Bombay High Court
Uttar Bhartiya Education Society 2018 … vs Principal Commissioner Of Income Tax … on 3 July, 2026
Author: G. S. Kulkarni
Bench: G. S. Kulkarni
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION
INCOME TAX APPEAL (L) NO. 20375 OF 2026
Uttar Bhartiya Education Society, AY-2018-19
1, 1 Sharda Estate
L.T. Road, Vazira Naka, Borivali (West)
Mumbai - 400 091 ... Appellant
Versus
1. Principal Commissioner of Income
Tax (Exemption)
Cumballa Hill, Peddar Road,
Mumbai - 400 026
2. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax
Centralized Processing
Centre, Income Tax Department,
Bengaluru
3. Income 'Tax Officer,
Exemption Ward 2(4), Cumballa Hill
Peddar Road, Mumbai - 400 026 ... Respondents
WITH
INCOME TAX APPEAL (L) NO. 20379 OF 2026
Uttar Bhartiya Education Society, AY-2018-19
1, 1 Sharda Estate
L.T. Road, Vazira Naka, Borivali (West)
Mumbai - 400 091 ... Appellant
Versus
1. Principal Commissioner of Income
Tax (Exemption)
Cumballa Hill, Peddar Road,
Mumbai - 400 026
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2. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax
Centralized Processing
Centre, Income Tax Department,
Bengaluru
3. Income 'Tax Officer,
Exemption Ward 2(4), Cumballa Hill
Peddar Road, Mumbai - 400 026 ... Respondents
_______
Mr. Pankaj Toprani a/w. Mrs. Krupa Jinit Shah, for Appellant.
Mr. Prathmesh Bhosle, for Respondent.
_______
CORAM: G. S. KULKARNI &
AARTI SATHE, JJ.
DATE: 3 JULY 2026
ORAL JUDGMENT (Per : AARTI SATHE, J )
1. These are two appeals filed by the Appellant-Assessee for assessment
years (A.Y.s) 2018-2019 and 2019-2020 involving common questions of law and
facts, and hence they are being disposed of by this common judgment.
2. These appeals are filed by the Appellant-Assessee under Section 260A of
the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’) challenging the
order dated 30th January 2026 (hereinafter referred to as “the impugned order”)
passed by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (hereinafter referred to as ‘the
‘ITAT’) for the aforesaid assessment years rejecting/dismissing the Appellant-
Assessee’s appeals, filed against the order of the Commissioner of Income Tax,
(Appeals) (for short ‘CIT-A’) dated 24th September 2025. The ITAT by its order
dated 30th January 2026 upheld the order of the CIT-A on the ground that the
Appellant-Assessee had filed the appeals belatedly before the CIT-A.
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3. By the present appeals the Appellant-Assessee has raised the following
questions of law: –
(a). Whether on the facts and circumstances of the case and in law, was the
Hon’ble Tribunal justified in dismissing the appeal of the Appellant in limine
on the ground that such inordinate delay of 1797 days (987 days considering
extension of limitation on account of Covid Pandemic) in filing an appeal
before the CIT (A), NFAC cannot be condoned in absence of any sufficient
cause shown by the Appellant by outrightly rejecting the affidavit of the
Trustee of the Appellant filed during the course of hearing?
(b) Whether on the facts and circumstances of the case and in law, was the
Hon’ble Tribunal justified in dismissing the appeal of the Appellant in limine,
overlooking the fact that in the matters involving Charitable institutions like
the Appellant where there is genuinely no intention to make profit and where
the activities are carried on “Non-Profit” basis, the delay is seldom deliberate?
(c). Whether on the facts and circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon’ble
Tribunal has exercised the discretion vested in it reasonably and in accordance
with the settled principles enabling condonation of delay in filing of statutory
appeals?
4. Briefly the facts for A.Y. 2018-19 which is the lead year are as follows : –
i. The Appellant-Assessee is public charitable trust registered under the
Maharashtra Public Trusts Act, 1950 and also as a society under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860. The Appellant-Assessee is also registered under Section
12A of the Act and is regularly assessed under that status for the past several years.
It is the Appellant-Assessee’s contention that the Appellant-Assessee is entitled to
claim exemption under section 10(23C) (iiiab) of the Act for which no registration
is required under this Act. The Appellant-Assessee conducts Government aided
Primary and Secondary Schools and Junior college in one Sharda Estate, L.T. Road,
Wazira Naka, Borivali (West) and is involved in imparting education to students
particularly in lower income groups. The Appellant-Assessee is also registered with
State Government and conducts Government aided Primary and Secondary
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2018 has been issued by Education Inspector, Brihanmumbai (Western Division)
evidencing that the Appellant-Assessee is 100% Government aided educational
institution, in Marathi with its English translation.
ii. The Appellant-Assessee has been availing and being granted exemption
under section 10(23C)(iiiab) read with Rule 2(BB) of the Income Tax Rules 1962
(for short “the Rules”). For the present A.Y., the Appellant-Assessee filed its return
of income (for short “ITR”) on 31st August 2018, declaring the total income as
‘Nil’. The said ITR was processed by Respondent No.2 under Section 143(1) of the
Income-tax Act, 1961, and the total income of the Appellant-Assessee was assessed
at Rs.1,88,15,751/- as against the declared income of ‘Nil’, resulting in a tax de-
mand of Rs.82,19,923/-.
iii. According to the Appellant-Assessee, it was entitled to exemption under
Section 10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act. However, on account of an inadvertent omission
on the part of its Chartered Accountant (CA), the prescribed Form No.10B, which
was required to be furnished for claiming the said exemption, was not filed along
with the ITR. Consequently, in the assessment order passed under Section 143(1)
of the Act, the benefit of the said exemption was not granted to the Appellant-
Assessee.
iv. The Appellant-Assessee intended to challenge the order passed under
Section 143(1) of the Act by filing an appeal before the Additional/Joint
Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals), National Faceless Appeal Centre (for
short, “CIT(A), NFAC”). However, the appeal could not be filed within the
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prescribed period of limitation. The limitation for filing the appeal expired on 26th
October 2019, as the order under Section 143(1) of the Act was passed on 26 th
September 2019. The appeal ultimately came to be filed only on 24th September
2024, resulting in a delay of 1,797 days.
v. It is the case of the Appellant-Assessee that, in view of the extension of the
period of limitation granted by the Supreme Court during the COVID-19
Pandemic by its order dated 10th January 2022 passed in Miscellaneous
Application Nos. 21, 29 and 665 of 2021 in Suo Motu Writ Petition (Civil) No.3
of 2020, the actual delay liable to be considered was only 987 days and not 1,797
days.
vi. By an order dated 24th September 2025, the CIT(A), NFAC dismissed the
appeal preferred by the Appellant-Assessee on the ground that there was a delay of
1,797 days in filing the appeal and that the explanation furnished by the
Appellant-Assessee for such delay did not constitute “sufficient cause” for
condonation. Accordingly, the appeal came to be dismissed as barred by limitation.
vii. Aggrieved by the said order dated 24th August 2025 of the CIT(A), NFAC,
the Appellant-Assessee preferred an appeal before the ITAT. The principal
contention urged before the ITAT was that the CIT(A), NFAC, had erred in
refusing to condone the delay, despite the Appellant-Assessee having furnished a
bonafide and reasonable explanation. It was also contended that the principles of
natural justice had been violated inasmuch as the Appellant-Assessee was not
afforded an adequate opportunity to present its case and to place on record
additional material to substantiate its claim for exemption under Section 10(23C)
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(iiiab) of the Act.
viii. During the pendency of the appeal before the ITAT, the Appellant-Assessee
filed an affidavit dated 20th January 2026 sworn by Mr. Jayprakash P. Mishra,
Trustee of the Appellant-Assessee. In the said affidavit, it was stated that the denial
of exemption under Section 10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act was solely attributable to an
inadvertent error committed by the Appellant-Assessee’s CA. It was explained that,
while filing the ITR for the relevant AYs, the return was inadvertently filed by
claiming exemption under Section 11 of the Act instead of Section 10(23C)(iiiab),
and the requisite certificate and Form No.10B were consequently not furnished.
According to the Appellant-Assessee, the omission was purely inadvertent and
occurred due to a bonafide mistake on the part of the CA, resulting in the denial of
the exemption to which the Appellant-Assessee was otherwise entitled. The
affidavit also set out the circumstances explaining the delay in preferring the
appeals before the CIT(A), NFAC and reiterated that the delay was neither
deliberate nor intentional but had occurred on account of bonafide reasons beyond
the control of the Appellant-Assessee.
ix. By the impugned order dated 30th January 2026, the ITAT dismissed the
appeals preferred by the Appellant-Assessee. The ITAT held that there was an
inordinate delay of 1,797 days in filing the appeals before the CIT(A) NFAC and
that the Appellant-Assessee had failed to establish any valid justification or
sufficient cause warranting condonation of the said delay. The relevant
observations of the ITAT contained in paragraph 7 onwards of the impugned order
are reproduced hereinbelow:
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7. We have heard both parties on this preliminary issue of condonation of delay.
We have also deliberated on the decisions relied on by the Id. AR. There was a delay
of 1797 days in filing appeal before the CIT(A). The Ld. AR submitted that the
appellant did not receive the intimation u/s 143(1) of the Act by post at its address.
The tax consultant also did not provide him proper guidance regarding filing of
appeal before CIT(A). It was also submitted that there was COVID-19 pandemic
due to which the Government of India and Hon’ble Supreme Court had extended
the limitation period for filing of appeals. After excluding such period, there would
be delay of 987 days. The Ld. AR has relied on the decision in case of Collector,
Land Acquisition vs. Mst. Katiji (Supra) and Rotary Club of India (supra). Ongoing
through the facts of the case and the material on record, we find that there is
inordinate delay of 1797 days in filing appeal by the assessee before the ITAT. The
time limit for filing appeal with CIT(A) expired on 25.10.2019 which was much
before the COVID period which started from March 2020. The appellant has not
been able to give any reason for not filing the appeal before the onset of COVID-19.
Even if the assessee’s contention is accepted, still there was delay of 987 days in
filing the appeal before the CIT(A). The trustee himself has admitted that filing of
appeal with CIT(A) had slipped out of his mind after resumption of the office of the
appellant after COVID-19. He has also not given any affidavit or supporting
evidence that the CA did not advise him in taxation matter. It is clear from the facts
discussed above that the assessee has not been able to give any cogent reason for
such inordinate delay in filing appeal before ITAT. That the delay was purely due to
the lack of advice from erstwhile CA, non-receipt of the intimation u/s 143(1) of the
Act, slip of mind to file appeal after COVID-19 etc. could not be treated as a
“sufficient cause” in terms of provisions of section 253(5) of the Act for the
inordinate delay of 1797 days. The Ld. AR has relied upon the decision of the
Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Collector, Land Acquisition vs. Mst. Katiji
(supra), which was pronounced on 19.02.1987. There was delay only 4 days in the
said case. However, we find that in the subsequent decisions, namely, (i) P. K.
Ramachandran vs State of Kerala & Anr. (1997) 7 SCC 556, (i) Pundik Jalam Patil
vs. Executive Engineers, Jalgaon Medium Project, (2008) 17 SCC 448 and (iii)
Basawaraj and Anr vs. Special Land Acquisition Officer, (2013) 14 SCC 81, (iv)
Pathapati Subba Reddy (dies) By L. Rs. & Ors. Vs The Special Deputy Collector
(LA), SLP(C) No.31248 of 2018 (SC), dated 08.04.2024, it has been held by the
Hon’ble Court that condonation of delay should not be granted only on the ground
that ordinarily a litigant does not stand to benefit by lodging an appeal late.
8. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Basawaraj (supra) summarized the
law on the subject issue by stating that where a case has been presented in the Court
beyond limitation of time, the applicant has to explain as to what was the “sufficient
cause” which means an adequate and enough reason, which prevented him to
approach the Court within the limitation. In case a party is found to be negligent, or
for want of bonafide on his part in the facts and circumstances of the case, or found
to have not acted diligently or remained inactive, there cannot be a justified ground
to condone the delay.
9. We also find that in a subsequent decision pronounced on 28.04.2024, in the
case of Pathapati Subba Reddy (dies) & Ors. vs. The Special Deputy Collector (LA),
in SLP (Civil) No. 31248 of 2018 (SC), the Hon’ble Supreme Court referred to and
discussed various decisions of Hon’ble Supreme Court namely (i) Bhag Mal (Alias)
Ram Bux & Ors vs. Munshi (Dead) by LRs & Ors (2007) 11 SCC 285 (SC), (ii)
Collector, Land Acquisition vs. Mst. Katiji (supra) iii) Ramlal, Motilal and Chhotelal
vs. Rewa Coalfields Ltd. (1962) 2 SCR 762, (iv) Maqbul Ahmad and Ors vs. Onkar
Pratap Narain Singh and Ors, AIR 1935 PC 85 (v) Brijesh Kumar and Ors vs. State
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of Haryana and Ors. 2014 (4) SCALE 50 (vi) Lanka Venkateswarlu vs. State of
Andhra Pradesh & Ors, (2011) 4 SCC 363 (vii) State of Jharkhand & Ors vs. Ashok
Kumar Chokhani & Ors. AIR 2009 SC 1927 (viii) Basawaraj and Anr. (supra) and
held as under:
“7. The law of limitation is founded on public policy. It is enshrined in the legal
maxim “interest reipublicae ut sit finis litium” i.e. it is for the general welfare that
a period of limitation be put to litigation. The object is to put an end to every
legal remedy and to have a fixed period of life for every litigation as it is futile to
keep any litigation or dispute pending indefinitely. Even public policy requires
that there should be an end to the litigation otherwise it would be a dichotomy if
the litigation is made immortal vis-a-vis the litigating parties i.e. human beings,
who are mortals.”
10. It has also discussed the case of Collector, Land Acquisition vs. Mst. Katiji
(supra) relied upon by the appellant, and held that the phrases “liberal approach”,
“justice-oriented approach” and “cause of advancement of substantial justice” cannot
be employed to defeat the law of limitation. For ready reference of equality, the
same is reproduced hereunder:
“16 . ….. In Collector, Land Acquisition, Anantnag and Ors. vs. Katiji and Ors.2,
this Court in advocating the liberal approach in condoning the delay for
‘sufficient cause’ held that ordinarily a litigant does not stand to benefit by
lodging an appeal late; it is not necessary to explain every day’s delay in filing the
appeal; and since sometimes refusal to condone delay may result in throwing out
a meritorious matter, it is necessary in the interest of justice that cause of
substantial justice should be allowed to prevail upon technical considerations and
if the delay is not deliberate, it ought to be condoned. Notwithstanding the
above, howsoever, liberal approach is adopted in condoning the delay, existence
of ‘sufficient cause’ for not filing the appeal in time, is a condition precedent for
exercising the discretionary power to condone the delay. The phrases liberal
approach’, ‘justice- (1987) 2 SCC 107 = AIR 1987 SC 1353 oriented approach’
and cause for the advancement of ‘substantial justice’ cannot be employed to
defeat the law of limitation so as to allow stale matters or as a matter of fact dead
matters to be revived and re-opened by taking aid of Section 5 of the Limitation
Act.”
11. After discussion on various cases in its order, the Hon’ble Supreme Court at
Para 26, has summed up the law laid down by it as under:
“26. On a harmonious consideration of the provisions of the law, as aforesaid,
and the law laid down by this Court, it is evident that:
(i) Law of limitation is based upon public policy that there should be an end to
litigation by forfeiting the right to remedy rather than the right itself;
(ii) A right or the remedy that has not been exercised or availed of for a long time
must come to an end or cease to exist after a fixed period of time;
(iii) The provisions of the Limitation Act have to be construed differently, such
as Section 3 has to be construed in a strict sense whereas Section 5 has to be
construed liberally;
(iv) In order to advance substantial justice, though liberal approach, justice-
oriented approach or cause of substantial justice may be kept in mind but the
same cannot be used to defeat the substantial law of limitation contained in
Section 3 of the Limitation Act;
(v) Courts are empowered to exercise discretion to condone the delay if sufficient
cause had been explained, but that exercise of power is discretionary in nature
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and may not be exercised even if sufficient cause is established for various factors
such as, where there is inordinate delay, negligence and want of due diligence;
(vi) Merely some persons obtained relief in similar matter, it does not mean that
others are also entitled to the same benefit if the court is not satisfied with the
cause shown for the delay in filing the appeal;
(vii) Merits of the case are not required to be considered in condoning the delay;
and
(viii) Delay condonation application has to be decided on the parameters laid
down for condoning the delay and condoning the delay for the reason that the
conditions have been imposed, tantamounts to disregarding the statutory
provision.”
12. The Hon’ble Supreme Court accordingly refused to interfere with the
decision of the Hon’ble High Court refusing to condone the delay in filing the
appeal.
13. We also find that the Hon’ble Supreme Court in case of H. Guruswamy &
Ors. vs. A. Krishnaiah Since Deceased by LRS., in Civil Appeal No. 317 of 2025,
dated 08.01.2025, has set aside the order of Hon’ble High Court of Karnataka in
WP No.7220 of 2014 wherein the Hon’ble High Court allowed the Writ Petition
by condoning the delay of about 6 years. The Hon’ble Supreme Court at para 13
observed as under:
13. We are at our wits end to understand why the High Court overlooked all the
aforesaid aspects. What was the good reason for the High Court to ignore all this?
Time and again, the Supreme Court has reminded the District judiciary as well
the High courts that the concepts such as “liberal approach”, “Justice oriented
approach”, “substantial justice” should not be employed to frustrate or jettison
the substantial law of limitation.”
14. In view of the above facts and respectfully following the authoritative
precedents cited supra, we find no reason to condone the inordinate delay of 1797
days in filing appeal before the CIT(A) in absence of any sufficient cause. The
CIT(A) has rightly declined to condone the delay and did not admit the appeal. We
do not find any infirmity in the order of the CIT(A), which we confirm.
Accordingly, the appeal of the assessee is dismissed.
15. Since delay in filing the appeal has not been condoned, it becomes academic
in nature to discuss the merit of the case and hence, they are not required to be
adjudicated.
16. In the result, appeal filed by the assessee is dismissed.
ITA No.7652/M/2025 (AY 2019-20)
17. Facts of the above appeal and grounds raised by the appellant are similar to
those in ITA No.7651/M/2025 (AY 2018-19) decided above. Following the
reasons given therein, this appeal is also dismissed.
18. In the result, both the appeals of the assessee are dismissed. Order is
pronounced on 30.01.2026.
5. We have heard Mr. Pankaj Toprani along with Mrs. Krupa Shah, learned
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counsels appearing on behalf of the Appellant-Assessee, and Mr. Prathmesh
Bhosale, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Respondent-Revenue.
6. Mr. Toprani, learned counsel for the Appellant-Assessee, submitted that the
ITAT failed to adopt an appropriate approach which the law would require while
considering an application for condonation of delay. According to him, the
Appellant-Assessee had placed on record sufficient and bonafide reasons explaining
the delay in filing the appeals before the CIT(A) NFAC. He further submitted that
the Appellant-Assessee had also explained that the denial of exemption under
Section 10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act was solely on account of an inadvertent error
committed by its CA in not claiming the exemption under the correct statutory
provision while filing the ITR.
7. It was further submitted that the ITAT, by merely affirming the order of the
CIT(A) on the ground of delay, failed to consider the merits of the Appellant-
Assessee’s claim and thereby deprived the Appellant-Assessee of an opportunity to
establish its entitlement to exemption under Section 10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act.
According to the learned counsel, such an approach has resulted in serious
prejudice to the Appellant-Assessee. Learned counsel further submitted that the
Appellant-Assessee is a non-profit educational institution engaged in imparting
education and is otherwise entitled to the benefit of exemption under Section
10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act. It was contended that the refusal to condone the delay
has resulted in denial of the statutory exemption on technical grounds, which has
saddled the Appellant-Assessee with a substantial tax liability and has adversely
affected its functioning and financial affairs.
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8. In support of his submissions, Mr. Toprani placed reliance on the decision of
the Supreme Court in Inder Singh v. State of Madhya Pradesh 1 to contend that,
while considering an application for condonation of delay, the Court is required to
adopt a liberal and justice-oriented approach and that a litigant ought not to be
non-suited on a mere technical ground of limitation where a bonafide and
sufficient explanation has been furnished.
9. Per contra, Mr. Prathmesh Bhosale, learned counsel appearing on behalf of
the Respondent-Revenue, supported the impugned order passed by the ITAT. He
submitted that there was an inordinate and unexplained delay on the part of the
Appellant-Assessee in preferring the appeals before the CIT(A), NFAC and that
both the CIT(A) NFAC as well as the ITAT had rightly declined to condone the
delay. It was further submitted that the Appellant-Assessee itself had filed the ITR
by claiming exemption under an incorrect provision of the Act and, therefore, the
benefit of exemption under Section 10(23C)(iiiab) of the Act was rightly denied
while processing the return.
10. Having heard the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the parties and
have perused the proceedings with their assistance. In the facts of the present case,
we are of the considered view that the ITAT, by the impugned order dated 30 th
January 2026, has adopted a pedantic approach. The record indicates that the
Appellant-Assessee had explained the reasons for the delay before both the
CIT(A), NFAC as well as the ITAT. In our considered opinion, such reasons
assigned for the delay deserved due consideration in the facts and circumstances of
1 2025 SCC OnLine SC 600
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the present case. We are, therefore, in agreement with the submissions advanced by
the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Appellant-Assessee that the delay in
filing the appeals deserve to be condoned and the matter ought to be heard and
decided on its own merits.
13. Our view is fortified by the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of
Inder Singh (supra), upon which reliance has rightly been placed by the learned
counsel for the Appellant-Assessee. In the said decision, the Supreme Court has
succinctly enunciated the governing principles relating to condonation of delay and
has held that, in an appropriate case, the merits of the matter deserve to be
examined and should not be defeated merely on the technical ground of limitation.
The relevant observations of the aforesaid decision of the Supreme Court are
reproduced hereunder:
13. In the present case, the contentions of the appellant, on first blush appears to
be attractive, inasmuch as the State cannot be given any undue indulgence as
compared to an ordinary litigant, especially in matters of limitation. There is no
doubt that all parties, whether or not State under Article 122 of the Constitution,
are required to act with due diligence and promptitude.
14. There can be no quarrel on the settled principle of law that delay cannot be
condoned without sufficient cause, but a major aspect which has to be kept in mind
is that, if in a particular case, the merits have to be examined, it should not be
scuttled merely on the basis of limitation.
15. In the present case, the filing of the Review Petition before the First Appellate
Court was with a delay of two years and four months and the Second Appeal before
the High Court was delayed by about a year from the date of the dismissal of the
Review Petition i.e., 30.09.2019. Pausing for a moment, it is necessary to indicate
that in the present case, the dispute over title of a land is not between private parties,
but rather between the private party and the State. Moreover, when the land in
question was taken possession of by the State and allotted for public purpose to the
Youth Welfare Department and the Collectorate and has continued in the
possession of the State, the claim of the State that it is government land cannot be
summarily discarded. We find, upon a perusal of the record, that the appellant had,
in fact, filed an execution case for taking over possession of the land, which would
demonstrate clearly the admitted position that he was not in possession thereof.
Thus, the matter would, in our considered view, require adjudication on its own
merits due to various reasons, inter alia, the fact that a new district has been formed
after the initial claim of the appellant of being allotted the land in the years 1975-
1976/1977-1978. Therefore, the delay of 1537 days reckoned from 01.10.2015 i.e.
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when the First Appellate Court decreed the suit, includes two years and four months
delay in filing a Review Petition (which was itself dismissed on the ground of delay
by the First Appellate Court) and of about a year thereafter for filing the Second
Appeal before the High Court, in the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case,
which, at the cost of repetition relate to land claimed by the State as government
land and in its possession, persuade us to not interfere with the Impugned Order.
Relevantly, initially the suit was dismissed by the Trial Court, which decision was
reversed by the First Appellate Court.
16. The Court in Ramchandra Shankar Deodhar v. State of Maharashtra, (1974)
1 SCC 317 held:
’10. … There was a delay_of more than ten or twelve years in filing the petition
since the accrual of the cause of complaint, and this delay, contended the
respondents, was sufficient to disentitle the petitioners to any relief in a petition
under Article 32 of the Constitution. We do not think this contention should
prevail with us. In the first place, it must be remembered that the rule which says
that the Court may not inquire into belated and stale claims is not a rule of law,
but a rule of practice based on sound and proper exercise of discretion, and there
is no inviolable rule that whenever there is delay, the Court must necessarily
refuse to entertain the petition. Each case must depend on its own facts. The
question, as pointed out by Hidayatullah, C.J., in Tilokchand Motichand v. H.B.
Munshi [(1969) 1 SCC 110, 116: (1969) 2 SCR 824] “is one of discretion for
this Court to follow from case to case. There is no lower limit and there is no
upper limit…… It will all depend on what the breach of the fundamental right
and the remedy claimed are and how the delay arose”.’
(emphasis supplied)
17. No doubt, Ramchandra Shankar Deodhar (supra) relates to a writ petition,
but the statement of law laid down is clear. Sheo Raj Singh (supra) has also
considered the impersonal nature of the functioning of the State, taking note of
what was observed in State of Manipur v. Kotin Lamkang, (2019) 10 SCC 408. In
A B Govardhan v. P Ragothaman, (2024) 10 SCC 613, the Court considered as
under:
37. In Collector (LA) v. Katiji [Collector (LA) v. Katiji, (1987) 2 SCC 107], the
Court noted that it had been adopting a justifiably liberal approach in condoning
delay and that “justice on merits” is to be preferred as against what “scuttles a
decision on merits”. Albeit, while reversing an order of the High Court therein
condoning delay, principles to guide the consideration of an application for
condonation of delay were culled out in Esha Bhattacharjee v. Raghunathpur
Nafar Academy [Esha Bhattacharjee v. Raghunathpur Nafar Academy, (2013)
12 SCC 649 : (2014) 1 SCC (Civ) 713 : (2014) 4 SCC (Cri) 450 : (2014) 2 SCC
(L&S) 595]. One of the factors taken note of therein was that substantial justice
is paramount [Para 21.3 of Esha Bhattacharjee [Esha Bhattacharjee v.
Raghunathpur Nafar Academy, (2013) 12 SCC 649: (2014) 1 SCC (Civ) 713 :
(2014) 4 SCC (Cri) 450 : (2014) 2 SCC (L&S) 595]].
38. In N.L. Abhyankar v. Union of India [N.L. Abhyankar v. Union of India,
1994 SCC OnLine Bom 574: (1995) 1 Mah L 503], a Division Bench of the
Bombay High Court at Nagpur considered, though in the context of. delay vis-à-
vis Article 226 gf. the Constitution, the decision in Dehri Rohtas Light Railway
Co. Ltd. v. District Board, Bhojpur [Dehri Rohtas Light Railway Co. Ltd. v.
District Board, Bhojpur,(1992) 2 SCC 598], and held that: (N.L. Abhyankar case
[N.L. Abhyankar v. Union of India, 1994 SCC OnLine Bom 574: (1995) 1 Mah
L 503], SCC OnLine Bom para 22)
“22. … The real test for sound exercise of discretion by the High Court in this
regard is not the physical running-of time as such, but the test is whether by
reason of delay there is such negligence on the part of the petitioner, so as to infer
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that he has given up his claim or whether before the petitioner has moved the
writ court, the rights of the third parties have come into being which should not
be allowed to be disturbed unless there is reasonable explanation for the delay.”
(emphasis supplied)
39. The Bombay High Court’s eloquent statement of the correct position in
law in N.L. Abhyankar case [N.L. Abhyankar v. Union of India, 1994 SCC
OnLine Bom 574: (1995) 1 Mah L 503] found approval in Municipal Council,
Ahmednagar v. Shah Hyder Beig [Municipal Council, Ahmednagar v. Shah
Hyder Beig, (2000) 2 SCC 48] and Mool Chandra v. Union of India [Mool
Chandra v. Union of India, (2025) 1SCC 625].
40. In the wake of the authorities abovementioned, taking a liberal approach
subserving the cause of justice, we condone the delay and allow lA No. 16203 gf
2019, subject to payment of costs of Rs. 20,000(Rupees twenty thousand) by the
appellant to the respondent.” (emphasis supplied)
18. Considering the above pronouncements and on an overall circumspection, we
are of the opinion that the Second Appeal deserves to be heard, contested and
decided on merits. However, a not of caution is sounded to the respondent to
exhibit promptitude in like matters henceforth and in futuro, failing which the
Court may not be as liberal.
(emphasis supplied)
14. Considering the aforesaid principles of law and the facts of the present
case we are of the view that the impugned order passed by the ITAT requires to be
quashed and set aside. The appeals are allowed on the questions of law raised, and
the delay in filing the appeals is condoned. The appeals are therefore restored to the
file of the CIT (A) to decide the appeals on merit.
15. In the aforesaid circumstances the Appeals are allowed on the question
of law raised. No costs.
(AARTI SATHE, J.) (G. S. KULKARNI, J.)
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