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MANU/KA/0393/2000
Equivalent Citation: AIR2000Kant298, ILR 2000 KARNATAKA 2341,
2000(5)KarLJ477, 2000(3)KCCR1818
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA AT BANGALORE (DIVISION BENCH)
Civil Revision Petition No. 1956 of 1994
Decided On: 25.05.2000
Appellants: Ramachandra
Vs. Respondent: Laxmana Rao
Hon'ble Judges/Coram: G.C. Bharuka and Mohamed Anwar, JJ.
Counsels: For Appellant/Petitioner/Plaintiff: Sri Ashok B. Hinchigeri, Adv.
For Respondents/Defendant: Sri S.B. Pavin, Adv.
Subject: Property
Catch Words
Mentioned IN
Acts/Rules/Orders:
Easements Act, 1882 - Section 4; Transfer of Property Act, 1882 - Sections 8, 11
and 19; Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 38(3); Civil ProProcedure Code, 1908 - Sections 11, 47, 50, 53, 146 and 244 - Order 21, Rules 11 and 32 - Order 22;
Cases Referred:
Basavant Dundappa v. Shidalingappa Sidaraddi MANU/KA/0292/1986 : 1987(1) Kar.
L.J. 56: ILR 1986 Kar. 1959; D'Souza v. A. Joseph MANU/KA/0425/1992 : 1992(4)
Kar. L.J. 16: ILR 1992 Kar. 2972: AIR 1993 Kant. 63; Muthukaruppa Pillai and
Another v. Ganesan MANU/SC/1117/1995 : 1995 Supp. (3) SCC 69; Jugalkishore
Saraf v. Raw Cotton Company Limited AIR 1955 SC 376; Kailash Chandra Tarafdar v.
Gopal Chanbra Paddar MANU/WB/0352/1926 : AIR 1926 Cal. 798; Bhiku Mal v. Firm
Ram Chandar Babu Lal and Another AIR 1946 Lah. 134; Radheshyam Modi v.
Jadunath Mohapatra MANU/OR/0027/1991 : AIR 1991 Ori. 88; Ishar Das v. Parma
Nand, AIR 1926 Lah. 134, ILR Lah. 544; Dayabai v. Bapalal ILR (1902) 26 Bom. 140;
Vithal v. Sakharam (1899)1 Bom. LR 854; Jamshetji Manekji Kotval v. Hari Dayal ILR
(1908)32 Bom. 181; Amritlal Vadilal v. Kantilal Lalbhai AIR 1931 Bom. 280; Chunilal
Harilal v. Bai Mani MANU/MH/0046/1918 : AIR 1918 Bom. 165: (1918)42 Bom. 504; Kanhaiyalal v. Babu Ram MANU/SC/1046/1999 : (1999)8 SCC 529
Case Note:
Property – transferee's liabilities – Sections 11 and 146 of Code of Civil
ProProcedure, 1860 – whether transferee of property can be said to be
person claiming under judgment debtor and held to be subject to all liabilities
and encumbrances to which original transferor and judgment debtor had
been for purpose of Section 146 – registered sale deed in question contained
covenant about existence of decree in question against vendors – transferee
purchased property with full knowledge of property being servient tenement
on account of petitioner's easementary right of way through and over it
under decree – such fact was not disputed by transferee or transferor in
question – second part of Section 11 permits creation of such restriction on
enjoyment of property transferred if enjoyment is for purpose of beneficial
enjoyment of another adjoining property of transferor – held, transferee subject to all liabilities – question answered in affirmative.
ORDER
Mohamed Anwar, J.
By this reference, we are called upon to decide the following questions:
"(1) Whether a transferee of a property purchasing the property by registered sale deed from the judgjudgment debtor can be said to be a
person claiming under judgjudgment debtor and be held to be subject to all those liabilities and encumbrances to which the original transferor and judgjudgment debtor had been for the purpose of Section 146?
(2) Whether the decree passed by the Court directing the original
owner of the property i.e., judgjudgment debtor not to cause interference or obstruction in the plaintiff's user of that land (which has been later transferred to the respondent) and putting a rider on the
right of the judgment debtor to the user of that land by him as well is binding on the subsequent transferee i.e., Purchaser thereof?
(3) Whether the decree-holder was entitled to seek execution of that
decree, in the above suit which was passed and granted permanent injunction with reference to the land against the judg- judgment debtor of that property, as being against him? If yes, did the Court below
illegally refused to exercise the jurisdiction vested by dismissing execution application?
(4) Whether the decisions in the cases of Basavant Dundappa v
Shidalingappa Sidaraddi and D'Souza v A. Joseph, do lay the correct law on this subject particularly in view of Section 146 of the CPC and the principle laid down in the case of Muthukaruppa Pillai and Another v Ganesan?
(4-A) Whether in such cases the remedy of the decree-holder is only to file a fresh suit against the transferee and not to apply for execution of the original decree passed against original owner (i.e., Transferor-judgment-debtor) against subsequent purchaser?"
2. The relevant undisputed facts leading to this reference may be stated as under:
The petitioner herein was the plaintiff in Civil Suit No. 307 of 1906 which was filed by
him in the Trial Court, viz., the then Court of Sub-Judge at Haven, against one
Subbannacharya and his son Sheshacharya for the relief of declaration that he
acquired by prescription the easementary right of way passing through the backyard
of adjoining defendants' house from his (plaintiff's) house; and for permanent
injunction restraining them from obstructing the plaintiff's use and enjoyment of that
right of way, and also to restrain them from discharging the water from their
bathroom into front yard of plaintiff's house. On contest, that suit was decreed as
prayed, by the Trial Court by its judgment dated 21-12-1907. The said decree was
taken in appeal by defendants in Appeal No. 48 of 1908. That appeal was dismissed
by the Appellate Court. Though the certified copy of the said decree is not produced
on the record of this revision proceeding, yet, the aforestated position of the litigation
between the parties in Civil Suit No. 307 of 1906 is not in dispute and the same is
sufficiently borne out by the photocopies of the certified copy of the Trial Court's
judgment dated 21-12-1907 and of Appellate Court's judgment dated 21-1-1908,
which are produced along with a memo by the learned Counsel for petitioner. The petitioner is hereinafter referred to as the decree-holder (D.Hr.)'.
Long after the said decree for declaration and permanent injunction dated 21-12-1907
was obtained by the D.Hr., the said judgment-debtors sold their said house premises
to the respondent herein, together with its vacant space including its backyard, by a
registered sale deed dated 27-4-1955. Therefore, respondent is hereinafter referred to
as 'the transferee-judgment-debtor'.
Subsequently, on 4-9-1981, the execution application under Order 21, Rule 11 of the
CPC was filed by the decree-holder in the Court below against respondent-purchaser
seeking execution of the said decree by his arrest and detention in civil prison to
compel him to keep the said suit passage free for plaintiff's enjoyment, by removing
the obstacles put up by him thereon, in obedience to the said decree. Notice to him
was then ordered by the Court below on the D.Hr.'s said application. On its service,
the former put in his appearance and filed his statement of objections through his
Counsel opposing the execution application on the ground that it was not maintainable
in law as against him. His objection against non-maintainability of the application was
that the decree in question being a decree for permanent injunction, it cannot be
enforced as against him as he was a purchaser of the property from the judgment-
debtors and since, in law, a decree for permanent injunction does not run with the
land. That contention was accepted by the Court below in view of the Single Bench
decision of this Court in Basavant Dun-dappa's case, supra, which was referred in a
later decision of another Single Bench in the case of D'Souza, supra. Accordingly, the
impugned order dismissing the said execution application of D.Hr. has been passed by it.
3. When the revision came up for hearing before his Lordship Justice H.N. Tilhari, it
was argued before him on behalf of the decree-bolder that the law laid down in the
case of Basavant Dundappa, supra, that a decree for injunction cannot be enforced
against the purchaser-judgjudgment debtor since injunction does not run with the
land, is not the correct statement of law when examined in the light of Section 146 of
the CPC, and that this material provision was not looked into and considered by the
learned Judge who decided the case of Basavant, supra. In other words, his
contention was that, by force of Section 146 of the CPC, the decree in question was
enforceable against the transferee-judgment-debtor also, since he acquired ownership
of the land in question through the original judgment-debtors, who were the rightful
owners thereof. Apparently, this plea of D.Hr.'s Counsel was found by Tilhari, J., as
carrying sufficient force. Therefore, his Lordship reached his opinion that the law
stated in the case of Basavant Dundappa, supra, and reiterated in the subsequent
Single Bench decision of this Court in the case of D'Souza, supra, required
reconsideration by a Larger Bench in view of Section 146 of the CPC and also in the
light of the principle laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Muthukaruppa
Pillai, supra. So, the aforementioned questions for decision by a Larger Bench were
framed and reference order dated 27-8-1998 was passed by him pursuant to which this matter has been placed before our Bench for resolution of the controversy.
4. Keeping in view the material facts of the case in hand, we are of the considered
opinion that the aforestated five questions under reference could be recast suitably
and condensed into the following two questions for effective disposal of this revision:
1. Whether a purchaser-transferee of an immovable property from the
judgment-debtor, which is the subject of a decree, is a person claiming through him within the meaning of Section 146 of the CPC and an
application for execution of the decree against such a transferee could be maintained by the decree-holder?
2. Whether or not, in law, the respondent-purchaser of the said house premises -- together with its backyard in question, from the original
judgment-debtor, is bound by the terms and directions of the decree for permanent injunction passed in Civil Suit No. 307 of 1906, in view
of the law laid down by this Court in the case of Basavant Dundappa, supra, and in the light of the decision of the Supreme Court in Muthukaruppa Pillai's case, supra?
5. Before dealing with these questions, it seems proper to advert to the facts of
Basavant Dundappa's case, supra, and keep ourselves informed of the context in
which the said statement of law was spelt out - that the decree for permanent
injunction cannot be enforced against a purchaser of the land from the judgment-
debtor, for an injunction does not run with the land. In Basavant's case, supra, the
revision before this Court was filed by the judgjudgment debtor against the order of
the execution Court passed in Ex. Case No. 45 of 1984 allowing an interim application
of the decree-holder, which was filed requesting to auction the tamarind fruits from
three trees in the land in dispute or to call upon the judgment debtor to deposit Rs.
400/- as security. That order of the executing Court was challenged by the judgment
debtor on the ground that an earlier interim application of decree-holder filed in the
said Execution Case No. 45 of 1984 for the same relief was already rejected by it
observing that the execution petition itself was not maintainable. Admittedly, the
decree-holder therein was a transferee from the heir of the original decree-holder, and
the judgment debtor was also a transferee from the heirs of the original judgment-
debtors. The contention canvassed for judgment debtor in the said revision that when
decree-holder's earlier interim application for the same relief was rejected by the
execution Court, its order impugned passed allowing the latter's subsequent interim
application for the same relief was per se illegal and unsustainable, was accepted by
the learned Judge. That apart, the learned Judge, in that case of Basavant, supra,
further proceeded to consider the point of enforceability or otherwise of the said
decree as against the petitioner therein who was a transferee from the heirs of the
original judgment-debtor. A passage appearing at page 359 in Mulla's Code of Civil
ProProcedure, 14th Edition, Volume I (occurring in page 441 of 15th Edition), under
the caption "Decree for Injunction"; and another passage under the same caption
from AIR Commentaries on the Code of Civil ProProcedure, 9th Edition, Volume I,
page 559 (occurring at Item 18 in page 671 of 10th Edition), were quoted by the
learned Judge, wherein the aforementioned statement of law was contained. Following
the same, the revision in Basavant Dundappa's case, supra, was allowed and the
executing Court's said order impugned therein was set aside. From the body of the
order pronounced in that case, the nature of the decree for permanent injunction and
the terms thereof were not discernible except that the prayer made in the said interim
application was to auction the tamarind fruits of the said three trees or to direct the petitioner-judgment debtor to deposit Rs. 400/- as security.
6. However, in the case of D'Souza, supra, the facts of the dispute between the
parties were materially different from those obtainable in Basavant's case, supra. In
D'Souza's case, supra, the appellant before this Court was defendant, and the
respondent therein was the plaintiff in O.S. No. 2243 of 1980. That suit was filed for
the relief of permanent injunction against defendant. It was decreed restraining him
from interfering with the plaintiff's peaceful possession of the suit schedule property.
The Trial Court's said decree was challenged by defendant D'Souza in appeal before
this Court. During pendency of that appeal, respondent (plaintiff) therein died. Instead
of bringing his legal representatives on record in time, learned Counsel for appellant
passed a memo praying to dispose of the appeal as not surviving for consideration as
the decree for permanent injunction impugned therein ceased to be enforceable, and
the relief of permanent injunction granted by it to the plaintiff stood extinguished
along with his death. That memo was filed relying on this Court's ruling in Basavant's
case, supra. The contention canvassed by appellant's Counsel in support of the prayer
in the said memo was that, with the death of the plaintiff, the decree for injunction in
his favour lost its force in the eye of law since it was a personal decree in plaintiffs
favour and the injunction does not run with the land. On facts, the learned Judge
found, that the point for consideration in the appeal was: whether on the death of
respondent-plaintiff, the appeal abated or the said suit itself abated. This question,
when differently worded, as indicated in the decision was: "the question for
consideration is, as to what should happen to the decree obtained by the plaintiff after plaintiffs death?"
7. In the case of D'Souza, supra, at paragraphs 5 and 6 of his order, the learned
Judge has culled out the said passages in Mulla's Code of Civil Procedure and AIR
Commentaries on the Code of Civil Procedure, which were quoted in the case of
Basavant, supra. The said passage from Mulla's CPC is reproduced below, which
serves our purpose:
". . . . An injunction obtained against a defendant restraining him from
obstructing plaintiff's ancient rights may on the death of the defendant, be enforced under this section against his son as his legal representative by
Procedure under Order 21, Rule 32 (Code of 1882, Section 260). Similarly, a decree for an injunction against a manager and representative of a joint Hindu
family can be enforced after his death against a son who represents the joint family. But such an injunction cannot be enforced under this section against a purchaser of the property from the defendant, for an injunction does not run with the land.....".
Elucidating the legal position, the learned Judge in the case of D'Souza, supra, held:
"4. ..... However in a case of heirship, the question of transfer of property does
not arise. The question of injunction running with the land would not arise in a case where the heirs of the deceased steps into the shoes of the person who has
obtained the decree. .. . As pointed out earlier, the observation made in Mulla's Civil Pro- cedure Code on the basis of which the judgment has been delivered by this Court in Basavant Dundappa's case, supra, mutatis mutandis holds good
here also and in that context, I am of the view that there should not be any difficulty for the legal heirs of the deceased plaintiff to enforce the decree for injunction against the judgment-debtor".
So holding, the appeal in D'Souza's case, supra, was dismissed as having abated.
Re. Question No. 1
8. As indicated above, the present reference has been made by H.N. Tilhari, J.,
observing that the aforesaid statement of the law was made in the case of Basavant
Dundappa, supra, simply on the basis of the said passages from Mulla's Code of Civil
Procedure and AIR Commentaries on Code of Civil Procedure, but without taking
notice of and considering the effect of the relevant provision in Section 146 of the CPC. This provision reads:
"146. Proceedings by or against representatives.--Save as otherwise provided by this Code or by any law for the time being in force, where any proceeding may be taken or application made by or against any person, then the proceeding may
be taken or the application may be made by or against any person claiming under him".
9. On an analytical reading of Section 146, one legal position which clearly emerges
is that where any legal proceeding may be taken or an application for a legal
proceeding may be made by or against any person, then, that proceeding may also be
taken or application for the same may be made by or against any persons claiming
under him. This provision deals with legal proceedings by or against representatives of
the parties to a dispute or to a decree or final order of any competent Court. Its
operation is general in nature, except that it is circumscribed by the beginning saving
clause "save as otherwise provided by this Code or any law for the time being in
force". The Supreme Court in the case of Jugalkishore Saraf v Raw Cotton Company
Limited, has, in regard to the curtailing effect of this saving clause on the scope of Section 146, said:
"The effect of the expression "save as otherwise provided in this Code" contained in Section 146 is that a person cannot make an application under Section 146 if other provisions of the Code are applicable to it".
In interpretation of Section 146, the moot point for our consideration is whether the
transferee of the property of judgment debtor by a private sale could be stated as the
judgment-debtor's "representative" within the meaning of Section 146 of the CPC as
well. The words "by or against any person claiming under him" occurring at the end of
the text of Section 146 makes it clear that any person who has lawfully acquired any
right or interest in the property which was the subject of legal proceeding and was
belonging to any party thereto, would be the person claiming under that party and is
thus his representative. The same is the import of the word "representative" occurring
in first part of Section 47 of the CPC which runs:
"47. Questions to be determined by the Court executing decree.--(1) All
questions arising between the parties to the suit in which the decree was passed, or their representatives,.....".
The sweep of this term "representative" was the subject of consideration by a Full
Bench of Calcutta High Court in the case of Kailash Chandra Tarafdar v Gopal Chandra
Paddar, at page 808, where it has held:
"The Legislature in Section 47 has placed the representatives of the parties in
the same position as the parties themselves, and the term "representatives" in Section 47 must, in my opinion, be held to include persons who by assignment
from a party or by operation of law have succeeded to the interest of that party in decree, and quoad that interest are bound by the decree".
A Full Bench of Lahore High Court, in the case of Bhiku Mal v Firm Ram Chandar Babu
Lal and Another, on a reference made by the learned Single Judge, was also seized of
the import of the term "representative" in Section 47 where the decision of Calcutta
High Court in the case of Kailash, supra, was also referred. Harries, C.J., speaking for
the Bench, proceeded to further elucidate the meaning of the term "representative" in the context of Section 47 and said:
"..... The meaning to be given to the word "representative" in Section 47 of the Civil Procedure Code has been the subject of a number of
cases in the various High Courts in India. The leading case is a Full Bench decision of five Judges of the Calcutta High Court in 24 Cal. 62.
In that case it was held that the term "representative" as used in Section 244 (now Section 47) of the Civil Procedure Code, when taken with reference to the judgment debtor does not mean only his legal
representative, that is, his heir, executor or administrator, but it means his representative-in-interest, and includes a purchaser of his interest, who so far as such interest is concerned, is bound by the decree.....".
(emphasis supplied)
10. Dealing with the similar question, a Single Bench of Orissa High Court in
Radheshyam Modi v Jadunath Mohapatra, at paragraph 11 of its order has said:
"11. In the event of the death of a judgment-debtor, the question that may arise for consideration as to against whom the execution proceeding shall be continued if the provisions of Order 22 of the Code are not applicable to an
execution proceeding. The provision contained in Section 146 of the Code is a complete answer to the aforesaid question. It provides that where any
proceeding may be taken or application made by or against any person, then the proceeding may be taken or the application may be made by or against any person claiming under him. In a case where the sole judgment debtor dies, the
proceeding may be continued against such person who claims under the deceased judgment-debtor..... ".
11. For the purpose of this case, suffice it to state that admittedly, the transferee-
judgment debtor claims his right of ownership and interest in and over the land of
servient tenement in question under the original judgment-debtors, on having
acquired the same by the said sale deed dated 27-4-1955. Therefore, he squarely falls
within the term "representative" as the one claiming under the said judgment-debtors,
as envisaged in Section 146. In that view of the legal position vis-a-vis, the said
decree passed with respect to the land in question, it becomes clear that the decree-
holder herein is entitled under Section 146 of the CPC to make the application for
execution of the said decree against the transferee-judgment debtor (see
Muthukaruppa Pillai's case, supra); although the question of its enforceability or
otherwise against the transferee is a question which falls within the domain of
Section 47 of the CPC for decision by the execution Court. Hence, we hold that the
transferee-judgment debtor is a person claiming under the original judgment-debtors
as their successor-in-interest within the meaning of Section 146 of the CPC and, as
such, the decree-holder can maintain an application for execution of the decree in
question against him, there being no other specific provision in CPC or in any law for
the time being in force enabling him to proceed against the former in execution of the
decree. The negative finding on this point of the Court below is, therefore, unsustainable in law. Accordingly we answer Question No. 1 in the affirmative.
Re. Question No. 2
12. This question relates to the material point of the enforceability or otherwise of the
said decree of permanent injunction against the respondent-transferee-judgment-
debtor. Following the decision of the Single Bench of this Court in the case of
Basavant, supra, the petitioner-decree-holder's application for execution of the decree
against him has been dismissed by the executing Court by its impugned order on the
ground that injunction does not run with the land. Respondent being the purchaser of
the property from the original judgment debtor has stepped into their shoes as their
representative-in-interest. The general principle of law is that the assignee or
transferee of the judgment-debtor's property would also be bound by the rights and
liabilities declared by a decree passed against the judgment-debtor. This principle is
succinctly enunciated by Division Bench of Lahore High Court in Ishar Das v Parma
Nand, which exposition of law is quoted, with approval by it in its subsequent Full Bench decision in Bhiku Mal's case, supra. The same is reproduced below:
"Now, it has been repeatedly held that the expression 'representative'
in Section 47 has a more extended meaning than a 'legal representative' and includes also a representative-in-interest. An assignee from a judgment debtor of property belonging to him and
affected by the decree is a representative of the judgment debtor within the meaning of the section. Such an assignee stands in the shoes of
the judgment debtor and is bound by the decree so far as the property assigned to him is concerned. He is subject to the same liabilities and is entitled to exercise the same rights as his assignor, the judgment-debtor.....
There can be no doubt that a purchaser from the judgment debtor of his property which is neither under attachment nor otherwise affected
by the terms of the decree, cannot be held to be a representative of the judgment-debtor,.... ".
(emphasis supplied)
To this general principle, the precedent that a decree for injunction cannot be
executed against the purchaser of property from the judgment debtor as injunction
does not run with the land would be an exception. It is here which we are precisely
concerned with the nature, width and scope of this precedent which lays down in bald terms the said exception to the general principle.
13. As noticed above, the decision of this Court in Basavant's case, supra, was
pronounced on the basis of the statement of law that an injunction does not run with
land, as contained in the passages to be found under the caption "Decree for
Injunction" in Mulla's Code of Civil Procedure and in the AIR Commentaries on the
Code of Civil Procedure. These passages occur therein in the synopsis of Section 50
of the CPC. The said statement of law that an injunction does not run with the land
and, therefore, it cannot be enforced against a purchaser of the property from
defendant judgment-debtor, is shown to have been digested in those passages from
the decisions of Bombay High Court in the cases of (1) Dayabai v Bapalal; (2) Vithal v
Sakharam; (3) Jamshetji Manekji Kotval v Hari Dayal; (4) Amritlal Vadilal v Kantilal
Lalbhai; and (5) Chunilal Harilal v Bai Mani. It has to be noted here at once that the
case of Chunilal Harilal, supra, is of no relevance to this case, since in that case, their
Lordships of Bombay High Court, while dealing with the scope of Section 53 of the
CPC held that a decree for injunction obtained by the plaintiff against two brothers
who, together with their sons of one of them, formed a joint Hindu family, cannot be
executed against the sons of said brother inasmuch as they were neither parties to
the suit nor were they the legal representatives of judgment-debtors, in any sense of this term.
14. In its latter decision in Amritlal's case, supra, a Division Bench of Bombay High
Court, reviewing the case law on the point as was laid down in its above stated earlier
decisions, has pointed out the restrictive nature of the statement of law that
"injunction does not run with the land and cannot be enforced under Section 50
against a purchaser of the property from the defendant" by further expounding the
proposition as follows:
"It would therefore follow from the decided cases that the decree for injunction does not run with the land, and in the absence of any
statutory provision, such a decree cannot be executed against the surviving members of the joint family or against the purchaser from the judgment-debtor".
(emphasis supplied)
Elucidating this legal position, the Court further said:
"The principle that an injunction does not run with the land has been deviated from in the case of legal representatives on the death of the
judgment debtor on the ground of the express provision made by Section 50 of the CPC and in the case of transferees in virtue of Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act. ....".
(emphasis supplied)
Thus, the operation of the case law that a decree for injunction cannot be enforced
against a purchaser judgment debtor since injunction does not run with the land for it
is a remedy in personam is saddled with a rider that it could be done so if saved by
any statutory provision. Therefore, the law reiterated by this Court in Basavant's case,
supra, is not and cannot be the absolute statement of law. It is a qualified one. Its
validity and the limit of operation depends upon the nature and character of the
injunctive relief granted under a decree for injunction. No doubt, injunction is a
remedy in personam. Yet, the enforcement of the decree for injunction against a legal
representative of the deceased or against the purchaser of the suit property pendente
life is saved by Section 50 of the CPC and Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act respectively.
15. Likewise, in the instant case, the decision whether the decree for permanent
injunction in question is binding on the transferee-judgment debtor and whether it
could be enforced against him by the decree-holder is dependent on the nature of the
injunctive relief and the right in protection of which the same is granted thereunder. It
is an undisputed fact that the said decree obtained by the decree-holder was a decree
granting him the reliefs of declaration and permanent injunction against the original
judgment-debtors. The declaratory relief was to the effect that the decree-holder
being the owner of the dominant heritage he acquired by prescription the
easementary right of way through and over the backyard of the judgment-debtors'
said premises i.e., servient heritage, from the front yard of his house; and the
injunctive relief granted to him under the decree was by restraining the judgment-
debtors from preventing or disturbing him from the use and enjoyment of the said
right of way over the land of judgment-debtors by any manner whatsoever. We,
therefore, proceed with our further discussion on the footing of this undisputed premise as regards the decree in question.
16. The said easementary right of the decree-holder is a right created by Section 4 of
the Indian Easements Act, 1882 ('the Act of 1882' for short). Thus, it is a statutory
right. It is a right in rem vesting with the plaintiff. Under the decree, the decree-
holder was entitled to utilize the said servient tenement of the judgment debtor as a
means of access to or egress from his dominant tenement. Once that right was
created by a decree of the Court, a corresponding burden or encumbrance gets
automatically imposed on or annexed to the servient tenement of the judgment-
debtors thereby creating a legal obligation against them to keep the said passage
through their land in question i.e., servient heritage, always open and free for the use
of the decree-holder for the beneficial enjoyment of his dominant tenement. Easement
is an incorporeal right of the dominant owner over the corporeal property of the
servient owner, and, it is a valuable property as far as dominant heritage is
concerned. Therefore, an easementary right runs, in law, with the dominant heritage
for its beneficial enjoyment by its owner. This rule is enacted by Section 19 of the Act of 1882, which reads:
"19. Transfer of dominant heritage passes easement.-- Where the dominant
heritage is transferred or devolves, by act of parties or by operation of law, the transfer or devolution shall, unless a contrary intention appears, be deemed to pass the easement to the person in whose favour the transfer or devolution takes place".
So, in law, an easement is a transferable and heritable right along with the dominant
heritage to which it is appurtenant. As a fortiori, therefore, unless modified, altered or
extinguished by operation of law or by agreement of parties or by reason of change in
material circumstances, it logically follows that when a servient heritage is also
transferred by act of parties or by operation of law, corresponding burden of
easementary right annexed to it also passes with it with its transfer to every
subsequent owner or occupier thereof, since easementary right in favour of dominant
heritage does not exist without there being a servient heritage. So, coming to any
easementary right of way, normally every servient owner, including the transferee
from judgment debtor of a servient tenement or its occupier is under a legal obligation
to protect or preserve it in its original condition for its beneficial enjoyment by the
dominant owner. Nonetheless in breach of this obligation if the former creates any
disturbance of such easementary right appurtenant to the dominant tenement he is
liable to be prevented from so acting by a decree of permanent or perpetual
injunction. It is exactly to meet such a situation which the legal remedy of perpetual
injunction is provided by sub- clauses (c) and (d) of Section 38(3) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, which run:
"38. Perpetual injunction when granted.-
(1) XXX XXX XXX.
(2) xxx xxx xxx.
(3) When the defendant invades or threatens to invade the plaintiff's right to, or enjoyment of, property the Court may grant a perpetual injunction in the following cases, namely.-
(a) xxx xxx xxx;
(b) xxx xxx xxx;
(c) where the invasion is such that compensation in money would not afford adequate relief;
(d) where the injunction is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of judicial proceedings".
17. Therefore, having due regard to the nature of easementary right of way declared
by the decree in favour of plaintiff-decree-holder and the injunctive relief with respect
thereto, we are of the considered opinion that the decree-holder's right being the
statutory right of way passing through the backyard of the judgment-debtors' servient
premises, the latter cannot pass or transfer any right or interest therein in favour of
any other person better than what themselves had. As a result, any transferee of the
property from them would acquire the same right or interest therein and the liability
or the burden with which it was encumbered which the judgment-debtors had at the
time of the transfer and, as such, the transferee would be under an obligation to
subject the servient tenement to the said easementary right of the decree-holder in
terms and directions of the decree in question- In other words, the transferee-
judgment debtor is also bound by the decree respecting the decree-holder's
easementary right of way and is liable thereunder in relation to the said servient
tenement to the same extent as his predecessors in title were bound by that decree.
In that view of the legal position, we find without any hesitation that the said decree
for permanent injunction respecting the said right of way is executable against the
respondent-transferee judgment-debtor. Thus, this is a case of one more instance of
an exception to the precedent that the decree for permanent injunction is not
enforceable against the purchaser of property from the judgment debtor since
injunction does not run with land.
18. Moreover we find our above conclusion in complete accord with the legal effect of
the 'transfer' of property spelt out by Section 8 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. The material portion thereof is reproduced below:
"8. Operation of Transfer.--Unless a different intention is expressed or necessarily implied, a transfer of property passes forthwith to the
transferee all the interest which the transferred is then capable of passing in the property, and in the legal incidents thereof.
Such incidents include, where the property is land, the easements annexed thereto.....;
and, .....;
and, where the property is a house, the easements annexed thereto,.....".
This provision of the Transfer of Property Act makes it clear that any easementary
obligation or burden annexed to the servient heritage will also pass therewith to the
transferee thereof on its valid transfer by its vendor, as a legal incident of the
transfer. This legal position finds ample support from the proposition enunciated by
the Supreme Court in its recent decision in Muthukaruppa Pillai's case, supra. In that
case, the contention of defendant-appellant before Supreme Court was that the
decree for permanent injunction obtained against him by the deceased plaintiff with
respect to his heritable and partible rights, cannot be executed by a legal
representative of the plaintiff on his death. Repelling this contention, the Supreme Court held:
"2..... It is claimed that the decree being personal, it could not have been executed by the respondent who claimed to be successor-in-interest of the plaintiff in the suit. The submission appears to be devoid of any merit. In the
main suit, out of which these execution proceedings have arisen, it was clearly held by the High Court that the rights were heritable and partible. In view of this
finding, it is not clear as to how can the appellant raise the argument of decree being personal in nature. Apart from that, the decree passed by the Trial Court, copy of which has been produced by the learned Counsel for the respondent, the
authenticity of which is not disputed by the appellant, and which has been extracted earlier, clearly indicates that the injunction granted did not impose any
such restriction expressly nor could it be impliedly held that it lapsed with the death of the plaintiff".
What follows from this ruling of Supreme Court is that if the remedy of injunction
granted by a decree is in respect of any heritable and partible right, it does not get
extinguished with the death of a party thereto, but it enures to the benefit of the legal
heirs of the decree-holder, as also such a decree could be executed against the
successor-in-interest of the deceased judgment debtor as well. The law so laid down is
fortified by another recent decision of the Supreme Court in Kanhaiyalal v Babu Ram.
For these reasons the said decree for permanent injunction cannot be said a decree in
personam since the easementary right of way in respect of which the remedy of
injunction is granted under it runs with both the dominant heritage and the servient heritage as well.
19. Besides the above, another pertinent fact which is pleaded by decree-holder
(petitioner) in Court below and not disputed by respondent-transferee either before it
or before us is that a covenant was also incorporated in the sale deed dated 27-4-
1955 as a term of the conveyance of their property by the judgment-debtors to
respondent, clearly mentioning the existence of the decree in question against the
vendors. Respondent thus purchased the property from them with the full knowledge
of its being the servient tenement on account of petitioner's easements right of way
through and over it under the decree. In this regard it is noteworthy that any
restriction on the enjoyment by the transferee of the property transferred absolutely
is declared void by first part of Section 11 of Transfer of Property Act. But second
part of Section 11 thereof provides an exception to this general rule. It permits
creation of such restriction on the enjoyment of the property transferred if it is for the
purpose of the beneficial enjoyment of another adjoining property of the transferor.
Keeping in view the peculiar facts of this case, on the analogy of this exception
embodied in second paragraph of Section 11 of Transfer of Property Act it can be
stated that respondent-transferee is bound by the said covenant of the sale deed in
the enjoyment of the property purchased by him thereunder.
20. Therefore, on consideration of the aforementioned decisions and the legal effect of
a transfer of servient heritage by the original judgment-debtors (to the transferee-
judgment-debtor), flowing from the above stated and discussed relevant provisions of
the law, we find that the statement of law stated in the case of Basavant Dundappa,
supra, by a Single Bench of this Court does not lay down an absolute legal principle of
universal application, but the same is a qualified one and restrictive in its application.
It operates subject to various relevant statutory provisions as also the nature of the
relief of injunction granted by a decree to plaintiff. In the case in hand, the decree for
permanent injunction being the one granted for protection of the decree-holder's
statutory easementary right of way appurtenant to his dominant heritage and
annexed with the servient tenement of the judgment-debtors, it is enforceable in law
against the transferee-judgment-debtor, he being the successor-in-interest of the
original judgment-debtors. In other words, the transferee-judgment debtor is bound
by the terms and directions of the decree in question and, therefore, the decree is
executable against him. In this view of the matter, the contrary finding of the
execution Court is legally not correct. Hence, Question No. 2 stands answered by us accordingly.
21. In view of our affirmative findings on Question Nos. 1 and 2, the revision is entitled to succeed.
22. Hence, the revision is allowed and the impugned order is set aside. The parties to bear their own costs.
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF ORISSA
Decided On: 06.03.2009
Appellants: Chhatia Palei and Anr.
Vs. Respondent: Additional District Judge-cum-Sessions Judge and Ors.
Hon'ble Judges/Coram: I. Mahanty, J.
Subject: Property
Subject: Civil
Catch Words
Mentioned IN
Acts/Rules/Orders:
CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, 1908 - Section 47, CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, 1908
- Section 49; SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT 1963 - Section 38
Disposition: Application dismissed
Case Note :
Civil – Interpretation of decree – Section 47 and Order 21, Rule 3, 32 and 35 of Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908(CPC) – Opposite party no.3 filed suit for injunction against
petitioner no.1 and opposite party no.4 – Trial Court passed decree of injunction in
favour of opposite party no.3 – Opposite party no.3 filed execution petition – In said
execution petition opposite party no.3 sought relief of recovery of possession – Petitioner
no.1 filed objection under Section 47 of CPC against such relief – Execution Court
allowed objections of petitioner no.1 – Thereafter opposite party no.3 filed revision
against order of Execution Court – Revisional Court allowed revision and held that
Execution Court while executing decree of injunction can extend it to recovery of
possession – Petitioner no.1 aggrieved by said order of Revisional court – Hence,
present petition assailing order Revisional Court - Whether execution could be made on
recovery of possession by decree holder where decree of permanent injunction had been
granted? – Held, as per judicial principle where decree is not inconsistent with
additional relief sought to be executed and in fact is in furtherance of same it would
remain within competence and domain of Executing Court for interpreting such decree
– In instant case originally decree of permanent injunction was passed in favour of
opposite party no.3 – During execution petitioners tried to disturb possession of
opposite party no.3 – Therefore opposite party no.1 prayed for recovery of possession –
As opposite party no.3 was not being in possession so decree envisaged recovery of
possession – Thus Executing Court while extending meaning of decree granted by Civil
Court was trying to remove obstruction and enforcing perpetual injunction passed by
that Civil Court – Hence, order of Revisional Court deserves to be upheld – Petition
accordingly dismissed
JUDGMENT
I. Mahanty, J.
1. The petitioner in the present writ application has sought to challenge the Order dated
31.3.1998 passed by the District and Sessions Judge, Nayagarh in C.R. No. 36/11 of 1997
allowing the said revision and reversing the order dated 23.12.1996 passed in M.J.C. and No.
30/1996 under Section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure arising out of Execution Proceeding
No. 3 of 1994 by the Court of Civil Judge (Junior Division), Nayagarh who had allowed the
objection of the petitioner under Section 47 C.P.C. and hold that the decree passed in O.S.
No. 24 of 77, was in executable.
2. Learned Counsel for the petitioners has challenged the impugned order passed by the Addl.
Dist. and Sessions Judge, Nayagarh on the following grounds:
(A) That the Execution Case is barred by limitation as envisaged under Article 136 of the
Limitation Act.
(B) That the decree sought to be executed being purely for injunction, the relief of recovery
of possession is beyond the scope of the executing Court.
(C) That the decree for permanent injunction is to be executed in the manner contemplated
under Order 21 Rule 32 C.P.C. and delivery of possession cannot be given as provided under
Order 21 Rule 35 C.P.C.
3. It is averred in the writ application that the property described in Schedule 'A' of the
petition were sold by registered sale deed dated 9.2.1972 by one Hadibandhu Palei in favour
of O.P. No. 3, namely, Dayanidhi Dash and in the sale deed it was stipulated that
consideration would be paid at the time of endorsement of registration ticket in favour of the
purchaser-O.P. No. 3 and from the date of payment, title will pass to the purchaser. It is
alleged that payment of consideration was not made to the vendor and consequently,
registration ticket was not endorsed in favour of the purchaser and it is claimed that as a
consequence thereof, title to ttie Schedule 'A' property did not pass on to the purchaser
Dayanidhi Dash (O.P. No. 3). Subsequently, the said sale deed dated 9.5.1972 was cancelled
by the registered deed of cancellation dated 6.11.1974. It is fu.ther contended that as the sale
deed in favour of Dayanidhi Dash was cancelled, the original owner and his successors in
interest, continued to remain in possession of the 'A' Schedule land and converted those land
to homestead land and raised residential houses thereon and lived there along with their
family members. It is further contended that the petitioners continued to pay rent and have
been obtaining necessary rent receipts in their names. The petitioners alleged that Sri
Dayanidhi Dash (O.P. No. 3) taking advantage of the locality of the petitioners filed a suit for
injunction against the petitioner No. 1 and opposite party No. 4 and others. The said suit, i.e.
T.S. No. 24/77 was decreed on 31.3.1981. It is contended that it is this decree dated
31.3.1981 which is now sought to be executed. Therefore, Execution Case No. 3/1994 was
filed on 13.9.1994. In the said Execution Case, opposite party No. 3 (petitioner therein)
sought to relief under Order 21 Rule 3 C.P.C. and also a delivery of possession under Order
21 Rule 35 C.P.C. and alleging that the judgment-debtors have re-entered possession of the
dispute property on 16.8.1994. The present petitioners upon entering in the suit proceeding,
filed objection contending, inter alia, that the Execution Case is not maintainable in law and
the Executing Court allowed the said objection petition filed by the petitioners by executing
the ground stated therein and come to hold that the decree was in executable. It is this order
by the Executing Court which came to be reversed by the revisional Court under impugned
Annexure-1 which is the subject matter of challenge in the present writ application on the
ground noted hereinabove.
4. Mr. Mohapatra, learned Counsel for opposite party No. 3, on the other hand, submitted that
the writ petitioners 1 and 2 and opposite party No. 4 (brother of petitioner No. 1) are
judgment-debtors in decree dated 31.3.1981 passed in T.S. 24/77-1 wherein the present
opposite party No. 3 Dayanidhi Dash was the plaintiff-decree holder. It is submitted that T.S.
No. 24/77-l was filed with the prayer for issue of perpetual injunction against the defendants
and restraining them from going over the suit land and creating disturbance in his possession
of the plaintiff with respect to the said suit land. In the 4th paragraph of the decree dated
31.3.1981 in favour of the opposite party No. 3 has been held as follows:
In this suit, a Civil Court Commissioner was deputed on the petition of the plaintiff for local
inspection of the suit land after giving due notice to the parties. The Commissioner inspected
the land and submitted his report. In support of the suit, the said Commissioner has been
examined as P.W.2 and his report dated 14.8.1978 marked as Ext.-8, clearly reveals that the
plaintiff is the peaceful owner and possessor over the suit land. And therefore, the Civil Court
in the judgment directed that the defendants are hereby permanently injuncted from going
over the suit land and from creating any disturbance in the possession of the plaintiff.
Mr. Mohapatra submitted that opposite party No. 3 while being temporarily absence from his
village, enabled the petitioners and opposite party No. 4 to trespass into the suit house and to
forcibly take possession of the same on 16.8.1994. The opposite party No. 3, on his return to
his village and on realizing the mischief created by the petitioners, opposite party No. 4 was
compelled to file Execution Case No. 3/94 on 13.9.1994. Sri Mohapatra submitted that the
petitioners and opposite party No. 4 did not appear in the suit proceeding inspite of the valid
notice for which, a notice for delivery of possession was issued. But the process server could
not serve the notice of delivery of possession since the petitioners and opposite party No. 4
threatened the process server with dire consequence and being armed with deadly weapon.
His further allegation is that opposite party No. 3- Dayanidhi Dash filed MJC No. 11/1996
for sending police force along with the process server and while the said applicant was
pending consideration, MJC No. 30/1996 was filed by the present petitioners and opposite
parity No. 4, before the executing Court claiming that the decree was inexecutable. The
M.J.C. No. 30 of 1996 came to be allowed by an order dated 23,12.1996 on a finding that in
the absence of a decree for delivery of possession, the possession cannot be delivered. The
opposite party No. 3 challenged the aforesaid order before the Addl.District and Sessions
Judge in C.R. No. 36/ 11 of 1997 and the same has came to be allowed by an order dated
31.3.1998 with direction to the executing Court to proceed with the execution proceeding. It
is this revisional order which is now come to be challenged in the present writ application and
it is alleged that the writ application contains wrong genealogy as well as incorrect facts.
5. So far as the grounds raised by the learned Counsel for the petitioners is concerned, Sri
Mohapatra, learned Counsel appearing for the opposite party No. 3- Dayanadhi Dash,
submitted that the proviso to Article 136 of the Limitation Act prescribes that "an application
for the enforcement or execution of a decree granting a perpetual injunction shall not be
subject matter to any period of limitation." It is further averred that the decree of injunction
by a Civil Court of competent jurisdiction against the judgment and order of a Court
restraining commission or wrongful omission and injunction is a judicial process, whereby a
person is required to do or refer from bring a particular thing and injunction, may be a final
remedy in a suit or premanentory and interlocutory while the suit is pending. A perpetual
injunction as prescribed under Section 38(3) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 having been
granted in favour of the opposite party No. 3-Dayanidhi Dash by a Court of competent
jurisdiction remains final and binding on all parties. It is further contended that a decree of
permanent/perpetual injunction can be executed if the judgment-debtor disturbs his
possession and in the instant case, the petitioners and opposite party No. 4 have trespassed
into the cuit property and continued with their illegal possession and since the decree passed
by the civil Court has became final, the same was required to be obeyed and the obstruction
created by the petitioners and opposite party No. 4 along with others was liable to be
removed under Order 21 Rule 32 CPC. In this respect, learned Counsel for the opposite
parties placed reliance on the judgment of this Court in the case of Gopal Barik v. Bhima
Barik and another, MANU/OR/0171/1992 : 1993(I)OLR139 and the next judgment of the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Jai Dayal and Ors. v. Krishan Lal Garg and Anr.,
MANU/SC/0933/1997 : AIR1997SC3765 . In conclusion, learned Counsel submitted that on
a consideration of the aforesaid facts and law, opposite party No. 3 being a decree holder of
enforceable decree passed by the competent civil Court, which has become final, cannot be
ignored in law and must be enforced. In conclusidn, it is submitted that the magnanimity of
law and the decree of a Court cannot be permitted to be throttled by the violators who
continue their illegal possession even after the revisional order passed by the learned
Additional District and Sessions Judge and impugned in the present writ application.
6. In so far as the main ground of challenge is concerned i.e. as to whether the execution
could be made on recovery of possession by a decree holder where a decree of permanent
injunction has been granted, is no longer res integra and has been settled by this Court in the
case of Gopal Barik {supra). In the said case, the plaintiff apart from seeking other relief
prayed for permanently restraining defendant from interfering with the possession. The suit
was decreed in favour of the plaintiff and consequently, the defendant was permanently
restrained.
Thereafter, the plaintiff-decree holder filed an execution petition seeking recovery of
possession. Objection was raised by the defendant claiming that in view of the nature of the
decree, i.e. decree of permanent injunction there was no scope for filing an execution petition
and seeking recovery of possession. It was further contended that the Executing Court cannot
go behind the decree and does not have the authority to effect recovery of possession. On the
aforesaid pleading, it was held that where the plaintiff asserts that the defendant was
disturbing possession and prayed for recovery of possession and if it is found that he had
been dispossessed, an Executing Court can interpret the decree to come to conclusion that the
plaintiff not being in possession, the decree envisaged recovery of possession. Therefore, the
question of recovery of possession by an Executing Court, does not amount to going behind
the decree, but amounts to interpretation of the decree itself. It was further held that in order
to avoid any technical difficulties and to protect a decree holder after obtaining the decree
from enjoying the fruits of the decree, Code of Civil Procedure has been amended. It is only
where the execution seeks some relief which was specifically refused or is inconsistent with
the relief granted by the Civil Court, the Executing Court cannot go behind such a decree to
execute the same.
Where the decree is not inconsistent with the relief sought to be executed and in fact, is in
furtherance of the same, it would remain within the competence and domain of the Executing
Court for interpreting such a decree. His Lordship of the Orissa High Court Mr. S.C.
Mohapatra (as he the then was) further held that a judgment-debtor who is vanquished in the
legal battle cannot be allowed to enjoy the property which Court on trial held that he was not
entitled to. Therefore, it was concluded that, even a decree for permanent injunction can be
executed where there was no necessity to interpret the decree and if the plaintiff on getting
possession from the Court is either dispossessed or disturbed by the.judgment debtor, a
Decree Holder in a decree for permanent injunction can seek execution of such a decree and
to that extent the Executing Court is within its competence to direct recovery of possession
for a decree holder who has been dispossessed after a decree of permanent injunction has
been passed.
The Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Jai Dayal and Ors. (supra) has came to hold that
under Order 21 Rule 32 C.P.C. where a decree for perpetual injunction and mandatory
injunction has been passed in a mandatory execution thereto, the Executing Court is
competent to direct the removal of the obstruction and enforcing the perpetual injunction
passed by the civil Court. In this case, the defendants took a defence under Section 22 of the
Easements Act but this plea was turned down by the Hon'ble Supreme Court by holding that,
they have allowed the perpetual injunction and mandatory injunction granted by the trial
Court to become final, it would be no defence for the respondent to plead that he had not
obstructed the passage etc. or that as passed by the High Court, a part of the property in
which the original shop was constructed, was not part of the property in the original suit. In
other words, if a judgment-debtor had suffered the decree, no attempt to circumvent the
perpetual injunction and mandatory injunction can be permitted. Non-compliance is a
continuing disobedience entailing penal consequences and separate fresh suit, is barred under
Section 49 of CPC and, therefore, the Hon'ble Supreme Court came to hold that it was
competent for the Executing Court to effect recovery of the property in question even in a suit
where mandatory injunction/perpetuity injunction have been granted.
7. In the light of the aforesaid discussion, I have no hesitation in holding that the writ
application deserves to be dismissed and am of the view that none of the contentions raised in
the application, are worthy of any further consideration and, therefore, the writ application
stands dismissed. All interim orders stand vacated and Executing Court is directed to
implement the direction of the Revisional Court forthwith preferably, within a period of three
months from the date of receipt of copy of this judgment and for such purpose, if necessary, it
shall be open for the trial Court to consider the necessity for issue notice to the local police
administration to assist in effecting implementation of the directions of the Executing Court.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Suit No. 712 of 1982
Decided On: 19.05.1987
Appellants: Usha Sales Ltd. and Ors.
Vs. Respondent: Aruna Gupta and Anr.
Hon'ble Judges/Coram: Jagdish Chandra, J.
Counsels: S.B. Ghosh, T.K. Ganju and P.K. Agarwal, Advs
Subject: Property
Catch Words
Mentioned IN
Acts/Rules/Orders:
Indian Companies Act; Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 - Section 14, Delhi Rent Control Act,
1958 - Section 15; Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 14, Specific Relief Act, 1963 -
Section 16, Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 38, Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section
38(3), Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 41; Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House
Rates Control Act, 1947 - Section 12, Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates
Control Act, 1947 - Section 13, Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947 - Section 28; Transfer of Property Act; Court Fees Act - Section 11; Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 - Section 2(12), Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 - Order 8 Rule 5 , Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 - Order 20 Rule 12
Citing Reference:
Discussed
7
Case Note:
Civil - Court-fees - Land-lady and Defendant No. 2 resisted entry of Plaintiff no. 2 in
premises in question on ground that lease deed in respect of tenancy premises was only
for residence of Company's previous General Manager and for no other officer of
Company and that lease had come to end after said Manager had left services of
Company and handed over possession of same - Hence, this Petition - Whether, suit was
properly valued for purposes of court-fees - Held, Plaintiffs did not know at time of
filing of suit as to when they would be allowed to use peacefully demised premises and
thus, could not possibly state valuation for purposes of court-fees in plaint in respect of
future damages from date of institution of suit till date they were allowed to use
peacefully premises in question - However, valuation of future damages from date of
institution of suit till date Plaintiffs were allowed to use peacefully tenanted premises,
could not be included in "valuation for purposes of court-fees nor were Plaintiffs
required to pay any court fees in respect of same - Therefore, plaint was properly
valued for purposes of court-fees and that correct court-fees was paid thereon and issue
was decided partly in favor of Plaintiffs and partly against them.
Tenancy - Maintainability - Whether, suit was maintainable and barred in view of
provisions of Sections 14, 16, 38 and 41 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Held, even
though with exit of previous General Manager of Plaintiff-company, contractual
tenancy came to end, Company became statutory tenant in respect of demised premises
- However, statutory tenant enforced his right under statute and not under contract -
Sections 14 and 16 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 pertained to specific enforceability of
contract and not statutory right - Section 41(e) of the Act talked of contract and there
was no bar with regard to enforcement of such right to property and particularly such
right flowing from a statute - Hence, said issues were decided in favor of Plaintiffs and
against Defendants.
Tenancy - Interpretation - Whether, Plaintiff-company or previous General Manager of
Plaintiff-company was tenant of demised premises - Held, Ext.DWI/X-4 stated that
Company and not previous manager was tenant of property in question - However,
plaint was dated only week prior to filing of suit and lease deed was executed by
Company in favor of land-lady and not manager of Company - Even though Ext. PW1/6
was filled up by previous manager in favor of Company, same could not make him
tenant in respect thereof under land-lady and it was Company which was really
intended to be tenant - Further, assertions in two letters Ext. P2 appeared to have been
made by Defendants for their own benefit as they apprehended that Company, after
resignation of manager from company, could put in possession of tenanted premises
some other officer of its own - Thus, Plaintiff-company was tenant of premises in
question and this issue was decided in favor of Plaintiffs.
Tenancy - Statutory tenant - Whether, suit premises were taken for use and occupation
of previous manager of company and Plaintiff No. 2 had any right to enter premises in
suit and use and occupy same without consent of Defendant No. I - Held, in view of
mandatory provision of Section 14 of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958, insertion of
clause that premises in question be used only by previous manager, in contract of lease,
could be of no avail to landlady for dispossessing Company from said premises unless
and until landlady brought her case on any of grounds of eviction set out in Section 15
of the Act - However, Plaintiff-company had become statutory tenant under landlady
after resignation of said manager from Company - Hence, Company had right to use
premises in question for residence of any other Officer of its own including Plaintiff
No.2 without obtaining consent of landlady until Company was evicted under Section 14
of the Act - So, these issues were decided in favor of Plaintiffs.
Tenancy - Surrender of tenancy - Whether, contract of lease was frustrated in view of
resignation of previous manager from Plaintiff-company and suit premises were
surrendered by him to Defendant No.1 - Held, as tenant in premises in question was
Company and not previous manager of company, said manager had no right to
surrender possession of premises in question to landlady and possession could be
surrendered only by tenant-Company - No effort was made by Plaintiffs to amend
plaint and replication regarding date on morning of which previous manager of
company had delivered possession of premises in question - Plaintiff No.3 verified
Company's furniture in premises in question in absence of manager - Para 7 of
replication made it clear that key of premises and furniture etc. were handed over to
official of Company on morning of date in question by manager himself in premises
itself - Thus, suit premises were surrendered by previous manager to landlady on behalf
of Company only and issue was decided accordingly partly in favor of Plaintiffs and
partly in favor of Defendants.
Property - Validity of lease agreement - Whether, lease agreement vitiated by coercion,
as alleged, or unjustified or illegal in any manner - Held, no writing by way of protest
was sent by Company to landlady for insertion of impugned clause of user of premises
in question only for residence of manager of Plaintiff-company and for no other officer
of Company, as having been result of any coercion on her part - Thus, issue was decided
against Plaintiffs.
Tenancy - Compensation - Whether, Plaintiffs 2 and 3 were illegally detained by
Defendants and were entitled to any compensation - Held, Ext. P2 showed that manager
of Plaintiff-company had informed landlady that he had resigned from Company and
would vacate house on relevant date and said letter was supported by plaint and
replication of Plaintiff, which in turn ran down version of Plaintiff no.2 and his
companions coming to premises in question on relevant date and being locked by
landlady - Thus, Plaintiffs 2 and 3 were not illegally detained by Defendants and no
compensation could be awarded to them and issue was decided against Plaintiffs.
Property - Injunction - Whether, Plaintiffs were entitled to injunction restraining
Defendants from disturbing their possession, in respect of premises given to Plaintiff
No. 1 on rent and damages - Held, even after lapse and termination of contractual
tenancy, Company became statutory tenant under landlady and was entitled to
statutory protection and could enforce right of irremovability from premises in question
through injunction - Clause in lease-deed that premises in question could be used for
residence of previous manager of Plaintiff-company alone had no adverse effect on
aforesaid statutory right of Company and that right of Company could be protected by
grant of injunction - Suit premises were surrendered by manager to landlady on behalf
of Company - Thus, Company remained in possession of premises in question upto said
surrender and no damages could be allowed to Company against Defendants for any
period up to filing of suit - However, Court could grant relief only as on date of suit and
not on subsequent cause of action as there was no other provision for decreeing any
amounts or compensation paid or received during pendency of suit or for payment of
court fees after passing of decree - Hence, Plaintiffs were entitled to injunction and not
to damages and issue was decided partly in favor of Plaintiffs and partly against them.
Ratio Decidendi:
"Statutory tenant shall be entitled to statutory protection in respect of its status of
irremovability unless evicted under enabling provisions of relevant statute."
JUDGMENT
Jagdish Chandra, J.
(1) In this suit the plaintiffs seek the following reliefs against the defendants in respect of the
itemizes in dispute comprising the first floor premises of* the house known as 99-Anand
Lok, New Delhi and the second floor in the annexe premises and the car parking space on the
ground floor, therein :
(a) restraining defendants from obstructing the plaintiffs their employees representatives,
and/or causing obstruction in any manner whatsoever, from going to and using the 1st floor
premises and the Car Park space at ground floor, of the house known as 99, Anand Lok, New
Delhi.
(B)restraining the defendants from disturbing the possession of the plaintiffs, in respect of the
premises, given to plaintiff No. 1 on rent, in house No. 99, Anand Lok, New Delhi.
(C)to pass a decree in the sum) of Rs. 1,04,000 as compensation for damages caused to the
plaintiff.
(D)a decree for further damages at the rate of Rs. 3100 per month and Rs. 500 per day from
5-5-1982 till the date the plaintiffs are allowed to use peacefully these premises.
(2) plaintiff No. 1 M/ s. Usha Sales Ltd., New Delhi (hereinafter to be referred to as the
Company) is a limited company duly registered under the Indian Companies Act, and
plaintiffs 2 and 3 are respectively its marketing manager and a senior officer. The premises in
question were taken on lease by the Company from the defendants at a monthly rental of Rs.
3100 out of which the rental of Rs. 2100 was towards the first floor of the main premises and
the remaining Rs. 1100 towards the second floor of the annexe premises and the car parking
space on the ground floor. The premises m question were allotted by the Company to its
previous General Manager L. L. Jain for his residence who subsequently tendered his
resignation from the service of the company on 6-2-1982 and whose resignation was accepted
and who was ultimately relieved by the Company from its service on 5-5-1982, and who also
handed over the possession of the said premises along with furniture etc. to the company on
that very day. The dispute between the parties arose in respect of these premises when
plaintiff no. 2 S. N. Sarma, the marketing manager of the Company who was transferred from
Hyderabad to Delhi, was sought to be put into possession of the premises in question and
who had brought with him a truck load of .his luggage to these premises and when his entry
in these premises was sought to be resisted by the land-lady Ms. Aruna Gupta and her
husband Bharat Kumar Gupta defendant No. 2 on the ground that the lease deed in respect of
the tenancy premises was only for the residence of the Company's previous General Manager
L. L. Jain and for no other officer of the Company and that the lease had come to an end after
L. L. Jain had left the services of the Company and handed over the possession of the
premises in question The allegations of the plaintiffs are that when S. N. Sarma. Saniay
Wndhawan co-plaintiff Ms. S. N. Sarma and Company's Chowkidar named Pancham went up
and got into the first floor of House No. 99, Anand Lok, New Delhi, the defendants, all of a
sudden, locked the door of the staircase on the ground floor which is the only access to the
premises in question en the first floor and a further intention of causing further harassment to
them, cut-off the electricity, telephone and water connections of the first floor premises as a
result of which the above-mentioned four persons were illegally and forcibly detained and
confined to the first floor of the premise against their wishes by the defendants for about four
hours and they were thus deprived of the aforesaid facilities of electricity, water and
telephone as also the meals during the aforesaid period of their wrongful confinement and
they were also unable to communicate with any person outside the said premises, not even
the office of the company. It is further alleged that these persons also suffered from agony-
mental as well as physical-accompanied by a severe shock to their nervous system. Sanjay
Wadhawan plaintiff No. 2 was able to inform the management of the Company about the
aforesaid wrongful detentions, through a slip written by him and thrown out of the first floor
premises to a peon of the Company who was standing outside near the truck carrying the
luggage of S. N. Sarma. When the other officers of the Company rushed to the premises in
question they demanded and persuaded the landlady defendant no. I to open the door to the
staircase whereupon plaintiffs S. N. Sarma and Sanjay Wadhawan together with Mrs. Sarma
and Chowkidar Panjan were in a position to come down. Both the parties then complained to
the police and on whose intervention the luggage of S. N. Sarma was kept in the tenanted
annexe on the second floor of the premises.
(3) It is also asserted that the defendants are not allowing the plaintiffs and the Company's
officers I representatives to so to the first floor premises in the main building and to use the
same for the residence of its officer S. N. Sarma plaintiff No. 2, and have threatened to cause
obstruction in future, in case any attempt was made by the plaintiff to go to the first floor or
park the car on the ground floor of the tenants premises and use the same for the residence of
its any other officers including plaintiff no. 2 S. N. Sarma and further that even the essential
.facilities like water, electricity and telephone connections which had been illegally cut-off by
the defendants, have lot been restored uptil now as a result of which the Company is unable
to use the first floor premises and the parking space on the ground floor any more and enjoy
the aforesaid essential amenities since 5-5-1982. The aforesaid telephone connection belongs
to the Company.
(4) It is also asserted that plaintiff No. 2 S. N. Sarma who had come from Hyderabad on
transfer bag and baggage had been allotted by the Company the premises in dispute turn his
residence but on account of the aforesaid obstructionist attitude and activity of the defendants
S. N. Sarma has been compelled to stay in Lodi Hotel with his family, against his will as a
result of which the Company is suffering unnecessary loss. The covenant in the lease-deed to
the effect that the premises in question shall not be used for the residence of any other officer
of the Company except L. L. Jain, unless otherwise agreed to by the landlady, has been
challenged by the plaintiffs as unenforceable in law and the landlady can evict the Company
which is now the statutory tenant, only under the provision of the Delhi Rent Control Act,
1958 but is not entitled to obstruct the Company in the fashion resorted to by her. The
aforesaid co nant in the lease-deed is also assailed by the plaintiffs as a result of the coercion
asserting that the Company was badly in need of a residential premises for the residence of its
officers as getting a suitable accommodation in Delhi and particularly in South Delhi, was a
difficult task, and the rents going up high every day, the general tendency of the landlords
was to get the maximum rents of their property with an expectation of increase thereof every
six months and thin putting the tenants to accept their terms and the defendants being no
exception, the Company was, thus, coerced to accept this term in the lease deed. It is further
asserted that the Company would not .agree to the demand of the landlady for the
enhancement of the install from Rs. 3.100 to Rs. 4,000 per month for the induction of another
officer of the Company.
(5) For the above-mentioned conduct on the part of the defendants the aforesaid reliefs have
been claimed in this suit.
(6) The suit has been resisted by the. defendants who while conceding the tenancy in respect
of the premises in question Have raised certain preliminary objections to the effect that the
suit" not maintainable and is even otherwise barred by Ss. 14, 16. 38 and 41 of the Specific
Relief Act. 1963 and does not disclosed any cause of action against them and also that the
suit is not properly valued for .purposes of court fees and jurisdiction. It is asserted that in
view of the clear term provided in the lease-deed that the premises in question were let out to
the Company only for the residence of one specified and particular officer of the Company
named L L. Jain and for the occupation of no other officer of the Company, and L. L. Jain
having resigned from the Company, the Company is barred from using or allowing the use of
the premises in question by its am other officer or employee. The defendants have also
pleaded that in fact it was L. L. Jain who was the tenant of the defendants in the premises in
question but as he was not to pay rent himself out of his own pocket but was to be paid by the
Company, it was in those circumstances that in the lease-deed the Company was shown as a
lessee, while in substance and reality the premises were let out only to L. L. Jain and the fact
remained that for all intents and purposes L L, Jain was the tenant. It was further pleaded that
even if assuming though not admitting that the Company was a tenant, the lease was meant
only for the benefit of L. L. Jain and it was clearly understood that in case L. L. Jain ceased to
be in the employment of the Company for any reason whatsoever, the contract of lease would
stand discharged and would cease io be enforceable and the Company would no longer be the
tenant in the premises in question and the possession thereof would be immediately handed
over to the defendants and the Company being bound by the aforesaid expressed and implied
terms of the contract of lease was bound by the same and cons quaintly the suit was wholly
untenable, misconceived, mala fide and fraudulent. It is also asserted that L. L. Jain had
already delivered possession of the premises in question to defendant No. 1 on 14-5-1982,
either for himself and\or on behalf of the Company, denying the assertion of the Company
that lie possession was delivered by L. T.. Jain to it, with the result that the suit for injunction
was not maintainable.
(7) The defendants have also asserted that it was L, L. Jain who was quite well known to the
defendants as he himself was a Chartered Accountant and defendant No. 2 was also a
Chartered Accountant and had assured and represented to the defendants that he was to take
the premises on lease but as the rent was to be paid by the Company the lease deed would be
executed by the Company in favor of the land lady defendant No. I, that he would himself
reside in the premises and that the lease would be only for his benefit and residence and for
no other, officer or employee of t:ic Company and that in Case he was transferred out of
Delhi or ceased to be in the employment of the Company the lease would stand discharged
and would be unenforceable and that he would hand over the possession of the premises to
them and the Company would then have no right, title or interest therein and that it was on
those representation and assurance of L. L. Jain that the said premises were given on lease to
him through the rent-notes were executed and handed over in the name of the Company.
(8) The allegations of the plaintiffs regarding the illegal or wrongful confinement and
detention of plaintiffs 2 and 3, Mrs. Sarma and Company's Chowkidar named Pancham are
specifically denied by asserting to the contrary that the plaintiffs with a squad of 20 persons
tried to forcly occupy the first floor pleases which was objected to and resisted by the
defendants and other residents of the colony since their action was wholly wrongful, illegal,
violent and criminal in nature and content whereupon the Flying Squad was summoned and it
was on the intervention of and on the protection given by the police that the plaintiffs could
not force entry into the first floor premises but to avoid the occurrence of violence at the
hands of the plaintiffs, and at the instance of the police the Company was permitted to keep
the luggage of plaintiff No. 2 S. N. Sarma on the second floor of the annexe presses which
they had brought in a truck along with the squad more than 20 persons and then arrangement
was permitted subject to the determination of the dispute between the parties "elating to the
premises in question and, thus, the assertions of the plaintiffs in regard the their actual
physical possession of the first floor premises as also the annexe premises have been denied
by the defendants as absolutely baseless and false.
(9) The allegation regarding the cutting of the amenities such as electricity, water and
telephone connections of the first floor by the defendants on that date or any other date lias
also been denied Thus, the claim for any compensation damages has also been controverter. It
is also challenged that the defendants have no right to obstruct the unlawful act on the part of
the plaintiffs to make an forcible entry into these premises or that the aforesaid covenant in
the lease-deed that the premises in question were meant only for the residence of L. L. Jain
and for none else, was not binding upon the plaintiffs. The assertion that the landlady wanted
to increase .the rent and had got inserted the aforesaid covenant in the lease-deed for that
purpose, was also dented as wholly baseless. They have, thus, asserted their right to prevent
any trespass on the part of the plaintiffs -and to resist any forcible entry in the premises in
question as threatened and being threatened by them.
(10) The pleadings in the written statement were controverter by tile plaintiffs in their
replication and from the pleadings of the parties the following issues were framed:
1.Has the suit been properly valued for the purposes of court-fees; and has the correct court-
fee been paid thereon?
2.Is the suit maintainable in the present form?
3.Is the suit barred in view of the provisions of the Specific Relief Act, especially Sections
14, 16, 38 and 41?
4.Is the tenant of the premises the plaintiff-company or Mr. L. L. Jain?
5.What is the effect of the clauses in the lease, that the suit premises have been taken for the
use and occupation of Mr. L. L. Jain only?
6.Does the plaintiff No. 2 have any right to enter the premises in suit and use and occupy the
same without the consent of defendant No. I?
7.Has the contract of least been frustrated in view of the resignation of Mr. L. L. Jain from
the plaintiff-company?
8.Has the suit premises been surrendered by Mr. L. L. Jain to defendant No. 1?
9.Is the agreement dated 27th January 1981 vitiated by coercion ,as alleged, or unjustified or
illegal in any manner?
10.Have plaintiffs 2 and 3 been illegally detained by the defendants and are they entitled to
any compensation on this account?
11.Are the plaintiffs entitled to the injunction as sought for and for the damages as
demanded? If so. what is the amount?
12.Relief. Issue No. 1
(11) The perusal of the plaint shows that the plaintiffs claimed further damages against the
defendants at the rate of Rs. 3100 per month and Rs. 500 per day from 5-5-1982 till such date
the plaintiffs 'are allowed to use peacefully tenanted premises in question. No court-fees was
paid in respect of this relief of further damages nor the valuation thereof stated in the plaint
nor purposes of court-fees. The suit was filed in Court on 13-5-1982 and obviously there was
no justification for the plaintiffs in not paying the requisite court-fees and staling the
valuation for purposes of court-fees in respect of these damages at least from the period from
5-5-19-82 till the filing of the suit, i.e. 13-5-1982 and to that extent the objection of the
defendants under this issue is correct.
(12) Regarding the payment of court-fees and the statement of valuation for purposes of court
-fees in the plaint, in respect of the aforesaid further dam-ages from the date of the filing of
the suit till such date the plaintiffs are allowed to use peacefully the tenanted premises, the
objection raised by the defendants is not tenable. The learned counsel for the plaintiffs
contended, and in my opinion correctly, that the valuation of the suit is to be seen only as on
the date of the institution of the suit and not what it shall be on some unknown subsequent
date. In this case it was not known to the plaintiffs at the time when they filed this suit as to
when they would be allowed to use peacefully the demised premises and that was the matter
which rested with the decision of the approbate issue in the suit which decision would
normally be given at the time of the final disposal of the entire suit. With that ignorance the
plaintiffs could not possibly state the valuation for purposes of court-fees in the plaint in
respect of the future damages from the date of the institution of the suit till the date they are
allowed to use peacefully the premises in question. Girja Kuer v. Shiva Prasad Singh and
others MANU/BH/0172/1935 : Air 1935 Pat 160 (1) is the authority cited by the learned
counsel for the plaintiffs in support of this proposition and it was held therein as under :
The value of the suit is its value at the date of the institution of the suit and not what will
become its value on some subsequent date. Future mesne profits being uncertain cannot be
taken into account for the purpose of payment of court-fee and for the purpose of determining
the value of a suit. Applying the analogy of future mesne profits to future damages it is clear
that no court-fee is payable in respect of the damages pendente lite. It follows Therefore that
it cannot be taken into account for determining the value of the suit.
No authority to the contrary on this point was cited by the learned counsel for the defendants.
(13) Consequently, it is held that the suit has not been properly valued for purposes of court-
fee in so far as it omits to put the valuation in respect of the claim for damages at the rate of
Rs. 3100 per month and Rs. 500 per day for the period from 5-5-1982 till 13-5-1982 the date
of the institution of the suit, and further that court-fees has not been paid by the plaint's for
the claimed damages on those rates for the said period. But retarding the rest of the. claim for
future damages from that date of the institution of the Suit till the date the plaintiffs are
allowed to use peacefully the tenanted premises, the objection of the defendants is not tenable
and any such valuation could not be included in the "valuation for purposes of court-fees nor
were the plaintiffs required to pay any court fees in respect of the same and, thus to that
extent the plaint is held to be properly valued for purposes of court-fees and further that
correct court-fees has been paid thereon. This issue i" decided accordingly partly in favor of
the plaintiffs and partly against them to the extent indicated above. Is gave NOS. 2 & 3
(14) The suit is for the grant of permanent injunction as also for the recovery of damages. The
injunction sought is that the defendants should not obstruct the plaintiffs/their employees
representatives, and/or causing obstruction in any manner whatsoever, from going to and
using the first floor premises and the car park space 'at ground floor of the house known as
99, Anand Lok, New Delhi and further should not disturb the possession of the plaintiffs in
respect thereof. According to the learned counsel for the defendants the contract of lease
stood frustrated as L. L. Jain had left the premises of the company and was no longer in
possession of the demised premises and under the lease-deed the premises in question had
been taken on lease only for the residence of L. L. Jain, an officer of the Company and the
Company was debarred under the lease from using the demised premises for any other
purpose or for the residence of its any other officer, and, thus, there was left no right with the'
Company to enforce against the defendants. This contention " lands repelled for the reason
that even though with the exit of L L. Jam the contractual tenancy came to an end, the
Company became statutory tenant in respect of the demised premises and there is no gain-
saying the fact that statutory tenant is entitled to remain in possession of the tenanted
premises until evicted under the relevant provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 (in
short the Act). The suit is based not on the contract of lease but has been brought for
protecting the Company's statutory estate in the demised premises by protecting against
trespass and interference by the defendants. These plea's find mention in sub-paras (v) to
(viii) of Para 16 of the plaint. For reaming the n foresaid statutory protection the Company
has a right of injunction 'and can also claim damages if such a right has been sought to be
disturbed or interfered with by the defendants.
(15) The Supreme Court has in Biswabani Pvt. Ltd. v. Santosh Kumar Dutta and others
MANU/SC/0486/1979 : [1980]1SCR650 held that a statutory tenant can always file a suit to
ask for an injunction restraining the landlord from interfering with his possession or user of
the premises. In that case the Supreme Court while setting aside the judgment of the High
Court and while holding that the tenant company was a statutory tenant observed that the
statutory tenant would enjoy the protection of the statute and the status of irrevocability
unless he was evicted from the premises under the enabling provisions of the statute and that
such tenant could enforce such right through an injunction. When the statutory tenant asks for
an injunction restraining the landlord from interfering with his possession of the demised
premises ,then he is asserting a property right. Such injunction is permissible under Section
38(3) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 which reads as under :
Perpetual injunction when granted (1)..............,.............. (2) ............................. (3) When the
defendant invades or threatens to invade the plaintiff's right to, or enjoyment of, property the
court may grant a perceptual injunction in the following cases, namely- (a) where the
defendant is trustee of the property for the plaintiff; (b) where there exists no standard for
ascertaining the actual damages caused, or likely to be caused, by the invasion; (e) where the
invasion is such that compensation in money would not afford adequate relief ; (d) where the
injunction is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of judicial proceedings.
The right of the statutory tenant flows not fro a contract but from a statute. The question is
not whether an injunction can be granted to specifically perform a term of a contractor not
and the provisions of Sections 14, 16 and 41 of the Specific Relief Act have Therefore no
relevance or application. The statutory tenant enforces his right under the statute and not
under the contract. Ss. 14 and 16 of the Specific Relief Aet, 1963 pertain to the specific
enforceability of a contract and not a statutory right. S. 41(e) on which reliance has been
placed by the defendants also talks of a contract. There is no bar with regard to the
enforcement of such right to property and, particularly, such right flowing from a statute. It is
for this reason that in MANU/SC/0486/1979 : [1980]1SCR650 (supra) the Supreme Court
granted such injunction to a statutory tenant with the following observations:-
In such circumstances the appellant as tenant would be entitled to protect its possession
unless evicted in due course of law and in order to protect its possession it can legitimately
sue, .there being no bar in law, for a declaration of its status as tenant and for an injunction
either prohibitory or mandatory, -as the case maybe.........
So, these Issues are decided in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants.
(16) Issue NO. 4 The most important piece of evidence which clinches this issue is
Ext.DWI{X-4 which is the certified copy of the plaint of Suit No. 542 of 1982 filed by the
land-lady /defendant No. 1 Smt. Aruna Gupta against the Company defendant No. 1 and L.L.
Jain as defendant No. 2 in the court of Shri Sat Pal, Sub Judge, Delhi. This plaint is dated 6-
5-1982 and it contains clear and unequivocal admissions on the part of the land-lady
regarding the Company M/s. Usha Sales Limited being the tenant of the property in question
under that plaintiffs and it would be advisable to setout the relevant positions from this plaint
and the same are reproduced below :--
1.That the plaintiff is the owner landlord of property No. 99, Anami Lok, New Delhi since
the time it was purchased /built. 2. That with effect from 1-1-1981, the plaintiff let out two
portions of the said property to the defendant No. 1 for use as residence for the defendant No.
2 who is a senior Employee of the defendant No. 1. 3. That the terms and conditions relating
to the tenancy of the defendant No. 2 were reduced into writing by the defendant No. I vide
its communication No. HD/ADG/H.2 dated 27-1-1981, according to which the tenanted
premises No. 2(a) cannot be used for any purpose other than the residence of the defendant
No. 2. 5. ..........keeping with the terms and conditions of the 'tenancy the tenanted premises
cannot be used for any purpose other than the residence of the defendant No. 2. 7. That the
threatened action of the defendants is an explicit breach of the obligations existing in favor of
the plaintiff by virtue of writing dated 27th January, 1981 addressed to the plaintiff by the
defendant No. I in which the terms and conditions relating to the tenancy in respect of the
tenanted premises in question are embodied and the defendant are bound by the same.
(17) So, from the plain reading of the aforesaid paras in the plaint of the suit filed by the land-
lady against M/s. Usha Sales Limited and Shri L. L. Jain, there is left no manner of doubt that
the Company and not L. L. Jain was the tenant of the property in question. One more very
significant, fact which emerges from this plaint is that the landlady unambiguously relies
upon the writing dated 27-1-1981 evidencing the lease in question and addressed by the
Company to the land-lady and further relying fully on the terms and conditions mentioned
therein relating to the tenancy in respect of the tenanted premises in question and which
according to her bound the Company as well as L. L. Jain. It would also be noted that this
plaint is dated 6-5-1982 only a week prior to the filing of the present suit on 13-5-1982
wherein , plaint is dated 12-5-1982. In the face of the aforesaid decisive and clinching
evidence in favor of the Company, no amount of any other evidence would be sufficient to
rebut the same. The lease deed relied upon by the land-lady herself in the above mentioned
plaint Ext. DW1/X-4 filed in the suit in the court of Shri Sat Pal Sub Judge was executed by
the Company in favor of the land-lady and not by L. L. Jain.
(18) The contention raised on behalf of the defendants that the premises let out were meant
only for the residence of L.L. Jam, an officer of the Company and for the residence of no
other officer of the Company except with the consent of the land-lady and, thus, the tenancy
had -been created only for the beneficial interest of L. L. Jain and of no other, and further that
the rent of the premises was also to come from L. L. Jam and not from the Company and,
thus, the tenancy in favor of the Company was only a benami and that the real tenant was L.
L. Jain, cannot be accepted. The defendants placed reliance upon a Performa Ext. (Public
Witness 1/6 which is a proforma of the letter of allotment which the Company is having for
the purpose of the same being filled up by its officers for the purpose of allotment of
residential premises to them. Shri Kameshwar Swarup (FW1) in his cross-examination Co
conceded as correct that the Company had a proforma of the letter of allotment and Ext.
PW1/6 was that proforma. This proforma reads as to flows :
You shall arrange to pay the rent directly to the Accounts Department. In case your
entitlement of house rent subsidy is less than the rental of the above premises, the short fall in
the rent amount shall have to be made good by your. You shall also be responsible for
payment of electricity /water charges or any other dues as per applicable rules in this regard.
Even if such a proforma was filled up by L. L. Jain in favor of the Company, and he was also
liable for the payment of the entire rental of the tenanted premises, the same does not and
cannot make him the tenant in respect thereof under the land-lady and it is the Company
which was really intended to be the tenant. The rent was not to be paid direct by L. L. Jam to
the land-lady but the same was to be paid first by the officer concerned in the accounts
department of the Company and it was then that the Company was pay the rent to the land-
lady. Such an arrangement with circumlocution is not for nothing and it is a matter of
common knowledge that such arrangements are frequently made with the land-lords by the
various companies though the premise are taken by the companies for the residence of their
officers, Such arrangement involves the direct responsibility of the Company for the payment
of rent to the land-lady who appears to have more faith in an organisation for the regular
payment of rent without default than in an individual tenant who is more prone -to making
defaults or is being irregular , the payment of rent. -This is very important and Significant
.aspect of the matter in the creation of tenancy.
(19) The learned counsel for the plaintiffs placed reliance on two letters Ext. P2 dated 30-4-
1982 and dated 8-5-1982 (Annexure I to the replication). The letter Ext. P2 was addressed by
the land-lady to the Executive Director of the Company whereas the letter dated 8-5-1982 is
from Bharat Kumar Gupta defendant No. 2, husband of the land-lady Shri Charat Ram. It was
argued on behalf of the plaintiffs that since both the letters were addressed to the Company
the lease must be held in favor of the Company itself, as it was the Company which was
requested in these letters to see that the vacant possession of the tenanted premises was
handed over by it/L. L. Jain when he vacated the premises in question on 5-5-1982 as he had
resigned from the Company. The learned counsel for the defendants submitted that the
reliance of the plaintiffs on these two letters for the aforesaid result was misconceived and
unwarranted Inasmuch as both these letters made the matter clear in favor of the defendants.
The letter Ext. P2 dated 30-4-1982 states as under:- Kindly refer to the lease agreement
entered by me with you in respect of the above premises let out to your L. L. Jain..........". In
the second letter dated 8-5-1982 it is stated as follows :- As I wanted to have some company
in house of my taste I agreed to let out its 1st floor to your Mr. L. L. Jain on 27th January,
1981. Mr. L, L Jain informed me that the rent shall be paid by Messrs Usha Sales Limited, a
Company of which he was then an employee...........". The aforesaid assertions appearing in
these two letters are without any basis and are, in fact, admissions of the defendants in their
own favor and are almost meaningless view of the unmistakable admission of the land-lady in
the plaint of the suit filed by her in the court of Shri Sat Pal, Sub Judge, Delhi. The reliance
on these two letters by the plaintiffs appears to be only in a limited sense as to why these
letters were written by the defendants to the Company when L. L. Jain was the tenant and not
the Company and that the necessity of writing these letters appeared to the defendant for the
reason that the Company was the tenant. The aforesaid assertions in these two letters by the
defendants that the premises had been let out to L. L. Jain appear to have been made by the
defendants for their own benefit as they apprehended that the Company, after resignation of
L. L. Jain from the company, would put in possession of the tenanted premises some other
officer of its own. So, these assertions having been made in imminent anticipation of the
aforesaid probable trouble emanating from the Company, can be given no importance in
favor of the defendants. Under these circumstances, it is held that it is the plaintiff-company
and not its officer L. L Jain who was the tenant of the premises in question and this issue is
found accordingly in favor of the plaintiffs. Issue Nos. 5 & 6
(20) The contention of the learned counsel for the defendants is that as provided in the
contract of lease the suit premises could be used only for the residence of L. L. Jain an
employee of the Company and for no other purpose. The learned counsel also made it clear
during the course of arguments that the defendants were not in any manner seeking the
eviction of the Company from the said premises but the Company would be bound, under the
lease agreement, to use the premises only for that particular purpose, i.e., for the residence of
L. L. Jain and for no other purpose. It is the admitted case of both the parties that the tenanted
premises in question have been used by L. L. Jain for his residence and further that L. L. Jain
has ceased to be in the employment of the Company and is not in occupation of the demised
premises. On the other hand, the contention of the learned counsel for the plaintiffs is that in
the face of the aforesaid clause in the lease-deed, the suit premises were used only by L. Jain
and by none-else and after the exit of L. L. Jain from the services of the Company and from
the premises in question, the contractual lease came to an end and even by the letter Ext. P2
dated 30-4-1982 the land lady had called upon the Company to hand over actual physical
possession of the premises to her as on account of the resignation of G. L. L. Jain from the
Company and his leaving the premises the Company was under an obligation to vacate the
same. and thereby the land lady had terminated the contractual tenancy. The learned counsel
has further urged that on the equating of the contractual tenancy the statutory tenancy in favor
of the Company would come into operation and the right of the statutory tenant to remain in
the premise cannot be interfered with except -through the order of eviction by the Rent
Controller under any one of the grounds of eviction set out in 14 of the Delhi Rent Control
Act. 1958 and that no such order of eviction has been passed against the Company nor has the
landlady instituted any eviction proceedings to obtain such an eviction order. The opening
word of S. 14 of the Act is non-obstante provision according to which notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any other law or contract, no decree or order for the
recovery of possession of any premises shall be made by any court or Controller in favor of
the landlord against a tenant, except B that on an application made by the landlord, in the
prescribed manner, the Controller may pass an order for the recovery possession of the
promises on one or more of the grounds enumerated there under. So, in view of this
mandatory provision of law the insertion of the aforesaid clause of the premises in question to
be used only by L. L. Jain, in the contract of lease, can be of no avail to landlady for
dispossessing the Company/tenant from the said premises unless and until the landlady can
bring her case on any of grounds of eviction set out in S. 15 of the Act. Nagindas Ramdas v.
Dalpatram Is haram alias Brijram and others MANU/SC/0417/1973 : [1974]2SCR544 was
dialing with the case under Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act (57
of 1947) (at 475) observed as follows:--- Construing the provisions of Ss. 12, 13 and 28 of
the Bombay Rent Act in the light of the public policy which permeates the entire scheme and
structure of the Act, there is no escape from the conclusion that the Rent Court under this Act
is not competent to pass a decree for possession either in invite or with the consent of the
parties on a ground which is de hors the Act or ultra virus the Act. The existence of one of the
statutory grounds mentioned in Ss. 12, and is a sine qua non to the exercise of jurisdiction by
the Rent Court under those provisions. Even parties cannot by their consent confer such
jurisdiction on the Rent Court to do something which according to the legislative mandate, it
could not do". In Smt. Hai Bahu v. Lala Ramnarayan and others MANU/SC/0367/1977 :
[1978]1SCR723 it was held as follows :-- It is well-settled that where the Rent Control and
Restrictions Acts are in operation, a landlord cannot obtain 'eviction of the tenant unless he
can satisfy the requirements of the provisions in those Acts. The general law of landlord and
tenant to that extent will give way to the Special Act in that behalf. It is also well-settled that
if the court does not find the permissible grounds for eviction disclosed in the pleadings and
other materials on record, no consent or compromise will give jurisdiction to the court to pass
a valid decree of eviction". Then again in V. Dhanapal Chettiar v. Yesodai Ammal
MANU/SC/0505/1979 : [1980]1SCR334 7-Judges Bench of the Supreme Court in a
unanimous decision made the following observations :
It will bear repetition to say that under the Transfer of Property Act in order to entitle the
landlord to recover possession determination of the lease is necessary as during its
continuance he could not recover possession, while under the State Rent Act the landlord
becomes entitled to recover possession only on the fulfillment of the rigour of law provided
therein. Otherwise not. He cannot recover possession merely by determination of tenancy.
Then the same authority at page 1753 (para 16) made the following observations :
Even if the lease is determined by a forfeiture under the Transfer of Property Act the tenant
continues to be a tenant, that is to say, there is no forfeiture in the eye of law. The tenant
becomes liable to be evicted and forfeiture comes into play only if he has incurred the
liability to be evicted under the State Rent Act, uoi otherwise.
(21) In the case reported in Biswabani Pvt. Ltd. v. Santosh Kumar Dutta and others
MANU/SC/0486/1979 : [1980]1SCR650 there was a clause that after 5 years the tenant shall
deliver possession and that after the said period he would be treated as a trespasser. The
tenant did not deliver possession and the High Court passed an eviction decree saying that it
would lead to evil consequences, if a party who solemnly agreed to deliver possession was
allowed to resile from his promise. But the Supreme Court set aside the High Court judgment
saying that any 'agreement contrary to the provisions of the Rent Act is invalid and that if the
landlord could enforce such as agreement then it would make a mockery of the provisions of
the said Act. 122
(22) The Calcutta High Court relying on the agreement between the parties to deliver
possession had observed thus :
Here is a party who has solemnly entered into an agree- ment, has enjoyed the benefit of it,
has committed, a flagrant breach of it and now wishes the law to come to his aid and protect
him from evil consequences of the appellant succeeds it would be no unhappy state of affairs.
(23) But the Supreme Court while commenting on this observation of the High Court and
while setting aside, the High Court Judgment observed thus :
And this feeling of righteous indignation completely ignores the overriding provisions of the
relevant Rent Restriction Act which came to the aid of every tenant in its area of operation on
the determination of contractual tenancy. At its commencement every lease would have its
origin in a bilateral contract which except for lease for indefinite period of permanent lease
would be for some specified duration. On the expiry of the period the solemn implied
promise or assurance is to return possession. If such a promise is to be enforced overlooking
or ignoring Rent Restriction Act it would make a mockery of protection extended by Rent
Restriction Act.
(24) Dialing with a case under Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 the Supreme Court in Smt.Gian
Devi Anand v. Jeevan Kumar and others MANU/SC/0381/1985 : AIR1985SC796 observed
as follows :
Keeping in view the main object of Rent Control Legislation, the position of a tenant whose
contractual tenancy has been determined has to be under- stood in the light of the provisions
of the Rent Acts. Though provisions of all the Rent Control Acts are not uniform, the
common feature of all the Rent Control Legislation is that a contractual tenant on the
termination of the contractual tenancy is by virtue of the provisions of the Rent Acts not
liable to be evicted as a matter of course under the ordinary law of the land and he is entitled
to remain in possession even after determination of the contractual tenancy and order or
decree for eviction will be passed against a tenant unless any ground which entities the
landlord to get an order or decree for possession specified in the Act is established. In other
swords, the common feature of every Rent (Control Act is that it affords protection to every
tenant 'against eviction despite termination of tenancy except on grounds recognised by the
Act and no order or .decree for eviction shall be passed against the tenant unless any such
ground is established to the satisfaction of the Court.
So, in view of these authorities of the Supreme Court the clause in question in the lease-deed
that the suit premises have been taken for the residence of L.L. Jain only, has no adverse
effect against the plaintiff Company which has become a statutory tenant under the landlady
defendant ; No. 1 after the resignation of L.L. Jain from the Company, and further that after
the exit of L. L. Jain, the Company has a right to use the premises in question for the
residence of any other Officer of its own including plaintiff No. 2 S. N. Sarma without
obtaining the consent of the landlady/deft. No. 1 until the Company is evicted under S. 14 of
the Act. So, both these issues are decided in favor of the plaintiffs. Issue NO. 7
(25) It has already been discussed and held under some earlier issues that the contract of lease
has been frustrated in view of the resignation of L.L. Jain from the Company but this does not
affect adversely the right of the Company to retain possession of the premises in question as a
statutory tenant and not to be dispossessed except by order of eviction passed under S. 14 of
the Act.
(26) In view of the finding under issue no. 4 that the tenant in the premises. in question is the
Company and not L.L. Jain this issue loses relevance because L.L. Jain not being a tenant had
no right to surrender possession of the premises in question to the landlady and the
possession could be surrendered only by the 'tenant-Company.
(27) Kameshwar Swarup (Public Witness 1), Secretary and Manager (Legal) of the Company
as also plaintiff No. 2 S. N. Sarma (PW2) and plaintiff No. 3 Sanjay Wadhawan (Public
Witness 3) have deposed that the keys of the first floor of House No. 99" Anand Lok, New
Delhi had been delivered by L.L. Jain to the Company on the morning of 4-5-1982 and the
same were given by the Company to S.N. Sarma (Public Witness 2) on the evening of 4-5-
1982 and that on his application Ext. PWI/5 for allotment of the premises in question, the
letter of allotment Ext. PWI{6 was issued by the Company in his favor on that very day, i.e.
4-5-1982 and that it was on the next day on 5-5-1982 at about 8.00 A.M., Mr. Sarma along
with his wife, Sanjay Wadhawan and one Chowkidar named Pancham entered the first floor
of the said house despite resistance by the landlady who locked them in the premises in
question by locking the door at the ground floor from where the stairs led to the first floor.
On the other hand, the position taken up by the defendants as also in the testimony of the
landlady Smt. Aruna Gupta defendant No. 1 as DW1 is that it was on 14-5-1982 that L.L.
Jain had delivered vacant possession of premises in question to her vide possession receipt
Ext. DW/1 which was proved by S.N. Gupta (DW2) who is one of the attesting witnesses of
the same by stating that it had been signed by L.L. Jain in his presence and that it was attested
by him as also by one Mr. Chhabra in the presence of L. L. Jain. He further stated that L.L.
Jain vacated the said premises on that very day, i.e. 14-5-1982.
(28) In para 5 of the plaint the plaintiffs asserted that L.L. Jain had vacated the premises and
handed over the possession of the same to the Company on 5-5-1982 and on the same day
itself S. N. Sarma had moved into the said premises with his personal belongings. In Para 5 of
the plaint is reproduced below :
c Shri L.L. Jain vacated the aforesaid premises and handed over the possession of the
premises under tenancy and other items like furniture. Cooler, and Air-Conditioner etc. to the
plaintiff-company on 5th May, 1982. The plaintiff's another Officer Shri S. N. Sarma
(plaintiff No. 2) Marketing Manager who had been transferred from Hyderabad to New
Delhi, moved into the aforesaid premises with his personal belongings on 5th May, 1982,
itself.
It was also stated in para 4 of the plaint that Mr. L. L. Jam was relieved from the service of
the Company on 5th May 1982.
(29) In para 7 of the preliminary objections of the written statement the defendants averred as
under :
THAT Shri L. L. Jain has already delivered possession of the premises in question namely
the first floor of house No. 99, Anand Lok, New Delhi to defendant " No. 1 either for himself
and/or on behalf of the plaintiff company to the defendant No. 1 on 14-5-1982......
In the corresponding para 7 of the replication the plaintiffs stated as follows :
IT is denied for want of knowledge that Mr. L. L. Jain has already delivered possession of the
premises in question namely the first floor of house No. 99 Anand Lok, New Delhi to the
Defendant No. 1, either for himself and/or on behalf of plaintiff company to the Defendant
No. 1 on 14-5-1982. As far as the plaintiff No. 1 knows that Mr. L.L. Jain has not given the
possession of the premises to the Defendant No. I on 14-5-1982. On 5-5-1982, as already
stated in the plaint, the keys of the premises and the furniture and/or other goods which were
given to Mr. L. L. Jain by the company were handed over to the official of the plaintiff
company on the morning of 5-5-1982 by Mr. L. L. Jain himself in the premises itself and on
that very date the plaintiff No. 2 went inside the premises for keeping his luggage.
So, the date 5-5-1982 is reiterated in the replication by the plaintiffs as the one on the
morning of which the keys of the premises and the furniture etc. given by the Company to L.
L. Jain, were handed over to the official of the plaintiff-company by L.L. Jain himself in the
premises itself and it was on that very date that S. N. Sarma went inside the premises for
keeping his luggage.
(30) It was contended that the denial of the plaintiffs for want of knowledge regarding
surrendering of possession of L. L. Jain to the landlady on 14-5-1982, is no denial in the eye
of law and the averment on that point in para 7 of the preliminary objections of the written
statement would be deemed to have been admitted by the plaintiff in view of the provision of
law contained in Order 8 Rule 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and further that the aforesaid
pleadings in the plaint as also" in the replication would' belie the story now put forth in the
testimony of plaintiffs' witnesses that L. L, Jain had surrendered the 'possession of the
premises in question along with keys on the morning 6f 4-5-1982. This contention of the
learned counsel' for the defendants has much force.
(31) Kameshwar Swarup (Public Witness 1) Secretary and Manager (Legal) of the Company
admitted in his cross-examination :
"The plaintiff company lost possession of the first floor 14th, 1982 because the defendants
produced in court a certificate of possession issued by Mr. L. L. Jain." It is also an admitted
case of the plaintiffs that they again got the possession of the premises in question from the
defendants on the morning of 28-5-82 vide possession receipt Ext. D3 of the even date issued
by the Company. The statement of Kameshwar Swarup (Public Witness I) recorded earlier on
this point is instructive :-
"ON14-5-1982 "we lost possession of the tenanted premises as the defendants removed
Company's belongings by breaking open the locks and stored the same in the garage on the
ground floor as well as on the car parking space. Thereafter by the order of 'this Court dated
27-5-1982 w.e (the plaintiff company) were declared as tenants of these premises and the
plaintiffs obtained possession back of the tenanted premises on 28-5-1982 and we gave a
possession receipt to the defendants. Ext. D3 is that possession receipt."
(32) No effort was made by the plaintiffs to amend the plaint and the replication regarding the
date 5-5-1982 on the morning of which L. L. Jain is alleged to have delivered possession of
the premises in question along with the Company's furniture therein and the keys to the
Company It was, however, in his cross-examination that Sanjay Wadhawan (Public Witness
3) who is also plaintiff No. 3 in this case, stated that - "Shri L. L. Jain handed over possession
of the premises in question to the company on the morning of 4th May, 1982 and there is
only a typing mistake in the plaint wherein the date is mentioned as 5th May, 1982 (latter
portion volunteered). I am not aware if there is a similar mistake even in the replication. I
signed the plaint as well as the replication." He further stated as under :
"L.L.Jain handed over to him the keys of the premises on 4th May, 1982 in the office. No
receipt w
So, from his aforesaid statement occurring in his crossexamination it would appear that he
verified the Company's furniture in the premises in question in the absence of L.L. Jain after
he had left. If his statement that there was only a typing mistake in the plaint wherein the date
is mentioned as 5th May, 1982, it would mean that thereby hs meant that the date mentioned
therein ought to have been 4th May, 1982 and not 5th May, 1982. But it would be seen that in
para 5 of the plaint and para 7 of the replication in reply to the preliminary objection no. 7 of
the written statement the date 5th May, 1982 has been asserted as the date both for handing
over the possession of the premises and other items like furniture etc. to the Company as also
to the moving of plaintiff No. 2 S. N. Sarma into the said premises with his personal
belongings and the use of the word 'itself in para 5 of the plaint and the use of the words 'on
that very date' in para 7 of the replication pertaining to that date are meaningful in that
context and the aforesaid para 7 of the replication further makes it clear that the key? of the
premises and furniture etc. were handed over by L.L. Jain to the official of the Company on
the morning of 5th May, 1982 by L. L. Jain himself in the premises itself thereby belying the
aforesaid Explanation given by Sanjay Wadhavan (Public Witness 3) that he verified the
furniture etc. in the premises in question on the morning of 5th May, 1982 in the absence of
L.L. Jain when he along With S.N. Sarma and others were locked inside the premises in
question by the landlady.
(33) So, from the above discussion it stands proved that the suit premises were surrendered
on 14-5-82 by L. L. Jain to the landlady defendant No. I, but as it is the Company which has
been found to be the tenant of these premises, the surrendering of possession by L.L. Jain to
the land lady was on behalf of the Company only and this issue is decided accordingly partly
in favor of the plaintiffs and partly in favor of the defendants. Issue No. 9
(34) The case of the plaintiffs in respect of this issue is that the Company was coerced into
executing the lease agreement in question inserting the impugned clause of the user of these
premises only for the residence of L.L. Jain and for no other officer of the Company, for the
reason that the Company had up high every day, the general tendency of the landlords was
"dictating, as the Company was badly in need of residential premises for the residence of its
officers, and to get a suitable accommodation in the Union Territory of Delhi and particularly
in South Delhi, was a difficult task and as the rents were going up high every day, the general
tendency of the landlords was to get maximum rent of the property in Delhi and they expect
increase of rent every six months from their tenants and they were always in search of some
trick for getting the tenant evicted from the premises and the landlady deft. no. I was no
exception to that tendency. This contention cannot be accepted as Constituting coercion on
the part of defendant no. 1. No writing by way of protest was sent by the Company to the
landlady alleging the insertion of this clause as having been the result of any coercion on her
part. This issue is decided against the plaintiffs. Issue No. 10
(35) Under issue no. 8 it has been seen that the version given by plaintiffs 2 and 3 S. N.
Sarma and Sanjay Wadhayan and the witness Kameshwar Swarup (Public Witness 1) about
the handing over of the keys of the premises in question by L.L. Jain to the Company on the
morning of 4th May, 1982 and the handing over of the same in the evening of that very day
by the Company to S. N. Sarma, has not been accepted as correct, and in the resultant the
going up to the first floor of S. N. Sarma, his wife, plaintiff no. 3 Sanjay Wadhawan and
Chowkidar Pancham by opening the locks of the house in question and their being locked
therein by the landlady, also fall " through.
(36) The plaintiffs' witnesses admitted that a person standing in the balcony of the first floor
could talk to the person standing on the road. Thus, it would look improbable that none of the
persons allegedly detained in the first floor told their peon Laxmi standing on the road, or the
truck driver or any other person from the crowd, to inform the Company or the police,
although they remained allegedly confined therein for more than 5 hours. The presence of
peon Laxmi on the road all through has been admitted in his cross-examination by S. N.
Sarma (Public Witness 2) and it would have been reasonable on his part and on the part of his
companions alleged to have been detained on the first floor to have asked him to inform the
Company or the police. The driver of the truck as also a number of persons were also in the
same position. On this point the statement of S. N. Sarma (Public Witness 2) in his cross-
examination is reproduced below :
We could not think of any after about 9 A.M. how to contact the office of the plaintiff
company and how to come out and this we could not think out uptil about 12.00 noon. Mr.
Lakshmi peon remained on the road all throughout outside the main gate of the house and we
could not see him from the balcony. But in that period we did not ask him to inform the
plaintiff company about our detention. The truck with the luggage was parked on the road
outside the main gate of the house and was not allowed to enter the compound and that truck
could be seen by us from the balcony of the first floor and there was commotion outside. The
driver of the truck was in fact asking me as to what he should do. There must be about 15120
persons in the commotion at that time. It did not strike me or my companions to ask the truck
driver, Lakshmi peon or anybody in the commotion to inform the plaintiff company about our
detention............. ............I approved the idea of Mr. Wadhawan to put the slip in the shoe of
the Chowkidar for onward transmission to the office of the plaintiff company. That chit was
thrown in the shoe at about 12.15 P.M. I cannot give any reason why I did not ask any person
including the truck driver, peon Lakshmi or anybody from the commotion to communicate
our detention in this house to the plaintiff company or to the police.
(37) In this back drop the version of the witnesses of the plaintiffs regarding a chit having
been placed in the shoe and the same having been thrown from the balcony of the first floor
to the peon Lakshmi standing on the road at about 12.30 P.M. after about 41 hours of their
alleged detention, suffers a great set-back. According to the witnesses of the plaintiffs the
landlady opened the lock of the door of the ground floor only after Kameshwar Swarup
(Public Witness 1) arrived at the premises in question at 2.00 P.M.
(38) The truck carrying the baggage of S. N. Sarma had admittedly arrived at the main gate of
the house in question at 12.00 noon as stated by the witnesses of the plaintiffs. According to
the version of' the defendants that truck was not allowed to enter inside the premises, and it
remained outside the main gate of this house, and that S. N. Sarma and Sanjay Wardhavan
etc. had not come to the premises in question in the morning as alleged and stated by them.
The version of the landlady appearing in her statement as DW1 is reproduced below :
It was in the middle of April 1982 that L.L. Jain told me that he had resigned from the
plaintiff company and that he would hand over vacant possession of the premises in question
to me on 5-5-1982. He also- told me that after 5-5-1982 he had to go to Bangkok. He also
told me that it would be desirable that a letter be written by me to the plaintiff-company as
well in this regard. I thereupon sent a registered letter to the plaintiff company on 30-4-1982.
Ext. P2 is that letter. On 4-5-1982 L.L. Jain came to me and told me that he would not be able
to give possession of the premises is question to me on 5-5-1982 as he was to go to Calcutta
and that from Calcutta he would be returning on 13-5-1982 and would deliver the vacant
possession of premises to me on the next 131 date, i.e., 14-5-1982. The same talk was
repeated between us even on the morning of 5-5-1982 at about 8.30 or 9.00 A.M. when my
husband defendant no. 2 was also present there at that time. L.L. Jain left at about 9.45 A.M.
My husband also left for Income Tax Department at about 10.00 A.M. On that day i.e., 5-5-
1982 I was a truck loaded with luggage at about 12.00 noon. I then came out to the main gate
outside the drive way and found that besides luggage in the truck there were about 20 or 25
persons in the truck and the cars. I enquired from them whom they wanted to meet. Two or
three persons out of them came forward and told me that they had come there to reside in the
first floor. I told them that L.L. Jain Was still in occupation of the first floor in question and
had not vacated the same but they told me that they had come from M/s. Usha Sales Ltd. and
that they would reside in the first floor. Thereupon I told them that as per the agreement the
premises in question had been let out only for the residence of L.L. Jain alone and Therefore
no other person could be put by the plaintiff in those premises. I got upset and frightened on
their demand .I was- inside that gate and they were outside that gate. I then locked the gate
from inside and came in and telephoned to my neighbours Mr. Balraj Chhabra and Mr. Inder
Sanon and other acquaintances. Their ladies and servants then came and I told them that I
was very pinch upset. There after I went in my car to the Income Tax Department to fetch my
husband at about 12.30 or 12.45 P.M. I then came out of the main gate and locked it again
from inside by putting my band inside and handed over the key to my neighbours who had
arrived there and were inside the drive way. None of the persons who came with the truck or
in cars entered inside the building. I returned along with husband from the Income Tax Office
at about 1.20 or 1:25 P.M.
(39) The perusal of the letter Ext. P2 dated 30-4-1982 referred to above in the testimony of
the landlady shows that L.L. Jain had informed her that he had resigned from the Company
and was leaving for Bangkok and had stated that he would be vacating the house on 5th May,
1982. In this letter she requested the Company to see that the vacant possession was handed
over to her by Company/L.L. Jain, when he vacated the premises on 5th May, 1982.
(40) There is no independent witness examined by either " side on these two contradictory
versions of the parties but the letter Ext. P2 and the landlady's statement that L.L. Jain had
told her that he would be vacating the house on 5th May, 1982, finds support from the plaint
and replication of the plaintiff and that in turn supports the testimony of the landlady on the
point that on the morning of 5th May, 1982 at about 8.30 or 9.00 A.M. L.L. Jain came to her
when her husband defendant No. 2 was also present there and that L.L. Jain left at about 9.45
A.M. and her husband also left for Income Tax Department at about 10.00 A.M., which in
turn would go to run down the version of S. N. Sarma and his companions coming to the
premises in question in the morning of 5th May, 1982 and going up-stairs in the first floor
and being locked in there by the landlady.
(41) According to all the plaintiffs' witnesses, the telephone of the premises was working at
the time when they reached there. It was also working at the time when they were allegedly
locked. According to Public Witness. 2, he reached the premises at 8.00 A.M. and soon
thereafter the landlady locked the premises. Alter discovering that he was locked in he rang
up the Transport Company to enquire as to when the luggage would arrive and was told that
the luggage would come to the said premises at about 10.00 A.M. It is submitted that it is
highly improbable that when a person finds himself detained or locked, he would first ring up
the Transport Company to find out the time of' the arrival of his luggage and would not ring
up the Police or the Company or any where else to seek help for his release from the alleged
detention. Thus, for the reasons aforesaid it is held that plaintiffs 2 and 3 were not illegally
detained by the defendants. In view of this finding the question of awarding any
compensation to the plaintiffs due to alleged detention does not arise. This issue is decided
against the plaintiffs. Issue No. 11
(42) It has already been found under issues 2 and 3 that even after the lapse and termination
of contractual tenancy the Company became the statutory tenant under the landlady I
defendant no. 1 and was, thus, entitled to the statutory protection in respect of its status of
removability in respect of the premises in question unless it was evicted there from under the
enabling provisions of the statute, i.e., the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958 and that such a
statutory tenant can enforce such right through an injunction. In this view of the matter the
clause in the lease-deed that the premises in question would be used for the residence of L.L.
Jain alone and for no other officer/employee of the Company, had no adverse effect on the
aforesaid statutory right of the Company unless and until evicted under the statutory
provisions of the Delhi Rent Control Act, 1958, and that right of the Company, when sought
to be interfered with by the landlady, can be protected by the grant of an injection ,Biswabani
Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Santosh Kumar Dutta MANU/SC/0486/1979 : [1980]1SCR650 (supra) is an
authority on this proposition of law.
(43) Admittedly, the landlady/defendant no.1 did not permit S.N. Sarma an officer of the
Company and his trick load of luggage to enter the .building wherein the premises are situate
at about 12.00 noon on 5-5-1982.. Moreover, the position taken up by the landlady
throughout has been one of not allowing entry to any other officer of the Company except L.
L. Jain, and that his tantamount, to interfering with the aforesaid statutory tenancy rights of
the Company in the premises in question. Even the assertion of the landlady regarding her
right in that regard as also her determination on that point is manifest from her written
statement from which the relevant lines are reproduced below :
........IT is absolutely false that the defendants are not entitled to obstruct the unlawful act on
the part of the plaintiffs to make a forcible entry into the house............................. It may be,
however, submitted that the defendants have a right to prevent any trespass on the part of the
plaintiff and/or to resist the forcible entry which they threatened and/or threatening.................
The defendants have every right and justification to enforce the terms of lease and to resist
any unlawful act on the part of the plaintiff in allotting the premises in question to any other
officer and or to use the same for his or their residence.........'*.
In her statement as D.W. 1 she stated as follows :
........IT is correct that I was not prepared to allow anybody else except L.L. Jain to enter the
premises in question............... I was not agreeable to allow any other employee of the
plaintiff company to occupy the premises in question because the lease-deed was meant only
for the residence of L.L. Jain and for nobody else..... ". So, obviously in the face of this
unmistakable position taken up by the defendants, the Company is entitled to the relief of
injunction in exercise of its being the statutory tenant in the premises in question.
(44) The suit was filed by the plaintiffs on 13-5-1982. It has been found under issue no.8 that
the suit premises were surrendered by L.L. Jain to the landlady/defendant no.1 on 14-5-1982
and that surrender by him was on behalf of the Company. Thus, the Company remained in
possession of the premises in question uptil 14-5-1982 and, thus, there is no question of any
damages to be allowed to the Company against the defendants for any period up to the filing
of the .suit, i.e., 13-5-1982 and this is in respect of the damages claimed at the rate of Rs.
3,100 per month and Rs. 500 per day from 5-5-1892.
(45) Regarding the further damages at the rate of Rs. 3,100 per month and Rs. 500 per day
from the date of the institution of the suit till the date of' the plaintiffs were allowed to use
peacefully the tenanted premises the same cannot be decreed in this suit. The Court can grant
the relief only as on the date of the suit and not on subsequent cause of action. The only
exception to this Rule is recognised under Order 20 Rule 12. of the Code of Civil Procedure
which talks of a suit for the recovery of possession of moveable property and for rents or
mesne profit. Admittedly, the suit is neither for the recovery of rent nor for mesne profits.
"Mesne Profit" is defined in S. 2(12) of the Code of Civil Procedure as follows -
MESNEProfits' of property means those profits which the person in wrongful possession of
such property actually receives or might with ordinary diligence have received there from,
together with interest on such profits but shall not include profits due to improvements made
by the person in wrongful possession.
(46) Since this is an exception to the general rule, S. 11 of the Court Fees Act governs the
payment of the court fees in such suits. There is no other provision either in the Code of Civil
Procedure or in the Court Fees Act for decreeing any amounts or compensation paid or
received during the pendency of the suit or for the payment of the court fees after passing of
the decree.
(47) Even though it Was conceded by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs that he was not
claiming mesne profits in this suit, he, however, cited Girja Kuer v. Shiva Prasad Singh and
others MANU/BH/0172/1935 : Air 1935 Pat160. In the said case, the Court was only
concerned with the valuation of the suit and held that:
THEvalue of the suit is its value at the date of the institution of the suit and not what will
become its value on some subsequent date. Future mesne profits being uncertain cannot be
taken into account turn the purpose of' payment of court fee and for the purpose of
determining the value of the suit. Applying the analogy of mesne profits to future damages. it
is clear that no court fee .is payable in respect of damages pendente lite. It follows Therefore
that it cannot be taken into account for determining the value of the suit.
(48) The High Court of Ratna was only concerned with the valuation of the suit for the
purpose of the jurisdiction. It observed at page 161 that :--
THE value of a suit does not depend upon the competency of a Court to pass a decree for a
particular claim. The claim' may be absolutely untenable and the plaintiff may not be entitled
to it on the face of it, but nevertheless if the plaintiff claims it, he has to value it and that
value will determine the forum for the institution of the suit. Secondly, I do not think the.
question whether future damages can or cannot be decreed is free .from doubt. As the matter
will have to be determined in the suit itself on the result of the main issue, I do not wish to
express any opinion.
(49) There is, however a clear authority, reported as India Electric Works Ltd. vs. Mrs. B. S.
Mantosh and others MANU/WB/0048/1956 : AIR1956Cal148 , in which a suit was filed
being Suit No. 28 of 1948 for a decree for Rs. 13,164 as damages for wrongful use and
occupation @ Rs. J 2 per diem. The plaintiffs also prayed for a decree at 'the same rate from
the date of the suit to the date on which the Company would vacate the shed. The trial court
decreed the suit and also the future damages. The High Court of Calcutta observed as follows
:
The rest of the decree in Suit No. 28 of 1948 was not according to law and cannot be
maintained. The suit was a pure money suit and not a suit for recovery of possession of
immovable property and mesne profits under Order 20, Rule 12 Civil Procedure Code. In
such a suit, a preliminary decree may be passed for possession and for assessment, but in a
pure suit for recovery of money, no decree can be passed for recovery of compensation after
the date of the suit up to the date of the decree or after the date of the decree until recovery of
possession. This part of the decree should, Therefore, be set aside.
(50) Thus, further damages from the date of the suit onwards till the date the plaintiffs are
allowed to use peacefully the tenanted premises cannot be decreed in this suit.
(51) So, while the plaintiffs are entitled to the injunction as sought for in respect of the
premises in question, they are not entitled to damages claimed by them in para 'C' of the
prayer clause at the rates Rs. 3,100 per month and Rs. 500 per day with effect from 5-5-1982
onwards till the date they are allowed to use peacefully the tenanted premises and this issue is
decided accordingly partly in favor of the plaintiffs and partly against them to the extent
indicated above. Issue NO. 12 (Relief)
(52) In view of my findings under Issue No. I the plaintiffs shall pay court fees on the relief
of damages claimed at the rates of Rs. 31,00 per month and Rs. 500 per day for the period
from 5-5-1982 till 13-5-1982 within two weeks from today failing which the plaint in respect
of that relief shall stand rejected.
(53) In view of my above findings the plaintiffs are granted' a decree of injunction as prayed
for in para A (i) and (ii) of the prayer clause in the plaint, against the defendants; but their suit
for damages in the sum of Rs. 1,04,000 on the ground of alleged detention is dismissed. The
suit for further damages at the rates of Rs. 31,00 per month and Rs. 500 per day for the period
from 5-5-1982 till the date of the suit, is dismissed when the requisite court fees for that relief
is paid by the plaintiffs, while the plaint in respect of the further damages at the rates of Rs.
31,00 per month and Rs. 500 per day from the " date of the suit onwards till the date the
plaintiffs are allowed to use peacefully the tenanted premises, is rejected. Under the
circumstances, parties are left to bear their own costs.
© Manupatra Information Solutions Pvt. Ltd.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA AT BANGALORE
R.F.A. No. 127 of 2001
Decided On: 02.11.2006
Appellants: Smt. Nirmala W/o C.S. Srinivasa Murthy
Vs. Respondent: Sri Naveen Chhaggar S/o Mangilal Chhaggar and Bangalore City
Chamarajpet Art Silk Handloom Weavers and Exporters Association
Hon'ble Judges/Coram: D.V. Shylendra Kumar, J.
Counsels: For Appellant/Petitioner/Plaintiff: H.N. Prakash, Adv.
For Respondents/Defendant: Paras Jain, Adv. for R 1
Subject: Civil
Subject: Property
Catch Words
Mentioned IN
Acts/Rules/Orders:
Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 38, Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 38(3)
Cases Referred:
Azeezulla Sheriff v. Bhabhutimul AIR 1973 SC 276; Jagannath Kashimath Patil v. Narayan
Balugaikar (1997) 2 SCC 212; Balwant Singh v. Daulat Singh (1997) 7 SCC 137
Disposition: Appeal allowed
Citing Reference:
Discussed
3
Case Note :
SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT, 1963 SECTION 38 - CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, 1908
- Order 39, Rules 1 and 2 - In a suit for bare injunction the plaintiff must prove that he
is in factual durable possession of the suit schedule property. A mere fact that the
plaintiff might have good title to the property that by itself automatically does not
establish his possession of the property unless such possession is actually pleaded and
proved by evidence. In a suit for bare injunction, unless the possession of the plaintiff is
independently established, there is no way of the suit being decreed.
In the present case, the fact, that there being considerable interval of about seven years
from the date of execution of the document under which the plaintiff claims title and
possession to the property and the date of institution of the suit, i.e., between 1985 and
1992, and there being another intervening development, viz., execution of another
document in favour of the first defendant, under which also it is recited that the first
defendant was put in possession, coupled with the fact that the first defendant has
asserted that she was in possession all along and certain additional materials such as tax
paid receipt in respect of the very land, khata transfer in her favour etc., held, were all
indicator that possibly the first defendant was in possession and definitely not that the
plaintiff had continued to be in possession.
The plaintiff was not suing for injunction based on title. The suit, which was filed for
declaration, title and injunction, was confined to one for mere injunction. Held, if the
suit should have been one for declaration and for a consequential relief of possession,
the plaintiff could have succeeded. In a suit for bare injunction, unless the possession of
the plaintiff is independently established, there is no way of the suit being decreed.
The relief of injunction cannot be granted for the mere asking, but only when there is
necessary pleadings and supporting evidence. Reference to the provision of law does not
automatically fetch the relief sought for by the plaintiff unless the plaintiff makes good
his case.
The plaintiff though in fact pleaded that he is the owner of the suit schedule property
and he was in possession etc., on his pleadings, the plaintiff admits in his evidence that
the interference was much later and one of obstruction by the first defendant when the
plaintiff went to the site to put up fence. The suit itself being filed two years thereafter
and the first defendant having categorically denied the right of the plaintiff the plaintiff
if was seeking to support his possession of the property with reference to title, it was
necessary for him to have sought a declaration of his title. In a suit which had been filed
initially for declaration and consequential injunction, wherein the first defendant has
denied title of the plaintiff the suit fails unless the prayer for declaration is also made
good.
The suit in law is not maintainable, as unless declaration is made in favour of the
plaintiff the continued possession of the plaintiff particularly in the light of denial by the
first defendant cannot be recognized in law, more so when the first defendant has also
claimed to herself title in the property and had denied the title of the plaintiff. In fact,
when the plaintiff filed a memo for deletion of the prayer for declaration subsequent to
the trial Court framing issues on this aspect i.e., issue No 1, the plaintiffs suit should
have been dismissed then and there.
A plaintiff approaching the Court for mere injunction if he fails, it does not amount to a
positive decree in favour of the defendant, which the defendant can either execute or
take advantage for anything further, other than for retaining the existing state of
affairs. It is always open to the person who is in possession of a property to defend his
possession in a manner known to law and the dismissal of the suit of the plaintiff does
not give rise to a specific or positive right in favour of the first defendant. (Obiter).
Appeal was allowed, and the judgment and decree passed by the trial court was set
aside and the suit of the plaintiff w
JUDGMENT
D.V. Shylendra Kumar, J.
1. This is an appeal by the defendant in O.S. No. 7026/1992 on the file of the Court of VIII
Addl. City Civil Judge, Bangalore, directed against the judgment and decree dated 22.8.2000.
2. The suit for injunction having been decreed in favour of the plaintiff in terms of the
judgment and decree, the present appeal by the defendant.
3. The appellant had contended that the plaintiff had miserably failed to prove his possession
with regard to the suit schedule property either on the date of the sale deed dated 23.1.1985
based on which the plaintiff claimed right, title and possession to the property or on the date
of filing of the suit; that the Court below could the date of filing of the suit; that the Court
below could not have decreed the suit for injunction in the absence of any credible material
placed by the plaintiff to establish possession in respect of the suit property; that the plaintiff
was not entitled to claim that he was in possession on the date of filing of the suit even
assuming that he was in possession of the property in the year 1985; that the trial Court ought
to have dismissed the suit etc.
4. The brief facts leading to filing of the suit and the present appeal are as under:
Plaintiff who had filed the suit initially for a declaratory relief to prove that he is the absolute
owner in possession of the suit schedule property by virtue of a sale deed Ex.P-3 dated
23.1.1985 and also a declaration that the subsequent sale deed dated 27.12.1989 - Ex.D-7 to
be null and void and praying for the relief of permanent injunction etc., against the defendant
from interfering with the peaceful possession of the suit schedule property by the plaintiff and
the defendant being one claiming under the subsequent sale deed dated 27.12.1989 and the
Society from whom both the plaintiff and the 1st defendant claim title to the property be
added as the 2nd
defendant.
5. The 2nd
respondent had subsequently given up the relief of declaration and had confined
the suit to one as suit for injunction alone in terms of a memo filed during the pendency of
the suit for deletion of the declaratory relief. The plaint averments were that the 2nd
defendant
- Society had executed the sale deed dated 23.1.1985 in favour of the plaintiff in respect of
site bearing No. 160 a site formed by the 2nd
defendant in Sy. No. 333/1, 2, 3, 4 & 5, 334/1 &
2 and part of Sy. No. 335 of Kempapura Agrahara, Bangalore North Taluk, and that on the
very day possession of sites had been handed over. Notwithstanding, the lst defendant having
claimed right and title to the very sites in terms of a sale deed dated 17.12.1999 executed by
the 2nd
defendant through one P. Rangaswamappa, as the President of the 2nd
defendant -
Society and that being a collusive document between the 1st defendant and 2
nd defendant and
the plaintiff having made enquiry's about the factum of no person by the name
Rangaswamappa, being the President of the 2nd
defendant society and that the cause of action
for the suit arose as on 1.11.1990, when the 1st defendant based on his sale deed dated
27.12.1989 attempted to dispossess the plaintiff and as that the threat continued, within the
jurisdiction of the Court, it became necessary for the plaintiff to file the suit praying for an
order of injunction/restraint order.
6. While the cause of action is pleaded to be one arising on 1.11.1990, it is significant to
notice the suit itself was filed on 2.11.1992.
7. It is also pleaded that the authority of the said P. Rangaswamappa who had purported to act
as the President of the 2nd
defendant - Society had executed the sale deed dated 27.12.1989 in
favour of the 1st defendant came to be challenged and in the proceedings which originated
before the Registrar of Co-operative Societies and culminated in W.P. No. 15614/1992 and in
the suit O.S. No. 5235/1995 litigation fought as against the office bearers as to who was in
management and control of the Society, it had been authoritatively concluded that the said
Rangaswamappa was not a competent person to act as the President on behalf of the Society
and consequently the BDA having issued cancellation dated 20.4.1995, the declaratory relief
became unnecessary and therefore that was deleted. The 1st defendant contested the suit. In
the written statement the 1st defendant contended that the suit was frivolous and vexatious;
that the plaintiff had no right title or interest to the suit schedule property; that the document
based on which the plaintiff claimed title is fabricated and concocted; that the defendant
denies the existence of the document in favour of the plaintiff and at any rate does not admit
the same. The plaintiff was put to proof of the suit pleadings; that the 2nd
defendant - society
itself was not in possession or had acquired valid title to the lands in Sy. No. 333/1,2,3, 4 and
5, Sy. No. 333/1 and 2 and part of Sy. No. 335 as on the date of the sale deed based on which
the plaintiff claim i.e. as on 23.1.1985 that neither the 2nd
defendant nor the plaintiff were
ever in possession of the property in question on this day; that the survey numbers were put
by themselves and were in possession of the 2nd
defendant - society, subsequently that the
resolution of the Bangalore Development Authority to sanction 50 sites in favour of the
Society was the event subsequent to which the plaintiff claimed. The resolution in fact was
communicated to the society only as per the communication dated 24.11.1984 sent by the
Executive Engineer to the President of the Society; that the defendant having been put in
possession thereafter defendant has been in valid possession ever since 27.12.1989; that the
defendant had in fact paid property tax, that thereafter the Court had rightly refused to grant
temporary injunction in favour of the plaintiff, there is no cause of action for the suit, the
plaintiff was not entitled for the relief sought for and the suit be dismissed. It was also
pleaded that the plaintiff is neither entitled for declaration nor for consequential relief of
injunction.
8. The 1st defendant filed an additional statement, inter alia, contending that the alleged
cancellation dated 5.6.1995 was not a valid one; that the executants of the said document had
no legal right or legal authority to execute the same; that the site having been sold in favour
of the defendant on 28.12.1989 the 1st defendant had lost all its right title and interest and to
create any document in favour of the plaintiff thereafter that the so called possession
certificate dated 30.5.1994 said to have been issued in favour of the plaintiff was denied and
not admitted; that it had no consequence in law having come into existence during the
pendency of the suit; that the court fee paid is not proper: that the suit was not tenable and
liable to be dismissed.
9. In the light of the initial proceedings, the trial Court had framed the following 5 issues and
an additional issue as under:
1. Does plaintiff prove that he is the owner of the suit property under the sale deed dated
23.1.1985?
2. Does plaintiff prove his lawful possession of the suit property on the date of suit?
3. Does plaintiff prove the obstruction by the defendants as alleged?
4. Is plaintiff entitled to the declaration as prayed for?
5. Is he entitled to the injunction as sought for?
6. What decree or order?
ADDITIONAL ISSUE:
1. Whether the suit is liable to be dismissed as contended in para 7(a) of the written statement
in view of the orders of the Registrar of Societies in Case No. 45/61-62 dated 31-3-1999?
10. Though the parties went to trial on these issues, subsequently the plaintiff having filed a
memo to the effect that the relief of declaration is not pressed for, the trial court confined the
examination of the case on issue Nos. 2, 3, 5 and additional issue and deleted issue Nos. 1
and 4 and passed order on issue No. 6.
11. On behalf of the plaintiff, the father of the plaintiff has been examined as PW1 and on
behalf of the defendants, the husband of the first defendant has been examined as DW1.
While plaintiff has got marked Ex Pl to 19, including ExP2 possession certificate, ExP3 sale
deed dated 20-4-1985, ExP4 cancellation deed dated 20-4-1995, ExP10 and 11, receipts
issued by the second defendant society in favour of the plaintiff, ExP12 encumbrance
certificate in respect of the suit schedule property for the period 1984 to 1995, which
indicates the execution of sale deed dated 23-1-1985 executed by the second defendant in
favour of plaintiff, execution of sale deed dated 28-12-1989 executed by the very second
defendant in favour of first defendant and execution of the cancellation deed dated 5-6-1995
executed by the second defendant in respect of the sale deed that had been executed in favour
of the first defendant; ExP14, certified copy of the order dated 19-5-1992 passed by this
Court in WP No 15614 of 1992, a petition which had been filed by one P. Rangaswamappa, a
person whom the first defendant claims to be the president of the second respondent society
at the time when the sale deed was executed in her favour, which came to be dismissed;
ExP15, judgment in OS No 5235 of 1995, on the file of XII Additional City Civil Judge,
Bangalore, a suit filed by one K.G. Srikantaiah against one A.S. Cheluvaiah, for permanent
injunction and declaration of his ownership and possession and enjoyment of the suit
schedule property, which had come to be decreed; ExP17. certified copy of the order passed
by this Court on 14-9-1995, disposing of WP No 6379 of 1990, a petition that has been filed
by the second defendant. Likewise, ExP18 and 19, orders passed by this Court in two other
writ petitions dismissing both the petitions.
12. On the side of defendants, ExD1 to 9 have been marked. Prominent being, ExP7 sale deed
dated 27-12-1989. ExD8 possession certificate dated 10-1-1990, ExD9 khata certificate
issued by the Bangalore Development Authority, ExD10 tax paid receipt upto the year 1994
issued in favour of first defendant and other related documents.
13. The trial court having answered issues 2, 3 and 5 in the affirmative as also additional
issue No 1, decreed the suit for permanent injunction in favour of the plaintiff and against the
defendants. Against such judgment and decree, the present appeal.
14. I have heard Sri H.N. Prakash, learned Counsel for the appellant and Sri Paras Jain,
learned Counsel for the first respondent.
15. Submission of Sri H.N. Prakash, learned Counsel for the appellant is that the trial court
has committed an error in decreeing the suit for bare injunction even when the plaintiff had
not established his possession as on the date of institution of the suit; that while the plaintiff
had miserably failed in proving his possession of suit schedule property and on the other hand
the materials on record indicated that the defendant No 1 was in fact in possession of the suit
schedule property; that the question of plaintiff establishing his title as against the first
defendant does not have any tearing or consequence particularly when the plaintiff having
rescinded from the prayer for declaration; that the trial court should have even on material
evidence on record dismissed the suit of the plaintiff; that the suit was even otherwise not
maintainable and should have been dismissed for the reason that even when the first
defendant had disputed the title of the plaintiff to the property in question, the plaintiff, who
had initially filed suit both for declaration and permanent injunction, having deleted the
prayer for declaration, the consequential prayer of injunction alone did not survive and the
suit was not tenable in the form it was filed and therefore sought for allowing the appeal and
set aside the decree passed by the trial court.
16. In this regard, learned Counsel for the appellant has taken me through the pleadings in the
plaint and the written statement as also the evidence of PW1 and DW1 and supporting
documents.
17. Sri Paras Jain, learned Counsel for the respondent-plaintiff vehemently submits that the
plaintiff has established his possession to the suit schedule property; that the sale deed of the
year 1985 has clearly recited that the plaintiff had been put in possession of the suit schedule
property; that the defendant would claim the very properly in terms of the sale deed of the
year 1989, that too a document executed by a person who has been declared to be not
competent or authorized to manage the affairs of the society, particularly in the light of the
decisions of this Court and the judgment and decree of the trial court as under ExP14, 15, 16;
that the trial court having found that the first defendant was unable to establish his possession
with reference to the document relied on and particularly the validity of the sale deed of the
year 1989 executed in favour of the first defendant, will fall to the ground with the
cancellation of the very deed in terms of ExP4 and therefore there was nothing in favour of
the defendant that could prevent the trial court decreeing the suit; that the plaintiff being
content with mere injunction only, had deleted the prayer for declaration, as the society itself
had by the subsequent cancellation deed cancelled the sale deed on which the first defendant
had claimed his right to the suit schedule property; that there is nothing in favour of the first
defendant based on which the first defendant could either assert his title or his possession;
that the trial court has rightly decreed the suit and the first defendant could not in law claim to
be in possession particularly as it had been established by orders of courts that all actions on
behalf of the second defendant society by the said Rangaswamappa, are all acts of fraud,
deceit and therefore nothing was required to be done on the part of the plaintiff to get over
such actions and deletion of the prayer for declaration cannot be of any consequence; that the
plaintiff had continued to be in possession ever since 1985 and the possession certificate
issued in the year 1994 though during the pendency of the suit before the trial court was only
in reiteration of the earlier position and by way of abundant caution to dispel the confusion
created by the sale deed in favour of the first defendant; that the plaintiff had continued to be
in possession all along and there is absolutely no need to disturb the judgment and decree
passed by the trial court.
18. It is the submission of learned Counsel for the first respondent-plaintiff that the claim of
the appellant [first defendant] has been characterized as one under the deed executed by
fraud, deceit and no right flows in favour of the first defendant under such a deed; that fraud
vitiates all actions and this Court has to take note of such developments and should not in this
appeal disturb the judgment and decree passed by the trial court, which if done, can only
amount to encouraging such fraudulent acts and therefore also prays for dismissal of the
appeal.
19. Sri Paras Jain, learned Counsel for the first respondent has also drawn my attention to the
evidence of DW1 and seeks to submit that the witness on behalf of the defendant having
admitted that some more documents are in possession of the first defendant, the suit had been
rightly decreed by the trial court and therefore does not warrant any interference in appeal.
20. In the light of the submissions made on behalf of both parties, the points that arise for
determination in this appeal are as under:
a) Whether the plaintiff-first respondent had established his factual physical possession of the
suit schedule property on the date of filing of the suit and interference on the part of first
defendant of such possession of the plaintiff prior to the filing of the suit?
b) Whether the suit in the modified form viz., for mere injunction as against the first
defendant was tenable when the plaintiff had laid the suit for declaration of only his title to
the property, and declaration against the first defendant under the sale deed of the year 1989
and the prayer for injunction was consequential but later confined the relief and the suit to
one of restraint order atone without the relief of declaration?
21. In so far as the first point is concerned, I find that the trial court has not recorded a
categorical finding in favour of the plaintiff to the effect that the plaintiff was in physical
possession of the suit schedule property either on the date of filing of the suit or immediately
prior to the filing of the suit. In fact even the assertion in the plaint was that the plaintiff was
put in possession of the property under the sale deed of the year 1985, But there is no positive
assertion that the plaintiff continued to be remain in possession thereafter. On the other hand,
the plaint pleading in para-5 indicates the cause of action to the following effect:
5. The cause of action for the suit arose on 1-11-90 when the 1st defendant attempted to
dispossess the plaintiff and the said threat is still continuing within the jurisdiction of this
Hon'ble Court.
This pleading coupled with the deposition of PW1, to the following effect:
During the period of Nov. 1992 myself, plff. Had been to the suit site to put up fence. At that
time the defendant No 1 and her followers obstructed our peaceful possession and enjoyment
of the suit schedule site.
Would only indicate that the suit itself, which was instituted on 2-11-1992, was about two
years after the cause of action arose and the evidence is to the effect that it was the first
defendant who was in possession and who obstructed the plaintiff's attempt to put up fence on
the suit site.
22. If such is the pleading and evidence, it is very obvious that the plaintiff was not in
possession of the suit schedule property on the date of institution of suit. That cannot lead to
an inference that the plaintiff was positively in possession of the suit schedule property on the
date of filing of the suit. In fact the learned judge of the trial court while does not give such a
positive finding, what is recorded in terms of para-16 of the judgment is that:
16. The list of office bearers of second defendant-society as certified by the Registrar of
Societies produced at the time of arguments on behalf of first defendant is not of any help to
the case of first defendant to show that Rangaswamappa and Ramachandra Reddy were the
office bearers of the society at the time of execution of sale deed in favour of first defendant.
So, I have no hesitation to hold that plaintiff has successfully shown that he is in lawful
possession of the suit schedule property on the date of suit and hence, I answer issue No 2 in
the affirmative. The way in which the first defendant contesting the suit is sufficient to hold
that first defendant has interfered into possession and enjoyment of the suit schedule property
by the plaintiff. Hence, I answer issue No 3 also in the affirmative. Since I have held that
plaintiff is in lawful possession of the suit schedule property and has continued to be in
possession of the suit schedule property by virtue of the temporary injunction order issued by
this Court, at the time of filing of the suit / have hesitation to hold that plaintiff is in
possession and enjoyment of the suit schedule property and is entitled for injunction order
and hence I answer issue No 5 also in the affirmative.
23. The above finding is not a positive finding in favour of the plaintiff, but an inference
drawn in favour lawful possession of the plaintiff on the inability of the defendant to prove
his lawful possession.
24. In a suit for bare injunction what is essential for the plaintiff is to prove that he is in
factual durable possession of the subject property, when the relief is for injunction in respect
of an immovable property. Therefore, the first point has to be answered in favour of the
appellant.
25. In so far as the second point is concerned, Sri Paras Jain, learned Counsel for the first
defendant-plaintiff has drawn my attention to the law laid down in the following decision:
1. Azeezulla Sheriff v. Bhabhutimul MANU/SC/0367/1972 : [1973]1SCR59
2. Jagannath Kashimath Patil v. Narayan Balugaikar MANU/SC/1036/1997 :
(1997)2SCC212
3. Balwant Singh v. Daulat Singh MANU/SC/0736/1997 : AIR1997SC2719
26. In the case of Azeezulla Sheriff what has been held is that the date on which registered
documents operates is the date on which the execution of the document is admitted and the
document operates from the time of the execution etc. This judgment is of no avail to the first
respondent on the facts and circumstances f the present case, as the question in the appeal and
the suit was not one of title but only one of possession. A mere fact that the plaintiff might
have good title to the property that by itself automatically does not establish his possession of
the property unless such possession is actually pleaded and proved by evidence. In fact there
being considerable interval of about seven years from the date of execution of the document
under which the plaintiff claims title and possession to the property and the date of institution
of the suit i.e. between 1985 and 1992 and there being another intervening development viz.,
execution of another document in favour of the first defendant under which also it is recited
that the first defendant was put in possession coupled with the fact that the first defendant has
asserted that she was in possession all along and certain additional materials such as tax paid
receipt in respect of the very land, khata transfer in her favour etc. are all if at all an indicator
that possibly the first defendant was in possession and definitely not that the plaintiff had
continued to be in possession.
27. One should bear in mind that the plaintiff was not claiming or suing for injunction based
on title but the suit which had been filed for declaration, title and injunction was confined to
one of mere injunction. If the suit should have been one for declaration and for a
consequential relief of possession, the plaintiff could have succeeded. In a suit for bare
injunction, unless the possession of the plaintiff is independently established, there is no way
of the suit being decreed.
28. In the case of Jagannath Kashimath Patil while dismissing the appeal of the defendant,
the Supreme Court had occasion to observe that actual possession of the plaintiff was further
reinforced with the plaintiff having acquired title also to the property through his maternal
grandmother, and already being in possession as mortgagee, the further acquisition or
improving his title has only improved the quality of factual possession and therefore the
appeal was required to be dismissed.
29. This decision again does not advance the case of the plaintiff, as the plaintiff's case in the
present suit was only one for mere injunction.
30. The other decision in the case of Balwant Singh is one holding that revenue entries by
themselves cannot confer title by itself. But unfortunately, the issue in the case is not one of
title, but only about of possession and therefore the decision does not help the case of the first
respondent.
31. Sri Paras Jain, learned Counsel for the first respondent has also by drawing attention to
the provisions of Section 38 of the Specific Relief Act. 1963 for short, the Act], particularly
Section 38(3) of the Act submits that when once the plaintiff had established that he was in
lawful owner of suit schedule property the trial court has rightly decreed the suit for
injunction: that the judgment and decree is to be sustained having regard to the provisions of
Section 38(3)(d) of the Act, particularly to avoid multiplicity of judicial proceedings; that the
plaintiff was definitely entitled to defend and protect his possession and seeking for a
restraint order against the first defendant and no need to wait till he is dispossessed to file a
suit for declaration and the suit for recovery of possession or mere suit for recovery of
possession etc.
32. Submission is not relevant to the facts of the present case. Section 38 of the Act is a
provision indicating the circumstances under which a perpetual injunction can be granted. It
is also subject to other provisions contained in the Act. The court is unable to grant an order
of perpetual injunction in the circumstances indicated in Sub-clauses (1), (2) and (3). Sub-
clause (3) deals with cases relating to immovable properties and Clause-(b) hereunder
provides for grant of an order of perpetual injunction to prevent multiplicity of judicial
proceedings.
33. The provision only enables the court to grant a relief of this nature if the plaintiff is able
to establish durable possession to the property on the date of filing the suit. Here the plaintiff
in fact has not established the possession in fact and cannot rely upon his mere title for
seeking the relief of injunction. The relief of injunction cannot be granted for the mere
asking, but only when there is necessary pleadings and supporting evidence. Reference to the
provision of law does not automatically fetch the relief sought for by the plaintiff unless the
plaintiff makes good his case.
34. The plaintiff though in fact pleaded that he is the owner of the suit schedule property and
he was in possession etc., on his pleadings, the plaintiff admits in his evidence that the
interference was much later and one of obstruction by the first defendant when the plaintiff
went to the site to put up fence. The suit itself being filed two years thereafter and the first
defendant having categorically denied the right of the plaintiff, the plaintiff if was seeking to
support his possession of the property with reference to title, it was necessary for him to have
sought a declaration of his title. In a suit which had been filed initially for declaration and
consequential injunction, wherein the first defendant has denied title of the plaintiff, the suit
fails unless the prayer for declaration is also made good. The suit in law is not maintainable,
as unless declaration is made in favour of the plaintiff, the continued possession of the
plaintiff particularly in the light of denial by the first defendant cannot be recognized in law,
more so when the first defendant has also claimed to herself title in the property and had
denied the title of the plaintiff. In fact, when the plaintiff filed a memo for deletion of the
prayer for declaration subsequent to the trial court framing issues on this aspect i.e. issue No
1, the plaintiffs suit should have been dismissed then and there.
35. I am of the view that the suit of the plaintiff for bare injunction without supporting
declaration was not maintainable in law. The suit should have been dismissed on this aspect
alone.
36. However, in the present case, the plaintiff having not made good his case on facts also
and the suit being not maintainable for the relief of injunction alone there was no way for the
trial court to decree the suit.
37. In the result, this appeal is allowed, and the judgment and decree passed by the trial court
is set aside and the suit of the plaintiff is dismissed.
38. Before parting with this appeal, it is necessary for me to make an observation about the
legal position. A plaintiff approaching the court for mere injunction if he fails, it does not
amount to a positive decree in favour of the defendant, which the defendant can either
execute or take advantage for anything further, other than for retaining the existing state of
affairs. It is always open to the person who is in possession [of a property] to defend his
possession in a manner known to law and the dismissal of the suit of the plaintiff does not
give rise to specific or positive right in favour of the first defendant.
39. In the circumstances, the parties to bear their respective costs.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF CALCUTTA
A.F.O.D. No. 131 of 1976
Decided On: 04.07.1979
Appellants: Sm. Nani Bala Saha and Anr.
Vs. Respondent: Sm. Charu Bala Saha and Anr.
Hon'ble Judges/Coram: M.M. Dutt and Ram Krishna Sharma, JJ.
Counsels: For Appellant/Petitioner/Plaintiff: Saktinath Mukherjee, Sourendran Prosad Ghosh and
Manoharan Saha, Advs.
For Respondents/Defendant: Ranjit Kumar Banerjee and Amiya Narayan Mukherjee, Advs.
Subject: Property
Catch Words
Mentioned IN
Acts/Rules/Orders:
Specific Relief Act, 1963 - Section 38(3)
Cases Referred:
Shelfer v. City of London Electric Lighting Co., (1895) 1 Ch. 287; Woollerton and Wilson
Ltd. v. Richard Costain Ltd., (1970) 1 All ER 483; Rochdale Canal Co. v. King, (1851) 2
Sim. N.S. 78; Goodson v. Richardson, (1874) 9 Ch. App. 221; Kelsen v. Imperial Tobacco
Co., (1957) 2 All ER 343; Shamnugger Jute Factory Co. v. Ram Naram Chatterjee, (1887)
ILR 14 Cal 189
Disposition: Appeal partly allowed
Case Note:
Property obstruction Specific Relief Act, 1963 injunction Orders granted by Court
below preventing defendants from creating obstructions in constructing partition wall
defining boundary allotted to plaintiffs and defendants appeal against this Order after
considering facts of present case and law on subject Court observed that by granting
such Order defendant were put to irreparable loss defendants could not enjoy their
portion freely held, Order of injunction bad in law and liable to set aside.
JUDGMENT
M.M. Dutt, J.
1. This appeal is at the instance of the defendants and it arises out of a suit for permanent and
mandatory injunction.
2. The plaintiff No. 1 is the wife and the plaintiff No. 2 Joykrishna Saha is her husband. The
defendants Nos. 1 and 2 are respectively the widow and the son of one Subal Krishna Saha,
since deceased, the elder brother of the plaintiff No. 2 Joykrishna Saha. There was an
amicable partition of joint properties among Subal Krishna Saha, Joykrishna Saha and one
Bibhuti Bhusan by a registered deed of partition dated June 2, 1954. The disputed house,
which is a five storied one, situate at P-98, B. K. Pal Avenue, Calcutta was allotted to Subal
Krishna Saha and Joykrishna Saha and the same was also partitioned between the said two
brothers in accordance with a plan annexed to the said deed of partition and on terms and
conditions mentioned therein. The house was divided into two portions.--Lot A and Lot B.
Lot A, being the front portion, abutting on the B. K. Pal Avenue, was allotted to Joykrishna
and Lot B, the rear portion, was allotted to Subal Krishna. A common passage, 10 ft. in
width, was created in the southwestern portion leading from B. K. Pal Avenue up to the
allotment of Subal Krishna and lying on the south of the allotment of Joykrishna. Lot A has
since been numbered as 16B, B. K. Pal Avenue and Lot B as 16A, B. K. Pal Avenue.
3. There was some trouble between the two brothers in effecting the partition by metes and
bounds by raising partition walls. The plaintiffs filed a suit being Suit No. 1778 of 1957 in
the Original Side of this Court. That suit was eventually settled between the parties. The
plaintiffs also filed another suit being Title Suit No. 19 of 1972 in the City Civil Court,
Calcutta which was transferred to the Original Side of this Court at the instance of Subal
Krishna. Thereafter, good feelings were restored between the parties. Subal Krishna died on
Feb. 15, 1968 leaving behind him the defendant No. 1, his widow, and the defendant No. 2,
his only son, as his heirs. Good feelings between the parties also continued even after the
death of Subal Krishna. Fresh quarrels and disputes between the parties again started. The
principal dispute between them centres round the construction of partition walls across the
roadside balconies allotted to the defendants. Further, it was alleged by the plaintiffs that on
Sept. 23 and 25, 1972 the defendants commenced building of an unauthorised structure on a
portion of the common passage and they also encroached upon the plaintiffs' land by making
a roof of an iron sheet and projecting the same against the roof of the plaintiffs' garage. It was
the plaintiffs' case that the defendants had been preventing them from constructing the
partition walls on the balconies. Accordingly, the plaintiffs prayed for a mandatory injunction
directing the defendants to remove and demolish the constructions raised by them in the
common passage and to remove the water pipes and other pipes and electric cables laid under
the common passage adjoining the plaintiffs' land. Further, it was prayed that the defendants
should be directed to remove the corrugated iron shed put up over the plaintiffs' garage on the
south eastern corner. The plaintiffs also prayed for a permanent injunction restraining the
defendants from preventing the plaintiffs from constructing the partition walls on the
balconies.
4. The suit was contested by the defendants. They denied the allegations made by the
plaintiffs about the unauthorised constructions constructed in a portion of the common
passage and the encroachment upon the plaintiffs' land by making a roof of iron sheet and
projecting the same over the plaintiffs' garage. The defendants also made certain allegations
against the plaintiffs. As to the claim for partition at the balconies, it was contended by the
defendants that the same was illegal and not maintainable in law. The case of the defendants
in this regard was that according to the intervention and mediation of one Upendra Kumar
Saha, the claim for partition of the balconies was abandoned by the plaintiffs on creation of
better feelings between the parties as good feelings between the parties, were restored, the
status quo was decided to be maintained so far as the water pipes, drain pipes, electric cables
and balconies were concerned.
5. The learned Judge, 4th Bench, City Civil Court, Calcutta decreed the suit and granted a
mandatory injunction as prayed for by the plaintiffs except that the plaintiffs' prayer for
partition of the common passage was disallowed. As to the erection of walls on the balconies,
the learned Judge granted a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing
the plaintiffs from constructing partition walls on the balconies. Hence this appeal by the
defendants.
6. At the outset, it may be stated that in this appeal we are only concerned with as to whether
the plaintiffs are entitled to a decree for permanent injunction restraining the defendants from
obstructing or preventing the plaintiffs from constructing partition walls on the balconies.
The finding of the learned Judge and the decree granted in that regard have only been
challenged before us. Accordingly, we are not concerned with the rest of the decree and other
findings of the learned Judge which stand affirmed.
7. It has been stated already that 16A, B. K. Pal Avenue which is the back portion of the
disputed house has been allotted to the defendants. It appears that even after the partition of
the house dividing the same into two Lots, namely, Lot A and Lot B, there were disputes
between Joykrishna and Subal Krishna which led the plaintiff No. 2 Joykrishna to institute
suits on two occasions. It, however, transpires from the written statement of the defendants
and it is also not disputed that the matter was once referred to a common relation and well
wisher of the parties, one Upendra Kumar Saha. It appears that the house has a corridor of the
width of 4f ft. in each Lot. Out of the width of 4f ft., 3f ft. was allotted to Subal Krishna and
the remaining strip of 1 foot was allotted to Joykrishna. Upendra Kumar Saha was of the
opinion that corridor with its entire width should go to Sutaal Krishna because the narrow
part of it allotted to Joykrishna would be useless to him. Accordingly, he decided that in lieu
of this I foot wide strip of corridor, Joykrishna should get 3 ft. wide land contiguous to his
allotment parallel to the site of the Common passage. It is not disputed that the parties
accepted the adjudication of Upendra Kumar Saha and it is the plaintiffs' case that Joykrishna
had given up his claim to the corridor in terms of the decision of Upendra Kumar Saha. It is
also not disputed that the partition wall was erected in each of the corridors, but no partition
wall was erected on the balconies. In this regard, it may be stated here, that the balcony in
each floor measures 88 inches in length of which the western 15 inches fell to the share of
Joykrishna. Joykrishna now wants to extend the partition wall across the balcony in each
floor so as to demarcate the 15-inch space allotted to his share. It is also not disputed that
after a wall is erected on the balcony only a 10-inch space would be left to the plaintiffs. The
most significant fact that may be noticed in this connection is that the plaintiffs have no
access to the balconies and they would never be able to use the small spaces on the balconies
for any purpose whatsoever. Even if the partition walls have to be erected on the balconies
that would have to be done from the portions allotted to the defendants. It has been stated
already that although a partition wall was erected on each floor, it was not extended across
the balconies. We have already noticed the case of the defendants that as good feelings were
restored between the parties, it was decided that status quo should be maintained. In other
words, the case of the defendants is that no wall should be raised on the balconies so as to
separate the 15-inch space allotted to the plaintiff Joykrishna in each balcony. It is not
disputed before us that for the non-construction of the partition walls on the balconies, the
plaintiffs will not suffer any loss or damage whatsoever.
8. The reasons why Joykrishna wants to erect walls on the balcony in each floor have been
stated in the plaint. In para. 5 of the plaint, it has been stated inter alia that after the second
suit which was filed by Joykrishna was transferred to the Original Side of this Court, good
feelings between the parties were restored and there was no further dispute between them and
the erection of walls on the balconies was deferred. In paragraph 7, it is stated that since Sept.
23, 1972 the defendants developed adverse attitude and the ladies also quarreled and so the
urgency for erecting the walls on the balconies in the different floors was felt. The defendants
resisted the erection of walls on the balconies by the plaintiffs. The statements in the plaint
support, to some extent, the defendants' case that the parties had decided that no wall should
be erected on the balconies. It is clear that as the ladies of the two families had fallen out, the
plaintiffs wanted to erect walls on the balconies although the same would not serve them any
purpose whatsoever. In this context, we are now to consider whether a permanent injunction
restraining the defendants from obstructing the plaintiffs from erecting the walls on the
balconies should be granted or not.
9. Section 38 of the Specific Relief Act relates to the grant of perpetual injunctions. The
circumstances enumerated under sub-sec. (3) of S. 38 are based on the rules acted upon by
courts of equity in England because they were in accordance with justice, equity and good
conscience. In the instant case, there can be no doubt that the plaintiff No. 2 Joykrishna has
acquired title to the fifteen-inch space in the balconies in the different floors of the house.
The defendants do not deny the title of the plaintiff No. 2. Their case, however, is that
erection of partition walls on the balconies for separating the said space of fifteen inches in
each balcony will not serve any purpose whatsoever to the plaintiffs; on the other hand, the
erection of such walls would be harmful to the defendants. The injuries that will be suffered
by the defendants as submitted by Mr. Sakti Nath Mukherjee, learned Advocate appearing on
their behalf are: (1) the entire load of the walls will rest on the balconies, (2) the ten-inch
space that would be left in the plaintiffs' portion on each balcony will be a source of nuisance
to the defendants inasmuch as that space which will be inaccessible to both parties will
remain unclean for ever, (3) the erection of the walls on the balconies will obstruct the entire
view of the defendants of the B. K. Pal Avenue, and (4) the walls will to some extent reduce
the light and air from the western side.
10. Mr. Ranjit Kumar Banerjee, learned Advocate appearing on behalf of the plaintiffs
submits that as soon as the plaintiffs establish their right to the property and the violation of
that right by the defendants, the plaintiffs will be entitled to the grant of a perpetual
injunction. In support of that contention, Mr. Banerjee has placed reliance on Halsbury's
Laws of England, Vol. 13, Article 17, page 12 where it is stated that as a general rule, before
a perpetual injunction can be granted, the party applying must establish his right; but as soon
as he has established his right and shows that it has been violated, then, unless there is
something special in the case, he is entitled, as of course, to a perpetual injunction to prevent
the recurrence of the violation, and the injunction may be granted even though no damage has
been caused. At the end of Article 17 it has been stated that the Court shall have regard to all
surrounding circumstances in considering whether or not it should grant an injunction, and
does not confine itself to the dry strict rights of the plaintiff and the defendant. In this
connection, we may refer to the following observations from Kerr on Injunctions, 6th Ed.,
pages 31-32:--
"The Court will in general have regard not only to the dry strict rights of the plaintiff and
defendant, but also to the surrounding circumstances and the conduct of the parties. The
consideration of the balance of convenience and inconvenience in granting or withholding the
Injunction is not neglected by the Court. If granting the injunction would have the effect of
inflicting serious damage upon the defendant without restoring or tending to restore the
plaintiff to the position in which he originally stood, or doing him any real practical good; or
if the mischief complained of is trivial, or can be properly, fully and adequately compensated
by pecuniary sum, an injunction will not issue."
11. The above statement of law from Kerr on Injunction supports the contention of the
defendants that as the erection of the walls on the balconies will not do any real practical
good to the plaintiffs; on the contrary, they will do positive harm to the defendants, the
injunction should not be granted. The principles relating to the grant of injunction have been
enumerated by A. L. Smith LJ in Shelfer v. City of London Electric Lighting Co. (1895) 1
Ch. 287 as follows :
"(1) If the injury to the plaintiffs legal right is small,
(2) And is one which is capable of being estimated in money,
(3) And is one which can be adequately compensated by a small money payment,
(4) And the case is one in which it would be oppressive to the defendant to grant an
injunction :--
then damages in substitution for an injunction may be given."
Mr. Banerjee, however, points out that the principles of law laid down in Shel-fer's case
(supra) have not been followed in Woollerton and Wilson Ltd. v. Richard Costain, Ltd.
(1970) 1 All ER 483 where it has been observed by Stamp J. that the case which A. L. Smith
L. J. was considering was, however, a case of nuisance, and the above principles cannot be
regarded as applicable where the complaint is of a trespass in respect of which only nominal
damages can be recovered. In expressing that view Stamp J. has placed reliance on the
Rochdale Canal Co. v. King (1851) 2 S. N. S. 78 and Goodson v. Richardson (1874) 9 Ch.
App. 221. His Lordship has also referred to the judgment in Kelsen v. Imperial Tobacco Co.
(1957) 2 All ER 343 where it has been held that the classic remarks of A. L. Smith LJ in
Shelfer's case are applicable as well as to an action for trespass as to one for nuisance.
Woollerton's case (Supra) was one of trespass on land and air space. The facts of that case
were that the defendants, a company of building contractors, installed a high crane on a site to
assist them in the construction of a tall building. Working space on the site was exceptionally
limited and the operation of the defendants caused congestion in the street, which had been
the cause of complaint by the plaintiffs whose premises were opposite the site.
Approximately 50 feet of the jib of the crane sometimes extended over the plaintiffs'
premises but they were at no time in any apprehension of danger. Construction on the site
began in Oct. 1969 and was due for completion in Nov. 1970. The plaintiffs were offered
£250 for the right to continue the trespass, which the defendants admitted, but which they
found was entirely unavoidable if construction was to continue. On the above facts, Stamp J.
held that the plaintiffs were entitled to an order of injunction; but it is significant to be
noticed, that the operation of the injunction was postponed until the end of Nov., 1970 within
which the defendants were expected to complete the construction works.
12. There can be no doubt that if the principles in Woollerton's case (supra) have to be
followed in the instant case, the plaintiffs should be granted an injunction as prayed for by
them. But the preponderance of authorities lean in favour of the view that where the plaintiff
will not suffer in case the injunction is not granted, but the grant of injunction will put the
defendant to hardship and will be oppressive to him, the Court will refuse to grant injunction.
In Spry on Equitable Remedies (1971) Ed 363 it has been observed as follows:
"Thus, on the one hand, there are cases where the plaintiff is concerned merely to vindicate
his rights and is not expected to suffer substantial hardship or inconvenience even if a breach
takes place. Here if the defendant is able to show that to grant an injunction would cause him
very considerable hardship a court of equity will generally consider it unjust and
unreasonable to do so, and this will be the case even where the plaintiff is merely seeking to
enforce a negative covenant or undertaking which has been voluntarily assumed by the
defendant."
Again at page 429, the learned author has, after referring to the rule in Woollerton's case,
observed:
"The better view, however, is that the considerations of hardship on the part of the defendant
are never disregarded, although the weight which will be attributed to them will often be
found to be considerably reduced in view of other circumstances, such as the acts in question
are clearly wrongful or that he has been wantonly or recklessly acting in disregard of the
rights of the plaintiff."
13. In the instant case, it has been stated already that the defendants do not deny the plaintiffs'
title to the small spaces in the balconies. It is not disputed that the plaintiffs will not suffer in
the least, far less any substantial injury, if the injunction be not granted. It is the plaintiffs'
case that they would not have insisted on erecting walls on the balconies, had it not been for a
fresh quarrel among the ladies. On the other hand, the defendants would suffer hardship and
inconvenience in case the walls are allowed to be constructed. In the circumstances, in our
view, the Court will not be inclined to apply the rule in Wollerton's case (supra) upon
consideration of only the dry strict rights of the plaintiffs.
14. Mr. Banerjee has placed reliance on an observation from Woodroffe on 'The Law
Relating to Injunctions', 5th Ed., page 358. It has been observed by the learned author that it
is doubtful whether the English Courts have jurisdiction to award damages in lieu of an
injunction where the injury is not yet committed, but threatened only, but apparently the
inclination of the Court is in the direction of holding that it has not. The observation
contemplates that if the injunction be not granted an injury will be committed to the plaintiff.
In the case before us, there is no question of any injury to be suffered by the plaintiffs as
pointed out above and so we do not think that the observation is of any help to the plaintiffs.
The statement in Kerr on Injunctions, 6th Ed., page 477, that the mere fact that there has been
a breach of covenant is, as a general rule, sufficient ground for the interference of the Court
by injunction and the covenantee is entitled, as a general rule, to have his right enforced by
injunction without the necessity of showing damage, relied on by the plaintiffs, relates to
breach of covenants in a contract and is, therefore inapplicable to the present case.
15. Mr. Banerjee has also placed reliance on the doctrine "Preventive justice excellent
punishing justice" on which a 'quia timet' action is based. But that doctrine will not apply to
the instant case, for in a 'quia timet' action there shall be a sufficient degree of probability that
the injury will be substantial and will be continued, repeated, or committed at no remote
period (See Salmond on Torts 11th Ed. page 187); the plaintiff must prove that there is an
imminent danger of very substantial damage, e.g., by showing that the threatened act is
attended with extreme probability of irreparable injury to the property of the plaintiff,
including also danger to their existence (See Snell's Principles of Equity 26th Ed., page 700).
The doctrine has been stated in another form in Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, 5th Ed.,
Article 1357, p. 967: "The ideal remedy in any perfect system of administering justice would
be that which absolutely precludes the commission of a wrong, not that which awards
punishment or satisfaction for a wrong after it is committed." At the same time it has been
observed in Article 1338 at pages 935-936 that equity will not interfere to restrain the breach
of a contract, or the commission of a tort, or the violation of any right, when the legal remedy
of compensatory damages would be complete and adequate.
16. It follows from the above principles laid down by different authorities that the grant of
injunction is discretionary with Court, the discretion has, however, to be exercised after due
consideration of all surrounding circumstances. It will not be correct to say that whenever
there is an invasion of a right, the Court should grant an injunction. "And the principle is well
settled that in granting or withholding an injunction the Courts exercise a judicial discretion,
and weigh the amount of substantial mischief done or threatened to the plaintiff, and compare
with that which the injunction, if granted, would inflict upon the defendant" (Shamnugger
Jute Factory Co. v. Ram Naram Chatterjee, (ILR (1887) Cal 189).
17. At the risk of repetition, it may, be stated that if the injunction be not granted, the
plaintiffs will not suffer any loss or injury whatsoever, but the grant of an injunction would
do definite harm to the defendants. After carefully considering the facts and circumstances of
the case and the above principles of law, we are of the view that it is not a fit case where an
injunction should be granted to the prejudice of the defendants. The learned Judge, in our
opinion, was not justified in granting the injunction solely on the consideration of the
plaintiffs' right to the fifteen inch spaces in the balconies. In our view, the learned Judge did
not exercise his discretion in accordance with the principles of law discussed above.
18. Before we part with this appeal, one fact may be noticed. In this appeal, the plaintiffs
were able to obtain an interim injunction in their favour and by virtue of such an injunction
erected brick walls on the balconies except on the balcony in the second floor where the
separation was made by an iron grill at the request of the defendants and as directed by the
Court. The order of interim injunction and the erection of walls and the grill were, however,
made subject to the result of the appeal.
19. In the circumstances, we set aside the judgment and decree of the learned Judge in so far
as they grant a permanent injunction against the defendants regarding the construction of
partition walls on the balconies in all the floors of the disputed house. The rest of the
judgment and decree of the learned Judge is affirmed. The plaintiffs will remove the walls
and the iron grill within six weeks from date. The defendants will give access to the plaintiffs
to their portion for the removal of the said walls and grill. If the plaintiffs do not remove the
walls and the grill within the time mentioned above, the defendants will be entitled to remove
the same at their own cost.
20. The appeal is allowed in part, but in view of the peculiar facts and circumstances of the
case, there will be no order for costs.
Sharma, J.
21. I agree.