Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADAMANCHI RAMAPPA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUTHALUR BOJJAPPA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/03/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1633 1964 SCR (2) 673
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC2547 (25)
ACT:
Civil Procedure-Concurrent findings of fact-powers of
second appellate court-insufficiency of evidence, if a
ground for interference--Equity, if must yield to express
provisions of law-Single Judge’s decision-Grant of Special
Leave-Constitution of India (1950), Art, 133 (3)- Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act V of 1908), s. 100.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants’ father bought 35 years before the date of
the suit 40 acres of land from one Krishnappa out of his
land measuring 166 acres. After the purchase the
appellants’
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father obtained possession and continued in possession
during his life time. On his death tire appellant’s mother
as their guardian remained in possession until 1947. The
respondent obtained a mortgage decree against Krishnappa and
in pursuance of the decree brought tire property to sale and
at the court sale the respondent himself ])ought the
property in 1943. In 1947 he managed to enter upon the land
in suit -unlawfully. Thereupon the appellants filed the
present suit. The appellants’ case was that the mortgage
did not affect the appellants’ title to the property which
had already been purchased by their father and therefore the
decree passed in the mortgage suit and the auction sale held
thereunder did not bind them. They claimed a declaration of
their title and asked for a decree for possession and mesne
profits. The respondent denied that the appellants’ father
purchased the property from Krishnappa and asserted that
they were cultivating the land as Krishnappa’s tenants and
therefore the mortgage, the mortgage decree and the auction
sale were binding against them.
The trial Court on air examination of the documentary as
well as the oral evidence gave a finding in favour of the
appellants both in resPect of their title and their
possession. Thereupon the respondent appealed to the
District judge who concurred with the trial Judge in his
findings of fact and found that the appellants had proved
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both their title and their possession within 12 years before
the date of the suit. Neither in the trial Court nor in the
first appellate court any question of construction of any
document or any question of drawing an inference of law
arose. The questions which arose were simple questions of
fact.
Tire respondent appealed to the High Court and the appeal
was heard by a single judge. Under the misconception that a
judge is entitled in second appeal, to interfere with even
concurrent findings of fact of the courts below not only
where the said conclusions are based on no evidence but also
where the said conclusions are based on evidence which the
High Court considers insufficient to support them , the
learned single judge examined the whole evidence and upset
the concurrent findings of fact given by tire courts below.
The appeal was allowed and the present appeal is by way of
special leave granted by this Court’ The main question
raised in the appeal was whether the High Court has
transgressed the limits prescribed by s. 100 Code of Civil
Procedure in interfering in the concurrent findings of fact
given by the two courts below.
Held that it has always been recognised that the sufficiency
or adequacy of evidence to support a finding of fact is a
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matter for decision of the courts of facts and cannot be
agitated in second appeal.
There is no jurisdiction to entertain a second appeal on the
ground of erroneous findings of fact however gross or in-
excusable the error may seem to be. Whenever this Court is
satisfied that in dealing with a second appeal the High
Court has, contravened the limits prescribed by s. 100 Code
of Civil Procedure it becomes the duty of this Court to
intervene and give effect to the said provisions.
The High Court cannot interfere with the concurrent findings
of fact on grounds of equity and justice because what is
administered in courts is justice according to law and
considerations of fair play and equity, however important
they may be, must yield to clear and express provisions of
the law.
Mussummal Durga Choudrain v. Jawahir Singh Choudhri, (1890)
L. R. 17 1. A. 122, Deity Pattabhiramasiqwamy v. S.
Hanymayya, A. I R. 1959 S. C. 57, and R. Ramachandra Ayyar
v. Ramalingam [1963] 3 S. C. R. 604 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 376 of
1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 5, 1959, of the Andhra Pradesh High Court, in Second
Appeal No. 545 of 1955.
M. Rajagopal and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the appellants.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and B. K. B. Nadu, for the
respondent.
1963. March 29. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-This appeal by special leave is directed
against the decision of a learned single judge of the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh in a second appeal preferred before
it by the respondent. There is no doubt that under
Art.133(3) of the Constitution, no appeal lies to this court
from the judgment, decree, or final order of one Judge
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of a High Court, and it has been the consistent practice of
this Court not to encourage applications for special leave
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against the decisions of the High Courts rendered in second
appeals; but in cases where the petitioners for special
leave against the second appellate judgments delivered by a
single judge of the High Court are able to satisfy this
Court that in allowing a second appeal, the High Court has
interfered with questions of fact and has thus contravened
the limits prescribed by section 100 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, it is not easy to reject their claim for special
leave. As early as 1890 in the case of Mussummat Durga
Choudhrain v. Jawahir Singh Choudhri, (1), the Privy Council
emphatically declared that under s.584 of the earlier Code,
which corresponds to s.100 of the present Code, there is no
jurisdiction to entertain a second appeal on the ground of
erroneous finding of fact, however gross or inexcusable the
error may seem to be; and they added a note of warning that
no Court in India has power to add to, or enlarge, the
grounds specified in s.100. The appellants’ contention in
the present appeal is that this warning has been patently
disregarded and in allowing the respondent’s appeal against
them, the second appellate Court has interfered with
concurrent findings of fact. That is the sole ground on
which leave has been granted to the appellants and on which
we propose to allow this appeal.
The facts leading to the present appeal are not many and
they lie within a very narrow compass. Survey No.440-B
situated in Rakatla village originally belonged to one Boya
Krishnappa and it measured 166 acres. In the suit filed by
the appellants in the Court of Subordinate Judge, Anantapur
in 1951 (0. S. No. 72 of 1953), the appellants alleged that
40 acres out of the said land had been purchased by their
father, Chinna Venkataramanappa from Boya Krishnappa about
35 years before the date of the suit for consideration.
(1) (1890) L. R. 17 1. A. 122.
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After the sale took place, the appellants’ father obtained
possession of the property and continued in possession
during his lifetime. On his death, the appellants’ mother
acting as their guardian remained in possession and
management of the said property until 1947. The appellants’
family had been paying the assessment for the land all the
time and had been in its possession in an open and peaceful
manner until 1947.
It appears that the respondent had obtained a mortgage
decree in 0. S. No. 94/1940 against Boya Krishnappa in
respect of the entire SurveyNo.440-B and in pursuance of
the said mortgagedecree, brought the mortgaged property
to sale.At the court sale, the respondent purchased the
property himself in about 1943, and thereafter liebegan
to obstruct the possession of the appellants.In 1947,the
respondent managed to enter upon theland in suit
unlawfully and that gave rise to the present suit. The
cause of action for the suit is thus the wrongful
dispossession of the appellants by the respondent by about
1947. The appellants pleaded that though Boya Krishnappa
may have included the suit property in the mortgage deed
executed by him in favour of the respondent on July 31,
1929, the said mortgage did not affect the ’appellants’
title -to the property which had already been purchased by
their father from the said Krishnappa, and so, the decree
passed in the mortgage suit, and the auction sale held
thereunder did not bind them. It is on these allegations
that the appellant claimed a declaration of their title to
the suit property and asked for a decree for possession as
well as mesne profits, past and future.
This claim was resisted by the respondent. He denied that
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the appellants’ father had purchased the property from
Krishnappa and that the assessment for the land had ever
been paid by the
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appellants’ family as owners. According to him, the
appellants had been cultivating the land in suit as tenants
of Boya Krishnappa, and so, the mortgage executed by
Krishnappt in his favour was binding against them and so was
the mortgage decree and the auction sale that followed it.
On these pleadings, the trial Court framed two substantive
issues. The first issue was whether the appellants were
entitled to the suit property and whether they were in
possession within 12 years prior to the date of the Suit,
and the second issue was whether the court sale set up by
the respondent had taken place and was binding on the
appellants. Both these issues were answered by the trial
judge in favour of the appellants. On the question about
the appellants’ title, the trial judge placed the burden on
the appellants and noticed the fact that the appellants had
not produced any sale-deed to evidence the transaction of
sale, nor had they produced a patta. He, however, examined
the other documentary evidence adduced by appellants and
found that the said evidence satisfactorily proved both
their title and their possession within 12 years before the
date of the suit. Exhibit A-8 is certified copy of the
Changes Register of Rakatla village. This document showed
the names of Boya Krishnappa and Venkataramanappa, the
father of the appellants as the Pattadars. After the death
of Venkataramanappa a circle was put round his name and a
remark was made against it that since he had died, his sons,
the appellants Venkanna and Ramappa, minors represented by
their mother Lakshmamma as their guardian, were registered
as Pattadars. According to the trial Judge, this entry must
have been made prior to 1926, because in 1926, 1927 and 1928
there were no further changes. Then the trial judge
examined Ext. A-1 which showed that the Kulam Number of
440-B was mentioned as 210. A number of cist receipts were
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produced by the appellants (Exts. A-2 to A-5 and A-9 to A-
35), and the trial Court came to the conclusion that these
documents showed that throughout the period, the cist in
respect of the land in suit was paid by the appellants’
family. In fact, the respondent clearly admitted that the
appellants’ family had been in possession of the land, but
he explained the said possession on the allegation that they
were the tenants of Boya Krishnappa. The revenue documents
on which the appellants relied were sought to be explained
away by the respondent on the ground that the village
officers were his enemies and they had fabricated the cist
receipts. These contentions were rejected by the trial
Court, and giving effect to the documentary evidence, it
made a finding in favour of the appellants both in respect
of their title and their possession within 12 years from the
date of the suit. The fact that the appellants’ father’s
name was not shown in the diglot exhibit B-1, did not appear
material to the trial Court, because the said register was
published in 1927 and at the time when it was prepared, the
information about the transaction in favour of the
appellant’s father may not have reached the revenue
officers. It is true that the appellants had sought to
prove their possession of the land by producing certain rent
notes alleged to have been executed in their favour by their
tenants (Exts. A-6, A-7, A-36 & A-37), but the trial Court
thought that these documents could not be accepted as
satisfactory or genuine.
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The trial Court then considered one circumstance which was
against the appellants and on which the respondent relied.
It appears that when the respondent put the mortgaged
properties to sale in execution of his mortgage decree
against Krishnappa, a Commissioner was appointed to value
the crops standing in the land and in those proceedings, the
appellants stood sureties for the crops at
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the instance of Krishnappa. The respondent’s contention was
that crops were standing on the suit land and that the
appellants would not offer to give security for the said
crops when the mortgagor Krishnappa was directed to furnish
security for the value of the crops on the lands covered by
the mortgage if they had been the owners of a part of the
property. The trial Court was not impressed by this
argument because it was not satisfied that the circumstances
under which the said surety bond was executed clearly showed
that the appellants had furnished security for any crops
standing on the land at present in suit. it clearly appears
from the Commissioner’s report then made that crops were
standing on a small portion of the entire survey No. 445-B.
The security bond was in English and there was nothing to
show that the surety offered by the appellants had anything
to do with any crop standing on their land. That is why the
trial Court was not prepared to attach any significance to
this circumstances Since it found that the property belonged
to the appellants’ family either by transfer or by reason of
adverse possession, it held that the mortgage executed by
Krishnappa in favour of the respondent and subsequent
proceedings under the said mortgage did not affect the
appellant’s title. That is how the Suit filed by the
appellants was decreed.
The respondent challenged this decree by preferring an
appeal in the Court of the District judge at Anantapur. The
learned District judge framed one comprehensive point for
determination and that was : whether the appellants had
proved title to and possession of the suit property within
12 years before the date of their suit. Both parts of this
issue were answered by him in favour of the appellants.
Like the trial Court, he also noticed the fact that there
was no sale-deed or patta on which the appellants relied,
but be considered the oral and documentary evidence produced
by both the parties
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and held that the trial judge was right in the findings
recorded by him. In his opinion, "the entire evidence in
the case and the probabilities and circumstances made out by
unimpeachable documentary evidence helped the appellants to
prove both their title and their possession within 12 years
before the date of the suit." Both the courts have noticed
the fact that the respondent himself had admitted that about
20 or 25 years ago, all the lands in the locality including
surevy No. 440-B were banjar, they were of no value and
people were getting them for the mere asking. In fact, the
mortgage deed executed in favour of the respondent supports
this admission. The mortgage was in regard to 166 acres and
the amount advanced was Rs. 650/only. This aspect of the
matter has relevance in dealing with the question as to
whether a registered document was necessary to convey title
to the appellants’ father in respect of the property in
suit.
It will thus be seen that the effect of the findings
concurrently recorded by the courts of fact is very clear.
The property in suit when it was purchased was not shown to
be worth more than Rs. 100/- and so, it was not unlikely
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that a sale as alleged by the appellants may have taken
place between their father and Krishnappa; but since the
evidence about the said sale was not satisfactory, the two
courts considered their evidence about possession with a
view to decide whether they had established a possessory
title as claimed by them. The possession of the land was
admitted to be with the appellants’ family for more than the
statutory period and as such, it was open and continuous.
The plea of the respondent that the said possession was that
of a tenant was rejected, and so, the said possession in law
was adverse against the whole world. It was also clear that
the possession continued until 1947 which was within twelve
years before the date of the suit, These findings were based
on appreciation
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of oral and documentary evidence examined in the light of
the circumstances of the case and the probabilities. No
question of construction of any document arose, nor did any
question of drawing an inference of law arise in this case.
The questions which ’arose were simple questions of fact and
on them concurrent findings were recorded by the two courts.
Aggrieved by the decree passed in his appeal by the District
Court, the respondent moved the High Court under section 100
C. P. C., and his appear was heard by Sanjeeva Rao Nayudu J.
The learned judge emphasised the fact that no sale deed had
been produced by the appellants to prove their title, and
then examined the documentary evidence on which they relied.
He was inclined to hold that Ext. A-8 had not been proved
at all and could not, therefore, be receive(] in evidence.
It has been fairly conceded by Mr. Sastri for the respondent
before us that this was plainly erroneous in law. The docu-
ment in question being a certified copy of a public document
need not have been proved by calling a witness. Besides, no
objection had been raised about the mode of proof either in
the trial Court or in the District Court. The learned judge
then examined the question as to whether the said document
was genuine, and he thought that it was a doubtful document
and no weight could be attached to it. A similar comment
was made by him in respect of the cist receipts on which
both the courts of fact had acted. In his opinion, the said
documents were also not genuine and could not be accepted as
reliable. He then referred to the fact that the appellants
had offered security in proceedings between the respondent
and his judgment-debtor Boya Krishnappa, and held that the
said conduct destroyed the appellants’ case; and, he also
relied on the fact that the leasedeeds produced by the
appellants had been disbelieved and that also weakened their
case. It is on
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these considerations that the learned judge set aside the
concurrent findings recorded by the courts below, allowed
the second appeal preferred by the respondent and directed
that the appellants’ suit should be dismissed with costs
throughout. It is the validity of this decree which is
challenged before us by the appellants and the principal
ground on which the challenge rests is that in reversing
concurrent findings of fact recorded by the courts below,
the learned judge has clearly contravened the provisions of
s. 100 of the Code.
The question about the limits of the powers conferred on the
High Court in dealing with second appeals has been
considered by High Courts in India and by the Privy Council
on several occasions. One of the earliest pronouncements of
the Privy Council on this point is to be found in the case
of Mst. Durga Choudhrain (1). In the case of Deity
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Pattabhiramaswami’v. S. Hanymayya (2), this Court had
occasion to refer to the said decision of the Privy Council
and it was constrained to observe that "notwithstanding such
clear and authoritative pronouncements on the scope of the
provisions of s. 100, C. P. C., some learned.judges of the
High Courts are disposing of second appeals as if they were
first appeals. This introduces, apart from the fact that
the High Court assumes and exercises a jurisdiction which it
does not possess, a gambling element in litigation and
confusion in the mind of the litigant public." On this
ground, this Court set aside the second appellate decision
which had been brought before it by the appellants.
In R. Ramachandra Ayyar v. Ramalingam Chettiar (3), this
Court had occasion to revert to the same subject once again.
The true legal position in regard to the powers of the
second appellate Court under s. 100 was once more examined
and it was pointed out that the learned judges of the
(1) (1890) L.R, 17 J.A. 122. (2) A I.R 1959 S.C. 57.
(3) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 604.
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High Courts should bear in mind the caution and warning
pronounced by the Privy Council in the case of Mst. Durga
Chowdhrain’(1) and should not interfere with findings of
fact.
It appears that the decision of this Court in Deity
Pattabhiramaswamy (2), was in fact cited before the learned
single judge, but he was inclined to take the view that some
aspects of the provisions contained in s. 100 of the Code
had not been duly considered by this Court and so, he
thought that it was open to him to interfere with the
conclusions of the courts below in the present appeal.
According to the learned judge, it is open to the second
appellate Court to interfere with the conclusions of fact
recorded by the District judge not only where the said
conclusions are based on no evidence, but also where the
said conclusions are based on evidence which the High Court
considers insufficient to support them. In other words, the
learned Judge seems to think that the adequacy or
sufficiency of evidence to sustain a conclusion of fact is a
matter of law which can be effectively raised in a second
appeal In our opinion, this is clearly a misconception of
the true legal position. The admissibility of evidence is
no doubt a point of law, but once it is shown that the
evidence on which courts of fact have acted was admissible
and relevant, it is not open to a party feeling aggrieved-
by the findings recorded by the courts of fact to contend
before the High Court in second appeal that the said
evidence is not sufficient to justify the findings of fact
in question. It has been always recognised that the
sufficiency or adequacy of evidence to support a finding of
fact is a matter for decision of the court of facts and
cannot be agitated in a second appeal. Sometimes, this
position is expressed by saying that like all questions of
fact, sufficiency or adequacy of evidence in support of a
case is also left to the jury for its verdict. This
position has always been
(1) (1890) L.R. 17 I.A. 122
(2) [1963] 3 S.C. R. 604.
685
accepted without dissent and it can be stated without any
doubt that it enunciates what can be properly characterised
as an elementary proposition. Therefore, whenever this
Court is satisfied that in dealing with a second appeal, the
High Court has, either unwittingly and in a casual manner,
or deliberately as in this case, contravened the limits
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prescribed by s. 100, it becomes the duty of this Court to
intervene and give effect to the said provisions. It may be
that in some cases, the High Court dealing with the second
appeal is inclined to take the view that what it regards to
be justice or equity of the case has not been served by the
findings of fact recorded by courts of fact; but on such
occasions it is necessary to remember that what is
administered in courts is justice according to law and
considerations of fair play And equity however important
they may be, must yield to clear and express provisions of
the law. If in reaching its decisions in second appeals,
the High Court contravenes the express provisions of section
100, it would inevitably introduce in such decisions an
element of disconcerting unpredictability which is usually
associated with gambling; and that is a reproach which
judicial process must constantly and scrupulously endeavour
to avoid.
In the result, the appeal is allowed, the decree passed by
the High Court is set aside and that of the District judge
restored with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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