LC - Local Commissioner Best Advocate in Dwarka Court

What is a Local Commissioner (LC)?

A Local Commissioner (LC) is an officer appointed by the court to assist it in gathering evidence or conducting certain fact-finding tasks outside the courtroom, such as inspecting a site, verifying records, or executing a commission.

The LC acts as an “extended arm of the court” — not as an advocate for either party, but as a neutral fact-finder.


Legal Basis

  • Order XXVI, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) – governs Commissions.
  • Sections 75–78 CPC provide the power to issue commissions.
  • Order 26 Rules 9, 10, 10A, 11, 12, etc. explain the procedure and scope.

When & Why LC Is Appointed

The Court may appoint a Local Commissioner for several reasons, such as:

PurposeRelevant Rule / ProvisionExample
To make a local investigationOrder 26 Rule 9Measurement of land, boundary disputes, site inspection, encroachment verification.
To record evidenceOrder 26 Rule 4AWhen witness cannot attend court (elderly, infirm, official witness).
To examine accountsOrder 26 Rule 11Business or partnership accounting disputes.
To conduct partition or saleOrder 26 Rules 13–14In partition suits or execution of decrees.
To hold scientific/technical examinationRule 10AExpert examination, handwriting verification, etc.
To take possession / prepare inventoryIn execution / family / property mattersDuring enforcement of court orders or sealing premises.

Who Appoints the LC

  • The Court itself (Civil Judge, District Judge, or High Court) appoints the Local Commissioner.
  • Appointment may be made:
    • Suo motu (by the court on its own), or
    • On application of either party (plaintiff or defendant).

Who Can Be Appointed as LC

Usually:

  • An Advocate practicing in that jurisdiction (impartial and experienced), or
  • A Government officer / technical expert, depending on the nature of inspection (e.g., engineer, surveyor, accountant).

The LC must be neutral and not connected with either party.


Procedure for Appointment

  1. Application Filed:
    • A party (plaintiff or defendant) files an application under Order 26 CPC requesting appointment of LC.
    • The application must specify:
      • Purpose (inspection, evidence, accounts, etc.)
      • Reasons why LC is necessary
      • Proposed person’s name (optional)
  2. Notice to Opposite Party:
    • The court usually issues notice to the other side before appointing LC (unless urgent).
  3. Court’s Order:
    • The judge passes an order appointing LC with clear terms:
      • Scope of inquiry (what to inspect, record, measure)
      • Time period
      • LC’s fee (called commissioner’s fee)
      • Deadline for submitting report
  4. LC’s Work:
    • LC visits site / conducts examination / records evidence.
    • Prepares a Local Commissioner’s Report (with photographs, maps, signatures, etc.).
    • Submits it to the court within the specified time.
  5. Filing of Report:
    • The report is placed on record.
    • Both parties can file objections to it if they disagree.
  6. Consideration by Court:
    • The court considers the LC report, objections (if any), and may:
      • Accept the report, or
      • Modify it, or
      • Direct a fresh commission.

Why LC Is Important

  • Helps the court ascertain factual conditions on-site.
  • Saves time and judicial effort.
  • Prevents parties from tampering with evidence or misrepresenting facts.
  • Ensures transparency — as LC works under court direction.

Key Case Laws

CaseCitationPrinciple
Haryana Waqf Board v. Shanti Sarup & Ors.(2008) 8 SCC 671LC’s report is a piece of evidence; not binding, but carries persuasive value.
K. K. Velusamy v. N. Palanisamy(2011) 11 SCC 275LC should not be appointed to collect evidence; only to clarify facts when necessary.
Rajesh Bhatia v. G. ParimalaAIR 2010 Mad 134Court can appoint LC even without party’s application if it feels it will help just adjudication.

In Summary

PointExplanation
Who appointsThe court (civil, family, or high court).
When appointedWhen physical verification, evidence collection, or expert assistance is needed.
PurposeTo help court ascertain facts objectively and prevent injustice.
Power sourceSections 75–78, Order XXVI CPC.
Report statusNot conclusive, but persuasive and aids decision-making.
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