Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VALLABH DAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DR. MADAN LAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/04/1970
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 987 1971 SCR (1) 211
1970 SCC (3) 92
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1983 SC 786 (9)
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), O. 23, R. 1-
Withdrawal of suit by plaintiff-court imposing condition for
filing fresh suit on the same subject-matter-Meaning of
subject-matter’.
HEADNOTE:
P was the owner of the suit properties. He had no children.
He gifted some of his properties to his wife on June 14,
1943. On April 29, 1946 the first ’respondent instituted a
suit for a declaration that he was the adopted son of P and
for partition and possession of his share in the family
property. The first respondent claimed to have been adopted
on July 12, 1943, P denied the said adoption and alleged
that in fact he had adopted the appellant on April 10, 1946.
In view of that allegation the appellant was added as a
supplemental defendant in the said suit, but no relief was
claimed against him. During the pendency of that suit P
died. Thereafter the first respondent moved the court to
withdraw the suit. He was permitted to withdraw the ’same
with liberty to file a fresh suit on the same cause of
action on condition that he paid the defendants’ costs of
that suit before instituting a fresh suit. Thereafter P’s
widow bequeathed her properties to the first respondent and
died soon after. On November 29, 1951 the first respondent
brought a fresh suit without having paid the costs of the
appellant in the earlier suit.. The appellant resisted the
suit on several grounds. However the trial court and the
High Court decided in favour of the first respondent.
Thereupon by special leave the present appeal was filed by
the appellant. The main question that fell for
consideration was whether the suit under appeal was
maintainable when the condition precedent imposed by the
court in the earlier suit-namely, the payment of defendants’
costs by the plaintiff before bringing a fresh suit on the
same cause of action-had not been complied with.
HELD : (i) Rule 1, 0. 23, Code of Civil Procedure empowers
the courts to permit a plaintiff to withdraw from the suit
brought by him with liberty to institute a fresh suit in
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respect of the subject-matter of that suit on such terms as
it thinks fit. The expression ’subject-matter’ is not
defined in the Code. It does not mean property. That
expression has a reference to a right in the property which
the plaintiff seeks to enforce. That expression includes
the cause of action and the relief claimed. Unless the
cause of action and the relief claimed in the second suit
are the same as in the first suit it cannot be said that the
subject-matter of the second suit is the same as in the
previous suit. [213 G-214 B]
(ii) The non-fulfilment of the condition imposed by the
Court at the time of withdrawal of the first suit did not
bar the present suit because the subject-matter of the two
suits was not the same.
In the first suit the first respondent was seeking to
enforce his right to partition and separate possession. In
the present suit he sought to get possession of the suit
properties from a trespasser on the basis of his, title. In
the first suit the cause of action was the division of
status between the first respondent and his adoptive father
and the relief claimed was the conversion of joint
possession into separate possession. In the present suit
the plaintiff was seeking possession of the suit properties
from a trespasser
212
In the first case his cause of action arose on the day he
got separated from his family. In the present suit the
cause of action, namely, the series of transactions which
formed the basis of the title to the suit properties arose
on the death of his adoptive father and mother. [214 B-D]
Mere identity of some of the issues in the two suits did not
bring about an identity of the subject matter in the two
suits. [214 D-E]
The appeal must accordingly be dismissed.
Rakhma Bai v. Mahadeo Narayan, I.L.R. 42 Bom. 1155 and Singa
Reddy v. Subba Reddy, I.L.R. 39 Mad. 987, approved and
applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 615 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
June, 25, 1962 of the Bombay High Court, Nagpur Bench in
Appeal No. 191 of 1956 from original Decree,.
B. R. L. Iyengar, S. K. Mehta, for the appellant.
S. N. Kherdekar, G. L. Sanghi and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for
respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. One Prem Sukh was the owner of the suite pro-
perties. Parvatibai was his wife They had no children.
Prem Sukh gifted some of his properties to his wife on June
14, 1943. Dr. Madan Lal’s (1st respondent in this appeal)
case is that Prem Sukh adopted him on July 12, 1943.
Thereafter it is said that Prem Sukh adopted on April 10,
1946, the appellant Vallabh Das. On April 29, 1946, Dr.
Madan Lal instituted a suit for a declaration that he is the
adopted son of Prem Sukh and for partition and possession of
his share in the family properties. Prem Sukh denied the
adoption pleaded by Dr. Madan Lal. On the other hand he
alleged that Vallabh Das was his adopted son. In view of
that allegation, Vallabh Das was added as a supplemental
defendant in that suit. No relief was claimed against him.
During the pendency of that suit Prem Sukh died. Thereafter
Dr. Madan Lal moved the court to withdraw the suit. He was
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permitted to withdraw the same with liberty to file a fresh
suit on the same cause of action on condition that he pays
the defendants’ costs of that suit before instituting a
fresh suit. Thereafter Parvatibai bequeathed her properties
to Dr. Madan Lal and died soon after. The suit from which
this appeal arises was brought on November 29, 1951 even
before the costs of Vallabh Das (the appellant herein) in
the previous suit had been paid. Vallabh Das resisted the
suit on various grounds. He contended that Dr. Madan Lal
was not adopted by Prem Sukh; even if he
213
had been adopted, that adoption was not valid under the
Benaras School of Hindu law by which the parties were
governed as Madan Lal was a married man on July 12, 1943 and
lastly the suit as brought is not maintainable as Dr. Madan
Lal had not paid the costs due to him under the order in the
previous suit before instituting the present suit. Both the
trial court as well as the High Court in appeal rejected
every one of the contentions taken by Vallabh Das and
decreed the suit as prayed for. Thereafter this appeal was
brought after obtaining special leave from this Court.
The factum of the adoption has been upheld both by the trial
court as well as by the High Court. There is evidence to
support that finding. No convincing circumstance was
brought to our notice requiring us to review the evidence
over again. This Court ordinarily does not interfere with
concurrent findings of fact. We see no justification to
disturb the concurrent finding of fact arrived at by the
trial court and the High Court.
As regards the validity of the adoption, the contention of
Vallabh Das that the adoption was invalid rests on the plea
that on July 12, 1943, Dr. Madan Lal was a married man.
This plea has been negatived by the trial court as well as
by the High Court. They have come to the conclusion that
Dr, Madan Lal was not a married man on that date and that he
was married subsequently. Here again there is no good
ground for us to interfere with the finding of fact reached
by those courts.
The only contention that was seriously pressed before us on
behalf of the appellant was that the suit under appeal is
not maintainable as the condition precedent imposed by the
court in the earlier suit namely the payment of defendants’
costs by the plaintiff before bringing a fresh suit on the
same cause of action had not been complied with. We do not
think that this contention is well founded.
Rule 1, Order 23, Code of Civil Procedure empowers the
courts to permit a plaintiff to withdraw from the suit
brought by him with liberty to institute a fresh suit in
respect of the subject-matter of that suit on such terms as
it thinks fit. The terms imposed on the plaintiff in the
previous suit was that before bringing a fresh suit on the
same cause of action, he must pay the costs of the
defendants. Therefore we have to see whether that condition
governs the institution of the present suit. For deciding
that question we have to see whether the suit from which
this appeal arises is in respect of the same subject-matter
that was in litigation in the, previous suit. The
expression "subject-matter" is not defined in the Civil
Procedure Code. It does not mean property. That expression
has a reference to a right in the property
214
which the plaintiff seeks to enforce. That expression
includes the cause of action and the relief claimed. Unless
the cause of action and the relief claimed in the second
suit are the same as in the first suit, it cannot be said
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that the subject-matter of the second suit is the same as
that in the previous suit. Now coming to the case before us
in the first suit Dr. Madan Lal was seeking to enforce his
right to partition and separate possession. In the present
suit he seeks to get possession of the suit properties from
a trespasser on the basis of his title. In the first suit
the cause of action was the division of status between Dr.
Madan Lal and his adoptive father and the relief claimed was
the conversion of joint possession into separate possession.
In the present suit the plaintiff is seeking possession of
the suit properties from a trespasser. In the first case
his cause of action arose on the day he got separated from
his family. In the present suit the cause of action,
namely, the series of transactions which formed the basis of
his title to the suit properties, arose on the death of his
adoptive father ’and mother. It is true that both in the
previous suit as well as in the present suit the factum and
validity of adoption of Dr. Madan Lal came up for decision.
But that adoption was not the cause of action in the first
nor is it the cause of action in the present suit. It was
merely an antecedent even which conferred certain rights on
him. Mere identity of some of the issues in the two suits
does not bring about an identity of the subject matter in
the two suits. As observed in Rakhma Bai v. Mahadeo
Narayan(1), the expression "subject matter" in Order 23,
Rule 1, Code of Civil Procedure means the series of acts or
transactions alleged to exist giving rise to the relief
claimed. In other words "subject matter" means the bundle
of facts which have to be proved in order to entitle the
plaintiff to the relief claimed by him. We accept as
correct the observations of Wallis C.J. in Singa Reddi v.
Subba Reddi(2), that where the cause of action and the
relief claimed in the second suit are not the same as the
cause of action and the relief claimed in the first suit,
the second suit cannot be considered to have been brought in
respect of the same subject matter as the first suit.
For the reasons mentioned above this appeal fails and the
same is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
(1)I.L.R. 42 Bom.1155.
(2)I.L.R. 39 Mad. 987.
215