Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJENDER SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANTA SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/08/1973
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2537 1974 SCR (1) 381
1973 SCC (2) 705
ACT:
Lis pendens-Transfer of Property Act, (4 of 1882)-Section
52-Whether arrests the running of the period of limitation
during the pendency of the suit.
Limitation Act (9 of 1908), Art. 142-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents had filed a suit in 1940 claiming title to
and possession of certain lards in the possession of the
appellants and the suit ended in favour of the appellants in
1958.
In 1959, the appellants filed a suit for possession against
the respondents asserting that the respondents had taken
illegal and forcible possession of those lands after the
decision of the High Court in 1958. The respondents,
however, claimed that they had taken possession of the lands
even in 1944 and that they had been since then in adverse
possession openly, continuously and exclusively as owners.
The trial court found that the respondents had been in
possession of the lands from 1946 to the date, of the
appellants’ suit. The first appellate court, however, held
that the doctrine of lis pendens prevented the rights of the
respondents from maturing. The High Court, accepting the
concurrent findings as to the fact of possession of the
respondents held that the adverse possession of the
defendants commenced during the pendency of the earlier suit
and once having begun to run would not stop running merely
because of the pendency of the defendants’ suit for
possession which was dismissed in 1958.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended that,
(i)a portion of the land entered in revenue record as
Banjar could not be adversely possessed at all and must be
deemed to be in the possession of plaintiffs on the
principle that possession follows title;
(ii)Art. 142 of the Limitation Act was not applicable; and
(iii)the doctrine of lis pendens contained in s. 52 of
the T.P. Act 1882 arrested ’,he running of the period of
limitation during the pendency of the respondents’ suit
filed in 1940.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (1) It is not correct that banjar land was incapable
of adverse possession. Even if Banjar land could not be
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cultivated it was not per se incapable of being actually and
physically possessed by use for other purposes such as
building or storing of wood or crops, apart from
cultivation. Further, this question which involved
investigation of fresh facts, was not raised in the courts
below. [385D-]
(2)(a) On the allegations of the appellants in their
plaint of alleged possession and dispossession, the case
fell within the ambit of art. 142, Limitation Act. The
question whether the suit was within time when assertions
were made attracting the application of the article became a
question of proof of title itself Without proof of
subsisting title the suit must fail; [385F-G]
Bindhyadchar Chand & Ors v. Ram Gharib Chand & Ors. A.I.R.
1934 All. 993 (F.B.) approved.
2(b) It is not necessary that the issue framed must mention
the provision ’of law to be applied. it is the duty of the
court, in view of s. 3 of the Limitation Act, to apply the
bar of limitation, whether on patent facts it is applicable
even though not specifically pleaded. [386D-E]
3 82
(3)(a) An extinction of title will not be hit by the
doctrine of lis pendens simply because it was an extinction
during the pendency of a suit. If so wide was the sweep of
s. 52, Transfer of Property Act, the provision would have
been differently worded. [386A-B]
(b)Further, such a case, in which the extinction of title
took place by an application of the specific and mandatory
provisions of the Limitation Act, would not be governed by
provision of an Act relating to "transfer" as defined by s.
3 of the Transfer of Property Act but by the Limitation Act
exclusively. [386B]
Jayaram Mudaliar v. Ayyaswami & Ors. [1972] 2 S.C.C. 200
followed.
(c)The doctrine of lis pendens was intended to strike at
attempts by parties to a litigation to circumvent the
jurisdiction of a court, in which a dispute on rights or
interests in immovable property was pending by private
dealings which might remove the subject matter of litigation
from the ambit of the court’s power to decide a pending
dispute or frustrate its decree. Alienees acquiring any
immovable property during a litigation over it were held to
be bound, by an application of the doctrine, by the decree
passed in the suit even though they might not have been
impleaded in it. The act of taking illegal possession of
immovable property or continuance of wrongful possession,
even if the wrong ,doer be a party to the pending suit, was
not a "dealing with" the property otherwise than by its
transfer so as to be covered by’ s. 52 of the Transfer of
Property Act. The prohibition which prevents the immovable
property being "transferred or otherwise dealt with" by a
party is apparently directed against some action which would
have an immediate effect, similar to or comparable with that
of transfer, but for the principle of lis pendens. Taking
of illegal possession or its continuance are one sided
wrongful acts and not bilateral transactions of a kind which
ordinarily constitute "deals" or dealings with property.
They cannot confer immediate rights on the possessor.
Continued illegal possession ripens into a legally
enforceable right only after the prescribed period of time
has elapsed. It matures into a right due to inaction and
not due to the action of the injured party which can
approach a court of appropriate jurisdiction for redress by
a suit to regain possession. Section 52 of the Transfer of
Property Act was not meant to serve indirectly as a
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provision or a substitute for a provision of the Limitation
Act to exclude time. [387E-388C]
The object of the low of Limitation was to prevent
disturbance or deprivation of what might have been acquired
in equity and justice by long enjoyment or what might have
been lost by a party’s own inaction, negligence or laches.
If section 52 of, the Transfer of Property Act. was really
intended to strike at the running of the period of
limitation, it would have made it clear that the law
excludes the period spent in any litigation from
computation. Exclusion of time in computing periods of
limitation was a different subject altogether to which the
whole of Part III of the Limitation Act was devoted.
Section 14 deals with ,exclusion of time of proceeding bona
fide in court without jurisdiction. Where a suit was
instituted long after the period of limitation had expired,
section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act could not apply
at all. The effect of s, 3 Limitation Act was that it
expressly precluded exclusion of time on a ground outside
the Limitation Act. [388E-H]
Subbaiya Pandaram v. Mohammad Mustapha Marcayar, I.L.R. 46
Mad. 751: Narayan Jivangouda Patil & Anr. v. Puttabai & Ors.
A.I.R. 1945 P.C. 5 approved.
(d)Courts of justice cannot legislate for reconstruct law
contained in a statute or introduce exceptions when
statutory law debars them from doing so. Even hard
circumstances of a case do not justify the adoption of such
a course.[389E]
(e)It is not necessary to give any decision on any dispute
between codefendants-respondents regarding the right to
possess any property which might ’have vested in the
Custodian. Evacuee Property, who was a co-respondent. be-
cause, a decision on such a dispute was not necessary for
deciding the instant case. [389G-H]
38 3
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1027 of 1967
Appeal by certificate from the judgment and decree dated the
4th day of March 1965 of the Punjab High Court at Chandigarh
in Regular Second Appeal No. 1532 of 1961.
Urmila Kapoor and Kamlash Bansal, for the appellants.
S.C. Manchanda, N. K. Aggarwal and M. L. Aggarwal, for
respondents 1-14 and 16-30.
S. N. Prasad and S. P. Nayar, for respondent No. 15
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J.-The plaintiffs-appellants, before us by grants of
certificate of fitness of the case for an appeal had filed a
suit on 20-4-1959 for possession against the defendants-
respondents, of 331 Kanals and 11 Marlas of land the Khasra
numbers of which are given in the plaint. The plaintiffs
were the sons of Smt. Premi, a daughter of Sham Singh
(Deceased), the original owner of the plots, and of Smt.
Malan, who was the widow of Sham Singh, had gifted the
plots in dispute in 1935, half and half, to the plaintiffs
and Smt. Khemi, the younger sister of their deceased
mother, Smt. Premi. It appears that Smt. Khemi, who was
issueless, had also made a gift in favour of the Plaintiffs
before her death in 1944. The plaintiffs are, said to have
obtained possession of the whole land in dispute thus gifted
to them.’ But, as there was considerable uncertainty at that
time about the rights of the daughters and the_ powers of a
widow to donate during her life time under the customary law
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in Punjab, which was applicable to the parties, the
defendats-respondents, the 8th degree collaterals of Sham
Singh, had filed a suit on 3-7-1940 for possession of the
land in dispute. This suit had been stayed from 1941 to 29-
5-1946, under tbe-Indian Soldiers (Litigation) Act, 1925, to
the benefits of which the plaintiffs were entitled. It
appears that there was also a dispute over mutation of names
between the plaintiffs and defendants-respondents in revenue
courts which ended finally by an order in favour of the
appellants donees passed by the Financial Commissioner of
Punjab on 13-12-1946. Defendants-Respondents’ suit of 1940,
for declaration of rights and possession, renumered in 1949,
ended with the judgment and decree of a Division Bench of
the Punjab High Court passed in favour of the appellants on
21-11-1958.
The plaintiffs asserted, in their suit No. 179 of 1959,
filed on 16-4-1959, now before us in appeal, that the
defendants-respondents had taken illegal and forcible
possession of the land in dispute after the decision of the
High Court on 21-11-1958, and that, as the defendants-
respondents refused to deliver possession of the land to the
plaintiffs, they were compelled to file their suit for
possession. rhe defendantsrespondents, however, claimed that
they had taken possession over the whole of the land in
dispute after the death of Smt. Khemi, issueless, in 1944,
and that, since then, they had been in open, continuous,
exclusive possession as owners, adversely to the rest of the
world. Hence, according to the defendants-respondents, the
plaintiffs’ suit was barred by limitation.
384
There cannot be the least doubt, after looking at the
plaint, that the plaintiffs-appellants, having alleged
possession and dispossession, for which they claimed relief
by delivery back of possession of the land in dispute to
them, the case fell squarely within the ambit of Art. 142 of
the Limitation Act of 1908. The defendants-respondents had,
however, pleaded the bar of limitation as well as
acquisition of title by their adverse possession for over 12
years.
The ’Trial Court had framed the first three issues which had
a direct bearing on the question whether Art. 142 or 144 of
the Limitation Act of 1908 would be applicable. These
issues were
"1. Whether the plaintiffs obtained the
possession of the land in dispute through the
Tehsildar near a-bout the date 13-12-1946 as
alleged by them in para 3 of the plaint ? O.P.
2.Whether the defendants took possession
of the land in dispute after 21-11-1958 as
alleged ’in para 5 of the plaint? O.P.
3.Whether the defendants have become
owners of the land in dispute through adverse
possession ? O.P."
The Trial Court rightly placed the burden of proof of the
first two issues on the plaintiffs and of the third issue
upon the defendants. It took up and decided the three
issues together holding that the plaintiffs’ suit is barred
by Art. 142 of the Limitation Act. The first Appellate
Court also rejected the plaintiffs’ case of acquisition of
possession on 13-12-1946 and then of dispossession after 21-
11-1958. It accepted the defendants’ version. It observed
that the "oral evidence coupled with the entries in the
revenue records conclusively established that the possession
over the suit land right from 1946 up to the present time
was not that of the plaintiffs, but, that of the
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defendants", who had been asserting their own proprietary
rights as collaterals of Sham Singh, the husband of Smt.
Malan. Although, no issue was framed on-the applicability
of Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, to such
a case, yet, the question appears to have been argued for
the first time before the first Appellate Court which,
relying upon a decision of the Nagpur High Court in Sukhubai
v. Eknath Bellappa (1), held that, despite the established
possession of the defendants-respondents for over twelve
years, the doctrine of lis pendens prevented the rights to
the defendants-respondents from maturing by adverse
possession. It held that the possession of the defendants-
respondents became adverse when their appeal in their suit
for possession was dismissed by the Punjab High Court on 21-
11-1958. Thus, the first Appellate Court had really used
Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act as though it was
a provision for excluding the period of time spent in
litigation in computing the prescribed period of
limitations. The question whether the doctrine of lis
pendens, contained in Sec. 52 of the’ Transfer of Property
Act, would govern such a case was referred by a Division
Bench to a Full Bench of the Punjab High Court.
A.N. Grover, J., giving the majority opinion of the Full
Bench of three judges of the Punjab High Court, held that,
on the concurrent
(1) A.I.R. 1948 Nagpur 97.
385
findings of fact recorded by the Courts below, the adverse
possession of the defendants, who were appellants before the
High Court, commenced during the pendency of the earlier
suit, and, once having begun to run, could not stop running
merely because of the pendency of the defendants’ suit for
possession which was finally dismissed by the High Court on
21-11-1958. On the other hand, I. D. Dua, J., expressing
his minority opinion of the Full Bench of the High Court,
held that the doctrine of lis pendens, contained in Section
52 of the Transfer of Property Act, would enable the
plantiffs-appellants to overcome the consequences of
defendants’ adverse possession until 21-11-1958 so that the
doctrine of lis pendens could operate as a provision
enabling exclusion of time during the pendency of the
defendants’ suit of 1940.
One of the questions attempted to be raised here, involving
investigation of fresh facts, was that a portion of the
land, entered in revenue, records as "Banjar", cannot be
adversely possessed at all because it is vacant so that it
must be deemed to be in the possession of plaintiffs oil the
principle that possession follows title. The plaintiffs
had not taken such a case even in their replication in
answer to the written statement of the defendants. Apart
from the fact that the question does not-, appear to have
been raised in the courts below, we think that the plain-
tiffs’ admission of dispossession by the defendants,
implying that the defendants-respondents were in actual
adverse possession of all the land’ in dispute, debars
plaintiffs’ learned Counsel from-raising such a question
now. Furthermore, the patent fallacy underlying such a
contention is that Banjar land is incapable of adverse
possession. It may be that Banjar land cannot be
cultivated, but, we do not think that it could possibly be
urged that it is per se in-capable of being actually
physically possessed by use for other purposes, such as
building or storing of wood’ or crops, aparts from
cultivation. We will say no more about this unsustainable
contention.
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It was then urged that Art. 142 was not applicable to this
case and’ that no question as to its applicability should
have been decided. We fail to see how such a contention
could be advanced in view of the assertions in the plaint
which clearly compelled the application of Article 142 As
was held by a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court, in
Bindhyachal Chand & Ors. v. Ram Gharib Chand & Ors. (1),
the question whether the suit is within time, when the
plaintiffs make assertions attracting the application of
Article 142, becomes a question of proof of title itself.
Without proof of subsisting title the plaintiffs’suit must
obviously fail. It was said there by Sulaiman, C.J. (at
pager 999) :-
"In cases failing strictly under Art. 142, in
which the only question is one of
discontinuance of possession of the plaintiff
and not of adverse possession of the
defendant, the question of limitation in one
sense becomes the question of title, because
by virtue of S. 28, Limitation Act. if the
claim is barred by time, the title must be
deemed to be extinguished."
(1) A.I.R. 1934 (FB) All. 993 at 999.
386
It is true that the extinction of title took place in the
case before us during the pendency of the suit. But, it has
to be borne in mind that an extinction of title will not hit
by the doctrine of lis pendens simply. because it is an
extinction during the pendency of a suit. If so wide was
the sweep of Section 52 of ’transfer of Property Act this
provision would have been differently worded. We are of
opinion that a case in Which the extinction of title takes
place by an application of the specific and mandatory
provisions of the Limitation Act falls outside the scope of
Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act. It would not be
governed by provisions of an Act relating to "transfer",
defined by Section 3 of the Transfer of Property Act, but by
the Limitation Act exclusively.
It is immaterial in the case before us, from the point of
view of extinction of title by an application of Section 28
of the Limitation Act of 1908, whether Article 142 or
Article 144 of the Limitation Act is applible. The findings
of the Courts below, accepted as correct and binding by A.
N. Grover, J., in the majority judgment of the Punjab High
Court, would make Article 144 also of the Act clearly
applicable to the case. All the elements of an open,
adverse, hostile, continuous, and exclusive possession of
the Defendants for over 12 years were present her,-.
It would be idle to contend in the case before us, in view
of the pleadings of the parties and the issues framed and
decided, that the applicability of Article 142 of the
Limitation Act was either not put in issue by pleadings of
the parties or an issue on its applicability was not framed.
The first two issues framed have a direct bearing on the
applicability or Article 142. It is not necessary that the
issue farmed must mention the provision of law to be
applied. Indeed, it is the duty of the Court, in view of
Section 3 of the Limitation Act, to apply the bar of
limitation where, on patent facts, it is applicable even
though not specifically pleaded. Therefore, we find no
force in the submissions based on the supposed
inapplicability of Article 142 of the Limitation Act of 1908
or assumed defects in procedure adopted in applying it.
The only question of some importance which could be said to
arise in this case is : Does the doctrine of lis pendens,
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contained in Sec. 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, arrest
the running of the period of limitation during the pendency
of the suit of the defendants-respondents filed on 3-7-1940,
and, finally decided in second appeal by the High Court on
21-11-58 ?
We may here set out Section 52 of the Transfer of Property
Act which runs as follows :
"52. During the pendency in any Court having
authority with in the limits of India
excluding the State of Jammu & Kashmir or
established beyond such limits by the Central
Government of any suit or proceeding which is
not collusive and in which any right to
immovable property is directly-and
specifically in question, the property cannot
be transferred or other ’wise dealt with by
any party to the suit or proceeding so as to
affect the rights of any other party thereto under
any decree or order which may be made
therein, except under the authority of Court
and on such terms as it may impose.
387
Explanation.-For the purposes of this section,
the pendency of a suit or proceeding shall be
deemed to commence from the date of the
presentation of the plaint or the institution
of the proceeding in a Court of competent
jurisdiction, and to continue until the suit
or proceeding has been disposed of by a final
decree or order and complete satisfaction or
discharge of such decree or order has been
obtained, or has become unobtainable by reason
of the expiration of any period of limitation
prescribed for the execution thereof by any
law for the time being in force".
The background of the provision set out above was indicated
by one of us (Beg, J.) in Jayaram Mudaliar v. Ayyaswami &
Ors.(1). There, the following definition of lis pendens from
Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol. LIV, p. 570) was cited :
"Lis pendens literally means a pending suit,
and the doctrine of lis pendens has been
defined as the jurisdiction, power, or control
which a court acquires over property involved
in a suit pending the continuance of the
action, and until final judgment therein".
It was observed there
"Expositions of the doctrine indicate that the
need for it arises from the very nature of the
jurisdiction of Courts and their control over
the subject-matter of litigation so that par-
ties litigating before it may not remove any
part of the subjectmatter outside the power of
the Court to deal with it and thus make the
proceedings infructuous."
It was observed there
The doctrine of lis pendens was intended to strike at
attempts by parties to a litigation to circumvent the
jurisdiction of a court, in which a dispute on rights or
interests in immovable property is pending, by private
dealings which may remove the subject matter of litigation
from the ambit of the court’s power to decide a pending
dispute of frustrate its decree.. Alienees acquiring any
immovable property during a litigation over it are held to
be bound, by an application of the doctrine, by the decree
passed in the suit even though they may not have been
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impleaded in it. The whole object of the doctrine of Its
pendens is to subject parties to the litigation as well as
others, who seek to acquire rights in immovable property
which are the subject matter of a litigation, to the power
and jurisdiction of the Court so as to prevent the object of
a pending action from being defeated.
It is very difficult to view the act of taking illegal
possession of immovable property or continuance of wrongful
possession, even if the wrong doer be a party to the pending
suit, as a "dealing with" the property otherwise than by its
transfer so as to be covered by Section 52 of the Transfer
of Property Act. The prohibition which prevents the immov-
able property being "transferred or otherwise dealt with" by
a party is apparently directed against some action which
would have an immediate effect,.similar to or comparable
with that of transfer, but for the principle of lis pendens.
Taking of illegal possession or its continuance
(1) [1972] (2) S.C.C 200 @ 217.
388
neither resemble nor are comparable to a transfer. They are
one sided wrongful acts and not bilateral transactions of a
kind which ordinarily constitute "deals" or dealings with
property (e.g. contracts to sell). They cannot confer
immediate rights on the possessor. Continued illegal
possession ripens into a legally enforceable right only
after the prescribed period of time has elapsed. It matures
into a right due to inaction and not due to the action of
the injured party which can approach a Court of appropriate
jurisdiction for redress by a suit to regain possession.
The relief against the wrong done must be sought within the
time prescribed. This is the only mode of redress provided
by law for such cases. Section 52 of the Transfer of
Property Act was not meant to serve, indirectly, as a
provision or a substitute for a provision of the Limitation
Act to exclude time. Such a provision could and would have
been there in the Limitation Act, where it would appropria-
tely belong, if the policy behind the law was to have such a
provision.
The policy underlying statutes of limitation, spoken of as
statutes of " repose" or of "Peace", has been thus stated in
Halsbury’s Laws of England Vol. 24, p. 181 (para 130)
"330. Policy of Limitation Acts. The courts
have expressed at least three differing
reasons supporting the existence of statutes
of limitation, namely, (1) that long dormant
claims have more of cruelty than justice in
them, (2) that a defendant might have lost the
evidence to disprove. a stale claim, and (3)
that persons with good causes of actions
should pursue them with reasonable diligence."
The object of the law of limitation is to prevent
disturbance or depreviation of what may have been acquired
in equity and justice by long enjoyment or what may have
been lost by a party’s own inaction, negligence, or laches.
If Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act was really
intended to strike at the running of the period of
limitation, based on the considerations mentioned above, it
would have made it clear that the law excludes the period
spent in any litigation from computation. Exclusion of time
in computing periods of limitation is a different subject
altogether to which the whole of Part III of the Limitation
Act is devoted. There, we find Section 14, which deals with
"exclusion of time of proceeding bona fide in Court without
jurisdiction". There are certain conditions for the
applicability of Section 14 of the Limitation Act. One of
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these is that the plaintiff should have prosecuted, with due
diligence, civil proceedings "founded upon the same cause of
action". In the case before us, the cause of action arose,
according to the plaintiffs, after the decision of the
previous suit. The cause of action in the previous suit was
entirely different. Indeed, it was the defendants-
respondents who had sought relief there and set up a cause
of action. Section 14 of the Limitation Act of 1908, which
is the only provision of the statute specifically dealing
with exclusion of time spent in another litigation, could
not obviously apply to, the case now before us. The only
mode of relief open to the plaintiffs was to have instituted
a suit of their own within the prescribed period of
limitation. They
389
did institute the suit now before us but did so long after
the period of limitation had expired. In such a case
Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act could not, in our
opinion, apply at all. The matter could only be covered, if
at all, by some provision of the statute of limitation
which. as already observed, makes no provision for such a
case. The effect of Section 3 of Limitation Act is that it
expressly precludes exclusion of time on a ground outside
this Act even if it parades under the guise of a doctrine
which has no application whatsoever here.
The majority judgment of the Punjab High Court cites several
cases to support the view that limitation would start
running against the plaintiffs-appellants when the
defendants-respondents took possession. We need mention
only two of these cases : Subbaiya Pandaram v. Mohammad
Mustapha Marcayar(1), and, Narayan Jivanouda Patil & Ans. v.
Puttabai & Ors.(2) We are in complete agreement with the
majority view.
It is not possible, in the absence of any provision which
would entitle the plaintiffs to exclude time and thus bring
their suit within 12 years period of limitation, to accept a
contention which would enable the plaintiffs to escape the
mandatory provisions of Sec. 3 of the Act read with Section
28 and Article 142 and 144 of the Limitation Act of 1908.
Courts of justice cannot legislate or reconstruct law
contained in a statuate or introduce exceptions when
statutory law debars them from doing so. Even hard
circumstances of a case do not justify the adoption of such
a course. Moreover, we fail to see how the plaintiffs could
complain of hardship when their own negligence or failure to
act in time enabled defendants to acquire rights by reason
of the operation of a law of limitation with the wisdom or
justice of which we are not concerned here.
A claim was sought to be advanced on behalf of the Custodian
of Evacuee Property, who is also a defendant-respondent,
based on the provisions of Section 8, sub. sec. 4 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act 1950. This question
was not gone into by the Punjab High Court. As we are
affirming the Full Bench decision of the Punjab High Court,
dismissing the plaintiffs’ suit on the ground that it is
barred by limitation, it is not necessary for us to give any
decision on any dispute between co-defendants-respondents
regarding the right to possess any property which may have
vested in the Custodian, Evacuee Property. A decision on
such a dispute is not necessary for deciding the case before us.
There is, therefore, no question of res-judicata
between co-defendants on the points raised. And, we cannot
allow
(1) I.L.R. 46 Mad. 751.
(2) AIR 1945 P.C. 5.
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390
the plaintiffs-appellants to raise any such question on
behalf of the Custodian, Evacuee Property, as their learned
Counsel seemed to be attempting to do, in a desperate
attempt to clutch at a straw.
The result is that we affirm the judgment and decree of the
Punjab High Court and dismiss this appeal. An application
on behalf of the plaintiffs-appellants (C.M.P. No. 2487 of
1967), seeking permission to introduce additional questions
in respect of Banjar land, is also dismissed for the reasons
already given. In the circumstances of this case, we order
that the parties will bear-their own costs throughout.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
391