possession
she was asserting a right adverse to one whom she regarded as dead. The position
of a widow as regards limitation is stated in Lajwanti v. Safa Chand
(1924), 51 Ind. App. 171, at p. 176, where Lord Dunedin, delivering the
judgment, said, "It was then argued that the widows could only possess for
themselves; that the last widow Devi would then acquire a personal title; and
that the respondents and not the plaintiffs were the heirs of Devi. This is
quite to misunderstand the nature of the widows possession. The Hindu widow,
as often pointed out, is not a life renter but has a widows estate that
is to say, a widows estate in her deceased husbands estate. If possessing
as a widow she possesses adversely to any one as to certain parcels, she does
not acquire the parcels as stridhan, but she makes them good to her husbands
estate." Mr. Page, for the appellant, conceded that the appellants
possession could not be adverse to the reversioners, who would take as heirs of
her husband, on the termination of her widows estate. All that the appellant
claimed to have prescribed was her interest in the estate as widow of the Second
Kumar. It might well be argued that, according to the Hindu law, the wife is
half of the husband, and that, on his death, she holds his estate as one-half of
the husband, but their Lordships prefer to base their rejection of the appellants
contention on the broader ground that her possession was not adverse to a
husband, whom she regarded as dead.
26. Their Lordships cannot part with this
case without expressing their deep indebtedness to counsel for their valuable
assistance in a case of such unusual magnitude and complication, and, in
particular, their gratitude and admiration for the untiring skill and breadth of
mind with which Mr. Page has conducted his case.
27. Their Lordships, accordingly, are of opinion
that the appeal fails and should be dismissed, and that the decision of the High
Court should be affirmed, and they will so advise His Majesty. In the very
special circumstances of this case, there will be no order as to costs of the
appeal.