Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. HANS RAJ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
YOSODANAND
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/11/1995
BENCH:
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
BENCH:
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 761 1996 SCC (7) 122
JT 1995 (8) 515 1995 SCALE (6)689
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Majmudar, J.
Leave granted.
This appeal is moved by the original plaintiff who had
filed Regular Civil Suit No.223 of 1976 in the court of
learned Munsif Gonda for cancellation of Sale Deed dated
7.4.1975 said to have been executed by her in favour of the
respondent-defendant. The suit came to be dismissed by the
Trial Court. Appellant lost her appeal before the appellate
court and further appeal being second appeal before the High
Court. That is how she has invoked this Court’s jurisdiction
under Article 136 of the Constitution of India. Notice was
ordered to be issued to the respondent on 20th January 1995
by a Division Bench of this Court consisting of S. Mohan ,
J. and one of us S.B. Majmudar, J. It was also stated
therein that notice to go on additional grounds as well. We
will advert to the additional grounds permitted to be urged
by the appellant pursuant to the notice aforesaid a little
later. Respondent has appeared through his learned counsel.
We have heard learned counsel for both the parties. We tried
to explore the possibility of a settlement but as no
settlement could be arrived at despite adjournment of this
petition on number of occasions, ultimately the petition was
finally heard on merits and the appeal pursuant to the same
is being disposed of by this judgment.
A few relevant facts are necessary to be noted at the
outset to appreciate the grievance of the appellant-
plaintiff. According to her she is an illiterate harijan
woman and a childless widow. On the death of her husband who
was a Railway servant she was given employment on
compassionate ground in Railway by Railway authorities. She
had inherited the house which belonged to her husband
situated in Gonda town in Gonda district of Uttar Pradesh.
Respondent, who was known to her came to Gonda town and as
he was in need of accommodation, the appellant accommodated
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him in her house. That happened about three years prior to
filing of the suit from which the present proceedings arise,
that is, somewhere in the year 1973 as the suit was filed in
1976. Thereafter according to the appellant plaintiff her
brother came to Gonda in 1975 and on his persuasion she
agreed to execute a will in favour of her brother’s sons as
she was a childless widow. It is her further case that at
that time respondent was also present and he undertook to
get the necessary will executed by the appellant in favour
of her brother’s sons. But instead of doing so he,
dishonestly and fraudulently told the appellant that before
the will is executed permission of the District Magistrate
will have to be obtained and accordingly made her sign some
blank documents and later on took her to the office of
Registrar for getting the will executed. However, it was
found that instead of getting the will executed the
respondent got a Sale Deed executed in his favour by
practising fraud and misrepresentation on the appellant.
The respondent resisted suit and contended that as the
appellant was a Railway servant residing at Pachperwa
Railway Station and as she was a childless widow she was no
longer in need of the suit house and, therefore, she agreed
to sell the same to him on having accepted a consideration
of Rs.2,500/-.
The learned Trial Judge after permitting the parties to
lead evidence, both oral and documentary, and on an
appreciation of the same came to the conclusion that the
appellant had failed to establish her case of fraud and
misrepresentation on the part of the respondent and that the
Sale Deed was duly executed by the appellant in favour of
the respondent. The suit was, therefore, dismissed. As noted
earlier she failed also in appeal as well as in the second
appeal.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellant vehemently
submitted that the alleged Sale Deed was a result of fraud
and misrepresentation on the part of the respondent. That
she was an illiterate harijan lady and the respondent
misused the trust reposed by her on him and fraudulently got
the document executed as the Sale Deed while she was all the
while under impression that a will was being executed by
her. He submitted that it is true she does not deny her
signature on the document but according to him she never
executed a Sale Deed in favour of the respondent. It was
next contended that she did not receive any consideration
from the respondent and the appellate court has simply
conjectured about the same and which conjecture has been
erroneously accepted by the High Court. He also contended
that the respondent had not examined attesting witness to
the document and that the High Court was in error in taking
the view that proviso to Section 68 of the Indian Evidence
Act was applicable to the facts of the present case. He
lastly submitted placing reliance on the additional grounds
permitted to be raised by this Court while issuing notice on
the Special Leave Petition as aforesaid, that the ground for
cancellation of the Sale Deed was in spirit based on the
defence of non est factum as the appellant’s signature on
the Sale Deed was never made for the purpose of Sale Deed
and consequently the transaction was void. The learned
counsel for the respondent refuted these contentions and
submitted that all the courts below have concurrently found
as a matter of fact the that appellant had willingly
executed the Sale Deed and had taken a consideration of
Rs.2,500/- prior to the execution of Sale Deed and that
there was no question of the transaction suffering from non
est factum.
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According to us the appellant has made out no case for
our interference in this appeal. It may be noted at the
outset that all the courts below have concurrently found
that the appellant had on her own and without any fraud or
misrepresentation on the part of the respondent had executed
the Sale Deed in question. Said finding is based on
appreciation of evidence and is a pure finding of fact which
is not required to be interfered with in this appeal. The
first appellate court in particular has relied upon the
evidence of respondent D.W.1 and his witness Ambika Prasad,
D.W.2 and another neighbour Om Prakash, D.W.3. The court has
also found that the appellant had herself applied to the
District Magistrate for permission to sell the house and
thereafter the Sale Deed was executed. The appellate court
has also noted that the version put forward by the appellant
that she was made to understand that she was executing the
will in favour of her nephews, could not be accepted as her
brother had made no effort to take any interest in getting
the will executed in favour of his sons and that when the
respondent was entrusted with that task in 1975 as alleged
by the plaintiff, it was strange that her brother did not
make any efforts in seeing to it that the respondent got the
will executed accordingly by the appellant, though
appellant’s brother was a school teacher and was not an
ignorant or illiterate person. These are pure findings of
fact which remain well supported by evidence on record. It
must, therefore, be held that there was no misrepresentation
or fraud perpetrated by defendant-respondent in getting the
Sale Deed executed by the appellant.
So far as the question of consideration is concerned,
the first appellate court as a final court of fact has held
that as the appellant had herself permitted the respondent
to stay in her house since about three years prior to the
suit and as he was well known to her there was every
possibility of the respondent having paid Rs.2,500/- to the
appellant even prior to the execution of the Sale Deed. The
High Court also was not inclined to take any contrary view
on this question as the learned Single Judge of the High
Court noted in the impugned judgment that even though in
para 12 of the plaint it is vaguely alleged that the Sale
Deed was without consideration, no issue was framed by the
court and no effort was made by the plaintiff to get such an
issue framed and agitated.
So far as the contention that the plaintiff was an
illiterate harijan woman and was a childless widow and hence
was like a ’pardanashin’ lady goes, it has rightly been
rejected by the High Court by observing that she was already
serving in Railway and there was nothing on record to show
that she was suffering from any ignorance or illiteracy or
mental deficiency and she could not be compared to a
’pardanashin’ lady.
So far as the applicability to the proviso to Section
68 is concerned, it must be noted that there was no occasion
for the respondent to examine any attesting witness to the
document in question as it was a Sale Deed which never
required any attestation and even if some "marginal"
witnesses had attested the document the document did not
attract Section 68 of the Evidence Act which in term applies
to the proof of execution of document required by law to be
attested. It reads as under :
"68. Proof of execution of document
required by law to be attested. - If a
document is required by law to be
attested, it shall not be used as
evidence until shall not be used as
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evidence until one attesting witness at
least has been called for the purpose of
proving its execution, if there be an
attesting witness alive, and subject to
the process of the Court and capable of
giving evidence:
Provided that it shall not be necessary
to call an attesting witness in proof of
the execution of any document, not being
a will, which has been registered in
accordance with the provisions of the
Indian Registration Act, 1908 (16 of
1908), unless its execution by the
person by whom it purports to have been
executed is specifically denied."
"Therefore, Section 68 would not cover such a transaction.
Hence there would remain no occasion to invoke the proviso
to Section 68 with a view to finding out whether the
execution of such a document was specifically denied by the
adverse party or not. Consequently all the main contentions
canvassed before the High Court which are repelled by the
High Court cannot be said to be wrongly repelled.
Now remains the question of additional ground which was
permitted by this Court while issuing the notice in these
proceedings. It is of course true that such additional
ground was permitted to be raised in support of the Special
Leave Petition from which this appeal arises. However, the
said contention raises a mixed question of law and fact,
namely, whether both the parties were ad idem or not and
whether the appellant had put her signature on the document
thinking that it is a will and not a Sale Deed. This is a
question which is linked up with the intention of the
executant for which there should be pleading and evidence.
On this aspect neither any pleading nor any evidence is put
forward by the appellant in courts below. On the contrary,
no such argument has been canvassed before the High Court or
before the first appellate court which was the final court
of facts. So far as the judgment of the first appellate
court is concerned, it has noted that the only point for
determination in the appeal was as to whether the Sale Deed
has been got executed by the defendant in his favour through
fraud and misrepresentation as alleged by the plaintiff-
appellant. Save and except this point no other point appears
to have been urged before the first appellate court.
Consequently on the facts as found on the record and in the
light of the evidence as led by the parties the aforesaid
contention covered by the additional ground cannot be
effectively supported or made out by learned counsel for the
appellant. Even otherwise when it has been concurrently
found by all courts below on evidence on record that the
document was executed as a Sale Deed by the appellant, the
aforesaid additional ground pales into insignificance. For
all these reasons there is no substance in this appeal. It,
therefore, fails and is dismissed. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, however, there will be no order
as to costs.