Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6145 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Prabhakar Adsule
RESPONDENT:
State of M.P. & Anr.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/05/2004
BENCH:
CJI & G.P. Mathur.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
G.P. MATHUR,J.
1. This appeal by special leave has been preferred against the judgment
and decree dated 9.7.2001 of a Division bench of High Court of Madhya
Pradesh at Indore, by which the Letters Patent Appeal preferred by State of
Madhya Pradesh was allowed and the suit filed by the respondent, Prabhakar
Adsule was dismissed.
2. The property in dispute is a plot measuring 8.70 acres situate in
Residency Area in Indore. The respondent herein Prabhakar Adsule filed a
suit for declaration that he is the sole owner in possession of the plot in
dispute and also for injunction restraining the defendants from interfering
with his possession over the said plot in any manner. Sometime after filing
of the suit, an amendment application was moved and relief for possession
was also claimed in the alternative. The case of the plaintiff, in brief, was
that Somaji son of Girdhari was owner of the disputed plot which was
coming in his possession since 1918; that he executed a will bequeathing the
plot in favour of his daughter-in-law Sajjan Bai on 12.2.1954; that Sajjan
Bai executed a sale deed of the disputed plot in favour of the plaintiff on
24.12.1966 for a consideration of Rs.40,000/-; that since the date of the
execution of the sale deed, the plaintiff was continuing in possession over
the same; that proceedings under Section 248 M.P. Revenue Code were
initiated against him on 24.12.1966 which were decided against him by the
SDO but finally the matter was remanded from the Court of the
Commissioner to the Court of SDO for a fresh decision, who again decided
against the plaintiff on 1.9.1979, which gave the cause of action for filing
the suit. Initially, the suit was contested by the State of Madhya Pradesh on
the ground, inter alia, that neither Somaji was owner of the disputed land nor
he was in possession over the same; that Sajjan Bai did not become the
owner of the property on the basis of any will executed in her favour; that
Sajjan Bai or Somaji were never in possession of the disputed plot; that no
title passed to the plaintiff on account of the sale deed executed in his
favour and he was not in possession over the same. It was further pleaded
that the disputed land was situate in Residency Area which vested with the
State of Madhya Bharat and thereafter in the State of Madhya Pradesh and
the plaintiff had no cause of action to file the suit. M.P. Housing Board,
which was subsequently impleaded as defendant no.2 in the suit, also filed a
written statement taking the same pleas and specifically denied the right,
title or possession of Somaji and also of the plaintiff. It was further pleaded
that the land in dispute was Nazul land, which was transferred by Madhya
Pradesh Government to M.P. Housing Board which thereafter came in
possession over the same. The genuineness of the will executed by Somaji
in favour of Sajjan Bai on 12.2.1954 was also disputed.
3. The learned XIIth Additional District Judge, Indore, after appraising
the oral and documentary evidence adduced by the parties, dismissed the suit
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on 2.5.1992. The appeal preferred by the plaintiff was allowed by a learned
Single Judge of the High Court on 15.11.1998 and the suit was decreed
declaring the plaintiff to be owner in possession of the land. It was further
directed that if the defendant no.2 (M.P. Housing Board) has got possession
over the disputed land, the same should be formally handed over to the
plaintiff. Feeling aggrieved by the judgment and decree of the learned
Single Judge, the State of Madhya Pradesh and M.P. Housing Board
preferred separate Letters Patent Appeals before a Division Bench of the
High Court. The Letters Patent Appeal preferred by the State of Madhya
Pradesh was allowed with costs and the suit was dismissed affirming the
judgment and decree of the trial Court. However, the appeal preferred by
M.P. Housing Board was dismissed.
4. Shri S.K. Gambhir, learned senior counsel appearing for the plaintiff
appellant, has submitted that the Division Bench of the High Court has erred
in not correctly appreciating the oral and documentary evidence adduced by
the appellant which conclusively established his case. He has also
submitted that the evidence adduced by the defendant no.1, namely State of
Madhya Pradesh, was wholly discrepant and in such circumstances, the
learned Single Judge of the High Court had rightly decreed the suit of the
plaintiff and the Division Bench has erred in reversing the decree passed by
him. Shri Anoop G. Chaudhary, learned senior counsel for the State of
Madhya Pradesh, has submitted that the evidence adduced by the appellant
was not only untrustworthy, but was even otherwise too flimsy to establish
his title. He has further submitted that certain features pointed out by the
trial Court, which cast serious doubt about the authenticity of the documents
produced by the plaintiff, were completely ignored by the learned Single
Judge and the Division Bench rightly discarded the said evidence. Shri
Chaudhary has also submitted that in fact there was hardly any evidence on
record to establish the title of the plaintiff over such a large chunk of area in
the city of Indore, which was a very valuable property.
5. In the plaint the source of Somaji’s title was not disclosed and it was
merely stated that he was owner of the disputed land and the same was
coming in his possession since 1918. In his statement in Court, the plaintiff
came out with a case that the land had been given by way of grant.
However, the plaintiff did not lead any kind of evidence to prove the factum
of grant. No document was produced to show that the land had been given
by way of grant either to Somaji or to his ancestors. In order to establish
the appellant’s case, reliance has been placed basically on three documents.
Exh.P5 is a document dated 17.11.1953 executed by the Sarpanch of Gram
Panchayat Pipal Yahana, which is a ’Sifarish Patra’ (Recommendatory
Letter) and it merely recites that the Panchayat had no objection in Somaji
making construction according to the plan submitted by him. There is no
mention of the disputed land in this document nor it can be connected with
the same in any manner. Therefore, this document is of no assistance to the
plaintiff. Exh.P8 and Exh.P9 are copies of letters dated 20.2.1946 and
3.8.1946 sent by Residency Authority, Indore to Somaji. By the first letter
permission was granted for making a boundary wall and by the second letter
permission was granted for sale of the land. It is noteworthy that copies of
these documents have been issued by the Superintendent of Public Works of
Municipal Corporation, Indore. Both these documents make reference to
the letters sent by Somaji seeking permission from the Residency Authority,
Indore. The defendants produced the relevant file bearing no.114/1912 of
Residency Area Authority. However, this file does not show that any
permission was given to Somaji for either construction of a boundary wall or
for sale of the plot. The trial Court gave good reasons for doubting the
genuineness of these documents, which were ignored by the learned Single
Judge. The Division Bench, in our opinion, has rightly held that the
documents were suspicious in nature and could not have been relied upon.
Even otherwise, a document granting permission to construct a boundary
wall cannot establish title to the property as even a lessee or a tenant can
seek permission for making such kind of construction. The plaintiff has
admitted in his cross-examination that he was Mayor of Municipal
Corporation, Indore, in 1959-60, and was a Corporator till 1964. He was in
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a position to exercise his influence in obtaining some kind of documents
from the Public Works Department of the Municipal Corporation.
6. The defendants have filed a copy of the lease deed which shows that a
lease for a period of 10 years was granted by Residency Area Authority,
Indore, in favour of General Secretary, United Church of Canada Mission,
Indore on 31.7.1947 for 5.11 acres of land and the boundary of the leased
out area more or less tallies with the boundary of the land in dispute. This
document belies the case set up by the plaintiff that Somaji was owner in
possession of the land in dispute.
7. The Division Bench of the High Court has, after appraisal of the
evidence on record, come to a finding that the plaintiff has miserably failed
to prove his title to the property. This is not the function of this Court, in a
special leave petition under Article 136 of the Constitution, to reappraise the
evidence unless the findings are shown to be perverse or they are vitiated by
any error of law resulting in miscarriage of justice. Learned counsel for the
appellant has not been able to point out anything which may impel us to
interfere with the findings recorded by the High Court in the impugned
judgment.
8. The appeal is totally devoid of merit and is hereby dismissed with
costs.