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R. DAYANANDA SAGAR ETC. versus VATAL NAGARAJ ETC.

Citation: [1976] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 121 · Decided: 23-04-1976 · Supreme Court of India · Bench: HANS RAJ KHANNA · Disposal: Dismissed

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Judgment (excerpt)

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121 
R. DAY ANANDA SAGAR ETC. 
v. 
VATAL NAGARAJ ETC. 
April 23. 1976 
(H. R. KHANNA, M. H. BEG AND V. R. KRISHNA !YER, JJ.] 
Review of judgn1t11t of Supreme Court should not be a routine sequel to a 
<defeat in Court-Cons1i1ution of India, Art. 137 and Order XL of the Supreme 
Court Rules, 1966 rtad with Order XLVfl, Rule 1 of tlie Civil Procedure 
Code. 
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B 
The petitioner filed a review petition on the ground that certain observa-
1ions in the judgment amounted to almost branding him as an unindicted crimi-
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nal-2uilty of abetting forgery and perjury and they should be obliterated. 
Dismissing the petitions and modifying the rigour of the observations, the 
Court, held : 
(1) A ill!l!onent of the final Court of the.land is final. 
A review of such a 
judgment is 8.n exceptional phenomenon, permitted only when n grave and 
¥1aring error or other well-established ground is made out. Unfounded and 
indiscriminate petitions almost as a routine sequel to defeat in court should be 
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avoided dolpite the theoretical possibility of succeS>. 
[121 F.GJ 
Obiter : 
Wisdom cannot be confounded with obstinacy and a charitable 
-.construction _of a situation cannot be excluded. 
(122 E] 
CrviL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Review Petition Nos. 43 and 44 
()f 1975. 
Application for review of this Hon'ble Court's Judgment dated 
11th October 1974 in the matter of CM! Appeal No. 1738 of 1973. 
A. K. Sen, M. Veerappa and Altai Ahmed for the Petitioners in 
Review Petition No. 43 of 1975. 
V. S. Desai and R. B. Datar for the Petitioners in Review Petition 
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No. 44 of 1975. 
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The Order of the Court was delivered by 
KRISHNA !YER, J. A judgment of the final Court of the land is final. 
A review of such a judgment is an exceptional phenomenon, permitted 
only where a grave and glaring error or other welt-established ground 
is made out. 
Unfortunately, the theoretical possibility, successful in 
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a microscopic rarity of cases, has led to frequent, unfounded and in-
discriminate petitions, almost as a routine sequel to a defeat in Court. 
The present review petitions fall under the latter category and fail by 
the fonner test and are therefore dismissed. 
Shri Asoke Sen made a limited submission on behalf of Dayananda 
Sagar in CMP 2095 of 1975 that certain observations in the judgment 
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almost branding his client as an unindicted criminal-guilty of abetting 
forgery land purjury-were altogether unmerited and should be oblite-
rated. 
While we cannot agree to this course, we admit that these 
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E 
122 
SUPREME COURT REPORTS 
[1976] SUPPLEMENTARY 
strictures are in no way integral to the decision, although relevant if 
we take an overall view. 
It is true that the words used are strong and we felt then tJ1at they 
were warranted. 
After hearing both sides we deem it meet to soften 
the judicial blow. 
Shri Sen submits that we were misled in reaching 
the inference drawn. 
Maybe, we were. 
Judge Learned Hand once 
said that the spirit of liberty is 'the spirit which is not too sure that it 
is right'. 
That great Judge was 'fond of recalling Cromwell's state-
ment : 'I beseech ye in the bowels of Christ, think that ye may be mis-
taken'.' He told a Senate Committee, 'I should like to have that written 
over the portals of every church, every school and every court-house, 
and may I say, of every legislative body in the United States. I sbould 
like to have every court begin. 
'I beseech ye in the bowels of Christ, 
think that we may be mistaken'. 
(Yale Law Journal: Vol. 71, 1961 
November part). 
In a sense, it is this likelihood of error that persuaded Jesus Christ 
to caution : 'Judge not, that ye be not judged'. 
Our search for truth 
sometimes reaches a blind aBey expressed by Bacon : 
" 'what is 
truth?' said Jesting Pilato : and would not stay for an answer'." 
In this conspectus of great sayings, we are inclined to be humble. 
in spirit and free to tone down the harshness of the characterisation· 
to some extent. 
We would content ourselves by saying that the mate-
rials placed before us in appeal, read in the light of the conclusions of 
the High Court, may well lead to the inference and justify the observa-
tions made by us, although it may not be ruled out that a more inno-
cent inference exculpating any role for the petitioner is possible .. Thus 
far, we modify the rigour, but decline to cancel, as pleaded by the peti-
tioner. 
Wisdom cannot be confounded with obstinacy and a charita--
ble 

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