Citation : 2010 Latest Caselaw 3094 Del
Judgement Date : 5 July, 2010
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
% RFA 704 OF 2002
+ Date of Decision: 05 July, 2010
# CHELA RAM CHOPRA(THROUGH LRs) ...Appellants
! Through: Mr. Harish Malhotra, Sr. Advocate
with Mr. Sanjeev Kr. Tiwari,
Advocate.
Versus
$ RAMO DEVI & ORS. ...Respondents
^ Through: Mr. V.K.Makhija, Sr. Advocate with
Mr. Akshay Makhija, Ms. Vandana
Khurana, Mr. Rahul Gupta, Mr.
Rajnish Mishra, Mr. Shekhar Dosi
and Ms. Aanchal Dhingra,
Advocates
CORAM:
* HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE P.K.BHASIN
1. Whether Reporters of local papers may be allowed to see the
judgment? No.
2. To be referred to the Reporter or not? No.
3. Whether the judgment should be reported in the digest? No.
JUDGMENT
P.K.BHASIN, J:
Legal heirs of one of the defendants in a suit for partition in respect
of property no. J-369, New Rajinder Nagar, New Delhi(hereinafter referred
to as the 'suit property') had filed this appeal challenging the judgment and
preliminary decree of partition passed in the suit by the Court of Additional
District Judge holding the respondent no.1- plaintiff Smt. Ramo Devi and
her husband's two brothers to be the owners of the suit property in equal
shares.
2. The suit for partition and separation of 1/3rd share in the suit property
was filed by the respondent no.1-plaintiff Smt. Ramo Devi against her two
brothers-in-law (husband's brothers) Shri Chela Ram Chopra and Shri
Shiv Kumar Chopra. It was claimed by Smt. Ramo Devi that the suit
property was initially a Government built quarter and the same was
allotted to her father-in-law late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra on lease-hold
basis by the Government of India in the year 1950 on his migration to
Delhi from Peshawar(now in Pakistan) after partition of the country. Shri
Manohar Lal Chopra died intestate in the year 1955 leaving behind three
sons, namely, Shri Chela Ram, Shri Shiv Kumar and her husband late Shri
Roshan Lal Chopra and three daughters,namely. Krishna, Lalli and Urmil.
It was further claimed by Smt. Ramo Devi that the three sisters had
surrendered their rights in favour of their brothers by giving affidavits to
that effect in the Estate Office and the suit property was then transferred in
the names of the three brothers on 17th August, 1963. She further pleaded
that after the death of her husband her name was substituted in the
Government records as a co-owner of the suit property since her two
children(who are respondents no.2 and 3 in this appeal) had surrendered
their right in the suit property in her favour. The filing of suit for partition
had been necessitated because of the refusal of her brother-in-law Shri
Chela Ram(who was defendant no.1 in the suit and reference to him shall
now be made as 'the deceased defendant no.1' since he had died during
the pendency of the suit) to give her share in the suit property after the
death of her husband.
3. Defendant no.2 in the suit was Shri Sushil Kumar Chopra, the other
brother-in-law of the plaintiff Smt. Ramo Devi. However, before he could
be served with the summons of the suit the plaintiff informed the Court that
he had died and she also moved an application for bringing on record his
two daughters being his only legal representatives. Before that application
could be considered Smt. Ramo Devi moved another application for
impleading the two daughters and the widow of Sh. Shiv Kumar Chopra as
plaintiffs since they were also claiming 1/3rd share in the suit property. That
application was allowed by the trial Court and two minor daughters of Shri
Shiv Kumar Chopra and Mrs.Kamlesh Chopra were then brought on record
as plaintiffs no. 2 to 4.
4. The suit was contested by the deceased defendant no. 1 inter alia on
the ground that there had been a family settlement between the three
brothers vide agreement dated 12th July, 1963 and pursuant thereto the
original two room quarter was demolished and new ground floor was
constructed by his wife Mrs. Daman Chopra during 1963-64 and in the
newly constructed ground floor his two brothers Shri Roshan Lal and Shri
Shiv Kumar had no right. As per the said arrangement between the three
brothers, which late Shri Chela Ram claimed to have signed on behalf of
his two brothers also as their attorney, Shri Roshan Lal Chopra had
however the right to construct first floor and Shri Shiv Kumar Chopra
could construct second floor with their own funds if they so desired. It was
also claimed by the deceased defendant no.1 that after the said family
settlement there was an oral parition between the three brothers pursuant to
which late Shri Roshan Lal had received the entire jewellery of their father
and had surrendered his 1/3rd share in the suit property in his favour and his
other brother Shri Shiv Kumar Chopra had also surrendered his right in the
suit property in his favour after receiving due consideration which fact Shiv
Kumr had aceepted also in the memorandum of settlement dated 24th
September, 1970. The deceased defendant no.1 denied that their three
sisters had surrendered their interest in the suit property as was being
claimed in the plaint. It was also pleaded that one of the three sisters had in
fact died on the same day when their father had died within few hours after
his death and so there was no question of her surrendering her right in the
suit property by giving an affidavit to that effect in the Estate Office.
Regarding the claim of plaintiff no.2 Smt. Kamlesh Chopra, who got
herself impleaded in the suit being the widow of Defendant no.2 Sh. Shiv
Kumar Chopra, it was claimed that she was in any event not entitled to any
share in the suit property since she had divorced her husband.
5. The pleadings of the parties had led to the framing of the following
issues by the trial Court:-
"1. Whether the suit has been instituted by a duly authorized person on behalf of Smt. Kamlesh Chopra and her two daughters? OPP.
2. Whether the suit is bad for non-joinder of Sh. Sudhir Kumar and Smt. Neena, the children of late Roshan lal Chopra? OPD.
3. Whether the plaintiffs are out of possession of the property in suit and the suit has not been correctly valued for purposes of court fees? OPD.
4. Whether there was any family arrangement on July 12, 1963? If so, what are its terms and its effect? OPD.
5. Whether the plaintiffs or anyone of them surrendered their rights in the property in dispute? If so, to what effect? OPD.
6. What are the respective shares of the parties in the property in suit? OP parties
7. Relief."
6. In view of the objection taken by the deceased defendant no.1 that
Smt. Ramo Devi had one son Shri Sudhir Kumar and a daughter Smt.
Neena and they should have also been impleaded in the suit both of them
were also impleaded as defendants. The daughter filed her written
statement claiming that her father had no right in the suit property while the
son did not file any written statement.
7. The learned trial Court decided issues no.1 and 3 to 6 in favour of
the plaintiffs while issue no.2 was disposed of as having become redundant
since the original plaintiff had impleaded her son and daughter also as
defendants in the suit. The conclusion of the trial Court was that the
".......defence taken by the defendant that Roshan Lal Chopra and Shiv
Kumar Chopra had surrendered their rights in favour of Chela Ram
Chopra is absolutely false and baseless....." and so all the three brothers
were owners of the suit property in equal shares. The legal heirs of late
Shri Chela Ram Chopra felt aggrieved and so they filed the present appeal.
Alongwith the appeal they also filed an application for additional evidence
for proving certain documents which according to them would establish
that there was an oral partition between the three brothers in the year 1966
and which documents though were available on record could not be
exhibited during the course of evidence due to lack of proper legal advice.
This application was opposed by respondent no.1-plaintiff no.1 and it was
claimed, inter alia, in her reply to the application that the documents
sought to be exhibited now were forged documents and in any case the
reasons being given for leading additional were not covered under the
provisions of Order XLI Rule 27 CPC.
8. During the course of arguments Shri Harish Malhotra, learned
senior counsel for the appellants challenged the findings of the trial Court
only on issue no.4 to the effect that there was no settlement dated 12th
July,1963 between the three sons of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra and the
wife of the deceased defendant no.1 Shri Chela Ram Chopra. The reversal
of the trial Court's judgment was also sought on the ground that the trial
Judge had not even dealt with issue no.5 which was framed in respect of
the main defence that there was an oral partition between the three brothers
in the year 1966 according to which both Shri Roshan Lal Chopra and Shri
Shiv Kumar Chopra had surrendered their rights in the suit property in
favour of their deceased brother Shri Chela Ram Chopra and the suit had
been decreed only after holding that the defendant no.1 had failed to
establish the alleged settlement dated 12th July,1963 which settlement was
only an understanding between the three brothers that after demolition of
the old structure Chela Ram's wife would construct ground floor, Roshan
Lal shall have the right to construct first floor and Shiv Kumar could
construct second floor.
9. On the other hand, Shri V.K.Makhija, learned senior counsel for the
respondents-plaintiffs maintained the stand taken by them before the trial
Court and supported the trial Court's judgment.
10. After going through the pleadings of the parties, the judgment under
challenge and after giving thoughtful consideration to the arguments
advanced by the learned senior counsel for the parties this Court does find
that the learned trial Court has failed to consider the plea of the deceased
defendant no.1 that there was an oral partition between the three brothers
in the year 1966 whereby his two brothers had surrendered their respective
shares in the suit property in respect of which earlier in the year 1963 there
was a settlement between the brothers only regarding construction of new
floors after demolishing the original two room construction. The trial Court
had though framed issue no.5 in respect of that plea but while deciding the
suit failed to render any finding on this plea of the deceased defendant no.1
Shri Chela Ram Chopra.
11. The question thus arises as to what should be done by this Court as
an appellate Court in such a situation when the trial Court has not decided a
very material point in dispute between the parties. Normally, considering
the fact that the parties are fighting this battle in respect of the suit property
since the year 1980 this Court would have preferred to resort to the
provisions of Order XLI Rule 24 CPC and to proceed to examine the
evidence adduced by the contesting parties to find out whether this Court
itself could decide the question of oral partition between the three brothers
in the year 1966, as was being claimed by the deceased defendant no.1 Shri
Chela Ram Chopra, or whether the legal heirs of the deceased defendant
no.1 should be permitted to adduce additional evidence to enable the Court
to pronounce its judgment on this material point but that course of action
cannot be adopted by this Court and in fact even the trial Court also could
not have returned any finding in respect of the oral partition of the estate of
late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra. In my view, for the reasons to be given
hereinafter, this is a fit case where the trial Court's judgment should be
reversed and re-trial should be ordered in exercise of the power conferred
upon an appellate Court under the provisions of Order XLI Rule 23A CPC.
12. It was common case of the parties that the suit property was allotted
to late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra by the Government in the year 1950. It is
also not in dispute that he died intestate leaving behind three sons and three
daughters and also that the three daughters also had become entitled to
have equal shares in the estate of their father alongwith their brothers. The
plaintiff-respondent no.1 had, however, not impleaded the three daughters
of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra in her suit for partition of the suit
property. The reason given for their non-impleadment was that they had
surrendered their rights in the estate of their father. This fact was refuted by
the deceased defendant no. 1 Shri Chela Ram Chopra in his written
statement. While denying this averment in the plaint he had also claimed
that one of the three daughters had in fact died within hours of the death of
their father and so there was no question of her surrendering her rights in
his properties. There was thus a dispute between the parties in respect of a
very material fact and the same was required to be resolved by the trial
Court and that dispute could be resolved only in the presence of the three
daughters of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra. They were necessary parties to
be impleaded in the suit for partition since in a suit for partition any person
who can claim to have any share in the estate of their ancestor which is
sought to be partitioned is a necessary party. The question whether or not
any legal heir had relinquished his/her interest in the property in dispute, if
it is so claimed by any party to the suit, can be decided only when that legal
heir is a party to the suit. The learned trial Judge in the present case has
proceeded to accept the plea of surrender of their rights by the daughters of
late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra by observing in the judgment that it was an
admitted case of the parties that the three daughters of late Shri Manohar
Lal Chopra had surrendered their rights. This observation is contrary to the
stand taken by Shri Chela Ram. Apart from the fact that the deceased
defendant no.1 had not accepted the averment of the respondent no.1-
plaintiff that his sisters had surrendered their rights in the estate of their
father, as has been observed by the trial Court in the impugned judgment, I
am also of the view that simply by observing that it was an admitted case
of the parties that the daughters had relinquished their rights in the estate
of their father no decree could be passed to the effect that the three brothers
had become owners of the suit property in equal shares in the absence of
the daughters of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra. Similarly issue regarding
the settlement dated 12th July, 1963 could not be decided in the absence of
the daughters of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra since that controversy also
was dependent upon the decision regarding the plea of alleged surrender of
the rights by the daughters. The daughters being necessary parties ought to
have been impleaded in the suit and despite the fact that there was no
objection regarding their non-impleadment taken by any defendant their
impleadment should have been ordered by the trial Court suo moto.
13. Even in appeal no objection was raised by the appellants that the suit
for partition was bad for non-joinder of the three daughters of late Shri
Manohar Lal Chopra. However, during the course of hearing of the appeal
this Court had raised the point regarding the non-impleadment of the
daughters. Though the counsel for the respondents/plaintiffs had initially
stated that they would be moving an application under Order I Rule 10
CPC for the purpose of impleading the left out legal heirs of late Shri
Manohar Lal Chopra but later on they changed their mind and claimed that
there was no necessity of moving any application under Order I Rule 10
CPC. While informing the Court that no such application was required to
be moved learned counsel for the respondents/plaintiffs came out with a
totally different plea that the daughters of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra
were not required to be impleaded since perpetual lease deed in respect of
the suit property was actually executed in the names of three sons only of
late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra who was only an allottee and being an
allottee only of the suit property he had not acquired any title thereto. It
was also contended that his three sons upon execution of the lease deed in
their favour, anyone of them could file the suit for partition and separation
of his share in the suit property by impleading the other two joint lessees
only. In support of the submission that merely on allotment of the suit
property under the Administration of the Evacuee Properties Act, 1950 late
Shri Manohar Lal Chopra had not become its lessee learned senior counsel
for the respondents had cited one judgment of the Supreme Court in "Amar
Singh and Others vs. Custodian, Evacuee Property Punjab and another",
AIR 1957 SC 599.
14. This twist sought to be given in the story on behalf of the
respondents/plaintiffs to meet the flaw of non-impleadment of necessary
parties pointed out by the Court cannot be entertained at all since the trial
in the suit had proceeded on the premise that the suit property belonged to
late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra and upon his death had devolved upon his
three sons and three daughters and not that the suit property had attained
the character of self acquired property of three sons of late Shri Manohar
Lal Chopra because of the Government having executed the lease deed in
respect thereof in the joint names of three sons. Therefore, this argument
raised on behalf of the plaintiffs is rejected.
15. In the result, this appeal succeeds and the judgment and the
preliminary decree passed by the learned Additional District Judge are set
aside. The matter is remanded back to the trial Court for re-trial which shall
be conducted after taking on record amended memo of parties in which the
left out legal heirs of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra would be shown as
defendants since they are being ordered to be impleaded by this Court to
enable the trial Court to adjudicate the rights of all the legal heirs of late
Shri Manohar Lal Chopra in respect of his estate once for all leaving no
scope for any of the legal heirs to contend at any stage in future that the
determination of shares in respect of the estate of late Shri Manohar Lal
Chopra is not binding on him/her because of his/her not impleadment.
During the course of hearing of the appeal this Court had been informed by
the appellants' counsel that one of the daughters of late Shri Manohar Lal
Chopra, namely, Smt. Shakuntala Kapoor had died issueless and another
daughter Smt. Krishna Dhawan had died within 12 hours of the death of
her father leaving behind one daughter Mrs. Neelam Khanna who was now
settled in U.S.A. and her address was 1810, University Avenue, Berkley,
California, U.S.A. The third daughter Mrs. Nirmal Dhawan was also settled
in U.S.A. and her address was 3700, Parkview Apartments, Parkview Lane,
Apartment No. 1-D Irvine, California-92612, U.S.A. This position was not
disputed by the counsel for the respondents-plaintiffs. The trial Court shall
take on record the amended memo of parties and shall cause these legal
heirs of late Shri Manohar Lal Chopra to be served with the summons in
the suit and after completion of service and pleadings on their behalf, if
they choose to contest the suit, and after framing additional issues, if any,
arising out of their pleadings render fresh decision. Since re-trial of the suit
is being ordered, the trial Court shall render fresh findings even in respect
of the issues which already stand framed. And now that the matter is being
remanded back to the trial Court the appellants would be at liberty to make
their prayer before the trial Court itself for adducing additional evidence
and if any such request is made the trial Court shall deal with the same in
accordance with law.
The trial Court shall take up the matter now for further proceedings
on 30th July, 2010 at 2 p.m. and shall make an endeavour to conclude the
fresh trial as expeditiously as possible.
P.K. BHASIN,J 05 July, 2010
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