Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
DOLAI MOLLIKO & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KRUSHNA CHANDRA PATNAIK & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/03/1966
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 49 1966 SCR (2) 22
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC 733 (30,33)
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908), O. XXII r.3-
Omission to bring on record all legal representatives-
Effect.
HEADNOTE:
On the death of one of the plaintiffs-appellants in an
appeal pending before the Subordinate Judge, an application
was made for bringing on record his heirs and these heirs
were two, viz., his widow and a major son. No objection was
made to this application and consequently the widow and the
major son were substituted on record as heirs. Later, when
the respondent’s further appeal was pending in the High
Court, it was discovered that the deceased had left some
other heirs besidesthe two who had been brought on record as
his heirs. Consequentlythe respondents raised an objection
that as some of the heirs of thedeceased had been left out
and there could be no question of wantof knowledge of the
existence of these heirs on the part of the widow and the
major son who had applied for being brought on record, the
appeal abated. The High Court upheld the objection In
appeal,, this Court.
HELD:The estate of the deceased was fully represented by the
heirs who had been brought on the record and these heirs
represented the absent heirs also, who would be equally
bound by the result.
Even where the plaintiff or the appellant has died and all
his heirs have not been brought on the record because of
oversight or because of some doubt as to who are his heirs,
the suit or the appeal, as the case may be, does not abate
and the hears brought on the record fully represent the
estate unless there is fraud or collusion or there are other
circumstances which indicate that there has not been a fair
or real trial or that against the absent heir there was a
special case which was not and could not be tried in the
proceedings [24 F-25B]
Further, in this case, the respondents themselves did not
object that some heirs of the deceased had been left out.
[25 C-D]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
Case law referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 836 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
January 4. 1962 of the Orissa High Court in S.A. No. 90 of
1960.
R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellants.
B. Parthasarathy, S. N. Prasad, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C.
Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for respondent No. 1.
23
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, J This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the Orissa High Court. The brief facts
necessary for present purposes are these. A suit was
brought by eleven plaintiffs (who are appellants before us)
including Dolai Molliko for a declaration that the
plaintiffs were tenants with occupancy rights in the lands
in dispute. The suit was resisted by the defendants who are
now respondents. The Munsif dismissed the suit. Thereupon
there was an appeal by the plaintiffs. During the pendency
of that appeal, Dolai Molliko, appellant, died in March
1958. An application was made within time for bringing on
record his heirs, and these heirs were two, namely, the
widow and a major son of the deceased. No objection was
made to this application and consequently the widow and the
son of the. deceased were substituted on record as heirs.
The Subordinate Judge allowed the appeal and decreed the
suit and gave the declaration prayed for by the plaintiffs.
Then followed a second appeal to the High Court by the
defendants-respondents. When the appeal was pending in the
High Court, it was discovered that Dolai had left three
other heirs, namely, a minor son, a married daughter and an
unmarried daughter besides the widow and the major son who
had been brought on record as his heirs. Consequently an
objection was raised in the High Court on behalf of the
present respondents that as all the heirs of the deceased
Dolai had not been brought on record, the appeal before the
Subordinate Judge had abated in toto. The High Court
accepted this contention and held that as three heirs had
been left out and as there could be no question of want of
knowledge of the existence of these heirs on the part of the
widow and the major son who had applied for being brought on
record, the appeal abated, as it was not disputed that in
the present case the appeal would abate in toto. In conse-
quence the appeal before the High Court was allowed holding
that the appeal before the Subordinate Judge had abated and
the judgment of the Munsif dismissing the suit was restored.
Thereupon the appellants obtained special leave from this
Court; and that is how the matter has come before us.
The only question therefore which falls for consideration is
whether the estate of Dolai deceased appellant was
sufficiently represented before the Subordinate Judge by the
widow and the major son. The question whether in similar
circumstances an appeal abates came up for consideration
before this Court in Daya Ram v. Shyam Sundari(1). In that
case it was held that "where a plaintiff or an appellant
after diligent and bona fide enquiry ascertains who the
legal representatives of a deceased defendant or respondent
are and brings them on record within the time limited by
law, there is no abatement of the suit or appeal, the
impleaded legal representatives sufficiently represent the
estate of the deceased and a decision obtained with them ’on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
record will bind not merely those impleaded but the entire
estate including those not brought
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 231.
L/84SCI-4
24
on record. In a case where the person brought on record is
a legal representative it would be consonant with justice
and principle that in the absence of fraud or collusion the
bringing on record of such a legal representative is
sufficient to prevent the suit or the appeal from abating."
The matter was again considered by this Court in N. K. Mohd.
Sulaiman Sahib v. N. C. Mohd. Ismail Saheb(1). That was a
mortgage suit, though the facts were slightly different from
Daya Ram’s case(1). In Daya Ram’s case (2), the sole
respondent had died and an application was made in time for
bringing his heirs on the record but two heirs were left
out in this application. The remaining heirs were brought
on record and a preliminary objection was raised that as all
the heirs had not been brought on record, the appeal had
abated, and it was this objection which this Court rejected
in Daya Ram’s case(1). In Mohd. Sulaiman’s case(1), how-
ever, the mortgagor had died before the suit was brought by
the mortgagee against some of the heirs of the mortgagor but
he left out two minor sons. The question then arose whether
the two minor sons who had been left out from the array of
defendants would also be bound by the decree passed in that
suit. This Court followed the judgment in Daya Ram’s
case(1) and it was held that if the plaintiff had proceeded
bona fide and after due enquiry and under a belief that the
persons who were sued were the only legal representatives,
the whole estate would be bound including those heirs who
were not arrayed as defendants. This Court further pointed
out that "this rule will of course not apply to cases where
there has been fraud or collusion between the creditor and
the heir impleaded or where there are other circumstances
which indicate that there has not been a fair or real trial,
or that the absent heir had a special defence which was not
and could not be tried in the earlier proceedings."
It has been contended on behalf of the appellants that the
principle of these cases applies to the present case and the
fact that three of the heirs were left out would make no
difference as the entire estate of Dolai, deceased, must be
held to be represented by the widow and the major son who
were brought on the record. It will be noticed that there
is one difference between the present case and the two cases
on which reliance has been placed on behalf of the
appellants. This is not a case where a plaintiff or an
appellant applies for bringing the heirs of the deceased
defendant or respondent on the record; this is a case where
one of the appellants died and his heirs have to be brought
on record. In such a case there is no question of any
diligent or bona fide enquiry for the deceased appellant’s
heirs must be known to the heirs who applied for being
brought on the record. Even so we are of opinion that
unless there is fraud or collusion or there are other
circumstances which indicate that there has not been a fair
or real trial or that against the absent heir there was a
special case which was not and could not
(1) [1966] 1 S.C.R. 937.
(2) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 231.
25
be tried in the proceeding, there is no reason why the heirs
who have applied for being brought on record should not be
held to represent the entire estate including the interests
of the heirs not brought on the record. This is not to say
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
that where heirs of an appellant are to be brought on record
all of them should not be brought on record and any of them
should be deliberately left out. But if by oversight or on
account of some doubt as to who are the heirs, any heir of a
deceased appellant is left out that in itself would be no
reason for holding that the entire estate of the deceased is
not represented unless circumstances like fraud or collusion
to which we have referred above exist.
In the present case there is no question of any fraud or
collusion; nor is there anything to show that there had not
been a fair or real trial, nor can it be said that against
the absent heir there was a special case which was not and
could not be tried in the proceeding in his absence. It may
also be noticed that the respondents themselves did not
object in the court of the Subordinate Judge that some of
the heirs of deceased Dolai had been left out and the case
proceeded there, as if the estate of Dolai deceased was
represented in full by the heirs brought on record. It was
only in the High Court that it was discovered that Dolai had
left three other heirs who had not been brought on the
record. In the circumstances we are of opinion that the
estate of Dolai was fully represented by the heirs who had
been brought on the record in the Subordinate Judge’s court
and that these heirs represented the absent heirs also who
would be equally bound by the result, and there is no reason
to hold that the appeal before the Subordinate Judge had
abated on that ground.
We may in this connection refer to certain cases where a
similar view has been taken. In Abdul Rahman v. Shahab-ud-
Din(1), the appellant had died and only his sons were
brought on the record and not his widow and daughters,
though the appellant was a Mohanimadan. It was held that as
the heirs who had applied for being brought on record as
heirs and legal representatives of the deceased appellant
bona fide believed that they were the sole heirs and legal
representatives of the deceased, the appeal did not abate
notwithstanding that in Mohammadan law other persons would
be co-heirs of the deceased.
In Mohd. Zafaryab Khan v. Abdul Razaq(2), it was held that
"when by an order which has become final, a certain person’s
name has been brought on to the record of an appeal as the
legal representative of the deceased appellant, it is not
open to the respondent to urge that the appeal has abated
because some other heirs have been left out."
In Ram Charan v. Bansidhar(3), the sole appellant had died
leaving two daughters. One of his daughters was brought on
record
(1)I.L.R. (1920) 1 Lah. 481. (2) I.L.R. (1928) 1 All. 857.
L/85SCI-4(a) (3) I.L.R. (1942) AD. 671.
26
as his legal representative but not the other. It was held
that the substitution of one of the daughters as legal
representative of the deceased must be deemed to have been
for the benefit of the entire inheritance which came into
being on his death, and the entire estate, was represented
by her and there was no abatement of any part of it.
In Babuie Shanti Devi v. Khodai Prasad Singh(1), on the
death of the plaintiff in a suit to enforce a mortgage his
sons were brought on record but not his widow who had
herself filed a petition stating that she was not in
possession of the properties of the deceased plaintiff nor
did she desire any interest in the family properties, it was
held that the failure to bring the widow on the record was a
mere technical defect and the suit did not abate.
In Ishwarlal Laxmichand Patel v. Kuber Mohan Lawar(2), on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
the death of the appellant, his son was brought on record as
heir on his application and the widow who also was an heir
was left out, it was held that it was proper that both the
son and the widow should have applied for being brought on
the record but that the appeal did not abate merely because
the widow had not applied as the estate was fully
represented by the son.
We are of opinion that these cases have been correctly
decided and even where the plaintiff or the appellant has
died and an his heirs have not been brought on the record
because of oversight or because of some doubt as to who are
his heirs, the suit or the appeal as the case may be, does
not abate and the heirs brought on the record fully
represent the estate unless there are circumstances like
fraud or collusion to which we have already referred above.
The appeal is therefore alowed and the judgment of the High
Court set aside. The case will now go back to the High
Court for decision on the merits after bringing the heirs
left out earlier on the record. The costs of this Court
will abide by the final result.
Appeal allowed.
(1)A.I.R. (1942) Patna 340 (2) A.I.R. (1843) Bom. 457.
27