Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8088 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Sumitra Devi Anand (D) by LRs.
RESPONDENT:
Shanti Devi (D) by LRs.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/12/2004
BENCH:
CJI R.C. Lahoti & G. P. Mathur
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.7763 of 2004)
G. P. MATHUR, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. This appeal, by special leave, has been preferred against the order
dated 26.3.2004 of the Delhi Court, by which the appeal filed by the
appellants against the order dated 22.11.2003 of the Additional District
Judge, was dismissed and the order refusing to grant an injunction in their
favour under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 CPC was affirmed.
3. The dispute relates to property bearing No.XVI/442, Sethi Building
(originally known as Hafiz Building), Faiz Road, Karol Bagh, New Delhi.
After partition of the country, Wazir Chand Anand (for short ’Anand’) and
B.S. Sethi (for short ’Sethi’) were tenants of the custodian in the said
building. The property was put up for auction on 9.11.1955 and a sale
certificate was finally issued in favour of Sethi on 20.7.1961 certifying that
he had given the highest bid for Rs.70,250/- in a public auction and had been
declared as purchaser of the property in full. Thereafter, a letter dated
1.9.1961 was issued by the custodian asking the tenants including Anand to
attorn in favour of the auction purchaser, namely, Sethi. Sethi filed eviction
petition against Anand on 10.2.1986 on the ground of his bona fide
requirement for his residence, in which notice was issued returnable on
20.3.1986. However, much before the said date, Anand appeared before the
Rent Controller and filed an application for leave to defend in the eviction
petition. He also filed an application for recording a compromise. The Rent
Controller recorded statement of the parties and passed a consent order for
eviction of Anand and he was given time upto 1.3.1988 to vacate the
premises. An undertaking of Anand was also recorded to the same effect
and the case was disposed of.
3. Sethi and Anand were co-brothers as their wives were real sisters.
Sethi was an advocate of some standing in Delhi and he passed away in
April, 1988. Anand also passed away on 21.12.1999. The appellants are
the legal representatives of Anand, while the respondents are legal
representatives of Sethi.
4. On 28.2.2000, when the period of limitation for executing the eviction
decree was about to expire, the respondents filed an execution petition
against the appellants. The appellants filed objections against the same
taking various pleas including the plea that the decree had been obtained by
fraud but the same was dismissed by the Additional Rent Controller on
18.3.2002 and the appeal against the said order was also dismissed on
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3.4.2002. The appellants then preferred a writ petition under Article 227 of
the Constitution before Delhi High Court. During the course of hearing, the
parties agreed that the petition be disposed of with liberty to the petitioners
(appellants) to file a suit for challenging the eviction decree on the ground of
fraud. The writ petition was accordingly disposed of on 9.1.2002 and the
operative portion of the order reads as under :
"I am also of the view that since the petitioner has
objected to the execution of the decree on the ground of
fraud, he may have a right to file a suit to challenge the
decree on such ground. Without, therefore, going into
the question as to whether the decree could be challenged
on the ground of fraud before the Executing Court itself,
I dispose of this petition with liberty to the petitioner to
challenge the decree on the ground of fraud by filing a
regular civil suit. For a period of six weeks from today,
the impugned order shall not be executed."
5. The appellants then filed Suit No.1833/02 in Delhi High Court for
declaration that the decree of eviction passed on 19.2.1986 in Eviction Case
No.36 of 1986 by Shri R.K. Sharma, Additional Rent Controller, Delhi titled
as ’Shri B.S. Sethi v. Shri Wazir Chand Anand’ is a nullity having been
obtained by playing fraud upon the said Court and is not binding upon the
plaintiffs and further that they are co-owners of the property in dispute.
They also sought a decree for permanent injunction restraining the
defendants from dispossessing them from the said property. In view of
increase in the pecuniary jurisdiction of the District Court, the suit was
transferred and registered as Suit No.138 of 2003 in the Court of the
Additional District Judge, Delhi. The plaintiffs also moved an application
for injunction under Order XXXIX Rules 1 and 2 CPC for restraining the
defendants from dispossessing them from the property in dispute. The
Additional District Judge dismissed the injunction application by his order
dated 22.11.2003 and the appeal preferred by the plaintiffs against the said
order was also dismissed by the High Court on 26.3.2004.
6. We have heard Shri Rajiv Dutta, Senior Advocate for plaintiff-
appellants and Shri Mukul Rohtagi, Senior Advocate for the defendant-
respondents. The learned counsel for the appellants has submitted that
when the property was put up for auction on 9.11.1955, the highest bid made
was that of Sethi and Anand, as his associate, and an amount of Rs.4,991.44
which was due to Anand as compensation for assets left by him in Pakistan,
was utilized to make up the sale consideration and thus he was a co-owner of
the property. Learned counsel has further submitted that Anand had never
appeared before the Rent Controller as the notice was not served upon him
nor he had filed any application for recording a compromise. According to
the appellants, Anand never appeared before the Court and he neither filed
any application for recording a compromise nor gave any undertaking to
vacate the premises by 1.3.1988. Sethi had set up an imposter and by
playing fraud upon the Court obtained an order of eviction against Anand.
Learned counsel has further submitted that Anand being a co-owner of the
property, there was no occasion for him to enter into a compromise
whereunder he became liable to vacate the building. It is also submitted
that the fact that an eviction decree passed in 1986 was sought to be
executed in the year 2000, itself shows that the whole thing was fraudulent.
7. Learned counsel for the respondents has submitted that Anand had not
paid any amount as his claim for compensation was rejected by the
Settlement Officer (Judicial) on 24.4.1959 and finally the sale certificate was
issued in favour of Sethi alone on 20.7.1961 and the tenants were asked to
attorn in his favour. The eviction decree was not executed as the parties
were closely related being co-brothers and they were having very cordial
relations. Learned counsel has further submitted that Shri M.S. Sethi,
Advocate, had filed an affidavit dated 18.11.2002 stating that Anand had
engaged him as his lawyer and he had filed his vakalatnamaon on his behalf.
Anand had appeared in Court and had made a statement on oath supporting
the compromise petition. Shri M.L. Sharma, Advocate, has also filed an
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affidavit dated 18.11.2002 on similar lines stating that he had been engaged
by Anand and on his instructions a compromise petition was drafted by him
which had been signed by Anand. Learned counsel has submitted that apart
from the aforesaid affidavits, there is other voluminous documentary
evidence to show that Anand was always treated as tenant of the building
and not as co-owner.
8. We have given our anxious consideration to the submissions made by
the learned counsel for the parties. It is not in dispute that in the eviction
petition filed by Sethi against Anand, notice was issued returnable on
20.3.1986, but even before the said date Anand appeared on 19.2.1986 and
an application for leave to defend was filed by him and thereafter a
compromise petition was filed on the basis of which eviction petition was
allowed and time was given to Anand to vacate the premises on or before
1.3.1988. The defendant-respondents did not put the decree into execution,
but waited for full 12 years and filed the execution petition only on the last
date i.e. on 28.2.2000. This shows that the eviction petition was filed only
for the purpose of saving limitation and at least till February, 2000, they had
no pressing need of the building in question. It certainly looks little strange
that though Anand filed an application for leave to defend the eviction
petition, but almost simultaneously he filed a compromise petition wherein a
consent order was passed giving him time to vacate the premises on or
before 1.3.1988. The specific case of the plaintiffs is that Anand never
appeared before the Rent Controller and the whole thing was managed by
Sethi by setting up an impostor. Having regard to the facts and
circumstances of the case, we consider it appropriate in the interest of justice
that the suit filed by the appellants itself may be decided at a very early date
and their possession may be protected during the pendency of the suit.
9. The appeal is accordingly allowed and the orders dated 22.11.2003
passed by the learned Additional District Judge and also the order dated
26.3.2004 passed by the High Court are set aside. The learned Additional
District Judge shall take up the suit on priority basis and decide the same as
expeditiously as possible, preferably within one year from the date of
communication of this order to him. The appellants shall not be dispossessed
from the premises in their occupation during the pendency of the suit. It is
further directed that the parties shall make all endeavours for an early
decision of the suit and shall not take adjournments unless absolutely
necessary. If the plaintiffs cause obstruction in the progress of the suit or
adopt delaying tactics, it will be open to the respondents to apply to this
Court for vacating the injunction order.
10. It is made clear that any observation made in this order is only for the
purpose of deciding the appeal and shall not be construed as an expression of
opinion regarding the merits of the claim of the parties.