In Manoj Kumar Sharma vs. Vinod Suri & Another, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh set aside a trial court order permitting the recall of a witness, ruling that Order 18 Rule 17 of the CPC is a discretionary power to be exercised sparingly and only for the Court’s clarification. The Court established that this provision is not a tool for parties to conduct further examination, introduce omitted evidence, or fill up lacunae discovered after a rigorous cross-examination. Emphasizing that a court cannot allow a recall merely because it causes no prejudice to the opponent, the High Court quashed the “cursory and non-speaking” order of the Rent Controller and issued a time-bound directive to dispose of the 15-year-old execution petition within one month.
- Factual Background and Procedural History
The dispute arose during an execution petition filed in 2011 by the respondent (decree holder). The petitioner filed third-party objections under Order 21 Rule 97 CPC, claiming to be a tenant, while the respondent maintained he was a trespasser. After the respondent (Vinod Suri) was cross-examined, he moved an application under Order 18 Rule 17 CPC to re-examine himself. He argued that during cross-examination, he was confronted with police documents that necessitated “clarification” regarding the petitioner’s status.
- Scope and Purpose of Order 18 Rule 17 CPC
The High Court clarified the strict legal boundaries of recalling witnesses:
- Court’s Power, Not Party’s Right: The primary purpose of the rule is to enable the Court to clarify its own doubts or ambiguities regarding evidence already led.
- No Filling of Lacunae: It is absolutely not intended to allow a party to fix omissions or “lapses” in their testimony noticed only after facing cross-examination.
- Sparingly Exercised: As per Supreme Court mandates (VadirajNaggappaVernekar and K.K. Velusamy), the power is discretionary and must not be used as a routine strategy for further examination-in-chief or cross-examination.
- Inherent Powers and Procedural Safeguards
While the Court may invoke its inherent jurisdiction under Section 151 CPC to permit fresh evidence in the interest of justice, it must ensure the process does not become a “protracting tactic”. The High Court reiterated that such applications must be:
- Bona Fide and Necessary: The court must be satisfied that there were valid reasons for the earlier non-production of evidence.
- Controlled by Costs: If allowed, the court should award appropriate costs to compensate for delays and set a fixed time schedule for completion.
- Rejected if Negligent: Mischievous or frivolous applications intended to cover up negligence must be rejected with heavy costs.
- Critique of the Lower Court’s Order
The High Court found the Rent Controller’s decision to allow the recall was legally unsustainable for several reasons:
- Vague Application: The respondent’s application was silent on which specific police documents required clarification or what the exact confusion was.
- Non-Speaking Order: The Rent Controller assigned no specific reasons for the decision, merely stating in a cursory manner that it might “assist the Court”.
- Conflict with Mandate: Allowing a recall “merely for the asking” defeats the purpose of CPC amendments intended to expedite trials.
- Directive for Time-Bound Disposal
The High Court took serious notice of the inordinate delay in the execution proceedings, which had been pending for over 15 years. Observing that the case had been “hanging fire” on one pretext or another, the Court exercised its superintending powers under Article 227. It issued a strict mandate to the Executing Court to decide the main petition positively within one month from the parties’ scheduled appearance on June 15, 2026.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 299
Manoj Kumar Sharma V. Vinod Suri & Another (D.O.J. 19.05.2026)
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