Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4500 of 2004
PETITIONER:
N.V.Srinivasa Murthy and others
RESPONDENT:
Mariyamma (dead) by Proposed LRs and others
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/07/2005
BENCH:
D. M. Dharmadhikari & B. N. Srikrishna
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dharmadhikari J.
In these appeals preferred by the plaintiffs the only question
involved is whether the trial court and the High Court were right in
holding that the plaint under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil
Procedure was liable to rejection. The High Court by the impugned
order passed in Misc. Second Appeal reversed the order of the first
appellate court and upheld that of the trial court.
Learned counsel appearing for the plaintiff in this appeal
contends that if the plaint allegations containing all facts are read in
proper perspective, ’cause of action’ has clearly been pleaded and the
High Court grossly erred in rejecting the plaint on the ground that it
does not disclose any cause of action.
With the assistance and on the comments and counter
comments of the parties, we have carefully gone through the contents
of the plaint. We find that the plaint has been very cleverly drafted
with a view to get over the bar of limitation and payment of ad
valorem court fee. According to us, the plaint was rightly held to be
liable to rejection if not on the alleged ground of non-disclosure of any
cause of action but on the ground covered by clause (d) of Rule 11 of
Order VII of Code of Civil Procedure namely that ’the suit appears from
the statement in the plaint to be clearly barred by law’.
As per the plaint allegations of the plaintiffs, their late father had
incurred some debts and had therefore borrowed a sum of Rs.2000/-
from the predecessor in title of the defendants. By way of security for
the loan advanced, a registered sale deed was executed on 5.5.53 with
a contemporaneous oral agreement that on return of the borrowed
sum with interest payable thereon @ 6% per annum, the registered
re-conveyance deed shall be executed in favour of the borrower. In
the plaint it is further averred that even after execution of the
registered sale deed, which according to plaintiff was, in fact merely a
loan transaction, the father of the plaintiffs and thereafter the plaintiffs
continued to be in possession of the suit lands and paid the land
revenue. The other averments in the plaint are that as the lands in
suit were already under mortgage with Bangalore Central Co-operative
Bank Ltd., they could not have been sold.
Further averment in the plaint is that the defendants had
executed a receipt on 30.7.1963 in favour of the first plaintiff
acknowledging return of certain amounts under the loan with an oral
promise to execute a registered reconveyance deed in favour of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
plaintiffs. In paragraph 9 of the plaint a statement was made to the
effect that in respect of the registered sale deed of 1953, on payment
of entire outstanding amount of loan, the receipt was obtained on
25.3.1987 from the defendants and the original registered sale deed
dated 5.5.53 was returned to the first plaintiff with an oral promise by
the defendants to execute a registered document in favour of
plaintiff/borrower.
On reading all the averments in paragraph 9 of the plaint, it is
apparent that the cause of action for obtaining a registered
reconveyance deed from the defendants in favour of the plaintiffs first
arose on 25.3.1987 when the entire loan amount was alleged to have
been repaid and an oral promise was given by the defendants to
reconvey the suit lands.
In paragraph 11 of the plaint it is stated that the plaintiff had
earlier filed Civil Suit No.557 of 1990 in the Court of Second Munsiff,
Bangalore seeking permanent injunction restraining the defendants
from interfering with the possession and enjoyment of the suit land by
the plaintiffs. That suit, it is stated, was pending on the date of filing
of the present suit.
In paragraph 12 there are averments with regard to the revenue
proceedings concerning mutation of names over the lands in question.
It is pleaded that the plaintiffs made formal application for mutation of
their names on the lands and at that time the village accountant, in
conspiracy with the second defendant, manipulated the revenue
records. An ante-dated application for mutation was alleged to have
been filed by the defendants. No date or year in which such
manipulation took place has been stated in the plaint. The said
paragraph further reads that in the revenue proceedings Tehsildar
passed an order on 16.2.1990 directing the Deputy tehsildar to
personally inspect the lands in suit and then make entries in the
Pahanis (revenue records). The Deputy Tehsildar, it is alleged made a
local inspection without giving any notice to the plaintiffs, and
thereafter, mutation in the revenue records was made in favour of the
second defendant. The plaintiffs then challenged the order of the
Tehsildar and the Deputy Tehsildar by way of an appeal before the
Assistant Commissioner who confirmed the orders of the lower
revenue authorities.
The cause of action is said to have arisen when the Assistant
Commissioner by order dated 28.4.1994 confirmed the orders of the
lower authorities directing mutation of the names of the defendants on
the suit lands and then again in the first week of July 1995 when
the defendants as alleged had made an attempt to interfere with the
plaintiffs’ possession and enjoyment of suit lands. The suit was filed
on 26.8.1996. In the prayer clause, the relief claimed in the suit are
(a) declaration that the plaintiffs are absolute owners of the suit lands
(b) permanent injunction restraining defendants from wrongfully
entering the scheduled property and from interfering with the
peaceful possession and enjoyment of scheduled lands.
As seen from the pleadings it is clear that foundation of the suit
is that the registered sale deed dated 5.5.1953 was, in fact, only a
loan transaction executed to secure the amount borrowed by the
plaintiff’s predecessor. The amount borrowed was alleged to have
been fully paid back on 25.3.1987 and in acknowledgement thereof a
formal receipt was obtained. At the same time, there was an alleged
oral agreement by the defendants to reconvey the property to the
plaintiff by registered deed.
On the above averments, relief of declaring the registered sale
deed dated 5.5.1953 to be a loan transaction and second relief of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
Specific Performance of oral agreement of re-conveyance of the
property by registered instrument should and ought to have been
claimed in the suit. A suit merely for declaration that the plaintiffs are
absolute owners of the suit lands could not have been claimed without
seeking declaration that the registered sale deed dated 5.5.1953 was a
loan transaction and not a real sale. The cause of action for seeking
such a declaration and for obtaining re-conveyance deed according to
the plaintiff’s own averments in paragraph 9 of the plaint, arose on
25.3.1987 when the plaintiffs claimed to have paid back the entire
loan amount and obtained a promise from the defendants to reconvey
the property. Reckoning the cause of action from 25.3.1987, the suit
filed on 26.8.1996, was hopelessly barred by time.
The averments in paragraph 12 of the plaint concerning the
mutation proceedings before the revenue authorities did not furnish
any fresh cause of action for the suit and they appear to have been
made as a camouflage to get over the bar of limitation. The dispute of
mutation in the revenue court between the parties arose only on the
basis of registered sale deed dated 5.5.1953. The orders passed by
Tehsildar/Assistant Commissioner did not furnish any independent or
fresh cause of action to seek declaration of the sale deed of 5.5.53 to
be merely a loan transaction. The foundation of suit does not seem to
be the adverse orders passed by revenue courts or authorities in
mutation proceedings. The foundation of suit is clearly the registered
sale deed of 1953 which is alleged to be a loan transaction and the
alleged oral agreement of re-conveyance of the property on return of
borrowed amount.
In paragraph 11 of the plaint, the plaintiffs have stated that they
had earlier instituted original suit No.557 of 1990 seeking permanent
injunction against defendants and the said suit was pending when the
present suit was filed. Whatever relief the petitioners desired to claim
from the civil court on the basis of averment with regard to the
registered sale deed of 1953 could and ought to have been claimed in
original civil suit No.557 of 1990 which was pending at that time. The
second suit claiming indirectly relief of declaration and injunction is
apparently barred by Order 2, Rule 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
After examining the pleadings of the plaint as discussed above,
we are clearly of the opinion that by clever drafting of the plaint the
civil suit which is hopelessly barred for seeking avoidance of registered
sale deed of 5.5.1953, has been instituted by taking recourse to
orders passed in mutation proceedings by the Revenue Courts.
Civil suit No.557 of 1990 was pending when the present suit was
filed. In the present suit, the relief indirectly claimed is of declaring
the sale deed of 5.5.1953 to be not really a sale deed but a loan
transaction. Relief of reconveyance of property under alleged oral
agreement on return of loan has been deliberately omitted from the
relief clause. In our view, the present plaint is liable to rejection, if not
on the ground that it does not disclose ’cause of action’, on the
ground that from the averments in the plaint, the suit is apparently
barred by law within the meaning of clause (d) of Order VII, Rule 11 of
Code of Civil Procedure.
The High Court does not seem to be right in rejecting the plaint
on the ground that it does not disclose any ’cause of action’. In our
view, the trial court was right in coming to the conclusion that
accepting all averments in the plaint, the suit seems to be barred by
limitation. On critical examination of the plaint as discussed by us
above, the suit seems to be clearly barred on the facts stated in the
plaint itself. The suit as framed is prima facie barred by the law of
limitation, provisions of Specific Relief Act as also under Order 2 Rule 2
of the Code of Civil Procedure.
This is a fit case not only for rejecting the plaint but imposing
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
exemplary costs on the appellant on the observations of this Court in
the case of T. Arvindam vs.T.V.Satyapal [1977 (4) SCC 467] :-
"The trial court must remember that if on a meaningful \026 no
formal \026 reading of the plaint it is manifestly vexatious and
meritless in the sense of not disclosing a clear right to sue, it
should exercise its power under Order VII, Rule 11 CPC taking
care to see that the ground mentioned therein is fulfilled. If
clever drafting has created the illusion of a cause of action, the
court must nip it in the bud at the first hearing by examining the
party searchingly under Order X, CPC. An activist judge is the
answer to irresponsible law suits. The trial courts would insist
imperatively on examining the party at the first hearing so that
bogus litigation can be shot down at the earliest stage. The
Penal Code is also resourceful enough to meet such men (Ch.XI)
and must be triggered against them."
In the result, the appeal fails with costs incurred throughout by
the respondents to be paid by the appellants. A further cost in the
sum of Rs.10,000 (Rupees ten thousand only) is imposed on the
appellant to be paid to the respondents for prosecuting and prolonging
litigation up to this Court in a hopelessly barred suit.
27041