Saturday, November 30, 2024

බාලාංශ ගුරුවරු ගුරුවරු නො වේ ද?

 ලොව ගුරුවරු අතරින් විශ්වවිද්‍යාල ආචාර්යවරුන් ඉහළ ම තැන ඇත. 


එ තරම් ඉහළට ඉගෙන නො ගත් එහෙත් උසස් ඉගෙනුමක් ලත් ගුරුවරු ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ ශිෂ්‍යයින්ට උගන්වති. 


එ තරම් ඉහළට ගෙන නො ගත් එහෙත් සැලකිය යුතු ඉගෙනුමක් ලත් ගුරුවරු කනිෂ්ඨ ශිෂ්‍යයන්ට උගන්වති. 


එ තරම් ඉහළට ඉගෙන නො ගත් එහෙත් ලොව දිනූ යුග පුරුෂයින් තනන්නට බාලාංශ ගුරුවරුන්ට පැවරෙන්නේ ය. ඔවුන් ගුරුවරු  අතර ඉහළින් සිටිය ද පහළින් සිටිය ද අන් සැමට ඇවිදින්නට හුරු කරන පීනන්නට හුරු කරන වැටෙන්නට නො දී දෙ පයින් සිටිගන්නට හුරු කරන වතුරේ ගිලෙන්නට නො දී ජීවිතය  බේරගන්න උදව් කරන දෙවිවරු ය. 

 

අනන්ත ගුණ ඇති සංඝ රත්නය ද එසේ වෙති.


උන් වහන්සේලා යුගල වශයෙන්  හතරක් ද පුද්ගල වශයෙන් අටක් ද වෙති. 


උසස් ම වහන්සේලා අගසව් දෙ නම වහන්සේලාගෙන් පටන් ගෙන,


පළමු සැට නම වහන්සේලාගේ සිට,


අග්‍රස්ථාන රහතන් වහන්සේලාගේ සිට,


පෘතග්ජන සංඝයා වහන්සේලාගේ සිට,


අද සිවුරු පෙරවූ සාමනේර හිමියන් වහන්සේ දක්වා උත්තම සංඝ පරම්පරාව විහිදි පවති. 


අති දුර්ලභ රහතන් වහන්සේලා සොයාගැනීමට දුෂ්කර වුව ද, 


පෘතග්ජන ජනයා තිසරණ පිහිටන, සීල සමාධි ප්‍රඥා, දාන ශීල භාවනා ආදි පුණ්‍ය ක්‍රියාවල පිහිටුවන ජනයාට නිතර සම්මුඛ වන සංඝයා වහන්සේලා පෘතග්ජන වුව ද 

උන්වහන්සේලා සාමාන්‍ය  ජනයාට ධර්ම මාර්ගයේ බාලාංශ උපාසක උපාසිකා අයට පින් කෙතක් වන්නේ ය. ⁣ක්ෂේම භූමියක් වන්නේ ය. 


සංඝයා වහන්සේලා යන කුලකය තීරණය කිරීමට එක එක අයට සිතු පරිදි නො හැක. භාග්‍යවතුන් වහන්සේගේ දේශනාව පරිදි සම්බුද්ධ ජයන්ති ත්‍රිපිටක ධර්මය අනුව ම සොයාගත යුතු ය. විස්තර අවශ්‍ය නම් අටුවා ටීකා ටිප්පිනි ඇත්තේ ය. 

අනන්ත ගුණ ඇති සංඝරත්නය වන්දනා කිරීම ගරු කිරීම ස්තුති කිරීම පූජා කිරීම අනන්ත ඵල දෙන සේ ම සිතිවිල්ලකින් හෝ නින්දා කිරීම අපහාස කිරීම අගෞරව කිරීම බරපතල විපාක දෙන බව කිව යුතු ය. 

නුවනැත්තෝ සාර දේ  සාර දේ ලෙසත් අසාර දේ අසාර දේ ලෙසත් දකිත් වා! 

#buddhism #dhamma #srilanka

Monday, September 18, 2023

Enforcement of foreign judgments in Sri Lanka


Question:
A divorce decree obtained in Australia Federal Circuit Court is to be registered in the District Court of Kurunegala as claimed by the judgment-creditor. What are the relevant laws, act, ordinances and case laws with regard to the above situation that recognizes such legal ground?
Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments Ordinance, No.41 of 1921, provides provisions for the enforcement in Sri Lanka of judgments obtained in the Superior Courts of the United Kingdom and of other parts of Her Majesty’s realms and territories. The Ordinance which governs the instant case as Australia is also a part of Her Majesty’s dominions.
Section 3 of this Ordinance recognizes the legal validity of enforcing in Sri Lanka of judgments superior courts in the United Kingdom. As it states,
                  3 (1). Where a judgment has been obtained in a superior court in the United Kingdom, the judgment-creditor may apply to the registering court at any time within twelve months after the date of the judgment or such longer period as may be allowed by the court to have the judgment registered in the court and on any such application the court may if in all the circumstances of t he case they think it is just and convenient that the judgment should be enforced in Sri Lanka and subject to the provisions of this section, order the judgment to be registered accordingly.
                 (2) No judgment shall be ordered to be registered under this Section if-   
a)    the original court acted without jurisdiction; or
b)    the judgment-debtor, being a person who was neither carrying on business nor ordinarily resident within the jurisdiction of court did not voluntarily appear or otherwise submit or agree to submit to the jurisdiction of that court; or …………..
                 (3) Where a judgment is registered under this section-
a)    the judgment shall as from the date of registration, be of the same force and effect, and proceedings may be taken thereon, as if it had been a judgment originally obtained or entered up on the date of registration in the registration court;
b)    the registering court shall have the same control and jurisdiction over the judgment as it has over similar judgments given by itself, but in so far only as relates to execution under this section;
c)    the reasonable costs of  and incidental to the registration of the judgment (including the costs of obtaining a certified copy thereof from the original court and of the application for registration ) shall be recoverable in like manner as if they were sums payable under the judgment;
d)    the same stamp duties shall be payable in respect of proceedings under this Ordinance as would have been payable if the judgment had been an original judgment of the registering court.

(4) Rules of court shall provide-
a.    for service on the judgment-debtor of notice of the registration of judgment under this section and;
b.    for enabling the registering court on an application by the judgment-debtor to set aside the registration of a judgment under this section on such terms as the court thinks fit and,
c.     for suspending the execution of a judgment registered under this section until the expiration of the period during which the judgment-debtor may apply to have the registration set aside.
As these above provisions are applicable only for the judgments of superior courts in the United Kingdom , this ordinance extends the provisions for the judgments of the other parts of Her Majesty’s realms and territories to be registered in Sri Lanka.
As Subsection 2(1) recognizes “United Kingdom” means the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and “superior courts in the United Kingdom” means the High Court in England or Northern Ireland and the Court of Session in Scotland.
As the section 6 states,
6(1) Where the Minister is satisfied that reciprocal provisions have been made by the Legislature of any part of Her Majesty’s Realms and Territories outside the United Kingdom for the enforcement within that part of Her Realms and Territories of judgments obtained in any District Court or in the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, the Minister may, by order published in the Gazette declare that this Ordinance shall extend  to judgments obtained in a superior court in that part of Her Realms and Territories in like manner as it extends to judgments obtained in a superior courts in the United Kingdom, and on any such Order being made this Ordinance shall extend accordingly.
For the execution of this Ordinance the relevant Minister published the countries to which this Ordinance applies on 23.01.1925 and then since the section 3 of the Ordinance no.41 of 1921 regulates regarding the recognition, setting an application to be registered, effects of such registration and the rules of court are extended accordingly to the other parts of Her Majesty’s dominions under the section 6 (1).
These statutory provisions pave the way for a registration of judgments of a country like Australia as a part of Her Majesty’s dominions, unlike it is for the U.K. ,the other parts are governed by the very Section 6(1) which expands for the former.
To the question as to how the Ordinance 1921 interprets terms, explanations are as follows,
The section 2(1) does it the way hereinafter, in this Ordinance, unless the context otherwise requires-
a ‘judgment’ means any judgment, decree or order given or made by a court in any civil proceedings, where before  or after the passing of this ordinance……
a judgment-debtor means the persons against whom the judgment was given and includes any person against whom the judgment is enforceable in the place where it was made.
the ‘original court’ in relation to any judgments means the court by which the judgment was given.
the ‘registering court’ in relation to any judgment means the District Court of  Colombo.
In the context of this act recognizes and enforces judgments of Australia as a colony under Her Majesty’s realms and territories, the next legal requirement is to be considered is what the superior courts in Australia are which this Ordinance states in its subsection 6(1).
Every part of Australia as a federal country New South Wales, Victoria, Australia Capital Territory, Northern Territory of Australia, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania are under her Majesty’s reign to which Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments Ordinance is applicable and extends.
The Act of Foreign Judgments No.112 of 1991 connects the nexus between the Australian Jurisdiction to the Sri Lankan Act of 1921. Part 3 of Foreign Judgments Act no.112 of 1991 says there are miscellaneous matters relating to the above mentioned enforceability.
Its Section 15 provides among other matters, states of the issuing of a certificate of judgments obtained in Australian Courts.
15(1). Subject to this Section, where an application is duly made by a judgment creditor who wishes to enforce in a country a judgment that has been given in an Australian Court, the Registrar of the court must issue to the judgment creditor;
a)    a certified copy of the judgment and
b)    a certificate with respect to the judgment containing such particulars including,
                                             I.        the causes of action to which the judgment relates and
                                          II.        the rate of interest (if any) payable on any amount payable under the judgment;
as are prescribed by the regulations or by Rules of Court.

Per se, Section 3 of this Act 1991, it interprets what an “action in personam” is as, one does not include a matrimonial cause or proceedings in connection with,
a)    matrimonial matters; or……..
and what a “judgment” means a.) a final or interlocutory judgment or order given or made by a court in civil proceedings; or….
and who a “judgment creditor” means the person in whose favour the judgment was given,….
and who a “judgment debtor” means in relation to a judgment means the person against whom the judgment was given ( whether or not a sum of money is payable under the judgment) and includes a person against whom the judgment is enforceable under the law of the original court.
and what an “original Court” is in relation to a judgment, means the court by which the judgment was given.
There is no contravention in the case laws with regard to the statutory provisions. In the case of Lalwani v. Indian Overseas Bank. 1998 (3) Sri LR 197, the petitionerrespondent Bank obtained two judgments of the Supreme Court of HongKong dated 10th June, 1983 and 9th March, 1990. On 25/05/1990 the Bank came to the District Court of Colombo claiming the registration of the duo citing the above mentioned section 3(1) and section 6(1) of 1921 No.41 Act. And in terms of the both sections of the Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments Ordinance, the District Court of Colombo ordered to be registered by an Order. The way the circumstances unfolded was subsequently HongKong ceased to be a part of Her Majesty’s Dominions in 1997.
As the petitionerrespondent’s counsel contended, the recognition of the said foreign judgments under the Sec.6(1) said Ordinance was connected with the submission of the Gazette on 23/01/1925 by the relevant minister.
In spite of the change in the state of HongKong, K.W.Petchett in his book Recognition of Commercial Judgments and Awards in the Commonwealth (1984) at page 39, cites that repealing the statute in which country the original court is situated does not affect the jurisdiction under what initial order was given. Validity of the order is not harmed in any way.
 Simultaneously, the Section 3(3) (a) of the Act No. 41 of 1921 is as recognized the original court’s judgment, be of the same force and effect after the date of the registration. And in Section 3(3) (b) recognizes the same control and jurisdiction of the registering court over the judgment.
With this statutory legal background the Court of Appeal judges dismissed the appeal with costs and accepted the District Court’s registration order.
  In the case of Prins Gunasekera v. The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd. 2000 (3) Sri LR 122, three Supreme Court judges recognized the validity of the Ordinance. In the circumstances as stated, the petitioner had obtained an exparte judgment from the High Court of England against the respondent newspaper limited.
And claimed the registration of the judgment under the Section 3(1) of the Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments Ordinance.
In the counter argument on the registration, the respondents said they are not obliged to act on the judgment as they are neither engaged in any business nor resident in the jurisdiction of the original court. They cited Section 3(2) (b) which as follows,
“the judgmentdebtor, being a person who was neither carrying on business nor ordinarily resident within the jurisdiction of court did not voluntarily appear or otherwise submit or agree to submit to the jurisdiction of that court; or…”
So the court stated there is no sufficient information on deciding this case whether the respondent company is either resident or engaged in any business in England and if so they have to submit to the jurisdiction of that court.
In the near future, the Supreme Court decided there is no jurisdiction to register a judgment of Canada. Varuna Jayasuriya v. Krishanjini Jayasuriya 2005 (2) Sri LR 382 did not even cite the above mentioned Ordinance. And however the court set aside the appeal claiming for the revoke of the District Court Judge’s order not to register it. Be that as it may, the said Ordinance does not recognize any judgment from any country other than the ones mentioned earlier. Canada is also of such kind.
W.M.D.Bandara
2018/10/20

පොලී මරා උකස අර්ථ නිරූපණය කරන්නේ කෙසේ ද?

වෙනත් අයගේ දේපලක් සම්බන්ධ  ඇති බැඳීමකට  ආරක්ෂණයක් ලෙස තවත් අයෙකුට ඇති අයිතියක් උකසක් වේ

එය ප්‍රධාන බැඳීමට අතුරු කොන්දේසියක් ලෙස පවතීප්‍රධාන බැඳීම නැති  අය නො පවතී.

විටෙක උකස්කරු විසින් දේපල නැවත පවරා ගැනීමට යටත්  උකස්හිමියාට පොලිය වෙනුවට දේපලේ ඇති ඵල ප්‍රයෝජනයට ගැනීමට ඉඩ දේ

මෙය කෙතරම් බලවත්  යත් ව්‍යතිරේකයන් කීපයකට යටත් පැමිණිලිකරු (උකස්හිමිභුක්තියේ නො සිටිය බැඳුම්කරය වලංගු වන තෙක් (උකස නිදහස්කරගන්නා තෙක්සියලු ආකාරයෙන් දේපල හිමි අයිතිකරු බවට පත්වේ.  වි මු ධ


https://www.lawnet.gov.lk/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/032-SLLR-SLLR-1993-1-KARUNARATNE-v.-RANASINGHE-HAMINE-since-deceased-and-substituted-by-S.-R.-A.pdf

අපේ පාරිසරික අයිති
රටේ පවතින පරිසර නීතිය යටතේ ජනතාවට හිමි පරිසර අයිති පිළිබඳ දැනුවත් වීම අතිශය වැදගත් ය. මේ ව්‍යායාමය ඒ පිළිබඳ උනන්දු කිරීම මිස සියලු පරිසර අයිතින් මෙහිලා දැක්වීම නො වේ.
රටේ මූලික නීතිය වන ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 3 ව්‍යවස්ථාව ප්‍රකාර ව මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම්, ජනතා පරමාධිපත්‍යය තහවුරු කිරීමට අතිශය වැදගත් වේ. 1978 ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 3 පරිච්ඡේදයේ ඇති මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම් පරිසර අයිතිවාසිකම් ක්ෂේත්‍රයෙන් එතරම් දියුණු වී නැතත් එය වැදගත් වන්නේ ය.
රජය විසින් සිදුකරන පරිසර අයිතිවාසිකම් කඩකිරීම්වලට එරෙහි ව රටේ ඉහළ ම අධිකරණයෙන් ඉක්මන් ප්‍රතිකර්ම ලබා ගැනීම ජනතාවට අතිශය වැදගත් වන්නේ ය. එහි 12 ව්‍යවස්ථාව අනුව සමානාත්මතාවයට නිදහස මෙරට සියලු ජනයාට ඇත. ඒ අනුව නිද: ලෙස රජයේ යම් තීරණයක් නිසා ඔබේ ප්‍රදේශයේ ජල මූලාශ්‍රවලට හානි වීමේ තත්ත්වයක් ඇති විය හැකි නම් ඊට එරෙහි ව 17, 126 ව්‍යවස්ථා අනුව අධිකරණයට යා හැකි ය. ඒ අන් ප්‍රදේශවල ජනතාවට ඇති අයිතියක් තම ප්‍රදේශයේ ජනතාවට අහිමි කරන්නේ ය යන පදනම මත යි.
මීට අමතර ව ඔබේ ප්‍රදේශයේ අදාළ පළාත් පාලන අායතනය හරහා ද ඔබට ඇති පරිසර ගැටළු නිරාකරණය කරගත හැක. නිද: මහ නගර සභාව, ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාව. යම් හෙයකින් ඔවුන්ට නීතියෙන් පැවරී ඇති කාර්යය ඉටු කිරීම ඔවුන් පැහැර හරී නම් එම කාර්යය ඉටු කරගැනීමට අදාළ අධිකරණයට යා හැකි ය.
එසේ නැතහොත් 1987 පාරිසරික පනත යටතේ පිහිටුවා ඇති ජාතික පාරිසරික පනත මඟින් පොදුවේ ඕනැ ම ක්ෂේත්‍රයක පරිසර ගැටළු පිළිබඳ ව දැනුම් දිය හැක.
 නැතිනම් වෙරළ සම්බන්ධ කරුණක් නම් වෙරළ සංරක්ෂණ අධිකාරිය හෝ පස සම්බන්ධ ගැටළු නම් භූ විද්‍යා හා පතල් කැනීම් කාර්යංශය හෝ ආදි වශයෙන් විවිධ රාජ්‍ය ආයතනවල උපකාරය ලබා ගත හැක.
ඒ අතර ම, අදාළ පොලිසිය, ප්‍රදේශයේ ග්‍රාම නිළධාරිවරයා ආදි වශයෙන් ඉතා පහසුවෙන් රජයේ උපකාරය ඔබට ලබා ගත හැක.
මේ සියලු ආකාර පිළිබඳ ව සෑහීමකට පත් නො වේ නම්, නීතිඥවරයකුගේ අනුදැනුම මත සුදුසු අධිකරණයක් හමුවේ ඔබේ පරිසර ගැටළුවලට විසඳුම් ලබා ගත හැක. වි.මු.ධ. බණ්ඩාර
2017/05/01

Coca-cola Beverages Sri Lanka LTD vs Jagath Keerthi Bandara et al S.C.Appeal 19 /2021 decided on 13/09/2023

 A foreign substance which is not used for human consumption was found in a Cocacola bottle when it was to be sold for lay people in Mahawa. Having found the bottle yet unopened, the public health inspector who is in charge of the area lodged a complaint to the Hon. Magistrate of Mahawa Magistrate's Court. Including both the distributor and the company which is situated in Biyagama charged with offences under the Food Act with separate charges. Having admitting the offence by the distributor and pleading not guilty to the relevant charge by the company matter was trialed and the PHI was able to prove the charge beyond reasonable doubt. In the course of the trial the PHI was able to get a Gov Analyst report on the subject cocacola bottle in which the impurities were found even remaining it was unopened. Being aggrieved by the judgment by the Hon. Learned Magistrate, the company (2nd Accused ) appealed the matter to the Kurunegala High Court. The appeal was dismissed  and being aggrieved the 2nd accused filed a special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka. 

Pronouncing the judgment His Lordship Justice Buwaneka Aluwihare dismissed the appeal after hearing to both parties. A learned president's counsel appeared for the company and the Attorney General's Department appeared for the PHI. 

Raising preliminary objections the Learned president's counsel questioned the jurisdiction of the Mahawa Magistrate's Court as the 2nd Accused company is located in Biyagama and all the manufacturing and preparation were done in Biyagama. 

The Supreme Court identified preliminary objections as to the jurisdiction are two fold. Patent lack of jurisdiction and latent lack of jurisdiction. Patent lack of jurisdiction is a kind of relating to parties or subject matter, under which the jurisdiction has to be decided. In this type of objection, the court does not have jurisdiction as to hear the matter whatsoever rending the proceedings and orders null and void. And even such objections can be raised at any time even in the appeal stage. 

However latter part differs. Such objections has to be taken at the earliest possible. Otherwise they are impliedly cured by the objecting party. Such objections are considered in exceptional cases where the objecting party has to bear serious impacts. 

Therefore as per s. 434 of the criminal procedure code and s. 39 of the Judicature Act such type of objections comes under latent lack of jurisdiction which are curable. In this matter the 2nd Accused did not raise it at the first instance. 

Then the Supreme Court affirmed the Learned Hon. Magistrate's judgment and conviction. 


W.M.Dhammika Bandara 

Attorney at Law 

rei vindicatio action

 A text book judgement by His Lordship Mahinda Samayawardane J, it can be classified as an academic research , a thesis whatever it is called a lecturer note for everyone who is interested in. 


1.To recognize rei vindicatio action in terms of old era and modern era,

2.To clarify the greater includes the less rule in a rei vindicatio action,

3.To interpret Hariette vs Pathmasiri in a broader manner and correctly,

4.To recognize rei vindicatio action as in rem or in personam,

5.Vendor's duty to put the vendee in possession of the transferred property and application of the same to the rei vindicatio action,

 6. Burden of proof of the plaintiff in a rei vindicatio action and consideration of the defendant's version by the Hon. Judge at the conclusion of the case,

7. Rei vindicatio action against a trespasser in case of a co owned property by a single co owner,

8. Rei vindicatio action by a permit holder,

9. Wide capacity to the trial judge in a rei vindicatio action,

10. Appellant's version in an appeal for a rei vindicatio action,


 SC/ APPEAL / 57/ 2016 decided on 11/09/2023.

https://supremecourt.lk/images/documents/sc_appeal_57_2016.pdf

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Identification of the corpus, dispute on the pedigree in a partition action.

 http://courtofappeal.lk/index.php?option=com_phocadownload&view=category&download=4637:ca-dc-1110-2000-polwatte-lekamalage-premasiri-ofmeneripitya-vs-mudannaka-arachchilage-punchimenika-a-others-hon-eaor-amarasekara-j-&id=88:january-2018&Itemid=133


PODI APPUHAMY AND ANOTHER VS GUNASEKARA AND OTHERS

-all documents marked during the trial of the partition action can be considered as evidence for all the purposes of this case.-Sri Lanka Ports Authority vs Jugolinija-Boal East (1981) 1 SLR 18


-The judge is not bound to accept plaintiff’s or defendant’s pedigree; he must inquire which pedigree is proved before the court.


-As per section 26, the judge can demarcate and seperate a portion of the land which represent the  share of any particular party and also order that any any share remain un allotted.



-If parties separately claim title to the corpus, there’s a dispute.

-The question is whether the land can be partitioned or not.


-If a party wants to partition a land he should first have to prove the identity of the corpus.

බාලාංශ ගුරුවරු ගුරුවරු නො වේ ද?

 ලොව ගුරුවරු අතරින් විශ්වවිද්‍යාල ආචාර්යවරුන් ඉහළ ම තැන ඇත.  එ තරම් ඉහළට ඉගෙන නො ගත් එහෙත් උසස් ඉගෙනුමක් ලත් ගුරුවරු ජ්‍යෙෂ්ඨ ශිෂ්‍යයින්ට උග...