caselaws

Supreme Court of India
P.V. Guru Raj Reddy & Anr vs P. Neeradha Reddy & Ors on 13 February, 2015Bench: Ranjan Gogoi, Prafulla C. Pant

REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.5254 OF 2006

P.V. GURU RAJ REDDY REP. BY
GPA LAXMI NARAYAN REDDY & ANR. …APPELLANTS

VERSUS

P. NEERADHA REDDY & ORS. ETC. …RESPONDENTS

J U D G M E N T

RANJAN GOGOI, J.

1. This appeal seeks to challenge two separate though largely
similar orders both dated 26th June, 2003 passed by the High Court of
Andhra Pradesh at Hyderabad in Civil Revision Petition Nos.1398 and 1399 of
2003. By the aforesaid orders, the High Court, in reversal of the order of
the learned trial judge, has allowed the applications filed by the
defendants under Order VII rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
(hereinafter referred to as “the CPC”). Aggrieved, the plaintiffs are
before us in this appeal.

2. Original Suit Nos. 71 and 72 of 2002 were filed by the
plaintiffs (appellants herein) for declaration of title and possession.
The case of the plaintiffs in both the suits were more or less similar.
According to the plaintiffs as they were living abroad they had reposed
trust and faith in defendants Nos.1 and 2 who are their close relatives
(sister and brother-in-law of plaintiff No.1) to purchase immovable
property in Hyderabad in the name of the plaintiff No.2. According to the
plaintiffs, they had made funds available to the defendants Nos. 1 and 2
for the said purpose and had entirely relied on them.

3. The specific case of the plaintiffs in Original Suit No.71 of
2002 is to the effect that the property belonging to one Professor N.S.
Iyengar was identified for purchase and an agreement was drawn up with the
said person. According to the plaintiffs, they were informed by the
defendants that Professor Iyengar has resiled from the agreement which
required filing a suit for specific performance. According to the
plaintiffs when they visited Hyderabad in November/December 1999, they
could notice some construction activity in the plot belonging to Professor
Iyengar. It is at that point of time that they had made enquiries and
could come to know that though the suit for specific performance filed by
the defendants was decreed, the sale deed was executed in the name of the
defendant No.4 who is the brother-in-law of the defendant No.1. It is
thereafter that the suit being Original Suit No.71 of 2002 was filed.
4. Insofar as Original Suit No.72 of 2002 is concerned, the
plaintiffs’ case is that the property belonging to one Professor B.
Ramchander Rao was identified for purchase. Though the defendant Nos.1 and
2 informed the plaintiffs that the needful was done, it transpired that the
said property was purchased on 31.8.1979 jointly in the name of plaintiff
No.2 and the defendant No.3, who is the son of defendant No.1. According
to the plaintiffs immediately after they came to know of the said facts,
they had issued a legal notice on 20.12.1999 and on receipt of the reply to
the said notice which contained an unequivocal denial of the plaintiffs’
claim, the suit being Original Suit No.72 of 2002 was filed. Both the suits
were filed in July, 2002.
5. Rejection of the plaint under Order VII rule 11 of the CPC is a
drastic power conferred in the court to terminate a civil action at the
threshold. The conditions precedent to the exercise of power under Order
VII rule 11, therefore, are stringent and have been consistently held to be
so by the Court. It is the averments in the plaint that has to be read as
a whole to find out whether it discloses a cause of action or whether the
suit is barred under any law. At the stage of exercise of power under
Order VII rule 11, the stand of the defendants in the written statement or
in the application for rejection of the plaint is wholly immaterial. It is
only if the averments in the plaint ex facie do not disclose a cause of
action or on a reading thereof the suit appears to be barred under any law
the plaint can be rejected. In all other situations, the claims will have
to be adjudicated in the course of the trial.

6. In the present case, reading the plaint as a whole and
proceeding on the basis that the averments made therein are correct, which
is what the Court is required to do, it cannot be said that the said
pleadings ex facie discloses that the suit is barred by limitation or is
barred under any other provision of law. The claim of the plaintiffs with
regard to the knowledge of the essential facts giving rise to the cause of
action as pleaded will have to be accepted as correct. At the stage of
consideration of the application under Order VII rule 11 the stand of the
defendants in the written statement would be altogether irrelevant.

7. In Original Suit No.71 of 2002, the plaintiffs had averred that
it is only in November/December 1999 when they came to India that they
could come to know that the property of Professor Iyengar was sold to
somebody else. Thereafter, they had issued a legal notice on 3.12.1999.
The plaintiffs have further averred that it is only from the reply of the
said notice that they could come to know of the true facts and the conduct
of the defendants in conspiring to cheat the plaintiffs. Thereafter,
according to the plaintiffs after obtaining the copy of the decree of
specific performance passed in O.S. No.24/1985 and the judgment of the
Appeal Court in A.S. 215/87 as well as the judgment of the High Court dated
13.1.1995, the suit in question was filed, inter alia, for:| | “a) For a declaration that the Plaintiff has title over the |
| |schedule property and for possession of the suit schedule |
| |property from the defendants. |
| | b) For cancellation of the judgment and decree passed in O.S.|
| |24/85 on the file of the Court of the Principal Subordinate |
| |Judge, Ranga Reddy District at Saroornagar regarding the |
| |schedule property. |
| | c) For permanent injunction restraining the defendants, |
| |their men and others on their behalf from further alienating |
| |the schedule property in favour of any other person. |
| | d) For costs.” |

8. Similarly in Original Suit No.72 of 2002, according to the
plaintiffs, they could come to know of the sale deed dated 31.8.1979
executed in favour of the plaintiff No.2 and the defendant No.3 only in the
year 1999 immediately whereafter they had issued the legal notice dated
20.12.1999. According to the plaintiffs it is only subsequently that they
came to know of sale of half of the scheduled property in favour of the
defendant No.5. Accordingly they had filed the Original Suit No.72 of 2002
claiming the following reliefs:
| | |
|”a) |For a declaration that the schedule |
| |property is the property of the 2nd |
| |plaintiff and for possession of the |
| |suit schedule property from the |
| |defendants to the 2nd plaintiff. |
|b) |For cancellation of the sale deed, dt. |
| |31.8.1979 jointly executed in the name |
| |of the 2nd plaintiff and the 3rd |
| |defendant, so far as the 3rd defendant |
| |is concerned. |
|c) |For cancellation of the sale deed, |
| |dated 10.02.1999, executed in the name |
| |of the 5th defendant. |
|d) |For permanent injunction restraining |
| |the defendants, their men and others on|
| |their behalf from further alienating |
| |the schedule property in favour of |
| |other persons. |
|e) |For costs.” |

9. Both the suits were filed in July 2002 which is well within
three years of the date of knowledge, as claimed by the plaintiffs, of the
fact that the property had not been transferred in the name of plaintiff
No.2 by the defendants Nos. 1 and 2. The aforesaid averments made in the
plaint will have to be accepted as correct for the purposes of
consideration of the application under Order VII rule 11 filed by the
defendants Nos. 1 and 2. If that be so, the averments in the plaint would
not disclose that either of the suits is barred by limitation so as to
justify rejection of the plaint under Order VII rule 11 of the CPC.

10. There is yet another issue framed by the High Court as Question
No.3 which is in the following terms:

|”|3. Whether the claims made in the |
| |suit, as appearing in the statement in |
| |the plaint, are hit by the provisions |
| |of the Benami Transactions |
| |(Prohibition) Act, 1983?” |

11. While in Civil Revision Petition No.1398 of 2003 the said issue
was decided in favour of the plaintiffs, in Civil Revision Petition No.1399
of 2003 the same was decided against the plaintiffs. The finding of the
High Court in this regard proceeds on the basis that the plaintiffs had
admitted in the plaint that the property purchased in the name of the
defendant No.3 belonged to the plaintiffs. Therefore the provisions of
Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 would apply. We fail to see how
the aforesaid view of the High Court can be sustained. The suits in
question were not filed for recovery of any property held in benami by the
defendants. Rather, the suit was for declaration of plaintiffs’ title and
for recovery of possession from the defendants, as already noted.

12. For the aforesaid reasons, the order of the High Court dated
26th June, 2003 has to be reversed. We, accordingly, do so and allow this
appeal and direct the learned trial Court to hear and decide both the suits
i.e. Original Suit No.71 of 2002 and Original Suit No.72 of 2002 on merits
at an early date.

13. The appeal is disposed of in the above terms.

………………………………J.
(RANJAN GOGOI)

………………………………J.
(PRAFULLA C. PANT)

NEW DELHI
FEBRUARY 13, 2015.

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