Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BISHWANATH PRASAD AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DWARKA PRASAD (DEAD) AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/10/1973
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 117 1974 SCR (2) 124
1974 SCC (1) 78
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 839 (15)
ACT:
Indian Evidence Act (1 of 1872), s. 21-Admission-Distinction
between admissions of party and admissions of witness.
HEADNOTE:
In a suit for partition the first defendant (respondent in
this Court) claim that the-disputed items of property
exclusively belonged to him. The trial court as well as the
High Court accepted his case on the basis of admission made
by the first plaintiff and the eighth. defendant (father of
the plaintiff) it depositions in an earlier suit as well as
similar admissions made in the writer statement Wed in that
suit by the eighth defendant together with the present
plaintiffs, and held that the said property belonged to the
first defendant.
It was contended in this Court that (1) the courts below
relied on the admissions of the plaintiffs and the eighth
defendant which were not even suggested in the written
statement and as such a new case which was at total variance
from the pleadings should not have been considered by the
court; ant. (2) these admissions were not put to the first
plaintiff, when he was in the witness box; nor was the
eighth defendant summoned for examination by the first
defendant to give him an opportunity to explain the
admissions.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : There is no doubt that if the depositions of the
first plaintiff, the deposition by the eighth defendant and
the written statement filed by these parties in the title
suit were reliable, the plaintiffs case was damaged by their
own admissions. [126B]
(1) Although the first defendant’s basic defence was a
denial of joint family ownership even in the trial court the
admissions had been considered and acted upon. Even in the
High Court the appellants did not state that they had been
prejudiced by the reliance on the admissions by the trial
court nor did the appellants contend before the High Court
of any prejudice by not being given an opportunity to
explain the material against them. Neither in the
memorandum of appeal appended to the application for a
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certificate nor in the statement of the case in this Court
was a ground raised on this point. [126G-H]
(2) It cannot be contended that because the disputed
statements had not been put to the first plaintiff when he
was in the witness box or to the eighth defendant they could
not be used against him. [127A]
There is a cardinal distinction between a party who is the
author of a prior statement and a witness who is examined
and is sought to be discredited by use of his prior
statement. In the former case an admission by a party is
substantive evidence if it fulfill the requirements of s. 21
of the Evidence Act; in the latter case a prior statement is
used to discredit the credibility of the witness and does
not become substantive evidence. In the former there is no
necessary requirement of the statement containing the
admission having to be put to the party because it is
evidence proprio vigore; in the latter case the court
cannot .be invited to disbelieve a witness on the strength
of a prior contradictory statement unless it has been put to
him, as required by s. 145 of the Evidence Act. [127B-C]
Bharat Singh & Anr. v. Bhagirathi, [1966] 1 S.C.R. 606,
followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1787 of
1967.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 3 1, 1963
of the Patna High Court in Appeal from Original Decree No.
77 of 1958.
125
M. B. Lal, for the appellants.
Sarjoo Prasad and S. N. Prasad, for respondents Nos. 2-7 &
14-18.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. The dispute is short, the points of law
few, he evidence largely made up of admissions, and so the
judgment .pets of brevity. A vignette of the facts is ill
that is therefore necessary.
This appeal arises out of a suit for partition where the
narrow area of conflict in this Court is continued to two
items claimed by the plaintiffs but disallowed by the High
Court. The first two of the three points formulated for
determination by the High Court reflect the controversy
raised before us and may be expected :
1. Whether the said shop-room at the
extreme north west corner of plot No. 1238
belongs exclusively to the defendants first
party;
2. Whether the entire properties mentioned
in Schedule C to the plaint are joint family
properties liable to partition, and....
Point No. 2 relates to three items in Schedule C to the
plaint which were covered by four usufructuary mortgages,
Ex-B-1 to B-4. The case of the first (contesting)
defendant, who is the first respondent before us now, is
that these items of property exclusively belonged to him.
The Trial Court has accepted this case and the High Court
has affirmed this finding. The foundation for these
concurrent findings is the admissions made by the first
plaintiff and the eighth defendant, the father of the
plaintiff, in depositions in an earlier suit, Title Suit No.
61 of 1945, as well as similar admissions made in the
written statement filed in that suit by the present eighth
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defendant (who was first defendant there) together with the
present plaintiffs, two of whom were majors at that time.
The inference fluently drawn by the courts below from these
admissions is that the said property belongs to the first
defendant.
Some challenge has been made in this Court about the
propriety of relying on these admissions but we will deal
with it a little later. Suffice it to say for the present
that admissions are usually telling against the maker unless
reasonably explained, and no acceptable ground to extricate
the appellants from the effect of their own earlier
statements has been made out. Be that as it may, concurrent
Conclusions from the two judicial tiers ordinarily find this
Court’s doors closed unless substantial reasons to the
contrary exist. Having heard arguments at length we are
disposed to agree with the High Court on the issue of the-
properties items 1 to 3 in Schedule C to the plaint.
The other short dispute relates to a shop-room at the
northwest comer of plot No. 1238. Here again the admissions
of the eighth defendant and the plaintiffs, already referred
to before, stand in the way of the plaintiffs’. success.
while the trial court partially upheld the possession of the
first defendant of this shop-building it did not
126
go the whole hog in upholding his right. The learned Judges
of the High Court held that the same admissions which had
been relied upon by the trial court for holding in favour of
the first defendant’s title to the mortgaged lands covered
by Exs. B-1 to B-4 operated against the plaintiffs
regarding the shop-building also. There is no doubt that if
the admissions Ex. G (the deposition of the present first
plaintiff in Title Suit No. 61 of 1945), Ex. G2 (the
deposition in the same suit by the present eighth defendant,
and Ex. H (the written statement filed by these parties in
the earlier suit are reliable, the plaintiffs’ case is
damaged by their own admissions. The High Court has taken
this view and concluded :
"On the strength of the written statement and
the other statements aforesaid, there is no
escape from the conclusion that this disputed
shop-room was allotted to defendant No.
1 in the partition that took place in 1938."
Council for the appellants strenuously urged that the fatal
admissions used against him have prejudiced him for many
reasons. He contended that, for one thing, these statements
were vague and therefore insufficient to justify a clear
verdict against his client. For another, he argued,- the
case of the first respondent was that the suit for partition
was not maintainable because the properties claimed belonged
to him as heir of his father, Narain Sah, and the
alternative case which has found favour with the courts
below, based on the admissions of the plaintiffs and the
eighth defendant, was not even suggested in the written
statement, and as such a new case at total variance from the
pleadings should not have been considered by the court. His
further grievance is that these admissions were not put to
his client, the first plaintiff, when he was in the witness
box; nor was the eighth defendant summoned for examination
by the first defendant to give him an opportunity to explain
the admissions. There fore counsel contended that he was
seriously harmed by the surprise reliance on statements
attributed to his clients without extending a fair
opportunity to them to offer their explanation and
neutralise the effect of the admissions.
We are not satisfied that there is any substance in the
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grievances voiced by counsel. There was no volte face on
the, part of the first defendant. Although it is true that
Ms basic defence was a denial of joint family ownership, it
is seen that even in the trial court Exs. G, G2 and H had
been considered and acted upon. In the appeal to the High
Court the present appellants did not state that they had
been hit below the belt by the reliance on the admissions by
the trial court in holding against them. Indeed, there is
no suggestion in the judgment of the High Court that the
appellants had even contended about any prejudice to them or
that they had been denied an opportunity to explain the
material so used against them. What is more, it is found
that at no stage subsequent to the High Court decision,
either in the memorandum of appeal appended to the
application for a certificate or in the statement of the
case in this Court, has there been 2 pointed ground of
complaint about the unfair reliance on the admissions
aforesaid to the detriment of the appellants. Under these
circumstances it is difficult to take the plea of prejudice
seriously in, the absence of earlier articulation thereof.
127
There is no merit even in the contention that because these
three statements-Exs. G, G2 and H-had not been put to the
first plaintiff when he was in the witness box or to the
eighth defendant although he had discreetly kept away from
giving evidence, they cannot be used against him. Counsel
drew our attention to s. 145 of the Indian Evidence Act.
There is a cardinal distinction between a party who is the
author of a prior statement and a witness who is examined
and is sought to be discredited by use of his prior
statement. In the former case. an admission by a party is
substantive evidence if it fulfill the requirements of s. 21
of the Evidence Act; in the latter case a prior statement is
used to discredit the credibility of the witness and does
not become substantive evidence. In the former there is no
necessary requirement of the statement containing the
admission having to be put to the party because it is
evidence proprio vigore : in the latter case the Court
cannot be invited to disbelieve a witness on the strength of
a prior contradictory statement unless. it has been put to
him, as required by s. 145 of the Evidence Act. This
distinction has been clearly brought out’ in the ruling in
Bharat Singh v. Bhagirathi(1). This Court disposed of a
similar argument with the following observations :
"Admissions are substantive evidence by
themselves, in view of ss. 17 and 21 of the
Indian Evidence Act, though they are not
conclusive proof of the matters admitted. We
are of opinion that the admissions duly proved
are admissible evidence irrespective of
whether the party making them appeared in the
witness box or not and whether that party when
appeared as witness was confronted with those
statements in case it made a statement
contrary to those admissions. The purpose of
contradicting the witness under s. 145 of the
Evidence Act is very much different from the
purpose of proving the admission.
Admission is substantive evidence of the fact
admitted while a previous statement used to
contradict a witness does not become
substantive evidence and merely serves the-
purpose of throwing doubt on the veracity of
the witness. What weight is to be attached to
an admission made by a party is a matter
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different from its use as admissible
evidence."
We, therefore, reach the conclusion that the appellants’
arrival in this Court has been an exercise in futility’ The
appeal must, therefore, fail and is hereby dismissed. There
is some force in the submission that the first respondent
had throughout in his pleadings set out a case against the
joint family character of the Properties and it was only at
the stage of the evidence that he fell back on the
alternative case that has got him through. We, therefore,
direct that the appellants shall be directed to pay only
half the costs in this Court.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 606; 615-616.
128