The Limitation Act, 1963
LIMITATION ACT, 1963 PART I
2. Definitions
PART II
4. Expiry of prescribed period when court is closed
5. Extension of prescribed period in certain cases
6. Legal disability
7. Disability of one of several persons
8. Special exceptions
9. Continuous running of time
10. Suits against trustees and their representatives
11. Suits on contracts entered into outside the territories to which the Act extends
PART III
13. Exclusion of time in cases where leave to sue or appeal as a pauper is applied for
14. Exclusion of time of proceeding bona fide in court without jurisdiction
15. Exclusion of time in certain other cases
16. Effect of death on or before the accrual of the right to sue
17. Effect of fraud or mistake
18. Effect of acknowledgement in writing
19. Effect of payment on account of debt or of interest on legacy
20. Effect of acknowledgement or payment by another person
21. Effect of substituting or adding new plaintiff or defendant
22. Continuing breaches and torts
23. Suits for compensation for acts not actionable without special damage
24. Computation of time mentioned in instruments
PART IV
26. Exclusion in favour of reversioner of servient tenement
27. Extinguishment of right to property
PART V MISCELLANEOUS
29. Saving
30. Provision for suits, etc., for the prescribed period is shorter than the period prescribed by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908
31. Provisions as to barred or pending suits, etc.
32. Repeal
2. Definitions
PART II
4. Expiry of prescribed period when court is closed
5. Extension of prescribed period in certain cases
6. Legal disability
7. Disability of one of several persons
8. Special exceptions
9. Continuous running of time
10. Suits against trustees and their representatives
11. Suits on contracts entered into outside the territories to which the Act extends
PART III
13. Exclusion of time in cases where leave to sue or appeal as a pauper is applied for
14. Exclusion of time of proceeding bona fide in court without jurisdiction
15. Exclusion of time in certain other cases
16. Effect of death on or before the accrual of the right to sue
17. Effect of fraud or mistake
18. Effect of acknowledgement in writing
19. Effect of payment on account of debt or of interest on legacy
20. Effect of acknowledgement or payment by another person
21. Effect of substituting or adding new plaintiff or defendant
22. Continuing breaches and torts
23. Suits for compensation for acts not actionable without special damage
24. Computation of time mentioned in instruments
PART IV
26. Exclusion in favour of reversioner of servient tenement
27. Extinguishment of right to property
PART V MISCELLANEOUS
29. Saving
30. Provision for suits, etc., for the prescribed period is shorter than the period prescribed by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908
31. Provisions as to barred or pending suits, etc.
32. Repeal
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title, extent and commencement
(1) This Act may be
called the Limitation Act, 1963.
(2) It extends to the
whole of India except the State of Jammu and
Kashmir.
(3) It shall come into force on such date1 as the Central Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, appoint.
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,
(a) "applicant" includes-
(i)
a petitioner;
(ii) any person
from or through
whom an applicant derives his right to apply;
(iii) any person whose
estate is represented by the applicant as executor, administrator or other
representative;
(b) "application"
includes a petition;
(c) "bill of
exchange" includes a hundi and a cheque;
(d) "bond" includes
any instrument whereby
a person obliges
himself to pay money to another, on condition that the obligation shall be
void if a specified act is performed, or is not performed, as the case may be;
(e) "defendant" includes-
(i) any person from
or through whom a defendant derives his liability to be sued;
(ii) any person whose
estate is represented by the defendant as executor, administrator or other
representative;
(f) "easement"
includes a right not arising from contract, by which one person is entitled to
remove and appropriate for his own profit any part of the soil belonging to
another or anything growing in, or attached to, or subsisting upon, the land of another;
(g) "foreign
country" means any country other than India;
(h) "good faith"-nothing shall
be deemed to be done in good faith which is not done with due care and
attention;
(i) "plaintiff" includes-
(i) any person from or through whom a plaintiff derives
his right to sue;
(ii) any person whose
estate is represented by the plaintiff as executor, administrator or other
representative;
(j) "period of
limitation" means the period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal
or application by the Schedule, and "prescribed period" means the
period of limitation computed in
accordance with the provisions of this Act;
(k) "promissory
note" means any instrument whereby the maker engages absolutely to pay a specified sum of money to another
at a time therein limited,
or on demand, or at sight;
(l) "suit"
does not include an appeal or an application;
(m) "tort" means
a civil wrong which is not exclusively the breach of a contract
or the breach of a trust;
(n) "trustee"
does not include a benamidar, a mortgagee remaining in possession after the mortgage has been satisfied or a
person in wrongful possession without title.
LIMITATION OF SUITS, APPEALS AND
APPLICATIONS
3. Bar of limitation
(1) Subject to the
provisions contained in sections 4 to 24 (inclusive), every suit instituted,
appeal preferred, and application made after the prescribed period shall be
dismissed although limitation has
not been set up as a defence.
(2) For the purposes
of this Act-
(a) a suit is instituted-
(i) in an ordinary
case, when the plaint is presented to the proper officer;
(ii) in the case of a pauper,
when his application for leave to sue as a pauper
is made; and
(iii) in the case of a
claim against a company which is being wound up by the court, when the claimant
first sends in his claim to the official liquidator;
(b) any claim by way
of a set off or a counter claim, shall be treated as a separate suit and shall
be deemed to have been instituted-
(i) in the case of a set off, on the same date as the suit in which
the set off is pleaded;
(ii) in the case of a
counter claim, on the date on which the counter claim is made in court;
(c) an application by notice of motion in a High Court is made when the application is presented to the
proper officer of that court.
Where the
prescribed period for any suit, appeal or application expires on a day when the
court is closed, the suit, appeal or application may be instituted, preferred
or made on the date when the court reopens.
Explanation: A
court shall be deemed to be closed on any day within the meaning of this
section if during any part of its normal working hours it remains closed on
that day.
Any appeal or
any application, other than an application under any of the provisions of Order
XXI of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, may be, admitted after the prescribed
period, if the appellant or the applicant satisfies the court that he had
sufficient cause for not preferring the
appeal or making
the application within such period.
Explanation: The
fact that the appellant or the applicant was misled by any order, practice or
judgement of the High Court in ascertaining or computing the prescribed period
may be sufficient cause within the meaning of this section.
(1) Where a person
entitled to institute a suit or make an application for the execution of a
decree, is at the time from which the prescribed period is to be reckoned, a
minor or insane, or an idiot, he may institute the suit or make the application
within the same period after the disability has ceased, as would otherwise have
been allowed from the time specified therefor in the third column of the Schedule.
(2) Where such person
is, at the time from which the prescribed period is to be reckoned, affected by
two such disabilities, or where, before his disability has ceased, he is
affected by another disability, he may institute the suit or make the
application within the same period after both disabilities have ceased, as would otherwise have been allowed
from the times so specified.
(3) Where the disability continues up to the death of that person,
his legal representative may institute the suit or make the application within the same
period after the death, as would otherwise have been allowed from the time so specified.
(4) Where the legal
representative referred to in sub-section (3) is, at the date of the death of
the person whom he represents, affected
by any such disability, the rules contained in sub-sections
(1) and (2)
shall apply.
(5) Where a
person under disability dies after the disability ceases but within the period
allowed to him under this section, his legal representative may institute the
suit or make the application within the same period after the death, as would
otherwise have been available to that person had he not died.
Explanation: For
the purposes of this section 'minor' includes a child in the womb.
Where one of
several persons jointly entitled to institute a suit or make an application for
the execution of a decree is under any such disability, and a discharge can be
given without the concurrence of such person, time will run against them all;
but, where no such discharge can be given, time will not run as against any of
them until one of them becomes capable of giving such discharge without the
concurrence of the others or until the disability has ceased.
Explanation I :
This section applies to a discharge from every kind of liability, including a
liability in respect of any immovable property.
Explanation II:
For the purposes of this section, the manager of a Hindu undivided family
governed by the Mitakshara law shall be deemed to be capable of giving a
discharge without the concurrence of the other members of the family only if he
is in management of the joint family property.
Nothing in
section 6 or in section 7 applies to suits to enforce rights of pre-emption, or
shall be deemed to extend, for more than three years from the cessation of the
disability or the death of the person affected thereby, the period of
limitation for any suit or application.
Where once time
has begun to run, no subsequent disability or inability to institute a suit or
make an application stops it:
PROVIDED that
where letters of administration to the estate of creditor have been granted to
his debtor, the running of the period of limitation for a suit to recover the
debt shall be suspended while the administration continues.
Notwithstanding
anything contained in the foregoing provisions of this Act, no suit against a
person in whom property has become vested in trust for any specific purpose, or
against his legal representatives or assigns (not being assigns for valuable
consideration), for the purpose of following in his or their hands such
property, or the proceeds thereof, or for an account of such property or
proceeds, shall be barred by any length of time.
Explanation: For
the purposes of this section any property comprised in a Hindu, Muslim or
Buddhist religious or charitable endowment shall be deemed to be property
vested in trust for a specific purpose and the manager of the property shall be
deemed to be the trustee thereof.
(1) Suits instituted in the territories to which this Act extends
on contracts entered
into in the State
of Jammu and Kashmir or in a foreign country shall be subject to the rules of
limitation contained in this Act.
(2) No rule of
limitation in force in the State of Jammu and Kashmir or in a foreign country
shall be a defence to a suit instituted in the said territories on a contract
entered into in that State or in a foreign country unless-
(a) the rule has
extinguished the contract; and
(b) the parties were
domiciled in that State or in the foreign country during the period prescribed by such rule.
COMPUTATION OF PERIOD OF LIMITATION
12. Exclusion of time in legal proceedings
(1) In computing
the period of limitation for any suit, appeal or application, the day from which
such period is to be reckoned, shall be excluded.
(2) In computing the
period of limitation for an appeal or an application for leave to appeal or for
revision or for review of a judgement, the day on which judgement complained of
was pronounced and the time requisite for obtaining a copy of the decree, sentence
or order appealed from or sought to be revised
or reviewed shall be excluded.
(3) Where a decree or
order is appealed from or sought to be revised or reviewed, or where an
application is made for leave to appeal from a decree or order, the time
requisite for obtaining a copy of the judgement 2[***] shall also be excluded.
(4) In computing the
period of limitation for an application to set aside an award, the time
requisite for obtaining a copy of the award shall be excluded.
Explanation: In
computing under this section the time requisite for obtaining a copy of a
decree or an order, any time taken by the court to prepare the decree or order
before an application for a copy thereof is made shall not be excluded.
In computing the
period of limitation prescribed for any suit or appeal in any case where an
application for leave to sue or appeal as a pauper has been made and rejected,
the time during which the applicant has been prosecuting in good faith his
application for such leave shall be excluded, and the court may, on payment of
the court fees prescribed for such suit or appeal, treat the suit or appeal as
having the same force and effect as if the court fees had been paid in the
first instance.
(1) In computing the
period of limitation for any suit the time during which the plaintiff has been
prosecuting with due diligence another civil proceeding, whether in a court of
first instance or of appeal or revision, against the defendant shall be excluded,
where the proceeding relates to the same matter in issue and is prosecuted in good faith in a court which, from defect of jurisdiction or other cause of a like nature, is unable to entertain it.
(2) In computing the
period of limitation for any application, the time during which the applicant
has been prosecuting with due diligence another civil proceeding, whether in a
court of first instance or of appeal or revision, against the same party for
the same relief shall be excluded, where such proceeding is prosecuted in good faith in a court which, from defect of jurisdiction or other cause of a like nature, is unable to entertain it.
(3) Notwithstanding
anything contained in rule 2 of Order XXIII of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (5 of 1908), the provisions of sub-section (1) shall apply in relation to
a fresh suit instituted on permission granted by the court under rule 1 of that
Order, where such permission is granted
on the ground that the first suit must fail by reason of a defect in the
jurisdiction of the court or other cause of a like nature.
Explanation: For
the purposes of this section-
(a) in excluding the
time during which a former civil proceeding was pending, the day on which that proceeding was instituted and
the day on which it ended shall both be counted;
(b) a plaintiff
or an applicant resisting an appeal shall be deemed to be prosecuting a proceeding;
(c) misjoinder of
parties or of causes of action shall be deemed to be a cause of a like nature
with defect of jurisdiction.
(1) In computing the
period of limitation of any suit or application for the execution of a decree,
the institution or execution of which has been stayed by injunction or order,
the time of the continuance of the injunction or order, the day on which it was issued
or made, and the day on
which it was withdrawn, shall be excluded.
(2) In computing the
period of limitation for any suit of which notice has been given, or for which
the previous consent or sanction of the government or any other authority is
required, in accordance with the requirements of any law for the time being
in force, the period of such notice or, as the case may be, the time
required for obtaining such consent or sanction shall be excluded.
Explanation: In
excluding the time required for obtaining the consent or sanction of the
government or any other authority, the date on which the application was made
for obtaining the consent or sanction and the date of receipt of the order of
the government or other authority shall both be counted.
(3) In computing the
period of limitation for any suit or application for execution of a decree by
any receiver or interim
receiver appointed in proceedings for the adjudication of a person
as an
insolvent or by
any liquidator or provisional liquidator appointed in proceedings for the
winding up of a company, the period beginning with the date of institution of
such proceeding and ending with the expiry of three months from the date of
appointment of such receiver or liquidator, as the case may be, shall be
excluded.
(4) In computing the
period of limitation for a suit for possession by a purchaser at a sale in
execution of a decree, the time during which a proceeding to set aside the sale
has been prosecuted shall be excluded.
(5) In computing the
period of limitation for any suit the time during which the defendant has been
absent from India and from the territories outside India under the
administration of the Central Government, shall be excluded.
(1) Where a person
who would, if he were living, have a right to institute a suit or make an
application dies before
the right accrues,
or where a right to institute a suit or make an application
accrues only on the death of a person, the period of limitation shall be
computed from the time when there is a legal representative of the deceased
capable of instituting such suit or making such application.
(2) Where a person
against whom, if he were living, a right to institute a suit or make an
application would have accrued dies before the right accrues, or where a right
to institute a suit or make an application against any person accrues on the
death of such person, the period of limitation shall be computed from the time7
when there is a legal representative of the deceased against whom the plaintiff
may institute such suit or making such application.
(3) Nothing in
sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) applies to suits to enforce rights of
pre-emption or to suits for the possession of immovable property
or of a hereditary office.
(1) Where, in the
case of any suit or application for which a period of limitation is prescribed
by this Act-
(a) the suit or application is based upon the fraud of the defendant or respondent or his agent; or
(b) the knowledge
of the right or title
on which suit or application is founded is concealed by the
fraud of any such person as aforesaid; or
(c) the suit or application is for relief
from the consequences of a mistake;
or
(d) where any
document necessary to establish the right of the plaintiff or applicant has
been fraudulently concealed from him;
the period of
limitation shall not begin to run until the plaintiff or applicant has
discovered the fraud or the mistake or could, with reasonable diligence, have
discovered it; or in the case of a concealed document, until the plaintiff or
the applicant first had the means of producing the concealed document or
compelling its production:
PROVIDED that
nothing in this section shall enable any suit to be instituted or application
to be made to recover or enforce any charge against, or set aside any
transaction affecting, any property which-
(i) in the case of
fraud, has been purchased for valuable consideration by a person who was not a party to the fraud and did not at the
time of the purchase know, or have reason to believe, that any fraud had been
committed, or
(ii) in the case of
mistake, has been purchased for valuable consideration subsequently to the
transaction in which the mistake was made, by a person who did not know, or
have reason to believe, that the mistake had been made, or
(iii) in the case of
concealed document, has been purchased for valuable consideration by a person who was not a party
to the concealment and, did not at the time of purchase
know, or have reason
to believe, that the document
had been concealed.
(2) Where a
judgement-debtor has, by fraud or force, prevented the execution of a decree or
order with the period of limitation, the court may, on the application of the
judgement-creditor made after the expiry of the said period extend
the period for execution of the decree
or order:
PROVIDED that
such application is made within one year from the date of the discovery of the
fraud or the cessation of force, as the case may be.
(1)
Where, before the expiration of the prescribed
period for a suit or application in respect of any property or right, an
acknowledgement of liability in respect of such property or right has been made
in writing signed by the party against whom such property or right is claimed,
or by any person through whom he derives his title or liability, a fresh period
of limitation shall be computed from the time when the acknowledgement was so signed.
(2)
Where the writing
containing the acknowledgement is undated, oral evidence may be given of
the time when it was signed; but subject to the provisions of the Indian
Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), oral evidence of its contents shall not be received,.
Explanation :
For the purposes of this section-
(a) an
acknowledgement may be sufficient though it omits to specify the exact nature
of the property or right, or avers that the time for payment, delivery,
performance or enjoyment has not yet come or is accompanied by a refusal to
pay, deliver, perform or permit to enjoy, or is coupled with a claim to
set-off, or is addressed to a person other than a person entitled to the
property or right;
(b) the word "signed" means signed either personally or by an agent duly authorised in this
behalf; and
(c) an application for the execution of a decree
or order shall not be deemed to be an application
in respect of any property or right.
Where payment on
account of a debt or of interest on a legacy is made before the expiration of
the prescribed period by the person liable to pay the debt or legacy or by his
agent duly authorised in this behalf, a fresh period of limitation shall be
computed from the time when the payment was made:
PROVIDED that,
save in the case of payment of interest made before the 1st day of January, 1928,
an acknowledgement of the payment appears in the handwriting of, or in a
writing signed by, the person making the payment.
Explanation: For
the purposes of this section -
(a) where mortgaged
land is in the possession of the mortgagee, the receipt of the rent or produce
of such land shall be deemed to be a payment;
(b) "debt"
does not include money payable under a decree or order of a court.
(1) The expression
"agent duly authorised in this behalf" in sections 18 and 19 shall,
in the case of a person under disability, include
his lawful guardian, committee or manager
or an agent duly authorised
by such guardian, committee or manager to sign the acknowledgement or make the
payment.
(2) Nothing in the said
sections renders one of several joint contractors, partners, executors or
mortgagees chargeable by reason only of a written acknowledgement signed by, or
of a payment made by, or by the agent of, any other or others of them.
(3) For the purposes
of the said sections,-
(a) an
acknowledgement signed or a payment made in respect of any liability by or by
the duly authorised agent of, any limited
owner of property
who is governed by Hindu law, shall be a valid
acknowledgement or payment, as the case may be, against a reversioner
succeeding to such liability; and
(b) where a liability
has been incurred by or on behalf of a Hindu undivided family as such, an
acknowledgement or payment
made by, or by the duly authorised agent of, the manager of the
family for the time being
shall be deemed
to have been made on behalf of the whole
family.
(1) Where after
the institution of a suit,
a new plaintiff or, defendant is substituted or added, the suit
shall, as regards
him, be deemed
to have been instituted when he was so made a party:
PROVIDED that
where the court is satisfied that the omission to include a new plaintiff or
defendant was due to a mistake made in good faith it may direct that the suit
as regards such plaintiff or defendant shall be deemed to have been instituted
on any earlier date.
(2) Nothing in
sub-section (1) shall apply to a case where a party is added or substituted
owing to assignment or devolution of any interest
during the pendency
of a suit or where a plaintiff is made a defendant
or a defendant is made a plaintiff.
In the case of a
continuing breach of contract or in the case of a continuing tort, a fresh
period of limitation begins to run at every moment of the time during which the
breach or the tort, as the case may be, continues.
In the case of a
suit for compensation for an act which does not give rise to a cause of action
unless some specific injury actually results therefrom, the period of
limitation shall be computed from the time when the injury results.
All instruments
shall for the purposes of this Act be deemed to be made with reference to the
Gregorian calendar.
ACQUISITION OF OWNERSHIP BY POSSESSION
25. Acquisition of easement by prescription
(1) Where the access
and use of light or air to and for any building have been peaceably enjoyed
therewith as an easement, and as of right, without interruption, and for twenty
years, and where any way or watercourse or the use of any water or any other
easement (whether affirmative or negative) has been peaceably and openly enjoyed
by any person claiming title thereto as an
easement and as
of right without interruption and for twenty years, the right to such access
and use of light or air, way, watercourse, use of water, or other easement
shall be absolute and indefeasible.
(2) Each of the said
periods of twenty years shall be taken to be a period ending within two years next before the institution of the suit wherein the claim to which such period relates
is contested.
(3) Where the
property over which a right is claimed under sub-section (1) belongs to the
government that sub-section shall be read as if for the words "twenty years" the words "thirty
years" were substituted.
Explanation :
Nothing is an interruption with the meaning of this section, unless where there
is an actual discontinuance of the possession or enjoyment by reason of an
obstruction by the act of some person other than the claimant, and unless such
obstruction submitted to or acquiesced in for one year after the claimant has
notice thereof and of the person making or authorising the same to be made.
Where any land or
water upon, over or from, which any easement has been enjoyed or derived has
been held under or by virtue of any interest for life or in terms of years
exceeding three years from the granting thereof the time of the enjoyment of
such easement during the continuance of such interest or term shall be excluded
in the computation of the period of twenty years in case the claim is, within
three years next after the determination of such interests or term resisted by
the person entitled on such determination to the said land or water.
At the
determination of the period hereby limited to any person for instituting a suit
for possession of any property, his right to such property shall be
extinguished.
28. Amendment of certain Acts
[Rep. by the Repealing and Amending Act, 1974 (56 of
1974) s. 2 and First Sch.]
(1) Nothing in this
Act shall affect section 25 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (9 of 1872).
(2) Where any special
or local law prescribes for any suit, appeal or application a period of
limitation different from the period prescribed by the Schedule, the provisions
of s. 3 shall apply as if such periods were the periods prescribed by the
Schedule and for the purpose of determining any period of limitation prescribed for any suit, appeal
or application by any special
or local law, the provisions contained in sections 4 to 24 (inclusive)
shall apply only in so far as, and to the extent
to which, they are not expressly excluded
by such special
or local law.
(3) Save as otherwise
provided in any law for the time being in force with respect to marriage and divorce, nothing in this Act shall apply to any suit or other proceeding under any such law.
(4) Sections 25 and
26 and the definition of "easement" in section 2 shall not apply to
cases arising in the territories to which the Indian Easements Act, 1882 (5 of
1882), may for the time being extend.
Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act-
(a) any suit for which
the period of limitation is shorter than the period
of limitation prescribed by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908 (9 of 1908), may be
instituted within a period of 3[seven years] next after the commencement of
this Act or within the period prescribed for such suit by the Indian Limitation
Act, 1908, whichever period expires earlier:
4[PROVIDED that
if in respect of any such suit, the said period of seven years expires earlier
than the period of limitation prescribed therefor under the Indian Limitation
Act, 1908 and the said period of seven years together with so much of the
period of limitation in respect of such suit under the Indian Limitation Act,
1908 (9 of 1908), as has already expired before the commencement of this Act is
shorter than the period prescribed for such suit under this Act, then, the suit
may be instituted within the period of limitation prescribed therefor under
this Act;]
(b) any appeal or
application for which the period of limitation is shorter than the period of
limitation prescribed by the Indian
Limitation Act, 1908,
may be preferred or made within a period
of ninety days next after the commencement of this Act or within a period
prescribed for such appeal or application by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908,
whichever period expires earlier.
Nothing in this Act shall-
(a) enable any suit,
appeal or application to be instituted, preferred or made, for which the period of limitation prescribed by the
Indian Limitation Act, 1908, expired before the commencement of this Act; or
(b) affect any suit, appeal
or application instituted, preferred or made before, and pending at, such
commencement.
[Rep. by the Repealing and Amending Act, 1974 (56 of
1974)]
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