Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
RIKHU DEV, CHELA BAWA HARJUG DASS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SOM DASS (DECEASED) THROUGH HIS CHELA SHIAMDASS
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/08/1975
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 2159 1976 SCR (1) 487
1976 SCC (1) 103
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908) O. 22 rr. 3, 4
and 10-Suit by de jure Mahant against de facto Mahant for
possession and management-Death of defendant and election of
another Mahant during pendency of appeal-If appeal abates.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant filed the suit on the basis that as the
Mahant of a Dera he was entitled to possession and
management of the properties of its branch Dera. The
defendant contended that it was an independent Dera and that
he was in possession of the properties as its lawfully
appointed Mahant. The trial court decreed the suit but in
appeal the decree was reversed. While the second appeal,
preferred by the appellant, was pending in the High Court,
the defendant died. As the application to implead the
elected successor of the defendant was filed beyond the
period prescribed for an application under O. 23, rr. 3 and
4, the High Court held that the appeal had abated and that
there was no ground for setting aside the abatement. In
appeal to this Court, the appellant contended that even if
the Chela, who had been elected as the Mahant on the death
of the defendant, was not impleaded within the period
prescribed, there would be no abatement, because he
represented the Dera.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
^
HELD: (1) When a suit is brought by or against a person
in a representative capacity and there is a devolution of
the interest of the representative, the rule that has to be
applied is O. 22, r. 10 and not O. 22, rr. 3 or 4, whether
the devolution takes place as a consequence of death or for
any other reason. The word ’interest’ in the rule means
interest in the property, i.e., the subject matter of the
suit, and the interest is the interest of the person who was
the party to the suit. This rule is based on the principle
that the trial of a suit cannot be brought to an end merely
because the interest of a party in the subject-matter of the
suit has devolved upon another during the pendency of the
suit. The suit may be continued against the person acquiring
the interest with the leave of the Court. [489F-G]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
In the present case, when the defendant died, the
interest which was the subject-matter of the suit devolved
upon his successor elected as the Mahant of the Dera, and
therefore, the appeal could be continued under O. 22 r. 10,
C.P.C. [489B-C]
(2) Though it was uncertain on the death of the
defendant as to who would become the Mahant by election, it
would not make any difference for the application of O. 22,
r. 10. The devolution of the interest in the subject matter
of the suit took place when the new Mahant was elected. The
suit was for possession and management of the Dera and the
properties appertaining to it by the appellant purporting to
be the de jure Mahant against the defendant as a de facto
Mahant. The subject matter of the suit was the interest of
the defendant in the Dera and its properties and it devolved
upon the new Mahant by virtue of his election subsequent to
the death of the defendant. As it was in a representative
capacity that he defendant was sued and that it was in the
same representative capacity that the appeal was sought to
be continued against the new Mahant, O. 23, r. 10 will
apply. [490B-E]
Rajnam Pillai v. Natraja Desikar A.I.R. 1924 Madras
615, Thirumalai v. Arunachella, A.I.R. 1926 Madras 540 and
Roshan Lal v. Kapur Chand, A.I.R. 1960 Punjab, 382,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 159 of
1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4-4-1973 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court at Chandigarh in R.S.A. No.
1482 of 1961.
488
N. N. Goswamy and Arvind Minocha, for the appellant.
Kapil Sibbal and D. Probir Mitra, for respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MATHEW, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against a
decree passed by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana
holding that the appeal filed by the plaintiff-appellant has
abated and dismissing his suit.
The appellant brought the suit on the allegation that
there was one Shiromani Nirankari Dera at Patiala, that this
institution had two-branches-one at Landeke in Moga Tehsil
and the other at Nanga Kheri in the erstwhile Patiala State,
and that he, as mahant-in-charge of the Shiromani Dera at
Patiala had the right to manage the properties attached to
the Dera at Landeke. The prayer in the plaint was for
recovery of possession of the Dera and the properties
attached to it.
Som Dass, the defendant, contended that the Dera at
Landeke was an independent Dera and that he was in
possession of the properties of the Dera as its lawfully
appointed mahant.
The trial court decreed the suit. In appeal by the
defendant the decree was reversed. Against that decree, an
appeal was preferred by the appellant to the High Court.
While the appeal was pending in the High Court, Som Dass,
the defendant, died on 13-10-1970. No application was made
by the appellant to bring on record his legal
representatives within the period prescribed. An application
was made on 1-2-1971 by the appellant stating that Som Dass
died on 26-11-1970 leaving behind him Shiam Dass as his
Chela and for impleading him. The correctness of the date of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
death of Som Dass was contested by Shiam Dass. The High
Court referred the question to the trial Court for enquiry
and decision. The trial Court, after taking evidence, found
that Som Dass died on 13-10-1970. Thereafter the appellant
prayed before the High Court that his application dated 1-2-
1971 might be treated as an application for setting aside
the abatement of the appeal and the ground for setting aside
the abatement was that the appellant did not know about the
death of Som Dass at the time he died. The High Court found
no substance in the plea that the appellant had no knowledge
about the date of the death of Som Dass and held that the
appeal had abated and that there was no ground for setting
aside the abatement.
The appellant had raised an alternative contention
before the High Court that there was no abatement of the
appeal even if Som Dass was not impleaded within the period
prescribed as he claimed to represent the dera as its duly
elected Chela. The High Court held that after the death of
Som Dass, Shiam Dass, as his Chela "inherited the sum-total
of the rights which earlier vested in Som Dass and when a
controversy is raised about such rights, then the appellant
was bound to bring on record the legal representatives of
the deceased within the time prescribed by law."
489
We do not think that the view of the High Court was
correct. The suit was filed on the basis that the appellant
as the lawfully appointed mahant was entitled to manage the
properties of the Dera at Landeke, that the defendant was
unlawfully claiming to be the mahant of the Dera and
entitled to manage the properties of the Dera, and that the
appellant was entitled to be in possession of the
properties. As already stated the contention of the
defendant was that though the properties belonged to the
Dera, he was its lawfully appointed mahant and that the
appellant had no right to recover possession of the property
of the Dera. When Som Dass died, the interest which was the
subject matter of the suit, devolved upon Shiam Das as he
was elected to be the Mahant of the Dera and the appeal
could be continued under Q. 22, r. 10, of the Civil
Procedure Code against the person upon whom the interest had
devolved.
Order 22, rule 10 reads:
"R. 10(1) In other cases of an assignment,
creation or devolution of any interest during the
pendency of suit, the suit may, by leave of the Court,
be continued by or against the person to or upon whom
such interest has come or devolved.
(2) The attachment of a decree pending an appeal
there from shall be deemed to be an interest entitling
the person who procured such attachment to the benefit
of sub-rule (1)."
This rule is based on the principle that trial of a
suit cannot be brought to an end merely because the interest
of a party in the subject matter of the suit has devolved
upon another during the pendency of the suit but that suit
may be continued against the person acquiring the interest
with the leave of the Court. When a suit is brought by or
against a person in a representative capacity and there is a
devolution of the interest of the representative, the rule
that has to be applied is Order 22, rule 10 and not rule 3
or 4, whether the devolution takes place as a consequence of
death or for any other reason. Order 22, rule 10, is not
confined to devolution of interest of a party by death, it
also applies if the head of the mutt or manager of the
temple resigns his office or is removed from office. In such
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
a case the successor to the head of the mutt or to the
manager of the temple may be substituted as a party under
this rule. The word ’interest’ which is mentioned in this
rule means interest in the property i.e., the subject matter
of the suit and the interest is the interest of the person
who was the party to the suit.
It was, however, contended on behalf of the respondent
that there was no devolution of the interest in the subject
matter of the suit on the death of Som Dass, since there was
no certainty as to the person who would be elected as mahant
to succeed him. The argument was that it was uncertain on
the death of Som Dass as to who would become the mahant by
election, that it was only when a person succeeded to the
mahantship on the death of a previous mahant by virtue of
law
490
or custom that there would be devolution of interest in the
subject matter of the suit and, therefore, Order 22, rule
10, would not be attracted. We see no force in this
argument. We are of the view that devolution of the interest
in the subject matter of the suit took place when Shiam Dass
was elected as mahant of the Dera after the death of Som
Dass.
Som Dass was sued in his capacity as a person who
claimed (though illegally according to the appellant) as
mahant of the Dera. Som Dass contended that he was lawfully
appointed as mahant of the Dera. He never set up any claim
which was adverse to the Dera or its properties. The suit
against Som Dass was not in his personal capacity but in his
capacity as de facto mahant. In other words, the suit was
for possession and management of the Dera and the properties
appertaining to it by the appellant purporting to be the de
jure mahant against Som Dass as de facto mahant. The fact
that it was after Som Dass died that Shiam Dass was elected
to be the mahant of the Dera can make no difference when we
are dealing with the question whether the interest in the
subject matter of the suit devolved upon him. The subject
matter of the suit was the interest of Som Dass in the Dera
and its properties and it devolved upon shiam Dass by virtue
of his election as mahant subsequent to the death of Som
Dass. And, as it was in a representative capacity that Som
Dass was sued and as it was in the same representative
capacity that the appeal was sought to be continued against
Shiam Dass, Order 22, rule 10 will apply(1). In Thirumalai
v. Arunachella (2) the Court held that a succeeding trustee
of a trustee who filed a suit and thereafter died during its
pendency was not legal representative of the predecessor in
office. The Court said that where some of the trustees die
or retire during the pendency of a suit and new persons are
elected to fill their place, it is a case of devolution of
interest during the pendency of a suit and the elected
persons can be added as parties under Order 22, rule 10
notwithstanding that the period of limitation for impleading
them had expired.
In Roshan Lal v. Kapur Chand the Court took the view
that newly appointed trustees are not legal representatives
of the trustees who had filed the suit and thereafter died
during the pendency of the suit, that they can be added as
parties under Order 22, rule 10 notwithstanding the fact
that the period of limitation for an application to
491
impleaded them under Order 22, rule 3 had elapsed. The Court
said (at p. 384):
"Such an application is obviously not an
application under O. 22, R. 3 Civil Procedure Code."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
We also see no reason why the High Court should not
have granted leave to the appellant to prosecute the appeal.
In the result we reverse the decree of the court below
and direct the High Court to dispose of the appeal on
merits. We allow the appeal but, in the circumstances, make
no order as to costs.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
492