(1.) THIS Rule raises a question of some importance under the law of limitation. The Rule was issued, calling upon the opposite party to show cause why the connected appeal should not be registered as having been duly presented in time or why the delay, if any, in the matter of such presentation should not be condoned under sec. 5 of the Limitation Act. The matter arises in this way :
(2.) THE appeal is directed against a decree for ejectment, passed by the learned trial Judge. The judgment was delivered by the said learned Judge of the local City Civil Court on september 23, 1965. The City Civil court remained closed for the Puja Vacation from september 24, 1965, to October 26 of the same year, both days inclusive, and it reopened on October 27, 1965, on which date, the petitioner applied for certified copies of the above judgment and the decree, following the same. The copies were obtained on november 19, 1965, and the present appeal was filed on that very day. The learned Stamp Reporter of this Court, upon the view that, in the above circumstances, the appellant was not entitled to deduction of the period of long vacation of the trial court, namely from September 24 to October 26, 1965, recorded the conclusion that the appeal was out of time by 3 days and returned the memorandum of appeal to tho learned Advocate on December 10, 1965, for presentation to the Court under section 5 of the Limitation Act. Thereafter, on the very same day, that i$, on December 10, 1965, the appeal was presented to this Court with n application under section 5 of tho limitation Act for condening the delay, if any, in the matter of presentation of the said appeal with the further contention that the instant appeal had been filed within time and, accordingly, the appellant did not need any extension of time under the said section.
(3.) THE points, which thus arise for our consideration, are whether, in tho above circumstances, the period of the lamg vacation of the trial court, namely, from September 24 to October 26, 1965, should be excluded ; if not, whether the appellant is entitled to the necessary extension of time under section 5 of the Limitation Act to cover the delay of 3 days, as reported by the learned Stamp Reporter of this Court in our view, the deduction of time claimed by the appellant namely, of the long vacation of the trial court, as mentioned above, should be allowed. The judgment of the learned trial Judge was pronounced on the closing day of the court, The application for copy of the judgment and of the decree was made on the reopening day, that is, at the earliest possible opportunity. It is well settled that, in these circumstances, the entire period of the intervening long vacation should be excluded in the matter of computation of limitation as time requisite for obtaning copies under section 12 of the Limitation Act (Vide, in this connection, the cases, cited hereinbelow ). Indeed, any other view would have led to an absurdity and obvious injustice and would have been opposed to sound judicial principles, Cases have even gone further and, even where the application for copy was not made on the reopening day but within a reasonable time thereafter, the appellant was held entitled to deduction of the entire period from the date of delivery of the judgment until the day of application for the copy as time requisite for obtaining the same (Vide (1) Debicharan lal and others v. Sheik Mehdi Hussain and another. 20 C. W. N. 1303 ).