The Asian Age

Don’t hear all high value pleas: SC to CC

Justice Bopanna: Commercial courts should avoid suits which are not related to commercial dispute

- PARMOD KUMAR

The Supreme Court has cautioned the commercial courts (CC) from entertaini­ng all the pleas, involving high value, coming before it as it is fraught with the consequenc­es of clogging them and defeating the very purpose for which they were created — a speedy and early disposal of cases involving commercial disputes.

“We feel that the very purpose for which the CC Act of 2015 has been enacted would be defeated if every other suit merely because it is filed before the commercial court is entertaine­d” said Justice A.S. Bopanna in a recent judgment pointing out that such an approach could eventually clog the system.

Speaking for himself, Justice Bopanna said that the Commercial courts should refrain from entertaini­ng the suits which are not actually relating to commercial dispute but being filed merely because of the “high value and with the intention of seeking early disposal”. Such an approach would only “clog the system and block the way for the genuine commercial disputes” which may have to be entertaine­d by the Commercial courts as intended by the law makers, said Justice Bopanna cautioning the commercial courts walking the course of the other court choked with huge pendency of cases.

In a concurring but separate judgment, Justice R. Banumathi said that the object and purpose of the establishi­ng the commercial courts, commercial divisions and commercial appellate divisions of the high court is to ensure that the cases involved in commercial disputes are disposed of “expeditiou­sly, fairly and at reasonable cost” to the litigants.

Advocating meaningful interpreta­tion of the provisions of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, Justice Banumathi said that would benefit the “litigants especially those who are engaged in trade and commerce which in turn will further economic growth of the country.”

Allaying the apprehensi­ons that the strict adherence to the procedures laid down under the Commercial Court Act for dealing a class of litigation­s would exclude the other high value cases, Justice Bopanna said, “If the same is strictly interprete­d it is not as if those excluded will be non-suited without any remedy. The excluded class of litigation will in any event be entertaine­d in the ordinary Civil Courts wherein the remedy has always existed.”

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