Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1101 of 2006
PETITIONER:
KISHORE KUMAR KHAITAN & ANR
RESPONDENT:
PRAVEEN KUMAR SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/02/2006
BENCH:
S.B. SINHA & P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(ARISING OUT OF S.L.P. (CIVIL) NO.11469 OF 2005)
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
Leave granted.
1. The respondent herein, hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff,
filed a suit TS No.119 of 1998 before the Civil Judge, Junior Division,
Howrah for a declaration of his status as a tenant of the suit property and for
a perpetual injunction restraining the appellants herein, hereinafter referred
to as the defendants, the owners of the building, from interfering with the
peaceful possession of the plaintiff and for other incidental reliefs. Along
with the suit, the plaintiff moved an application under Order XXXIX Rules 1
and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure (hereinafter referred to as the ’Code’),
for an interim injunction pending the suit, restraining the defendants from
interfering with his possession of the plaint schedule property. When the
application for interim injunction was moved on 12.6.1998, the trial court
found that there was no urgency which justified the grant of an ad-interim
ex parte order of injunction and taking the view that the delay will not defeat
justice, refused to pass an ad-interim order of injunction and issued notice to
the defendants to show cause within 15 days of the receipt of the notice, as
to why the temporary injunction, as prayed for by the plaintiff, shall not be
granted. Feeling himself aggrieved by the non-grant of an ad interim ex
parte injunction, the plaintiff filed an appeal under Order 43 Rule 1 of The
Code of Civil Procedure before the District Court. The Additional District
Judge on 19.6.1998, while entertaining the civil miscellaneous appeal
admitted the same and issued notice to the defendants fixing 4.9.1998 for
their appearance. After allowing an application for amendment of the
application for injunction by way of incorporating a schedule thereto, the
Additional District Judge along with the issuance of notice to the defendants
to show cause why the prayer for temporary injunction shall not be granted,
stating that in the light of the materials available it was just and proper to
direct the parties to maintain the status quo as on date and delay in the grant
of an ad-interim order may cause complications, passed an ex parte ad
interim order directing both the parties to maintain status quo as on that day
till 17.7.1998. Thereafter alleging that he was in possession on 19.6.1998
when the order to maintain status quo was passed by the Additional District
Judge and that he was dispossessed on 20.6.1998 in violation of that order,
the plaintiff filed an application under Section 151 of the Code for an interim
mandatory injunction directing the defendants to put him in possession of
the suit premises. The District Court originally passed an order of interim
mandatory injunction directing the defendants to restore possession of the
suit property to the plaintiff. This was challenged by the defendants before
the High Court in a proceeding under Section 115 of the Code. The High
Court set aside the order of the trial court and remanded the application for
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interim mandatory injunction for reconsideration by the District court.
Thereafter, the District court reconsidered the application for interim
mandatory injunction and allowed the same by upholding the claim of the
plaintiff that he was dispossessed after the interim order of status quo was
passed by that Court. A challenge by the defendants to that order before the
High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution was rejected by the High
Court. This appeal by special leave is filed by the defendants challenging
those orders.
2. We may note two incidental facts at this stage. The first is the
filing of a suit TS No.153 of 1998 by the present defendants for a declaration
that the document relied on as a rent deed by the present plaintiff, be
adjudged void and cancelled and for consequential reliefs flowing from the
grant of the main relief. The second is that even though the petition for
special leave to appeal against the order of the High Court dated 25.11.2004
was filed in this Court on 31.3.2005, in enforcement of the order of the
District Court under challenge in this appeal, possession was delivered over
to the plaintiff on 8.4.2005 through the process of court.
3. It is the case of the plaintiff that the suit property was leased to
him by the first defendant on 17.4.1998 and that the transaction was
evidenced by writing in the letter-head of Khaitan Paper Machine Limited
owned by the first defendant. According to the plaintiff, there was an
earlier litigation between the first defendant and one Shivanand Mishra,
Shivanand Mishra claiming a tenancy over a portion of the present suit
premises and at the instance of the present plaintiff, that suit was
compromised, as part of the compromise a sum of Rs.2 lakhs was paid to
Shivanand Mishra and Shivanand Mishra gave up his claim of tenancy.
According to the plaintiff, the said sum of Rs.2 lakhs which was paid to
Shivanand Mishra was advanced by him to the first defendant and it was in
consideration of the same and the help rendered by the plaintiff in the matter
of settling the dispute with Shivanand Mishra, that the first defendant agreed
to handover possession of the suit premises to the plaintiff immediately after
recovering possession from Shivanand Mishra and it was in furtherance of
the promise that the tenancy agreement was executed on 17.4.1998. Thus,
the plaintiff claimed that he had been put in possession of the suit property
as a tenant. In derogation of the tenancy thus created in his favour, the
defendants were attempting to dispossess the plaintiff forcibly and it was in
that situation that the plaintiff was filing the suit for a declaration of his
tenancy rights over the suit property and for a perpetual injunction
restraining the defendants from interfering with his possession as a tenant.
As already noticed, though the plaintiff filed an application under Order
XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 of the Code for an interim injunction restraining the
defendants from interfering with his possession, the trial court did not pass
an ad interim order of injunction, but only issued notices to the defendants
calling upon them to show cause why the prayer for injunction shall not be
granted. It is against this refusal of ad interim injunction ex parte, that the
plaintiff filed the appeal before the District Court in which, on 19.6.1998,
the Additional District Judge passed an ad interim ex parte order directing
both the parties to maintain status quo.
4. It is necessary to notice at this stage that in an original suit of
this nature, it was not appropriate for the Additional District Judge to pass an
order directing the parties to maintain status quo, without indicating what the
status quo was. If he was satisfied that the appellant before him had made
out a prima facie case for an ad interim ex parte injunction and the balance
of convenience justified the grant of such an injunction, it was for him to
have passed such an order of injunction. But simply directing the parties to
maintain status quo without indicating what the status quo was, is not an
order that should be passed at the initial stage of a litigation, especially when
one court had found no reason to grant an ex parte order of injunction and
the appellate court was dealing with only the limited question whether an ad
interim order of injunction should or should not have been granted by the
trial court, since the appeal was only against the refusal of an ad interim ex
parte order of injunction and the main application for injunction pending
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suit, was still pending before the trial court itself. Therefore, we are prima
facie of the view that the Additional District Judge ought not to have passed
an equivocal order like the one passed in the circumstances of the case. But
of course, that aspect has relevance only to the extent that before ordering
an interim mandatory injunction or refusing it, the court has first to consider
whether the plaintiff has proved that he was in possession on the date of suit
and on the date of the order and he had been dispossessed the next day.
Unless a clear prima facie finding that the plaintiff was in possession on
those dates is entered, an order for interim mandatory injunction could not
have been passed and any such order passed would be one without
jurisdiction.
5. An interim mandatory injunction is not a remedy that is easily
granted. It is an order that is passed only in circumstances which are clear
and the prima facie materials clearly justify a finding that the status quo has
been altered by one of the parties to the litigation and the interests of justice
demanded that the status quo ante be restored by way of an interim
mandatory injunction. Keeping this principle in mind, it is necessary to see
whether in the case on hand, the Additional District Judge was justified in
passing the interim order of injunction.
6. Admittedly, the defendants are the owners of the building. The
plaintiff was setting up a case that the plaint schedule part of the building
had been granted to him on lease on 17.4.1998 and that he had obtained
possession thereof on the basis of such a lease transaction. The lease, thus
set up by the plaintiff has been denied by the defendants who had pleaded
that the plaintiff had been entrusted with some renovation work for which he
was being paid and the alleged document relied on by him was a concocted
one. The grant of mandatory injunction would necessarily depend upon the
plaintiff establishing before the court that on 19.6.98 when the court directed
the parties to maintain status quo, he was in possession as a tenant of the
plaint schedule property. The burden in that behalf is clearly on the
plaintiff, the claim he made, having been denied by the defendants.
Therefore, the first question that the District Court had to consider pursuant
to the order of remand by the High Court was whether the plaintiff had
prima facie established that the building was let out to him as claimed.
The building is seen to be of a substantial dimension , within the
District of Howrah, part of a city, commercially important. Prima facie
it is difficult to imagine that such a building or the second floor and part
of the ground floor of a building of this nature would have been let out in
such an informal manner and the transaction not being evidenced even by a
rent deed executed by the lessor and the lessee in terms of Section 107 of the
Transfer of Property Act. What the plaintiff has relied upon is seen to be a
letter on the letter-head of Khaitan Paper Machine Limited signed by the
first defendant describing himself as Managing Director and Partner of
Khaintan Estates. Prima facie it is seen that whereas the letter-head is that
of Khaitan Paper Machine Limited, obviously a limited company, the
signature is that of the Managing Director and partner of Khaitan Estates, an
entity different from Khaitan Paper Machine Limited. It is difficult to
imagine that the letter-head of one company was used for dealing with the
properties of another entity which appears to be a partnership as per the
description contained in the letter. Secondly, the letter purports to be an
acknowledgement for having received a sum of Rs.2 lakhs as security from
the plaintiff and creating a tenancy in favour of the plaintiff, and inducting
the plaintiff into possession in respect of the entire second floor and shop
rooms in the ground floor as a tenant on a monthly rent of Rs.7,000/- and
conferring upon the plaintiff a right to do certain other acts in the premises.
It is also stated that a stamped agreement would be created by the signatory
as well as his wife, in favour of the plaintiff. Prima facie, the document
does not satisfy the requirements of Section 107 of the Transfer of Property
Act and though it acknowledges receipt of a sum of Rs.2 lakhs, there is no
stamp affixed to indicate that it was intended to be a receipt for the said sum.
As noticed, the rent stipulated is also Rs.7,000 per month. Suffice it to
notice, that the genuineness of this document which is seriously disputed by
the defendants, its admissibility in evidence and validity, have to be decided
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in the suit. Therefore, one of the questions that has to be decided is whether
this letter is genuine and if it is genuine, whether it is capable of bringing
into existence a lease or accepted as evidencing a lease transaction between
the parties. Since this is the document on which the suit is based, the
finding on the genuineness and validity of this document and the alleged
transaction created by it will have a great bearing on the claim of possession
by the plaintiff. No doubt the signature of defendant No.1 found in the
document is admitted but with an explanation that it is a got up document.
A suit has also been filed by the defendants challenging it.
7. At this stage it is not necessary to go further into this aspect
because what we are concerned with is whether pursuant to the order of
remand earlier made by the High Court directing the District Court to take
evidence and to decide the question falling for decision, the District Court
has considered the relevant aspects and whether its order granting an interim
mandatory order of injunction is capable of being sustained or is free from
jurisdictional error.
8. While setting aside the original order passed by the Additional
District Judge, and remanding the application for an interim mandatory
injunction, the High Court specifically pointed out that the essential
condition for passing an interim mandatory injunction was that the party
claiming it must be shown to be in possession on the date of the order
directing the parties to maintain status quo and it must be further to shown
that he was dispossessed after such an order was passed and that specific
findings on both these aspects were necessary to sustain an order. The court
had found that such findings were lacking and hence the Additional District
Judge acted without jurisdiction in passing the interim mandatory order of
injunction. The order passed was set aside and the application filed by the
plaintiff was remanded. Certain directions regarding production of
documents and their receivability were also issued. The District Court was
directed to decide the claim of the plaintiff afresh, in accordance with law
and in the light of the directions issued in that order.
9. It is seen that after the remand, the parties produced some
evidence. The Additional District Court set out the arguments on the side of
both the parties. Then it referred to certain decisions cited by the parties. It
observed that there was at least some prima facie foundation in the claim of
the plaintiff that the tenancy agreement was executed by defendant No.1 and
whether it was concocted out of a signed blank letter head and whether it
had legal force could only be decided in the suit. It did not discuss the oral
evidence that was taken pursuant to the order of remand and merely stated
that it has perused the evidence. After referring to some cash memos and
money receipts produced by the plaintiff, it held that they prima facie
showed that the plaintiff was in possession. Then it abruptly observed that
at least prima facie it is proved that the plaintiff was in possession of the suit
property on 19.6.1998, the date of the passing of the order of status quo. It
stated that as such his possession must be restored and it was a fit case where
the court should invoke its inherent jurisdiction to order restoration of
possession.
10. We must say that the approach of the Additional District Judge
and the manner in which he dealt with the question in spite of the directions
in the order of remand by the High Court leave a lot to be desired. Instead
of discussing the evidence properly to find whether the plaintiff had prima
facie proved his possession on 19.6.1998 as a tenant as claimed by him and
whether he had adduced any evidence to show prima facie that he had been
forcibly dispossessed on 20.6.1998, the day after the grant of ad interim ex
parte order to maintain status quo, the Additional District Judge has passed
the interim order of mandatory injunction. We are of the view that there is
no proper or adequate finding by the Additional District Judge either of
prima facie possession of the plaintiff on 19.6.1998 or of his forcible
dispossession on 20.6.1998, Apparently, not even a neighbour or occupant
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of any part of the building was examined in support of the case of forcible
dispossession on the morning of 20.6.1998. In fact there does not appear to
be any such finding of dispossession in spite of the direction in that behalf in
the order of remand. Thus, we find that the order of interim mandatory
injunction, an extraordinary relief in itself, is not supported by the necessary
findings justifying its grant. We also find that the approach made by the
Additional District Judge is not the approach that is called for, in
entertaining a claim of this nature put forward by a plaintiff and hence the
order is also vitiated by an erroneous approach to the question falling for
decision.
11. The High Court, we must say, has also not properly exercised
its jurisdiction under Article 227 of the Constitution of India. In fact, it has
failed to exercise its jurisdiction. Though the High Court rightly noticed that
the burden was on the plaintiff to show that he was in possession on the date
of the order directing the parties to maintain status quo and that he was
dispossessed in violation of the subsisting interim order, it did not scrutinize
the order to find out whether the requisite findings had been entered by the
Additional District Judge on both those aspects. It did not even consider
whether there was a clear finding that the plaintiff was forcibly dispossessed
on 20.6.1998 as alleged by him. It did not also consider whether the finding
on possession was rendered based on a discussion of the available evidence
and whether the directions in the order of remand had been complied with.
In short, in exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 227 of the Constitution
of India, it behoved the High Court to consider whether the order of interim
mandatory injunction was supported by the necessary findings. That is
certainly a question of jurisdiction, since the jurisdiction to pass an interim
mandatory order can only be based on such clear findings and the grant of an
interim order without such findings would be acting without jurisdiction.
We may incidentally notice that there is no prima facie material to indicate
that on 20.6.1998 the plaintiff was, in fact, dispossessed by the defendants.
We may in this context notice that the plaintiff could not show that he had
either become a member of the tenants association of the building or had
entered into an arrangement with it for the consumption of electricity in
terms of the alleged rental arrangement. We have already noticed that none
of the occupants of the building was examined to prima facie show
dispossession.
12. The jurisdiction under Article 227 of the Constitution may be
restrictive in the sense that it is to be invoked only to correct errors of
jurisdiction. But when a court asks itself a wrong question or approaches
the question in an improper manner, even if it comes to a finding of fact, the
said finding of fact cannot be said to be one rendered with jurisdiction and it
will still be amenable to correction at the hands of the High Court under
Article 227 of the Constitution. The failure to render the necessary findings
to support its order would also be a jurisdictional error liable to correction.
Here the jurisdiction to grant an interim mandatory injunction could be
exercised on entering a finding that on the day the order for maintaining the
status quo was passed, the plaintiff was in possession and a day after the
interim order was passed, he was in fact dispossessed. The interim direction
to maintain status quo was an ex parte order. From the order of the
Additional District court it is not possible to come to the conclusion that on a
proper advertence to the relevant materials, prima facie clear findings had
been rendered by that court on these aspects. The prima facie infirmities
attached to the letter said to create the tenancy cannot also be ignored, since
that transaction is the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim of possession.
13. Thus, prima facie, we find that the tenancy claimed by the
plaintiff remains to be proved in the suit. For the present, we should say
that prima facie, the plaintiff has not been able to establish the foundation
for the possession claimed by him. It is significant to note that not even
another tenant of the building among the various tenants in the building, was
examined to establish that the plaintiff while in possession, had been
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dispossessed on 20.6.1998 as claimed by him. Any way, the Additional
District Judge has not referred to any such evidence except referring to the
affidavit of Shivanand Mishra, who even according to the plaintiff was no
more in occupation. Thus, the disturbance of the status quo by the
defendants has not been established. Thus, prima facie it is clear that the
plaintiff has not laid the foundation for the grant of an interim order of
mandatory injunction in his favour. The order so passed by the Additional
District Judge, and confirmed by the High Court, therefore, calls for
interference in this appeal.
14. Before parting, it is necessary to notice the argument that after
the order of the High Court and after the filing of this petition for special
leave to appeal to this Court, the plaintiff was put in possession pursuant to
the order under challenge through the process of court. Now that we have
set aside the order of the High Court and that of the Additional District court
and rejected the prayer of the plaintiff for mandatory injunction, the
defendants would be entitled to re-delivery of possession by way of
restitution. The possession will be restored to them through court. But
considering the questions to be decided in the suit, we direct the defendants,
once they are put in possession of the premises in restitution, not to create
any third party interest in respect of the plaint schedule building (being a
part of the whole building) pending disposal of the suit. Considering the
nature of the suit and the question involved, we would request the trial court,
in which the suit has been filed, to try and dispose of the suit expeditiously.
We clarify that it would not be necessary to consider the interim application
for prohibitory injunction separately and the same would also be disposed of
along with the suit by the trial court. The suit will be disposed of after trial
untrammeled by any of the observations contained in these interim orders.
15. The appeal is, thus allowed, the orders of the High Court and
that of the Additional District Court are set aside with the directions as
above and the trial court is requested to dispose of the suit itself
expeditiously and in accordance with law. The appellants would be entitled
to their costs throughout.