Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 14913-14 of 1996
PETITIONER:
SURENDRA KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NATHULAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/05/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & Brijesh Kumar
JUDGMENT:
D.P.MOHAPATRA, J.
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Smt. Chand Bai, widow of Pothulal, was the original
owner of the suit property which is a three storied building
situated at Sangipada, Sawai Madhopur in the State of
Rajasthan. On the third floor of the house some rooms were
constructed by the said Smt. Chand Bai. She mortgaged
those rooms with possession to Sugan Chand for Rs. 3700/-
vide the registered mortgage deed dated 17.2.1950.
Thereafter Sugan Chand mortgaged the suit property with
possession to Smt. Parsadi and Hanumandas on 28.7.1961 for
Rs.2400/- under a registered mortgaged deed. Said Smt.
Parsadi and Hanumandas in turn mortgaged the suit property
with possession to Nathulal, the respondent no.1 herein.
Nathulal is in possession of the suit property.
When the respondent no.1 started demolishing a portion
of the suit property, Smt.Chand Bai filed a Civil Suit
No.69/70 (4/76) in the Court of the Munsif, Sawai Madhopur
for mandatory injunction, for declaration of easementary
rights, etc. The suit was decreed and the appeal filed by
the respondent no.1 was dismissed. The Second Appeal
No.168/91 filed by him is pending in the High Court. During
the pendency of the suit, Smt.Chand Bai executed a gift deed
on 29.1.1971 in favour of Surendra Kumar, appellant herein.
Thereafter the appellant filed a Civil Suit No.140/73/111/74
for redemption of the mortgage. Smt.Parsadi, Hanuman Dass,
Nathu Lal, Sugan Chand and Smt.Chand Bai were impleaded as
Defendant Nos.1 to 5 respectively in the said suit. It is
relevant to state here that in the suit, Nathu Lal was the
main contesting defendant. Smt.Parsadi and Hamuman Dass,
Defendants 1 and 2 had entered into a compromise with the
plaintiff. Sugan Chand and Smt.Chand Bai, Defendants 4 and
5 filed written statement supporting the case of the
plaintiff.
The Trial Court, on perusal of the pleadings of the
parties, framed ten issues of which issue Nos.2, 7 and 9 are
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relevant for the purpose of the present proceeding. The
said issues are to the effect that :
2. Whether the plaintiff has got the right to file the
suit?
7. Whether the gift-deed is collusive?
9. Whether the plaintiff is entitled to get the
possession of the house in dispute?
The trial Court answered all these issues in favour of
the plaintiff and decreed the suit vide its judgment dated
15th March, 1978. The operative portion of the judgment
reads :
1. Upon the plaintiff paying to the defendant No.3
Rs.2612.25 (Rs.2400/- mortgage amount and Rs.212.25 as
expenses for repairs etc.) the plaintiff shall have the
right to get the property in dispute redeemed and the
plaintiff shall be entitled to get the possession of the
disputed property. The plaintiff shall deposit the said
amount in the Court on 30.3.78 and on the same day the
defendant Nathu Lal shall produce the documents regarding
the mortgage in the Court.
2. The plaintiff shall also pay Rs.1300/- to Shri Sugan
Chand, defendant No.4.
The appeal, Civil Appeal No.11/78/75/86 filed by the
respondent no.1 challenging the judgment/decree of the trial
Court was allowed by the District Judge, Sawai Madhopur and
the suit was dismissed vide the judgment dated 11th October,
1989.
The Second Appeals filed by the appellant were
dismissed summarily by the Rajasthan High Court vide its order
dated 7th August, 1991. The relevant portion of the order is
quoted below:
Heard the arguments of the learned counsel for the
Appellant in the aforesaid both appeals for admission and
perused the Judgments of the Courts below and the material
available on the file.
I do not find any question of law on which the decisions
of the lower Courts require inference.
Therefore both the aforesaid appeals being without
merits are hereby dismissed.
Hence, these appeals. Shri U.N.Bachawat, learned senior
counsel, appearing for the appellant contended that the High
Court erred in law in summarily dismissing the second
appeals filed by the appellant. He further contended that
the lower appellate Court in the facts and circumstances of
the case, erred in law in holding that the deed of gift was
not duly proved since one of the attestors has not been
examined in the case. According to Shri Bachawat, the
document was rightly received in evidence by the Trial Court
and marked as Exhibit-3.
Per contra, Shri Ajay Chaudhary, learned counsel
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appearing for the respondent supported the judgment of the
lower appellate court and also the summary dismissal of the
second appeals by the High Court.
We have considered the contentions advanced by counsel
for the respective parties. As noted earlier, the Trial
Court answered the three relevant issues in the suit i.e.
issue nos.2, 7 and 9 in favour of the plaintiff. The
discussions in the judgment show that the trial Court was
not impressed by the contention raised on behalf of the
contesting defendant that the deed of gift has not been
proved by producing any one of the attesting witnesses as
required under Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
Accepting the deed of gift the Court held that the plaintiff
has neither the right to redeem the suit property nor
recover possession. Referring to the evidence of DW1 Nathu
Lal, the Court observed that he has not stated even a single
word about the collusiveness of the deed of gift and,
therefore, there is no basis for holding the deed of gift as
collusive. The trial Court further held that since the
donor has admitted the genuineness and validity of the deed
of gift, any other person cannot be permitted to challenge
its genuineness and validity if no prejudice is caused to
his interest by virtue of the document. The Court further
observed that no such issue has been framed in the suit
whether defendant no.5 Chand Bai executed any deed of gift
in favour of the plaintiff in respect of the property in
dispute or not.
On a perusal of the judgment of the lower appellate
Court it is clear that the District Judge has reversed the
decision of the trial Court on the ground that the plaintiff
has not produced the original deed of gift by which he
claims himself to be the owner of the suit property. In the
circumstances, the appellate Court held, mere admission of
the execution and validity of the deed of gift by Chand Bai
in the pleading is not sufficient to entitle the plaintiff
to get a decree in the suit.
The High Court, as noted earlier, summarily dismissed
the second appeal holding that the case did not involve any
substantial question of law.
On a perusal of the written statement filed by defendant
no.3, who is respondent no.1 herein, it appears that the
assertion in the plaint that Chand Bai has executed a deed
of gift in favour of the plaintiff and, therefore, he is
entitled to redeem the mortgage property and recover
possession of the same was not specifically denied. In
paras 5 and 6 of the written statement, there was merely a
general denial of the averments in the plaint. Regarding
the deed of gift the plea taken in the written statement was
that it was a collusive transaction. The further case
pleaded by the defendant no.3 was that he has no privity of
contract with the plaintiff as he got the property by
mortgage from Smt.Parsadi and Hanumandas and, therefore, the
plaintiff is not entitled to redeem the mortgage and recover
possession of the property.
In the absence of any specific denial of execution of
the deed of gift by Chand Bai, the trial Court did not and,
in our view, rightly frame any issue regarding the execution
and validity of the deed of gift. On the plea that the gift
was a collusive transaction, the trial Court observed that
no evidence was led on behalf of the defendant no.3 in
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support of his case.
Section 123 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882
provides :
123. Transfer how effected.- For the purpose of making
a gift of immovable property, the transfer must be effected
by a registered instrument signed by or on behalf of the
donor, and attested by at least two witnesses.
In the present case there exists a registered deed of
gift signed by the donor and attested by two witnesses.
Therefore, the requirement of the law as incorporated in the
Section is satisfied. Section 68 of the Indian Evidence
Act, 1872 makes a provision regarding proof of execution of
a document required by law to be attested. Therein it is
laid down that :
If a document is required by law to be attested, it
shall not be used as evidence until one attesting witness at
least has been called for the purpose of proving its
execution, if there be an attesting witness alive, and
subject to the process of the Court and capable of giving
evidence.
The proviso to the section, which is relevant for the
present purpose, reads:
Provided that it shall not be necessary to call an
attesting witness in proof of the execution of any document,
not being a will, which has been registered in accordance
with the provisions of the Indian Registration Act, 1908 (16
of 1908), unless its execution by the person by whom it
purports to have been executed is specifically denied.
(Emphasis supplied)
On a plain reading of the proviso, it is manifest that a
registered deed of gift can be received in evidence without
examining one of the attestors if the person who has
executed the deed of gift has not specifically denied its
execution. In the present case, the donor Chand Bai has
specifically admitted execution of the deed of gift in
favour of the appellant. Therefore, the lower appellate
Court was in error in holding that the deed of gift has not
been duly proved since one of the attestors has not been
examined as witness. Indeed the certified copy of the
registered deed of gift was produced in the trial Court
along with an application filed by the plaintiff in the
previous suit, suit No.69/70(4/76) that the same may be
called for. The trial Court, being satisfied about the
reason for non-production of the original document, marked
the certified copy of the deed of gift as Exhibit-3.
The High Court, as noted earlier, dismissed the second
appeals on the ground that no substantial question of law
arises in the case. We are constrained to hold that the
order was passed without due application of mind. The
judgment of the lower appellate Court was clearly vitiated
by error of law in holding that the deed of gift was not
duly proved in the case. In the result, the appeals succeed
and they are allowed with costs. The judgment/order passed
by the High Court dismissing the second appeals, thereby
confirming the judgment of the District Judge are set aside
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and the judgment and decree passed by the trial Court is
restored.