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The Top Court in its decision on March 16, 2021, held that all consumer complaints instituted before coming into force of the new Consumer Protection Act, 2019 shall continue to be heard by the fora designated by the 1986 Act and not be transferred in terms of the new pecuniary limits established under the Act of 2019.
A Division Bench of Justice D.Y. Chandrachud and Justice M.R. Shah, while setting aside the impugned orders passed by the NCDRC, held, “Proceedings instituted before the commencement of the Act of 2019 on 20 July 2020 would continue before the fora corresponding to those under the Act of 1986 (the National Commission, State Commissions and District Commissions) and not be transferred in terms of the pecuniary jurisdiction set for the fora established under the Act of 2019.”
Consumer Protection Act, 2019 came into force on 20.07.2020. The Appellants instituted a consumer case before the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) on 18.06.2020, under the provisions of erstwhile Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
The claim amount filed by the Appellants was Rupees 2.19 Crores.
By order dated 30.07.2020, NCDRC dismissed the complaint of the Appellants on the ground that after enforcement of the Act of 2019, its pecuniary jurisdiction has been enhanced from rupees 1 crore to rupees 10 crore. Review petition was also dismissed by order dated 05.10.2020.
It is to be noted that by an administrative notice dated 17.07.2020, issued by NCDRC, the registry was allowed to take up fresh filings since the law was to come into force on 20.07.2020. In such case, the Appellants is also aggrieved by the fact that contrary to the position taken in its case, other benches of the NCDRC did admit complaints before 20.07.2020.
The issue precisely was construction of Section 107 of the Act of 2019 among other provisions of the new legislation and its interplay with Section 6 of the General Clauses Act 1897.
Broad line of submission made by the Appellants were:
(i) Section 107 of the Act of 2019 read with Section 6 of the General Clauses Act saves pending legal proceedings; hence the complaint which was filed before the enforcement of the new legislation should be allowed to proceed before the NCDRC under the Act of 1986
(ii) In the absence of an express provision, the new legislation must operate prospectively
(iii) In the absence of a provision for transfer of pending cases, complaints which were instituted prior to the enforcement of the Act of 2019 should not be disturbed.
Observations made by the Court
[Southfield Paints and Chemicals Pvt. Ltd v. New India Assurance Co. Ltd (1975) 2 SCC 840, Premier Automobiles Ltd. v. Dr. Manoj Ramachandran, CIT Orissa v. Dhadi Sahu 1994 Suppl (1) SCC 257]
[Nusli Neville v. Ivory Properties (2020) 6 SCC 557, Hindustan Commercial Bank v. Punnu Sahu, (1971) 3 SCC 124]
Case Title: Neena Aneja v. Jai Prakash Associates | CIVIL APPEAL 3766-3767 of 2020
Statute/Provisions Involved: Consumer Protection Act, 1986, Consumer Protection Act, 2019
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