Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2292 of 1999
PETITIONER:
Govindaraju
RESPONDENT:
Mariamman
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/2005
BENCH:
ASHOK BHAN & A.K. MATHUR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
BHAN, J.
This appeal by special leave is preferred by
the original defendant \026 appellant herein, against
the judgment and decree of the High Court of Madras
granting declaration and permanent injunction to the
original plaintiff \026 respondent herein, with respect
to the suit property setting aside the judgment and
decree of the Trial Court as well as of the First
Appellate Court wherein aforesaid relief was denied
to the respondent.
Facts :-
Appellant claims to be the purchaser of suit
property from descendants of Muthuswamy Moopanar,
brother of Veeramuthu Moopanar and the respondent
claims to be the purchaser of the same property from
descendants of Veeramuthu Moopanar.
Respondent filed a suit for declaration of
title and permanent injunction restraining the
appellant from disturbing his possession and causing
any inconvenience in the peaceful enjoyment of the
suit property. In the plaint it was averred that
the suit property belonged to one Veeramuthu
Moopanar. He had two daughters viz. Sivamalai Ammal
and Thayarammal. Veeramuthu Moopanar sold his
entire property to his two daughters through a sale
deed dated 1.7.1940 for Rs. 300/-. Veeramuthu
Moopanar died and soon after his widowed daughter
Sivamalai Ammal also died issueless. Property of
Sivamalai Ammal came to the share of Thayarammal.
Thayarammal was married to one Sengamalai Moopanar
as his second wife. Sengamalai Moopanar died in the
year 1973 and in 1976 Thayarammal also died
issueless. Ganapathy Moopanar, son of the first wife
of Sengamalai Moopanar, succeeded to the estate of
Thayarammal by virtue of Section 15(1)(b) of the
Hindu Succession Act, 1955 (for short ’the Act’)
being heir of her husband. Ganapathy Moopanar sold
the property to the respondent temple on 25.5.1980.
That appellant was obstructing and interfering in
the peaceful enjoyment of the property by the
respondent. It was prayed that the respondent be
declared to be the owner being the vendee from the
lawful owner and the appellant be injuncted from
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interfering with the possession and peaceful
enjoyment of the suit property by the respondent.
In the written statement filed by the appellant
it was contended that the entire property belonged
to the father of Veeramuthu Moopanar and Muthuswamy
Moopanar and after the death of their father,
partition took place between the brothers in the
year 1927 and the suit property fell to the share of
Muthuswamy Moopanar. Veeramuthu Moopanar managed
the property and took care of small children of
Muthuswamy Moopanar. To prevent the property from
falling into the hands of the creditors of his
deceased brother Muthuswamy Moopanar, Veeramuthu
Moopanar executed a sham and nominal sale deed dated
1.7.1940 in favour of his two daughters. That the
suit property was always in possession and enjoyment
of the children of Muthuswamy Moopanar and the
appellant purchased the property from Sornathammal
and Nallathambi, daughter and grandson respectively
of Muthuswamy Moopanar on 1.4.1980. That marriage
between Thayarammal and Sengamalai Moopanar was
dissolved under custom by Village Panchayat prior to
1950. That Ganapathy Moopanar was not the son of
Sengamalai Moopanar from his first wife and in turn
was not the heir of Sengamalai Moopanar. That the
suit was not maintainable for non-joinder of
necessary parties as well. According to the
appellant, he was the owner in possession of the
suit property. That respondent was not entitled to
the declaration and injunction prayed for. The suit
being frivolous deserves to be dismissed with costs.
Trial Court dismissed the suit of the
respondent with costs. It was held that both the
parties had failed to adduce satisfactory evidence
to prove the title of their respective vendors to
the suit property. That the sale deed executed in
favour of the respondent was not valid and the sale
made in favour of the appellant was also not proved.
That respondent failed to prove that Ganapathy
Moopanar was the son of Sengamalai Moopanar from his
first wife. That Ganapathy Moopanar was neither in
possession of the suit property nor had any title
over the same. That no divorce had taken place
between Thayarammal and Sengamalai Moopanar as had
been pleaded by the appellant. That sale deed dated
1.7.1940 executed by Veeramuthu Moopanar in favour
of his daughters was valid. That the suit was
barred for non-joinder of necessary parties.
Being aggrieved, respondent preferred first
appeal. Appellate Court upheld the judgment and
decree of the Trial Court and dismissed the appeal
holding that the respondent was not entitled to the
declaration of title and permanent injunction as
prayed for. It was held that the title in the suit
property did not pass to Veeramuthu Moopanar and the
sale deed executed by him in favour of his daughters
on 1.7.1940 was sham and nominal. That the marriage
between Thayarammal and Sengamalai Moopanar was
dissolved under custom and the respondent had also
failed to prove that Ganapathy Moopanar was the son
of Sengamalai Moopanar. Since Ganapathy Moopanar
was not the son of Sengamalai Moopanar, he could not
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inherit the estate of Thayarammal as the heir of the
husband of Thayarammal under Section 15(1)(b) of the
Act. In view of the findings that Thayarammal
succeeded to the estate of her father by way of
inheritance being the daughter and not as a vendee
by way of sale from her father, by virtue of Section
15(2)(a) of the Act, in the absence of any direct
heir, the property of Thayarammal devolved upon the
heirs of her father i.e. the family members of the
brother of her father. The family members of
Muthuswamy Moopanar had the title and right over the
suit property and the sale deeds executed by the
daughter and grandson of Muthuswamy Moopanar in
favour of the appellant were valid and those
executed by Ganapathy Moopanar in favour of the
respondent did not convey any title as their vendor
did not have the title to the property.
Respondent, being aggrieved, filed Second
Appeal No. 595 of 1984 against the judgment and
decree of the First Appellate Court in the High
Court. The \High Court while admitting the appeal
formulated the following substantial questions of
law said to be arising in the appeal :-
"1) Whether the lower appellate court having
upheld the sale deed executed by
Thayarammal in favour of a third party in
relation to the properties said to have
been obtained by her through her father
Veeramuthu Moopanar could held
inconsistently that Thayarammal did not
get any property validly from Veeramuthu
Moopanar?
2) If Thayarammal can be taken to have
acquired title to the suit property
whether the plaintiff could be non-suited
on the ground that Ganapathy, who sold
the property as step son of Thayarammal
should be proved by plaintiff as the
legitimate son of Thayarammal’s husband
by another wife, when there is no
specific allegations made in the written
statement that Ganapathy is the
illegitimate son of Sengamalai, husband
of Thayarammal?"
High Court on reappraising the entire evidence
reversed the findings of both the courts below and
decreed the suit of the respondent granting
declaration and permanent injunction as prayed for
in the suit. It was held that sale deed dated
1.7.1940 executed by Veeramuthu Moopanar in favour
of his daughters was not sham and nominal. That no
divorce took place between Thayarammal and
Sengamalai Moopanar and Ganapathy Moopanar was the
son of Sengamalai Moopanar. That by virtue of
Section 15(1)(b) of the Act Ganapathy Moopanar
succeeded to the estate of Thayarammal and
completely excluded the branch of Muthuswamy
Moopanar from inheritance to the estate of
Thayarammal. That after the death of Thayarammal,
her step-son Ganapathy Moopanar inherited the
property as heir of her husband and, therefore, had
a conveyable title to the suit property. Sale made
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by him in favour of the respondent was upheld and
the suit decreed.
Counsel for the appellant strenuously contended
that the High Court has committed jurisdictional
error in setting aside the findings of fact recorded
by the courts below on re-appreciation of evidence
in the Second Appeal in exercise of its jurisdiction
under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Code’). According
to him, the questions of law formulated by the High
Court at the time of admission of the appeal did not
arise either from the pleadings of the parties,
evidence led or the findings recorded by the courts
below. That the High Court after referring to the
questions of law which had been formulated at the
time of admission failed to determine any one of
them. That the High Court erroneously assumed that
once the questions of law have been framed then it
gets the jurisdiction to decide the appeal on re-
appreciation of evidence without determining the
questions of law.
Per contra, counsel for the respondent did not
dispute the proposition of law that the jurisdiction
of the High Court under Section 100 of the Code is
limited to the substantial questions of law framed
at the time of admission of the appeal or further
substantial questions which the High Court can frame
during the course of hearing of the appeal after
recording reasons for the same. He could not
seriously dispute the fact that the questions of law
formulated at the time of admission of the appeal
are not substantial questions of law involved in the
case. He submitted that the case be remitted back
to the High Court for a fresh decision leaving it
open to the High Court to frame additional
substantial questions of law, if any, arising in the
appeal in order to do substantial justice between
the parties.
A perusal of Section 100 of the Code makes it
clear that the High Court cannot proceed to hear a
Second Appeal without formulating the substantial
questions of law involved in the appeal. It reads
:-
"100. Second Appeal \026 (1) Save as otherwise
expressly provided in the body of this Code or
by any other law for the time being in force,
an appeal shall lie to the High Court from
every decree passed in appeal by any court
subordinate to the High Court, if the High
Court is satisfied that the case involves a
substantial question of law.
(2) An appeal may lie under this section from
an appellate decree passed ex-parte.
(3) In an appeal under this section, the
memorandum of appeal shall precisely state the
substantial question of law involved in the
appeal.
(4) Where the High Court is satisfied that a
substantial question of law is involved in any
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case, it shall formulate that question.
(5) The appeal shall be heard on the question
so formulated and the respondent shall, at the
hearing of the appeal, be allowed to argue
that the case does not involve such question:
Provided that nothing in this sub-section
shall be deemed to take away or abridge the
power of the Court to hear, for reasons to be
recorded, the appeal on any other substantial
question of law, not formulated by it, if it
is satisfied that the case involves such
question."
Section 100 provides that the second appeal
would lie to the High Court from a decree passed in
appeal by any court subordinate to the High Court if
the High Court is satisfied that the case "involves
a substantial question of law". It further provides
that the memorandum of appeal shall precisely state
the substantial question of law involved in the
appeal and the High Court on being satisfied that
the substantial question of law is involved in a
case formulate the said question. Sub-section (5)
provides that the "appeal shall be heard on the
question so formulated". It reserves the liberty
with the respondent against whom the appeal was
admitted ex-parte and the questions of law had been
framed in his absence to argue that the case did not
involve the questions of law framed. Proviso to
sub-section (5) states that the questions of law
framed at the time of admission would not take away
or abridge the power of the court to frame any other
substantial question of law which was not formulated
earlier, if the court is satisfied that the case
involved such additional questions after recording
reasons for doing so. It is abundantly clear from
the analysis of Section 100 that if the appeal is
entertained without framing the substantial
questions of law, then it would be illegal and would
amount to failure or abdication of the duty cast on
the court. The existence of substantial questions
of law is the sine qua non for the exercise of
jurisdiction under Section 100 of the Code. {
Refer to Kshitish Chandra Purkait v. Santosh Kumar
Purkait & Ors. [(1997) 5 SCC 438], Panchugopal Barua
v. Umesh Chandra Goswami [(1997) 4 SCC 413], Kondiba
Dagadu Kadam v. Savitribai Sopan Gujar [(1999) 3
SCC 722] }
A three Judge Bench of this Court in Santosh
Hazari v. Purushottam Tiwari (Deceased) By LRs.
[(2001) 3 SCC 179] after tracing the history of
Section 100, the purpose which necessitated and
persuaded the Law Commission of India to recommend
for amendment of Section 100, concluded that scope
of hearing of Second Appeal by the High Court is
circumscribed by the questions formulated by the
High Court at the time of admission of the appeal
and the High Court has to hear the appeal on
substantial questions of law involved in the case
only. That the High Court would be at liberty to
hear the appeal on any other substantial question of
law, not earlier formulated by it, if the court is
satisfied of two conditions i.e. (i) the High Court
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feels satisfied that the case involves such
question, and (ii) the High Court records reasons
for its such satisfaction." It was observed in para
10 as under :-
"At the very outset we may point out that the
memo of second appeal filed by the plaintiff-
appellant before the High Court suffered from
a serious infirmity. Section 100 of the Code,
as amended in 1976, restricts the jurisdiction
of the High Court to hear a second appeal only
on "substantial question of law involved in
the case". An obligation is cast on the
appellant to precisely state in the memorandum
of appeal the substantial question of law
involved in the appeal and which the appellant
proposes to urge before the High Court. The
High Court must be satisfied that a
substantial question of law is involved in the
case and such question has then to be
formulated by the High Court. Such questions
or question may be the one proposed by the
appellant or may be any other question which
though not proposed by the appellant yet in
the opinion of the High Court arises as
involved in the case and is substantial in
nature. At the hearing of the appeal, the
scope of hearing is circumscribed by the
question so formulated by the High Court. The
respondent is at liberty to show that the
question formulated by the High Court was not
involved in the case. In spite of a
substantial question of law determining the
scope of hearing of second appeal having been
formulated by the High Court, its power to
hear the appeal on any other substantial
question of law, not earlier formulated by it,
is not taken away subject to the twin
conditions being satisfied : (i) the High
Court feels satisfied that the case involves
such question, and (ii) the High Court records
reasons for its such satisfaction."
{Emphasis supplied}
As to which would constitute a substantial
question of law, it was observed :-
"A point of law which admits of no two
opinions may be a proposition of law but
cannot be a substantial question of law. To
be "substantial" a question of law must be
debatable, not previously settled by law of
the land or a binding precedent, and must have
a material bearing on the decision of the
case, if answered either way, insofar as the
rights of the parties before it are concerned.
To be a question of law "involving in the
case" there must be first a foundation for it
laid in the pleadings and the question should
emerge from the sustainable findings of fact
arrived at by court of facts and it must be
necessary to decide that question of law for a
just and proper decision of the case. An
entirely new point raised for the first time
before the High Court is not a question
involved in the case unless it goes to the
root of the matter. It will, therefore,
depend on the facts and circumstance of each
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case whether a question of law is a
substantial one and involved in the case, or
not; the paramount overall consideration being
the need for striking a judicious balance
between the indispensable obligation to do
justice at all stages and impelling necessity
of avoiding prolongation in the life of any
lis." {Emphasis
supplied}
This judgment has been followed in a number of
decisions including the latest on the point
Thiagarajan & Ors. v. Sri
Venugopalaswamay B. Koil & Ors. [(2004) 5 SCC
762].
As per settled law, the scope of exercise of
the jurisdiction by the High Court in Second Appeal
under Section 100 is limited to the substantial
questions of law framed at the time of admission of
the appeal or additional substantial questions of
law framed at a later date after recording reasons
for the same. It was observed in Santosh Hazari’s
case (supra) that a point of law which admits of no
two opinions may be a proposition of law but cannot
be a substantial question of law. To be a
’substantial’ question of law must be debatable, not
previously settled by law of the land or a binding
precedent and answer to the same will have a
material bearing as to the rights of the parties
before the Court. As to what would be the question
of law "involving in the case", it was observed that
to be a question of law ’involving in the case’
there must be first a foundation for it laid in the
pleadings and the question should emerge from the
sustainable findings of fact arrived at by the court
of facts and it must be necessary to decide that
question of law for a just and proper decision
between the parties.
After perusal of the findings recorded by the
courts below and the High Court, we are of the
opinion that the questions of law framed at the time
of admission of the appeal were not questions of
substance arising from the findings record\ed by the
courts of fact. The court of fact recorded the
finding that the title in the suit property did not
pass to Veeramuthu Moopanar and the sale deed dated
1.7.1940 executed by him in favour of his two
daughters was a nominal and a sham transaction. The
court of fact had also come to the conclusion that
there was a divorce between Thayarammal and
Sengamalai Moopanar under custom and the respondent
herein had failed to prove that Ganapathy Moopanar
was the son of Sengamalai Moopanar from his first
wife. After recording this finding of fact, the
court of fact held that since Ganapathy Moopanar was
not proved to be the son of Sengamalai Moopanar and
that a divorce had taken place between Thayarammal
and Sengamalai Moopanar, Ganapathy Moopanar could
not succeed to the estate of Thayarammal being the
heir of her husband under Section 15(1)(b) of the
Act. That in the absence of any direct heir, the
property of Thayarammal reverted back to the heirs
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of her father i.e. the family members of the brother
of her father. The sale effected by Ganapathy
Moopanar in favour of the respondent did not convey
any title as Ganapathy Moopanar was not proved to be
the owner of the property.
The High Court on re-appreciation of evidence
recorded a finding to the contrary and held that the
marriage between Thayarammal and Sengamalai Moopanar
had not been dissolved. It further held that
Ganapathy Moopanar was the son of Sengamalai
Moopanar from his previous wife. That the sale
executed by Veeramuthu Moopanar dated 1.7.1940 in
favour of his two daughters was not a nominal and
sham transaction. That it conveyed a valid title of
the suit property to his two daughters. As the
daughters had not inherited the property but
purchased the same from their father, they became
the absolute owners of the same. Thayarammal had
inherited the share of her sister after her death.
As Thayarammal had died issueless and had a step-son
Ganapathy Moopanar from her husband, Ganapathy
Moopanar inherited the suit property being the heir
of her husband under Section 15(1)(b) of the Act and
succeeded to the estate of Thayarammal. That
Ganapathy Moopanar had a conveyable title in the
suit property and the sale made by him in favour of
the respondent was valid and decreed the suit. This
was done on re-appreciation of evidence present on
record. Questions of law which had been framed at
the time of admission and were referred and
reproduced in the judgment were not adverted to
while deciding the appeal. No finding was recorded
on those questions. After reproducing the questions
of law, the learned Single Judge did not advert to
either of them or record findings on them. The
learned Single Judge proceeded to decide the appeal
thereafter as if after framing the questions of law
the High Court gets the jurisdiction to re-
appreciate the evidence and come to a conclusion
other than the one recorded by the courts of fact.
As observed by this Court in Santosh Hazari’s case
(supra) for the question of law to be involved in
the case, first a foundation for it has to be laid
in the pleadings and the question should emerge from
the sustainable findings of facts arrived at by the
court of fact and it must be necessary to decide
that question of law for a just and proper decision
of the case. In the present case, the learned
Single Judge proceeded to re-appreciate the evidence
and on re-appreciating the same, set aside the
findings referred to above on facts. On reversal of
the findings referred to above on facts, the High
Court came to the conclusion that Ganapathy Moopanar
would inherit the property under Section 15(1)(b)
being the heir of the husband of Thayarammal and not
under Section 15(2)(a) under which property was to
revert back to the heirs of her father. The
questions of law which were framed at the time of
admission of the appeal were not decided by the High
Court.
Even if the High Court was of the view that the
findings of fact recorded by the courts below were
wrong, in our opinion, these findings of fact could
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not be disturbed without coming to the conclusion
that the findings recorded were perverse i.e. based
on misreading of evidence or based on no evidence.
The High Court did not come to such a conclusion.
The learned Singh Judge also did not come to the
conclusion that the appeal involved other
substantial questions of law or formulate the same.
Counsel for the respondent submitted that the
case be remitted back to the High Court for a fresh
decision. We are not inclined to do so as, in our
opinion, a substantial question of law does not
arise in the appeal. Counsel for the respondent
could not formulate a question of law which could be
said to be arising in the second appeal.
For the reasons stated above, this appeal is
accepted, the judgment and decree passed by the High
Court is set aside and that of the courts below is
restored. No order as to costs.