Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JHUMMAN SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CENTRAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/03/1995
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
SEN, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2083 1995 SCC (3) 420
JT 1995 (3) 360 1995 SCALE (2)546
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J.:
1. This writ petition brings to light a serious abuse of
process of court - indeed an abuse of the process of more
than one court - indulged in by certain unscrupulous
persons. Since the facts of the case are themselves
demonstrative of the said abuse perpetrated by Respondent
No.3, we, would set them out first.
2. The four writ petitioners are the tenants of four shops
comprised in property bearing No. WZ-93, Titarpur, Najafgarh
Road, New Delhi-1 10027, while the third respondent is
occupying the fifth shop as a tenant. According to the
petitioners, one Siyaram Gupta was the, own=of the said five
shops. On his death in or about 1983, his wife, Smt.Urmila
Devi and her three daughters became the owners. Towards the
end of the year 1992, the petitioners say, the landlady
offered to sell the shops to the respective tenants. Three
of
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the petitioners purchased the three shops occupied by them.
Sale deeds were also executed in their favour. After the
death of Smt. Urmila Devi, the petitioners say, the third
respondent, Sri Sangat Singh started declaring himself as
the owner of all the five shops and demanded rent from the
petitioners which they resisted.
3. The petitioners complained that with a view to get the
writ petitioners evicted from the shops otherwise than by
due process of law, the third respondent resorted to a
devious device. Two decrees were, obtained against the
Petitioners 1 and 2 - one from the Court of Assistant Dis-
trict Judge-1 at Gauhati against the first petitioner and
the other from the SubJudge-1, Gaya (Bihar) against the
second petitioner’s father. The decree from the Gauhati
court is dated May 18, 1994 in Arbitration Suit No.47 of
1994 making an award the rule of the Court. The award is
said to have been obtained by one Sri Bhupinder Singh, S/o
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Sri Harcharan Singh, R/o Sri Mantapur, Bhangaghar, Gauhati
against Sri Jhumman Singh, S/o Sri Chadda Singh, R/o Titar
Pur, New Delhi (the first writ petitioner in this writ
petition). The decree says that the defendant, Sri Jhumman
Singh shall pay a sum of Rupees fifty thousand plus interest
@ twelve per cent per annum from April 1, 1992 till the day
of payment to Sri Bhupinder Singh and shall also hand over
peaceful vacant possession of the property bearing Shop No.
4 forming part of premises WZ 93/4 situated at Titar Pur,
Main Najafgarh Road, Tagore Garden, New Delhi. A site plan
is attached to the said decree specifying Shop No.4 which
the defendant to the said decree was to hand over to the
plaintiff therein. The other decree passed by SubJudge-1st,
Gaya is also a decree making an award the rule of the court.
The award which has been made a rule of the Court directs,
inter alia, that Sri Ala Noor S/o Sri Amir Bux, R/o
Titarpur, New Delhi shall hand over to the plaintiff therein
peaceful vacant possession -of the Shop No.3 Conning part of
property No. 93/3, Titar Pur, Main Najafgarh Road, Tagore
Garden, New Delhi-27 (specified in the annexed plan) within
fifteen days of the said Award being made a rule of the
Court. In default, the plaintiff, Sri Ravi Raj Singh, was
held entitled to execute the said decree and recover the
possession. Execution was taken out of the said two decrees
and then transferred to Delhi for execution. Petitioners 1
and 2 came to know of the said decrees only when the Bailiff
came along with the warrants of delivery of possession of
the said premises. On account of the resistance put up by
the petitioners, supported by the neighbours, the Bailiff
could not execute the decrees on that day. On verification
from the Court records, the petitioners say, they came to
know the particulars of said decrees. Petitioners 1 and 2
say that they had nothing to do with the persons shown as
plaintiffs in the said decree, had no dealings with them
much less was there any dispute between them either at
Gauhati, Gaya or anywhere else. They even doubt whether any
such persons really exist. According to them, the whole
thing is a fabrication indulged in by third respondent to
get the Petitioners 1 and 2 evicted surreptitiously. They
submit that obtaining the said fraudulent decrees and the
manner in which they were, sought to be executed and the
petitioners sought to be evicted from their shops is the
result of a criminal conspiracy hatched by the third
respondent. It amounts to criminal offence besides a gross
abuse of process of the Court. Accordingly, they pray for
issu-
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ance of an appropriate writ, order or direction directing
the C.B.I. to enquire and investigate into the circumstances
in which the aforesaid decrees were passed and to take
appropriate action against the persons responsible therefor.
4. The writ petition was entertained by this Court on
September 5, 1994 and stay of dispossession pursuant to the
aforesaid arbitral awards granted.
5. The third respondent, Sri Sangat Singh, has appeared
and filed a counter affidavit. He states that he is the
owner of the shops in occupation of the writ petitioners by
virtue of the sale deed(s) executed by the aforementioned
landlady in his favour in the year 1992. He admits that the
petitioners were tenants in respect of the four shops under
Smt. Urmila Devi but denies the petitioners’ claim of title.
Against the third writ petitioner, Sri Vijay Kumar Behl, he
says, he has filed a suit (Suit No.97 of 1993) seeking his
eviction. In the written statement, he states, Vijay Kumar
Behl has admitted the ownership of Smt.Urmila Devi. With
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respect to the circumstances in which he took out execution
of the aforesaid two decrees against Petitioners 1 and 2,
the third respondent has made the following averments, which
an: better set out in his own words:
"(2) It is submitted that one Bhupender Singh
of Gauhati and other Rabi Raj from Gaya
contacted the replying respondent and told him
that they wants to execute a decree against
Jhumman Singh and Alanur therefore after
execution of decree they will give the shop to
some body else and will get pagari. The
deponent told them that he is the owner of the
shops therefore will not allow any third
person to enter in his shops therefore the
deponent asked them to sell the decree to th
e
deponent and execute the Power of Attorney in
his favour. The replying respondent paid them
Rs. 20,000/- each after taking loan from their
friends and filed the case for execution of
decree.......
(9) That the contents of para 11, 12, 13 of
the writ petition are denied. It is sub-
mitted that Be replying respondent is the
owner of the disputed property and the
petitioner wants to grab the petitioner’s
property. It is submitted when he came to
know that two persons on Shri Bhupender Singh
and Sh.Ravi Raj Singh who both used to come to
Shri Jhumman Singh and Allanur occasionally
and later on when their relation became very
strained they came to the respondent and told
him that they had obtained decree against
the petitioners and after execution of decree
they will give the shops to third person on
pagari. The replying respondent then
requested them not to execute the decree as
the he is owner of the disputed shops but they
did not accept the deponent request.
The bhupinder Singh and Ravi Raj Singh
executed the power of attorney in favour of
the replying respondent and gave him the power
to executed the decree in their behalf. It is
vehemently denied that any signature or
agreement was forged. Smt. Urmila Devi also
given on affidavit on 17.7.92. The true
photocopies of power of Attorney as Annexure
VI collectively and the true copy of affidavit
dated 17.7.92 is Annexure-VII."
(Quoted from the paper-book)
6. We must say at once that the story put forward by the
third respondent is incredulous, to say the least. It is
delightfully vague in relevant particulars. It is curious
how the two plaintiffs, Bhupinder Singh of Gauhati and Ravi
Raj Singh of Gaya, who had obtained two identical de-
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crees from Gauhati and Gaya courts against Petitioners 1 and
2 respectively, simultaneously contacted the third
respondent about the decrees obtained by them and how both
of them made identical statements to third respondent that
after executing the decrees they will give the shops to some
other persons and get ’pagri’. What is more curious is that
the third respondent, who claims to have become the owner of
all the said four shops in the year 1992 itself having
purchased them from Smt.Urmila Devi did not protest against
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the third parties seeking to evict, what according to him,
are his tenants from the premises owned by him and their
proposal to lease them out to third parties and
collect’pagri’themselves. One would have expected the third
respondent to question immediately the right of those third
parties to evict his tenants and obtain possession of the
shops with which they had nothing to do and which, according
to him, are his own properties. Not only did he not do
that, he, without any demur, purchased the said decrees from
the said two persons paying them Rupees twenty thousand each
and obtained Powers of Attorney from them to enable him to
execute the said decrees. The whole story, every bit of it,
appears to be a fabricated one meriting no consideration
whatsoever. It is abundantly clear that the said stratagem
was resorted to by the third respondent with a view to
obtain the surreptitious eviction of the 1st and 2nd
petitioners in execution of the said spurious decrees since
he may have thought that it would be difficult - at any
rate, it will take a long time - for him to obtain eviction
of the said writ petitioners in a straight-forward manner,
i.e., in accordance with the correct procedure prescribed by
law. We are of the opinion that the manner in which the
said decrees were obtained and sought to be put in execution
by the third respondent through the Court at Delhi is a
clear case of abuse of process of courts.
7. Sri M.C.Bhandare, learned counsel appearing for the
petitioners, submits that such fraudulent proceedings are
becoming rampant in the Courts at Delhi and it is necessary
in the interest of justice that persons indulging in such
proceedings should be dealt with severely. He, therefore,
requests that C.B.I. be asked to investigate and prosecute
the persons responsible for perpetrating the said fraud. On
the other hand, Sri K.G.Bhagat, learned counsel for the
third respondent, submitted that this writ petition is
wholly misconceived a,; also the prayer made in the writ
petition. lie says that the Code of Criminal Procedure
prescribes the procedure to be followed in cases of
complaint of the nature made by the writ petitioners herein
and that a writ petition under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India is wholly inappropriate. He says that
the petitioners are not seeking to enforce any of their
fundamental rights and hence, the writ petition is itself
not maintainable in law. He also submits that the third
respondent has bonafide purchased the decrees and put them
in execution and is not guilty of any criminal offence or
abuse of process of Court.
8. We are of the opinion that the story put forward by the
third respondent with respect to the circumstances in which
he claims to have purchased the said decrees are highly
tell-tale. The whole story appears to be a fabricated one.
It is evident that the third respondent has himself ma-
nipulated to get the said decrees from Gauhati and Gaya
Courts with a view to
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evict Petitioners 1 and 2 otherwise than in accordance with
the proper procedure prescribed by law. It is clear beyond
any doubt that the third respondent has tried to over-reach
the courts and to circumvent and defeat the ends of justice
by resorting to the said tactic. It is necessary that not
only such tactics be not allowed to succeed but persons
indulging in them should be dealt with appropriately. In
such a situation, we are not inclined to agree with Sri
Bhagat that this writ petition under Article 32 is not
maintainable. When such a blatant abuse of process of
courts and judicial system comes to the notice of this
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court, it has the power, indeed the duty, to rectify it
whether the power to do so is traced to Articles 32, 136 or
142 of the Constitution. Accordingly, the following
directions are made:
(i) The decrees aforementioned, viz., (1) between Sri
Bhupinder Singh, S/o Sri Harcharan Singh, R/o Sri Mantapur,
Bhangaghar, Gauhati Versus Sri Jhumman Singh, S/o Sri Chadda
Singh, R/o Titar Pur, New Delhi in Arbitration Suit No.47 of
1994 passed by the Court of Assistant District Judge-1 at
Gauhati and (2) between Sri Ravi Raj Singh, S/o Sri Iqbal
Singh, R/ o Church Road, Gaya Versus Ala Noor, S/ o Sri Amir
Bux, R/o WZ-42, Titar Pur, New Delhi are declared in
executable against Petitioners 1 and 2 through any court in
Delhi. Petitioners 1 and 2 shall not be evicted from the
shops mentioned in the said decrees in execution of the said
decrees.
(ii) The third respondent, Sri Sangat Singh, shall pay costs
of this writ petition assessed at Rupees one lakh. The said
amount shall be deposited in this Court within one month
from today. On such deposit, the said amount shall be paid
to Writ Petitioners 1 and 2 (Rupees fifty thousand each).
If the third respondent fails to deposit the said amount
within the period prescribed, this order shall be executable
and be executed as a decree of the civil court by and at the
instance of Petitioners 1 and 2 either jointly or
separately, as the case may be.
(iii)The third respondent and/or any other person claiming
under or through him shall not be entitled to evict the Writ
Petitioners 1 to 4 from the shops in their occupation
forming part of premises No.WZ-93, Titar Pur, Najafgarh
Road, New Delhi except in accordance with law, viz., by
approaching a court at Delhi having territorial jurisdiction
either in accordance with the Rent Control Act or through an
ordinary civil action, as the case may be.
(iv)The petitioners are free to take such proceedings
against the third respondent civil or criminal, as are open
to them in law.
9. We make it clear that we did not intend to and we do
not express any opinion on the pleas of the writ
petitioners or of the third respondent with respect to their
claim of having purchased the said shop or shops, or with
respect to their respective claims of ownership of the said
shops.
10. The writ petition is allowed in the above terms. Costs
as indicated above.
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