21 February 1997
Supreme Court
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RAM SAKAL SINGH Vs MOSAMAT MONAKO DEVI (DEAD) & ORS.

Bench: K. RAMASWAMY,S. SAGHIR AHMAD
Case number: Appeal (civil) 1441 of 1986


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PETITIONER: RAM SAKAL SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MOSAMAT MONAKO DEVI (DEAD) & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       21/02/1997

BENCH: K. RAMASWAMY, S. SAGHIR AHMAD

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                          O R D E R      This appeal  by special leave arises from the judgement of the  Patna High Court, 1984, dismissing the second appeal in limine at the admission stage.      The undisputed  facts are  that one  Sheo Charan Singh, the common ancestor, left behind him two sons, Lal Singh and Shanker Singh.  Shanker Singh  left behind  his son  Banjhoo Singh who  died issueless. Lal Singh had seven sons by name, Kirtarth Singh, Padarath Singh, Ujagir Singh, Sukhari Singh, Ratan  Singh,   Budhan  Singh   and  Mangru  Singh.  We  are concerned, in  this litigation,  with Sukhari  Singh of this branch. It  is   now an admitted case that Sukhari Singh had executed  a   gift  deed  with  respect  to  the  properties mentioned in  Schedule A  of the  plaint in  favour  of  the appellant, a  stranger to  the family,  on December 4, 1995. Thereafter, he  cancelled the  gift deed  by another deed on April 4, 1960. He thereafter exceed a sale deed in favour of the first  respondent on  November 22,  1970. Therefore, the first respondent filed a suit in 1995 for a declaration that the gift  deed dated  December 4,  1959 was  obtained by the appellant by  playing fraud on Sukhari Singh and, therefore, it was  voidable. He  also sought a declaration that Sukhari Singh had  validly executed  , after  its cancellation,  the sale  deed   in  his  favour.  He  also  sought  decree  for possession of  the Schedule-A  properties. Pending the suit, the notification  under Section 3 of the Bihar Consolidation of Holding  and Prevention  of Fragmentation  Act, 1956 (for short, the  ’Act’) was  issued  in  the  year  1974-75  and, thereafter, an  objection was  raised, a part from the other pleading, that the suit stood abated by operation of Section 4(1)(c) of  the Act.  It was also pleaded that Sukhari Singh had validly  executed gift  deed i n favour of the appellant on December  4, 1959  and, therefore,  the sale in favour of the respondent  was not  binding on  him.  The  trial  Court upheld the contention of the appellant but issue No.4 on the question of  fraud, was  decided against  the appellant.  On appeal, the  District Judge  decided both the points against the appellant  and held  that the  document, the  gift  deed December 4, 1959, is voidable and that the civil Court alone could give  declaration. As  a  result,  the  suit  had  not

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abated. The  appellant Court  also recorded  a finding  that gift deed  was obtained  by playing fraud and, therefore, it was voidable document. Accordingly, the declarations came to be made.  The suit  was decreed  on that  basis.  As  stated earlier, the  High Court  has dismissed the second appeal in limine. Thus, this appeal by special leave.      Shri Ranjit  Kumar, learned  counsel for the appellant, with his  usual thorough  preparation  and  clarity  of  his submission,  raises  three-fold  contention.  Under  Section 4(1)(c) of  the Act,  the suit stands abated and, therefore, the civil  Court was  devoid of jurisdiction to proceed with the trial  to decree the suit. He also contends that Sukhari Singh, having  gifted over  the undivided share in the joint family property,  had no  right to  alienate the property by way of  sale in  favour of the respondent. So that sale deed itself is invalid in law. All these questions touch upon the properties held  by Sukhari Singh  which should be gone into by the consolidation authorities but not by the civil court. The contentions  are resisted  by  Shri  Rakesh  K.  Khanna, learned counsel  for the  respondents. He  argues  that  the consistent view  of the  Patna  High  Court  is  that  if  a document is wholly void, the civil Court has no jurisdiction to go  into its  legality. But  if the document is voidable, unless the civil Court gives a declaration that the document is voidable,  Consolidation authorities  get no jurisdiction to decide  the matter.  As a  consequence, civil Court alone has the  jurisdiction to  decide the  dispute and  give  the declaration,  as  sough  for.  He  also  contends  that  the question whether  Sukhari Singh  had divested himself of the joint interest had in the joint family, was not an issue nor is any  finding in  this  behalf  recorded.  Therefore,  the question cannot  be gone into in this appeal. He has further stated that in view of the finding recorded by the appellate court that the gift deed executed in favour of the appellant was voidable,  Sukhari Singh  had power  to dispose  of  his property. The  sale made  in favour  of  the  respondent  is valid.  He   further  contends   that  pending  appeal,  the respondent Nos.  7,8 and  15 have died and an application to delete them  from the  array having  been filed,  the appeal stands abated.      In view  of the  respective  contentions,  the  primary question which  arises for  consideration  is:  whether  the civil Court  has jurisdiction  to go  into the  question  of declaration that  the gift deed is void of voidable? Section 4 of the Act postulates thus:      "The effect  of notification  under      Section 3(1)  of the  Act- Upon the      publication  of   the  notification      under sub-section  (1) of Section 3      in   the   official   Gazette   the      consequences,  as  hereinafter  set      forth,  shall,   subject   to   the      provisions of  this Act,  from  the      date specified  in the notification      till the close of the consolidation      operation, ensue  in  the  area  to      which  the   notification  relates,      namely :-      (c)  every   proceedings  for   the      correction  of  records  and  every      suit and  proceedings in respect of      declaration of  rights or  interest      in any  land lying  in the  area or      for declaration  or adjudication of      any other  right in regard to which

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    proceedings  can  or  ought  to  be      taken under this Act, ending before      any court  or authority  whether of      the first  instance or  of  appeal,      reference or revision, shall, on an      order being  passed in  that behalf      by the  court or  authority  before      whom such  suit or  proceedings  is      pending stand abated."      As a consequence of the publication of the notification under Section  3(1) of  the Act,  every proceedings  for the correction of  record and  every  suit  and  proceedings  in respect of  declaration of  right or  interest in  any  land lying in  the area or for declaration of adjudication of any other right in regard to such proceedings can or ought to be taken under  the Act,  pending before any court or authority whether in  the first  instance or  in appeal,  reference or revision ,  shall, on  an order being passed, in that behalf by  the   Court  or  authority  before  whom  such  suit  or proceedings  is   pending,  stand   abated.  Therefore,  the prohibition of the civil court to proceed further, after the publication of  the notification  under Section 3(1), was in respect of  the declaration  of a  right or  interest in any land lying in an area or for the declaration or adjudication of any  other right  in regard  to which  proceedings can or ought to  be taken  under the  Ac. All  pending  proceedings before the  Court, either  at the  trial  or  in  appeal  or reference or  revision, shall  sand abated,  unlike in  U.P. Act, only  on an  order being  passed in  that behalf by the concerned Court  or  authority  before  whom  such  suit  or proceedings is  pending. The  next question  is: as  to when Consolidation authorities get jurisdiction to declare that a if deed  executed by  a holder  of a  land under  the Act is obtained by  fraud or  collusion etc.?  This controversy was considered by this Court in Gorakh Nath Dube vs. Hari Narain Singh &  Ors. [(1974) 1 SCR 339]. After consideration of the entire case law in that behalf, this court had held thus:      "We think that a distinction can be      made between cases where a document      is wholly  or partially  invalid so      that if  can be  disregarded by any      court or authority and one where it      has to be actually set aside before      it can  cease to have legal effect.      An adjudication  on the   effect to      such a  purported alienation  would      be  necessarily   implied  in   the      decision  of  a  dispute  involving      conflicting  claims  to  rights  or      interests in  land  which  are  the      subject  matter   of  consolidation      proceedings.  The   existence   and      quantum of rights claimed or denied      will have  to be  declared  by  the      consolidation   authorities   which      would be deemed to be invested with      jurisdiction,  by   the   necessary      implication  of   their   statutory      powers  to   adjudicate  upon  such      rights and  interests in  land,  to      declare such documents effective or      ineffective, but,  where there is a      document the  legal effect of which      can only  be taken  away by setting      it aside  or its  cancellation,  it

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    could    be    urged    that    the      consolidation authorities  have  no      power  to  cancel  the  deed,  and,      therefore, it  must be  held to  be      binding on  them so  long as  it is      not cancelled by a court having the      power to cancel it.      On the  facts in that case since the declaration of one half  share   in  the   property  was   matter  within   the jurisdiction of  the Consolidation authority, this Court had held that the suit stood abated.      In Paras  Singh V/s. Baikunth Singh [1979 PLJR (Vol.12) 567] and  Tarkeshwar Upadhya   Anr. V/s. Mahesh kehar & Ors. [AIR 1981 Patna 348], the learned Single Judge had held that a suit  for cancellation of the deed on the ground that they were executed by an insane person would stand abated. If the notification under  Section 4(c)  of the Bihar Consolidation of Holdings  and Prevention  of Fragmentation Act is already published, the  civil court  has no jurisdiction. A Division Bench in Jiwan Pandey & Anr. vs, Mahendra Rai [1985 PLJ 686] had held  that when the decree is voidable but not void, the suit does  not get abated since the civil Court alone has to grant declaratory  relief to  avoid  the  decree.  Later,  a reference was  made to  the Full bench decision of the Patna High Court  for resolving  the conflict. Following the ratio in Gorakh  Nath Dube’s  case  (supra),  the  full  Bench  in Sheoratan Chamar  & Ors.  V/s. Ram  Murat Singh  [1985  BLJR (Vol.33) 45] had held in para 14 that all cases where lis is rested wholly  would abate  if such document is void. But no such abatement  would result if the same is voidable and the same has  to be  set aside  by the  court for  adjudication. Therein also the voidity or voidability of the gift deed was in question.  Having found  the gift deed voidable, the full bench held  that found the gift deed voidable. The same view was reiterated  by  another  Division  Bench  in  Dharmanath Pandey &  Ors. V/s. Dhumun Manjhu & Ors. [1985 BLJR (Vol.33) 110]; Jaleshwar  Tiwary &  Ors. V/s.  Suresh Tiwary  &  Ors. [1986 BLJR  (Vol.34)378] and  Shivaji Rai vs. Rajendra Rai & Anr. [(1993) 1(Vol.44) BLJR 258].      It is thus settled law that if the document is invalid, it can  be disregarded  by the court or the authority and it may proceed  to consider  declaration or adjudication of any other right  in regard  to which proceedings can or ought to be taken  under the  Act. Since  we have in the present case proceedings before  the Consolidation  authorities, it would necessarily imply in the adjudication of a dispute involving conflicting claims in respect of rights or interests in land which is  subject  matter  of  the  proceedings  before  the Consolidation authorities  but if  a dispute relating to the land was  in respect  of the  land  and  was  based  upon  a document where its validity is impugned, it is for the court to declare  such document  effective or  ineffective and the legal effect  would hinge  upon such  a  declaration.  Based thereon, if  the  document  requires  to  be  set  aside  or cancelled, the  Consolidation authorities under the Act have no power  to cancel  such deed.  Therefore, the  proceedings would not  abate. As  held, if  the document  is  void,  the proceedings pending in any court or authority stand abated.      Therefore, the civil Court gets jurisdiction to declare the  document   to  be   voidable.   In   consequence,   the notification under  Section 3(1) does not have the effect of abatement under  Section 4(1)(c) of the Act. If the document is void,  there would  be no need to set aside or cancel the document/deed.  Then   the  Consolidation   authorities  get exclusive jurisdiction  to deal  with all questions relating

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to declaration  of a  right or  interest in  any land or for declaration or adjudication of any other right  in regard to such proceedings.  The Court  or authority  before whom  any suit  etc.  is  pending  should  record  that  the  suit  or proceedings have  abated leaving  it to the parties to avail of the remedy under the Act.      The appellate Court has gone into the question of fraud and recorded the finding thus:      "Having   learnt   about   such   a      fraudulent  deed  of  gift  Sukhari      Singh cancelled  it by another deed      dated  4.4.  1960.  But,  defendant      No.1 somehow,  obtained the deed of      gift to  him. Defendant  No.1 never      came   in   possession   over   the      properties covered  by the  deed of      gift properties covered by the deed      of gift and the  same are coming in      possession of  the  plaintiffs  and      the other defendants.’      ".......even if  it si held that it      is a  voidable document  because of      fraud and undue influence practiced      upon Sukhari mahto, it must be held      that the plaintiffs are entitled to      get the  deed to gift set aside and      cancelled.      That, although  the scribe  of  the      deed   of    gift   and   attesting      witnesses Ram  Prabesh are deed but      the attesting  witness  Ram  Bachan      and the identifying witness Dukdama      as also  serval  other  person  who      have been  named by  D.W. 2 and who      are alive  and who are said to have      seen the  Rasid Behi  have not been      examined and,  therefore, competent      person   who    could    therefore,      competent    person    who    could      therefore,  competent   person  who      could have  testified regarding the      execution of  the deed  of gift and      exchange  of  the  equivalent  have      been purposely  withheld, which  in      circumstances   pointing   at   the      fraudulent nature  of the  deed  of      gift in question.      In the instant case, I have already      shown  that   the  plaintiffs  have      alleged that the executant, namely,      Sukhari was slow of under standing,      fraud was  practiced  in  obtaining      the  deed   of  gift   and  he  was      subjected   to    cohesion,   undue      influence and misrepresentation and      had he  known about the true nature      of the  document he  would not have      executed that  deed. The plaintiffs      have not  denied that  Sukhari  had      executed the  deed of gift in suit.      An  alternative   relief  has  been      asked for  the cancellation  of the      deed of  gift in  the suit as it is      illegal and invalid. The appellants      have cited 1981 Bihar Law Judgments

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    page 112  (Srimati  Surajmani  Devi      Vs. Srimati Janaki Devi and others)      in support of their contention that      there a  suit has  been filed  of r      declaration of  title on the ground      that the registered deed of gift is      illegal  and  void  on  account  of      fraud practiced upon the executant,      it cannot  be held  to be  void  ab      initio and  it si voidable document      and has  to be  set  aside  on  the      ground of fraud. In my opinion, the      facts of  the case  cited above are      similar to the facts of the present      suit under consideration, and, upon      the allegations  in the  plaint the      deed of gift is not a void document      rather it  is voidable document and      it is  held accordingly. That being      so, the  suit shall not abate under      Section  4(1)(c)   of   the   Bihar      Consolidation   of   Holdings   and      prevention  of  Fragmentation  Act,      1956 as  decide in the above quoted      decision in  Srimati  Devi’s  case.      Accordingly, it  is held  that  the      suit  has   not  abated   and   the      decision    of    the    Additional      Subordinate Judge in this regard is      reversed and set aside.      In the  result, the suit is decreed      and the  plaintiffs are entitled to      recover  possession   of  the  suit      lands.  The   deed  of  gift  dated      4.12.1959 is  also hereby cancelled      and it is held to be not binding on      the plaintiffs  and the  defendants      other than the contesting defendant      No.1. The  title of  the plaintiffs      with respect to the suit properties      is  hereby   declared.  Thus,   the      appeal is  allowed on contest, but,      in the  circumstances of  the  case      without cost of this appeal."      In view  of the  above finding recorded after elaborate consideration, the  District Judge  held that  the gift deed dated  December   4,  1959   was  voidable.  Therefore,  the declaration  that   the  gift   deed  is  voidable  is  well justified. The  contention that  it is  void  is  devoid  of force. As  a consequence,  the civil  Court had jurisdiction and the  suit had  not abated.  The question whether Sukhari Singh had  only undivided  joint interest in the coparcenary and that  he had  denuded himself  of the  same after he had executed another  gift deed  in favour of one of his agates, was not  in issue  before the  trial Court  or the appellate Court nor  is any  finding recorded  to that  effect.  As  a result, we  cannot hijack  the procedure  and  go  into  the question  for  the  first  time.  Therefore,  Sukhari  Singh having, admittedly,  cancelled the  gift  deed  axecuted  in favour of  the appellant,  which was  found to be a voidable document, the  respondent had  got the title to the property under the  sale deed.  As  such  the  declaration  of  title granted in  his favour  is legal  and valid. It is true that the trick  of the  pleading and  camouflaging of  the relief cannot conclusively  confer the  jurisdiction on  the  civil

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Court  or   the  Consolidation   authorities  to   decide  a particular dispute  in question.  The substratum  of the lis has to  be considered  and  decided  on  the  basis  of  the pleadings and  evidence on  record. In this case, the relief of declaration  of title, as asked for, was the first relief in  the   plaint  and   declaration  of   title   was   only consequential to  the declaration of the voidability of  the gift deed  executed in  favour of  the appellant. Unless the document was  avoided, Sukhari Singh could not get any title to alienate  the property  by a sale deed to the respondent. Therefore, the  declaration of  the voidability would be the main relief and the declaration of the title on the basis of the sale  deed  is  consequential  to  the  primary  relief. Therefore decree  for possession are sequential to the first declaration. The  reliefs in the suit, as a whole, are to be granted by the civil Court only.      The next  question is:  whether the  appeal before this Court stands  abated? It is true that an application came to be filed  and an order came to be passed deleting respondent Nos. 7,8  and 15,  who died  pending appeal.  With regard to respondent No.7,  Smt. Kamala  Devi, since she died issuless the question  of abatement  does not  arise because  if  the appellant succeeds,  the  share  of  her  agates  would  get enlarged. Therefore,  the appeal  does not  get abated.  But with regard  to respondent  Nos. 8 and 15 the stand taken by the appellant is not correct in law. Order XXII, Rule 4, CPC postulates that  in case  one of  the respondents  on record dies, appeal  does not stand abated unless the interest held by them is joint and indivisible. In this case, the interest held by  them is joint and indivisible. It is  true that, in the application,  it was stated that respondent Nos.9 and 10 are already  on record to replace respondent no.8 and he was deleted on that premise. Similarly, respondent No.16, who is the son  of respondent  No.15, replaced  him  on  his  death pending appeal. The appellant has stated that the respondent No. 16  was already on record and, therefore, the respondent No.15 was  deleted. The  procedure adopted is not correct in law. The  order of  this Court  is that  the consequence  of their deletion  would be considered at the time of disposal. It is  the mistaken  perception of the counsel. The deceased are not  to be deleted but the legal representatives who are not  already  on  record  are  to  be  transposed  as  legal representatives  of  the  respective  deceased  respondents. Other XXII,  Rule 4(1), CPC posiulates that where one of the the two  or more  defendants/ respondents dies and the right to   sue    does   not   survive   against   the   surviving defendants/respondents alone or a sole defendant/respondent, the Court,  on an  application made  in that  behalf,  shall cause the  legal representative of the deceased defendant to be made  a party  and shall  proceed with  the  suit/appeal. Under sub-rule (5) if such an application is not made within the prescribed  limitation, the suit/appeal, in consequence, gets abated  under clause  (b) of  sub-rule (5).  Only on an application  made   to  set  aside  the  abatement  and  for condonation  of  the  delay  showing  sufficient  cause  for failure to  make the application with in the specified time, the court  having regard  to the  facts  of  the  case,  may condone  the   delay  and   order  abatement.  The  salutary principle    to     bring    on     record     the     legal representative/representatives is  to have the estate of the deceased in  the litigation  represented in  the absence  of which the Court would be unable to pronounce upon the rights of the  deceased vis-a-vis  parties to  the  suit.  That  is manifested by  Rule 6 of Order XXII, CPC which provides that after hearing  the case  and before judgement is pronounced,

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if one  of the  parties dies,  there would be no abatment by reason of such death. It is, therefore, one of the duties of the counsel  to ensure  proper  representation  by  a  legal representative of the estate of the deceased. An application should be  duly, and  within limitation, filed and it is the duty of the court to pass order as per law.      Shri Ranjit Kumar, obviously due to mistaken perception of  the   procedural   part,   has,   instead   of   seeking transposition of  the legal representatives to represent the estates of  the deceased  respondents Nos.8  and 15,  sought deletion of  the names  of the deceased. Without there being already on  record some persons eligible and entitled in law to represent  the  estate  of  the  deceased,  the  deceased defendants/ respondents  were deleted.  The  consequence  of deletion is  that the  decree of the courts below as against the deceased  decree of  the courts  below  as  against  the deceased becomes final. If the decree is inseparable and the rights of the parties are indivisible between the contesting parties and  the deceased, the consequence would be that the suit/appeal stands  abated as  a whole.  But it  one of  the respondent/respondents or  defendant/defendats is already on record, what  needs to be done is an intimation to the court by filing  a formal  application or  memo to  transpose  the existing defendant/defendats  or  respondent/respondents  as legal representatives  of the  deceased defendant/defendants or representatives  of the  deceased defendant/defendants or respondent/respondents. In  view of the mistake committed by the counsel,  the Court  has to consider the effect thereof. On the  facts, we  think that  cause of  justice  would  get advanced if  the misconception  as to  the procedure  on the part of  the counsel is condoned and if respondent Nos.8 and 15 instead  of being  deleted respondent  Nos.9 and  10  are substituted and  transposed as  the legal representatives of the  deceased   respondent  No.8  and  respondent  No.16  is transposed as legal representative of respondent No.15.      However, in  view of  the above findings, on merits the appeal stands  dismissed but,  in the circumstances, without costs.