SAMEER KUMAR PAL Vs SHEIKH AKBAR .
Bench: DALVEER BHANDARI,K.S. PANICKER RADHAKRISHNAN, , ,
Case number: C.A. No.-002398-002398 / 2002
Diary number: 17336 / 2001
Advocates: Vs
RAM SWARUP SHARMA
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.2398 OF 2002
Sameer Kumar Pal & Another ... Appellants
Versus
Sheikh Akbar & Others ... Respondents
J U D G M E N T
Dalveer Bhandari, J.
1. This appeal is directed against the judgment and order of
the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur dated
17.8.2001 passed in Second Appeal No.596 of 1999.
2. The appellant is particularly aggrieved by the impugned
judgment because the concurrent findings of fact have been
set aside by the High Court in the second appeal without any
basis, justification or cogent grounds.
3. Brief facts necessary to dispose of this appeal are
recapitulated as under:
Appellants Sameer Kumar Pal and Subhash Chandra Pal,
both sons of Laxminarayan Pal (who were the plaintiffs in the
trial court), filed a suit in the Court of the Civil Judge,
Jabalpur. In the plaint, it was clearly incorporated that the
appellants were the owners in possession of Shop No.1214
(Old No.892), New Corporation Chowk, Wright Town,
Jabalpur. They purchased the said shop vide sale-deed dated
31.12.1991.
4. The appellants filed a suit for eviction against the
defendants (respondents herein) under section 12(1)(c) (that
the tenant has created nuisance), 12(1)(f) (for bona fide
requirement of landlord for non-residential purposes) and
12(1)(g) (bona fide requirements of landlord to carry out
repairs) of the M.P. Accommodation Control Act, 1961. The
relevant parts of section 12 of the Act are set out as under:
“12. Restriction on eviction of tenants.—(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other law or contract, no suit shall be filed in any civil court against a tenant for his eviction from any accommodation except on one or more of the following grounds, only, namely—
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(a) – (b) x x x
(c) that the tenant or any person residing with him has created a nuisance or has done any act which is inconsistent with the purpose for which he was admitted to the tenancy of the accommodation, or which is likely to affect adversely and substantially the interest of the landlord therein:
(d) – (e) x x x
(f) that the accommodation let for non-residential purpose is required bona fide by the landlord for the purpose of continuing or starting his business or that of any of his major sons or unmarried daughters if he is the owner thereof or for any person for whose benefit the accommodation is held and that the landlord or such person has no other reasonably suitable non-residential accommodation of his own in his occupation in the city or town concerned;
(g) that the accommodation has become unsafe, or unfit for human habitation and is required bona fide by the landlord for carrying out repairs which cannot be carried out without the accommodation being vacated.”
5. In the written statement filed in the trial court, the
respondents herein raised the main objection that the
appellants herein are not the owners of the suit property and
the trial court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate the matter as
the suit property has been a Wakf property. It may be
pertinent to mention that in the written statement the
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respondents nowhere took the plea that the suit property,
namely ‘Madras Hotel’ is a joint family property. The trial
court held that the appellants were in bona fide need of
carrying on the business of sweets and for running a
restaurant. No other vacant property was in possession of the
appellants in Jabalpur. It was also held that the shop in
question is very old, unsafe and in dilapidated condition.
There is need to repair and carry out some structural changes
in the shop which cannot be carried out unless the same is
made available to the appellants. The trial court clearly held
that the appellants are in bona fide need of the suit property.
The trial court also held that the respondents have not paid
rent since September, 1992 and decided the issue of default in
favour of the appellants. The trial court categorically held that
the suit property is not the Wakf property and decreed the suit
of the appellants.
6. The respondents preferred first appeal before the court of
XIth Additional District Judge, Jabalpur. The entire evidence
was re-appreciated by the appellate court independently and
the court clearly held that the respondents have failed to prove
that the appellants are in possession of any other non-
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residential accommodation in the entire city of Jabalpur. The
first appellate court upheld the findings of the trial court. It
may be pertinent to mention that before the first appellate
court also, no plea was taken that the property in question,
namely the ‘Madras Hotel’, was a joint family property. The
first appellate court dismissed the appeal.
7. Respondent nos. 1 & 2, aggrieved by the judgment of the
XIth Additional District Judge, Jabalpur, preferred a second
appeal before the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur.
8. The High Court in the impugned judgment, without any
pleadings or basis, held that the property namely ‘Madras
Hotel’ is a joint family property. The High Court erroneously
observed that the property namely ‘Madras Hotel’ was
purchased by the father of the appellants and his brothers,
whereas in fact the property was purchased by the appellants
vide sale deed dated 31.12.1991. The assumption of wrong
fact has led to total erroneous finding and conclusion. The
High Court in para 8 observed as under:
“……It is firmly established that the building known as ‘Madras Hotel’ belongs to Laxminarayan Pal and his two sons who are the plaintiffs. That is their joint family property. This building was purchased
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by Laxminarayan when he was carrying on business with his two brothers and the partition took place long after the acquisition of that building. In that partition that building was allotted to Laxminarayan alone……”
9. The High Court in the impugned judgment weaved out an
entirely new case. Neither there was any pleading nor it was
the case of the respondents either before the trial court or the
first appellate court. The High Court gravely erred in arriving
at the finding without any basis whatsoever. Subhash
Chandra Pal, PW1 was examined by the trial court and in his
testimony he categorically stated that he and his elder brother
Sameer Kumar were owners of the property in question.
10. The appellants have relied on Mst. Rukhmabai v. Lala
Laxminarayan & Others AIR 1960 SC 335 in which this
court held that there is no presumption that any property
whether moveable or immoveable held by a member of a joint
Hindu family is joint family property. The burden lies upon
the person who asserts that a particular property is joint
family property to establish that fact.
11. The appellants further relied on Kuppala Obul Reddy v.
Bonala Venpata Narayan Reddy (dead) by LRs. (1984) 3
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SCC 447 in which this court held that there were no pleadings
as to the properties being joint properties and no issue as to
joint family had been raised and there was no proper evidence
to make out any case of the properties being joint family
properties, was raised and no such issue could possibly have
been raised in absence of the pleadings. The court further
held that in absence of any pleading and any issue and further
in the absence of any proper evidence, the view expressed by
the learned judge of the High Court that the properties were
joint family properties is clearly unwarranted. There may be
presumption that there is a Hindu Joint Family but there can
be no presumption that the joint family possesses joint family
properties.
12. The appellants further relied on Mudi Gowda
Gowdappa Sankh v. Ram Chandra Ravagowda Sankh
(1969) 1 SCC 386 wherein this Court held that, of course,
there is no presumption that merely because the family is joint
so the property is also joint. So the person alleging the
property to be joint family property must prove it. In that
case, this Court further held that the burden of proving that
any particular property is joint family property is, therefore, in
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the first instance, upon the person who claims it to be
coparcenary property. But if the possession of a nucleus of
the joint family property is either admitted or proved, any
acquisition made by a member of the joint family is presumed
to be joint family property. The Court carved out an exception
and observed that, “this is, however, subject to the limitation
that the joint family property must be such as with its aid the
property in question could have been acquired. It is only after
the possession of an adequate nucleus is shown, that the onus
shifts on to the person who claims the property as self-
acquisition to affirmatively make out that the property was
acquired without any aid from the family estate.” In Mudi
Gowda Gowdappa Sankh (supra), this court heavily relied
upon the ratio of Privy Council judgment in Randhi
Appalaswami v. Randhi Suryanarayanamurti & Others
ILR 1948 Mad 440 wherein the legal position of Hindu Law
has been beautifully articulated by Sir John Beaumont. The
relevant portion of the judgment is reproduced as under:
“Proof of the existence of a joint family does not lead to the presumption that property held by any member of the family is joint, and the burden rests upon anyone asserting that any item of property was joint to establish the fact. But where it is established that the family possessed some joint
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property which from its nature and relative value may have formed the nucleus from which the property in question may have been acquired, the burden shifts to the party alleging self-acquisition to establish affirmatively that the property was acquired without the aid of the joint family property.”
13. In this view of the matter, we are constrained to set aside
the impugned judgment of the High Court. The High Court
was not justified in reversing the concurrent findings of fact in
this case. Consequently, the appeal is allowed and the
impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside and that the
judgment and order of the trial court, as affirmed by the first
appellate court, is restored. In the facts and circumstances of
the case, the parties are directed to bear their own costs.
....……….……………………..J. (Dalveer Bhandari)
.…..…….……………………..J. (K.S. Radhakrishnan) New Delhi; July 28, 2010
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