Burden of Proof Lies On The Party Who Asserts The Facts 13 May 2011 Supreme Court Decision
Burden of Proof Lies On The Party Who Asserts The Facts 13 May 2011 Supreme Court Decision
562 OF 2003 RANGAMMAL Versus KUPPUSWAMI & ANR. JUDGMENT ..Respondents .. Appellant
GYAN SUDHA MISRA, J. This appeal by special leave has been filed by the appellant Tmt. Rangammal against the order dated
11.07.2002 passed by the learned single Judge of the High Court of Judicature at Madras in Second Appeal No. 703/1992 by which practically the appeal was dismissed by
question of law which was formulated at the time of admission of the appeal was as follows: Whether the sale deed executed by the de facto guardian on behalf of the minor without the permission of the court could be held to be valid ?
2.
However,
the prevailing
whether in a partition suit filed by the plaintiff/respondent No.1 herein, the courts below could shift the burden of proof on the defendant - appellant regarding the validity of a sale deed, which was executed when the appellant was admittedly a minor, contrary to the pleading in the plaint filed in a suit for partition, who claimed title to the suit land on the basis of the alleged sale deed. Still further the
question arises whether the question of limitation could arise against the defendant/appellant shifting the burden on her to challenge the sale deed, when the story of execution of the alleged sale deed was set up by the
plaintiff/respondent No.1
in the plaint for the first time against his brother, without
impleading the appellant, but claimed benefit of title to the suit land on the basis of the alleged sale deed.
3.
far as it is relevant which disclose that the appellant Tmt. Rangammal was impleaded as second defendant in a suit for partition bearing O.S. No. 255/1982 which had been filed by one Kuppuswami plaintiff-respondent No.1 herein in the court of District Munsif, Palani, against his brother Andivelu who was the principal for defendant/1st partition and included the
property of the appellant-Rangammal in the schedule to the plaint without including her as a party to the suit as it was pleaded by the plaintiff-respondent No.1-Kuppuswami that the share which originally belonged to the appellantRangammal, were father was transferred to their predecessors, who of the plaintiff and defendant by way of a sale deed favour by Kumara
and uncle
Rangammal
admittedly a minor and was barely few years old, less than even three years. The sale deed was claimed to have been
in order to discharge
the
of the deceased mother of the appellant in the year 1951 which according to the case of the plaintiff-respondent No. 1 had been transferred to their branch by virtue of the aforesaid sale deed executed on 24.2.1951 by the alleged guardian of the appellant Kumara Naicker. 4. Since the appellant had not been impleaded in
the suit for partition although her property was included in the partition suit between the two brothers i.e. plaintiff Kuppuswami-respondent No.1 herein and Andivelu 1st
defendant respondent No.2 herein, the appellant filed an application for impleadment in the partition suit before the trial court which was allowed. 5. The appellant herein who was impleaded as a in the suit clearly pleaded that the
brother Andivelu 1st defendant respondent No.2 herein, was collusive in nature as this was clearly to deprive the
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appellant from her share by relying on an alleged sale deed dated 24.2.1951 by fraudulently stating that the deceased mother of the appellant was owing certain debt during her lifetime and in order to discharge the same, the socalled
legal guardian of the appellant Kumara Naicker executed a sale deed in favour of the father and uncle of the plaintiff and defendant No.1 who are respondents herein. It was,
therefore, submitted by the appellant/2nd defendant in the suit been that the sale deed dated 24.2.1951 alleged to have executed in order to discharge the debt of her
deceased mother, when the appellant was a minor, ought not to be held legally binding on her and so as to include her property for partition in the partition suit which had been instituted by an altogether different branch of the family who had separated more than three generations
ago. Hence she specifically pleaded that the partition suit including her property was clearly collusive in nature and therefore the suit was fit to be dismissed.
6.
were justified in depriving the appellant Tmt. Rangammal from her share, it appears necessary to relate some other salient facts of the case leading up to the filing of this
appeal. The schedule-property comprising an area of 4 acres and 10 cents described in various survey numbers originally belonged to one Laksmi Naicker-the common and an
oral partition had taken place between them in regard to the properties of the joint family including the scheduleproperty. Thereafter, a sale deed dated 24.2.1951 in
respect of the schedule-property was executed by Kumara Naicker alleged legal guardian of appellant-Rangammal
who was one of the sons of late Kumara Naicker and wife of the elder son of Laksmi Naicker-Thottammal a cousin of her son, who was descendent of Kumara Naicker. Kumara Naicker, i.e. the son of the elder son of Laksmi Naicker
executed the sale deed on behalf of the appellant herein, who was the daughter of younger son of Laksmi Naicker and Andi Naicker was admittedly a minor, representing
himself as her guardian since she had lost both her father
and her mother at the time of the execution of the sale deed. However, the appellant according to her case
continued in possession of half of the schedule property according to the oral partition which had fallen into the share of her father since the only brother of the appellant/ Rangammal had died unmarried. Thus, the appellant
continued to be in possession of half of the property without any knowledge about the alleged sale deed. 7. The appellants case is that as she was a minor
and had lost both her parents, she was living with her maternal uncle even at the time of the alleged sale. The
appellants case is that the suit was instituted between the plaintiff-respondent No.1 herein and 1st defendant-
respondent No.2 herein under the pretext of partition but in fact the idea behind institution of the suit was to oust the appellant who continued to be in possession of half of the share of the property being the sole legal representative of the younger son of Naicker. even made Laksmi Naicker who was Andi
As already stated, the appellant in fact was not a party in the partition suit initially but was
an
second appeal arising out of the partition suit, cast the burden completely on the appellant/2nd defendant to
prove that the property shown in the sale deed which fell into the share of the appellant, was not for the purpose of discharge of the liability of her deceased mother who
according to her case was not owing any debt to anyone including Kumara Naicker. But the suit was finally
decreed in favour of the plaintiff/respondent No.1 holding therein that the appellants deceased mother was owing
certain debts and for discharge of the same, the so-called legal guardian of the appellant who was Kumara Naicker executed a sale deed in favour of the plaintiffs father and defendant No.1s father of Rangammal and in respect of the entire property this was done ostensibly as the
appellants mother
she was owing to the plaintiffs father during her lifetime. Thus, the District Munsif, Palani, decreed the suit in favour of the plaintiff/1st respondent herein Kuppuswami. While
doing so, the trial court recorded a finding that the sale deed dated 24.2.1951 by which half share of the appellant in the suit property was transferred when the appellant
was a minor had been executed by legal guardian Kumara Naicker for legal necessity according to the case of the
appellant herein, Kumara Naicker the so-called legal guardian was neither her natural guardian nor guardian appointed by the court and hence the sale deed executed by him to the extent of half share of the schedule property of appellant-Rangammal was clearly void, illegal, inoperative and hence not binding on her. The trial court decreed the suit against which the appeal before the 1st appellate court was dismissed. The matter then came up to the High Court by way of a second appeal. 9. Learned counsel for the appellant while
challenging the judgment and orders of the courts below submitted that the sale deed executed by the so-called de facto guardian Kumara Naicker and Thottammal cannot be held to be binding on her as she was a minor in the
custody of her maternal uncle and not Kumara Naicker father of the respondent No.2 and hence the sale deed
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executed by him on her behalf was not binding on her as the same was executed in order to deprive her of her half
share in the disputed property which is situated on the eastern portion of the schedule property. 10. The learned single Judge of the High Court
however was pleased to dismiss the second appeal holding therein that the present suit out of which the second
appeal arose was filed in the year 1982 which was after 31 years of the execution of the sale deed dated The single Judge further observed 24.2.1951.
Tmt. Rangammal was aggrieved of the sale deed executed by the de facto guardian, she ought to have challenged it within three years from the date of attaining majority. The High Court went on to hold that until the date of filing of the present suit by the 1st respondent and even thereafter, the appellant had not chosen to challenge the sale deed executed by the de facto guardian and she never asserted any title in respect of the suit property irrespective of the sale deed in order to establish that she was aggrieved of the sale deed and hence it was too late for the appellant to
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by way of a second
length and on a consideration of their submissions in the light of the judgments and orders of the courts below,
specially the High Court, we are clearly of the view that the High Court as also the courts below have clearly
misconstrued the entire case of the plaintiff as well as the respondents and tried it contrary to the pleadings. The
High Court has recorded that the present suit which was filed in the year 1982, is after 31 years i.e. after 31 years of the execution of the sale deed dated 24.2.1951. But it can be instantly noticed that the High Court has fallen into a crystal clear error as it has patently and unambiguously missed that the suit had not been filed by the appellant
Tmt. Rangammal as she was the 2nd defendant who was later impleaded in the suit but the partition suit had been filed by the plaintiff-Kuppuswami-respondent No.1 herein against his brother the 2nd respondent-Andivelu-1st
defendant which was a suit for partition of the property but while doing so he included and asserted title to the
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property in the schedule of the plaint which admittedly had fallen into which the share of the appellants deceased-father after the death of her father, But it is the
devolved
upon her
plaintiff/respondent No.1 who came up with a case in the plaint that this property was transferred for legal necessity of the appellant by
executing a sale deed on 24.2.1951 in favour of the respondents predecessors who were father and uncle of the plaintiff and 1st defendants/respondents herein. 12. The learned single Judge of the High Court as
also the trial court and the lower appellate court thus have lost sight of the fact that it is the plaintiff/respondent No.1 herein who had come up with a case that the half share of the disputed property which on partition had fallen into the share of the appellants father was sold out by
Kumara Naicker as guardian of the appellant-who was a minor in order to discharge some debt which the appellants deceased mother was alleged to be owing. However the
disputed property which was sold in order to discharge the alleged burden of debt vide sale deed dated 24.2.1951 was
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purchased by the plaintiff-1st respondents father Arumuga Gounder and their uncle Kumara Naicker which means
that the legal guardian Kumara Naicker claims the property of the appellant who was minor and then sold it to himself and nephew Arumuga Gounder. Furthermore, it is also the plaintiffs case that the property which had fallen into the share of Tmt. Rangammal had been sold out by KuppuswamiArumuga
Gounder and Andivelu who was his own son. 13. Therefore, it is more than apparent that when
the plaintiff/respondent came up with a case of execution of sale deed on 24.2.21951 for half of the schedule
property/disputed property alleged to have been sold out for legal necessity which had fallen into the share of appellant Rangammal, the burden clearly lay on the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 to discharge that the sale deed executed by Kumara Naicker to his own son and nephew Arumuga Gounder admittedly fallen in regard to the share which had into the appellant share Rangammal
who was a minor, was sold for the legal necessity. But this burden by the trial court was wrongly cast upon the
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appellant/Rangammal
to discharge, although,
it is well-
settled that the party who pleads has also to prove his case. 14. Section 101 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 clearly lays down that
whosoever desires any court to give judgment as to any legal right or law dependent on the existence of facts which he asserts, must prove that those facts exist. person is bound to prove the When a
said that the burden of proof lies on that person. Thus, the Evidence Act has clearly laid down that the burden of proving fact always lies upon the person who asserts.
Until such burden is discharged, the other party is not required to be called upon to prove his case. The court has to examine as to whether the person upon whom burden lies has been able to discharge his burden. Until he
arrives at such conclusion, he cannot proceed on the basis of weakness of the other party. In view of this legal position of the Evidence Act, it is clear that in the instant matter, when the plaintiff/respondent No.1 pleaded that the disputed property fell into the share of the plaintiff by
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virtue of the sale deed dated 24.2.1951, then it was clearly for the plaintiff/respondent No.1 to prove that it was
executed for legal necessity of the appellant-while she was a minor. But, the High Court clearly took an erroneous
view while holding that it is the defendant/appellant who should have challenged the sale deed after attaining majority as she had no reason to do so since the plaintiff /respondent No.1 failed to first of all discharge the burden that the sale deed in fact had been executed for legal
necessity of the minors predecessor mother was without permission of the court. It was not the
defendant/respondent who first of all claimed benefit of the sale deed or asserted its genuineness, hence the burden of challenging the sale deed specifically when she had not even been dispossessed from the disputed share, did not arise at all. 15. Plethora of commentaries emerging from series
of case laws on burden of proof which are too numerous to cite, lay down that when a person after attaining majority, questions any sale of his property by his guardian during his minority, the burden lies on the person who
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upholds/asserts the purchase not only to show that the guardian had the power to sell but further that the whole transaction was bona fide. Roop Narain vs. Malay vs. Na This was held in the case of in Anna the
when
plaintiff/respondent No.1 came up with a case that the minors share/appellant herein was sold for legal necessity by her uncle Kumara Naicker, then it was the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 who should have discharged the burden to prove that the minor/appellants share had been sold of by the de facto guardian Kumara Naicker without permission of the court, could be held to be legal and valid so as to include the same in the partition suit between two brothers, which has not been discharged at all by the plaintiff/respondent No.1. In fact, the real brother of
plaintiff Kuppuswami who is defendant No.1/respondent No.1 herein Andivelu has also not supported the case of the plaintiff that the half share of appellant/Rangammal in the disputed property was sold out vide sale deed dated
24.2.1951 for legal necessity without permission of the Court and hence defendant No.1/respondent No.2 also has
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not supported the case of the plaintiff/respondent No.1 on this count. 16. The plaintiff/respondent No.1 therefore has
miserably failed to prove his case as per his pleading in the plaint and the burden to prove that the sale deed in fact was valid has not even been cast on plaintiff/respondent No.1 that the share of appellant-Rangammal had been sold out by Kumara Naicker vide sale deed dated 24.2.1951 for consideration without permission of the Court when the appellant was a minor. 17. The High Court, therefore, has fallen into an
error while observing that the appellant/defendant No.2 in the suit should have assailed the sale deed and cannot do so after 31 years of its execution when it is unambiguously an admitted factual position that it is the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 who had filed a suit for partition against his brother defendant No.1/respondent No.2 and in that partition suit it was plaintiff/respondent No.1 who
banked upon the story that a sale deed had been executed by his Uncle Kumara Naicker who claimed it to be the legal guardian of the appellant-Rangammal who admittedly was a
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minor for legal necessity which was to discharge the debt of the appellants deceased mother. Hence, in view of Section 101 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 it is the
plaintiff/respondent No.1
discharged the burden that in fact a sale deed had been executed for the share which admittedly belonged to appellant-Rangammal in order to discharge the burden of debt for legal necessity and for the benefit of the appellant who admittedly was a minor. 18. When the plaintiff-respondent No.1-Kuppuswami
came with a specific pleading for the first time in a partition suit that the appellants share had been sold out by her de facto guardian Kumara Naicker without even the permission of the court, it was clearly the plaintiff/respondent No.1
who should have discharged the burden that the same was done for legal necessity of the minor in order to discharge the debt which the deceased mother of the appellant was alleged to have been owing to some one. When the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 failed to discharge this burden, the question of discharge of burden to disprove the sale deed by the 2nd defendant/appellantRangammal do not
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arise at all as per the provisions of Evidence Act. It may be relevant at this stage to cite the ratio of the decision of this Court delivered in the matter of Subhra Mukherjee vs.
Bharat Coaking Coal Ltd, AIR 2000 SC 1203, whether the document in question was genuine or sham or bogus, the party who alleged it to be bogus had to prove nothing until the party relying upon the document established its
genuineness. This was the view expressed by this Court in the matter of Subhra Mukherjee vs. Bharat Coaking Coal Ltd, AIR 2000 SC 1203 = 2000 (3) SCC 312. This case
although did not relate to a suit for partition or question relating to minority, it was a case wherein the appellant
refused to hand over possession of property to the respondent-government company when ordered to do so.
Instead she filed a suit for declaration of title in respect of property. several The evidence of plaintiff/appellant indicated and inconsistencies due to which
discrepancies
the trial court dismissed the suit but the 1st appellate court and the High Court, had allowed the appeal which was
upheld by the Supreme Court as it was held that the High Court rightly allowed the respondents/government
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companys second appeal and rightly found that the sale in favour of the appellant was not bona fide and thus confer no rights on them. 19. Application of Section 101 of the Evidence Act,
1872 thus came up for discussion in this matter and while discussing the law on the burden of proof in the context of dealing with the allegation of sham and bogus
transaction, it was held that party which makes allegation must prove it. But the court was further pleased to hold wherein the question before the court was whether the
transaction in question was a bona fide and genuine one so that the party/plaintiff relying on the transaction had to first of all prove its genuineness and only thereafter would the defendant be required to discharge the burden in order to dislodge such proof and establish that the transaction was sham and fictitious. upon This ratio can aptly be relied
plaintiff/respondent No.1-Kuppuswami
the alleged sale deed dated 24.2.1951 and included the subject-matter of the property which formed part of the sale deed and claimed partition. This sale deed was denied by
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the defendant/appellant on the ground that it was bogus and a sham transaction which was executed admittedly in 1951 when she was a minor. Thus, it was the
plaintiff/respondent No.1 who should have first of all discharged the burden that the sale deed executed during the minority of the appellant was genuine and was fit to be relied upon. If the courts below including the High Court had felt satisfied could be on this aspect, only then the burden dislodge
the case of the plaintiff that the sale deed was not genuine. But when the plaintiff merely pleaded in the plaint but
failed to lead any evidence much less proof, that the sale deed was genuine and was executed in order to discharge the burden of legal necessity in the interest of minor, then the High Court clearly misdirected itself by recording in the impugned order that it is the defendant/appellant herein who should have challenged the genuineness of the sale deed after attaining majority within the period of limitation. 20. Since the High Court has misplaced burden of
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courts below since it is well established dictum of the Evidence Act that misplacing burden of proof would vitiate judgment. It is also equally and undoubtedly true that
the burden of proof may not be of much consequence after both the parties lay evidence, but while appreciating the question of burden of proof, misplacing of burden of proof on a particular party and recording findings in a particular way definitely vitiates the judgment as it has happened in the instant matter. This position stands reinforced by
several authorities including the one delivered in the case of Koppula Koteshwara Rao vs. Koppula Hemant Rao,
2002 AIHC 4950 (AP). 21. It has been further held by the Supreme Court in
the case of State of J & K vs. Hindustan Forest Company, 2006 (12) SCC 198, wherein it was held that the onus is on the plaintiff to positively establish its case on the basis of material available and it cannot rely on the weakness or absence of defence to discharge onus. 22. It was still further held by this Court in the
matter of Corporation of City of Bangalore vs. Zulekha Bi, 2008 (11) SCC 306 (308) that it is for the plaintiff to prove
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applicable to the facts of this case for it is the plaintiff who claimed title to the property which was a subject-matter of the alleged sale deed of 24.2.1951 for which he had sought partition against his brother and, therefore, it was clearly the plaintiff who should have first of all established his case establishing title of the property to the joint family out of which he was claiming his share. When the plaintiff
himself failed to discharge the burden to prove that the sale deed which he executed in favour of his own son and
nephew by selling the property of a minor of whom he claimed to be legal guardian without permission of the
court, it was clearly fit to be set aside by the High Court which the High Court as also the courts below have
miserably failed to discharge. The onus was clearly on the plaintiff to positively establish his case on the basis of material available and could not have been allowed by the High Court to rely on the weakness or absence of defence of the defendant/appellant herein to discharge such onus. 23. The courts not below to thus cast have illegally on and the
erroneously
failed
this
burden
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plaintiff/respondent No.1 by clearly misconstruing the whole case and thus resulted into recording of findings which are wholly perverse and even against the admitted case of the parties. 24. It is further well-settled that a suit has to be
tried on the basis of the pleadings of the contesting parties which is filed in the suit before the trial court in the form of plaint and written statement and the nucleus of the
defendant in the form of issues emerges out of that. This basic principle, seems to have been missed not only by the trial court in this case but consistently by the first
appellate court which has been compounded by the High Court. 25. of which Thus, we are of the view, that the whole case out this appeal arises had been practically made a
mess by missing the basic principle that the suit should be decided on the basis of the pleading of the contesting parties after which Section 101 of The Evidence Act would come into play in order to determine on whom the burden falls for proving the issues which have been determined.
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26.
basic case pleaded by the plaintiff had been misconstrued and the burden of discharge of genuineness, veracity and legal efficacy of the sale deed dated 24.2.1951 was shifted on the appellant-Rangammal clearly missing that it is the plaintiffs/respondent No.1 case who was bent upon to include Rangammals property also for partition by relying upon the story of execution of sale deed when the partition suit was between the two brothers who were plaintiff-
Kuppuswami and defendant No.1-Andivelu. 27. Coming now to the next question, we are unable
to appreciate as to how the High Court has held that the delay in challenging the sale deed of 1951 should have
been done at the instance of the 2nd defendant-appellant herein when it is the plaintiff execution of property who brought the of appellant branch of
theory/story of Rangammals
plaintiff/respondents
that this had fallen into the share of their predecessor as one of the predecessors was the de facto guardian of the
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the genuineness and veracity of the sale deed and the appellant was in occupation of her share, then it is the plaintiff who should have filed a suit claiming title on the basis of the sale deed which was claimed to have executed in their favour by the de facto been
guardian of
Rangammal when she was a minor before this property could be included in the suit for partition between the brothers excluding the 2nd defendant/appellant Rangammal and the regard, consequence of not doing so or delay in this obviously will have to be attributed to the
plaintiff/respondent. 28. Thus, the High Court fell into a clear error when
it observed that the suit was barred by limitation as it had been filed after 31 years of the execution of the sale deed which on the face of it is factually incorrect. The High
Court has clearly erred while recording so, as it seems to have missed that the suit had not been filed by the
appellant herein but she was merely contesting the suit as the 2nd defendant by getting herself impleaded in the partition suit when it came to her knowledge that the property which is in her occupation and possession has
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also been included in the schedule in the suit for partition between plaintiff/respondent No.1 herein-Kuppuswamy
and the 1st defendant/respondent No.2 herein-Andivelu and when she received the copy of the plaint, execution of the alleged sale deed way back in 1951 was disclosed to her for the first time. Hence, there was no cause of action
for her to file a suit challenging the alleged sale deed as knowledge of the same cannot be attributed to her in this regard as she asserted actual physical possession on her share. 29. The appellant who claimed to be in occupation
and peaceful possession of her share to the extent of half which is situated on the eastern property, had no side of the schedule the sale
deed when she was in actual physical possession of her share and suddenly out of the blue, a partition suit was filed by the plaintiff/respondent No.1 wherein the property of the appellant also was included in the schedule of the partition suit which was to be partitioned between the two brothers by metes and bounds by setting a cooked up story that the appellants share, who belonged to an altogether
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different branch of the family, had been given away by her de facto guardian Kumara Naicker by executing a sale deed in favour of the respondents predecessor way back on 24.2.1951 when the appellant admittedly was a minor. 30. We are, therefore, constrained to partly set aside
the judgment and order of the High Court in so far as the share of the appellant Rangammal is concerned and consequently the decree passed by the trial court, upheld by the first appellate court and the High Court which had been illegally decreed including the share of the appellant -Rangammal which had not devolved on the family of the plaintiff/respondent No.1 and defendant No.1/respondent No.2, but was claimed on the basis of a sale deed which could not be proved either by evidence or law, is fit to be set aside. 31. It hardly needs to be highlighted that in a suit
for partition, it is expected of the plaintiff to include only those properties for partition to which the family has clear title and unambiguously belong to the members of the joint family which is sought to be partitioned and if someone elses property meaning thereby disputed property is
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included in the schedule of the suit for partition, and the same is contested by a third party who is allowed to be impleaded by order of the trial court, obviously it is the plaintiff who will have to first of all discharge the burden of proof for establishing that the disputed property belongs to the joint family which should be partitioned excluding someone who claims that some portion of the joint family property did not belong to the plaintiffs joint family in regard to which decree for partition is sought. 32. However, we make it clear that the decree which
has been passed by the trial court in so far as partition between plaintiff/respondent No.1 and defendant
No.1/respondent No.2 is concerned, shall remain in tact but the said decree shall exclude the property which had fallen into the share of appellant-Rangammal but was to the branch of the
plaintiff and 1st defendant-respondents herein vide sale deed dated 24.2.1951 The trial court being the court of
District Munsif, Palani, accordingly shall modify the decree passed in O.S. No.255 of 1982 by excluding the share of the appellant Rangammal claimed on the basis of the sale
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deed dated 24.2.1951. Thereafter, if the decree is put to execution, the executing court portion shall ensure that such of
Rangammal which was alleged to have been sold vide sale deed dated 24.2.1951, shall not be put into execution while partitioning the remaining property between the plaintiffKuppuswami and 1st defendant -Andivelu - respondent No.2. 33. Thus, this appeal in so far as the claim of the
appellant- Rangammal to the extent of half of the share in the schedule to the suit property, situated on the eastern portion is concerned, stands allowed with a token cost which is quantified at rupees twenty five thousand as we are of the view that the appellant who was in actual physical and peaceful possession of her property which she had inherited from her deceased parents, was unnecessarily dragged into this litigation at the instance of the plaintiffKuppuswami who filed a partition suit which was
apparently collusive in nature as it included the share of a third party to which the plaintiff and 1st defendants family had no clear title. Under the facts and circumstance of
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the instant case, it was clearly a compulsion on the part of the appellant/Tmt. Rangammal to contest the collusive suit for decades Kwasting time, energy and expense over a litigation which was started by the plaintiff clearly with an oblique motive and evil design. Hence the cost shall be paid by the respondent No.1-Kuppuswami to the appellantRangammal as indicated above. 34. costs. Accordingly, this appeal stands allowed with
.J (J.M. Panchal)
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