Order XII, Rule 6 of the Code. An admission contemplated under Order XII, Rule 6 of the Code, cannot be equated to the fiction of a deemed admission under Order VIII, Rule 5 of the Code. Order VIII, Rule 5 creates a fiction to the effect that what is not specifically denied, is deemed to have been accepted. No plaintiff will be entitled to a decree in terms of Order VIII, Rule 5, before trial. What the plaintiffs sought before the Court below was actually a decree on deemed admission in terms of Order VIII, Rule 5. Fortunately the Court below did not fall a prey to such design on the part of the plaintiffs.

HONBLE SRI JUSTICE V.RAMASUBRAMANIAN AND HONBLE MRS JUSTICE ANIS                

Appeal Suit No.573 of 2016

26-10-2016

Guduru Veera Nishitha,  Rep. by Power of Attorney Holder  Appellant/Plaintiff
No.1

G.V. Sambashiva Rao  Respondent/Plaintiff No.2   G.V. Deepak Rao @ Laxmikantha    
Rao  and 3 others Respondents/Defendant Nos.2, 3, 4 and 9
  Vemuganti G.V. Sruthi Respondent/Defendant No.10  

Counsel for the Appellant:Dr. Venkat Reddy Donthireddy

Counsel for Respondent No.1: Sri C.Ramesh Sagar
 Counsel for Respondents 2 to 5: Sri Alladi Ravinder
 Counsel for Respondent No.6: None appeared.  

<Gist:

>Head Note:

? Cases referred:
    Nil.


HONBLE SRI JUSTICE V.RAMASUBRAMANIAN          
AND
HONBLE SMT JUSTICE ANIS    

A.S.No.573 of 2016

JUDGMENT: (per V. Ramasubramanian, J.)  

        This appeal is filed purportedly under Section 96 read with
Order XLI Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, questioning the
dismissal of an application filed under Order XX, Rule 18 read with
Order XV, Rules 1 and 2 and Section 151 CPC seeking a
preliminary decree for partition in respect of a few items of the plaint
schedule properties.
        2. We have heard Dr. Venkat Reddy Donthireddy, learned
counsel for the appellant, Mr. C. Ramesh Sagar, learned counsel for
the 1st respondent and Sri Alladi Ravinder, learned counsel
appearing for the respondents 2 to 5.
        3. The appellant herein filed a suit in O.S.No.43 of 2009 on the
file of I Additional District Court, Karimnagar, seeking partition and
separate possession of her share in suit Schedules A to H
properties. In the suit as it was originally instituted, the appellant
impleaded (1) her own father G.V. Sambasiva Rao as the 1st
defendant; (2) her sister as the 10th defendant; (3) her paternal
uncles as defendants 2 to 4; (4) her paternal grandmother as the 5th
defendant and her paternal aunts as defendants 6 to 8.
        4. The claim of the appellant/plaintiff in the suit was that the
suit properties described in Schedules A to J belonged to her
paternal grandfather G.V. Sadasiva Rao (father of defendants 1 to 4)
and that he died intestate on 01-11-2007 leaving behind him
surviving, the defendants 1 to 8 as his legal heirs to inherit the
properties described in Schedules A to J. According to the
appellant/plaintiff, the properties described in Schedules A to C were
ancestral properties of G.V. Sadasiva Rao and that he got them in a
partition among his brothers.
        5. In so far as suit D schedule is concerned, the appellant/
plaintiff claimed that the same belonged to one Chakunta Kishan
Rao and that after him, the said properties were divided among his
three daughters, one of whom married the 1st defendant. Similar
averments were made by the appellant/plaintiff in respect of the
other items of suit properties. Since we are not concerned now with
the manner in which the devolution of property was pleaded by the
plaintiff, we are not elaborating on the same for the present.
        6. During the pendency of the suit, the appellants father, who
was the 1st defendant in the suit, got transposed as the 2nd plaintiff
by an order dated 21-07-2011 in I.A.No.53 of 2011. Thereafter, the
appellant herein as well as her father who is the 1st respondent
herein jointly took out an application in I.A.No.449 of 2014
purportedly under Section 151 read with Order XX Rule 18 and
Order XV Rules 1 and 2 of the Code seeking a preliminary decree in
respect of the properties described in suit Schedules E, F and G
alone. This application was taken out by the appellant and her father
on the ground, interalia, that the suit was first posted on 02-02-2010
for the appearance of the defendants; that one advocate filed
vakalat for defendants 2 to 4 and 9 on the said date; that as per the
amended provisions of Order VIII Rule 1 of the Code, the
defendants 2 to 4 and 9 had a time limit of 90 days to file a written
statement; that the said period expired on 02-05-2010; that since the
defendants did not file a written statement within 90 days as
stipulated in Order VIII Rule 1, they forfeited their right to file a
written statement; that therefore, the appellant/1st plaintiff filed an
application in I.A.No.53 of 2010 for a declaration that the defendants
2 to 4 and 9 forfeited their right to file a written statement; that the
said application was allowed by an order dated 25-11-2011; that
despite the same, the 4th defendant filed a written statement, which
cannot be taken into account in view of the order passed in
I.A.No.53 of 2010; that in para-16 of the written statement, the 4th
defendant pleaded very vaguely that the suit properties are not joint
family properties; that defendants 2 and 3 filed a memo adopting the
written statement of defendant No.22, who was only a purchaser of
one item of suit B schedule property; that even the written statement
of defendant No.22 could not be taken into account in view of the
fact that it was filed belatedly in November 2011; that in view of the
invalidity of the written statements filed by defendants 4 and 22, they
are deemed to have admitted the plaint averments; that in any case
the denial in the written statement filed by them was not specific, in
so far as the properties covered by Schedules E, F and G of the
plaint are concerned; that therefore the defendants 2 to 4 and 9 are
not at issue with regard to the liability of these properties to be
partitioned; that as per Order XV Rules 1 and 2, the Court is
empowered to grant a preliminary decree, if the parties are not at
issue; and that therefore, a preliminary decree should be passed in
respect of properties described in Schedules E, F and G to the
plaint.
        7. The respondents 3 and 4 in I.A.No.449 of 2014, who are
defendants 3 and 4 in the suit, filed separate counter affidavits
contending that their right to file the written statement was not
forfeited and that their denial in the written statement was not vague
but prcise. They also contended in their counter that the appellant/
1st plaintiffs father, who became the 2nd plaintiff, earlier filed a suit
for partition in O.S.No.18 of 1983, which was transferred to another
Court in O.S.No.27 of 1987. The suit was dismissed for default in
1989 and the 2nd plaintiff did not take any steps thereafter. The
appellant herein was not even born on the date of filing of O.S.No.18
of 1983, but her father set up the appellant to file the present suit.
As a matter of fact, the 2nd plaintiff has also filed a fresh suit for
partition in O.S.No.204 of 2005. Therefore, the defendants 3 and 4
contended in their counter affidavit that the present suit in O.S.No.43
of 2009 was not even maintainable in view of Section 11 and Order
II Rule 2 CPC.
        8. After the defendants 3 and 4 filed a counter to I.A.No.449 of
2014, the Court below allowed the parties to file certain documents.
The appellant/1st plaintiff filed 27 documents as Exs.P.1 to P.27.
The respondents filed 12 documents as Exs.R.1 to R.12.
        9. After considering the averments contained in the affidavit
and counter affidavit and also after taking note of the documents
filed, the trial Court came to the conclusion that in the facts and
circumstances of the case, no preliminary decree for partition can be
granted without trial. As a consequence, the Court below dismissed
the application for the grant of a preliminary decree. As against the
said order, the 1st plaintiff has come up with the present appeal.
Maintainability:-
        10. At the outset an objection is taken by the learned counsel
for the respondents that the appeal is not maintainable, as there is
no decree in the eye of law. In response to the said contention, it
was argued by the learned counsel for the 1st respondent that the
appeal was actually filed originally as a Civil Miscellaneous Appeal in
CMA (SR) No.19714 of 2016 and that it is only due to the objections
raised by the Registry that the appeal was converted into a regular
appeal under Section 96 CPC.
        11. But, unfortunately for the appellant, neither a regular
appeal under Section 96 nor a miscellaneous appeal under Order
XLIII Rule 1 is maintainable in the case on hand. As we have seen
from the narration of facts, the order under appeal was passed on an
interlocutory application taken out by the 1st plaintiff for passing a
preliminary decree under Order XV Rule 1. The application was
dismissed by the trial Court. The dismissal of the said application
was solely on the ground that the entitlement of the appellant to a
decree can be adjudicated only after full trial. In other words the
Court did not conclusively determine the rights of the parties by the
order under appeal, with regard to all or any of the matters in
controversy in the suit. Hence, the order under appeal will not fall
within the meaning of the expression decree under Section 2 (2) of
the Code. If the order under appeal does not amount to a decree, no
appeal under Section 96 (1) shall lie as against the same.
        12. The order under appeal is also not one of the orders
enumerated in clauses (a) to (w) of Rule 1 of Order XLIII. Therefore,
no appeal shall lie as against the said order even under Section 104
(1) of the Code. Hence, the contention of the learned counsel for the
respondents 2 to 5 that the present appeal is not maintainable either
under Section 96 read with Order XLI or under Section 104 read with
Order XLIII is correct and has to be upheld.
        13. But wherever an order passed by a Court below is not
appealable under any of the above provisions, the same is revisable
by this Court under Section 115 of the Code. Therefore, this Court
can always treat the present appeal as a revision, subject however,
to one important aspect namely that the revisional jurisdiction is
limited by its very nature. Keeping this in mind, we shall proceed to
see whether the impugned order of the Court below calls for any
interference at least under the revisional jurisdiction of this Court.
On Merits:-
        14. As we have indicated in the narration of facts, the
appellant herein and her father, who is the 1st respondent herein,
virtually wanted a shortcut to success. They sought a preliminary
decree for partition in respect of the properties described in
Schedules E, F & G to the plaint, on the ground inter alia that the
defendants 2 to 4 and 9 had already forfeited their right to file
a written statement; that the written statements filed by the
defendants 4 and 22 were of no value, since the 4th defendant had
already forfeited his right of defence; that in para 16 of the written
statement the 4th defendant did not make a specific denial of the
plaint averments that the suit properties are not joint family
properties; that similarly the written statement filed by the
22nd defendant is of no value, as he was only a purchaser of
Item No.2 of plaint-B schedule property and he had no knowledge
about anything; that the defendants 2, 3 and 9 adopted the written
statement of the 22nd defendant and consequently their written
statements are also of no avail and that the denial in the written
statement of the 22nd defendant was also not specific.
        15. Thus the Affidavit filed by the appellant herein in support of
her application I.A.No.449 of 2014 seeking a preliminary decree
even without a trial, was full of contradictions and was nothing but
an attempt at hoodwinking the Court. If the defendants 2 to 4, 9 and
22 have forfeited their right to file written statements, the only thing
to which the plaintiffs would be entitled, is to have those defendants
set ex parte, so that the Court could proceed further. As a matter of
fact, the plaintiffs had impleaded about 198 defendants in the suit.
If some or many of the defendants had lost their right to file a written
statement, the only course of action open to the Court is to set them
ex parte and proceed further. Even if all the defendants are set ex
parte, the plaintiffs are not automatically entitled to a decree as
prayed for. The Court is obliged to satisfy itself, before granting a
decree even ex parte in favour of the plaintiffs that the plaintiffs have
a right to succeed and the evidence adduced by them was sufficient
to enable them to get a decree.
        16. In other words, if the plaintiffs take a plea that the real
contesting defendants had lost their right to file a written statement,
they can only urge the Court to set them ex parte.  After getting them
set ex parte, the plaintiffs should go to the witness box, lead
evidence and earn a decree. Instead of doing that, the plaintiffs
attempted to bowl a yorker which the Court below correctly declared
as a no ball.
        17. It is very interesting to see that after contending on the one
hand that the defendants 2 to 4, 9 and 22 had lost their right to file
a written statement, the plaintiffs contend on the other hand that the
written statements filed by them contained a vague and evasive
denial, tantamounting to admission of the plaint averments. If a party
had lost his right to file a written statement, the written statement
cannot form part of the record. If it cannot form part of the record of
the Court, any pleading contained therein will be of no avail to any of
the parties. A plaintiff, who obtained the orders of the Court to the
effect that the defendants had forfeited their right to file a written
statement, cannot rely upon a written statement filed by the
defendant thereafter. Such a written statement is not worth anything
both for the defendant as well as for the plaintiff. Therefore, the
contention of the plaintiff that the written statements of these
defendants contained a vague and evasive denial thereby
tantamounting to admission of the plaint averments, is nothing but
an abuse of the process of Court.
        18. A Trial Court can pass a decree on admission in terms of
Order XII, Rule 6 of the Code. An admission contemplated under
Order XII, Rule 6 of the Code, cannot be equated to the fiction of
a deemed admission under Order VIII, Rule 5 of the Code.
Order VIII, Rule 5 creates a fiction to the effect that what is not
specifically denied, is deemed to have been accepted. No plaintiff
will be entitled to a decree in terms of Order VIII, Rule 5, before trial.
What the plaintiffs sought before the Court below was actually
a decree on deemed admission in terms of Order VIII, Rule 5.
Fortunately the Court below did not fall a prey to such design on the
part of the plaintiffs.

        19. We do not know how the plaintiff could have filed
an application under Order XV, Rule 1 of the Code at all. Order XV,
Rul1 of the Code empowers a Court to pass a decree at the first
hearing of the suit, in respect of a question of law or fact on which
the parties are not at issue. The question as to whether the parties
are at issue on a question of law or fact, can be decided only after
the stage prescribed in Order XIV of the Code is crossed.
The question of framing issues under Order XIV, Rule 1 would arise
either after the defendants file a written statement or after the
defendants are set ex parte. A Court can come to the conclusion in
terms of Order XV, Rule 1 that the parties are not at issues on
a question of law or fact, only if the pleadings are complete. Even in
cases where the defendants are set ex parte, the Court cannot
invoke Order XV, Rule 1, but has to ask the plaintiff to prove his
case to enable him to get a decree as prayed for.

        20. Therefore, we are of the considered view that the attempt
on the part of the plaintiffs to get a decree in terms of Order XV, was
nothing but an abuse of the process of law. The reason as to why
the plaintiffs have chosen to take this shortcut is not far too difficult
to seek. It appears that the plaintiffs have been in enjoyment of
an interim order of injunction for the past six years or so. This has to
be seen in the context of the fact that the 1st respondent herein
(transposed as 2nd plaintiff later) earlier filed a suit in O.S.No.18 of
1983 seeking partition, at a time when the 1st plaintiff (appellant
herein) was not even born. That suit was dismissed for default in
1989. He later filed another suit in O.S.No.204 of 2005. Therefore, if
the defendants had been set ex parte, the plaintiffs would have been
called upon by the trial Court before granting an ex parte decree, to
explain as to how they would be entitled to maintain the suit.
Therefore, the plaintiffs appear to have resorted to this short cut
route. Hence, we are of the considered view that the present appeal
deserves to be dismissed with costs.

        21. Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed with costs which we
quantify at Rs.10,000/- (Rupees ten thousand only), to be paid by
the appellant herein to the respondents 2 to 5. Since there are
nearly 200 defendants in the suit, it is unlikely that the suit would see
the light of the day very soon. Therefore, we direct the Court below,
either to endeavour to dispose of the suit within a period of 3 (three)
months and if it is not possible, to endeavour to dispose of at least
the application for injunction.

      22. As a sequel thereto, the miscellaneous petitions, if any,
pending in this appeal shall stand closed.

________________________  
V. RAMASUBRAMANIAN, J.    
_________
ANIS, J.
26th October, 2016.

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