Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANIL KUMAR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIVNATH MISHRA AND GADASA GURU
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/10/1994
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (3) 147 JT 1995 (1) 273
1994 SCALE (4)953
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
ORDER
1.Daulat Singh, father of the petitioner filed Civil Suit
No.51/89 for specific performance of a contract of sale said
to have been executed on September 22,
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1986 agreeing to sell 7.17 acres of the land bearing plot
No.655. Pending decision in the suit, Daulat Singh died.
The petitioner came on record as legal representative of
Daulat Singh. He filed an application under Order 6, Rule
17 CPC seeking leave to amend the plaint by impleading
respondent also as a party defendant in the suit. The
contention of the petitioner is that Shivnath Misra, the
vendor, had colluded with his sons and wife and had obtained
a collusive decree in Suit No.393/90 under Section 229-B of
the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act. By
operation thereof, they became co-sharers of the property to
be conveyed under the agreement and, therefore, the re-
spondent is a necessary and proper party. The trial court
dismissed the petition and on revision, by the impugned
order dated July 13, 1994, the High Court of Allahabad
dismissed the civil Revision No.369/93. Thus this S.L.P.
2.The contention of the petitioner is that the respondent
having secured an interest as a co-owner in the land by
operation of decree of the Court to effectuate the ultimate
decree of the specific performance that may be granted in
favour of the petitioners, the respondent is a necessary and
proper party, and the High Court, therefore, has committed
grievous error in refusing to bring the respondent on record
as second defendant. He seeks to place reliance on Order 1
Rule 3, Order 1 Rule 10(2) and Order 22, Rule 10 C.P.C. We
find no force in the contention.
3. Order 22, Rule 10 postulates of continuation of suit by
or against a person has, by devolution, assignment or
creation, acquired any interest during the pendency of a
suit, by leave of the Court. The obtaining of a decree and
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acquiring the status as a co-owner during the pendency of a
suit for specific performance, is not obtaining, by
assignment or creation or by devolution, an interest.
Therefore, Order 22, Rule 10 has no application to this
case.
4. Equally, order 1 Rule 3 is not applicable to the
suit for specific performance’ because admittedly, the
respondent was not a party to the contract. Rule 3 of
Order 1 provides that:
"3. Who may be joined as defendants....... All
persons may be joined in one suit as
defendants where....
(a) any right to relief in respect of, or
arising out of, the same act or transaction or
series of acts or transactions is alleged to
exists against such persons, whether jointly,
severely or in the alternative; and
(b) if separate suits were brought against
such persons, any common question of law or
fact would arise".
5. In this case, since the suit is based on agreement of
sale said to have been executed by Misra. the sole defendant
in the suit, the subsequent interest said to have been
acquired by-the respondent by virtue of a decree of the
Court is not a matter arising out of or in respect of the
same act or transaction or series of acts or transactions in
relation to the claim made in the suit,
6. Order 1, Rule 10(2) postulates that:
"10(2) Court may strike out or add parties.-
The Court may at any stage of the proceedings,
either upon or without the application of
either party, and on such term as May appeared
to the Court to be
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just, order that the name of any party
improperly joined whether as plaintiff or
defendant, be struck out, and that the name of
any person who or to have been joined, whether
as plaintiff or defendant, or whose presence
before the Court may be necessary in order to
enable the Court effectually and completely to
adjudicate upon and settle all the questions
involved in the suit be added".
7.By operation of the above-quoted rule though the Court may
have power to strike out the name of a party improperly
joined or add a party either on application or without
application of either party, but the condition precedent, is
that the Court must be satisfied that the presence of the
party to be added, would be necessary in order to enable the
Court effectually and completely to adjudicate upon and
settle all questions involved in the suit. To bring a
person as party defendant is not a substantive right but one
of procedure and the Court has discretion in its proper
exercise. The object of the rule is to bring on record all
the persons who are parties to the dispute relating to the
subject matter so that the dispute may be determined in
their presence at the same time without any protraction,
inconvenience and to avoid multiplicity of proceedings.
8. The question is whether the person who has got his
interest in the property declared by an independent decree
but not a party to the agreement of sale, is a necessary and
proper party for effectually and completely adjudicate upon
and settle all the question involved in the suit. The ques-
tion before the Court in suit for the specific performance
is whether the vendor had executed the document and whether
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the conditions prescribed in the provisions of the Specific
Relief Act have been complied with for granting the relief
of specific performance.
9. Sub-rule (2) of Rule 10 of Order 1 says that "necessary
parties are persons who ought to have been joined as a party
to the suit, a necessity to the constitution of the proper
suit without whom no relief or order can be passed". In
order that a person may be considered a necessary party,
defendant to the suit, the conditions precedent must be (1)
that there must be a right to some relief against him in
respect of the dispute involved in the suit; and (2) that
his presence should be necessary to enable the court to
effectually and completely to adjudicate upon and settle all
the questions involved in the suit. Since the respondent is
not a party to the agreement of sale, it cannot be said that
without her presence the dispute as to specific performance
cannot be determined. Therefore, she is not a necessary
party.
10. A person may be added as a party defendant to the suit
though no relief may be claimed against him/her provided
his/her presence is necessary for a complete and final
decision on the question involved in the suit. Such a
person is only a proper party as distinguished from a
necessary party. In Razia Begum v. Sahebzadi Anwar Begum &
Ors. , 1959 SCR 111, in a suit instituted for a declaration
of legal status as a married wife, the question arose
whether another person claiming to be the third wife and
sons through her are necessary and proper party, who sought
to come on record under Order 1 Rule 10(2). This Court held
that in a suit for declaration, as regards status or legal
character under s.42 of the Specific Relief Act, the rule
that in order that a person may be added as a party must
have a present or
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direct interest in the subject matter of the suit, is not
wholly applicable, and the rule may be relaxed in a suitable
case where the court is of the opinion that by adding that
party it would be in a better position to effectually and
completely to adjudicate upon the controversy. In such
suits the court is not bound to grant the declaration prayed
for, on a mere admission of the claim by the defendant, if
the court has reasons to insist upon clear proof, apart from
the admission. It was therefore, held that a declaratory
judgment since binds not only the parties actually before
the court but also the persons claiming through them
respectively within the meaning of s.43 of the Specific
Relief Act, they are proper parties. The petitioner is not
claiming this legal status nor through the respondent. In
Lala Durga Prasad and Anr. v. Lala Deep Chand & Ors., 1954
SCR 360, in a suit for specific performance the subsequent
purchaser was held to be a necessary party. In this case
the petitioner is merely seeking the specific performance of
the agreement of sale. Section 15 of the Specific Relief
Act, 1963, provides that except as otherwise provided by
this Chapter, the specific performance of a contract may be
obtained by "any party thereto"; and under s. 16 the Court
has been given discretion and personal bars to relief.
Therefore, based on the fact situation, the court would
mould the relief The respondent is neither a necessary nor a
proper party to adjudicate upon the dispute arising in the
suit so as to render an effective and complete adjudication
of the dispute involved in this suit.
11.Therefore, the High Court, though for different reasons,
has rightly refused to interfere with the order of the trial
court. The S.L.P. is accordingly dismissed.
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