PLR 2023 Lahore 11
Other citation:
2022 LHC 6944 (https://sys.lhc.gov.pk/appjudgments/2022LHC6944.pdf)
PLD 2023 Lahore 699 (https://www.pakistanlawsite.com/Login/MainPage)
[Lahore High Court]
Before Shahid Bilal Hassan, J
Basharat Ali and
others—Petitioners
Versus
Muhammad Arif and
others—Respondents
Writ
Petition No.22235 of 2020, heard on 4th October, 2022.
HEADNOTE
Civil Procedure Code (V of 1908) —
— O. III, R. 1 — Statement made by counsel — Scope — A party is always bound by the statement of his counsel unless anything contrary in the power of attorney places restriction on the authority, delegated upon the counsel, to compromise or abandon the claim on behalf of his client(s). [Para. No. 3]
Hassan Akhtar and others v. Azhar Hameed and others (PLD 2010 Supreme Court 657), Fateh Khan v. Manzoor and 5 others (PLD 1993 Lahore 76), Noor Muhammad and others v. Muhammad Siddique and others (1994 SCMR 1248) relied.
Afzal and others v. Abdul Ghani (2005 SCMR 946) referred.
Muhammad
Mehmood Chaudhry, Advocate for Petitioners.
Mubeen
Arif and Ihsan Ullah Ranjha, Advocates for Respondents.
Date
of hearing: 4th October, 2022.
JUDGMENT
Shahid
Bilal Hassan, J:
Facts, in concision, are as such that respondents instituted a suit for
malicious prosecution against the petitioners on 27.07.2017. During pendency of
the suit, learned counsel for the respondents namely Ch. Hasnain Sadiq Sahi,
Advocate appeared before the learned trial Court alongwith one of the
plaintiffs Muhammad Akram and recorded his statement, by virtue of which the
suit was withdrawn on 09.01.2019 and the impugned order dated 10.01.2019 was
passed. After 30 days of the said withdrawal of the suit, an application was
filed by the respondents for restoration of the suit. The learned trial Court
after hearing both the parties dismissed the said application vide order dated
04.03.2019, against which they filed a revision petition which was partially allowed
vide impugned order dated 26.02.2020; hence, the instant constitutional
petition.
2. Heard.
3. Engagement of counsel namely Hasnain Sadiq
Sahi, Advocate and conducting of proceedings by him on behalf of the
respondents, under Order III, Rule 1, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, is
admitted one. The respondents have appointed the said learned Advocate as their
counsel for conducting of suit on their behalf and signed the power of
attorney, which authorizes the said learned Advocate to conduct the suit on their
behalf including recording of any kind of statement. Record reveals that the
statement was recorded on 09.01.2019 on the application of the learned counsel
and one of the plaintiffs/respondents namely Muhammad Akram and after recording
statement, the case was ordered to be produced on the date already fixed i.e.
10.01.2019, when order with regards to withdrawal of the suit was passed. By
singing Wakalatnama all the powers including withdrawal of suit or to take any
step and conduct proceedings have been delegated upon the counsel. In Fateh
Khan v. Manzoor and 5 others (PLD 1993 Lahore 76), this Court
held:-
‘It is inconceivable that elements of fraud
and misrepresentation may anywise be involved in the exercise of lawful
authority conferred on a counsel by means of Wakalatnama. This appointment is
made as per the contemplation of Rule 1 of Order III, C.P.C. and is essentially
an authority conferred on an agent, exercisable under the ordinary rules
governing the relationship of Principal and Agent, in quite a subtle and
refined form, exercisable in the field determined by the terms of Wakalatnama
itself. Effectiveness of such delegated authorisation and the use thereof stand
provided for by section 2 of the Powers of Attorney Act (VII of 1882) as also
in Chapter X of the Contract Act (IX of 1872). Authority to withdraw or
compromise a, litigation has been held to also be inherent in the engagement of
a counsel.’
Further
reliance is placed on Noor Muhammad and others v. Muhammad Siddique and others (1994
SCMR 1248) wherein the Apex Court of country has invariably held that:-
‘It will be seen that the terms of
Vakalatnama amply demonstrate that the counsel was empowered to take any step
and conduct proceedings in the suit as considered proper by him, and that the
same were acceptable to the respondents, who put their signatures on the Deed
in token of their approval.’
A
party is always bound by the statement of his counsel unless there is anything
contrary in the power of attorney places restriction on the authority,
delegated upon the counsel, to compromise or abandon the claim on behalf of his
client(s). Reliance is placed on Hassan Akhtar and others v. Azhar Hameed
and others (PLD 2010 Supreme Court 657) and Afzal and
others v. Abdul Ghani (2005 SCMR 946). In Hassan Akhtar case ibid,
the Hon’ble Supreme Court has held:-
’13. It is by now well-settled that an
Advocate has authority to make statement on behalf of his client, which is
binding upon the client, unless there is any thing contrary in the Vakalatnama
putting restriction on the authority of the Advocate to compromise or abandon
claim on behalf of the client. The Advocate’s power in the conduct of a suit
allows him to abandon the issue, which in his discretion, advisable in the general
interest of his client.’
4. For the foregoing discussion, the learned
revisional Court has wrongly construed law on the subject and has failed to
exercise vested jurisdiction as per mandate of law and this Court in exercise
of constitutional jurisdiction under Article 199 of the Constitution of Islamic
Republic of Pakistan, 1973 is not denuded of correcting the wrong committed by the
learned Court below. As such, the impugned order dated 26.02.2020 passed by the
learned Addl. District Judge, Wazirabad being illegal is set aside by allowing
the constitutional petition in hand and consequent whereof the order dated
04.03.2019 passed by the learned trial Court is restored. No order as to the
costs.
Petition allowed