THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF ‘RES-JUDICATA’: BY - YASH DHOLAKIA
THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF
‘RES-JUDICATA’:
AUTHORED BY - YASH DHOLAKIA
ABSTRACT:
“Res-judicata” is a Latin maxim which
means that the matter adjudicated once cannot be judged by the judiciary, if
the matter is consisting with the same parties and same facts. “Res judicata
pro veritate occipitur” is the actual Latin maxim but over the years it has
been pronounced as “Res-judicata”. The concept has been evolved from the
English Common Law. This concept has been developed in the Indian legal System
after the concept first found its place in the Code of Civil Procedural from
the common law. The objective behind the inclusion of ‘res-judicata’ into the
Indian legal system is to save the time of judiciary system and also it helps
in the administrative law. If either of the parties to the litigation
approaches to either the same or any other higher courts, with the same facts
and with the same opposite party the matter will be struck down by the
concerned authority by the help of the doctrine ‘res-judicata’. But there is
some grey area into this matter like what if there is substantial changes in
the matter or with the facts and also is there any exception to the doctrine?
Therefore, the author will try to reach to the conclusion of the doctrine of
‘res-judicata’ with the help of principles and precedents set by the Indian
Judiciary System and will try to portray the research substantial method.
KEYWORDS: Indian Judiciary system, Code of
Civil Procedural, res-judicata, exception, principles.
Ø EVOLUTION OF THE CONCEPT OF
RES-JUDICATA:
The idea of res judicata, which is
Latin for "a case already judged," has changed over time in many
nations' legal systems.
Res judicata, a legal principle that
dates to ancient Rome, denoted that a final decision in a case could not be
overturned or reopened. This idea served as the foundation for the contemporary
idea of res judicata, which is a cornerstone of common law legal systems and
intended to advance the finality of court decisions.
Res judicata is a common law notion
that forbids the same parties from pursuing the same issues over. In other
words, a court's decision is regarded final and binds the parties if it has
made a judgement on a specific matter. This helps the administration of justice
proceed more quickly by preventing parties from constantly litigating the same
problems.
The idea of res judicata has expanded
over time to encompass several related doctrines, such as issue preclusion and
collateral estoppel, which forbid parties from bringing up a specific issue in
a subsequent process if that issue has already been resolved in a previous proceeding.[1]
Generally, the idea of res judicata
still has a significant place in contemporary legal systems since it encourages
the conclusion and certainty of judicial actions and makes sure that parties
may rely on the outcomes of earlier litigation.
Ø INTRODUCTION TO THE CONCEPT OF
RES-JUDICATA:
A legal theory known as res judicata
refers to the doctrine of finality in litigation. The phrase translates from
Latin to mean "a matter already judged." Relitigating of a claim or
issue that has already been decided by a court with appropriate authority is
prohibited by the doctrine of res judicata.
Claim and issue preclusion are two
aspects of the res judicata principle. Issue preclusion prevents the
relitigating of an issue that was unavoidably resolved in an earlier case,
whereas claim preclusion prohibits the relitigating of a claim that has already
been decided.
Res Judicata is a Latin proverb that
was created by combining the terms "res" and "judicata."
Judicata is Latin for judged, while Res is Latin for affair or matter. As a
result, the etymological meaning is "a judged matter."[2]
·
DEFINATION:
The literal definition of the
res-judicata has been mentioned under Civil Procedural Code section-11[3] as
“No Court shall try any
suit or issue in which the matter directly and substantially in issue has been
directly and substantially in issue in a former suit between the same parties,
or between parties under whom they or any of them claim, litigating under the
same title, in a Court competent to try such subsequent suit or the suit in
which such issue has been subsequently raised, and has been heard and finally
decided by such Court.”
·
PRINCIPLE OF RES-JUDICATA:
The res judicata principle aims to
encourage the impartial and honest administration of justice and to guard
against the exploitation of the legal system. When a litigant wants to bring a
future lawsuit on the same subject after receiving a decision in an earlier
case involving the same parties, the doctrine of res judicata is applicable.
This holds true not just for the claims filed in the first case, but also in
many jurisdictions for claims that might have been brought at the same time.[4]
·
PURPOSE OF RES-JUDICATA:
According to the doctrine of res
judicata, all legal proceedings must be concluded as soon as possible in the
sake of the greater good. The philosophy also emphasises justice, equity, and
good faith, which call for repeated hearings on the same matter not afflict
parties who have already won a case.[5]
The doctrine of res-judicata is based
on three Latin maxims which are as follows:
i) nemo debet bis vexari pro una et
eadem causa (no man should be vexed for the same cause).
ii) interest reipublicae ut sit finis litium (it is in
the interest of the State that there should be an end to a litigation
iii) res judicata pro veritate occipitur (a judicial
decision must be accepted as correct).
·
PRE-REQUISITES OF THE CONCEPT OF RES-JUDICATA:
To fulfil the criteria of section 11[6] of
CPC there are some pre-requisites which must be fulfilled, which are as
follows:
a) a judicial decision by proficient
court or tribunal;
b) a judicial decision must be final
and binding;
c) any judicial decision made on the
merits;
d) a fair hearing in the court;
e) it is not relevant on the count of
earlier decision which may be a right or wrong.
·
NATURE AND SCOPE OF RES-JUDICATA:
Res is Latin for "subject
matter," and Judicata is Latin for "determined." This idea,
which was developed in the wider public interest, mandates that all legal
proceedings must conclude at some point. This idea is supported by justice,
equity, and morality. Meaning that a party who has won a case once should not
face harassment in a subsequent case concerning the same subject. Res judicata
seeks to create a balance between two opposing forces. It first promotes the
effectiveness of the legal system by rendering a conclusive decision. Secondly,
it safeguards the parties' already-agreed-upon rights and interests. The
concept of public policy is codified in Section 11 of the code. It is an
example of the conclusiveness rule and serves as a barrier to try the same
issue twice.[7]
·
APPLICABILITY OF RES-JUDICATA:
A crucial idea built on the concept
of public and private interests is the doctrine of res judicata. It merely
demands that all legal proceedings conclude. The civil action, execution
processes, arbitration proceedings, tax matters, industrial adjudication, writ
petitions, administrative orders, interim orders, criminal orders, etc. are all
situations where it applies. Hence, the Civil Process Code's Section 11, which
establishes the theory of res judicata, is extensive in scope.[8]
·
EXAMPLES OF RES-JUDICATA:
A’ sued ‘B’
as he did not pay rent. ‘B’ pleaded for the lessening of rent on the ground as
the area of the land was less than the mentioned on the lease. The Court found
that the area was greater than shown in the lease. The area was excess and the
principles of res judicata will not be applied.
In a case,
‘A’ new lawsuit was filed in which the defendants requested that the Court
dismiss the lawsuit with a plea of res judicata. She was barred from bringing a
claim of res judicata because her previous claim was dismissed for fraud. The
Court said that the defence of res judicata must be proved by evidence.
·
RES-JUDICATA UNDER INDIAN LAW
SYSTEM:
Under Section
11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, the principle of res judicata, or the
norm of the judgment's conclusiveness, has been incorporated into Indian law.
It stipulates that no party may be authorised to reopen a topic in a later
litigation once it has been definitively settled by a competent Court. No Court
shall try any action or matter where the matter directly and substantially in
issue was directly and substantially in issue in a former action between the
same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim,
litigating under the same title, in a Court competent to try such subsequent
action or the action in which such issue has subsequently been raised,
according to Section 11.[9]
·
ESSENTIAL POINTS:
a) Past suit refers to a case that was
decided before the case at hand, not whether it was the case before this one.
i.e., the cut-off date is the judgement date rather than the filing date for
the lawsuit.
b) Independent of a person's ability to
appeal a previous lawsuit, a court's competence must be determined.
c) The matter at issue in this lawsuit
must have been asserted by one party and either accepted or rejected
(expressly/implicitly) by the other party.
d) Any issue that could have or should
have been used as a basis for an attack or defence in that earlier lawsuit will
be regarded to have been directly and significantly at issue in that lawsuit
(constructive res judicata).
·
CONSTRUCTIVE RES-JUDICATA:
A man-made version of res judicata is
the constructive res judicata rule included in Section 11 of the Civil Process
Law. It states that if a party enters a plea in a proceeding involving him and
the defendant, he is not entitled to enter a plea against the same party in a
proceeding involving the same topic in the future. That is against the public
policies that the res judicata concept is predicated on. For the defendant, it
would result in harassment and suffering. Raising the bar is assisted by the
constructive res judicata rule. This rule, which in reality is an aspect of
augmentation of the general principles of res judicata, is hence known as the
rule of constructive res judicata.[10]
·
RES-JUDICATA AND ESTOPPEL:
Estoppel is the legal concept that
forbids one from saying something that is inconsistent with what a prior action
has implied. The Indian Evidence Act's Sections 115 to 117 deal with it.
Estoppel is the law of constructive res judicata. The doctrine of res judicata
and the doctrine of estoppel are different in some circumstances.[11]
a) Res judicata is the outcome of the
court's ruling, whereas estoppel results from the parties' actions.
b) Estoppel operates under the equity
doctrine; a person who has encouraged another to change his position to his
disadvantage cannot later use that change to his advantage. In other words,
several lawsuits are prohibited by res judicata, and multiple representations
of cases are prohibited by estoppel.
c) Unlike res judicata, which strips a
court of its authority to hear a case and forbids an inquiry at the threshold,
estoppel is a rule of proof and is sufficient for the party (in limine).
d) Estoppel forbids a person from
expressing two opposing things at once, while res judicata forbids a person
from averring the same thing twice in court proceedings.
e) The rule of estoppel prevents the
party from denying what they have previously claimed to be true, while the
principle of res judicata presumes the reality of the decision in the prior
lawsuit.
·
CONDITIONS IN RES-JUDICATA:
The Plea of Res Judicata contests the
court's authority to conduct the trial. The res judicata theory, however, will
only be applicable in cases where Section 11 prerequisites are met. The
following requirements must be met in order to invoke the plea and establish
res judicata under Section 11:[12]
ü The problem in the following lawsuit
must be the same issue that was directly and substantially at issue in the
prior lawsuit, either constructively or. The prior lawsuit had to have involved
the same parties or parties that they or any of them claimed to be entitled to
compensation from.
ü Those parties must have been involved
in the previous lawsuit's litigation under the same title.
ü The matter immediately and
substantially in issue in the later litigation must have been heard and finally
decided by the court in the previous suit;
ü The court which decided the former
suit must be a court competent to try the subsequent suit or the suit in which
such issue is subsequently raised.
·
RES-JUDICATA AND RES-SUBJUDICE:
|
RES-JUDICATA
|
RES-SUBJUDICE
|
|
It is applied to the matter which
has been already decided or adjudicated.
|
It is applied in a matter which is
still pending before the court of law.
|
|
It prevents the trial or issue in
court which has been already decided in the previous suit, with the same
facts, parties, and issues.
|
It bars the trial of a suit in
which the matter is pending for decision in the previous suit.
|
|
The competent court must have given
the judgement in the former instituted suit.
|
The presence of two suits is
necessary one which was formerly instituted and the one which is subsequently
instituted.
|
|
Both the parties must have
litigated under the same title in the former suit.
|
Both the parties must be litigating
under the same title in both the suits.
|
|
Here it is essential that the
issue, parties, and the facts must be same.
|
Here if the suit is directly or
subsequently connected to the
|
These two doctrines must be strictly
adhered to in order to ensure the efficient operation of the judicial system
and to deliver justice to those who are in need given the growing number of
cases in the courts and the increased burden on the courts as a result of
numerous frivolous and repetitive lawsuits. These teachings are not to be used
and must not be applied with the intention of escaping justice. Instead, the
objective is to increase the judiciary's effectiveness.[13]
·
RES-JUDICATA AND STARE DECISIS:
Ø WHAT IS STARE DECISIS?
Stare Decisis, a Latin word that
literally means "to stand in the things that have been decided," is
the concept that binds judges to precedent. The legal principle that requires
courts to follow precedent when deciding legal issues in order to ensure
clarity, consistency, and stability in the administration of justice, with
exceptions made for clearly compelling circumstances (as to prevent the
perpetuation of injustice).[14]
Ø KEY DIFFERENCE:
"A thing adjudicated,"
"a case already determined," or "an issue concluded by a
decision or judgement" are all definitions of the Latin phrase "res
judicata." "Stand by decided cases," "uphold
precedents," "keep previous adjudications," and "not
disrupt existing law" are all definitions of the Latin phrase "stare
decisis."
Res judicata binds parties and
privies, whereas stare decisis applies to strangers as well and prevents courts
from adopting an opposing viewpoint on a matter of law that has already been
determined. Res judicata assumes that the same facts will be at issue in
subsequent litigation involving the same parties. All parties are subject to
the same legal standard under stare decisis.
·
RES-JUDICATA AND COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL:
Ø WHAT IS COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL?
Collateral estoppel in civil process
refers to the use of issue preclusion to apply res judicata principles.
Collateral estoppel can be used for issue preclusion to bar one party from
re-litigating any issue that has been legitimately, finally, and truly decided
on the merits in another case.
The court will consider whether an
issue was crucial to the previous holding when determining whether a particular
issue has already been resolved. According to this standard, any matter
previously addressed in court that, if resolved differently, would have changed
the outcome of the case, is considered to have been resolved.[15]
Ø CONSIDERABLE POINT BETWEEN
RES-JUDICATA AND COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL:
When a second case that is identical
to one that has previously been decided is filed, the theories of res judicata
and collateral estoppel sometimes come into play. An issue or cause of action
that has been thoroughly litigated should not be litigated again, according to
the theories. A common name for res judicata is "claim preclusion."
The phrase "issue preclusion" is often used to describe collateral
estoppel.
When a party believes that a certain
matter has already been litigated or could have been litigated and should
therefore not be litigated again, they assert res judicata. In order to decide
whether res judicata applies, a court often considers three considerations.
Prior litigation in which identical claims were filed or could have been raised
will be the first factor the court considers. The parties must be the same
parties that were involved in the original action's litigation. This is the
second condition to be considered. The third need is that the merits of the
initial action must have been finally decided.[16]
Example: Party ‘A’ sustained some
injury while colliding with party ‘B’ in a motor vehicle accident. A filed a
suit in a court for sustaining injury and to provide damages to him. Court
decided the matter in favour of A. After a year B filed a suit against A but
for another matter relating to robbery. Here in this scenario A cannot claim
for the res-judicata, though the parties are same but the issues and facts are
different.
Ø EXCEPTIONS TO THE CONCPET OF
RES-JUDICATA:
As we move forward to the brief
research about the topic, it is also necessary to know about the exceptions to
the concept of res-judicata. Exceptions to the res-judicata is the most
important right given under the Indian Constitution article-32[17].
It does not apply to the writ of Habeus corpus as far as the high courts are
concerned. Article 32 gives power to the supreme court to issue writs and some
powers under article 226[18]
to the high court. Courts are directed to give proper reasoning while applying
the doctrine of res-judicata.
Supreme court while deciding the
matter between Raju Ramsing Vasave vs. Mahesh Deorao Bhivapurkar[19], laid
down the three exceptions to the rule of res-judicata are as follows:
i) when the judgement is passed
without the jurisdiction.
ii) when matter involves a pure
question of law.
iii) when the judgment has been
obtained by committing the fraud on the court.
Supreme court in a case between Fatima
Bibi Ahmed Patel vs. State of Gujarat[20], laid
down that the res-judicata is not applicable to the criminal cases, by
mentioning the criteria to it:
i) when there is a lack of
jurisdiction.
ii) when the matter has been adjudged
without the merit.
iii) when the matter has been
adjudged based on fraud.
Therefore, as res-judicata also
applies to the criminal matter it is necessary to also know its exceptions to
clearly bifurcate the research into applicability and non-applicability of the
concept of res-judicata. Though the statutory implications do not brief into it
but there are the precedents set by the apex court which must be taken into
consideration.
·
CAN IT BE WAIVED OFF?
The plea of res-judicata can be
waived off to the party to the proceedings, if the defendant does not raise the
plea of res judicata then it can be waived off. It is the part of the
proceedings and either of the party can waive off. The court can decline the
question of res-judicata by stating that it has been not raised by any of the
party. The same thing has been decided in a case between P.C. Ray and Co.
Pvt. Ltd. vs. UOI[21].
·
RES-JUDICATA UNDER ADMINISTRATIVE LAW:
The composition, responsibilities,
and authority of the administrative organs are the subject of administrative
law. Administrative law, commonly referred to as regulatory law, is upheld by a
certain sort of government agency. The government entity gives the legislation
the authority to impose regulations. All government employees and organisations
must adhere to this. An administrative body of government may enact legislation
or carry out a predetermined plan. It is regarded as a subset of public law in
theory. The ability to make rules and regulations based on the granting of
licences and permits is necessary for the administrative authority, which
differs from the legislative and judicial authorities.[22]
The fundamental tenets of this law
are that no one shall be unheard or denied his or her rights and that an
individual shall not preside as the sole judge in any proceeding. Res judicata,
which was taken directly from the Civil Process Code, functions as a guiding
principle in administrative law.
Ø CRTICISM TO THE CONCEPT OF
RES-JUDICTA:
Res judicata is also applicable to
decisions that might be illegal. The overall impact of one judgement on a
subsequent trial or action is covered by the res judicata doctrine, which has
been around for a while. It encompasses not only bar-related issues but also
those that require litigation. For instance, res judicata will technically
apply if a case has been dismissed on a specific issue by a court of law or
equity but it is not justified since it is not seen as a final ruling.
If the plaintiff is ineligible to
pursue a legal remedy after the chancellor denied equitable relief based on a
principle, the court will uphold that ruling. Most equity cases only go as far
as collateral estoppel and involve res judicata. Because it highlights the
difficulty of overlapping more so than unresolved legal issues.
The creation of a will determined
both the title to real estate and the authority to receive rent. A received the
ruling in an interpleader on the rents. Before his appeal was decided, A had
sued B in an ejectment proceeding, invoking the decree, and had successfully
acquired a judgement for the real estate. B had challenged the decision without
supersedeas and obtained a reversal. B did not file an appeal against this
ruling, but he sued A in ejectment for the land after the ruling was reversed,
relying on the decision.[23]
Ø CASE ANALYSIS:
In the case of Brobston vs.
Darby Borough[24],
the plaintiff, Brobston, suffered injuries while operating a vehicle on
a public road in the Borough of Darby. The machine's steering wheel was being
dragged by the driver because a transit firm was blocking the street. The
complainant was injured as a result of this. In order to recoup damages, a
lawsuit was brought against the street railway in Philadelphia court. The
existence of contributory negligence, sometimes known as carelessness on the
part of both parties, was established. The defendant was awarded the benefit of
the doubt. On the same grounds and against the same transit provider, a subsequent
action was once more initiated against the same defendant. The
plaintiff admitted that Brobston was the same person who was the plaintiff in
the action brought earlier in Philadelphia.
In the case of Lowe vs.
Haggerty[25],
when the visitor sued the defendant, a concern was brought up regarding
the impact of a prior verdict for the defendant. According to the ruling, the
driver of the car that was hit by someone else was ineligible to file a
lawsuit. There was no prior record that made the information in the initial
proceeding public. It was decided that it was impossible to ascertain what the
issue in the earlier lawsuit was. There, the court made decisions on the
parties' records, which created a new situation. In this instance, nonsuit was
denied, and the plaintiff's appeal was turned down.
·
LANDMARK CASE LAWS IN INDIA:
Supreme court in the case of Dayrao
vs. State of Uttar Pradesh[26], the
doctrine of res-judicata is of universal application was established. The
theory of res judicata was given an even more comprehensive foundation by the
Supreme Court of India. According to Article 226 of the Constitution,
petitioners in this case submitted a writ petition to the High Court of
Allahabad. Nonetheless, the lawsuit was dropped. After that, they independently
petitioned the Supreme Court using Article 32 of the Constitution's writ
jurisdiction. The defendants objected to the petition by claiming that the
Supreme Court's earlier ruling would serve as res judicata in the case of an
Article 32 petition. The applications were dismissed and rejected by the
Supreme Court.
The
court held that the rule of res judicata applies to a petition under Article 32
of the Constitution. If a petition is filed by the petitioner in the High Court
under Article 226 of the Constitution and it is dismissed based on merits, it
would be operated as res judicata to bar a similar petition in the Supreme
Court under Article 32[27]
of the Constitution.
It was decided in the case of Mathura
Prasad v. Dossibai N.B. Jeejeebhoy[28]
that res judicata applied between the parties in the prior case and prevented
them from bringing new claims in collateral proceedings. A competent court's
ruling typically serves as res judicata, even when it comes to legal issues. A
legal issue, however, will not serve as res judicata if it is unrelated to the
facts that gave rise to the right. A decision has already been changed by a
power when the legal theory or the cause of action have changed. Res judicata
will not apply in the following process, and the ruling will be deemed lawful.
The author tried to analyse the case
laws of the parallel jurisdiction country in the light of Indian judiciary to
conclude more simpler and briefly.
Ø CONCLUSION:
The doctrine of Res Judicata
prohibits the ability of either party to "turn back the clock"[29]
while the case is still pending. Public Interest Litigations are among the many
things that fall under the broad definition of res judicata. This doctrine
covers a wide range of topics linked to society and people and can be used
beyond the context of the Code of Civil Process. As time, the scope and the
extent have grown, and the Supreme Court's decisions have extended the domains.
The idea of res judicata is widely
accepted throughout the world's jurisdictions. The Res Judicata concept has
grown to be a significant component of Indian law. When the court believes that
the case has already been resolved by the prior lawsuit, Res Judicata may be
applied, according to Section 11 of Civil Process Court, 1908. This idea is applied
in India not just to civil courts but also to administrative law and other
laws. The basis for the res judicata defence is the finality principle, which
is a matter of public policy. Res Judicata is a legal principle that limits a
plaintiff's ability to recover damages from a defendant twice in order to
prevent multiple judgements and safeguard the opposing party's rights.
Due to the numerous frivolous and
repetitious lawsuits and the ever-growing number of cases in the courts, it is
essential that these two precepts be strictly followed in order to ensure that
the legal system runs smoothly and that those who lack access to justice
receive justice. These principles are not intended for, and cannot be used to
avoid justice. Instead, the objective is to increase the judiciary's
effectiveness.
Ø SUGGESTIONS:
Indian judiciary while mentioning the
exceptions to it has confined its boundaries to the three to four points only.
The main point is that the concept of res-judicata is not applicable to the
writ of Habeus Corpus. Instead of that Indian judiciary should provide the
exact guidelines through the act only regarding the applicability and
non-applicability to the res-judicata. Also, this concept is being adopted
because Indian judiciary is overburdened with the uncountable cases but the one
point which has been neglected is that what is the same parties after mutually
agreed to the decision adjudged by the court have some disputes in regards of
their fundamental rights under Indian Constitution and the second point is that
if the court doesn’t want to entertain the same case with same parties along
with the same issues then it is the duty of the Indian judiciary to provide
them some Alternative Dispute Resolution (remedy) in case of infringement of
their fundamental rights.
Because the non-applicability of the
res-judicata has neglected these concerns of the public at large because by
anyhow it is the concept of our constitution that the fundamental right should
not be infringed and it must be protected. Then for this there must be another
solution to provide them a relief.
Ø REFERENCES:
·
Advocate Anik, Doctrine of res-judicata:
critical analysis, https://www.vkeel.com/legal-blog/doctrine-of-res-judicata-critical-analysis,
06-04-2023.
·
Vidhi Agarwal, An introduction to the
Res-judicata, https://www.lawinsider.in/columns/an-introduction-to-res-juidicata,
05-04-2023.
·
Civil Procedure Code, 1908, §-11, No. 05,
Acts of parliament, 1949 (India).
·
Avni Tiwari, Res-judicata and right to information,
https://cic.gov.in/sites/default/files/Res,
05-04-2023.
·
Madhuri
Piliana, Res-Judicata, https://blog.ipleaders.in/overview-on-doctrine-of-res-judicata/, 05-04-2023.
·
Maryam,
doctrine of res-judicata and res-subjudice, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-6220-critical-analysis-of-doctrine-of-res-judicata-and-res-subjudice, 05-04-2023.
·
Megha Bindal, Res judicata and Estoppel, https://www.lawyersclubindia.com/articles/res-judicata-and-estoppel-differences-explained,
05-04-2023.
·
Aditi Prabhune, Res-judicata: Section 11
of CPC, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-2646-res-judicata-section-11-of-civil-procedure-code-1908,
05-04-2023.
·
Kakoli Nath, res-judicata and res-sub
judice, https://blog.finology.in/Legal-news/res-judicata-res-sub-judice,
06-04-2023.
·
Nayan Jain, res-judicata and stare
decisis, https://taxguru.in/goods-and-service-tax/legal-term-ratio-decidendi-obiter-dictare-judicata-stare-decisis,
06-04-2023.
·
Law Shelf, https://lawshelf.com/coursewarecontentview/res-judicata-and-collateral-estoppel,
06-04-2023.
·
India Const. art. 32.
·
India Const. art. 226.
·
(2008) 9 SCC 54.
·
(2008) 6 SCC 789.
·
AIR 1971 Cal 512
·
Sandy Gail Nyholm, Administrative Law -
Res Judicata - Application of Res Judicata to Agencies with Parallel
Jurisdiction, https://digitalcommons.du.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article,
06-04-2023.
·
Shashwant Agarwal, Res judicata in India, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/article/l454-Res-Judicata,
06-04-2023
·
Brobston
v. Darby Borough, 290 Pa.
331, 138 A. 849 (Pa. 1927)
·
Lowe
v. Haggerty, 283 Pa.
459, 129 A. 457 (Pa. 1925)
·
Dayrao vs state of Uttar Pradesh, 1961 AIR 1457, 1962 SCR (1) 574.
·
1971 AIR
2355, 1970 SCR (3) 830
[1] Advocate Anik, Doctrine of
res-judicata: critical analysis, https://www.vkeel.com/legal-blog/doctrine-of-res-judicata-critical-analysis, 06-04-2023.
[2] Vidhi Agarwal, An introduction to
the Res-judicata, https://www.lawinsider.in/columns/an-introduction-to-res-juidicata, 05-04-2023.
[3] Civil Procedure Code, 1908, §-11,
No. 05, Acts of parliament, 1949 (India).
[4] Avni Tiwari, Res-judicata and
right to information, https://cic.gov.in/sites/default/files/Res, 05-04-2023.
[5] Madhuri Piliana, Res-Judicata, https://blog.ipleaders.in/overview-on-doctrine-of-res-judicata/, 05-04-2023.
[6] Supra note no. 3.
[7] LEGODESK, what is res-judicata, https://legodesk.com/legopedia/what-is-res-judicata, 05-04-2023.
[8] Madhuri Piliana, Res-Judicata, https://blog.ipleaders.in/overview-on-doctrine-of-res-judicata/, 05-04-2023.
[9] Maryam, doctrine of res-judicata
and res-subjudice, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-6220-critical-analysis-of-doctrine-of-res-judicata-and-res-subjudice, 05-04-2023.
[10] Supra note no. 08.
[11] Megha Bindal, Res judicata and
Estoppel, https://www.lawyersclubindia.com/articles/res-judicata-and-estoppel-differences-explained, 05-04-2023.
[12] Aditi Prabhune, Res-judicata:
Section 11 of CPC, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/legal/article-2646-res-judicata-section-11-of-civil-procedure-code-1908, 05-04-2023.
[13] Kakoli Nath, res-judicata and
res-sub judice, https://blog.finology.in/Legal-news/res-judicata-res-sub-judice, 06-04-2023.
[14] Nayan Jain, res-judicata and stare
decisis, https://taxguru.in/goods-and-service-tax/legal-term-ratio-decidendi-obiter-dictare-judicata-stare-decisis, 06-04-2023.
[16] Law Shelf, https://lawshelf.com/coursewarecontentview/res-judicata-and-collateral-estoppel, 06-04-2023.
[17] India Const. art. 32.
[18] India Const. art. 226.
[19] (2008) 9 SCC 54.
[20] (2008) 6 SCC 789.
[21] AIR 1971 Cal 512
[22] Sandy Gail Nyholm, Administrative
Law - Res Judicata - Application of Res Judicata to Agencies with Parallel
Jurisdiction, https://digitalcommons.du.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article, 06-04-2023.
[23] Shashwant Agarwal, Res judicata in
India, https://www.legalserviceindia.com/article/l454-Res-Judicata,
06-04-2023.
[24] Brobston v. Darby Borough, 290 Pa. 331, 138 A. 849 (Pa. 1927)
[25] Lowe v. Haggerty, 283 Pa. 459, 129 A. 457 (Pa. 1925)
[26] Dayrao vs state of Uttar Pradesh, 1961 AIR 1457, 1962 SCR (1) 574.
[27] Supra Note no. 17
[28] 1971 AIR 2355, 1970 SCR (3) 830
[29] Supra Note No. 08.