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Darbari Lal vs Gobind Ram And Ors.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|31 March, 1921

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT
1. In this case the plaintiff-appellant, who was entitled to succeed to the estate of one Hoti Lal on the death of the widow of Hoti Lal, Musammat Mul Kunwar, sued for recovery of possession of a house sold by Hoti Lals widow, Musammat Mul Kunwar, to the ancestors of the defendants on the 20th of January 1889, The Courts below have found that this house was purchased by Musammat Mul Kunwar in 1-69; eleven years after the death of Hoti Lal. They found further that there was nothing on the evidence to establish that the house had been purchased with the funds of Hoti Lal's estate in the bands of his widow, or to establish that the widow had shown any intention to make the house an accretion to her husband's estate. They found farther that there was nothing to establish even that the house had been purchased with the proceeds of savings out of the estate. The above are findings of fact which cannot be traversed in second appeal. The only point that remains is this. In the year 1890 the plaintiff appellant's deceased uncle, Budh Sen, who was then the presumptive next reversioner of Hoti Lal, obtained a declaratory decree against Mul Kunwar and the purchasers to the effect that Mul Kunwar had no right to transfer anything more than a life-interest in the house in question. If this decree he treated as binding in the present case on the principle of res judicata, the plaintiff-appellant should certainly succeed, but we agree with the lower Courts that the decree does not operate as res judicata. The ruling of the Full Bench in Bhagwanta v. Sukhi 22 A. 33 (F.B.) A.W.N. (1899) 159 : 9 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 1054 has application. No reversioner san be held to derive his title from another reversioner. He derives his title from the last full owner, the title in question being the title to the estate. This is the law which prevails in this Province, for nothing has been laid down by their Lordships of the Privy Council to vary the law laid down in this decision. There is nothing in the decision in Venkatanarayana Pillay v, Subbammal 29 Ind. Cas. 298 : 38 M. 406 : 17 M.L.T. 435 : 28 M.L.J. 535 : 17 Bom. L.R. 468 : 19 C.W.N. 641 : 2 L.W. 596 : (1915) M.W.N. 555 : 21 C.L.J. 515 : 42 I.A. 125 (P.C.) inconsistent with the view taken by the Pull Bench of this Court. There it was laid down that when a reversioner who had instituted a suit died during the hearing of the suit, the next reversioner had a right to carry on the suit Their Lordships were considering the provisions of Order XXIT, Rule 1 of the Civil Procedure Code. They were not concerned in any way with the question whether a decision in favour of or against one reversioner could be held to operate as res judicata in favour or against another reversioner. In fact at page 412 Page of 38 M.--[Ed.] of that decision they said clearly that the test of res judicata applied by the Madras High Court was irrelevent to the inquiry whether the petitioner was entitled to continue the action commenced by his grandfather, and there is authority of their Lordships of the Privy Council themselves that no question of res judicata arises in these circumstances. The reference here is to the decision in Isri Dutt Koer v. Hansbutti Koerain 10 I.A. 150 : 10 C. 324 : 13 C.L.R. 418 : 7 Ind. Jur. 557 : 4 Sar. P.C.J. 459 : 5 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 217. The words are: "nor is it readily conceivable that the decision will be fruitless because the question of law is of such a nature that its decision, though not binding as ret judicata between the widows and a new reversioner, would be so strong an authority in point as probably to deter either party from disputing it."
2. There was thus no bar of res judicata against the defendants-respondents and it was open to them to take the pleas which they took. These pleas have been decided on the merits and have been rightly decided. The appeal, therefore, fails and is dismissed with costs, including in this Court-fees on the higher scale.
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Title

Darbari Lal vs Gobind Ram And Ors.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
31 March, 1921
Judges
  • Rafique
  • Stuart