Posted by All Information Here on Saturday, December 5, 2015
In its judgment dated 3rd December, 2012, the Division Bench of Delhi HC comprising of Justice Pradeep Nandrajog and Justice Manmohan Singh set aside the Single Bench judgment dated 8th November, 2012 in Star India Pvt. Ltd v. Piyush Aggarwal & Ors. on the ground of serious procedural flaws. [We blogged on the aforesaid Single Bench judgment here and here.] The Division Bench, vide its judgment, restored the civil suits along with all the pending applications which included the application seeking interim injunction. As per the judgment, “With as many as 12 senior counsels breathing down the neck of the Judge; docket explosion breaking the back of the judicial system, it was a rush-rush affair, and regretfully has resulted in a situation of precious time, far from being saved, being lost.”(paragraph 30) The Division Bench observed that the Single Bench judgment was a “self-contradictory decision” on the ambit of broadcasting rights. (paragraph 31)
The Division Bench, further, held that if an issue arises as to whether common law recognizes any proprietary/ownership interest in BCCI with respect to cricket matches organized by BCCI, then the Single Judge will have the discretion to settle the same as a preliminary issue provided the pleadings evidence it as a purely legal issue. This direction of the Division Bench is in conformity with Order 14, Rule 2 of Civil Procedure Code, 1908 and Supreme Court judgment in Ramesh B. Desai v. BipinVadilal Mehta (AIR 2006 SC 3672) (which re-affirmed the earlier Supreme Court judgment in Major S.S. Khanna v. Brig. F.J. Dillon (AIR 1964 SC 497) - “Under O. 14 r. 2, Code of Civil Procedure, where issues both of law and of fact arise in the same suit, and the Court is of opinion that the case or any part thereof may be disposed of on the issues of law only, it shall try those issues first, and for that purpose may, if it thinks fit, postpone the settlement of the issues of fact until after the issues of law have been determined. The jurisdiction to try issues of law apart from the issues of fact may be exercised only where in the opinion of the Court the whole suit may be disposed of on the issues of law alone, but the Code confers no jurisdiction upon the Court to try a suit on mixed issues of law and fact as preliminary issues. Normally all the issues in a suit should be tried by the Court; not to do so, especially when the decision on issues even of law depend upon the decision of issues of fact, would result in a lop-sided trial of the suit.”)