Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2976 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Vimlesh Kumari Kulshrestha
RESPONDENT:
Sambhajirao and Anr
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/02/2008
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2976 OF 2004
S.B. SINHA, J :
1. Plaintiff, in a suit for specific performance of contract, is the appellant
herein. She was a tenant in a portion of the premises in respect whereof the
agreement of sale dated 1.4.1986 is said to have been entered into by and
between the parties hereto.
The relevant clauses of the said agreement read as under:-
"It was settled down in between the above parties
that house of party No. 1, in which party No. 2 is
living, party No. 1 will sell for Rs. 48,000/- (Forty
eight thousand only) and as a part payment
received Rs. 24,000/- (Rupees twenty four
thousand) by cheque by party No. 2 from party No.
1 on 20.3.86.
(2) Party No. 1 will obtain permission for sale
of the house from Ceiling Officer and will give
information to party No. 2 and within three months
of the information the party No. 2 will get
executed the Registry and will make the payment
of balance amount.
(3) That Party No. 1 assured to Party No. 2 that
regarding the rights of ownership and transfer of
the house there is no dispute and if need arises then
party No. 1 will get permission from the Court and
Party No. 2 will have the right that on the error of
party No. 1 will get registry executed through
court and the expenses will have to be borne by
party No. 1.
Therefore, this agreement wrote down and
received Rs. 24,000/-(Rupees twenty four
thousand). The map of residential house prepared
and will remain with this document. The
boundaries are wrote down under :
North : House Sambhajirao Angre.
West : Property of Sambhajirao Angre
East : Road
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South : House Hariram Kapoor"
2. A suit for specific performance was filed on 9.9.1986 which was
marked as O.S. No. 228A/1986. Proper court fees were not paid thereupon.
Having regard to an objection taken in that behalf by the first respondent
herein in his written statement, allegedly another suit was filed by her on
23.3.1987, which was marked as O.S. No. 13A of 1987. O.S. No. 228A of
1986, on the premise that another suit has been filed, was sought to be
withdrawn. The application for withdrawal was allowed.
3. Respondent No. 1, however, had entered into another agreement of
sale with the respondent No. 2. He filed an application for impleading
himself as a party in the suit. It was allowed.
4. The learned Trial Judge decreed the suit. By reason of the impugned
judgment, however, the High Court has reversed the same, holding :
(i) In view of Order XXIII Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the
permission for filing another suit on the same cause of action
having not been obtained, the second suit was not maintainable;
and;
(ii) The agreement of sale dated 1.4.1986 being vague, no decree for
specific performance could be granted.
5. Mr. P.S. Narasimha, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant in support of the appeal raised the following contentions :
(a) The High Court committed a manifest error in passing the impugned
judgment insofar as it failed to take into consideration that the second
suit having been instituted during the pendency of the first suit, Order
XXIII Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure was not applicable.
(b) The agreement was required to be read in its entirety and so read, it
would be evident that the subject matter of sale was the entire house
and not a part thereof.
6. Mr. S.S. Khanduja, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent, on the other hand, would support the judgment.
7. It is not in dispute that O.S. No. 13A of 1987 was filed during
pendency of O.S. No. 228A of 1986.
Order XXIII Rule 1 of the CPC stricto sensu therefore, was not
applicable, the relevant provision whereof reads thus:
1. Withdrawal of suit or abandonment of part
of claim. \026 (1) At any time after, the institution
of a suit, the plaintiff may as against all or any
of the defendants abandon his suit or abandon a
part of his claim :
(2) \005..
(3) Where the Court is satisfied, -
(a) that a suit must fail by reason of some formal
defect, or
(b) that there are sufficient grounds for allowing
the plaintiff to institute a fresh suit for the
subject matter of a suit or part of a claim, it
may, on such terms as it thinks fit, grant the
plaintiff permission to withdraw from such suit
or such part of the claim with liberty to institute
a fresh suit in respect of the subject-matter of
such suit or such part of the claim.
Admittedly, the second suit was filed before filing the application of
withdrawal of the first suit. The first suit was withdrawn as an objection had
been taken by the appellant in regard to payment of proper court fee. We,
therefore, are of opinion that Order 23 Rule 1 of the Code was not applicable
to the facts and circumstances of the present case.
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8. A somewhat similar question came up for consideration in Mangi Lal
Vs. Radha Mohan [1930 Lahore 599(2), wherein it was held;
"Order 23, Rule 1, refers to permission to
withdraw a suit with liberty to institute a fresh suit
after the first one has been withdrawn. Order 23,
Rule 1, cannot be read so as to bar a suit which has
already been instituted before the other suit has
been abandoned or dismissed. The rule is clear and
can only be applied to suits instituted after the
withdrawal or abandonment of previous suits".
9. The said view was followed by the Karnataka High Court in P.A.
Muhammed Vs. The Canara Bank and Another [AIR (1992) Kar. 85].
10. An identical view was also taken in Girdhari Lal Bansal Vs. The
Chairman, Bhakra Beas Management Board, Chandigarh and Others [AIR
1985 Punj and Har 219] wherein it was held;
"4. \005.. The earlier application was filed on 6th
Oct, 1982 and the present application was fixed on
26th Oct., 1982 and the first application was
withdrawn vide order dt. 18-11-1982. The learned
counsel for the Board could not show if aforesaid
two decisions were ever dissented from or
overruled. The aforesaid two Lahore decisions
clearly say that if second suit is filed before the
first suit is withdrawn then O. 23, C.P.C. is not
attracted and the second suit cannot be dismissed
under O. 23, R. 1(4) of the Civil P.C.
Accordingly, I reverse the decision of the trial
Court and hold that the present petition was not
barred under O. 23, C.P.C."
We agree with said views of the High Court.
11. The application filed for withdrawal of the suit categorically stated
about the pendency of the earlier suit. Respondent, therefore was aware
thereof. They objected to the withdrawal of the suit only on the ground that
legal costs therefor should be paid. The said objection was accepted by the
learned Trial Court. Respondent even accepted the costs as directed by the
Court, granting permission to withdraw the suit. In a situation of this nature,
we are of the opinion that an inference in regard to grant of permission can
also be drawn from the conduct of the parties as also the Order passed by the
Court. It is trite that even a presumption of implied grant can be drawn.
12. In Hari Basudev Vs. State of Orissa and Others [AIR 2000 Orissa
125], a Division Bench of the Orissa High Court held;
"7. As already indicated, the cause of action
accrued to opposite party No. 4 to file the election
dispute u/S. 30 of the Act only after publication of
the result of the election. Opposite party No. 4 in
his petition made out a case for grant of permission
to withdraw M.J.C. No. 14 of 1997. He had also
stated in the petition that he reserved his right to
file a fresh case, if necessary. The learned Civil
Judge having permitted him to withdraw the said
case, we are inclined to hold that permission to
institute a fresh case in the circumstances was
impliedly granted."
13. In Mulla’s The Code of Civil Procedure, Seventeenth Edition, page
674, it is stated
"(g) Permission need not be Express
The permission mentioned in this section need
not be given in express terms. It is sufficient if it
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can be implied from the order read with the
application on which the order was made. No
formal order is necessary for withdrawal of a suit.
But the proceedings must show that the plaintiff
has withdrawn the suit or part of the claim.
However, if either from the application of the
plaintiff or from the order permitting withdrawal, it
transpires that while permitting withdrawal, the
court had also granted liberty to institute fresh suit,
the subsequent suit would be barred. Thus, in a
case, the Delhi High Court held that the words
’without prejudice to the right of plaintiff’
endorsed on the application for withdrawal would
only mean that the suit was sought to be
withdrawn as compromised and not on merits.
An application for withdrawal of suit was
made, seeking liberty to file a fresh suit. The
order passed by the court was that ’The application
is, therefore, allowed while permitting the plaintiff
to withdraw the suit’. It was held that this should
be construed as an order also granting liberty, as
prayed. The court cannot split the prayer made by
the applicant."
14. For the reasons aforementioned, we are of the opinion that the High
Court was not correct in applying the provisions contained in Order XXIII
Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure in the facts and circumstances of the
case.
15. It is no doubt true that ordinarily an endeavour should be made by the
court to give effect to the terms of the agreement but it is also a well settled
principle of law that an agreement is to be read as a whole so as to enable the
court to ascertain the true intention of the parties. It is not in dispute that no
plan was prepared. A purported sketch mark was attached with the plaint,
which was not proved. Evidences brought on record clearly lead to the
conclusion that the appellant was not the tenant in respect of the entire
house. She, in her deposition, even did not claim the same. Another tenant
was occupying some rooms in the same premises. Appellant herein in her
evidence also admitted that no map was attached to the agreement.
16. The very fact that the premises sought to be transferred could not
adequately be described; a plan was sought to be attached. According to the
appellant herself, she had been residing only in the ground floor, along with
open land on the northern side and had been using two rooms, a Patore
alongwith open land of the upper portion.
She had not received the possession of the disputed house. It is,
therefore, evident that she did not claim herself to be a tenant in respect of
the entire house and, thus, the same was not agreed to be sold.
17. It is in the aforementioned context, the meaning of the words used in
the agreement must be determined. It refers to the property where the
appellant was living and not any other property. If the appellant was living
in a part of the property, only the same was the subject matter of sale and not
the entire premises.
Reliance, has been placed by Mr. Narasimha on a decision of the
House of Lords in Hillas & Co. Ltd. Vs. Arcos, Ltd. [(1932 All. E. R. 494],
wherein it was held;
"It is the duty of the court to construe agreements
made by business men - which often appear to
those unfamiliar with the business far from
complete or precise- fairly and broadly, without
being astute or subtle in finding defects; on the
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contrary, the court should seek to apply the maxim
verba ita sunt intelligenda ut res magis valeat
quam pereat. That maxim, however, does not
mean that the court is to make a contract for the
parties, or to go outside the words they have used,
except in so far as there are appropriate
implications of law, as, for instance, the
implication of what is just and reasonable to be
ascertained by the court as matter of machinery
where the contractual intention is clear but the
contract is silent on some detail. Thus in contracts
for future performance over a period the parties
may not be able nor may they desire to specify
many matters of detail, but leave them to be
adjusted in the working out of the contract."
18. There is no dispute with regard to the aforementioned legal
proposition. However, we have not been called upon to construe an
agreement entered into by and between two businessmen. The maxim,
Certum est quod certum reddi potest instead of being of any assistance to the
appellant, runs counter to her submission. It means that is certain which can
be made certain. In relation to ’uncertainty’ it is stated :
"The office of the habendum is a deed is to limit,
explain, or qualify the words in the premises; but if
the words of the habendum are manifestly
contradictory and repugnant to those in the
premises, they must be disregarded. A deed shall
be void if it be totally uncertain ; but if the King’s
grant refers to another thing which is certain, it is
sufficient; as, if he grant to a city all liberties
which London has, without saying what liberties
London has.
An agreement in writing for the sale of a house did
not describe the particular house, but it stated that
the deeds were in the possession of A. The Court
held the agreement sufficiently certain, since it
appeared upon the face of the agreement that the
house referred to was the house of which the deeds
were in the possession of A., and, consequently,
the house might easily be ascertained, and id
certum est quod certum redid potest.
Again, the word "certain" must, in a variety of
cases, where a contract is entered into for the sale
of goods, refer to an indefinite quantity at the time
of the contract made, and must mean a quantity
which is to be ascertained according to the above
maxim."
[See Trayner’s Latin Maxims, Fourth Edition,
Page 76]
19. Reference to the said legal maxim is, in our opinion, is not apposite in
the facts and circumstances of this case. By reference to the boundaries of
the premises alone, the description of the properties agreed to be sold did not
become certain. For the purpose of finding out the correct description of the
property, the entire agreement was required to be read as a whole. So read,
the agreement becomes uncertain.
20. An agreement of sale must be construed having regard to the
circumstances attending thereto. The relationship between the parties was
that of the landlord and tenant. Appellant was only a tenant in respect of a
part of the premises. It may be that the boundaries of the house have been
described but a plan was to be a part thereof. We have indicated
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hereinbefore that the parties intended to annex a plan with the agreement
only because the description of the properties was inadequate. It is with a
view to make the description of the subject matter of sale definite, the plan
was to be attached. The plan was not even prepared. It has not been found
that the sketch of map annexed to the plaint conformed to the plan which
was to be made a part of the agreement for sale. The agreement for sale,
therefore, being uncertain could not be given effect to.
21. In Plant Vs. Bourne [(1897) 2 Ch. 281], whereupon Mr. Narsimha
relied upon, the Court of Appeals held that oral evidence is admissible. In
this case, oral evidence adduced by the appellant herself suggests that the
entire property was not to be sold as she was not a tenant in respect of the
entire premises.
22. For the reasons aforementioned, we do not find any infirmity in the
judgment of the High Court. The appeal is dismissed. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as to costs.