Showing posts with label CauseOfAction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CauseOfAction. Show all posts

Monday, September 4, 2023

Cause of Action

                       Cause of Action

                    Order 2 Rule 2 CPC

         




PLD 2023 Lahore 601

    There are three specific terms used in Order II Rule 2 which are required to be interpreted as these shall have bearing on a just decision of this case. These terms are cause of action, claim and relief. 

The expression cause of action has not been defined in the Code although several attempts have been made in the judgments to explain it. Various authorities have referred it to mean that every fact, which if traversed, it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove to support his right to a judgment by of the court. This definition would generally suffice but it does not necessarily provide a satisfactory answer as to what is the cause of action. This Court shall not make an attempt to define the term cause of action in recognition of the fact that the scope thereof is vague and that it must be applied broadly to carry out the functions of the Code which are designed to achieve convenience and efficiency in trial of the suits. This policy of the Code is indubitably brought forth by Order II Rule 1 according to which all matters in dispute between the parties relating to the same transaction be disposed of in a single suit. Generally looking at the provisions of Orders I & II of the Code would make it evident that when the right recognized by law is violated constituting a legal wrong, a cause of action can be said to have arisen. A fortiori, it is the legally recognized wrong that creates the right to sue. It is axiomatic that facts which do not represent the existence of right in the plaintiff with a corresponding duty in defendant to observe that right and an infringement of that right or duty is no cause of action. In Stone v. Cass, 34 Okla. 5, 124 P. 960, the Court stated that “There can be no cause of action, unless there is a wrong for which redress is afforded. Nor can there be a subject of action, unless there is a right and a wrong done to it. The right might exist for ages, but is not a subject of action until it is infringed upon. The wrong might be continuous, but is not a cause of action, unless relief is afforded.” Cause of action thus comprises material facts (to borrow the term from the Code) constituting the right and its infringement which entitles a person to sue the wrongdoer or anyone liable for it. The logical progression of this rule dictates that a cause of action must include a set of primary or operative facts that represent a legally recognized wrong that creates the right to sue which gives rise to a claim enforceable in court. Each cause of action consists of points the plaintiff must prove, and all these elements must be satisfied before the court can take action. This broad categorization of the rule is in accord with the scheme of the Code.

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