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Monday, May 13, 2013

Suit: Suit for declaration of title - Suit property sold by DW-4 by registered sale deed in 1968 - Petitioner claiming title over property on the basis of registered sale deed executed by DW-4 in 1974 - Held: DW-4 was not competent to execute the subsequent sale deed in 1974 in respect of same property - Petitioner therefore did not acquire any title to the suit property - Deeds and documents. The petitioner filed a suit for declaration of title to the suit property. The basis of petitioner's claim was that suit property was sold by DW-4 to `SG' by a registered deed dated 10.5.1974 (Ext.A-1) from whom the petitioner purchased the suit property in 1984. The defence of defendant was that DW-4 sold the suit property by a registered deed dated 22.5.1968 (Ext.B-1) to one `TH' who then sold it on 17.5.1982 to `PP'. The defendant then purchased the suit property from `PP' by registered deed in 1985. The trial court dismissed the suit and held that in view of registered deed dated 22.5.1968 by DW-4, she was no longer competent to execute the subsequent sale deed in respect of same property in favour of `SG' through whom the petitioner claimed title. The First Appellate Court decreed the suit holding that the evidence of DW-4 was not reliable as she neither knew `TH' nor the scribe of the sale deed. However, the High Court accepted the evidence of DW-4 and held that since Ext.B-1 was prior in point of time in relation to the subsequent document executed in favour of `SG', the petitioner, who had acquired his title through `SG', did not acquire any title to the suit properties. On such finding, the High Court reversed the decision of the first Appellate Court. Aggrieved petitioner filed special leave petition.=Dismissing the special leave petition, the Court Held: Ext.B2 was a crucial document and was admittedly anterior in point of time to Ext.A1 subsequently executed by DW-4 when she had already divested herself of title to the suit properties. The petitioner did not, therefore, acquire any title to the suit property and the suit was rightly dismissed. [Para 11] [629 -A-B] CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTIO : SLP (Civil) No. 4549 of 2008. From the Judgment & Order dated 18.4.2007 of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad in Second Appeal No. 656 of 1997. A. Subba Rao for the Petitioner.


REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (C) No.4549 of 2008
Atla Sidda Reddy .. Petitioner
Vs.
Busi Subba Reddy & Ors. .. Respondent
J U D G M E N T
ALTAMAS KABIR, J.
1. Despite service of notice, the respondents have
not appeared to contest the Special Leave
Petition which is directed against the judgment
and order dated 18th April, 2007, passed by theAndhra Pradesh High Court in S.A. No.656 of
1997.
2. In September, 1988, the petitioner filed O.S.
No.735 of 1988 in the Court of District Munsif,
Cuddapah, inter alia, for declaration of the
petitioner’s title to the plaint schedule
property and for permanent injunction to
restrain the defendant No.1 and his men from
interfering with the petitioner’s peaceful
possession therein and enjoyment thereof. The
III Additional District Munsif dismissed the
petitioner’s suit on 29.11.1990, upon holding
that the petitioner had failed to establish the
title of his predecessor-in-interest in the
suit land. The petitioner preferred an appeal,
being A.S.No.113 of 1990, in the Court of 1
st
Additional District Judge, Cuddapah, which was
allowed on 26th March, 1997. The judgment and
2order of the trial court was set aside and the
suit was decreed in favour of the petitioner.
3. It may be indicated that the defendant No.1
Koppolu Subba Reddy, died during the pendency
of the appeal before the 1
st Additional
District Judge, Cuddapah, and the Respondents
Nos. 2 to 4 herein were brought on record as
his legal representatives. The respondents
herein filed Second Appeal No.656 of 1997, in
the Andhra Pradesh High Court and the same was
allowed by the learned Single Judge on 18th
April, 2007. The judgment and decree of the
1
st Additional District Judge was set aside and
the judgment and decree of the trial court
dismissing the petitioner’s suit was restored.
4. In order to appreciate the submissions of Mr.
A. Subba Rao, learned advocate, appearing in
support of the Special Leave Petition, it is
3necessary to set out the facts of the case in
brief.
5. According to the petitioner, the suit property
belonged to the defendant No.1, Koppolu Subba
Reddy who sold the same to one Pasupula
Lakshmamma by a registered deed of sale dated
19.7.1966. Lakshmamma, in her turn, sold the
property to one Syed Ghouse Bi alias Chand
Begum, a minor represented by her guardian and
father Syed Ghouse, by a registered sale deed
dated 10.5.1974 and the same was allegedly
attested by the defendant No.1 himself.
Thereafter, Syed Ghouse Bi alias Chand Begum
sold the land to the petitioner by a registered
deed of sale dated 5.3.1984 and the petitioner
is in peaceful possession and enjoyment of the
said land in his own right since then. The suit
was resisted by the defendant by filing a
4written statement wherein it was admitted that
the suit lands originally belonged to the
defendant No.1 who sold the same to Lakshmamma,
but the said Lakshmamma sold all the lands,
except Survey No.93/6, to one Thondolu
Mahaboob Basha, son of Dathagiri by a
registered deed of sale dated 22.5.1968.
Subsequently, Thondolu Mahaboob Basha sold two
portions of the said land, namely, Survey
No.99/6 to an extent of 40 cents out of 52
cents and Survey No.99/6 to an extent of 47
cents, comprising the suit land, to Pallampalli
Pedda Veera Reddy, by a registered deed of sale
dated 17.5.1982. The defendant thereafter
purchased the said two plots of land from the
said Pallampalli Pedda Veera Reddy by a
registered deed dated 7.11.1985. The
defendant, accordingly, was the absolute owner
of the said land and he has been in possession
5and enjoyment of the property since then.
6. In the light of the pleadings of the parties to
the suit, the main issue which fell for
decision of the trial court was whether the
petitioner had acquired title to the suit
properties by virtue of the deed of sale dated
5.3.1984 executed in his favour by Syed Ghouse
Bi alias Chand Begum in view of the case of the
defendant that Lakshmamma had already sold the
suit property to one Thondolu Mahaboob Basha by
a registered deed of sale dated 22.5.1968
(Ext.B2). In other words, what the Court was
called upon to decide was whether Ext.B2
extinguished Lakshmamma’s right in the suit
property so that she no longer had any right to
execute and register the sale deed dated 10th
May, 1974 executed in favour of Syed Ghouse Bi
alias Chand Begum.
67. The trial court came to the finding that in
view of the registered sale deed dated
22.5.1968 executed by Lakshmamma in favour of
Thondolu Mahaboob Basha in respect of the suit
property, she was no longer competent to
execute the subsequent sale deed in respect of
the same property in favour of Syed Ghouse Bi
alias Chand Begum through whom the
plaintiff/petitioner claims title. The trial
court thereupon dismissed the suit.
8. The First Appellate Court, however, chose not
to rely on the evidence of Lakshmamma, (DW.4),
who in her deposition was not certain as to how
the sale deed was said to have been executed by
her in favour of Thondolu Mahaboob Basha as she
neither knew him nor the scribe, who is said to
have written the sale deed.
79. The First Appellate Court held that the
testimony of DW.4, Lakshmamma, did not inspire
confidence and, accordingly, discarded the same
as far as the sale deed in favour of Thondolu
Mahaboob Basha on 22.5.1968 (Ext.B2) is
concerned and relied on the subsequent deed
executed in favour of Syed Ghouse Bi alias
Chand Begum dated 10.5.1974 (Ext.A1), and
decreed the suit.
10. As indicated hereinbefore, the High Court
accepted the evidence of DW.4 Lakshmamma and came
to a finding that by virtue of Ex.B2 she had
transferred all her rights, title and interest in
the suit properties in favour of Thondolu Mahaboob
Basha and having divested her of the title to the
suit properties, she was no longer competent to
execute a further sale deed in respect of the same
property in favour of Syed Ghouse Bi on 16.3.1974
8(Ex.A1). The High Court having accepted the sale
deed dated 22.5.1968 in favour of Thondolu Mahaboob
Basha as being genuine, it came to the conclusion
that since the said document was prior in point of
time in relation to the subsequent document
executed in favour of Syed Ghouse Bi, the
plaintiff/petitioner, who had acquired his title
through Syed Ghouse Bi alias Chand Begum, did not
acquire any title to the suit properties. On such
finding, the High Court reversed the judgment and
decree of the first Appellate Court.
11. The factual aspect having been dealt with in
detail by the Courts below, ending in the findings
of the High Court, we are not inclined to delve
into the facts any further. As indicated by the
trial Court, Ext.B2 is a crucial document and was
admittedly anterior in point of time to Ext.A1
subsequently executed by DW.4 in favour of Syed
9Ghouse Bi when she had already divested herself of
title to the suit properties. The petitioner did
not, therefore, acquire any title to the suit
property and the suit was rightly dismissed.
12. Having regard to the above, the submissions
advanced on behalf of the petitioner do not warrant
any interference with the order of the High Court
impugned therein and the same is, accordingly,
dismissed, but without any order as to costs.
…………………………………………J.
(ALTAMAS KABIR)
…………………………………………J.
(CYRIAC JOSEPH)
New Delhi
Dated: 6TH May, 2010.
10

Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 - Suit in civil court for recovery of possession of agricultural land - Maintainability of - Held: Maintainable as neither plaintiff nor defendant claimed or admitted that there was relationship of landlord and agricultural tenant between them - Plaintiff's case was that defendant was trespasser and case of defendant was that he was owner and was never tenant of suit land either under plaintiff or anyone else - Since suit was not for eviction of agricultural tenant, s.13 of 1956 Act not attracted - Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Areas) Tenancy Act, 1956 - ss.13, 16. Adverse possession - Suit for possession - Claim by defendant that he had perfected his title by adverse possession and suit was not maintainable for want of prayer for declaration of title - Held: Mere claim of adverse possession by defendant, does not mean that a cloud is raised over plaintiff's title and that the plaintiff who is the owner, should file a suit for declaration of title - Unless the defendant raises a serious cloud over the title of the plaintiff, there is no need to file a suit for declaration - On facts, plaintiff had title and she only wanted possession and, therefore, suit for possession was maintainable. The respondent-plaintiff claiming herself to be the owner of certain agricultural land under a sale deed dated 10.4.1957 and alleging the appellant as trespasser, filed suit against him for possession of the suit land. The defendant denied the title of the plaintiff and claimed to have perfected his title by adverse possession. His case was that the sale deed dated 10.4.1957 was a nominal deed as was evident from an agreement dated 18.1.1959 executed by the plaintiff and; that since the plaintiff had stated in the plaint that she had leased out the land to him, she should have filed petition before the Revenue Court under the Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Areas) Tenancy Act, 1956. The Trial Court decreed the suit and the High Court affirmed the decree. In the instant appeal filed by the defendant, the questions for consideration before the Court were: (i) whether the plaintiff's suit for possession in the civil court was not maintainable and whether the remedy was only by way of an eviction petition under s.13 of the Act; (ii) whether the suit was not maintainable for want of a prayer for declaration of title; (iii) whether the concurrent findings of fact recorded by the trial court and High Court that plaintiff was the owner of the suit property and that defendant had not made out title by adverse possession call for interference. Citation: 2008(11 )SCR849 ,2008(11 )SCALE160 ,2008(9 )JT295= Dismissing the appeal, the Court HELD: 1.1. Section 13 of Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Areas) Tenancy Act, 1956 requires an application to be made to the Special Officer under the Act only when a landlord wants to terminate the tenancy and evict his cultivating tenant and not otherwise. Termination of tenancy and eviction petition under s.13(e) are contemplated only where (a) the defendant is the cultivating tenant; and (b) the defendant wilfully denies the landlord's title to the land. [Para 10, 11] [858 B-C, E & F] 1.2. It is true that in the instant case, the plaintiff had averred in the plaint that the defendant was closely related to her and on her request, she had leased the suit land to him in the year 1971. But the plaintiff further specifically alleged that the defendant had denied her title and claimed title in himself, and he had also denied the relationship of `landlord and tenant'; and that therefore, the defendant was a trespasser and she was entitled to sue for possession to evict the `trespasser'. The averment in the plaint should be read as a whole. If so done, it is clear that plaintiff claims that defendant is a trespasser in the suit land. Significantly, the defendant in his written statement did not allege that he was the cultivating tenant of the suit land either under the plaintiff or anyone else. On the other hand, he denied the title of plaintiff and asserted ownership and title in himself by adverse possession. Thus neither the plaintiff nor the defendant claimed or admitted that there was relationship of landlord and agricultural tenant between them. Consequently tenancy was not an issue in the suit nor was the suit for eviction of an agricultural tenant. Therefore Section 13 of the Act was not attracted. [Para 10] [857 E,F,G,H] 1.3. Mere denial of the title of the plaintiff by the defendant in respect of an agricultural land would not mean that only the authorities under the Act will have jurisdiction and that plaintiff should sue for eviction under the Act by approaching the Special Officer. Only a civil suit was the remedy to obtain possession from a trespasser. Further, to attract Section 16 of the Act, the person approaching the Special Officer should contend that he is either a landlord or a cultivating tenant, and admit the existence of the relationship of landlord and cultivating tenant between the parties. S.16 is only a provision enabling a landlord or cultivating tenant to approach the Special Officer for settlement of any dispute arising under the Act and it does not operate as a bar for a suit by an owner against a trespasser. [Para 11, 13] [859 B,C & 860-E,F] Abdulla Bin Ali v. Galappa 1985 (2) SCC 54 - relied on. D. Venkata Reddy v. B.Bhushireddy AIR (1971) A.P. 87 - referred to. 2.1. A mere claim by the defendant that he had perfected his title by adverse possession, does not mean that a cloud is raised over plaintiff's title and that the plaintiff who is the owner, should file a suit for declaration of title. Unless the defendant raises a serious cloud over the title of the plaintiff, there is no need to file a suit for declaration. Plaintiff had title and she only wanted possession and therefore a suit for possession was maintainable. [Para 14] [861 B,C,D] Anathula Sudhakar v. P.Buchi Reddy (Dead) by LRs. & Ors. (2008) 4 SCC 594 - relied on. 2.2. Both the courts have entered a concurrent finding that the defendant did not establish adverse possession, and that mere possession for some years was not sufficient to claim adverse possession, unless such possession was hostile possession, denying the title of the true owner. The courts have pointed out that if according to defendant, plaintiff was not the true owner, his possession hostile to plaintiff's title will not be sufficient and he had to show that his possession was also hostile to the title and possession of the true owner. After detailed analysis of the oral and documentary evidence, the trial court and High Court also held that the appellant was only managing the properties on behalf of the plaintiff and his occupation was not hostile possession. [Para 17] [862 E,F,G] 3. The trial Court and the High Court have concurrently held that (i) plaintiff had established her title to the suit land by purchase under sale deed dated 10.4.1957; (ii) the sale in favour of plaintiff was not nominal as alleged by defendant; (iii) the agreement dated 18.4.1959 put forth by defendant was a fabricated document; and (iv) the defendant had failed to establish title by adverse possession. Both the courts have considered the issues of fact in detail with reference to the evidence and recorded concurrent findings against the defendant. Neither any perversity nor omission to consider evidence nor any error of law has been pointed out with reference to consideration and appreciation of evidence by the trial court and the High Court. [Para 6 and 18] [855 F,G 862,H, 863-A,B] Case Law Reference 1985 (2) SCC 54 relied on Para 12 AIR (1971) A.P. 87 referred to Para 13 (2008) 4 SCC 594 relied on Para 14 Ravindra Shrivastava and A.T.M. Ranga Ramanujam, Kunal Verma, Rajul Shrivastav, Supriya Jain, K. Krishna Kumar, Anup Jain, P.R.K. Amarendra Kumar, Anu Gupta and Rami Jethmalani for the Appellant. P.S. Narasimha, M. Srinivas R. Rao, Abid Ali Beera P. And Sudha Gupta for the Respondent.


Reportable
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.4788 OF 2008
(Arising out of SLP [C] No.23232 of 2007)
Kurella Naga Druva Vudaya Bhaskara Rao … Appellant
Vs.
Galla Jani Kamma Alias Nacharamma …
Respondent
J U D G M E N T
R.V.RAVEENDRAN, J.
Leave granted. Heard learned counsel.
2. This appeal is by the defendant in O.S. No.232 of 1979 on the file of
the Sub-ordinate Judge, Rajmundry. The said suit was filed by the
respondent – plaintiff seeking possession of suit property and mesne profits.
The suit was decreed by the trial court on 13.9.1988 and the decree was
affirmed by the High Court on 27.9.2006.
13. The case of respondent-plaintiff in the plaint was that she is the
owner of the suit schedule property (Survey No.100 of Rajanagaram
Village), having purchased it under a registered sale deed dated 10.4.1957
from the previous owners Sathyanarayana Rao and Suryaprakash Rao
represented by their mother Varalakshmamma. She paid the entire
consideration of Rs.10000/- and obtained possession of the land from her
vendors. The appellant-defendant, who is her close relative (son-in-law of
her husband’s brother) offered to manage the suit land by identifying
suitable persons to cultivate the said land. The suit land was given on lease
by the plaintiff to various persons suggested by the defendant, from time to
time. In the year 1971, the defendant offered that he himself will take the
suit land on lease on an annual rent of 40 bags of paddy. The plaintiff
agreed and accordingly, from 1971 onwards, defendant was cultivating the
land. He was delivering 40 bags of paddy every year as rent, till Sankranti,
1978. He did not pay the rent by way of share in produce, due on Sankranti,
1979. Therefore, she issued a registered notice dated 12.7.1979 through her
counsel, demanding payment of agreed rent and possession of the land. The
defendant issued a reply dated 13.7.1979 alleging that he was not the tenant
2of plaintiff; that he had occupied the land in the year 1957 and had been
cultivating the land ever since then in his own right; and therefore, the
question of delivering possession to the plaintiff did not arise. As the
defendant claimed ownership and denied being a cultivating tenant under
the plaintiff, the plaintiff treated the defendant to be a trespasser from the
date of such reply notice. The plaintiff prayed for a decree for possession of
the suit schedule land and consequential reliefs.
4. The defendant filed a written statement claiming that he was
occupying and cultivating the land from 1957 and had perfected his title by
adverse possession. He contended that the plaintiff-respondent was never in
possession and the sale deed dated 10.4.1957 in her favour was a nominal
deed, that one Mahalaxmamma (a common relative) had paid the sale
consideration and was the true owner, and that plaintiff had admitted this
position in an agreement dated 18.4.1959 executed by her in favour of
Mahalaxmamma and her husband. The defendant also contended that the
suit was not maintainable for two reasons : (i) The plaintiff had stated in the
plaint that she had leased the land to defendant and the relationship between
them as that of landlord and cultivating tenant; and therefore, she ought to
have filed an eviction petition before the Special Officer (Tenancy Court)
3under the Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Areas) Tenancy Act, 1956 (‘Act’ for
short) and civil court had no jurisdiction. (ii) A mere suit for possession was
not maintainable in the absence of a prayer for declaration, as he had
disputed her title to the suit property.
5. The court framed issues as to whether the plaintiff was entitled to
possession; whether the defendant had acquired title by adverse possession;
whether the plaintiff was entitled to mesne profits (damages for wrongful
occupation); whether the plaintiff had executed an agreement dated
18.4.1959 admitting that the sale deed dated 10.4.1957 in her favour was a
nominal document; whether the said agreement dated 18.4.1959 put forth by
defendant was a forged document; and to what relief plaintiff was entitled.
No issue was framed about tenancy or jurisdiction of the court.
6. After considering the evidence – oral and documentary, the trial court
by judgment dated 13.9.1988 decreed the suit for possession (and mesne
profits to be determined by a separate enquiry). The defendant filed an
appeal before the High Court in FA No.1990 of 1988 which was dismissed
by judgment dated 27.9.2006. The trial court and High Court have
concurrently held that (i) plaintiff had established her title to the suit land by
4purchase under sale deed dated 10.4.1957; (ii) the sale in favour of plaintiff
was not nominal as alleged by defendant; (iii) the agreement dated
18.4.1959 put forth by defendant was a fabricated document; and (iv) the
defendant had failed to establish title by adverse possession. Both courts
have also rejected the contentions that civil court had no jurisdiction and the
suit was not therefore maintainable.
7. On the contentions urged by the defendant-appellant, the following
questions arise for our consideration :
(i) Whether the plaintiff’s suit for possession in the civil court was not
maintainable and whether the remedy was only by way of an eviction
petition under section 13 of the Act ?
(ii) Whether the suit was not maintainable for want of a prayer for declaration
of title ?
(iii) Whether the concurrent findings of fact recorded by the trial court and High
Court that plaintiff was the owner of the suit property and that defendant
had not made out title by adverse possession call for interference?
Re : Question No. (i) :
8. The defendant submitted that the plaintiff had specifically admitted in
the plaint that the defendant was her tenant in regard to suit land. He
contended that in view of the said specific admission in regard to
5relationship of landlord and cultivating tenant, a civil suit for possession
was barred by sections 13 and 16 of the Act.
9. Sections 13 and 16 of the Act relied on by the appellant read as
under:
“13. Termination of tenancy -
Notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 10, 11 and 12, no landlord
shall be entitled to terminate the tenancy and evict his cultivating tenant
except by an application made in that behalf to the Special Officer and
unless such cultivating tenant –
(a) has failed to pay the rent due by him within a period of one month
from the date stipulated in the lease deed, or in the absence of such
stipulation, within a period of one month from the date on which the
rent is due according to the usage of the locality; and in case the rent is
payable in the form of a share in the produce, has failed to deliver the
produce at the time of harvest; or
(b) has done any act or has been guilty of any neglect, which is destructive
of, or permanently injurious to the land; or
(c) has sub-let the land; or
(d) has violated any of the conditions of the tenancy regarding the uses to
which the land may be put; or
(e) has wilfully dented the landlord’s title to the land; or
(f) has failed to comply with any order passed or direction issued by the
Special Officer or the District Judge under this Act.”
“16. Adjudication of disputes and appeal -
[1] Any dispute arising under this Act, between a landlord and a
cultivating tenant in relation to a matter not otherwise decided by the
Special Officer under the provisions of this Act, shall, on application by
the landlord or the cultivating tenant, as the case may be, be decided by the
Special Officer after making an enquiry in the manner prescribed;
x x x x x”
610. It is true that the plaintiff had averred in the plaint that the defendant
was closely related to her and she had entrusted the management of the
schedule land to him; and that on his request, she had leased the suit land to
him in the year 1971 and he had paid the rent by way of share in crop up to
1978. But the plaintiff further specifically alleged that the defendant had
denied her title and claimed title in himself, and he had also denied the
relationship of ‘landlord and tenant’; and that therefore, the defendant was a
trespasser and she was entitled to sue for possession to evict the
‘trespasser’. The averments relating to defendant earlier being the tenant,
furnish the factual background leading to the cause of action for the suit.
The averments in the plaint should be read as a whole. If so done, it is clear
that plaintiff claims that defendant is a trespasser in the suit land.
Significantly, the defendant in his written statement did not allege that he
was the cultivating tenant of the suit land. On the other hand, he denied the
title of plaintiff and asserted ownership and title in himself by adverse
possession alleging that he was in occupation of the suit property eversince
1957 in his own right. He categorically stated that plaintiff was never his
landlord. Neither plaintiff nor defendant claimed or admitted that there was
relationship of landlord and agricultural tenant them. To repeat, plaintiff’s
case was that the defendant was a trespasser. Consequently, tenancy was not
7an issue in the suit. Section 13 requires an application to be made to the
Special Officer under the Act only when a landlord wants to terminate the
tenancy and evict his cultivating tenant and not otherwise. When plaintiff’s
case is that the defendant is a trespasser and the case of defendant is that he
was the owner and he was never a tenant of the suit land either under
plaintiff or anyone else, the suit was not for eviction of an agricultural
tenant, and therefore, section 13 of the Act was not attracted.
11. The appellant-defendant contended that as he had denied the title of
the plaintiff, the case would squarely fall under section 13 (e) of the Act.
He submitted that section 13(e) contemplated termination of tenancy and
filing of an eviction petition against the cultivating tenant, if the cultivating
tenant wilfully denies the landlord’s title to the land; and therefore the
remedy of the landlord was to terminate the tenancy and seek eviction of the
cultivating tenant by making an application under section 13(e) of the Act,
and a civil suit was not maintainable. Termination of tenancy and eviction
petition under section 13(e) are contemplated only where (a) the defendant
is the cultivating tenant; and (b) the defendant wilfully denies the landlord’s
title to the land. In this case the defendant denied that he was the cultivating
tenant of the suit land and plaintiff claimed that defendant was a trespasser.
8Hence the first requirement for application of section 13 (e) was not
satisfied. If the case of plaintiff had been that the defendant was the
cultivating tenant under her and that defendant was claiming to be the
cultivating tenant under someone else by setting up title in someone other
than the plaintiff-landlord, section 13(e) would have certainly been
attracted. In this case, as noticed above, the plaintiff alleged she was the
owner and the defendant was a trespasser. The defendant asserted that he
was the owner by adverse possession and denied that he was a cultivating
tenant at any point of time. When neither party to the suit claimed that
defendant was the cultivating tenant, and as the suit was not for eviction of
a cultivating tenant, the mere denial of the title of the plaintiff by the
defendant in respect of an agricultural land, would not mean that only the
authorities under the Act will have jurisdiction and that plaintiff should sue
for eviction under the Act by approaching the Special Officer. Only a civil
suit was the remedy to obtain possession from a trespasser. Therefore the
contention that the suit was not maintainable, is liable to be rejected.
12. We are fortified in this view by a decision of this Court in Abdulla
Bin Ali V. Galappa [1985 (2) SCC 54]. In that case, the appellants had filed
a suit for possession and mesne profits, treating the defendants -
9respondents as trespassers. One of the defences in the written statement
filed by the respondents therein was that the civil court had no jurisdiction
to try a suit as plaintiffs had pleaded in the plaint that the second defendant
was the tenant of the disputed plots and therefore they could seek
possession only by filing an application in the Revenue court under the
Tenancy Act. This Court did not agree. This Court found that though the
plaintiffs had referred to the tenancy of the second defendant in the plaint,
they had filed a suit treating the defendants as trespassers, as the defendants
had denied their title. This Court held that a suit against the trespassers
would lie only in the civil court and not in the revenue court. This Court
observed :
“6. In our opinion the High Court was not quite correct in observing
that the suit was filed by the plaintiffs-appellants on the basis of
relationship of landlord and tenant. Indeed, when the defendants denied
the title of the plaintiffs and the tenancy, the plaintiffs filed the present suit
treating them to be trespassers and the suit is not on the basis of the
relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties. It is no doubt true
that the plaintiff had alleged that defendant 2 was a tenant but on the
denial of the tenancy and the title of the plaintiffs-appellants they filed a
suit treating the defendant to be a trespasser and a suit against a trespasser
would lie only in the civil court and not in the revenue court.
7. We are, therefore, of the considered opinion that on the allegations
made in the plaint the suit was cognizable by the civil court and that the
High Court has erred in law in non-suiting the plaintiffs-appellants on the
ground that the civil court had no jurisdiction.”
13. It was next contended that having regard to section 16 of the Act any
dispute in regard to an agricultural tenancy had to be filed before the Special
10Officer under the Act. Section 16 provides that any dispute arising under
the Act between a landlord and a cultivating tenant in relation to a matter
not otherwise decided by the Special Officer under the provisions of the
Act, shall, on an application by the landlord or the cultivating tenant, as the
case may be, be decided by the Special Officer after making an enquiry in
the manner prescribed. But when both the plaintiff and the defendant claim
that there is no relation of landlord and cultivating tenant, there is no
question of any dispute arising under the Act between them as landlord
and cultivating tenant. Further to attract section 16, the person approaching
the Special Officer should contend that he is either a landlord or a
cultivating tenant, and admit the existence of the relationship of landlord
and cultivating tenant between the parties. Section 16 is only a provision
enabling a landlord or cultivating tenant to approach the Special Officer for
settlement of any dispute arising under the Act and it does not operate as a
bar for a suit by an owner against a trespasser. This position is long
recognized in Andhra Pradesh as is evident from the following observations
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in D. Venkata Reddy v. B.Bhushireddy
[AIR 1971 A.P. 87] :
“A reading of section 16(1) clearly shows that the necessary condition for
the exercise of the jurisdiction by the Tahsildar under that section is the
existence of the relationship of landlord and cultivating tenant. The
11Tahsildar has no jurisdiction to decide a dispute which is not between a
landlord and a cultivating tenant.”
Re : Question (ii) :
14. The plaintiff had purchased the suit land under registered sale deed
dated 10.4.1957. Defendant did not claim title with reference to any
document but claimed to have perfected title by adverse possession. A mere
claim by the defendant that he had perfected his title by adverse possession,
does not mean that a cloud is raised over plaintiff’s title and that the
plaintiff who is the owner, should file a suit for declaration of title. Unless
the defendant raises a serious cloud over the title of the plaintiff, there is no
need to file a suit for declaration. Plaintiff had title and she only wanted
possession and therefore a suit for possession was maintainable. We are
fortified in this view by the following observations of this Court in
Anathula Sudhakar v. P.Buchi Reddy (Dead) by LRs. & Ors. [2008 (4) SCC
594] :
“We may however clarify that a prayer for declaration will be necessary
only if the denial of title by the defendant or challenge to plaintiff’s title
raises a cloud on the title of plaintiff to the property. A cloud is said to
raise over a person’s title, when some apparent defect in his title to a
property, or when some prima facie right of a third party over it, is made
out or shown. An action for declaration, is the remedy to remove the cloud
on the title to the property. On the other hand, where the plaintiff has clear
title supported by documents, if a trespasser without any claim to title or
an interloper without any apparent title, merely denies the plaintiff’s title,
12it does not amount to raising a cloud over the title of the plaintiff and it
will not be necessary for the plaintiff to sue for declaration. ….”
Re : Question No. (iii) :
15. The appellant-defendant next contended that the courts below
committed an error in holding that the respondent – plaintiff was the owner
of the suit property and he (the appellant) had not established title by
adverse possession.
16. In support of his contention that plaintiff is not the real owner and
that the sale deed dated 10.4.1957 in her favour was nominal, the defendant
relied on an alleged agreement dated 18.4.1959 said to have been executed
by the plaintiff in favour of Mahalaxmamma and her husband
acknowledging that the sale deed in her favour on 10.4.1957 was nominal,
and Mahalaxmamma and her husband had paid the sale consideration for
the said sale. Both the courts have rightly pointed out that neither
Mahalaxammma during her lifetime nor her legal heirs after her death, had
put forth any claim in respect of the suit property. The trial court and High
Court also found that the stamp papers used for the alleged agreement dated
18.4.1959 were purchased on 6.10.1961 and that supported the plaintiff’s
13contention that the defendant had used a blank stamp paper which contained
the signatures of herself and her husband.
17. The defendant claimed that he had perfected his title by adverse
possession by being in open, continuous and hostile possession of the suit
property from 1957. He also produced some tax-receipts showing that he
has paid the taxes in regard to the suit land. Some tax receipts also showed
that he paid the tax on behalf of someone else. After considering the oral
and documentary evidence, both the courts have entered a concurrent
finding that the defendant did not establish adverse possession, and that
mere possession for some years was not sufficient to claim adverse
possession, unless such possession was hostile possession, denying the title
of the true owner. The courts have pointed out that if according to
defendant, plaintiff was not the true owner, his possession hostile to
plaintiff’s title will not be sufficient and he had to show that his possession
was also hostile to the title and possession of the true owner. After detailed
analysis of the oral and documentary evidence, the trial court and High
Court also held that the appellant was only managing the properties on
behalf of the plaintiff and his occupation was not hostile possession.
1418. We find that both the courts have considered these two issues of fact
in detail with reference to the evidence and recorded concurrent findings
against the defendant. This Court will not convert itself into a third court of
facts and re-examine the facts or disturb concurrent findings of facts.
Neither any perversity nor omission to consider evidence nor any error of
law has been pointed out with reference to consideration and appreciation of
evidence by the trial court and the High Court. We do not therefore find any
reason to re-examine the facts.
19. Consequently the appeal is dismissed as having no merit.
..……………………….J.
(R. V. Raveendran)
New Delhi; . ……………………….J.
August 4, 2008. (Lokeshwar Singh Panta)
15

Suit - Eviction suit - Issue regarding title between parties - Recording of finding in favour of plaintiff - Subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery of possession between the same parties - Effect of earlier suit on the subsequent suit - Held: Finding recorded in favour of the plaintiff in the earlier suit for eviction would operate as res judicata in the subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery of possession between the parties - Question of title was directly and substantially in issue between the parties in the earlier suit - Res judicata. The plaintiff, mother of the respondents, filed a suit for eviction against the defendant, father of the appellants. The issues were framed regarding the plaintiff's claim to the title over the suit property and the relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties. The trial court upheld the plaintiff's claim to the title but did not grant decree of eviction since the relationship of landlord and tenant was not established between the parties. The appellate court affirmed the order of the trial court. Thereafter, the plaintiff filed another suit against the defendant seeking declaration of title over the property and recovery of its possession from the defendant. The trial court decreed the suit. The defendant filed an appeal and the same was allowed. Thereafter, the plaintiff died and her legal representatives-respondent filed the second appeal. The High Court set aside the judgment and the decree passed by the first appellate court and restored the judgment and the decree of the trial court. Therefore, the appellants filed the instant appeal.= Dismissing the appeal, the Court HELD: The issue of title was expressly raised by the parties in the earlier eviction suit and it was expressly decided by the eviction court. The question of title was directly and substantially in issue between the parties in the earlier suit for eviction. Hence, the High Court was right in holding that the finding recorded in favour of the plaintiff in the earlier suit for eviction would operate as res judicata in the subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery of possession between the parties. [Para 17] [740-D-F] Pardip Singh vs. Ram Sundar Singh AIR (36) 1949 Patna 510 - approved. Shamim Akhtar v. Iqbal Ahmad and ANOTHER (2000) 8 SCC 123; Sajjadanashin Sayed Md.B.E.Edr.by L.Rs.(D) vs, Musa Dadabhai Ummer and Ors. (2000) 3 SCC 350 - referred to. Case Law Reference: (2000) 8 SCC 123 Referred to. Para 14 (2000)3 SCC 350 Referred to. Para 15 AIR (36) 1949 Patna 510 approved. Para 15 CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2579 of 2004. From the Judgment & Order dated 24.05.2002 of the High Court of Judicature at Patna in Appeal from appellate decree No. 236 of 1987. H.L. Agarwal, Gaurav Agrawal, Dr. Kailash Chand for the Appellates. Seema Kashyap, S.K. Sinha for the Respondents.


REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2579 OF 2004
Md. Nooman & Ors. ….Appellants
Versus
Md. Jabed Alam & Ors. ….Respondents
JUDGMENT
AFTAB ALAM, J.
1. A finding on the question of title recorded in a suit for eviction would
how far be binding in a subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery
of possession between the same parties? This is the question that arises for
consideration in this appeal. The answer to the question would depend on, in
what manner the question of title was raised by the parties and how it was
dealt with by the court in the eviction proceedings. Ordinarily, it is true, in a
suit for eviction even if the court goes into the question of title, it examines
the issue in an ancillary manner and in such cases (which constitute a verylarge majority) any observation or finding on the question of title would
certainly not be binding in any subsequent suit on the dispute of title. But
there may be exceptions to the general rule and as we shall find presently,
the case in hand seems to fall in that exceptional category of very limited
number of cases.
2. Amina Khatoon, the mother of respondent nos.1-4, (who were
substituted in her place and brought on record after her death) instituted a
suit for eviction (Title Suit No.36 of 1973) in the Court of Second Munsif,
Arrah, against Md. Lukman, the father of appellant nos.1-6 (who were
similarly substituted in his place and brought on record after his death).
According to the plaintiff Amina Khatoon, the suit property originally
belonged to her mother-in-law, Sulakshana. Sulakshana had two other sons,
Md. Lukman (the original defendant) and Md. Jan, apart from Amina’s
husband, Mahmood Hassan. Amina further claimed that Sulakshana sold the
suit house to her through a registered sale deed dated August 13, 1957.
Following the purchase of the suit house, she moved the Block Development
Officer (BDO) and the municipality for mutation of her name in respect of
the suit house in the revenue and municipal records. The defendant Md.
Lukman, filed an objection before the BDO, but his objection was
disallowed and her name was entered in the revenue and municipal records.
2Later on, the municipality filed a suit against her for arrears of tax
whereupon all the outstanding dues of tax were paid by her. It was further
the case of Amina, that she had let out the suit house to the defendant about
4 or 5 years prior to the filing of the suit on a monthly rent of Rs.10.00
(rupees ten only). The defendant did not pay the rent from September, 1971
to February 13, 1973. She then sent a registered notice to him under section
106 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 through her lawyer determining
the defendant’s tenancy and asking him to vacate the house by March 31,
1973. The defendant did not vacate the house forcing her to go to the court.
3. The defendant in his written statement, apart from the formal
objections to the maintainability of the suit, denied that Sulakshana executed
any sale deed with respect to the suit house in favour of the plaintiff. He
described the sale deed, relied upon by the plaintiff as the basis of her title,
as a forged and fabricated document. In this connection, the defendant stated
that Sulakshana had an attack of paralysis before August 13, 1957 when the
sale was said to have been executed by her. She had lost her senses and she
was not in a position to execute any sale deed. No consideration was paid by
the plaintiff to Sulakshana and the title to the house never passed to her. The
defendant set up a rival claim of title over the suit house. He stated that
Sulakshana had transferred the suit house in his favour in 1950, by Hiba
3(oral gift) and since then he was coming in possession of the suit property.
Originally, it was parti (vacant) land. He submitted a plan in the
municipality for construction of the house on it and constructed the house
after the plan was sanctioned. He was living in the house constructed by him
over the land which was given to him by his mother by Hiba. He denied any
relationship of landlord and tenant with the plaintiff and also denied to have
taken the suit house from the plaintiff on a monthly rent of Rs.10.00 (rupees
ten only). He never paid any rent to the plaintiff, nor was any rent due
against him.
4. On the basis of the pleadings of the parties, the trial court framed
seven issues, of which issue nos.3 & 4 relating to the plaintiff’s claim of title
over the suit property and issue no.5 about the relationship of landlord and
tenant between the parties are relevant for this appeal. Those three issues are
as under:
 “3. Has the plaintiff got title to the suit land?
4. Is the sale deed genuine, valid and for consideration?
5. Is there any relationship of landlord and tenant between the
Parties?”
5. In support of the rival claims of title over the suit property, both the
plaintiff and the defendant led their respective evidences, both oral and
documentary. The defendant also examined the third brother, Md. Jan from
4his side as DW11. On a consideration of the evidences adduced before it, the
trial court upheld the plaintiff’s claim of title to the property arriving at the
following finding:
“In view of the discussion made above I hold that the sale deed
(Ext.4) is genuine and that story set up by the defendant that an
oral hiba was made by Sulachna to him has not been proved.
The plaintiff has got Title to the suit land and the sale deed is
genuine valid and for consideration.”
6. It then took up issue nos.5 and 6 (about the plaintiff’s entitlement to a
decree of eviction) together and came to hold and find that the relationship
of landlord and tenant between the parties had not been proved. In light of its
finding on issue no.5, the court further observed that in case the question of
title is raised by the defendant and if it is found that there is no contract of
tenancy, the proper course would be to dismiss the suit and not to convert it
into a declaratory or possessory suit which is of altogether a different nature.
The court further pointed out that the suit before it was neither for
declaration of title nor the plaintiff had paid ad valorem court fee. The
plaintiff was, therefore, not entitled to a decree of eviction since the
relationship of landlord and tenant was not established between the parties.
It, accordingly, dismissed the suit by judgment and order dated December
23, 1974.
57. The plaintiff took the matter in appeal, (Title Appeal No.12 of 1975)
which too was dismissed by the Second Additional District Judge, Arrah, by
judgment and order dated February 19, 1975. From the judgment of the first
appellate court, it appears that before it the main focus was on the issue of
relationship of landlord and tenant between the parties. The trial court found
that the suit property was vacant land and not a house (the case of the
plaintiff was that the suit property was a piece of land 3 kathas and 5 dhurs
in area with a fallen down house). It also noted that on behalf of the
respondent no argument was advanced on the invalidity of the sale deed and
the controversy was mainly about the relationship of landlord and tenant
between the parties. On this issue, the appellate court came to the same
finding as the trial court and dismissed the plaintiff’s appeal observing as
follows:
“10. It is quite clear from the above enunciated principle that in
order to get a decree in such a suit the plaintiff must not come
to the Court with a false story. In the present case, it is quite
obvious the plaintiff has come with a false case that she let out
a house on the suit land to the deft (sic defendant) on a rent of
Rs.10/- per month. If there is no relationship of landlord and
tenant between the parties the plaintiff should have prayed for
declaration her title and recovery of possession after paying
advalorem Court fee on the current market value of the suit
property. By filing a suit for eviction of the defendant and
paying small Court fee on twelve month alleged rent of the
house, the plaintiff has adopted a tricky way of getting her title
6declared and possession of the suit house recovered after paying
very low amount of the court fee.”
8. The plaintiff did not take the matter any further but filed
another suit (Title Suit No.16/82 of 1978-79) against Md. Lukman
seeking declaration of title over the property and recovery of its
possession from the defendant. In this suit, her claim of title over the
suit property was exactly the same as in the previous suit. The
defendant too, apart from raising the objections based on limitation
and res judicata and similar other formal pleas mainly stuck to the
same story as in the previous case. According to the defendant, the
sale deed relied upon by the plaintiff was not a genuine document for
consideration and it was not executed by Sulakshana, who was the
mother of the defendant. It was stated on behalf of the defendant that
Sulakshana died in 1957. In the beginning of that year she suffered
from fever for about a month and remained confined to bed and
thereafter she suffered an attack of paralysis. She lost all power of
understanding and continued in that state till her death in August
1957. The defendant specifically pleaded that on August 13, 1957
when the disputed sale deed was shown to have been executed, she
had no power of understanding. It was further stated on his behalf that
7the plaintiff’s husband was a clever litigant and he manoeuvred to
fabricate the sale deed by setting up some other woman as
Sulakshana. It was also stated that if there was in existence any sale
deed purportedly executed by Sulakshana, it must have been
manufactured in collusion with the scribe, the attesting witnesses and
the registrar and it would not confer any right, title or interest in the
suit property on the plaintiff. It was further the case of the defendant
that the disputed sale deed was never acted upon and the plaintiff
never came in actual possession of the suit property on this basis. The
defendant also denied the case of the plaintiff that she had inducted
him as a tenant in the suit premises on a monthly rental of Rs.10.00
(rupees ten only) or as a licensee, as totally false and concocted. The
defendant claimed that his mother Sulakshana had given him the suit
property in the year 1950 by Hiba (oral gift) and put him in actual
physical possession of the suit premises and since then he was coming
in its possession. He constructed a boundary wall around the land and
a house consisting of five rooms, etc. It was lastly claimed that the
defendant was coming and continuing in possession to the knowledge
of everyone, including the plaintiff and, thus, the defendant had, in
any event, acquired title by adverse possession.
89. It is, thus, to be seen that in the second suit too both parties went to
the court with the same stories as in the previous suit, though, it is true
that this time each side led some additional evidence in support of its
case, for example, the plaintiff relied upon and produced a copy of the
judgment in the earlier suit in which her claim of title over the suit
property was upheld.
10. The trial court framed a number of issues, of which issue nos. III, IV,
V & VI are relevant for this appeal and are as follows:
 “III) Has the plaintiff got title over the suit property?
IV) Is there any relationship of landlord and tenant between the
plaintiff and the defendant?
V) Has the plaintiff acquired title by adverse possession?
 VI) Is the plaintiff entitled to recovery of possession? ”
The trial court considered issue nos. III, IV & V together and came to find
and hold that the plaintiff had succeeded in proving her title whereas the
defendant had failed to prove his adverse possession. Issue nos. III & V were
therefore decided in the plaintiff’s favour while issue no. IV was decided
against her. On the basis of its findings, the trial court held that the plaintiff
had valid cause of action and it, accordingly, decreed the suit by judgment
and order dated February 28, 1981.
911. Against the judgment and order passed by the trial court the defendant
preferred an appeal (Title Appeal No.33 of 1981). The first appellate court
(the eighth Additional District Judge, Arrah), on a reappraisal of the
evidence produced by the parties, came to find and hold that the plaintiff had
failed to prove that Sulakshana had put her left thumb impression on the sale
deed (Ext.3) after understanding its contents and she had, thus, failed to
prove her title to the suit premises on the basis of the sale deed. The
appellate court, accordingly, allowed the appeal and by judgment and order
dated May 21, 1987 set aside the judgment and decree passed by the trial
court and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit.
12. The original plaintiff was dead by this time and her heirs and legal
representatives, the present respondents, took the matter in second appeal
(Appeal from Appellate Decree No.236 of 1987) to the High Court. In the
High Court, the second appeal was heard on the substantial question of law
framed as under:
“…whether the judgment and decree regarding title passed in
Title Suit No.36 of 1973 (Ext.15) shall operate as res judicata
between the parties on the question of title.”
13. The High Court by judgment and order dated May 24, 2002 answered
the question in the affirmative, in favour of the appellants (respondents
10herein), allowed the appeal, set aside the judgment and order passed by the
appeal court below and restored the judgment and decree of the trial court.
The High Court noted that the earlier suit (for eviction) and the later suit for
declaration of title and recovery of possession were between the same parties
and were contested on exactly the same claims raised by the two sides. The
plaintiff on each occasion was claiming title to the suit premises on the basis
of a sale deed executed by Sulakshana in her favour in the year 1950. The
defendant on each occasion alleged that the sale deed was sham, fake and
fabricated and set up a rival claim of title on the plea that his mother
Sulakshana had made an oral gift of the suit premises in his favour in the
year 1950 and since then he was coming in possession over it. The premises,
when it was given to him in gift, was a vacant land over which he had
constructed a house after obtaining sanction from the municipality. The High
Court, therefore, observed as under:
“9… The facts of the earlier Title Suit No.36 of 1973, which
was between the same parties and present Title Suit No.16 of
1978 also between the same parties, show that the plea taken by
both the parties regarding title in both the Title Suits are same.
10. In the facts and circumstances of the case, the judgment and
decree regarding title passed in Title Suit No.36 of 1973
(Ext.15) shall operate as res judicata between the parties on the
question of title.”
1114. Mr. H.L. Agrawal, learned senior advocate, appearing for the
appellant contended that the High Court had seriously erred in holding that
the finding in the earlier suit of eviction would operate as res judicata in the
subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery of possession. Mr.
Agrawal contended that a court dealing with an eviction suit was a creature
of the Rent Act and was a court of limited jurisdiction. It had no authority or
jurisdiction to decide disputes of title and hence, any finding recorded by it
on the larger issue of title could not be binding on a court under the Code of
Civil Procedure adjudicating upon a dispute of title between the two sides.
He further submitted that there may be instances where in a suit for eviction
the tenant might deny the title of the person seeking his ejectment and in
those cases the rent court may incidentally go into the question of title in
order to decide on the primary issue of eviction. But its findings on the issue
of title would only be incidental and never binding in a proper suit for
declaration of title and recovery of possession. In support of the submission
he relied upon a decision of this Court in Shamim Akhtar v. Iqbal Ahmad &
Anr., (2000) 8 SCC 123, in which it is said that in an eviction suit under the
Rent Act, the question of title can be considered by the court as an incidental
question and the final determination of title must be left to the decision of
the competent court. The decision in Shamim Akhtar arose from U.P. Urban
12Buildings (Regulation of Letting, Rent and Eviction) Act, 1972 and the
Provincial Small Cause Courts Act, 1887 and it was on a totally different set
of facts. The observation of the court relied upon by Mr. Agrawal was of
course stating the general rule and no more than that. The decision in
Shamim Akhtar in no way helps the case of the appellants in the present
appeal.
15. The counsel for the respondents on the other hand relied upon a
decision of this court in Sajjadanashin Sayed Md. B.E.Edr.by LRs. (D) vs.
Musa Dadabhai Ummer and Ors., (2000) 3 SCC 350. The decision in this
case dealt with the question when a matter can be said to be directly and
substantially in issue and when it is only collaterally and incidentally in
issue. The decision in Sajjadanashin does seem to help the case of the
respondents. But we may state here that Mr. Agrawal with great fairness
brought to our notice a decision of the Patna High Court1
in Pardip Singh vs.
Ram Sundar Singh, AIR (36) 1949 Patna 510, though it is clearly against
him. It is an old decision in which the division bench of the High Court
placed reliance on two earlier decisions of the Privy Council. In Pardip
Singh Meredith J., speaking for the division bench of the court observed as
follows:
1 To which both, Mr. Agrawal and the two of us have been very closely associated at some time.
13“The decision in a rent suit is not res judicata on the question of
title unless the question of title had to be decided, was expressly
raised, and was expressly decided between the parties and in
each case it is necessary to examine carefully the decision in the
rent suit before any opinion can be formed as to whether it
operates as res judicata on the question of title or not.
Ordinarily the decision would be res judicata only with regard
to the existence of the relationship of landlord and tenant. The
difference in the two classes of cases is very well illustrated in
two Privy Council decisions, namely, Run Bahadoor Singh v.
Mt. Lucho Koer, 12 I.A. 23: (11 Cal. 301 P.C.), where it was
held that the decision was not res judicata as the question of
title had been gone into only incidentally and collaterally, and
Radhamadhub Holdar v. Manohar Mookerji, 15 I.A. 97: (15
Cal. 756 P.C.), where the question of title was directly decided
in a rent suit, and the decision was held to be res judicata.”
16. We respectfully concur with the view expressed in the decision in
Pardip Singh.
17. We have carefully examined the pleadings of the parties in the two
suits and the evidences led by them in support of their respective claims
regarding title in the two suits. And, we are satisfied that the issue of title
was expressly raised by the parties in the earlier eviction suit and it was
expressly decided by the eviction court. The question of title was directly
and substantially in issue between the parties in the earlier suit for eviction.
Hence, the High Court was right in holding that the finding recorded in
favour of the plaintiff in the earlier suit for eviction would operate as res
14judicata in the subsequent suit for declaration of title and recovery of
possession between the parties.
18. We, thus, find no merit in the appeal. It is dismissed, but in the facts
and circumstances of the case there will be no order as to costs.
……………………………..J
(AFTAB ALAM)
………………………………J
(R.M. LODHA)
New Delhi,
September 22, 2010
15

Suit for prohibitory injunction - Relating to vacant land --Claim for possession based on title - Title of plaintiff disputed - Various complicated questions arose for putting forth a case of title - Suit decreed by trial court - Reversed by first appellate court - High Court in second appeal after recording finding of facts restored the order of trial court - On appeal, held: In the facts and circumstances of the case, the questions which arose for consideration could be decided only in a suit for declaration and consequential reliefs and not in a suit for injunction simplicitor - In absence of prayer for declaration of title, issue regarding title, pleadings required for declaration of title, the parties cannot be said to have an opportunity to have full fledged adjudication regarding title - High Court exceeded its jurisdiction u/s 100 CPC in re-examining questions of fact, by going into the questions which were not pleaded and not in issue, and by formulating questions of law which did not arise in the second appeal - Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 - s.100. Suit for prohibitory injunction - Relating to immovable Property - Scope of - Held: The prayer for injunction will be decided with reference to the finding on possession - In cases of vacant land, it will be necessary to examine and determine the title as a prelude for deciding the de jure possession - If the title is clear and simple, the court may decide the issue of title - But, if a cloud is raised over plaintiff's title, a suit for declaration and possession, with or without a consequential injunction, is the remedy. Respondent/plaintiffs 1 and 2 filed a suit for permanent injunction against the appellant-defendant. They pleaded that they were owners in possession of the suit properties (vacant land) under sale deeds from `R' (their vendor). They alleged that the defendant interfered with their possession. Defendant in his Written Statement stated that the suit property was purchased by him from the brother of the plaintiffs' vendor under a registered sale deed and was put in possession of the property by his vendor and it were the plaintiffs who tried to interfere with his possession. Plaintiffs led evidence to the effect that defendant's vendor had gifted the suit property to his sister in the year 1961 by way of `Pasupu Kumkumam'. Defendant and his vendor denied the plea of gift. Trial Court decreed the suit. First Appellate Court allowed the appeal of the defendant holding that defendant was in possession of the property and the plaintiff had not made out either title or possession over it; that mere suit for injunction was not maintainable and the suit should have be amended to one for declaration and injunction. High Court in second appeal, examining the evidence in detail, recorded the findings of facts and restored the judgment and decree of trial court. It held that plaintiffs had established their title in respect of suit land and drew an inference that possession was presumed to be with them by applying the principle of possession follows title; and that it was not necessary for the plaintiffs to sue for declaration of title as the question of title could be examined incidental to the question of possession. Hence the present appeal. The questions which arose for consideration before this Court were regarding the scope of a suit for prohibitory injunction relating to immovable property; whether plaintiffs were required to file a suit for declaration of title and injunction; and whether the High Court, in a second appeal , could examine the factual question of title which was not the subject matter of any issue and based on a finding thereon, reverse the decision of the first appellate court. Citation: 2008 AIR 2033,2008(5 )SCR331 ,2008(4 )SCC594 ,2008(4 )SCALE718 ,= Allowing the appeal, the Court HELD: 1.1 Where a cloud is raised over plaintiff's title and he does not have possession, a suit for declaration and possession, with or without a consequential injunction, is the remedy. Where the plaintiff's title is not in dispute or under a cloud, but he is out of possession, he has to sue for possession with a consequential injunction. Where there is merely an interference with plaintiff's lawful possession or threat of dispossession, it is sufficient to sue for an injunction simpliciter. [Para 17] [349-G; 350-A] 1.2 A cloud is said to raise over a person's title, when some apparent defect in his title to a property, or when some prima facie right of a third party over it, is made out or shown. An action for declaration, is the remedy to remove the cloud on the title to the property. On the other hand, where the plaintiff has clear title supported by documents, if a trespasser without any claim to title or an interloper without any apparent title, merely denies the plaintiff's title, it does not amount to raising a cloud over the title of the plaintiff and it will not be necessary for the plaintiff to sue for declaration and a suit for injunction may be sufficient. Where the plaintiff, believing that defendant is only a trespasser or a wrongful claimant without title, files a mere suit for injunction, and in such a suit, the defendant discloses in his defence the details of the right or title claimed by him, which raises a serious dispute or cloud over plaintiff's title, then there is a need for the plaintiff, to amend the plaint and convert the suit into one for declaration. Alternatively, he may withdraw the suit for bare injunction, with permission of the court to file a comprehensive suit for declaration and injunction. He may file the suit for declaration with consequential relief, even after the suit for injunction is dismissed, where the suit raised only the issue of possession and not any issue of title. [Para 12] [345-G; 346-A, B, C, D] 1.3 As a suit for injunction simpliciter is concerned only with possession, normally the issue of title will not be directly and substantially in issue. The prayer for injunction will be decided with reference to the finding on possession. In cases of vacant land, the principle is that possession follows title. If two persons claim to be in possession of a vacant site, one who is able to establish title thereto will be considered to be in possession, as against the person who is not able to establish title. This means that even though a suit relating to a vacant site is for a mere injunction and the issue is one of possession, it will be necessary to examine and determine the title as a prelude for deciding the de jure possession. In such a situation, where the title is clear and simple, the court may venture a decision on the issue of title, so as to decide the question of de jure possession even though the suit is for a mere injunction. But where the issue of title involves complicated or complex questions of fact and law, or where court feels that parties had not proceeded on the basis that title was in issue, the court should not decide the issue of title in a suit for injunction. The proper course is to relegate the plaintiff to the remedy of a full-fledged suit for declaration and consequential reliefs. [Paras 14 and 17] [346-G; 347-A, B, C; 350-A, B] 1.4 However, a finding on title cannot be recorded in a suit for injunction, unless there are necessary pleadings and appropriate issue regarding title (either specific or implied). Where the averments regarding title are absent in a plaint and where there is no issue relating to title, the court will not investigate or examine or render a finding on a question of title, in a suit for injunction. Even where there are necessary pleadings and issue, if the matter involves complicated questions of fact and law relating to title, the court will relegate the parties to the remedy by way of comprehensive suit for declaration of title, instead of deciding the issue in a suit for mere injunction. [Para 17] [350-C, D, E] 1.5 Where there are necessary pleadings regarding title, and appropriate issue relating to title on which parties lead evidence, if the matter involved is simple and straight-forward, the court may decide upon the issue regarding title, even in a suit for injunction. But such cases, are the exception to the normal rule that question of title will not be decided in suits for injunction. But persons having clear title and possession suing for injunction, should not be driven to the costlier and more cumbersome remedy of a suit for declaration, merely because some meddler vexatiously or wrongfully makes a claim or tries to encroach upon his property. The court should use its discretion carefully to identify cases where it will enquire into title and cases where it will refer to plaintiff to a more comprehensive declaratory suit, depending upon the facts of the case. [Para 17] [350-F, G, H; 351-A] Vanagiri Sri Selliamman Ayyanar Uthirasomasundareswarar Temple vs. Rajanga Asari - AIR 1965 Mad. 355; Sulochana Amma vs. Narayanan Nair - 1994 (2) SCC 14; Annaimuthu Thevar v. Alagammal - 2005 (6) SCC 202; Sajjadanashin Sayed Md. Vs. Musa Dadabhai Ummer - 2000 (3) SCC 350- referred to. Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol.50, para 735, p.229) - referred to. 2.1 In the present case, the suit sites were vacant plots. Both sides admitted that defendant's vendor was the original owner and that entire property stood in his name. The defendant claims title through his vendor. The plaintiffs claim title through their vendor, who neither has any deed of title nor any document in support of title or possession. Admittedly, there was no mutation in her name. This means that plaintiffs claim title through someone who claimed to be owner in pursuance of an oral gift in the year 1961 without the property being mutated in her name, whereas the defendant claims title from the person who was admittedly the original owner who was registered as owner in the revenue records. Necessarily, therefore, prima facie it has to be held that defendant had made out possession following title. [Para 20] [352-B, C, D, E] 2.2 The plaintiffs and their witnesses gave evidence to the effect that defendant's vendor represented that his sister (appellants' vendor) was the owner of the plot and negotiated for sale of the several portions thereof in favour of plaintiffs and PW3, and that defendant's vendor had attested the sale deeds in their favour and identified his sister as the vendor-executant before the Sub-Registrar, at the time of registration of the sale deeds. But defendant's vendor in his evidence denied having made the oral gift or having attested the sale deeds in favour of plaintiffs. He also denied having identified his sister at the time of registration of the sale deeds. Whether evidence of appellants' vendor and other plaintiffs' witnesses should be believed or whether evidence of defendant's vendor should be believed on the question of title, can be examined only when there are necessary pleadings and an issue regarding title. Further, where title of plaintiffs is disputed and claim for possession is purely based on title, and the plaintiffs have to rely on various principles of law relating to ostensible ownership and section 41 of Transfer of Property Act, validity of a oral gift by way of `Pasupu Kumkum' under Hindu Law, estoppel and acquiescence, to put forth a case of title, such complicated questions could properly be examined only in a title suit, that is a suit for declaration and consequential reliefs, and not in a suit for an injunction simpliciter. [Para 21] [352-E, F, G, H; 353-A, B, C] 3.1 High Court exceeded its jurisdiction under Section 100 CPC, firstly in re-examining questions of fact, secondly by going into the questions which were not pleaded and which were not the subject matter of any issue, thirdly by formulating questions of law which did not arise in the second appeal, and lastly, by interfering with the well reasoned judgment of the first appellate court which held that the plaintiffs ought to have filed a suit for declaration. [Para 27] [355-G; 356-A, B] 3.2 The High Court, in the absence of pleadings and issues, formulated in a second appeal arising from a suit for bare injunction, questions of law unrelated to the pleadings and issues, presumably because some evidence was led and some arguments were advanced on those aspects. The only averment in the plaint that plaintiffs were the owners of the suit property having purchased the same under sale deeds, did not enable the court, much less a High Court in second appeal, to hold a roving enquiry into an oral gift and its validity or validation of ostensible title under section 41 of Transfer of Property Act. No amount of evidence or arguments can be looked into or considered in the absence of pleadings and issues. [Para 25] [355-A, B, C] 3.3 The High Court while reversing the decision of the first appellate court, examined various aspects relating to title and recorded findings relating to title. It held that gifting a property to a daughter or sister by way of `Pasupu Kumkumam', could be done orally and did not require a registered instrument. Even though there was no independence evidence of oral gift except the assertion to appellants' vendor (which was denied by defendant's vendor), the High Court, held that there was an oral gift in her favour. It also accepted the evidence of PW3 and PW5 and plaintiffs, that defendant's vendor negotiated for the sale of the plots representing that they sbelonged to his sister; and that he attested the sale deeds as a witness and identified his sister as the executant before the Sub-Registrar and therefore, Section 41 of Transfer of Property Act came to the aid of plaintiffs and defendant's vendor was estopped from denying the title of his sister. The High Court in a second appeal arising from a suit for an injunction, could not have recorded such findings, in the absence of pleadings and issue regarding title. [Para 26] [355-D, E, F, G] 3.4 Though driving the plaintiffs to a fresh round of litigation after three decades would cause hardship to them. But the scope of civil cases are circumscribed by the limitations placed by the rules of pleadings, nature of relief claimed and the court fee paid. The predicament of plaintiffs, was brought upon themselves, by failing to convert the suit to one for declaration even when the written statement was filed, and by not seeking amendment of issues to include an issue on the question of title. In the absence of a prayer of declaration of title and an issue regarding title, let alone the pleadings required for a declaration of title, the parties cannot be said to have an opportunity to have a full-fledged adjudication regarding title. [Para 28] [356-B, C, D] D. Mahesh Babu for the Appellant. K. Amareswari, P. Venkat Reddy and Guntur Prabhakar for the Respondents.


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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6191 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Anathula Sudhakar
RESPONDENT:
P. Buchi Reddy (Dead) By LRs & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/03/2008
BENCH:
R. V. Raveendran & P. Sathasivam
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Reportable)
CIVIL APPEAL NO.6191 OF 2001
R.V. RAVEENDRAN, J.
 This appeal by special leave is by the defendant in a suit for
permanent injunction. Puli Chandra Reddy and Puli Buchi Reddy were the
plaintiffs in the said suit. Both are now no more. The Legal Representatives
of Puli Chandra Reddy are Respondents 2 to 5 and Legal Representatives of
Puli Buchi Reddy are Respondent 1 (i) to (iii). The suit related to two sites
bearing no. 13/776/B and 13/776/C measuring 110 sq. yards and 187 sq.
yards in Matwada, Warangal town, together referred to as the ’suit property’.
2. Plaintiffs 1 and 2 claimed to be the respective owners in possession of
the said two sites having purchased them under two registered sale deeds
dated 9.12.1968 (Exs.A1 and A2) from Rukminibai. The plaintiffs further
claimed that the said two sites were mutated in their names in the municipal
records. They alleged that on 3.5.1978, when they were digging trenches in
order to commence construction, the defendant interfered with the said
work. The plaintiffs, therefore, filed suit OS No.279 of 1978 in the file of
Principal District Munsiff, Warangal, for a permanent injunction to restrain
the defendant from interfering with their possession.
3. Defendant resisted the suit. He claimed that suit property measuring
300 sq. yards in Premises No. 13/776 was purchased by him from K. V.
Damodar Rao (brother of plaintiffs’ vendor Rukminibai) under registered
sale deed dated 7.11.1977 (Ex.B1); that he was put in possession of the suit
property by Damodar Rao; that the suit property had been transferred to his
name in the municipal records; that he applied for and obtained sanction of a
plan for construction of a building thereon; and that he had also obtained a
loan for such construction from the Central Government by mortgaging the
said property. According to him, when he commenced construction in the
suit property, the plaintiffs tried to interfere with his possession and filed a
false suit claiming to be in possession.
4. The trial court framed the following issues - (i) whether the plaintiffs
are in exclusive possession of the suit sites (house plots)? (ii) whether the
defendant has interfered with the possession of the plaintiffs over the suit
plots? (iii) whether the plaintiffs are entitled to permanent injunction; and
(iv) to what relief. The plaintiffs examined themselves as PW1 and PW2.
They examined their vendor Rukminibai as PW4. Puli Malla Reddy and
Vadula Ramachandram examined as PW3 and PW5, were the purchasers of
two adjacent sites from Rukminibai. One of them (PW3) was the cousin of
plaintiffs and was also the scribe and attestor in respect of the two sale deeds http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
in favour of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs exhibited the two sale deeds dated
9.12.1968 in their favour as Ex.A1 and A2 and municipal demand notices
and tax receipts, all of the year 1978 onwards, as Ex.A3 to A11. A plan
showing the sites was marked as Ex.A12. Two letters said to have written by
Damodar Rao were marked as Ex.A13 and A14. The sale deed executed by
Rukminibai in favour of PW3 was marked as Ex.X1 and sale agreement in
favour of PW5 was marked as Ex.X2. The defendant gave evidence as DW1
and examined his vendor Damodar Rao as DW2. He exhibited the certified
copy of the sale deed dated 7.11.1977 in his favour as Ex.B1, a certified
copy of mortgage deed executed by him in favour of Central Government as
Ex.B2, the licence and sanctioned plan for construction of a house in the suit
plot as Ex.B3 and B4 and the loan sanction proceedings as Ex.B5. He also
exhibited a property tax receipt dated 12.2.1978 issued to Damodar Rao
(Ex.B6), water charge bill dated 20.9.1978 for house No. 13/775 and 13/776
issued to Damodar Rao (Ex.B7), and property tax receipts dated 19.2.1972,
14.10.1973, 28.3.1970 and 13.11.1968 in the name of Damodar Rao (Ex. B8
to B11).
5. There was no dispute that the site purchased by the defendant from
Damodar Rao under deed dated 7.11.1977 is the same as the two sites
purchased by plaintiffs from Rukminibai under sale deeds dated 9.1.1968.
There is also no dispute that the suit property is a vacant plot and it was
originally portion of the backyard of the property bearing nos. 13/775 and
13/776, belonging to Damodar Rao, and that he was shown as registered
owner of the said properties No.13/775 and 13/776 in the municipal records.
6. The plaintiffs led evidence to the effect that Damador Rao orally
gifted the backyard portion of No.13/775 and 13/776, (separated from the
main building by a dividing wall) to his sister Rukminibai in the year 1961,
by way of ’Pasupu Kumkumam’ (a gift made to a daughter or sister,
conferring absolute title, out of love and affection, with a view to provide for
her); that Rukminibai sold three portions of the gifted site to PW3, plaintiff
No.1, plaintiff No.2 in the year 1968 and they were in possession ever since
1968; and that an agreement of sale was also entered in regard to another
portion with PW5 as per Ex.X2. On the other hand, defendant led evidence
denying that the suit property was given to Rukminibai by way of ’Pasupu
Kumkumam’. His vendor Damodar Rao gave evidence that he was the
owner of the suit property and he sold it to the defendant under deed dated
7.11.1977 and put him in possession thereof. While plaintiffs alleged that
plots were mutated in their names after their purchase, defendant alleged that
the suit property purchased by him was a part of plot No.13/776 which stood
in the name of Damodar Rao in the municipal records. Neither party
produced the order of mutation or any certificate from the municipal
authorities, certifying or showing mutation to their names. They only
produced tax receipts. The tax receipts produced by plaintiffs showed that
they had paid taxes from 1978 onwards, that is for a period subsequent to the
sale by Damodar Rao in favour of defendant. Plaintiffs did not produce any
tax paid receipt to show that the property stood in the name of Rukminibai.
Nor did they produce any tax receipt for the period 9.12.1968 (date of
purchase by plaintiffs) to 7.11.1977 (date of purchase by defendant). The
defendant produced tax receipts to show that the suit property stood in the
name of his vendor Damodar Rao till the date of sale in his favour.
7. The trial court decreed the suit by judgment dated 31.12.1985.
Relying on the two sale deeds in favour of plaintiffs, the tax paid receipts
and the oral evidence, it held that plaintiffs were in possession of the suit
property from the date of purchase and the defendant had interfered with
their possession. The defendant filed an appeal challenging the judgment and
decree of the trial court before the Addl. District Judge, Warangal. The first
appellate court held that the defendant was in possession of the suit property
and the plaintiffs had not made out, even prima facie, either title or
possession over the suit property. It was of the view that in the
circumstances a mere suit for injunction was not maintainable, and at least
when the defendant filed his written statement denying the title of plaintiffs
and setting up a clear and specific case of title in himself, the plaintiffs ought http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
to have amended the plaint to convert the suit into one for declaration and
injunction. Consequently it allowed the appeal by judgment and decree dated
9.12.1991 and dismissed the suit. Being aggrieved, the plaintiffs filed SA
No.29 of 1992.
8. The High Court by its judgment dated 18.1.1999 allowed the second
appeal and restored the judgment and decree of the trial court. For this
purpose, the High Court examined the evidence in detail and recorded the
following findings:
(i) There was an oral gift of the backyard portion (No.13/776) by way of
’pasupu kumkumam’ by Damodar Rao in favour of his sister Rukminibai in
the year 1961. As a gift of an immovable property in favour of a daughter or
sister by way of ’Pasupu Kumkuman’ could be oral, the absence of any
registered document did not invalidate the gift.
(ii) Damodar Rao negotiated with plaintiffs, for sale of the two sites, on
behalf of his sister Rukminibai, representing that his sister was the owner
thereof and attested the sale deeds executed by his sister Rukminibai in
favour of plaintiffs as a witness and identified her as the executant of the
sale deeds before the Sub-Registrar. Those acts of Damodar Rao supported
the claim of Rukminibai that there was a oral gift. Alternatively, even if
there was no gift in favour of Rukminibai, and Damodar Rao was the owner,
the aforesaid acts of Damodar Rao showed that with his implied consent,
Rukminibai represented to be the ostensible owner of the suit property and
transferred the same to plaintiffs for consideration. This attracted the
provision of section 41 of Transfer of Property Act, 1882 and therefore the
transfers in favour of plaintiffs was not voidable at the instance of Damodar
Rao or his successor in interest on the ground that Rukminibai was not the
owner of the suit property.
The High Court consequently held that plaintiffs had established their title in
regard to the two vacant sites purchased by them and drew an inference that
possession was presumed to be with them by applying the principle of
possession follows title. The High Court also held that it was not necessary
to plaintiffs to sue for declaration of title, as the question of title could be
examined incidental to the question of possession.
9. The said judgment is challenged by the defendant, in this appeal by
special leave, on the following grounds :
(a) The suit for permanent injunction without seeking declaration of title
was not maintainable on the facts of the case. At all events, the High Court
ought not to have recorded a finding of fact on a seriously disputed and
complicated issue of title, in a suit for a mere injunction.
(b) The first appellate court held that plaintiffs had neither established
their title nor their possession and their remedy was to file a suit for
declaration and consequential relief. The High Court, in a second appeal,
ought not to have reversed the said decision of the first appellate court, by
the process of examining and recording a finding on title, even though there
was no issue regarding title.
(c) An oral gift by a brother to a sister was not permissible. At all events,
such an oral gift even if permissible, can be made only at the time of a
partition or at the time of marriage of the sister, with a view to making a
provision for her. The High Court erred in holding that the there was a valid
oral gift by Damodar Rao in favour of Rukminibai.
(d) There was no plea in the plaint about the ostensible ownership of
Rukminibai or about any acts of Damodar Rao which demonstrated the
consent of Damodar Rao to such ostensible ownership. Nor was there any
plea about due and diligent enquiries by the plaintiffs regarding title before
purchase. Therefore the High Court erred in holding that the sales in favour
of plaintiffs were protected by section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act, http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
1882.
(e) In the absence of pleadings and an issue regarding title, the defendant
had no opportunity to effectively lead evidence on the question of title.
(f) The High Court erred in equating plaintiffs’ failure to produce title
deeds of their vendor to defendant’s failure to produce the title deeds of his
vendor. The High Court overlooked the fact that there was no dispute that
defendant’s vendor Damodar Rao was the earlier owner of the suit property
and it was for the plaintiffs who had set up a case that their vendor
Rukminibai derived title from Damodar Rao under an oral gift, to prove the
said claim.
10. On the contentions urged, the following questions arise for our
consideration in this appeal:
(i) What is the scope of a suit for prohibitory injunction relating to
immovable property?
(ii) Whether on the facts, plaintiffs ought to have filed a suit for
declaration of title and injunction ?
(iii) Whether the High Court, in a second appeal under section 100
CPC, examine the factual question of title which was not the
subject matter of any issue and based on a finding thereon, reverse
the decision of the first appellate court?
(iv) What is the appropriate decision?
Re : Question (i) :
11. The general principles as to when a mere suit for permanent
injunction will lie, and when it is necessary to file a suit for declaration
and/or possession with injunction as a consequential relief, are well settled.
We may refer to them briefly.
11.1) Where a plaintiff is in lawful or peaceful possession of a property and
such possession is interfered or threatened by the defendant, a suit for an
injunction simpliciter will lie. A person has a right to protect his possession
against any person who does not prove a better title by seeking a prohibitory
injunction. But a person in wrongful possession is not entitled to an
injunction against the rightful owner.
11.2) Where the title of the plaintiff is not disputed, but he is not in
possession, his remedy is to file a suit for possession and seek in addition, if
necessary, an injunction. A person out of possession, cannot seek the relief
of injunction simpliciter, without claiming the relief of possession.
11.3) Where the plaintiff is in possession, but his title to the property is in
dispute, or under a cloud, or where the defendant asserts title thereto and
there is also a threat of dispossession from defendant, the plaintiff will have
to sue for declaration of title and the consequential relief of injunction.
Where the title of plaintiff is under a cloud or in dispute and he is not in
possession or not able to establish possession, necessarily the plaintiff will
have to file a suit for declaration, possession and injunction.
12. We may however clarify that a prayer for declaration will be
necessary only if the denial of title by the defendant or challenge to
plaintiff’s title raises a cloud on the title of plaintiff to the property. A cloud
is said to raise over a person’s title, when some apparent defect in his title to
a property, or when some prima facie right of a third party over it, is made
out or shown. An action for declaration, is the remedy to remove the cloud
on the title to the property. On the other hand, where the plaintiff has clear
title supported by documents, if a trespasser without any claim to title or an
interloper without any apparent title, merely denies the plaintiff’s title, it http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
does not amount to raising a cloud over the title of the plaintiff and it will
not be necessary for the plaintiff to sue for declaration and a suit for
injunction may be sufficient. Where the plaintiff, believing that defendant is
only a trespasser or a wrongful claimant without title, files a mere suit for
injunction, and in such a suit, the defendant discloses in his defence the
details of the right or title claimed by him, which raises a serious dispute or
cloud over plaintiff’s title, then there is a need for the plaintiff, to amend the
plaint and convert the suit into one for declaration. Alternatively, he may
withdraw the suit for bare injunction, with permission of the court to file a
comprehensive suit for declaration and injunction. He may file the suit for
declaration with consequential relief, even after the suit for injunction is
dismissed, where the suit raised only the issue of possession and not any
issue of title.
13. In a suit for permanent injunction to restrain the defendant from
interfering with plaintiff’s possession, the plaintiff will have to establish that
as on the date of the suit he was in lawful possession of the suit property and
defendant tried to interfere or disturb such lawful possession. Where the
property is a building or building with appurtenant land, there may not be
much difficulty in establishing possession. The plaintiff may prove physical
or lawful possession, either of himself or by him through his family
members or agents or lessees/licensees. Even in respect of a land without
structures, as for example an agricultural land, possession may be
established with reference to the actual use and cultivation. The question of
title is not in issue in such a suit, though it may arise incidentally or
collaterally.
14. But what if the property is a vacant site, which is not physically
possessed, used or enjoyed? In such cases the principle is that possession
follows title. If two persons claim to be in possession of a vacant site, one
who is able to establish title thereto will be considered to be in possession, as
against the person who is not able to establish title. This means that even
though a suit relating to a vacant site is for a mere injunction and the issue is
one of possession, it will be necessary to examine and determine the title as
a prelude for deciding the de jure possession. In such a situation, where the
title is clear and simple, the court may venture a decision on the issue of
title, so as to decide the question of de jure possession even though the suit
is for a mere injunction. But where the issue of title involves complicated or
complex questions of fact and law, or where court feels that parties had not
proceeded on the basis that title was at issue, the court should not decide the
issue of title in a suit for injunction. The proper course is to relegate the
plaintiff to the remedy of a full-fledged suit for declaration and
consequential reliefs.
15. There is some confusion as to in what circumstances the question of
title will be directly and substantially in issue, and in what circumstances the
question of title will be collaterally and incidentally in issue, in a suit for
injunction simpliciter. In Vanagiri Sri Selliamman Ayyanar
Uthirasomasundareswarar Temple vs. Rajanga Asari \026 AIR 1965 Mad. 355,
the Madras High Court considered an appeal arising from a suit for
possession and injunction. The defendant contended that the plaintiff had
filed an earlier suit for injunction which was dismissed, and therefore the
plaintiff was precluded from agitating the issue of title in the subsequent
suit, being barred by the principle of res judicata. It was held that the earlier
suit was only for an injunction (to protect the standing crop on the land) and
the averments in the plaint did not give rise to any question necessitating
denial of plaintiff’s title by the defendant; and as the earlier suit was
concerned only with a possessory right and not title, the subsequent suit was
not barred. There are several decisions taking a similar view that in a suit for
injunction, the question of title does not arise or would arise only
incidentally or collaterally, and therefore a subsequent suit for declaration of
title would not be barred. On the other hand, in Sulochana Amma vs.
Narayanan Nair \026 1994 (2) SCC 14, this Court observed that a finding as to
title given in an earlier injunction suit, can operate as res judicata in a
subsequent suit for declaration of title. This was on the premises that in http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
some suits for injunction where a finding on possession solely depended
upon a finding on the issue of title, it could be said that the issue of title
directly and substantially arose for consideration; and when the same issue
regarding title is put in issue, in a subsequent title suit between the parties,
the decision in the earlier suit for injunction may operate as res judicata.
This Court observed :
"Shri Sukumaran further contended that the remedy of injunction
is an equitable relief and in equity, the doctrine of res judicata
cannot be extended to a decree of a court of limited pecuniary
jurisdiction. We find no force in the contention. It is settled law
that in a suit for injunction when title is in issue for the purpose of
granting injunction, the issue directly and substantially arises in
that suit between the parties. When the same issue is put in issue in
a later suit based on title between the same parties or their privies
in a subsequent suit the decree in the injunction suit equally
operates as res judicata."
This was reiterated in Annaimuthu Thevar v. Alagammal \026 2005 (6) SCC
202.
16. This Court in Sajjadanashin Sayed Md. Vs. Musa Dadabhai Ummer \026
2000 (3) SCC 350, noticed the apparent conflict in the views expressed in
Vanagiri and Sulochana Amma and clarified that the two decisions did not
express different views, but dealt with two different situations, as explained
in Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol.50, para 735, p.229):
"Where title to property is the basis of the right of possession, a decision
on the question of possession is res judicata on the question of title to the
extent that adjudication of title was essential to the judgment; but where
the question of the right to possession was the only issue actually or
necessarily involved, the judgment is not conclusive on the question of
ownership or title."
 In Vanagiri, the finding on possession did not rest on a finding on title and
there was no issue regarding title. The case related to an agricultural land
and raising of crops and it was obviously possible to establish by evidence
who was actually using and cultivating the land and it was not necessary to
examine the title to find out who had deemed possession. If a finding on title
was not necessary for deciding the question of possession and grant of
injunction, or where there was no issue regarding title, any decision on title
given incidentally and collaterally will not, operate as res judicata. On the
other hand, the observation in Sulochana Amma that the finding on an issue
relating to title in an earlier suit for injunction may operate as res judicata,
was with reference to a situation where the question of title was directly and
substantially in issue in a suit for injunction, that is, where a finding as to
title was necessary for grant of an injunction and a specific issue in regard to
title had been raised. It is needless to point out that a second suit would be
barred, only when the facts relating to title are pleaded, when a issue is
raised in regard to title, and parties lead evidence on the issue of title and the
court, instead of relegating the parties to an action for declaration of title,
decides upon the issue of title and that decision attains finality. This happens
only in rare cases. Be that as it may. We are concerned in this case, not with
a question relating to res judicata, but a question whether a finding regarding
title could be recorded in a suit for injunction simpliciter, in the absence of
pleadings and issue relating to title.
17. To summarize, the position in regard to suits for prohibitory
injunction relating to immovable property, is as under :
(a) Where a cloud is raised over plaintiff’s title and he does not have
possession, a suit for declaration and possession, with or without a
consequential injunction, is the remedy. Where the plaintiff’s title is not in
dispute or under a cloud, but he is out of possession, he has to sue for
possession with a consequential injunction. Where there is merely an
interference with plaintiff’s lawful possession or threat of dispossession, it is
sufficient to sue for an injunction simpliciter.http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
(b) As a suit for injunction simpliciter is concerned only with possession,
normally the issue of title will not be directly and substantially in issue. The
prayer for injunction will be decided with reference to the finding on
possession. But in cases where de jure possession has to be established on
the basis of title to the property, as in the case of vacant sites, the issue of
title may directly and substantially arise for consideration, as without a
finding thereon, it will not be possible to decide the issue of possession.
(c) But a finding on title cannot be recorded in a suit for injunction,
unless there are necessary pleadings and appropriate issue regarding title
[either specific, or implied as noticed in Annaimuthu Thevar (supra)]. Where
the averments regarding title are absent in a plaint and where there is no
issue relating to title, the court will not investigate or examine or render a
finding on a question of title, in a suit for injunction. Even where there are
necessary pleadings and issue, if the matter involves complicated questions
of fact and law relating to title, the court will relegate the parties to the
remedy by way of comprehensive suit for declaration of title, instead of
deciding the issue in a suit for mere injunction.
(d) Where there are necessary pleadings regarding title, and appropriate
issue relating to title on which parties lead evidence, if the matter involved is
simple and straight-forward, the court may decide upon the issue regarding
title, even in a suit for injunction. But such cases, are the exception to the
normal rule that question of title will not be decided in suits for injunction.
But persons having clear title and possession suing for injunction, should not
be driven to the costlier and more cumbersome remedy of a suit for
declaration, merely because some meddler vexatiously or wrongfully makes
a claim or tries to encroach upon his property. The court should use its
discretion carefully to identify cases where it will enquire into title and cases
where it will refer to plaintiff to a more comprehensive declaratory suit,
depending upon the facts of the case.
Re : Question (ii) :
18. Rukminibai did not have any title deed to the suit property. The case
of plaintiffs during arguments was that the gift made in the year 1961, being
by way of ’Pasupu Kumkumam’ in favour of a sister by a brother, could be
oral and did not require a registered instrument. But the property allegedly
gifted to Rukminibai was not mutated in the name of Rukminibai in the
municipal records, but continued in the name of Damodar Rao even after
1961. Damodar Rao was a resident of Warangal and staying in the house
adjoining the suit property. Rukminibai was a resident of Hyderabad.
Therefore, as on the date of sales in favour of the plaintiffs 9.12.1968,
Rukminibai had neither any title deed nor actual possession. Nor was the
property mutated in her name in the municipal records. The tax paid receipts
produced by the plaintiffs related to a period subsequent to the execution of
the sale deeds by Rukminibai in their favour and subsequent to the sale by
Damodar Rao in favour of defendant. On the other hand, the suit property
was sold in favour of the defendant by Damodar Rao who was shown as
registered owner in the municipal records and who even according to the
plaintiffs was the original owner of the property.
19. The first appellate court found that the evidence of plaintiffs and their
witnesses as to the title of plaintiffs’ vendor Rukminibai was sketchy and
inconsistent. It referred to three versions as to how Rukminibai got the
property. The first version (as per PW1) was that the suit property belonged
to Rukminibai’s father and he had given it to his daughter Rukminibai by
way of ’Pasupu Kumkumam’. The second version (as per PW2) was that
after the death of Rukminibai’s father, there was an oral partition between K.
V. Damodar Rao and Rukminibai and at that partition, the suit property was
allotted to Rukminibai. But both PW1 and PW2 admitted that they did not
make any enquiry with Rukminibai about her title. The third version (as per
PW4 - Rukminibai) was that Damodar Rao made an oral gift of the plot in
her favour by way of ’Pasupu Kumkumam’ in the year 1961. She admitted http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
that there was no special occasion for gifting the plot to her in the year 1961,
as she was married long prior to 1961.
20. The suit sites were vacant plots. Both sides admitted that Damodar
Rao was the original owner and that entire property stood in his name. The
defendant claims title through Damodar Rao. The plaintiffs claim title
through Rukminibai who neither has any deed of title nor any document in
support of title or possession. Admittedly, there was no mutation in her
name. This means that plaintiffs claim title through someone who claimed to
be owner in pursuance of an oral gift in the year 1961 without the property
being mutated in her name, whereas the defendant claims title from the
person who was admittedly the original owner who was registered as owner
in the revenue records. Necessarily, therefore, prima facie it has to be held
that defendant had made out possession following title.
21. The plaintiffs and their witnesses gave evidence to the effect that
Damodar Rao represented that his sister Rukminibai was the owner of the
plot and negotiated for sale of the several portions thereof in favour of
plaintiffs and PW3, and that Damodar Rao had attested the sale deeds in
their favour and identified his sister as the vendor \026 executant before the
Sub-Registrar, at the time of registration of the sale deeds. It is no doubt true
that if that was the position, it is possible for them to contend that having
regard to section 41 of Transfer of Property Act, when the ostensible owner
Rukminibai sold the property with the implied consent of Damodar Rao, the
defendant as a transferee from Damodar Rao could not contend that the sales
were not valid. They also alleged that defendant was a close relative of
Damodar Rao and the sale in favour of defendant was only nominal,
intended to defeat their title. But Damodar Rao in his evidence denied
having made the oral gift or having attested the sale deeds in favour of
plaintiffs. He also denied having identified his sister at the time of
registration of the sale deeds. Whether Rukminibai’s evidence and other
plaintiffs’ witnesses should be believed or whether evidence of Damodar
Rao should be believed on the question of title, can be examined only when
there are necessary pleadings and an issue regarding title. Further, where
title of plaintiffs is disputed and claim for possession is purely based on title,
and the plaintiffs have to rely on various principles of law relating to
ostensible ownership and section 41 of TP Act, validity of a oral gift by way
of ’pasupu kumkum’ under Hindu Law, estoppel and acquiescence, to put
forth a case of title, such complicated questions could properly be examined
only in a title suit, that is a suit for declaration and consequential reliefs, and
not in a suit for an injunction simpliciter.
Re : Questions (iii) and (iv)
22. The High Court formulated the following as substantial questions of
law:
"(i) Whether the plaintiffs’ suit for permanent injunction without seeking
declaration of title is maintainable under law?
(ii) Whether the acts and deeds of Damodar Rao (DW-2) made the
plaintiffs to believe that Rukminibai is the ostensible owner of the suit
property and thus made them to purchase the suit property for valid
consideration and, therefore, the provisions under Section 41 of the Transfer
of Property Act are attracted and as such DW-2 could not pass on a better
title to the defendant under Ex.B-1?
(iii) Whether the alleged oral gift of the suit property in favour of
Rukminibai by DW2 towards pasupukumkum is legal, valid and binding on
DW2 though effected in contravention of the provisions under Section 123
of the Transfer of Property Act?"
Having regard to the pleadings and issues, only the first question formulated
by the High Court can be said to arise for its consideration in the second
appeal. The second and third questions did not arise at all, as we will http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
presently demonstrate.
23. The second question of law formulated by the High Court is a mixed
question of fact and law, that is whether the factual ingredients necessary to
claim the benefit of section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act were made
out by plaintiffs. To attract the benefit of section 41 of TP Act, the plaintiffs
had to specifically plead the averments necessary to make out a case under
section 41 of the T.P. Act and claim the benefit or protection under that
section. The averments to be pleaded were :
(a) that Rukminibai was the ostensible owner of the property with the
express or implied consent of Damodar Rao;
(b) that the plaintiffs after taking reasonable care to ascertain that the
transferor or Rukminibai had the power to make the transfer, had acted in
good faith in purchasing the sites for valid consideration; and
(c) that therefore, the transfer in favour of plaintiffs by Rukminibai was
not voidable at the instance of Damodar Rao or any one claiming through
him.
These pleas were not made in the plaint. When these were not pleaded, the
question of defendant denying or traversing them did not arise. In the
absence of any pleadings and issue, it is ununderstandable how a question of
law relating to section 41 of TP Act could be formulated by the High Court.
24. The third question of law formulated by the High Court, is also a
mixed question of fact and law \026 firstly whether there was an oral gift and
secondly whether the alleged oral gift was valid. Here again, there was no
averment in the plaint in respect of any gift, oral or otherwise, by Damodar
Rao in favour of Rukminibai or about its validity. Consequently there was
no opportunity to the defendant to deny the oral gift in his written statement.
There was no issue on this aspect also. Therefore, this question, which could
not have been considered in the suit, could not also have been considered in
the second appeal.
25. The High Court, in the absence of pleadings and issues, formulated in
a second appeal arising from a suit for bare injunction, questions of law
unrelated to the pleadings and issues, presumably because some evidence
was led and some arguments were advanced on those aspects. The only
averment in the plaint that plaintiffs were the owners of the suit property
having purchased the same under sale deeds dated 9.12.1968, did not enable
the court, much less a High Court in second appeal, to hold a roving enquiry
into an oral gift and its validity or validation of ostensible title under section
41 of TP Act. No amount of evidence or arguments can be looked into or
considered in the absence of pleadings and issues, is a proposition that is too
well settled.
26. The High Court while reversing the decision of the first appellate
court, examined various aspects relating to title and recorded findings
relating to title. It held that gifting a property to a daughter or sister by way
of ’Pasupu Kumkumam", could be done orally and did not require a
registered instrument. Even though there was no independence evidence of
oral gift except the assertion to Rukminibai (which was denied by Damodar
Rao), the High Court, held that there was an oral gift in her favour. It also
accepted the evidence of PW3 and PW5 and plaintiffs, that Damodar Rao
negotiated for the sale of the plots representing that they belonged to his
sister Rukminibai and that he attested the sale deeds as a witness and
identified the Rukminibai as the executant before the Sub-Registrar and
therefore, section 41 of TP Act came to the aid of plaintiffs and Damodar
Rao was estopped from denying the title of his sister. The High Court in a
second appeal arising from a suit for an injunction, could not have recorded
such findings, in the absence of pleadings and issue regarding title. http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
27. We are therefore of the view that the High Court exceeded its
jurisdiction under section 100 CPC, firstly in re-examining questions of fact,
secondly by going into the questions which were not pleaded and which
were not the subject matter of any issue, thirdly by formulating questions of
law which did not arise in the second appeal, and lastly, by interfering with
the well reasoned judgment of the first appellate court which held that the
plaintiffs ought to have filed a suit for declaration.
28. We are conscious of the fact that the suit was filed in the year 1978
and driving the plaintiffs to a fresh round of litigation after three decades
would cause hardship to them. But the scope of civil cases are circumscribed
by the limitations placed by the rules of pleadings, nature of relief claimed
and the court fee paid. The predicament of plaintiffs, was brought upon
themselves, by failing to convert the suit to one for declaration even when
the written statement was filed, and by not seeking amendment of issues to
include an issue on the question of title. In the absence of a prayer of
declaration of title and an issue regarding title, let alone the pleadings
required for a declaration of title, the parties cannot be said to have an
opportunity to have a full-fledged adjudication regarding title.
29. We, therefore, allow this appeal, set aside the judgment of the High
Court and dismiss the suit. Nothing stated herein or by the courts below shall
be construed as expression of any opinion regarding title, in any future suit
for declaration and consequential reliefs that may be filed by the Appellants,
in accordance with law. Parties to bear their respective costs.

Quashed FIR 498 -A = irrespective of validity of the customary divorce effected between the second respondent and the petitioner on 30.04.1994, the fact is that they have been residing separately since then. The question of the petitioner harassing the second respondent therefore, will not arise. Moreover, the limitation for taking cognizance of the offence punishable under Section 490-A IPC as per Section 468 Cr.P.C. is three years. Since the parties have been residing separately since 30.04.1994, the alleged offence punishable under Section 498-A IPC against the petitioner is barred by limitation on the date of report lodged by the second respondent.


THE HON'BLE MR JUSTICE R. KANTHA RAO        

CRL.P.NO.1132 OF 2012  

24.09.2012

Appikatla Imanyalu @ Immanuel

State of A.P. and another

Counsel for the Appellant : Sri C.Masthan Naidu
       
Counsel for respondent No.1: The Additional Public Prosecutor Representing the
State

<GIST:

>HEAD NOTE:  

? Cases referred:
1 (2009) 1 SCC (CRL) 404
2 (2009)10 SCC 604
3 (2010)10 SCC 673


ORDER:


        This criminal petition is filed under Section 482 of the Criminal
Procedure Code to quash FIR in Crime No.486 of 2011 of Machavaram Police
Station, Vijayawada.

2.      I have heard the learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and the
learned Additional Public Prosecutor representing the first respondent/State.
Though served with notice, none appeared for the second respondent/de facto
complainant.

3.      The brief facts of the case which are sought to be quashed are that the
marriage of the second respondent/de facto complainant with the
petitioner/accused was performed on 28.04.1980 and the couple blessed with two
children.  According to the second respondent, at the time of marriage an amount
of Rs.25,000/- was paid as dowry to the petitioner besides gifting one acre of
land by the parents of the second respondent.  It is alleged that the petitioner
used to harass the second respondent with a view to obtain divorce and to marry
another lady, so as to get more dowry.  With these allegations, the second
respondent lodged a report with the Station House Officer, Machavaram Police
Station, who in turn basing on the said report, registered a case in Crime
No.486 of 2011 under Section 498-A of IPC.

4.       The learned counsel appearing for the petitioner would contend that the
marriage between the petitioner and the second respondent, which was solemnized
in Christian form was dissolved by customary divorce on 30.04.1994, since then
both of them were living separately, the question of the petitioner harassing
the second respondent, therefore, will not arise and that the second respondent
lodged a report with the police only to harass the petitioner.  The learned
counsel therefore, seeks to quash the FIR.

5.      Copy of the customary divorce was filed along with the criminal petition,
which shows that the divorce was effected between the parties on 30.04.1994.
The facts of the case would reveal that since the date of divorce the parties to
the marriage have been residing separately.  The learned counsel for the
petitioner relied on a judgment in M.SARAVANA PORSELVI v A.R.CHANDRASHEKAR @          
PARTHIBAN AND OTHERS1 wherein the Supreme Court on identical facts held as    
follows:
"The customary divorce may be legal or illegal. The fact that such an agreement
had bee entered into or the appellant had received a sum of Rs.25,000/- by way
of permanent alimony, however, stands admitted.  The document is a registered
one.  The appellant being in the legal profession must be held to be aware of
the legal implication thereof.  If the contents of the said agreement are taken
to be correct, indisputably the parties had been living separately for more than
ten years.  How then a case under Section 498-A of the Penal Code can be said to
have been made out and that too at such a distant point of time is the question,
particularly in view of the bar of limitation as contained in Section 468 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure.  Even otherwise it is unbelievable that the
appellant was really harassed by her husband or the in-laws."

6.       Further, in the instant case, even if the allegations mentioned in the
report lodged by the second respondent with the police are considered to be true
which are narrated hereinbefore, they do not attract the offence punishable
under Section 498-A IPC.
7.       In BHASKAR LAL SHARMA AND ANOTHER v MONICA2 the Supreme Court held as            
follows:
"For proving the offence under Section498-A IPC, the complainant must make
allegation of harassment to the extent so as to coerce her to meet any unlawful
demand of dowry, or any willful conduct on the part of the accused of such a
nature as is likely to drive the woman to commit suicide or to cause grave
injury or danger to life, limb or health. We do not find any such allegation has
been made or otherwise can be found out so as to enable us to arrive at an
opinion that the appellants prima facie have committed such an offence.  The
complaint petition must also be read with several other documents which form
part of the complaint petition.  The children from the first wife of Vikas were
with Monica.  Vikas affirmed an affidavit so as to enable Monica to apply for
their passports.  Vikas, therefore, wanted to have children with them."

8.        The High Court while exercising jurisdiction under Section 482 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure is not supposed to adopt a mechanical approach.  It
has the duty to scrutinize the allegations levelled in the complaint/report.  If
they are found to be absurd or ex facie false, the High Court in exercise of
powers under Section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, can quash the
proceedings.

9.      In MANOJ MAHAVIR PRASAD KHAITAN v RAM GOPAL PODDAR AND ANOTHER3 the                  
Supreme Court held as follows:
"We reiterate that when the criminal court looks into the complaint, it has to
do so with an open mind.  True it is that that is not the stage for finding out
the truth or otherwise in the allegations; but where the allegations themselves
are so absurd that no reasonable man would accept the same, the High Court could
not have thrown its arms in the air and expressed its inability to do anything
in the matter.  Section 482 Cr.P.C is a guarantee against justice.  The High
Court is invested with the tremendous powers thereunder to pass any order in the
interests of justice.  Therefore, this would have been a proper case for the
High Court to look into the allegations with the openness and then to decide
whether to pass any order in the interest of justice.  In our opinion, this was
a case where the High Court ought to have used its powers under Section 482
Cr.P.C."

10.     If the facts of the present case are examined in the light of the
judgments referred above,
irrespective of validity of the customary divorce
effected between the second respondent and the petitioner on 30.04.1994, the
fact is that they have been residing separately since then.  
The question of the
petitioner harassing the second respondent therefore, will not arise. 
Moreover,
the limitation for taking cognizance of the offence punishable under Section
490-A IPC as per Section 468 Cr.P.C. is three years.  
Since the parties have
been residing separately since 30.04.1994, the alleged offence punishable under
Section 498-A IPC against the petitioner is barred by limitation on the date of
report lodged by the second respondent. 
 Further, even if the entire allegations
levelled in the report are considered to be true, they do not constitute any
offence punishable under Section 498-A IPC.  If a case of this nature is allowed
to be investigated into, it is nothing but abuse of process of law and it would
cause undue harassment to the petitioner and permitting such investigation would
result in miscarriage of justice.
11.     For the foregoing reasons, FIR in Crime No.486 of 2011 of Machavaram
Police Station, Vijayawada is hereby quashed and the criminal petition is
allowed.
__________________  
R. KANTHA RAO, J  
Date: 24.09.2012