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(Mirza) Husain Yar Beg vs (Sahu) Radha Kishan And Ors.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|27 September, 1934

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Niamatullah, J.
1. This is a cross-objection filed by one of the defendants-respondents in an appeal which has been compromised between the appellant and the plaintiff-respondents. A preliminary objection has been taken by the plaintiffs-respondents that the cross-objections which are directed solely against them are not maintainable under Order 41, Rule 22, Civil P.C. To appreciate the arguments addressed to us it is necessary to bear in mind the following facts. The property in dispute is village Tewar Khas. It belonged to one Mohammad Husain who had a son Ahmad Husain and three daughters, only two of whom need be mentioned, namely, Bashiruzzaman Bibi and Shaukatuzzaman Bibi. Mohammad Husain executed a deed of gift in favour of his son Ahmad Husain sometime in 1883. Not long afterwards he instituted a suit for the cancellation of that deed. The principal defendant was his son Ahmad Husain, the donee. The controversy was referred to an arbitration by a common friend whose award dated 13th September 1884 was made a rule of the Court by decree dated 13th November 1884. The award provided that Mohammad Husain would remain in possession of village Tiwar Khas, that after his death Ahmad Husain would become the owner thereof but would have no power of transfer and would be bound to allow the property to descend upon his own heirs unfettered by any encumbrances created by himself. Ahmad Husain was made liable to pay Rs. 30 a month to each of his two sisters Shaukatuzzaman Bibi and Bashiruzzaman Bibi. Mohammad Husain died in 1886. Ahmad Husain who entered into possession made default in payment of the monthly allowance which he was bound to pay under the award and the decree of 1884.
2. His sisters instituted suit for arrears of their allowance in 1892. The dispute between the brother and sisters was referred to arbitration. The award which was again made a rule of the Court directed that the village Tewar Khas be made over to one of the two sisters, namely, Bashiruzzaman Bibi who should pay herself the monthly allowance and thereafter the monthly allowance of her sister Shaukatuzzaman Bibi. If any surplus was left, the same was to be paid to Ahmad Husain. The award was given effect to and Bashiruzzaman Bibi was placed in possession of village Tewar Khas. In 1910 Shaukatuzzaman Bibi made a simple mortgage of her interest in village Tewar Khas to Asfandayar Beg who has since died and is now represented by his son Husain Yar Beg. In 1912 Asfandayar Beg enforced his mortgage and had the rights of Shaukatuzzaman Bibi sold. He himself became the auction purchaser. The result of this was that he became entitled to Rs. 30 a month which his mortgagor Shaukatuzzaman Bibi was entitled to receive in terms of the award of 1884. An arrangement was arrived at between the auction purchaser Asfandayar Beg and Bashiruzzaman Bibi who was in possession of the village Tewar Khas, under which part of that village was made over to Asfandayar Beg who was to recover Rs. 30 a month from its rents and profits. This arrangement appears to have been given effect to. In 1922 Bashiruzzaman Bibi executed a deed of wakf the particulars of which need not be stated in detail. In 1924 she executed another deed of wakf. One related to her right in that portion of the village Tewar Khas which was in possession of Asfendayar Beg. The other related to the rest of her rights in that village. By one or both of these deeds she made her daughter's daughter Mt. Sabiri Begam the present cross-objector a beneficiary entitled to receive Rs. 10 per month. Nazir Ahmad the son of Shaukatuzzaman Bibi who had died in the meantime was made the mutwalli entitled to manage the wakf properties. Accordingly Nasir Ahmad obtained possession of that part of Tewar Khas which was not in possession of Asfandayar Beg. The plaintiffs Radha Kishan and his three brothers claim to be the auction purchasers of the right and title and interest of Ahmad Husain. They instituted a suit against Nazir Ahmad the mutwalli, Hussain Yar Beg the son of Asfandayar Beg who has since died, Mt. Sabiri Begam one of the beneficiaries under the wakf and two others. They claimed the relief of possession and mesne profits on the ground that Shaukatuzzaman Bibi and Bashiruzzaman Bibi were entitled to receive Rs. 30 a month only for life and both having died, their legal representatives by inheritance or by transfer are no longer entitled to that allowance and that the plaintiffs being the representatives in interest of Ahmad Husain the paramount owner are entitled to actual possession of the entire village Tewar Khas. It will appear that the plaintiffs repudiate the title of Husain Yar Beg and Sabiri Begam precisely on the same ground. Husain Yar Beg claims to derive his right partly from Shaukatuzzaman Bibi and partly from Bashiruzzaman Bibi. Sabiri Begam claims to derive title from Bashiruzzaman Bibi. The nature of the rights of Bashiruzzaman Bibi and Shaukatuzzaman Bibi is precisely identical. The suit was contested by Husain Yar Beg and Sabiri Begam on identical grounds. They pleaded that the plaintiffs acquired no interest by auction purchase because Ahmad Husain whose interest they purchased had no transferable rights. Sabiri Begam took the additional pica that she is entitled to Rs. 10 a month under the deeds of wakf of 1922 and 1924, but this plea is of no consequence as against the plaintiffs, as, if the plaintiffs' rights prevail - and they can prevail only of Shaukatuzzaman Bibi and Bashiruzzaman Bibi had only life interest - the deeds of wakf lapsed on their deaths and Sabiri Begam ceased to be entitled to anything thereunder. If on the other hand the plaintiffs' rights do not prevail for the alleged reason that their predecessor in title Ahmad Husain had no transferable right, their suit should be dismissed and it would not be necessary to adjudicate on Mt. Sabiri Begam's additional pica. The Subordinate Judge decreed the plaintiffs' suit in its entirety. The mutwalli Nazir Ahmad did not appeal nor did Mt. Sabiri. Husain Yar Beg preferred appeal which was numbered as F.A. 421 of 1932. On receipt of summons Mt. Sabiri Begam filed cross-objections which it is not disputed were filed after the expiry of the period of limitation for an appeal by her against the decree. Husain Yar Beg and the plaintiffs entered into a compromise the effect of which was that the former's appeal was dismissed. There only remain the cross-objections of Mt. Sabiri Begam, which, if otherwise maintainable, remain unaffected by the facit that the appeal has been dismissed.
3. The plaintiffs-respondents have taken the preliminary objection that, in the circumstance of the case Mt. Sabiri's cross-objections which arc directed against them alone, are not maintainable and should be dismissed without a hearing thereof on the merits. From the narrative of the facts given above, it is clear that Mt. Sabiri Begam's cross-objections proceeded on the same grounds as Husain Var Beg's appeal which has been dismissed. They are not to any extent directed against the appellant Husain Yar Beg. The position of Sabiri Begam in the litigation was such that she could very well have joined Husain Yar Beg in the appeal filed by him. They both attack the plaintiffs-respondents on the same grounds. On the one hand, it is contended on behalf of the plaintiffs-respondents that cross-objections can be directed only against the appellant and that it is not open to one of the respondents who has preferred an appeal to file cross-objections under Order 41, Rule 22, Civil P.C., against his co-respondents. On the other hand, it is argued on behalf of Mt. Sabiri Begam that the language of Order 41, Rule 22, is general enough to allow cross-objections by a respondent, who could have appealed from a part of the decree but had not done so. It seems to us that the correct view lies midway between the extreme contentions which have been put forward before us on behalf of the plaintiffs-respondents and Mt. Sabiri Begam. The expression "cross-objection" is clearly indicative of the fact that it should be directed against the appellant, but it may be taken against a co-respondent also if there is a community of interest between the latter and the appellant. It is clear to us that where the cross-objection is directed solely against a co-respondent, whose case has nothing in common with that of the appellant but proceeds on the same grounds on which the appeal does, it is not maintainable. The case law on the point does not militate against this view. In Co-operative Hindustan Bank v. Surendra Nath De 1932 Cal. 524 it was held that:
A cross-objection which seeks to raise a question as between two respondents inter se and is a purely lateral attack, in which the appellant is not concerned or interested, cannot be entertained in view of the settled practice of the Calcutta High Court, both under the old and under the present Code.
4. The facts of this case were different, but the view taken is that a cross-objection, unless it is directed against the appellant also is not maintainable. In Nursey Virji v. Alfred H. Harrison (1913) 37 Bom. 511 it was held that:
The ordinary rule is that the cross-objections provided for by Order 41, Rule 22, Civil P.C., are cross-objections which are aimed against an appellant from a decree of a lower Court and are not cross-objections against a co-respondent. In any case such cross-objections will not be allowed as against a co-respondent where the respondent could have preferred them by way of appeal.
5. In the case before us Mt. Sabiri Begam could have have not only preferred an appeal of her own, but as already stated, could have joined with Husain Yar Beg as appellant in the appeal which the latter filed. In Official Trustee of Bengal v. Charles joseph Smith 1920 Pat. 77 the point has been considered at great length. It was held that:
Order 41, Rule 22(1) in so far as it relates to a cross-objection, was provided to meet the case where a respondent, although the decree is not entirely in his favour, is content to let matters rest provided his opponent does not appeal, but who may not be willing to run the risk of having the findings in his favour varied or reversed without an opportunity of appealing against the findings which are adverse to him. The rule should ordinarily be confined to cases of cross-objections urged against the appellant, but Order 41, Rule 33, gives the Court a wide discretion, where justice requires it, that cross-objections against a correspondent should be heard. The rule should not be invoked to enable a litigant to avoid the provisions of other statutes such as the Limitation Act or the Court-fees Act.
6. In Abdul Ghani v. Muhammad Fasih (1906) 28 All. 95, which was decided under the Code of 1832. it was held that:
Where it is necessary for the proper decision of an appeal before it. it is competent to an appellate Court to take into consideration objections filed under Section 56(1), Civil P.C., by one of the respondents, not only as against the appellant, but, it may be, as against the co-respondents with the objector also, and to modify the decree as against them accordingly.
7. In that case the appeal was filed by one of the defendants who impleaded the plaintiff and a defendant who had a common interest with the appellant. The plaintiff filed cross-objection which was directed against the defendant-appellant and the defendant-respondent. The question was whether the plaintiff should be allowed to impugn the decree by his cross-objections so far as it affected his co-respondent. It was observed as follows:
The Court of first instance had decided the suit upon a ground common to all the defendants. Consequently, under Section 544, Civil P.C., on the appeal of only one of the defendants, the appellate Court could modify or set aside in favour of all the defendants the decree of the lower Court. The whole case was the opened out in appeal, not only as between the plaintiff and the defendant who had appealed, but also as between the plaintiff and other defendants, who had been made respondents apparently because they had not joined in the appeal. Having regard to the nature of the suit, and of the decree passed by the Court of first instance, those defendants were necessary parties to the appeal and complete justice could not be done without having them before the Court. Under the circumstances of the case they were to all intents and purposes appellants in the lower appellate Court. The objections under Section 56(1) were preferred not only against these other defendants, the co-respondents of the plaintiff, but also against the appellant.... As the Court on the appeal of one of the defendants could have varied or set aside the decree in favour of all the defendants, it seems to us to be just and equitable that it should also have the power upon objections taken by the plaintiff to vary the decree against all the defendants.
8. It will be seen that in this case the cross-objections were directed against the defendant-appellant to the same extent as against the defendant-respondent, the cross-objector being the plaintiff who had partly succeeded in the Court of first instance. None of these cases countenances the view that cross-objection can be permitted by one respondent against another where the effect of the cross-objection, if successful, cannot be adverse to the appellant to any extent. We hold that in the circumstances of the present case the cross-objections filed by Mt. Sabiri Begam which are directed solely against the plaintiffs-respondents are not maintainable under Order 41, Rule 22, Civil P.C. Accordingly we dismiss them with costs.
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Title

(Mirza) Husain Yar Beg vs (Sahu) Radha Kishan And Ors.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
27 September, 1934