Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
KASHIBAI W/O LACHIRAM & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARWATIBAI W/O LACHIRAM & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/09/1995
BENCH:
SINGH N.P. (J)
BENCH:
SINGH N.P. (J)
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (6) 213 JT 1995 (7) 48
1995 SCALE (5)615
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
Faizan Uddin, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. This appeal at the instance of the plaintiffs has been
directed against the judgment and decree dated 5.2.1992
passed by the High Court of Bombay in Second Appeal No.
682/1981 reversing the judgment and decree of the two Courts
below passed in favour of the plaintiffs-appellants herein.
The appellants herein shall be described as plaintiffs and
the respondents as defendants hereinafter for the sake of
convenience.
3. The following family tree will indicate the inter se
relationship of the parties to the suit out of which the
present appeal arises.
Lachi Ram (Dead)
-----------------------------------------------------------
Kashi Bai (first wife) Parwati Bai (second wife)
Plaintiff/appellant Defendant/respondent
No. 1 No. 1
Sunita Bai (daughter Meena Bai (daughter from
from Kashi Bai) Parvati Bai) Defendant/
Plaintiff/appellant No. 2 respondent No. 2
Purshottam (son of Meena
Bai) Defendant/respondent
No. 3
4. As would be clear from the family tree the plaintiff
No. 1 and defendant No. 1 are the two widows of deceased
Lachiram while the plaintiff No. 2 is the daughter of
Lachiram from his first wife. Kashi Bai and the defendant
No. 2 Meena Bai is his daughter from his second wife,
Parvati Bai. The defendant No. 3, Purshottam is the son of
defendant No. 2. Meena and grand-son of late Lachiram. The
plaintiffs brought this suit for separate possession by
partition of a double storey house, open plot and some
agricultural lands as described in the plaint, situated at
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
village Eklara, Taluka Mukhed. The plaintiffs claimed half
share in the suit properties being the legal heirs of
deceased Lachiram. It was alleged by the plaintiffs that
Lachiram during his life time had given survey Nos.171/1,
160 and 159/3 to the plaintiff No. 1 towards her maintenance
in addition to a portion of suit house and placed the
plaintiff No. 1 in possession thereof and she became full
owner of the said land after the Hindu Succession Act, 1956
came into force. It was alleged by the plaintiffs that
deceased Lachiram during his life time challenged the
plaintiffs ownership in respect of survey Nos.171/1, 160 and
159/3 by filing civil suit No. 138/1969 which was dismissed
on 28.12.1970. The said judgment was confirmed in first and
second appeals and thus the plaintiffs became the absolute
owner of the same.
5. Further case of the plaintiffs was that during the life
time of Lachiram survey No. 111/2 and survey No. 129/7 were
purchased by Lachiram in the name of defendant No. 1 and
that survey No. 128/A was received by defendant No. 1 during
the pendency of the suit as a result of a decision of
pending suit between deceased Lachiram and one Naga and,
therefore, the same were also liable to partition and the
plaintiffs were entitled to half share by partition in the
said lands also. It was averred by the plaintiffs that the
defendants were requested for separate possession by
partition to the extent of their half share in the suit
property but the defendants were not agreeable for the same
which led to the filing of the suit for partition.
6. The defendants contested the suit. In their written
statement they denied the plaintiffs claim and took the
stand that deceased Lachiram at the time of his death was
the owner only of survey Nos. 110/1, 218 and 149/1 It was
alleged that the defendant No. 1 had herself purchased
survey Nos. 127, 129/1 and 120/2 from one Iranna on 21st
March 1354 fasli (1945 A.D.) by a registered sale deed and
she was the exclusive owner with possession thereof and the
plaintiffs had no right over the same and those lands could
not be the subject matter of the partition. The defendants
though admitted the relationship but denied the claim of the
plaintiffs for partition on the ground that the defandant
No. 3, Purshottam son of Meena Bai was adopted by deceased
Lachiram under the registered Deed of Adoption dated
29.4.1970 and that Lachiram had also executed the Deed of
Will on the same date i.e. dated 29.4.1970 in favour of
Purshottam, defendant No. 3 becueathing the suit properties
to the defendant No. 3 and as such the plaintiffs have no
right over any of the suit properties. With regard to survey
Nos. 172/1, 160 and 159/3 and the portion of the house the
defendants took the plea that the same were given to the
plaintiffs for their maintenance and, therefore, they were
not entitled to claim any share in the suit properties.
Regarding the decision in Civil Suit No. 138 of 1969 the
defendants contended that the same was not binding on them
as on the death of Lachiram, the defendant No. 3 Purshottam
had become the owner of those properties.
7. After appreciation of evidence on record adduced by the
parties the trial Court decreed the plaintiffs suit for
separate possession by partition. The trial Court recorded
the finding that the defendants had failed to establish the
adoption of Purshottam by late Lachiram and the execution of
will in his favour in respect of the suit properties and
that Lachiram was the owner of all the properties in suit at
the time of his death in which the plaintiffs are entitled
to half share. The trial Court also recorded the finding
that the plaintiffs were the absolute owner of lands bearing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
survey Nos. 172/1, 160 and 159/3 of village Eklara. These
findings were further affirmed by the first Appellate Court
after evaluating the evidence, the High Court took a
contrary view and reversed the findings recorded by the two
Courts. According to the High Court the defendants had
proved the execution of Deed of Adoption and Deed of will in
accordance with law by reason of which the plaintiffs were
held not entitled to claim any share in the suit properties
and, therefore, after setting aside the judgments and degree
of the two Courts below dismissed the suit.
8. Learned counsel for the plaintiffs-appellants
strenuously urged before us that the question of proof of
the Deed of Adoption and the Deed of will is a pure finding
of fact and, therefore, the High Court was not justified in
interfering with the findings of fact arrived at by the two
Courts below, in exercise of its power under Section 100 of
the Code of Civil Procedure. It was submitted that the High
Court was not justified in substituting its own views on re-
appraisal of the evidence on record for that of the two
lower Courts and that the conclusions arrived at by the High
Court are based on conjectures and surmises. It was,
therefore, submitted that the impugned judgment of the High
Court should be set aside.
9. It is no doubt true that after analysing the parties
evidence minutely the trial Court took a definite view that
the defendants had failed to establish that the plaintiff
No. 1, defendant No. 1 and deceased Lachiram had taken the
defendant No. 3. Purshottam in adoption. The trial Court
also recorded the finding that the plaintiff No. 1 was not a
party to the Deed of Adoption as the plaintiff No. 1 in her
evidence has specifically stated that she did not sign the
Deed of Adoption nor she consented for such adoption of
Purshottam and for that reason she did not participate in
any adoption proceedings. On these findings the trial Court
took the view that the alleged adoption being against the
consent of Kashi Bai the plaintiff No. 1, it was not valid
by virtue of the provisions of Section 7 of the Hindu
Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956. Section 7 of the Act
provides that any male Hindu who is of sound mind and is not
a minor has the capacity to take a son or a daughter in
adoption. It provides that if he has a wife living, he shall
not adopt except with the consent of his wife. In the
present case as seen from the evidence discussed by the
trial Court it is abundantly clear that plaintiff No. 1
Kashi Bai the first wife of deceased Lachiram had not only
declined to participate in the alleged adoption proceedings
but also declined to give consent for the said adoption and,
therefore, the plea of alleged adoption advanced by the
defendants was clearly hit by the provisions of Section 7
and the adoption can not be said to be a valid adoption.
10. This brings us to the question of the will alleged to
have been executed by deceased Lachiram in favour of his
grand-son Purshottam, the defendant No. 3. Section 68 of
Evidence Act relates to the proof of execution of document
required by law to be attested. Admittedly, a Deed of will
is one of such documents which necessarily require by law to
be attested. Section 68 of the Evidence Act contemplates
that if a document is required by law to be attested, it
shall not be used as evidence until one attesting witness at
least has been called for the purpose of proving its
execution, if there be an attesting witness alive, and
subject to the process of the Court and capable of giving
evidence. A reading of Section 68 will show that
"attestation" and "execution" are two different acts one
following the other. There can be no valid execution of a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
document which under the law is required to be attested
without the proof of its due attestation and if due
attestation is also not proved, the fact of execution is of
no avail. Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 also
lays down certain rules with regard to the execution of
unprivileged wills. Clause (C) of Section 63 provides that
the will shall be attested by two or more witnesses, each
one of whom has seen the testator sign or affix his mark to
the will or has seen some other person sign the will, in the
presence and by the direction of the testator, or has
received from the testator a personal acknowledgement of his
signature or mark or the signature of such other person; and
each of the witnesses should sign the will in the presence
of the testator, but it shall not be necessary that more
than one witness be present at the same time and no
particular form of attestation shall be necessary.
11. Here we may also take note of the definition of the
expression "attested" as contained in Section 3 of the
Transfer of Property Act which reads as under:-
"attested", in relation to an
instrument, means and shall be deemed
always to have meant attested by two or
more witnesses each of whom has seen the
executant sign or affix his mark to the
instrument, or has seen some other
person sign the instrument in the
presence and by the direction of the
executant, or has received from the
executant a personal acknowledgement of
his signature or mark, or of the
signature of such other person, and each
of whom has signed the instrument in the
presence of the executant but it shall
not be necessary that more than one of
such witnesses shall have been present
at the same time, and no particular form
of attestation shall be necessary."
Having regard to the afore-mentioned definition an attesting
witness is a person who in the presence of an executant of a
document puts his signature or mark after he has either seen
the executant himself or someone on direction of the
executant has put his signature or affixed his mark on the
document so required to be attested or after he has received
from the executant a personal acknowledgement of his
signature or mark or the signature or mark of such other
person. In the present case the trial Court after a close
scrutiny and analysis of the evidence of the defendant No.
1, Smt. Parvati Bai, Vir Bhadra. Sheikh Nabi. Shivraj and
Gyanoba Patil who are witnesses to the will recorded the
finding that none of them deposed that Lachiram had signed
the said will before them and they had attested it. None of
them except Sheikh Nabi even deposed as to when the talk
about the execution of will was held. The witness Sheikh
Nabi, however, deposed that the talk about the will also
took place at the time of the talk about the adoption. But
this witness too did not depose that deceased Lachiram had
signed the alleged will in his presence. In the absence of
such evidence it is difficult to accept that the execution
of the alleged will was proved in accordance with law as
required by Section 68 of the Evidence Act read with Section
63 of the Indian Succession Act and Section 3 of the
Transfer of Property Act. It may be true as observed by the
High Court that law does not emphasis that the witness must
use the language of the Section to prove the requisite
merits thereof but it is also not permissible to assume
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
something which is required by law to be specifically
proved. The High Court simply assumed that Lachiram must
have put his signature on the will Deed in the presence of
the attesting witness Sheikh Nabi simply because the Deed of
Adoption is admitted by the witness to have been executed on
the same day. The High Court committed a serious error in
making the observations that broad parameters of Nabi’s
evidence would show that Lachiram executed the will in his
presence, that he signed the will being part of the
execution of the testament and this evidence in its correct
background would go to show that what was required under
Section 63 has been carried out in the execution of the
will. With respect to the High Court we may say that these
findings of the High Court are clearly based on assumption
and surmises and, totally against the weight of the evidence
on record. The trial Court on a close and thorough analysis
of the entire evidence came to a proper conclusion that the
will has not been proved in accordance with law which
finding has been further affirmed by the lower appellate
Court after an independent reappraisal of entire evidence
with which we find ourselves in agreement as there was
hardly any scope or a valid reason for the High Court to
interfere with.
12. Further, it may not be out of place to mention that
Sub-section (1) of Section 100 of the Code of Civil
Procedure explicitly provides that 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. Sub-section (4) of Section 100 provides that when the
High Court is satisfied that a substantial question of law
is involved in any case it shall formulate that question.
But surprisingly enough the High Court seems to have ignored
these provisions and proposed to reappreciate the evidence
and interfere with the findings of fact without even
formulating any question of law. It has been the consistent
view of this Court that there is no jurisdiction to
entertain a second appeal on the ground of erroneous finding
of fact, based on appreciation of the relevant evidence.
There is a catena of decisions in support of this view.
Having regard to all the facts and circumstances of the
present case discussed above, we are satisfied that there
was no justification for the High Court to interfere with
the well reasoned findings of the two Courts below.
Consequently, this appeal must succeed.
13. In the result the appeal is allowed, the judgment and
decree passed by the High Court are set aside and that of
the trial Court is restored. We make no order as to costs of
this appeal. The respondents shall, however, bear the
plaintiffs cost incurred in trial Court and the first
appellate Court.