Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAVI RAMAN PRASAD AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/02/1993
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (CJ)
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (CJ)
RAMASWAMY, K.
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 109 1993 SCR (1) 393
1993 SCC (2) 3 JT 1993 (4) 526
1993 SCALE (1)442
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1976:
Sections 144, 145, 482-Property restored to owner-Tenant
restrained from entering the property-Fresh application by
tenant rejected-Order becoming final-On application by
tenant High Court directing Police to take possession till
disposal of Title Suit filed by him-Validity of.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent No. 4 was a tenant in a residential house owned
by the appellants. He claimed that there was an agreement
for sale of the property to him and in part performance
thereof he continued in possession of the house and
therefore he could not be evicted. An eviction suit riled
appellants against Respondent No. 4 was decreed. In
execution of the decree, the appellants were put in physical
possession of the house with the aid of police force.
Thereafter in a bid to take over possession of the said
house, Respondent No. 4 opened fire and the appellants
lodged FIR with the police. Proceedings under section 144
of the Code of Criminal Procedure was drawn up by the Sub-
Divisional Magistrate. The proceeding ended in favour of
the appellants, and Respondent No. 4 was restrained from
entering upon the property. The Criminal Revision Petition
preferred by Respondent No. 4 was dismissed by the High
Court.
Later, Respondent No. 4 again riled an application before
the S.D.M. for initiating proceedings under section 145 Cr.
P.C. and the same was dismissed. Since this order was not
challenged, it became final.
Thereafter Respondent No. 4 filed a Title Suit. He also
filed an application under section 482 Cr.P.C. before the
High Court claiming the same relief as was claimed before
the S.D.M. The High Court in its judgment directed that the
possession of the house shall be with the police till the
disposal of the suit. The appellant’s application for
recalling the judgment was rejected by the High Court.
Being aggrieved by the said
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judgment, the appellants preferred the present appeals.
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Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD : 1. The High Court failed to appreciate the crucial
fact that the appellants were not put in possession of the
property by the Sub Divisional Magistrate on the termination
of the proceeding under Section 144 Cr.P.C. but had obtained
actual physical possession thereof earlier in the execution
of the eviction decree with police aid and the status quo
was restored by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate while
disposing of the proceeding under section 144 Cr.P.C. and
dismissing the application of respondent No. 4 for starting
a fresh proceeding under section 145 Cr.P.C. On the finding
arrived at by him, the Sub-Divisional Magistrate took the
right step in restoring the possession of the property to
the appellants, who had been for a temporary period
restrained from entering upon the same. The application
made by respondent No.4 under section 482 Cr.P.C. was thus a
gross abuse of the process of the Court. [396D-F]
2. By virtue of an interim order of this Court the
appellants have remained in possession of the house and they
shall continue to do so until respondent No.4 obtains a
decree in his favour in the pending suit and dispossesses
the appellants in accordance with law. [396G]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal Nos. 213-
214 of 1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 11.10.91 and 3.9.91 of
Patna, High Court in Crl. Misc. Jurisdiction Case No.
3064/91 (R) & Crl. Misc. No. 1263 of 1991.
S.N. Sinha for the Appellants
B.B Singh and Ms. P. Khata (for Ms. Rani Jethmalani) for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHARMA, CJ. Heard the learned counsel for the parties.
Special leave is granted.
2. The dispute in the case relates to a residential house
which
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admittedly belongs to the family of the appellants and was
in possession of respondent No. 4 as a tenant. The
appellants and their father filed a suit for eviction
impleading respondent No. 4 as a party, which was decreed.
In execution of the decree the appellants were put in
physical possession of the house with the aid of police
force. The case of respondent No.4 is that there was an
agreement for sale of the property to him and in part
performance thereof he continued in possession of the house
and was, therefore, not liable to be evicted. He has filed
Title Suit No.27 of 1991 in the Court of Munsif, Hazaribagh,
on the basis of the alleged agreement which is still
pending. He continued to assert his possession of the house
and was not reconciled even after his dispossession with the
aid of the police force, and ultimately an incident took
place on 15.9.1991 which is the subject matter of a pending
criminal case. According to the appellants respondent No. 4
opened fire in a bid to take over possession of the house
and a first information report was lodged with the police.
3. At this stage a proceeding under Section 144 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure was drawn up by the Sub-
Divisional Magistrate and both the parties were restrained
from entering upon the property. After the matter was
examined, the Sub-Divisional Magistrate decided the
proceeding on 11.10.1990 in favour of the appellants.
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Relying upon the fact of delivery of possession of the
property to the appellants in pursuance of the Civil Court’s
decree and the other materials on the record, the Sub-
Divisional Magistrate restrained the respondent No. 4 from
entering upon the property. Some further facts have been
stated by the appellants in their special leave petition in
this regard, which do not appear to be relevant at the
present stage, and it is sufficient to mention that a
criminal revision petition by respondent No. 4 directed
against the Sub-Divisional Magistrate’s Order was dismissed
by the High Court. On 22.1.1991, that is, more than three
months after the Sub-Divisional Magistrate’s Order,
respondent No. 4 filed a fresh application before the same
Sub-Divisional Magistrate for initiating a proceeding under
Section 145 Code of Criminal Procedure-, which was dismissed
by a reasoned order, pointing out the existence of eviction
decree against the respondent No. 4 and the fact of delivery
of possession of the property to the appellants in execution
thereof This order was not challenged and became final. It
was only thereafter that the Title Suit by respondent No. 4
was filed in Munsif s Court. On 23.4.1991, respondent No. 4
made an application under Section 482 Code of Criminal
Procedure before the High Court substantially for the same
relief which was claimed before the Sub-Divisional
Magistrate. He did not
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set out complete facts in his application, High Court mainly
relied upon the fact of delivery of the movable articles
found in the property by the authority concerned to the
parties in pursuance of the final direction issued in the
proceeding under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal
Procedure and prayed for dispossession of the appellants
from the house. The appellants appeared before the High
Court and placed full facts, but the High Court by the
impugned judgment directed that the house shall be in
possession of the Officer-in-charge of the Mandu Police
Station till the disposal of the Title Suit. The appellants
moved an application before the High Court for recalling its
judgment, which was heard by the Division Bench and was
dismissed.
4. According to the impugned order of the High Court, when
on the initiation of the proceeding under Section 144 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure both the parties had been
restrained from entering upon the property, it was not right
for the Sub-Divisional Magistrate to have allowed the
appellants later to take possession of the property. An
examination of the impugned judgment will show that the High
Court failed to appreciate the crucial fact that the
appellants were not put in possession of the property by
Sub-Divisional Magistrate on the termination of the proceed-
ing under Section 144 Code of Criminal Procedure, but had
obtained actual physical possession thereof earlier in the
execution of the eviction decree with police aid and the
status quo was restored by the Sub-Divisional Magistrate
while disposing of the proceeding under Section 144 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure and dismissing the application of
the respondent No. 4 for starting a fresh proceeding under
Section 145 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. On the
finding arrived at by him, the Sub-Divisional Magistrate
took the right step in restoring the possession of the
property to the appellants, who had been for a temporary
period restrained from entering upon the same. The
application made by respondent No. 4 under Section 482 of
the Code of the Criminal Procedure was thus a gross abuse of
the process of the court, which the High Court failed to
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appreciate. We, accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the
impugned judgment and dismiss the application of respondent
No. 4 made before the High Court. By virtue of an interim
order of this Court the appellants have remained in posses-
sion of the house and they shall continue to do so until
respondent No. 4 obtains a decree in his favour in the
pending suit and dispossesses the appellants in accordance
with law.
G.N. Appeals allowed.
397