Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1921 of 2007
PETITIONER:
BEGUM SABIHA SULTAN
RESPONDENT:
NAWAB MOHD. MANSUR ALI KHAN & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/04/2007
BENCH:
TARUN CHATTERJEE & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1921 OF 2007
(Arising out of SLP(C) No.4586 of 2006)
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. The appellant, hereinafter referred to as the
plaintiff, is the daughter of Nawab Iftikar Ali Khan and Mehar
Taj Sajeda Sultan. Defendants 1 and 2, who are respondents
1 and 2 herein, are her siblings. Defendant No.3 is her niece,
being the daughter of her brother, Defendant No.1. Defendant
Nos.4 and 5 are assignees from Defendant No.2.
3. The plaintiff filed a suit C.S. (OS) No.495 of 2004 on
the original side of the High Court of Delhi praying for the
following reliefs:
"(a) Pass a decree of declaration declaring the
oral Will dated 1.1.1995 allegedly made by Her
Highness Begum Mehar Taj Sajida Sultan was
never made, further declare that the Sale deed
purported to have been executed on behalf of
Defendant No.2 in favour of Defendant No.4
and 5 as null and void;
(b) to pass a decree of partition in favour of
the plaintiff in respect of her entitled share in
view of the Islamic Personal Law i.e. < of total
properties/estates, out of 180 Kanals and 12
Morlas situated at Village Pataudi, Gurgaon
left behind by above mentioned Her Highness
Mehar Taj Sajida Sultan;
(c) Pass a decree of rendition of account in
respect of the earnings of the above mentioned
properties w.e.f. June, 2000 uptill filing of the
present suit;
(d) Pass a decree of permanent injunction
restraining the Defendants, their employees,
servants whosoever acting on their behalf from
using, alienating, parting with possession
and/or dealing with in any manner whatsoever
in respect of the respective shares of the
plaintiff;
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(e) Pass an order for cost of the suit; and
(f) Pass any other and further orders as this
Hon’ble Court may deem fit, just and proper."
4. The immovable properties that were sought to be
partitioned and alienation in respect of which was sought to be
declared void, were admittedly situate in Village Pataudi,
Gurgaon in the State of Haryana, outside the jurisdiction of
the Court in which the suit was instituted. The suit was filed
in the Court at Delhi on the basis of the following averments in
the plaint:
"The cause of action for filing the present suit
arose on 1.1.1995 when the alleged oral Will
was made by Her Highness Mehar Taj Begum
Sajida Sultan at New Delhi, the cause of action
arose on 25.9.1995 when Defendant No.1
organised a meeting. It again arose
somewhere in March/April when the plaintiff
got knowledge and on 22.10.2002 when the
plaintiff issued legal notice. It further arose on
28.11.2002 and 30.11.2002 when the notices
were replied and the same still subsists.
That Defendant No.1 and 2 reside at Delhi.
The cause of action arose at Delhi, as
according to Defendants themselves alleged
oral Will was made at New Delhi; threats of
parting with the possession was also issued at
Delhi hence this Hon’ble court has jurisdiction
to entertain and try the present suit."
5. The defendants raised an objection to the
jurisdiction of the trial court. They pleaded that the main
relief sought in the plaint was for partition of the properties
situate in Gurgaon, not falling within the jurisdiction of Delhi
court and the declarations sought for are also related to the
said properties and in the light of Section 16(b)and (d) of the
Code of Civil Procedure (for short ’the Code’), the jurisdiction
to entertain the suit was with the concerned court in the State
of Haryana and hence the plaint was liable to be rejected. On
their behalf, the following averment in paragraph 3(d) of the
plaint was emphasised.
"Present suit is being confined to the
properties situate at Village Patudi, Gurgaon
(Haryana), left behind by the mother who had
purchased these properties. So far as the
other properties either left behind by their
mother, father or other relatives are
concerned, the Plaintiff is reserving her
valuable rights to claim in due course, if need
be."
The description of the suit properties set out in paragraph 3(h)
was also relied on.
6. On behalf of the plaintiff, this plea was resisted by
contending that the first declaration regarding the alleged oral
Will of the mother wholly arose within the jurisdiction of the
court at Delhi and since that part of the prayer fell within the
jurisdiction of the court at Delhi, the court at Delhi had
jurisdiction to entertain the suit. It was contended that the
cause of action regarding the will and the declaration sought
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in respect thereof, wholly arose in Delhi and that even
otherwise, three of the defendants were residing in Delhi,
within the jurisdiction of the court at Delhi and, in any event,
on that ground and on the ground that a part of the cause of
action arose in Delhi, the suit could be entertained in the
court at Delhi in terms of Section 20 of the Code.
7. The learned Single Judge, the trial Judge, on a
reading of the plaint, came to the conclusion that the reliefs
claimed in the plaint fell within the purview of Section 16(b)
and (d) of the Code and that the proviso to Section 16 had no
application. Section 20 could not be resorted to, since
Section 16 had application and Section 20 applied only if
Section 16 had no application. Overruling the contention that
the first part of the declaratory relief was rightly claimed in the
court at Delhi, he held that the said declaration was also
related to the properties situated in village Pataudi, outside
the jurisdiction of the court at Delhi and hence the court at
Delhi had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit. The trial judge,
therefore, directed the return of the plaint to the plaintiff for
being presented to the court having jurisdiction. An offer
made to the plaintiff to pass an order in terms of Rule 10A of
Order VII of the Code was not accepted by the plaintiff. Thus,
the plaint was returned to the plaintiff for being presented to
the proper court.
8. The plaintiff filed an appeal against the order before
the Division Bench of the High Court. The Division Bench, on
adverting to Section 16 of Code and the approach of the trial
judge to the question, agreed with the trial judge and
dismissed the appeal. The Division Bench reiterated that the
suit was essentially and in substance for partition and since
the property lay beyond the jurisdiction of the trial court, the
suit could not be brought within the jurisdiction of the trial
court by exhibiting some ingenuity in introducing a plea
regarding an alleged oral Will said to have been brought into
existence in Delhi, within the jurisdiction of the court. The
plaint had to be scrutinised for the real relief sought for
therein and so viewed, the trial judge was right in returning
the plaint for presentation to the proper court. This decision
of the Division Bench is in challenge before us.
9. Learned counsel for the appellant contended that
the substantial prayer in the plaint was for a declaration that
the oral Will dated 1.1.1995 allegedly made by the mother
Sajida Sultan was never made and the cause of action for that
relief wholly arose in Delhi within the jurisdiction of the trial
court. He submitted that the other reliefs of partition,
accounting and declaration of invalidity of the sale executed by
Defendant No.2 were all reliefs that would flow only if the relief
regarding the declaration of Will was granted to the plaintiff
and consequently, those reliefs could be perceived to be only
consequential reliefs. Counsel also pointed out that even if
Section 16(a) and (d) of the Code had application, it was a case
to which the proviso to Section 16 of the Code applied,
especially in the context of the fact that at least three of the
defendants were residing within the jurisdiction of the trial
court. It was, therefore, contended that the decision to return
the plaint was unsustainable in law. Counsel for the
defendants, on the other hand, contended that in pith and
substance, the plaint was for partition of the properties situate
in village Pataudi in Gurgaon that lay outside the territorial
jurisdiction of the court at Delhi and when that is so, the suit
had to be instituted only in the court having jurisdiction over
the property in question and the High Court was right in
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holding that Section 16(b) and (d) of the Code squarely applied
to the case on hand in the light of the releifs claimed. Counsel
further submitted that the proviso to Section 16 of the Code
had no application, since this was not a case where mere
personal obedience to the decree would result in an effective
decree. He further pointed out that Section 20 of the Code will
have no application in a case where Section 16 squarely
applies, since Section 20 was only a residuary provision. He
ultimately submitted that the High Court has understood the
plaint in a particular manner and since an effective decree for
partition, which is the main relief claimed in the plaint, could
more conveniently be passed by the court having jurisdiction
over the properties in question, it was not a fit case where this
Court ought to exercise its jurisdiction under Article 136 of the
Constitution of India, since having the suit tried at Delhi
would only create complications and prolong the proceedings,
even assuming that this Court saw some merit in the
contention that the first part of prayer (a) might come within
the purview of the court at Delhi. He therefore submitted that
no interference be made with the order now passed.
10. There is no doubt that at the stage of consideration
of the return of the plaint under Order VII Rule 10 of the Code,
what is to be looked into is the plaint and the averments
therein. At the same time, it is also necessary to read the
plaint in a meaningful manner to find out the real intention
behind the suit. In Messrs Moolji Jaitha & Co. Vs. The
Khandesh Spinning & Weaving Mills Co. Ltd. [A.I.R. 1950
Federal Court 83], the Federal Court observed that:
"The nature of the suit and its purpose have to
be determined by reading the plaint as a
whole."
It was further observed:
"The inclusion or absence of a prayer is not
decisive of the true nature of the suit, nor is
the order in which the prayers are arrayed in
the plaint. The substance or object of the suit
has to be gathered from the averments made
in the plaint and on which the reliefs asked in
the prayers are based."
It was further observed:
"It must be borne in mind that the function of
a pleading is only to state material facts and it
is for the court to determine the legal result of
those facts and to mould the relief in
accordance with that result."
This position was reiterated by this Court in T.
Arivandandam Vs. T.V. Satyapal & Anr. [(1978) 1 S.C.R.
742] by stating that what was called for was a meaningful ---
not formal --- reading of the plaint and any illusion created by
clever drafting of the plaint should be buried then and there.
In Official Trustee, West Bengal & Ors. Vs. Sachindra Nath
Chatterjee & Anr. [(1969) 3 S.C.R. 92], this Court approving
the statement of the law by Mukherjee Acting Chief Justice in
Hirday Nath Roy Vs. Ramchandra Barna Sarma, [I.L.R. 48
Calcutta 138 F.B.] held:
"Before a court can be held to have jurisdiction
to decide a particular matter it must not only
have jurisdiction to try the suit brought but
must also have the authority to pass the
orders sought for. It is not sufficient that it has
some jurisdiction in relation to the subject-
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matter of the suit. Its jurisdiction must
include the power to hear and decide the
questions at issue, the authority to hear and
decide the particular controversy that has
arisen between the parties."
11. Reading the plaint as a whole in this case, there
cannot be much doubt that the suit is essentially in relation to
the relief of partition and declaration in respect of the
properties situate in Village Pataudi, Gurgaon, outside the
jurisdiction of court at Delhi. It is no doubt true that there is
an averment that an alleged oral will said to have been made
at Delhi by the deceased mother and presumably relied on by
defendants 1 and 2 was never made. But on our part, we fail
to understand the need for claiming such a negative
declaration. After all, the plaintiff can sue for partition,
rendition of accounts and for setting aside the alienation
effected by defendant No. 2 without the junction of the plaintiff
on a claim that the plaintiff is also one of the heirs of the
deceased mother. If in such a suit, the defendants propound
any oral will as excluding the plaintiff from inheritance, the
burden would be on them to establish the making of such an
oral will and the validity thereof. The negative declaration
sought for by the plaintiff appears to us to be totally
superfluous and unnecessary in the circumstances of the
case. It may be noted that it is not the case of the plaintiff
that an oral will was made at Delhi. It is the case of the
plaintiff that no oral will was made at Delhi. It is debatable
whether in such a situation it can be said that any cause of
action arose at all within the jurisdiction of the court at Delhi.
On a reading of the plaint, the trial judge and the Division
Bench have come to the conclusion that in substance the suit
was one relating to immovable property situate outside the
jurisdiction of the trial court in Delhi and hence the plaint had
been presented in a court having no jurisdiction to entertain
the suit. We are inclined to agree with the said understanding
of the plaint by the trial judge and Division Bench, on a
reading of the plaint as a whole.
12. On a reading of the plaint as a whole, it is clear, as
we have indicated above, that the suit is one which comes
within the purview of Section 16(b) and (d) of the Code. If a
suit comes within Section 16 of the Code, it has been held by
this Court in Harshad Chiman Lal Modi Vs. DLF Universal
Ltd. & Anr. [(2005) 7 S.C.C. 791] that Section 20 of the Code
cannot have application in view of the opening words of
Section 20 "subject to the limitations aforesaid". This Court
has also held that the proviso to Section 16 would apply only if
the relief sought could entirely be obtained by personal
obedience of the defendant. The relief of partition, accounting
and declaration of invalidity of the sale executed in respect of
immovable property situate in Village Pataudi, Gurgaon, could
not entirely be obtained by a personal obedience to the decree
by the defendants in the suit. We are in respectful agreement
with the view expressed in the above decision. Applying the
test laid down therein, it is clear that the present suit could
not be brought within the purview of the proviso to Section 16
of the Code or entertained relying on Section 20 of the Code on
the basis that three out of the five defendants are residing
within the jurisdiction of the court at Delhi.
13. Thus, on the whole, we are satisfied that the trial
court was right in returning the plaint to the plaintiff for being
presented to the proper court. We therefore affirm the order
returning the plaint and dismiss this appeal. In the
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circumstances, we make no order as to costs.