The petitioner, Shubhkaran Singh, appealed against an order from the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur, dated 7th January 2025, which rejected his petition. This original petition challenged a decision rejecting his application under Order 18 Rule 17 of the Civil Procedure Code (CPC). The petitioner had also preferred a Review Petition, which was rejected on 27th February 2025. Consequently, the petitioner sought to challenge both these orders before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved The core legal provisions at play are:
Order 18 Rule 17 of the Civil Procedure Code (CPC): This rule empowers the Court, at any stage of a suit, to recall any witness who has been examined and may put such questions to him as the Court thinks fit. It allows for recall and further examination of a witness. The rule is primarily a provision enabling the court to clarify any issue or doubt by recalling any witness and putting questions to elicit answers, or to permit parties to assist the court by putting some questions.
Section 165 of the Evidence Act: This section provides that a Judge may, in order to discover or obtain proper proof of relevant facts, ask any question he pleases in any form at any time, about any fact relevant or irrelevant, from any witness. The parties are not entitled to make any objection to such questions, nor can they cross-examine any witness without leave of the Court.
Section 151 of the CPC: This section deals with the inherent powers of the Court.
Precedents cited: Sultan Saleh Bin Omer v. Vijayachand Sirmal (A.I.R. 1966, A.P. 295.)4, Vadira] Naggamma Vernekar v. Sharadchandra Prabhakar Gogate (2009) 4 SCC 410, and K.K. Velusamy v. N. Palanisamy (2011) 11 SCC 2753. These cases underscore that the power under Order 18 Rule 17 CPC is to be exercised sparingly and in exceptional cases only, not as a general rule.
Reasoning The Supreme Court emphasized that the power under Order 18 Rule 17 CPC is an extraordinary one, to be used sparingly and only in exceptional cases. Its purpose is to remove ambiguities, clarify statements, and fill lacunae in a party’s case. It is not intended to enable a party to re-call a witness for cross-examination or re-examination without the leave of the Court. The Court highlighted that the power under Section 165 of the Evidence Act complements Order 18 Rule 17, allowing the Court to recall and re-examine a witness.
Crucially, the Court reiterated that this power should not be used as a “protracting tactic”. If an application under Order 18 Rule 17 is found to be mischievous, frivolous, or aimed at delay due to negligence or lacunae, it should be rejected with heavy costs. The Court stressed that the primary purpose of Order 18 Rule 17 is to assist the court in clarifying issues and rendering justice, not to defeat justice or prolong the litigation. In this case, the High Court and the Review Petition had rejected the application, implying it did not meet the stringent criteria for recalling a witness.
Holding The Supreme Court dismissed the Special Leave Petition, thereby upholding the orders of the High Court which rejected the petitioner’s application under Order 18 Rule 17 CPC and his subsequent review petition. All pending applications related to the petition were also disposed of .
Shubhkaran Singh V. Abhayraj Singh And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 628: (DoJ 05-05-2025)




