The provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code
specifically bar the filing of a suit for setting aside a decree on the
ground that the compromise on the basis of which the decree was
passed was not lawful. The explanation to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of
the Code indicates that a compromise that is void or voidable
under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 is not deemed to be lawful
under Rule 3. In Banwarilal (supra), it was held by the Hon'ble
Supreme Court that the compromise is sought to be challenged as
being fraudulent when it is deemed to be void within the meaning
of the explanation to the proviso to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of the
Code and as such, is not lawful. The prayer for setting aside the
compromise has to be made before the same Court which recorded
the compromise. Similarly, in Horil (supra), this position was
reiterated and it was held that a separate suit for challenging the
compromise on the ground that it was obtained by fraud was not
maintainable. In R. Rajanna (supra), it was again held that a
separate suit of the present nature for challenging a compromise as
not being lawful was not maintainable.
From the aforesaid, therefore, the legal position is well
settled as regards remedy available for challenging a compromise
which is not lawful. That a compromise which is obtained through
fraud, with coercion and through misrepresentation would not be
lawful also does not admit of any doubt. Thus, the only recourse
that is available in such case is to approach the same Court under
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code. The same cannot be
done by a separate suit which is barred in view of provisions of
Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
NAGPUR BENCH : NAGPUR.
CIVIL REVISION APPLICATION NO.88 OF 2014
Sushil Sohanlal Agrawal, Vs Harishankar Ramnivas Sharma,
CORAM: A.S. CHANDURKAR, J.
DATED: 26-02-2016.
Citation:2016(4) MHLJ 904
2. By this civil revision application filed under Section
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for short 'the Code'), the
applicant, who is the original defendant No.1 in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 has challenged the order dated 30/06/2014 passed
on the application below Exhibit33 filed under provisions of Order
VII Rule 11(a) and (d) of the Code for rejection of the plaint.
Similarly, the order dated 15/09/2014 rejecting the review
application below Exhibit49 filed by the applicant is also under
challenge.
3. Few facts which are relevant to consider the challenge
as raised in the revision application are that, initially the nonapplicant
No.1 had filed S.C.S. No.581/2006 against the present
applicant and three others. It was the case of the nonapplicant
No.1 that he was the lawful owner of land bearing Kh. No.46 and
part of land bearing Kh. No.47, admeasuring 1.75 acres. It was
the further case that though the nonapplicant No.1 was the owner
of aforesaid land, by saledeeds dated 24/12/1998 and
29/01/2001, he was sought to be divested of his title. The
aforesaid suit was, therefore, filed for declaration that the nonapplicant
No.1 was the lawful owner of the suit lands on the basis
of saledeed dated 08/01/1999 and for a declaration that the saledeeds
dated 24/12/1998 and 29/01/2001 were null and void. A
prayer for permanent injunction was also made. The applicant
who was the defendant No.1 had filed a counterclaim seeking
declaration of his title. During pendency of the said civil suit, a
compromise petition came to be filed on record on 07/10/2008.
In terms of said compromise petition, the suit was withdrawn and
the counterclaim filed by the applicant came to be decreed. This
order was passed on 10/08/2008.
4. Thereafter, the nonapplicant No.1 on 01/12/2012
filed S.C.S. No.5055/2012 against the present applicant and
another praying therein that the compromise decree that was
passed in S.C.S. No.581/2006 be declared as null and void. A
further declaration was sought that the saledeed dated
08/01/1999 was valid and that the saledeeds dated 24/12/1998
and 29/01/2001 were null and void ab initio. Other consequential
reliefs were also prayed for. There was also a prayer for perpetual
injunction with regard to protecting the possession of the nonapplicant
No.1.
5. The applicant moved an application under provisions
of Order VII Rule 11(a) and (d) of the Code below Exhibit33. It
was stated in the application that S.C.S. No.581/2006 had been
withdrawn by the nonapplicant No.1 without seeking any further
liberty/ permission to file fresh proceedings. It was stated that,
such course was not permissible. The subsequent suit was also
barred in view of provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
It was further stated that the subsequent suit was also barred by
limitation. On these counts, it was prayed that the plaint be
rejected. The nonapplicant No.1 filed his reply below Exhibit 36
A and opposed the application. The trial Court by order dated
30/06/2014 rejected said application below Exhibit33. It held
that the subsequent suit had been filed within limitation and that
withdrawal of the earlier suit would not preclude the nonapplicant
No.1 from instituting the subsequent suit.
6. The applicant thereafter filed an application below
Exhibit49 seeking review of the order passed below Exhibit33 on
the ground that the trial Court had committed an error apparent
on the face of record while rejecting said application. The review
application was also rejected on 15/09/2014. Both these orders
are challenged in this revision application.
7. Shri M.G. Bhangde, the learned Senior Counsel for the
applicant submitted that the trial Court committed an error when
it rejected the application below Exhibit33. It was submitted that
S.C.S. No.581/2006 had been withdrawn by the nonapplicant
No.1 on the ground that the proceedings had been compromised.
No liberty was sought by the nonapplicant No.1 before
withdrawing the civil suit and therefore no suit could have been
filed seeking similar reliefs. The subsequent suit seeking to
challenge the compromise decree was also not maintainable in
view of the bar under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the
Code. It was submitted that the compromise having been entered
into by practicing fraud cannot be a ground for filing a subsequent
suit for setting aside the compromise decree. The applicant in
support of the application below Exhibit33 had relied upon the
averments made in S.C.S. No.581/2006 and without considering
these aspects, the trial Court was not justified in holding that the
subsequent suit was maintainable. In support of his submission
that the subsequent suit was barred in law, the learned Senior
Counsel relied upon the judgments of the Hon'ble Supreme Court
in Banwari Lal vs. Chando Devi and another (1993) 1 SCC 581;
Horil vs. Keshav and another (2012) 5 SCC 525 and R. Rajanna vs.
S.R. Venkataswamy and others (2014) 15 SCC 471. It was then
submitted that the subsequent suit was barred by limitation in as
much as the same was filed more than three years from the
disposal of the earlier proceedings. S.C.S. No.581/2006 was
disposed of on 10/10/2008, while according to the nonapplicant
No.1, the cause of action for filing S.C.S. No.5055/2012 as stated
in paragraph 43 of the plaint accrued on 23/10/2008. The
subsequent suit was filed on 01/12/2012 which was beyond three
years from the date when the cause of action had accrued.
Reference was made to the provisions of Article 59 of the
Limitation Act, 1963. It was submitted that from the averments in
the plaint, the aspect of limitation ought to have been considered
by the trial Court. In that regard, the learned Senior Counsel
placed reliance on the judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in
Suresh Kumar Dagla vs. Sarwan and another, 2014 (9) SCALE 675.
It was then submitted that though the applicant had sought a
review of the order passed below Exhibit33, the trial Court did
not consider the application for review in the proper perspective.
It was, therefore, submitted that the order passed below Exhibit33
was liable to be set aside and the suit deserved to be dismissed.
8. On the other hand, Shri S.P. Bhandarkar, the learned
Counsel for the nonapplicant No.1 supported the impugned
orders. It was submitted that the trial Court was justified in
rejecting the application below Exhibit33. According to the
learned Counsel, the reliefs sought in the subsequent suit basically
against the defendant No.2 therein and only the first prayer in the
said suit was sought against the present applicant. Similarly, the
prayers made in the earlier suit and those made in the subsequent
suit were distinct. According to him, the entire suit was not liable
to be dismissed under provisions of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code
and that it was not permissible to reject the plaint in part. The
cause of action for filing the subsequent suit had been clearly
stated in the plaint and, hence, there was no case made out for
dismissing the suit under provisions of Order VII Rule 11(a) of the
Code. Similarly, there was no statement in the plaint on the basis
of which the provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code could
be attracted. It was then submitted that the question of limitation
was a mixed question of law and facts and said aspect could not
have been decided under provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the
Code. In that regard, the learned Counsel placed reliance on the
judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Balasaria Construction
(P) Ltd. vs. Hanuman Seva Trust and others (2006) 5 SCC 658. The
learned Counsel also relied upon the decision in Bhau Ram vs.
Janak Singh and others (2012) 6 Mh.L.J. 758 (SC) in support of his
submissions. It was then submitted that the review application
had been rightly rejected by the trial Court. Therefore, in absence
of any error of jurisdiction, there was no case made out to invoke
jurisdiction under Section 115 of the Code.
9. In the present case, the applicant has sought rejection
of the plaint for relying upon the provisions of Order VII Rule
11(a) & (d) of the Code. Under clause (a) if the plaint does not
disclose a cause of action it has to be rejected. Under clause (d) if
the suit appears from the statement in the plaint to be barred by
law, the plaint shall be rejected. The applicant has relied upon the
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code while seeking
rejection of the plaint. Similarly, according to the applicant the
suit is barred by limitation.
10. It would be first necessary to examine whether the bar
under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A would be attracted in the
present case. Special Civil Suit No.581/2006 was filed by the nonapplicant
No.1 in which he had sought the relief of declaration
that the sale deed dated 24121998 executed by the defendant
No.2 in favour of the defendant No.3 as well as the sale deed
dated 2912001 executed by the defendant No.3 therein in favour
of the defendant No.1 were null and void. A further declaration
was sought that the nonapplicant No.1 was the owner of the suit
property admeasuring 1.75 acres as per the sale deed dated 81
1999. In said suit, the present applicant had filed a counter claim
challenging the sale deed dated 811999 that was executed in
favour of the nonapplicant No.1. The applicant further sought the
relief of permanent injunction.
Special Civil Suit No.581/2006 came to be disposed of
on the basis of a compromise between the parties. The suit filed
by the nonapplicant No.1 came to be withdrawn while a decree
was passed in the counter claim filed by the applicant on 1010
2008.
11. In so far as the SC.S. No.5055 of 2012 is concerned,
the same has also been filed by the nonapplicant No.1 against the
present applicant and the defendant No.3 in S.C.S. No.581/2006.
In paragraph Nos.31 to 33 of this suit, it has been pleaded that the
compromise petition in the earlier suit was got executed by the
applicant fraudulently, under coercion and threat. The relief
sought in this suit is a declaration that the compromise dated 24
102008 be declared null and void. A prayer is also made that the
sale deed dated 811999 in favour of the nonapplicant No.1 be
declared legal and valid and that the sale deeds dated 24121998
and 2912001 be declared null and void. Further consequential
relief of setting aside the mutation entries standing on record on
the basis of aforesaid transactions be declared to be illegal. There
is also a prayer for perpetual injunction. The cause of action for
this suit is stated to have accrued on 24102008 when the
applicant obtained the compromise decree by practicing fraud on
the nonapplicant No.1. It was stated that the cause of action
continued thereafter when the mutation entries were recorded.
12. From the aforesaid, it can be seen that S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 is essentially a suit for setting aside the
compromise decree that was passed in Special Civil Suit
No.581/2006. Besides said prayer, the other prayers in relation to
the sale deed dated 24121998, 811999 and 2912001 are
identical to the prayers made in S.C.S. No.581/2006. The
averments in the subsequent suit clearly indicate that according to
the nonapplicant No.1, the compromise deed was got signed by
the applicant by practicing fraud, through coercion and
misrepresentation.
13. The provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code
specifically bar the filing of a suit for setting aside a decree on the
ground that the compromise on the basis of which the decree was
passed was not lawful. The explanation to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of
the Code indicates that a compromise that is void or voidable
under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 is not deemed to be lawful
under Rule 3. In Banwarilal (supra), it was held by the Hon'ble
Supreme Court that the compromise is sought to be challenged as
being fraudulent when it is deemed to be void within the meaning
of the explanation to the proviso to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of the
Code and as such, is not lawful. The prayer for setting aside the
compromise has to be made before the same Court which recorded
the compromise. Similarly, in Horil (supra), this position was
reiterated and it was held that a separate suit for challenging the
compromise on the ground that it was obtained by fraud was not
maintainable. In R. Rajanna (supra), it was again held that a
separate suit of the present nature for challenging a compromise as
not being lawful was not maintainable.
From the aforesaid, therefore, the legal position is well
settled as regards remedy available for challenging a compromise
which is not lawful. That a compromise which is obtained through
fraud, with coercion and through misrepresentation would not be
lawful also does not admit of any doubt. Thus, the only recourse
that is available in such case is to approach the same Court under
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code. The same cannot be
done by a separate suit which is barred in view of provisions of
Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
14. In the light of aforesaid legal position, the question is
whether the plaint is liable to be rejected under provisions of
Order VII Rule 11(a) and/or (d) of the Code. In S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 it has been pleaded that S.C.S. No.581/2006
came to be compromised and this compromise dated 24102008
was null and void. The pleadings to that effect can be found in
paras 31 to 33 of the plaint. If these are the pleadings in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012, it is obvious that this suit would be barred in view
of provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code. The pleadings in
paras 31 to 33 of S.C.S. No.5055/2012 are by themselves sufficient
to attract provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. The
judgment in the case of Bhauram (supra) therefore, does not
support the stand of the nonapplicant No.1 as only the averments
in the plaint have been considered while deciding the application
under Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. It will, therefore, have to
be held that in view of aforesaid averments appearing in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 and on a plain reading of the plaint, the suit itself
is barred by law.
15. According to the applicant, the suit is also barred by
limitation in view of the fact that the cause of action for filing the
said suit is stated to have accrued on 24-10-2008 and the suit was
filed on 11-2-2012. This was more than three years from the
accrual of the cause of action and hence, it was beyond the period
of limitation prescribed by Article 59 under the Limitation Act,
1963. That a suit which is barred by limitation can also be
dismissed under provisions of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code is not
in dispute. In Hardesh Ore Limited Vs. Hide and Company 2007 (5)
Mh.L.J. 571, it was held that the expression barred by law would
include the law of limitation. Considering the cause of action as
pleaded and the fact that admittedly the suit has been filed beyond
the period of three years from its accrual, the suit is even
otherwise barred by limitation under Article 59 of the Limitation
Act, 1963. Though it has been averred that the cause of action
was continuous in view of the subsequent mutation entries, these
mutation entries are based on the sale deeds in question and are
merely the consequence of execution of said sale deeds. If the
challenge to the sale deeds in question is barred by limitation, the
challenge only to the mutation entries also cannot succeed. It was
also urged on behalf of the nonapplicant No.1 by relying upon
the judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Balsaria
Construction Pvt. Ltd. (supra) that the question of limitation was a
mixed question of law and fact. However, the same does not
appear so in the present case inasmuch as the suit is based on the
compromise decree dated 24102008 and the sale deeds referred
to herein above. Thus, even on this count, the suit appears to be
barred by law of limitation under provisions of Order VII Rule
11(d) of the Code.
16. The learned Counsel for the nonapplicant No.1 tried
to salvage the case of the nonapplicant No.1 by urging that there
were other reliefs sought in the plaint and hence, the entire plaint
was not liable to be rejected. This submission cannot be accepted
for the reason that the prayer with regard to declaration that the
mutation entries taken on the basis of the sale deeds in question
were liable to be set aside cannot be considered independently of
the challenge to the sale deeds on the basis of which the same
were effected. Moreover, absence of one defendent in the
subsequent suit also cannot be a ground for refusing the prayer for
rejecting the plaint.
17. The matter can be viewed from another angle. Even if
the prayer with regard to setting aside the compromise decree is
kept aside for some time, under provisions of Order XXIII Rule
1(3) of the Code, it is open for the plaintiff to withdraw the suit or
such part of the claim with liberty to institute a fresh suit in
respect of the subject matter of such suit or such part of the claim.
However, such withdrawal without the permission of the Court
precludes the plaintiff from instituting any fresh suit in respect of
such subject matter or such part of the claim. Admittedly, the
earlier suit was withdrawn without reserving any right or liberty to
file any fresh suit. No permission of the Court was sought in that
regard. Thus, even under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 1(4) of
the Code, the nonapplicant No.1 was precluded from instituting
the subsequent suit for challenging the sale deeds dated 2412
1998 and 2912001 or for that matter seeking declaration as to
the legality of the sale deed dated 811999. This is one more
reason why the plaint is liable to be rejected under provisions of
Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code.
18. The trial Court misdirected itself when it rejected an
application moved by the applicant below Exhib33. The
averments in the plaint in Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 were
sufficient to come to the conclusion that the plaint was liable to be
rejected. As the trial Court had failed to consider said application
in the proper perspective, the applicant had moved an application
seeking review of said order by filing an application below
Exhib.49. Similarly, the written notes of argument were also
sought to be relied upon by the applicant. However, said
application was also rejected. It is, therefore, clear that the trial
Court by rejecting the application below Exhibit33 has failed to
exercise the jurisdiction vested in it for rejecting the plaint under
provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. The impugned
order suffers from material irregularity and is thus, liable to be set
aside.
19. In view of aforesaid discussion, the following order is
passed:
ORDER
(1) The order dated 3062014 passed below Exhibit33 as
well as the order dated 1592014 passed below Exhibit49 in
Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 are set aside.
(2) The application below Exhibit33 is partly allowed and
the plaint in Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 stands rejected under
provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code.
(3) The Civil Revision Application is allowed in aforesaid
terms with no order as to costs.
specifically bar the filing of a suit for setting aside a decree on the
ground that the compromise on the basis of which the decree was
passed was not lawful. The explanation to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of
the Code indicates that a compromise that is void or voidable
under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 is not deemed to be lawful
under Rule 3. In Banwarilal (supra), it was held by the Hon'ble
Supreme Court that the compromise is sought to be challenged as
being fraudulent when it is deemed to be void within the meaning
of the explanation to the proviso to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of the
Code and as such, is not lawful. The prayer for setting aside the
compromise has to be made before the same Court which recorded
the compromise. Similarly, in Horil (supra), this position was
reiterated and it was held that a separate suit for challenging the
compromise on the ground that it was obtained by fraud was not
maintainable. In R. Rajanna (supra), it was again held that a
separate suit of the present nature for challenging a compromise as
not being lawful was not maintainable.
From the aforesaid, therefore, the legal position is well
settled as regards remedy available for challenging a compromise
which is not lawful. That a compromise which is obtained through
fraud, with coercion and through misrepresentation would not be
lawful also does not admit of any doubt. Thus, the only recourse
that is available in such case is to approach the same Court under
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code. The same cannot be
done by a separate suit which is barred in view of provisions of
Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY
NAGPUR BENCH : NAGPUR.
CIVIL REVISION APPLICATION NO.88 OF 2014
Sushil Sohanlal Agrawal, Vs Harishankar Ramnivas Sharma,
CORAM: A.S. CHANDURKAR, J.
DATED: 26-02-2016.
Citation:2016(4) MHLJ 904
2. By this civil revision application filed under Section
115 of the Code of Civil Procedure (for short 'the Code'), the
applicant, who is the original defendant No.1 in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 has challenged the order dated 30/06/2014 passed
on the application below Exhibit33 filed under provisions of Order
VII Rule 11(a) and (d) of the Code for rejection of the plaint.
Similarly, the order dated 15/09/2014 rejecting the review
application below Exhibit49 filed by the applicant is also under
challenge.
3. Few facts which are relevant to consider the challenge
as raised in the revision application are that, initially the nonapplicant
No.1 had filed S.C.S. No.581/2006 against the present
applicant and three others. It was the case of the nonapplicant
No.1 that he was the lawful owner of land bearing Kh. No.46 and
part of land bearing Kh. No.47, admeasuring 1.75 acres. It was
the further case that though the nonapplicant No.1 was the owner
of aforesaid land, by saledeeds dated 24/12/1998 and
29/01/2001, he was sought to be divested of his title. The
aforesaid suit was, therefore, filed for declaration that the nonapplicant
No.1 was the lawful owner of the suit lands on the basis
of saledeed dated 08/01/1999 and for a declaration that the saledeeds
dated 24/12/1998 and 29/01/2001 were null and void. A
prayer for permanent injunction was also made. The applicant
who was the defendant No.1 had filed a counterclaim seeking
declaration of his title. During pendency of the said civil suit, a
compromise petition came to be filed on record on 07/10/2008.
In terms of said compromise petition, the suit was withdrawn and
the counterclaim filed by the applicant came to be decreed. This
order was passed on 10/08/2008.
4. Thereafter, the nonapplicant No.1 on 01/12/2012
filed S.C.S. No.5055/2012 against the present applicant and
another praying therein that the compromise decree that was
passed in S.C.S. No.581/2006 be declared as null and void. A
further declaration was sought that the saledeed dated
08/01/1999 was valid and that the saledeeds dated 24/12/1998
and 29/01/2001 were null and void ab initio. Other consequential
reliefs were also prayed for. There was also a prayer for perpetual
injunction with regard to protecting the possession of the nonapplicant
No.1.
5. The applicant moved an application under provisions
of Order VII Rule 11(a) and (d) of the Code below Exhibit33. It
was stated in the application that S.C.S. No.581/2006 had been
withdrawn by the nonapplicant No.1 without seeking any further
liberty/ permission to file fresh proceedings. It was stated that,
such course was not permissible. The subsequent suit was also
barred in view of provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
It was further stated that the subsequent suit was also barred by
limitation. On these counts, it was prayed that the plaint be
rejected. The nonapplicant No.1 filed his reply below Exhibit 36
A and opposed the application. The trial Court by order dated
30/06/2014 rejected said application below Exhibit33. It held
that the subsequent suit had been filed within limitation and that
withdrawal of the earlier suit would not preclude the nonapplicant
No.1 from instituting the subsequent suit.
6. The applicant thereafter filed an application below
Exhibit49 seeking review of the order passed below Exhibit33 on
the ground that the trial Court had committed an error apparent
on the face of record while rejecting said application. The review
application was also rejected on 15/09/2014. Both these orders
are challenged in this revision application.
7. Shri M.G. Bhangde, the learned Senior Counsel for the
applicant submitted that the trial Court committed an error when
it rejected the application below Exhibit33. It was submitted that
S.C.S. No.581/2006 had been withdrawn by the nonapplicant
No.1 on the ground that the proceedings had been compromised.
No liberty was sought by the nonapplicant No.1 before
withdrawing the civil suit and therefore no suit could have been
filed seeking similar reliefs. The subsequent suit seeking to
challenge the compromise decree was also not maintainable in
view of the bar under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the
Code. It was submitted that the compromise having been entered
into by practicing fraud cannot be a ground for filing a subsequent
suit for setting aside the compromise decree. The applicant in
support of the application below Exhibit33 had relied upon the
averments made in S.C.S. No.581/2006 and without considering
these aspects, the trial Court was not justified in holding that the
subsequent suit was maintainable. In support of his submission
that the subsequent suit was barred in law, the learned Senior
Counsel relied upon the judgments of the Hon'ble Supreme Court
in Banwari Lal vs. Chando Devi and another (1993) 1 SCC 581;
Horil vs. Keshav and another (2012) 5 SCC 525 and R. Rajanna vs.
S.R. Venkataswamy and others (2014) 15 SCC 471. It was then
submitted that the subsequent suit was barred by limitation in as
much as the same was filed more than three years from the
disposal of the earlier proceedings. S.C.S. No.581/2006 was
disposed of on 10/10/2008, while according to the nonapplicant
No.1, the cause of action for filing S.C.S. No.5055/2012 as stated
in paragraph 43 of the plaint accrued on 23/10/2008. The
subsequent suit was filed on 01/12/2012 which was beyond three
years from the date when the cause of action had accrued.
Reference was made to the provisions of Article 59 of the
Limitation Act, 1963. It was submitted that from the averments in
the plaint, the aspect of limitation ought to have been considered
by the trial Court. In that regard, the learned Senior Counsel
placed reliance on the judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in
Suresh Kumar Dagla vs. Sarwan and another, 2014 (9) SCALE 675.
It was then submitted that though the applicant had sought a
review of the order passed below Exhibit33, the trial Court did
not consider the application for review in the proper perspective.
It was, therefore, submitted that the order passed below Exhibit33
was liable to be set aside and the suit deserved to be dismissed.
8. On the other hand, Shri S.P. Bhandarkar, the learned
Counsel for the nonapplicant No.1 supported the impugned
orders. It was submitted that the trial Court was justified in
rejecting the application below Exhibit33. According to the
learned Counsel, the reliefs sought in the subsequent suit basically
against the defendant No.2 therein and only the first prayer in the
said suit was sought against the present applicant. Similarly, the
prayers made in the earlier suit and those made in the subsequent
suit were distinct. According to him, the entire suit was not liable
to be dismissed under provisions of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code
and that it was not permissible to reject the plaint in part. The
cause of action for filing the subsequent suit had been clearly
stated in the plaint and, hence, there was no case made out for
dismissing the suit under provisions of Order VII Rule 11(a) of the
Code. Similarly, there was no statement in the plaint on the basis
of which the provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code could
be attracted. It was then submitted that the question of limitation
was a mixed question of law and facts and said aspect could not
have been decided under provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the
Code. In that regard, the learned Counsel placed reliance on the
judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Balasaria Construction
(P) Ltd. vs. Hanuman Seva Trust and others (2006) 5 SCC 658. The
learned Counsel also relied upon the decision in Bhau Ram vs.
Janak Singh and others (2012) 6 Mh.L.J. 758 (SC) in support of his
submissions. It was then submitted that the review application
had been rightly rejected by the trial Court. Therefore, in absence
of any error of jurisdiction, there was no case made out to invoke
jurisdiction under Section 115 of the Code.
9. In the present case, the applicant has sought rejection
of the plaint for relying upon the provisions of Order VII Rule
11(a) & (d) of the Code. Under clause (a) if the plaint does not
disclose a cause of action it has to be rejected. Under clause (d) if
the suit appears from the statement in the plaint to be barred by
law, the plaint shall be rejected. The applicant has relied upon the
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code while seeking
rejection of the plaint. Similarly, according to the applicant the
suit is barred by limitation.
10. It would be first necessary to examine whether the bar
under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A would be attracted in the
present case. Special Civil Suit No.581/2006 was filed by the nonapplicant
No.1 in which he had sought the relief of declaration
that the sale deed dated 24121998 executed by the defendant
No.2 in favour of the defendant No.3 as well as the sale deed
dated 2912001 executed by the defendant No.3 therein in favour
of the defendant No.1 were null and void. A further declaration
was sought that the nonapplicant No.1 was the owner of the suit
property admeasuring 1.75 acres as per the sale deed dated 81
1999. In said suit, the present applicant had filed a counter claim
challenging the sale deed dated 811999 that was executed in
favour of the nonapplicant No.1. The applicant further sought the
relief of permanent injunction.
Special Civil Suit No.581/2006 came to be disposed of
on the basis of a compromise between the parties. The suit filed
by the nonapplicant No.1 came to be withdrawn while a decree
was passed in the counter claim filed by the applicant on 1010
2008.
11. In so far as the SC.S. No.5055 of 2012 is concerned,
the same has also been filed by the nonapplicant No.1 against the
present applicant and the defendant No.3 in S.C.S. No.581/2006.
In paragraph Nos.31 to 33 of this suit, it has been pleaded that the
compromise petition in the earlier suit was got executed by the
applicant fraudulently, under coercion and threat. The relief
sought in this suit is a declaration that the compromise dated 24
102008 be declared null and void. A prayer is also made that the
sale deed dated 811999 in favour of the nonapplicant No.1 be
declared legal and valid and that the sale deeds dated 24121998
and 2912001 be declared null and void. Further consequential
relief of setting aside the mutation entries standing on record on
the basis of aforesaid transactions be declared to be illegal. There
is also a prayer for perpetual injunction. The cause of action for
this suit is stated to have accrued on 24102008 when the
applicant obtained the compromise decree by practicing fraud on
the nonapplicant No.1. It was stated that the cause of action
continued thereafter when the mutation entries were recorded.
12. From the aforesaid, it can be seen that S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 is essentially a suit for setting aside the
compromise decree that was passed in Special Civil Suit
No.581/2006. Besides said prayer, the other prayers in relation to
the sale deed dated 24121998, 811999 and 2912001 are
identical to the prayers made in S.C.S. No.581/2006. The
averments in the subsequent suit clearly indicate that according to
the nonapplicant No.1, the compromise deed was got signed by
the applicant by practicing fraud, through coercion and
misrepresentation.
13. The provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code
specifically bar the filing of a suit for setting aside a decree on the
ground that the compromise on the basis of which the decree was
passed was not lawful. The explanation to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of
the Code indicates that a compromise that is void or voidable
under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 is not deemed to be lawful
under Rule 3. In Banwarilal (supra), it was held by the Hon'ble
Supreme Court that the compromise is sought to be challenged as
being fraudulent when it is deemed to be void within the meaning
of the explanation to the proviso to Rule 3 of Order XXIII of the
Code and as such, is not lawful. The prayer for setting aside the
compromise has to be made before the same Court which recorded
the compromise. Similarly, in Horil (supra), this position was
reiterated and it was held that a separate suit for challenging the
compromise on the ground that it was obtained by fraud was not
maintainable. In R. Rajanna (supra), it was again held that a
separate suit of the present nature for challenging a compromise as
not being lawful was not maintainable.
From the aforesaid, therefore, the legal position is well
settled as regards remedy available for challenging a compromise
which is not lawful. That a compromise which is obtained through
fraud, with coercion and through misrepresentation would not be
lawful also does not admit of any doubt. Thus, the only recourse
that is available in such case is to approach the same Court under
provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3 of the Code. The same cannot be
done by a separate suit which is barred in view of provisions of
Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code.
14. In the light of aforesaid legal position, the question is
whether the plaint is liable to be rejected under provisions of
Order VII Rule 11(a) and/or (d) of the Code. In S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 it has been pleaded that S.C.S. No.581/2006
came to be compromised and this compromise dated 24102008
was null and void. The pleadings to that effect can be found in
paras 31 to 33 of the plaint. If these are the pleadings in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012, it is obvious that this suit would be barred in view
of provisions of Order XXIII Rule 3A of the Code. The pleadings in
paras 31 to 33 of S.C.S. No.5055/2012 are by themselves sufficient
to attract provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. The
judgment in the case of Bhauram (supra) therefore, does not
support the stand of the nonapplicant No.1 as only the averments
in the plaint have been considered while deciding the application
under Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. It will, therefore, have to
be held that in view of aforesaid averments appearing in S.C.S.
No.5055/2012 and on a plain reading of the plaint, the suit itself
is barred by law.
15. According to the applicant, the suit is also barred by
limitation in view of the fact that the cause of action for filing the
said suit is stated to have accrued on 24-10-2008 and the suit was
filed on 11-2-2012. This was more than three years from the
accrual of the cause of action and hence, it was beyond the period
of limitation prescribed by Article 59 under the Limitation Act,
1963. That a suit which is barred by limitation can also be
dismissed under provisions of Order VII Rule 11 of the Code is not
in dispute. In Hardesh Ore Limited Vs. Hide and Company 2007 (5)
Mh.L.J. 571, it was held that the expression barred by law would
include the law of limitation. Considering the cause of action as
pleaded and the fact that admittedly the suit has been filed beyond
the period of three years from its accrual, the suit is even
otherwise barred by limitation under Article 59 of the Limitation
Act, 1963. Though it has been averred that the cause of action
was continuous in view of the subsequent mutation entries, these
mutation entries are based on the sale deeds in question and are
merely the consequence of execution of said sale deeds. If the
challenge to the sale deeds in question is barred by limitation, the
challenge only to the mutation entries also cannot succeed. It was
also urged on behalf of the nonapplicant No.1 by relying upon
the judgment of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Balsaria
Construction Pvt. Ltd. (supra) that the question of limitation was a
mixed question of law and fact. However, the same does not
appear so in the present case inasmuch as the suit is based on the
compromise decree dated 24102008 and the sale deeds referred
to herein above. Thus, even on this count, the suit appears to be
barred by law of limitation under provisions of Order VII Rule
11(d) of the Code.
16. The learned Counsel for the nonapplicant No.1 tried
to salvage the case of the nonapplicant No.1 by urging that there
were other reliefs sought in the plaint and hence, the entire plaint
was not liable to be rejected. This submission cannot be accepted
for the reason that the prayer with regard to declaration that the
mutation entries taken on the basis of the sale deeds in question
were liable to be set aside cannot be considered independently of
the challenge to the sale deeds on the basis of which the same
were effected. Moreover, absence of one defendent in the
subsequent suit also cannot be a ground for refusing the prayer for
rejecting the plaint.
17. The matter can be viewed from another angle. Even if
the prayer with regard to setting aside the compromise decree is
kept aside for some time, under provisions of Order XXIII Rule
1(3) of the Code, it is open for the plaintiff to withdraw the suit or
such part of the claim with liberty to institute a fresh suit in
respect of the subject matter of such suit or such part of the claim.
However, such withdrawal without the permission of the Court
precludes the plaintiff from instituting any fresh suit in respect of
such subject matter or such part of the claim. Admittedly, the
earlier suit was withdrawn without reserving any right or liberty to
file any fresh suit. No permission of the Court was sought in that
regard. Thus, even under provisions of Order XXIII Rule 1(4) of
the Code, the nonapplicant No.1 was precluded from instituting
the subsequent suit for challenging the sale deeds dated 2412
1998 and 2912001 or for that matter seeking declaration as to
the legality of the sale deed dated 811999. This is one more
reason why the plaint is liable to be rejected under provisions of
Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code.
18. The trial Court misdirected itself when it rejected an
application moved by the applicant below Exhib33. The
averments in the plaint in Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 were
sufficient to come to the conclusion that the plaint was liable to be
rejected. As the trial Court had failed to consider said application
in the proper perspective, the applicant had moved an application
seeking review of said order by filing an application below
Exhib.49. Similarly, the written notes of argument were also
sought to be relied upon by the applicant. However, said
application was also rejected. It is, therefore, clear that the trial
Court by rejecting the application below Exhibit33 has failed to
exercise the jurisdiction vested in it for rejecting the plaint under
provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code. The impugned
order suffers from material irregularity and is thus, liable to be set
aside.
19. In view of aforesaid discussion, the following order is
passed:
ORDER
(1) The order dated 3062014 passed below Exhibit33 as
well as the order dated 1592014 passed below Exhibit49 in
Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 are set aside.
(2) The application below Exhibit33 is partly allowed and
the plaint in Special Civil Suit No.5055/2012 stands rejected under
provisions of Order VII Rule 11(d) of the Code.
(3) The Civil Revision Application is allowed in aforesaid
terms with no order as to costs.
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