Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BECHAN PANDEY & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DULHIN JANKI DEVI & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/03/1976
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
GOSWAMI, P.K.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 866 1976 SCR (3) 555
1976 SCC (2) 286
ACT:
practice and procedure-Old litigation-Must come to an
end-No remand.
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiff-appellants filed a suit against
defendants for a declaration of their title to the land in
question admeasuring 142 bighas. The trial Court dismissed
the suit in respect of land admeasuring 28 acres and decreed
the suit in respect of the remaining land. The plaintiffs’
suit was held to be barred in respect of that land on
account of the doctrine of waiver and acquiescence. The
plaintiffs were also held entitled to recover mesne profits.
On an appeal filed by some of the respondents, the High
Court accepted the appeal and dismissed the suit in its
entirety. The High Court held that it was not shown that the
disputed land was the same as had been purchased by Mina
Kuer in auction sale. The High Court also held that the
plaintiffs’ suit for possession was barred by limitation.
The appellants contended.
(1) The respondent did not dispute that the suit land
was the same which was purchased by Mina Kuer as per sale
certificate dated 26-2-1935.
(2) In any case the matter may be remanded for
determining the above issdue.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: (1) The appellants have failed to establish that
the land in dispute is the same as has been purchased in
auction by Mina Kuer as per sale certificate dated 26-2-
1935. The contention of the appellant that the respondents
did not dispute that the suit land is the same as the one
purchased by Mina Kuer is not correct. The respondents did
deny this fact in their written statement. The land which is
the subject matter of the present litigation is situate in
the State of Bihar on the right bank of the Ganges. Although
the land is subject to river action, the onus to prove that
the land in dispute in Bihar State represents the land in
U.P. which got submerged as a result of river action was
upon the appellants. The appellants have failed to discharge
this onus. [557F, H, 558A, E]
(2) The prayer of the appellants for remand of the case
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is rejected because there was no valid basis for the
assumption of the appellants that the appellants did not
dispute the identity of the land. The suit was filed as long
ago as in January, 1950. During the pendency of this
litigation many of the original plaintiffs and defendants
have died and are now represented by their legal
representatives. It is time that we draw the final curtain
and put an end to this long course of litigation between the
parties. If the passage of time and laws of nature bring to
an end the lives of men and women it would perhaps be the
demand of reason and dictate of prudence not to keep alive
after so many years the strife and conflict started by the
dead. To do so would in effect be defying the laws of nature
and offering a futile resistance to the ravage of time. If
human life has short span, it would be irrational to
entertain a taller claim for disputes and conflicts which
are a manifestation of human frailty. ’the Courts should be
loth to entertain a plea in a case like the present which
would have the effect of condemning succeeding generation of
families to spend major part of their lives in protracted
litigation. [558G-H, 559A-D]
Sant Narain Mathur v. Rama Rrishna Mission A.I.R. 1974
S.C. 2241 reiterated.
556
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1432 of
1968,
(From the judgment and decree dated the 26-10-1959 of
the Patna High Court in appeal from original decree No. 280
of 1953.)
Sarjoo Prasad with D. Goburdhun, for the appellants.
V. S. Desat with D. P. Mukherjee for respondents 3, 4,
S, 6(a) 14 and is.
Ex parte, for respondents 1, 2, 6, 7 to 13 & 16-17.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHANNA, J.-The plaintiff-appellants field a suit in the
Court of Subordinate Judge against 41 defendants for a
declaration of their title to land measuring 142 bighas, 17
kathas described in the schedule to the plaint situated in
village Shivpur Diar in District Shahbad. Prayer was also
made for delivery of possession of the land and for mesne
profits amounting to Rs. 4,100. The trial court dismissed
the suit in respect of land measuring 28.36 acres out of
plot No. 3863/ 41. Suit in respect of the remaining land was
decreed. The plaintiffs were also held entitled to recover
mesne profits from defendants who might be found in
possession of the land decreed. On appeal by defendants 3,
7, 12 and 14 the Patna High Court accepted the appeal and
dismissed the suit in its entirety. The plaintiffs have come
up in appeal to this Court against the judgment and decree
of the High Court on certificate granted under article 133
(1) (a) of the Constitution.
Village Shivpur Diar consists of five Mahals, Shivpuur
Diar Nambari, Shivpur Diar Gangbarar Shurnali, Shivpur Diar
Gangbarar Janubi, Shivpur Diar Sarju Barar and Shivpur Diar
Naubarar. Each of the two Mahals, Shivpur ’Diar Gangbarar
Chummily and Shivpur Diar Nambari has 18 pattis.
Proprietorship rights in each patti were calculated as 16
annas. One Brahmdeo Singh had a share of S annas 4 pies in
patti Bhrighunath Singh in the above Mahals. He also held
different shares in the other pattis of the two Mahals.
Brahmdeo Singh mortgaged with possession his share in the
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said lands in favour of Sitaram Sahu and Sheogulam Sahu by
means of several mortgage deeds. As the mortgagees were
dispossessed from some of the lands mortgaged in their
favour, they filed a suit for recovery of the mortgage
amounts. Final decree was awarded in that suit on June 13,
1925. In execution of that decree proprietary interest of
Brahmdeo Singh in Mahal Shivpur Diar Nambari and Mahal
Shivpur Diar Gangbarar Shumali were auctioned on June 15,
1932 and was purchased by Maine Kuer, widow of Sitaram Sahu
mortgagee. Sale certificate was granted to Maine Kuer
auction purchaser on February 26, 1935. She got delivery of
possession of the land sold in her favour on March and 20,
1935. On November 9, 1936 Shea Prasad Singh, who held
general power of attorney from Maina Kuer, executed a patta
(lease) for seven years in respect of 135 bighas, 15 kathas
out of the land purchased by Maina Kuer in favour of Mahadeo
Rai and others. On September 27, 1940 Sheo Prasad Singh
557
executed on behalf of Maina Kuer a deed for perpetual lease
of land measuring 134 bighas, 17 kathas out of the land
purchased by her in favour of plaintiffs 1 to 9, 14, 16 to
18 and father of plaintiffs 10 to 13. Three days later on
September 30, 1940 Sheo Prasad Singh executed another deed
for perpetual lease in respect of the remaining land
measuring 8 bighas in favour of plaintiff No. 15. On May 16,
1941 Mahadeo Rai and others, in whose favour lease deed of
the land had been executed for seven years, relinquished
their rights under the lease in favour of the plaintiffs. On
July 13, 1942 Maina Kuer sold her proprietary interest which
she had acquired under the auction sale lo Rajendra Prasad
Singh and others.
The plaintiffs in whose favour deed for perpetual lease
of the land purchased by Maina Kuer had been executed filed
the present suit in January 1950 against the defendants, on
the allegation that defendants 1 to 18 had taken wrongful
possession of the land. Prayer was also made, as mentioned
above, for recovery of Rs. 4,100 as mesne pretty. It was
also mentioned by the plaintiffs that proceedings under
section 145 of the Code of Criminal Procedure in respect of
the land in dispute had been initiated but as those
proceedings were dropped the plaintiffs had to seek redress
by means of the present suit.
The suit was resisted by the defendants who denied the
title of the plaintiffs or Maina Kuer to the land in
dispute. It was also stated that the said land had not been
partitioned. Plea was also taken that the defendants had all
along remained in possession of the land and the plaintiffs
suit was barred by limitation.
The trial court dismissed the suit in respect of 28.36
acres of land on the ground that the defendants had built
their houses on that land. The plaintiffs suit was held to
be barred in respect of that land on account of the doctrine
of waiver and acquiescence. The suit in respect of the
remaining land, as already mentioned, was decreed.
on appeal the High Court held that the plaintiffs had
failed to prove their title to the land in dispute. The land
in dispute, it was held, was not shown to be the same as had
been purchased by Maina Kuer in auction sale. The plaintiffs
suit for possession of the land was also held to be barred
by limitation.
In appeal before us Mr. Sarjoo Prasad on behalf of the
appellants had made a number of contentions, but in our
opinion, it is not necessary to go into all of them for the
appeal is liable to be dismissed on the short ground that
the plaintiff-appellants have failed to establish that the
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land in dispute is the same as had been purchased in auction
by Maina Kuer as per sale certificate dated February 26,
1935 and was thereafter leased on her behalf in favour of
the appellants as per two lease deeds dated September 27 and
30, 1940. It is not disputed that if on the above view of
the matter the appellants are found to have not proved their
title to the land in dispute, the question of going into
other contentions would not arise. Mr. Sarjoo Prasad,
however, sub- mist that the defendant-respondents did not
dispute in the trial court that the land in dispute was the
same which had been purchased by Maina Kuer in auction sale
and had been leased in favour of the
558
plaintiffs. We find it difficult to accede to this
submission. In para 15 of their written statement defendants
2, 3, 12 and 14 stated as under:
"That Maina Kuer was not’ at all auction purchaser
of the property in dispute nor was she a proprietor nor
Zamindar nor was she at any time in possession and
occupation of the lands in dispute. The allegation of
the plaintiff in respect of these facts are altogether
wrong."
In the same language is couched para 15 of the written
statement of defendant No. 7 who filed a separate written
statement. It was incumbent in view of the averments in para
15 of the written statements for the plaintiff-appellants to
establish by clear evidence that the land in dispute was the
same which had been purchased in auction sale by Maina Kuer
and had been subsequently leased by her in favour of the
appellants. The learned Judges of the High Court discussed
the or and documentary evidence which had been adduced in
the case and came to the conclusion that there was no cogent
material to show that the land in dispute was the same which
and been purchased by Maina Kuer and had been leased by her
in favour of the appellants. After hearing Mr. Sarjoo Prasad
we find no sufficient ground to take a different view. The
land which had been purchased by Maina Kuer in the auction
sale as per sale certificate dated February 26, 1935 was
situated in Bihar district in the State o Uttar Pradesh on
the left bank of the Ganges. The land which is the subject
matter of the present that land in situated in Shahbad
district in the State of Bihar on the right bank of the
Ganges. Although the land is subject to river action, the
onus to prove that the land in dispute in Shahbad district
represents the land which got submerged as a result of the
river action in Bihar district was upon the plaintiff-
appellants. The appellants have failed as held by the High
Court, to discharge this onus.
Mr. Sarjoo Prasad took us through the evidence of Ram
Pachise Lall (DW 3) and Nanku Lall Singh (DW 5), but the
evidence of these witnesses is far from proving that the
land in dispute is the same as was purchased by Maina Kuer.
The evidence of Raghunath Prasad (PW 6), to which also
passing reference was made, is not sufficient to connect the
land in dispute with sale certificate dated February 26,
1935.
Prayer has also been made by Mr. Sarjoo Prasad for the
remand of the case to the trial court as the plaintiff-
appellants were laboring under the impression that the
defendant-respondents had not disputed that the land in
dispute was the same as had been purchased by Maina Kuer. It
is urged that because of that impression, material which
could have clearly proved that the land in dispute was the
same as had been purchased by Maina Kuer could not be
brought on the record. We find it difficult to accede to
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this prayer. As already pointed out above, the contesting
defendants clearly stated in their written state meets that
Maina Kuer was not the auction purchaser of the land in
dispute. In view of that unequivocal averment, there was no
vaIid
559
basis for the assumption or the impression under which
plaintiff-appeliants are stated to have labored. Apart from
that, we find that the suit out of which the present appeal
has arisen was filed as long ago as January 1950. From the
title of the appeal we find that many of the original
plaintiffs and defendants have during this period of more
than a quarter of century departed and are no more in the
land of the living, having bowed as it were to the
inexorable law of nature. They are now represented by their
legal representatives. To remand the suit to the trial court
would necessarily have the effect of keeping alive the
strife between the parties and prolonging this long drawn
litigation by another round of legal battle in the trial
court and thereafter in appeal. It is time, in our opinion,
that we draw the final curtain and put an end to this long
meandering course of litigation between the parties. If the
passage of time and the laws of nature bring to an end the
lives of men and women, it would perhaps be the demand of
reason and dictate of prudence not to keep alive after so
many years the strife and conflict started by the dead. To
do so would in effect be defying the laws of nature and
offering a futile resistance to the ravage of time. If human
life has a short span, it would be irrational to entertain a
taller claim for disputes and conflicts which are a
manifestation of human frailty. The courts should be loth to
entertain a plea in a case like the present which would have
the effect of con- damning succeeding generation of families
to spend major part of their lives in protracted litigation.
It may be appropriate in the above context to reproduce what
was said in the case of Sant Narain Mafhur Ors. v. Rama
Krishna-Mission & ors.(1):
It is time, in our opinion, that we draw the final
curtain on this long drawn litigation and not allow its
embers to shoulder for a further length of time, more
so when the principal contestants have all departed
bowing as it were to the inexorable law of nature. one
is tempted in this context to refer to the observations
of Chief Justice Crete in a case concerning peerage
claim made after the death without issue of the Earl of
oxford. Said the learned Chief Justice:
Time hath its revolutions; there must be a
period and an end to all temporal things-an end of
names, and dignities and whatsoever is terrne, and why
not of De Vere? For where is Bohun? Where is Mortimer ?
Where is Mortimer ? Why, which is more and most of all,
where is Plantagenet ? They are all entombed in the
urns and sepulchers of mortality."
What was said about the inevitable end of all mortal
beings, however eminent they may be, is equally true of
the affairs of mortal beings, their disputes and
conflicts, their ventures in the field of love and
sport, their achievements and failures for essentially
they all have a stamp of mortality on them."
(1) A.T.R.1974 S.C.2241.
560
one feels tempted to add that if life like a dome of many
colored glass stains the white radiance of eternity, so do
the doings and conflicts of mortal beings till death
tramples them down.
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The appeal fails and is dismissed but in the
circumstances without costs.
P.H.P Appeal dismissed.
561