Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 20182-20184 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Narne Rama Murthy
RESPONDENT:
Ravula Somasundaram & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/08/2005
BENCH:
S. N. Variava & Tarun Chatterjee
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
O R D E R
[with SLP (C) Nos. 20226-20228 of 2003]
Heard parties at great length.
These Special Leave Petitions are against the Judgments of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court dated 21st December, 2001 dismissing the
Appeal filed by the Petitioners and the Judgment dated 4th October,
2002 dismissing the Review Petition.
We see no substance in the contention that there has been non-
appreciation or misinterpretation of evidence. In our view, the Courts
below have correctly analyzed the evidence on record and correctly
concluded, on the basis of material on record, that the Petitioner had
entered into the Agreement to Sell not just on his own behalf but also
on behalf of the other parties. The Courts below also have correctly
recorded that the possession had been taken on behalf of all.
The case sought to be made out that after notice dated 11th
September, 1976, calling upon the Respondents 1 to 8 to pay their
shares, the Petitioner had cut off the other Respondents as they had
not paid their share is not even pleaded. In any case it is not
believeable in view of the various documents wherein the Petitioner
himself has been stating that the purchase had been made on behalf
of all.
We also see no substance in the contention that the Suit was
barred by limitation and that the Courts below should have decided the
question of limitation. When limitation is the pure question of law and
from the pleadings itself it becomes apparent that a suit is barred by
limitation, then, of course, it is the duty of the Court to decide
limitation at the outset even in the absence of a plea. However, in
cases where the question of limitation is a mixed question of fact and
law and the Suit does not appear to be barred by limitation on the face
of it, then the facts necessary to prove limitation must be pleaded, an
issue raised and then proved. In this case the question of limitation is
intricately linked with the question whether the Agreement to Sell was
entered into on behalf of all and whether possession was on behalf of
all. It is also linked with the plea of adverse possession. Once on
facts it has been found that the purchase was on behalf of all and that
the possession was on behalf of all, then, in the absence of any open,
hostile and overt act, there can be no adverse possession and the Suit
would also not be barred by limitation. The only hostile act which
could be shown was the advertisement issued in 1989. The Suit filed
almost immediately thereafter.
We also see no substance in the contention that no consideration
has flowed from the other Respondents. The Petitioner in his own
evidence-in-chief admits that some amounts were paid jointly. This is
clear from the fact that in respect of some payments he uses the word
"I paid" but in respect of others he deposes "we paid". Even
otherwise, the contention that no consideration has flowed is contrary
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to the terms of the Agreement. Also the evidence of D.W. 3 shows
that in 1967, when the Agreement to Sell was entered into, the
Petitioner had no income and no monies. This also belies his claim
that he alone had paid.
We also see no substance in the submission of Mr.
Ramachandran that there is no finding on Issue No. 1. In our view,
once the finding was reached on Issue No. 5 the answer to Issue No. 1
followed. Even otherwise, both these Issues have been dealt with
together and the reasoning given by the trial Court for answering
these two Issues in favour of the Respondents applies to both these
Issues.
In view of the above, we see no infirmity in the impugned
Judgments. We see no reason to interfere. The Special Leave
Petitions stand dismissed with no order as to costs.