SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Subhaga and Others
Vs
Shobha and Others
C.A. No. 2836 of 2006
(S. B. Sinha and P. K. Balasubramanyan, JJ)
07.07.2006
P. K. BALASUBRAMANYAN J.
1. Leave granted.
2. This Appeal by Special Leave is by the legal representatives of the original
plaintiff in O.S. No. 1326 of 1957 on the file of the Munsif, Mohammadabad
Gobarn at Azamgarh. The Suit was one for a mandatory injunction directing the
defendants in the Suit to demolish further constructions put up by them and to
fill up a well dug by them in the property claimed to belong to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff claimed title and possession over the suit property which was
described in the plaint and got demarcated in a sketch. The claim of the
plaintiff was that the construction had been put up in plot No. 1301/1 Ba in
Village Sarhan Kolla Pargana Mahal, District Azamgarh. The defendants resisted
the Suit essentially on a plea that the constructions put up by them did not
lie in plot No. 1301. They, of course, denied the title and possession claimed
by the plaintiff over the portions in which the constructions and the well
stood.
3. The Suit had a chequered career. There were repeated remands of the Suit.
What is seen is that ultimately the question boiled down to that of
identification of the suit property with reference to the disputed portion.
Ultimately, in the present round, the Trial Court decreed the Suit holding that
the plaintiff was the owner of the suit land which had been identified on the
spot and was hence entitled to the reliefs claimed. An Appeal filed by the
defendants was dismissed holding that the disputed constructions lay in the
suit property described in the plaint, that the plaintiff had title to it and
that the Trial Court was hence right in decreeing the Suit. Thus, the Appeal
filed by the defendants was dismissed. The defendants filed a Second Appeal
before the High Court of Allahabad. The High Court upheld the finding rendered
by the Courts below that the plaintiff was the exclusive owner of plot No.
1301/1 Ba. The High Court found that there was no illegality in the approach
made by the Courts below in arriving at that finding and the finding was based
on the evidence on record. But in spite of this finding, the High Court
reversed the judgment and decree of the First Appellate Court and dismissed the
Suit on a finding that there was no proper identification of the suit property
by the plaintiff either in the plaint or at the spot and since the boundaries
cannot be ascertained without surveying the adjoining plots, no decree could be
granted to the plaintiff as was done by the Courts below. The Second Appeal was
thus allowed and the Suit was dismissed. This is challenged in this Appeal by
the legal representatives of the plaintiff.
4. It is contended on behalf of the appellants, that the High Court had
exceeded its jurisdiction under Section 100 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 in interfering with the finding of fact rendered
by the Courts below that the suit property had been adequately identified and
it has been shown that the disputed constructions were in the portion that
belonged to the plaintiff. Though we find some merit in this submission raised
on behalf of the appellants, we do not think it necessary to rest our decision
on this ground.
5. We find that a commission was issued for demarcating the suit plot No. 130
1/1 Ba and the Commissioner showed the disputed area in the map prepared by
him. The lower Appellate Court while considering the question of identification
had referred to the description of the boundaries in the plaint, the admissions
of one of the defendants as DW1 and the report and plan submitted by the
Commissioner. That Court also noticed that the plaintiff had given specific
boundaries of the suit land and it was clear from the sketch prepared by the
Commissioner that the disputed constructions lay in the suit land and that it
belonged to the plaintiff. This was the basis of the affirmance of the decree
in favour of the plaintiff by the lower Appellate Court. In Second Appeal, the
learned Judge of the High Court, after referring to the description of the
boundaries in the Plaint, simply discarded the sketch prepared by the
Commissioner in the presence of the parties after ascertaining the plots lying
as boundaries of the suit property. It also appears to have taken the view that
without a survey of the adjoining plots, it cannot definitely be said that the
disputed structure lies in the plot belonging to the plaintiff, namely, plot
No. 1301/1 Ba. We think that the High Court was not justified in interfering
with the finding of the lower Appellate Court and in discarding the
identification made by the Commissioner. It must be noticed that the Suit had
been remanded twice for the purpose of identifying the suit property and such
identification had been done by the Commissioner and such identification had
been accepted by the Trial Court and the First Appellate Court in the light of
the admissions of DW1. The vague and general reasons given by the High Court
for interfering with the decision of the First Appellate Court are clearly
insufficient to upset the finding on identification. There was nothing to show
that the Commissioner had not properly identified the suit property.
6. The High Court has also upheld the title claimed by the plaintiff over the
plot, Plot No. 130 1/1 Ba. Once we accept the identification made by the
Commissioner as was done by the First Appellate Court, it is clear that the
plaintiff has the right to have the disputed construction removed and the well
filled up. That a property can be identified either by boundary or by any other
specific description is well established. Here the attempt had been to
identif~' the suit property with reference to the boundaries and the
Commissioner has identified that property with reference to such boundaries.
Even if there was any discrepancy, normally, the boundaries should prevail.
There was no occasion to spin a theory that it was necessary in this suit to
survey all the adjacent lands to find out whether an encroachment was made in
the land belonging to the plaintiff. In this situation, we are satisfied that
the judgment and decree of the High Court calls for interference. We are also
satisfied that the lower Appellate Court was justified in affirming the decree
granted in favour of the plaintiff on the pleadings and the evidence in the
case.
7. We, therefore, allow this Appeal and setting aside the judgment and decree
of the High Court in S.A. No. 1782 of 1976, restore the judgment and decree of
the Trial Court in 0.S. No. 1326 of 1957 as affirmed in Civil Appeal No. 112 of
1973 on the file of the Additional Civil Judges Court, Azamgarh. We make no
order as to costs in this Appeal but the appellants would be entitled to their
costs in the Courts below.
J