Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 7952 of 2001
PETITIONER:
KAMALESHWAR KISHORE SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARAS NATH SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/11/2001
BENCH:
R.C. Lahoti & Brijesh Kumar
JUDGMENT:
Leave granted.
Kamaleshwar Kishore Singh, the appellant and his two minor
sons suing through the appellant as next friend, have filed a suit for
partition of movable and immovable properties registered as T.P. Suit
No. 489 of 1993 in the Court of Sub-Judge-I, Patna. A perusal of the
plaint shows that the parties are alleged to be members of joint Hindu
Mitakshara family and the properties forming subject matter of the
suit, set out in the two schedules annexed with the plaint (Schedule-I
listing the immovable properties and Schedule II listing the movable
properties) are alleged to be joint family properties of the parties. The
source of acquisition of properties is alleged to be joint family funds.
The share claimed by the plaintiffs is 25/3 paise out of 100 paise.
The remaining shares belong to the defendants. The reliefs sought for
are: (i) a preliminary decree defining plaintiffs share at 25/3 paise
in the suit properties described in Schedule I & II of the plaint, (ii)
appointment of a commissioner to divide the properties by metes and
bounds, and (iii) placing the plaintiffs in exclusive possession over the
property falling in their share. The suit is valued at Rs.16 lakhs for
the purpose of jurisdiction but according to the plaintiffs it being a
simple suit for partition a fixed court fee of Rs.29.25 p. only is liable
to be paid which has been affixed on the plaint.
It appears that the defendant No.20 moved an application on
3.10.96 submitting that the properties exclusively belonging to her,
being her self-acquired properties, as evidenced by the documents
filed by her with the written statement, have been included in the suit
for partition and so either the defendant No.20 be deleted from the
array of the parties or in the alternative the plaintiffs be directed to
pay ad-valorem court fee on the market value of the properties
standing in the name of this defendant amounting to Rs.30,50,000/-.
By order dated 17.12.96 the trial court allowed the objection petition
filed by the defendant No.20 and directed as under:-
the petition of defendant no.20 dt. 3.10.96
is allowed and the plaintiffs directed to first pay
ad-valorem court fee over the properties standing
in the name of defendant no.20 which were
included in the suit property on the value of 10%
above as given in the sale deeds of these properties
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the photo copy of which has been filed on behalf
of the defendant no.20. Put up on 9.1.97.
After the passing of the above order, the defendant no.20
moved yet another petition submitting that the plaintiffs should have
been directed to pay ad-valorem court fee on Rs.29,39,760/-, the value
of the land and the houses standing thereon, included in the suit
property and that there was a typing mistake in the order dated
17.12.96 wherein the direction should have been to pay court fee on
10 times of the value of the properties given in the sale deeds (filed
by the defendant no.20) and not 10% as typed in the said order. By
order dated 1.3.97 the trial court directed as under:-
.. the petition of the defendant no.20 dated
9.1.97 is allowed and the order passed by this court
dated 17.12.96 is also corrected and modified and
the plaintiff is directed to pay ad valorem court fee
over the value of Rs.29,39,760/-. Put up on
10.5.97 for filing the same.
A perusal of the above order shows the trial court having been
persuaded to hold that 10 times of the value of the properties
calculated on the basis of deeds filed by defendant No.20 with her
written statement comes to Rs.10,39,760/- to which should be added
value of 4 storeyed constructed pucca house which is Rs.19 lacs and
thus the suit should have been valued at Rs.29,39,760/- and ad-
valorem court fee paid thereon by the plaintiffs.
Feeling aggrieved by the order dated 1.3.97 the plaintiff No.1
filed a civil revision under Section 115 of the C.P.C. before the High
Court of Patna. The principal grievance raised by the appellant before
the High Court was that the order dated 1.3.1997 was passed without
affording him any opportunity of hearing and hence was liable to be
set aside. By the impugned order dated 20.8.97 the High Court has
dismissed the revision forming an opinion that the order dated 1.3.97
was an order directing only a clerical error to be corrected which the
court was empowered to do and hence no fault could be found with
the impugned order. The plaintiff has filed this petition seeking
special leave to appeal.
In our opinion the appeal deserves to be allowed and the matter
deserves to be remitted back to the High Court for decision afresh.
Without going into the question whether the order dated 17.12.96
suffered from only a clerical error it is clear that the order dated 1.3.97
was in substantial departure from the order dated 17.12.96. By order
dated 1.3.97 the trial court directed the plaintiffs to value the suit at 10
times of the value given in the sale deeds of the properties, the
photocopies whereof were filed by the defendant no.20 with the
written statement. A reading of the order dated 1.3.97 shows that this
order could not have been construed as the one correcting a
clerical/typing error only; it substantially modified the earlier order
dated 17.12.96 and in effect was the real order causing grievance to
the plaintiffs. The order dated 1.3.1997 is not to be read in isolation.
The revision filed by the plaintiff/appellant before the High Court
could not have been disposed of without testing correctness of both
the orders dated 17.12.1996 and 1.3.1997.
It is well settled that the court fee has to be paid on the plaint as
framed and not on the plaint as it ought to have been framed unless by
astuteness employed in drafting the plaint the plaintiff has attempted
at evading payment of court fee or unless there be a provision of law
requiring the plaintiff to value the suit and pay the court fee in a
manner other than the one adopted by the plaintiff. The court shall
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begin with an assumption, for the purpose of determining the court
fees payable on plaint, that the averments made therein by the plaintiff
are correct. Yet, an arbitrary valuation of the suit property having no
basis at all for such valuation and made so as to evade payment of
court fees and fixed for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction on some
court which it does not have, or depriving the court of jurisdiction
which it would otherwise have, can also be interfered with by the
court. It is the substance of the relief sought for and not the form
which will be determinative of the valuation and payment of court fee.
The defence taken in the written statement may not be relevant for the
purpose of deciding the payment of court fee by the plaintiff. If the
plaintiff is ultimately found to have omitted to seek an essential relief
which he ought to have prayed for, and without which the relief
sought for in the plaint as framed and filed cannot be allowed to him,
the plaintiff shall have to suffer the dismissal of the suit. These
principles of law were over-looked by the trial court in passing the
impugned order which was put in issue before the High Court. We
are further of the opinion that though the revision preferred by the
plaintiff was directed against the order dated 1.3.97, the real question
arising before the High Court was to find out whether the suit was
properly valued and proper court fee was paid thereon in accordance
with law. While doing so if the High Court was required to examine
the correctness or otherwise of the order dated 17.12.96 it should not
have felt inhibited from doing so. In the facts of the present case we
are clearly of the opinion that the High Court was not justified in
dismissing the revision on the ground that the order dated 1.3.97 was
an order correcting a clerical or typing error only.
The two orders of the trial court do not refer to any relevant
provision of law or a binding precedent based on which the trial court
was persuaded to take the view which it did.
The learned counsel for the defendant-respondent pointed out
that during the course of arguments, on 17.12.1996, the plaintiff had
agreed to pay the ad-valorem court fees on the properties and asked
the defendant-applicant to file the deeds of the said properties in order
to ascertain the valuation of the said property. What is the effect of
such concession shall also be taken into consideration by the High
Court and we express no opinion thereon.
The appeal is allowed. The impugned order of the High Court
dated 20.8.97 is set aside. The Civil Revision No.901 of 1997 shall
stand restored on the file of the High Court. The High Court shall
after affording the contesting parties an opportunity of hearing decide
the revision afresh and expeditiously, consistently with the
observation made hereinabove. A short point is arising for decision
and much time has already been lost. Further the pendency of the
revision has stalled progress of the suit pending before the trial Court.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( R.C. Lahoti )
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J.
( Brijesh Kumar )
November 22, 2001.