The Supreme Court has reiterated that the doctrine of constructive res judicata, embodied in Explanation IV to Section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is aimed at preventing parties from litigating in instalments and ensuring finality in judicial proceedings. Drawing from a long line of authorities including Kameswar Pershad v. Rajkumari Ruttun Koer, Daryao v. State of Uttar Pradesh 1961...
The Supreme Court has reiterated that the doctrine of constructive res judicata, embodied in Explanation IV to Section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is aimed at preventing parties from litigating in instalments and ensuring finality in judicial proceedings. Drawing from a long line of authorities including Kameswar Pershad v. Rajkumari Ruttun Koer, Daryao v. State of Uttar Pradesh 1961 SCC OnLine SC 21, State of Karnataka v. All India Manufacturers Organisation (2006) 4 SCC 683, and Samir Kumar Majumder v. Union of India 2023 LiveLaw (SC) 806, the Court highlighted the following principles:
1. All Grounds That "Might and Ought" to Have Been Raised Must Be Raised
Constructive res judicata requires parties to raise all grounds of attack or defence that were available and ought to have been taken in the earlier proceedings. The doctrine seeks to prevent multiplicity of litigation and piecemeal adjudication.
This principle traces its origins to Henderson v. Henderson (1843), where it was held that parties must bring forward their whole case in one proceeding. The principle was subsequently approved by the Supreme Court in State of Karnataka v. All India Manufacturers Organisation (2006) and Samir Kumar Majumder v. Union of India (2023).
2. The Doctrine Is a Legal Fiction Whose Application Depends on the Facts of Each Case
Constructive res judicata operates through a deeming fiction: a matter that was not actually raised may nevertheless be treated as having been in issue. However, its application is not automatic.
Whether the doctrine applies depends on the facts and circumstances of each case, including the scope of the earlier proceedings and the connection between the omitted ground and the controversy involved.
This qualification was recognised by the Privy Council in Kameswar Pershad v. Rajkumari Ruttun Koer (1892), which observed that whether a matter "ought" to have been raised depends on the particular facts of the case.
3. The Doctrine Is Founded on Public Policy
The rule rests on the public policy that litigation must attain finality and that no person should be vexed twice over in respect of the same dispute.
In Daryao v. State of Uttar Pradesh (1961), the Supreme Court held that although constructive res judicata may have technical aspects, its foundation lies in considerations of public policy, namely finality of judicial decisions and protection against repetitive litigation.
Because the doctrine is founded on public policy, it applies not only to civil suits but also to proceedings under Articles 226 and 32 of the Constitution. Daryao, Forward Construction Co. v. Prabhat Mandal and Direct Recruit Class II Engineering Officers' Association v. State of Maharashtra affirmed the applicability of constructive res judicata in writ proceedings.
4. "Ought" Means More Than Mere Possibility
The fact that a plea could have been raised is not sufficient. The omitted ground must be one that the party was expected to raise in the earlier proceedings.
The Supreme Court emphasised that the expression "ought" imports a threshold higher than mere possibility. The omitted issue must have been so connected with the earlier controversy that it reasonably should have been raised at that stage.
5. Parties Must Exercise Reasonable Diligence
The doctrine expects litigants to exercise reasonable diligence and to raise all issues falling within the legitimate purview of the litigation.
Drawing from Henderson v. Henderson, Greenhalgh v. Mallard and State of Karnataka v. All India Manufacturers Organisation, the Court reiterated that the inquiry is whether the omitted matter properly belonged to the subject of litigation and could have been raised through the exercise of reasonable diligence.
6. Negligence, Inadvertence or Accident Do Not Avoid the Bar
A party cannot escape constructive res judicata by contending that a plea was omitted due to negligence, inadvertence, oversight or accident.
Relying on Henderson v. Henderson and reaffirming the principle in Samir Kumar Majumder v. Union of India (2023), the Court held that the doctrine applies with full force even where the omission occurred unintentionally. A litigant who fails to raise a ground that both "might and ought" to have been raised does so at his own peril.
The principles were summarised in a recent judgment in Makardhwaj Ram v. Jagdish Rai (Dead) Th. Lrs. & Anr. 2026 LiveLaw (SC) 626