Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 989 of 2008
PETITIONER:
Shri V.J. Thomas
RESPONDENT:
Shri Pathrose Abraham & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/02/2008
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 989 OF 2008
(Arising out of SLP (C) NO. 20338 of 2005)
S.B. SINHA, J
1. Leave granted.
2. A question of some importance as to whether a third party can be
impleaded in a suit filed under Order I Rule 8 of the Code of Civil Procedure
is involved in this appeal which arises out of the judgment and order dated
30th June, 2005 passed by a Learned Single Judge of the Kerala High Court
in CRP No. 272 of 2004 dismissing the revision application filed by the
appellant herein challenging the order dated 17.10.2003 passed by
Additional sub Court, Kottayam.
3. The basic fact of the matter is not in dispute.
4. Appellant herein filed Original Suit No. 364 of 1997 in the Court of
Additional Sub Court, Kottayam, for declaration of his title and for
possession of the suit property. A prayer therein was made for restraining
the defendants who were three in number (Respondent Nos. 3 to 5 herein)
from interfering with his right to enjoy the property by entering upon it or
using it as a pathway as if it was a public pathway. A purported publication
was also made in a newspaper purported to be in terms of Order I Rule 10
of the Code of Civil Procedure.
5. Respondent Nos. 3 to 5 herein did not appear in the suit as a result
whereof, an ex-parte decree was passed on 26.3.1998. An application for
execution of the said decree was filed. Respondent Nos. 1 and 2 herein in
the said execution case filed five applications, the details whereof are as
under:
I.A.No.965/2002- Under Order 9 Rule 13, for
setting aside the exparte decree.
I.A.No.966/2002- For Condonation of Delay
I.A.No.967/2002- Application for Stay of all the
proceedings in the execution.
I.A.No.968/2002- Application filed by the
respondent no.1 for permission
to contest the suit and to add
himself in the array of parties
as additional defendant No.1.
I.A.No.969/2002- Application filed by respondent
No.2 for permission to contest
the suit and for making her as
additional defendant No.5.
6. The Executing Court allowed I.A No. 968 of 2002 and 969 of 2002
impleading respondent Nos. 1and 2 as defendant No. 5 and 7 in the suit.
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The Revision Application filed thereagainst has been dismissed by a Single
Judge of the High Court by reason of the impugned judgment.
7. Mr. V.J. Francis, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant,
submitted that a suit, wherein notice under Order I Rule 8 of Code of Civil
Procedure has been issued, could not have been reopened at the instance of
the respondent Nos.1 and 2 herein without allowing their application for
condonation of delay and for setting aside the ex parte decree. It was urged
that no case has been made out for condonation of delay as the applications
for setting aside the ex parte decree was filed after more than four years
from the passing thereof.
Respondent Nos. 1 and 2, in any event, it was contended, could not
have represented the panchayat and, thus, the impugned order is
unsustainable.
8. Mr. M.T. George, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent, however, would support the impugned judgment.
9. The suit land measuring 450 ft. x 4 ft. starts from Vattachalpady
junction of Manarcadu-Thengana PWD road and ends at
Kuttiyilpadyperumpanachi Panchayat road on the east.
Respondent Nos. 1 and 2 were not parties to the suit. They, in their
applications, inter alia, contended that the appellant and the respondent Nos.
3 to 5 herein are neighbours and close associates. The suit was a collusive
one. Leave of the Court under Order 1 Rule 8 was obtained on a
misrepresentation.
10. A specific contention was also raised that plaintiff-petitioner
deliberately and intentionally had not impleaded the users of the pathway in
the said suit. It was stated that publication of the notice purported to be
under Order 1 Rule 8 CPC was made is the newspapers which did not have
wide circulation in the locality.
11. The High Court has, inter alia, relying upon the decision of the
Madras High Court in Swaminatha Mudaliar vs. Kumaraswami Chettiar
and others [(1923) 44 MLJ 282] accepted the said contentions of the
respondent, holding :
"It may be unusual to bring fresh plaintiffs
on the record after a decree has been passed; but
there is authority for doing so under Order I Rule
10.
Order 1 Rule 8 expressly permits any person
on whose behalf a representative suit is instituted
to apply to the Court to be brought on the record,
and the words of this rule are not limited, as they
are by Order 1 Rule 10 by the purpose being
expressed as that of adjudication on the questions
arising in the suit. "
12. The plaint is not before us. The application purported to have been
filed by the applicant under Order 1 Rule 8 is also not before us. On what
basis, the respondent Nos. 3 to 5 were impleaded in the suit and in which
capacity, thus, is not known.
13. A suit filed in terms of Order 1 Rule 8 should ordinarily be premised
on the ground that the defendants represent the parties interested in the suit
Defendants in such a suit, _________, must be able to represent the public in
general, but no personal decree can be passed against them. To what extent
the original defendants were interested in the suit property at least in respect
of the portion thereof is not known.
14. A litigant may execute a decree which was obtained for the benefit of
the people of the locality but if he intends to execute a decree which was
obtained for his own benefit, those who would be affected thereby should
ordinarily be made parties to the suit. Similarly, if a village pathway is the
subject matter of the suit on the premise that it is the personal property of the
plaintiff, those who use the said pathway or at least have lands adjacent
thereto should ordinarily be impleaded as parties. In the latter case, like the
present one, applying the legal principles, as noticed hereinbefore, we are of
the opinion that a decree which has been obtained by suppression of fact or
collusively would not be executable against those who were not parties to
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the suit.
15. Reliance has been placed by Mr. Francis on Chairman, Tamil Nadu
Housing Board, Madras v. T.N. Ganapathy [(1990) 1 SCC 608] wherein the
question which arose for consideration centered around the maintainability
of the suit at the instance of the plaintiffs who belonged to the category of
low income group against Housing Board for a permanent injunction from
demanding and calculating from the allottees any additional price, was
answered in the following terms :
"Coming to the relevant circumstances in the
present case, it will be seen that all the allotments
in Ashok Nagar were made under the same scheme
and all the relevant facts are common. The basis
of the impugned demand of the appellant is equally
applicable to all the allottees and the plea of the
plaintiff is available to all of them. The trial court
was, therefore, perfectly right in permitting the
plaintiff to proceed under Order I, Rule 8 of the
Code of Civil Procedure. Nobody in this situation
can complain of any inconvenience or injustice.
On the other hand, the appellant is being saved
from being involved in unnecessary repeated
litigation."
16. As indicated hereinbefore, we have no idea as to what was the nature
of interest was claimed by the Original Defendant No. 1 to 3 (Respondent
Nos. 3 to 5) in the suit land. In any event, whether the service of notice was
proper would also be the subject matter of an enquiry by the learned trial
court. It has also to be seen as to whether the notice in terms of Order I Rule
10 of the Code was published in a newspaper having a wide circulation in
the locality.
17. In Union of India & Ors. v. DinanathShantaram Karekar & Ors. [1998
(4) SCALE 659], this Court held :
"So far as the service of show cause notice is
concerned, it also cannot be treated to have been
served. Service of this notice was sought to be
effected on the respondent by publication in a
newspaper without making any earlier effort to
serve him personally by tendering the show cause
notice either through the office peon or by
registered post. There is nothing on record to
indicate that the newspaper in which the show-
cause notice was published was a popular
newspaper which was expected to be read by the
public in general or that it had wide circulation in
the area or locality where the respondent lived.
The show-cause notice cannot, therefore, in these
circumstances, be held to have been served on the
respondent. In any case, since the very initiation of
the disciplinary proceedings was bad for the reason
that the charge sheet was not served, all
subsequent steps and stages, including the issuance
of the show-cause notice would be bad."
In Church of North India v. Lavajibhai Ratanjibhai & Ors. [(2005) 10
SCC 760], it was observed
"71. \005.. bars a suit to enforce a right on behalf of
a public trust. C.N.I. got itself registered as a
public trust in the year 1981. A suit evidently was
filed by the plaintiffs in the year 1980 because
C.N.I. was not then entitled to file a suit. It may be
true that the suit was filed under Order 1, Rule 8 of
the Code of Civil Procedure but therein the
question as to whether the Appellant herein, being
a registered trust became entitled to the properties
of Brethren Church could not have been gone into.
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What is prohibited is to enforce a right on behalf of
a public trust. When the plaintiffs intended to
enforce a right on behalf of the Appellant, the suit
was evidently not maintainable."
18. If for the purpose of examination of the said question, amongst others,
the executing court has allowed the applications for impleadment of the
respondent Nos. 1 and 3 herein as defendant No. 4 and 5, so as to enable
them to press their applications for setting aside the ex-parte decree upon
condonation of delay; we do not see any reason to interfere therewith in
exercise of our discretionary jurisdiction under Article 136 of the
Constitution of India.
19. For the reasons above mentioned, there is no merit in this application
which is accordingly dismissed with costs. Counsel’s fee assessed at Rs.
10,000/- (Rupees ten thousand only).