Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 3
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5807 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Col. Anil Kak (Retd.) .
RESPONDENT:
Municipal corporation, Indore & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/09/2005
BENCH:
G.P. MATHUR & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
( @ SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 11940 OF 2003)
WITH
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (CIVIL) NO.11771 OF 2003
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. These two petitions arise from the claim for an interim
injunction by the petitioner before us in a suit filed by him. The suit was for
a permanent injunction restraining the respondents, the defendants in the
suit, from interfering with the possession of the suit land allegedly held by
the petitioner including the school buildings constructed thereon and not to
demolish or take any steps for removal of the constructions. An interim
injunction along the same lines to enure during the suit was sought. That
application was opposed. Respondent No.3, in turn sought an injunction
restraining the petitioner \026 plaintiff from putting up any construction outside
an area of 16,000 Sq. ft. The trial court granted an interim injunction in
favour of the petitioner but confined it to an area of 16,000 Sq. ft. and the
construction thereon and also restrained him from putting up any
construction outside it but included in the plaint schedule. The petitioner
appealed against those orders and the Additional District Judge allowed the
appeals and modifying the order of injunction granted by the trial court,
made the injunction operative in respect of the entire plaint schedule
property and the structures thereon. The respondents originally filed a
revision invoking Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for short ’the
Code’) before the High Court challenging the order of the first appellate
court. In view of a decision rendered by that High Court that no revision
under Section 115 of the Code could be entertained against an order of
injunction since the order was purely interlocutory in nature, the respondents
herein sought a conversion of their revision into a petition under Article 227
of the Constitution of India. This prayer was allowed by the High Court
which decided to treat the proceedings as one under Article 227 of the
Constitution of India. It is challenging that order that the petitioner before
us has filed Special Leave Petition(C) No.11771 of 2003. Proceeding on
the merits thereafter, the High Court modified the order of the first appellate
court and restored the order of the trial court and thereby confined the
interim order of injunction to an area of 16,000 Sq. ft. and the structures
thereon. Feeling aggrieved by this modification, the petitioner before us -
the plaintiff in the suit, has filed SLP(C) No.11940 of 2003. Since both
matters arise from the same proceedings, they are taken up together for final
disposal.
SLP(C) No.11771 of 2003
2. All that the High Court has done is to treat the petition filed
before it under Section 115 of the Code as a proceeding initiated under
Article 227 of the Constitution of India. The respondents had filed the
revision originally and during the pendency of that revision the High Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 3
appears to have taken a view that an order in an appeal arising from a
proceeding under Order 39 Rules 1 and 2 of the Code, could not be
challenged under Section 115 of the Code since the order was in the nature
of an interlocutory order. In such a situation, in our view, the High Court
rightly decided to permit the revision petitioners before it, to convert the
same as a proceeding under Article 227 of the Constitution of India. After
all, the court could have done it on its own, even without a motion in that
behalf by the petitioner. We see absolutely no ground to interfere with the
said order on the grounds raised in this special leave petition. Hence, this
special leave petition is dismissed.
SLP(C) No.11940 of 2003
Leave granted.
3. In this appeal, the appellant - plaintiff who had filed a suit, inter
alia, for a permanent injunction restraining the defendants in the suit from
interfering with his possession of the plaint schedule property and the
structures thereon allegedly put up by him, challenges the order of the High
Court by which that court set aside the order of the first appellate court and
restored the limited order of interim injunction granted by the trial court.
The trial court, after hearing both sides had confined the interim order of
injunction to an extent of 16,000 Sq. ft. and the structures thereon and had
declined relief to the plaintiff in respect of the rest of the plaint area, and the
constructions allegedly put up by him outside the 16,000 Sq. ft, which alone
was the subject matter of an admitted lease. In appeal, the lower appellate
court modified the order passed by the trial court and made the injunction
operative in respect of the whole of the suit property including the disputed
portion and the structures in the entire property including the ones allegedly
put up in the disputed portion. The High Court found that no prima facie
case was made out by the plaintiff- the appellant before us, for an injunction
in respect of the property outside the 16,000 Sq. ft. and the structures
thereon and the appellate court was not justified in modifying the order of
the trial court. The High Court set aside the order of the appellate court and
restored the order of the trial court. Thus, the High Court confined the order
of injunction to an area of 16,000 Sq. ft and the structures thereon.
4. This Court by order dated 12.7.2003, stayed the operation of
the order of the High Court as also any action for demolition until the matter
was heard in this Court. On 14.7.2003, while issuing notice on the petitions
for special leave to appeal, this Court also ordered that until further orders,
the order dated 12.7.2003 shall continue to remain in operation. Thus, the
order passed by this Court on 12.7.2003 continues to be in operation,
meaning thereby that the proposed demolition of structures outside the area
of 16,000 Sq. ft. remains stayed.
5. We find that in the schedule property including the disputed
portion, an educational institution is functioning. It is seen that there are a
number of litigations between the parties, including a suit for specific
performance of an agreement to lease filed by the appellant against
Respondent No.3 before us apparently in respect of the area outside the
16,000 Sq. ft. The suits are all pending. Taking note of the salient fact \026
and no other fact \026 that an educational institution is being run in the property
in question including the disputed portion and taking note of the fact that
from 12.7.2003 the order of stay of demolition granted by this Court has
been in operation, we feel that it is not necessary or appropriate to go into
the merits of the disputes between the parties at this stage. We feel that it
would be appropriate to continue the order of this Court dated 12.7.2003 and
to keep it operative till the disposal of the suit, with a direction to the trial
court to try and dispose of the suit as expeditiously as possible, preferably
within a period of six months from the production before it of a copy of this
order by either of the parties. We have thought it fit not to go into the merits
of the controversy vehemently projected before us by counsel on either side,
only in our view, that the status quo should be maintained in view of the fact
that an educational institution is said to be functioning in the property.
6. Learned counsel for Res.No.3 submitted that under the cover of
this order, the appellant is attempting to put up constructions in the disputed
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 3
property and it is just and necessary to prevent him from doing so. We think
that this prayer deserves to be granted, especially, in the context of the fact
that we are trying to maintain the status quo until the suit is finally disposed
of. We, therefore, restrain the appellant - the plaintiff in the suit, from
putting up any further construction and from altering or modifying any
existing construction until the disposal of the suit. In other words, there will
not only be an injunction against the defendants for demolishing the
constructions in the entire plaint schedule property including the disputed
portion, but there would also be an injunction restraining the appellant from
making any further construction and from altering or modifying any existing
construction in the plaint property including the disputed property. We also
make it clear that the fact that we are permitting the structures in the
disputed portion of the property to continue to exist, will not confer any right
on the plaintiff, if he is not able to establish his case for relief in the suit.
7. There is a further submission on behalf of Respondent No.3 that
the appellant has not paid the rent for the premises which was admittedly
leased out to him. Counsel for the appellant submits that there is no arrears,
as claimed. We do not think it necessary to decide this controversy. But we
grant the appellant a time of one month from the date of this order to clear
all the rent in arrears (if any), either by tendering the same to Respondent
No.3 or depositing the same in the trial court.
8. We also clarify that if the suit is not disposed of within the time
fixed by us and the defendants have a case that the plaintiff was deliberately
delaying the disposal of the suit, the respondents before us would have the
liberty to move this Court for any appropriate modification of this order.
9. This appeal is, thus, disposed of by maintaining the order of this
Court dated 12.7.2003 until the disposal of the suit and with an injunction
against the plaintiff as indicated above and the other directions as contained
hereinabove. We once more clarify that we have not gone into or dealt with
any contention on merits and leave all questions open, to be decided by the
trial court and our order maintaining the order dated 12.7.2003, is only
because of the fact that an educational institution is located, and is
functioning in the suit property, including in the disputed portion. The
parties are directed to bear their own costs.