Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5784 of 2002
PETITIONER:
BINAPANI KAR CHOWDHURY
RESPONDENT:
SRI SATYABRATA BASU AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/05/2006
BENCH:
B.P. SINGH & R.V. RAVEENDRAN
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
B.P. SINGH, J. :
This appeal, by special leave, is directed against the judgment and order
of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta in C.O. No. 197 of 2002 whereby
the High Court while disposing of the revision preferred by the appellant
herein directed that the suit shall not proceed till such time as the Will
said to have been executed by Avarani Bose was not probated.
2. The facts relevant for the disposal of this appeal as stated by the
appellant are as follows :-
2.1. Late Avarani Bose was the owner of the suit property. The said Avarani
Bose executed a registered sale deed in her favour on 23.12.1994 in respect
of the suit property. The appellant resides in the first floor.
2.2. The said Avarani Bose filed Title Suit No. 10 of 1995 in the Court of
Civil Judge, (Sr. Division), 8th Court, Alipore for declaration of title in
respect of the suit property and for recovery of possession and injunction
with respect to first floor of the suit property claiming that she had
never sold the suit property to the appellant. The appellant, who was
defendant No. 1 in the suit, controverted the allegations in the plaint and
asserted that the property was in fact sold to her by the said Avarani Bose
on 23.12.1994, and that sale deed was valid and binding on the vendor. The
core issue in the suit is whether the said Avarani Bose had sold the suit
property by a valid registered sale deed executed on 23.12.1994 in favour
of the appellant.
2.3. The said Avarani Bose died on 13.11.1997. An application was filed
under Order XXII Rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for Short CPC’) by
respondent No. 1 herein claiming substitution as the legal representative
of the deceased plaintiff on the basis of a Will dated 16.5.1996 said to
have been executed in his favour by Avarani Bose. He claimed to be the
executor and legatee under the said will. The Appellant admits that the
first respondent is in possession of a portion of the ground floor of the
suit property. (The first Respondent claimed that he was in possession in
his own right whereas the appellant claimed that he was the tenant of the
ground floor). None else sought to come on record as the Legal
Representative of Avarani Bose. Though, the appellant herein objected to
the substitution of respondent No. 1 as legal representative of deceased
plaintiff, her objections were rejected and respondent No. 1 was brought on
record as the legal representative of Avarani Bose.
2.4. Though the recording of evidence in the suit has been completed, the
court has not proceeded to hear arguments and dispose of the suit, in view
of the pendency of the probate proceeding, initiated by the first
respondent in regard to the will of Avarani Bose. As the matter was pending
for long, on 5.10.2001, the appellant filed an application under section
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151of CPC before the trial court praying that the court may proceed with
the hearing and decide the suit. The appellant inter alia contended that
first respondent herein was deliberately prolonging the probate
proceedings, so as to keep the suit against appellant pending as that
enabled him to continue to reside in the ground floor of the suit property
without paying rents/damages for occupation. The appellant also contended
that she is old and is prevented from enjoying the entire suit property as
owner, in view of the pendency of the suit.
2.5. The appellant’s prayer was rejected by the trial court by order dated
5.10.2001 on the ground that the suit cannot be disposed of till the
probate is granted. The appellant therefore moved the Calcutta High Court
under section 115 CPC by way of a revision petition. The said revision has
been rejected by the High Court by its impugned order of February 7, 2002
holding that if a suit has been initiated by a testator, on his death, the
Executor of his will can get substituted, but the Executor must get probate
before final disposal of the suit. The said order is under challenge in
this appeal.
3. The first respondent though served has remained unrepresented. The
appellant in her application for early hearing has alleged that the
petition for probate filed by the first respondent has been dismissed for
default on 7.9.2005. The appellant has not, however, produced the order
dismissing the first respondent’s petition for issuance of probate. The
learned counsel for appellant is also not able to state as to whether the
said petition for probate has been restored thereafter. In the absence of
any material in that behalf, it is not possible for us to take note of the
said subsequent event.
4. Section 213 of the Indian Succession Act (‘Act’ for short) provides as
to when the right of the executor or legatee is established. Sub-section
(1) thereof provides that no right as executor or legatee can be
established in any court unless a court of competent jurisdiction in India,
has granted probate of the Will under which the right is claimed (or has
granted letters of administration with the Will or with a copy of the Will
annexed.) It is not in dispute that the said Section applies in the case of
Wills made by a Hindu who is a resident of Calcutta. The trial court and
the High Court have proceeded on the basis that having regard to section
213 of the Act, the suit cannot be decided unless the executor of the Will
produces the probate. Section 213 clearly creates a bar to the
establishment of any right under a Will by the executor or legatee unless
probate or letters of administration of the Will have been obtained. This
Court in Mrs. Hem Nolini Judah v. Mrs. Isolyne Sarojbashini Bose, AIR
(1962) SC 1471, held as follows :
"The words of S.213 are not restricted only to those cases where the claim
is made by a person directly claiming as a legatee. The section does not
say that no person can claim as a legatee or as an executor unless he
obtains probate or letters of administration of the will under which he
claims. What it says is that no right as an executor or legatee can be
established in any Court of Justice, unless probate or letters of
administration have been obtained of the will under which the right is
claimed, and therefore, it is immaterial who wishes to establish the right
as a legatee or an executor. Whosoever wishes to establish that right
whether it be a legatee or an executor himself on somebody else who might
find it necessary in order to establish his right to establish the right of
some legatee or executor from whom he might have derived title, he cannot
do so unless the will under which the right as a legatee or executor is
claimed has resulted in the grant of a probate or letters of
administration."
5. Therefore, where the right of either an executor or a legatee under a
Will is in issue, such right can be established only where probate (where
an executor has been appointed under the Will) or letters of administration
(where no executor is appointed under a Will) have been granted by a
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competent court. Section 213 does not come in the way of a suit or action
being instituted or presented by the executor or the legatee claiming under
a Will. Section 213, however, bars a decree or final order being made in
such suit or action which involves a, claim as an executor or a legatee, in
the absence of a Probate or Letters of Administration in regard to such a
will. Where the testator had himself filed a suit (seeking a declaration
and consequential reliefs) and he dies during the pendency of the suit, the
executor or legatee under his will, can come on record as the legal
representative of the deceased plaintiff under Order 22 Rule 3 CPC and
prosecute the suit. Section 213 does not come in the way of an executor or
legatee being so substituted in place of the deceased plaintiff, even
though at the stage of such substitution, probate or letters of
administration has not been granted by a competent court.
6. However, there appears to be some divergence in views on the question
whether a decree can be passed in the absence of probate (or letters of
administration) where the suit or action has been initiated by the testator
himself (and not by any one claiming a right as the executor or legatee
under a Will) and the Executor/Legatee subsequently comes on record as the
legal representative on the death of the testator. One view is that after
the death of the testator, when an executor or a legatee comes on record
and proceeds with the suit, he is trying to enforce his right under a Will
and, therefore, section 213 would come into play and the probate or letters
of administration will have to be obtained before the judgment is delivered
(see Arijit Mullick v. Corporation of Calcutta, (1979) 2 Cal. L.J. 426. The
other view is that Section 213 will not apply as the suit was not filed to
establish any right of an Executor or Legatee under a Will, and that as the
testator himself having filed the suit, the issue in the suit is only about
the right claimed by the testator/plaintiff and not about the right claimed
by the Executor/Legatee under the Will (see Gobinda Ballav Chakraborty v.
Biswanath Mustafi, AIR (1980) Cal. 143. We do not propose to examine this
question in this appeal, as the respondent is unrepresented, and this
appeal can be disposed of on the special facts and circumstances of this
case.
7. The suit is of the year 1995 and the original plaintiff died in 1997.
The first Respondent came on record as Executor and Legatee of the original
plaintiff in pursuance of an order dated 10.8.1998. The evidence had been
concluded long ago. But till now the first respondent has not obtained the
probate of the Will. The appellant-defendant is stated to be 74 years old.
The said suit, wherein the validity of the sale deed executed in favour of
the appellant by Avarani Bose is questioned, has been pending without a
decision for more than a decade. The first respondent has not even chosen
to appear in this appeal nor explained the delay in securing probate,
thereby lending credence to the claim of the appellant that the first
respondent is deliberately protracting the probate proceedings so that he
can avoid a decision in this case and continue to be in possession of the
ground floor.
8. Therefore, with a view to do complete justice between the parties, it is
appropriate to direct the trial court (Civil Judge, Senior Division,
Alipore), where T.S. No. 10/1995 is pending, to proceed to hear arguments
and deliver judgment in the suit. Nothing further will be required, if the
suit is to be dismissed. But if the suit is to be decreed, the trial court
should make it clear that the judgment and decree will come into effect
only on the first respondent obtaining and producing the probate of the
will, and till then the decree should be considered only as provisional and
not to be given effect. We dispose of this appeal accordingly making it
clear that nothing stated above is an expression of any opinion on merits
of the case.