Gurbux Singh v. Bhooralal (1964)

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Civil procedure frequently raises an important procedural question:

Can a defendant successfully invoke Order II Rule 2 CPC without proving what was pleaded in the earlier suit?

The Supreme Court in Gurbux Singh v. Bhooralal (1964) clarified the scope of Order II Rule 2 CPC and laid down one of the most important procedural requirements governing the bar of subsequent suits.

The Court reaffirmed an important principle:

A plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC cannot ordinarily succeed unless the defendant proves that both proceedings arise from the same cause of action and establishes what was claimed in the earlier suit.

The judgment remains a leading authority on Order II Rule 2 CPC, cause of action, omitted relief, and proof required for procedural bar in civil litigation.

Introduction

Order II Rule 2 CPC seeks to:

  • Prevent multiplicity of litigation
  • Avoid splitting of claims arising from one cause of action
  • Ensure all available relief arising from the same grievance is pursued together

The rule requires:

A plaintiff must ordinarily claim the whole relief arising from one cause of action in a single suit.

This raises an important legal issue:

Can courts assume identity of cause of action without examining what was pleaded in earlier proceedings?

The Supreme Court clarified:

Before applying Order II Rule 2 CPC, courts must carefully examine whether both suits arise from the same factual foundation and whether relief was omitted in earlier litigation.

Case Details

Case Name

Gurbux Singh v. Bhooralal

Year

1964

Citation

AIR 1964 SC 1810

Court

Supreme Court of India

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Relevant Provision

Order II Rule 2, Civil Procedure Code, 1908

Subject Matter

Order II Rule 2 CPC, Cause of Action and Bar of Subsequent Suit

Facts of the Case

The dispute arose out of claims relating to:

Possession of immovable property and connected reliefs

An earlier suit had already been instituted concerning:

Certain reliefs connected with the disputed property

Subsequently, another suit was filed seeking:

Possession and additional reliefs

The defendant objected and argued that:

  • The subsequent suit was barred under Order II Rule 2 CPC
  • Relief should have been claimed in earlier proceedings
  • Both proceedings arose from the same cause of action

However:

The material pleadings from the earlier suit were not properly placed before the court to establish identity of cause of action

The matter eventually reached the Supreme Court for determination of:

Whether Order II Rule 2 CPC could be invoked without proof of the earlier pleadings and factual foundation

Issues Before the Court

Issue 1

Whether a plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC can succeed without proof of earlier pleadings?

Issue 2

Whether both proceedings arose from the same cause of action?

Issue 3

What must a defendant establish to invoke the procedural bar?

Issue 4

Whether courts may infer omitted relief merely through assumptions?

Judgment of the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court clarified:

A plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC cannot succeed merely on assumptions or broad allegations.

The Court emphasized:

The defendant must establish the factual foundation of the earlier suit and prove that the later proceeding arises from the same cause of action.

The Court explained that a successful plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC generally requires proof that:

  1. The subsequent suit arises from the same cause of action
  2. More than one relief was available in the earlier proceeding
  3. The omitted relief was not claimed without leave of the court

The Court observed:

Courts cannot speculate regarding earlier pleadings or presume identity of cause of action without evidence.

Accordingly:

The plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC failed.

Cause of Action Test

Cause of Action

Cause of action means:

The bundle of material facts necessary to establish entitlement to relief

The Court clarified:

Identity of cause of action cannot be presumed and must be affirmatively established.

The decisive inquiry is:

Whether both proceedings substantially arise from the same factual foundation

Without proof:

The procedural bar under Order II Rule 2 CPC may fail.

1. Earlier Pleadings Must Be Established

The Court held:

A defendant invoking Order II Rule 2 CPC must establish what formed the basis of the earlier suit.

2. Identity of Cause of Action Must Be Proven

The Court clarified:

Sameness of cause of action cannot be assumed merely because parties or subject matter overlap.

3. Procedural Bar Requires Clear Proof

The Court emphasized:

Order II Rule 2 CPC is a technical bar that requires proper proof and careful examination.

4. Courts Must Avoid Speculation

The judgment reaffirmed:

Claims should not be dismissed merely through assumptions regarding omitted relief.

Also Read: State Bank of India v. Gracure Pharmaceuticals Ltd. (2013)

Why This Case is Important?

This judgment remains important because it:

  • Explains Order II Rule 2 CPC
  • Clarifies proof requirements for procedural bar
  • Defines cause of action analysis
  • Prevents speculative objections in litigation
  • Protects fairness in civil proceedings

The judgment remains relevant in:

  • CPC studies
  • Property disputes
  • Subsequent suit litigation
  • Cause of action analysis
  • Judiciary examinations

Key Takeaways

ConceptPrinciple
Order II Rule 2 CPCPrevents splitting of same cause of action
Earlier SuitMust be factually established
Cause of ActionMust be affirmatively proved
Procedural BarRequires clear proof
Judicial ApproachAvoid speculation

Conclusion

Gurbux Singh v. Bhooralal (1964) remains one of the most important judgments on Order II Rule 2 CPC and proof of cause of action. The Supreme Court clarified that a plea under Order II Rule 2 CPC cannot ordinarily succeed unless the earlier suit and omitted relief are properly established and both proceedings are shown to arise from the same factual foundation.

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