MANU/SC/0493/1969
Equivalent Citation: (1969)2SC C 539, [1970]1SC R921
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Civil Appeal Nos. 1782 and 1783 of 1966
Decided On: 18.08.1969
Appellants:Ouseph Varghese
Vs.
Respondent:Joseph Aley and Ors.
Hon'ble Judges/Coram:
A.N. Ray and K.S. Hegde, JJ.
Counsels:
For Appellant/Petitioner/Plaintiff: O.P. Malhotra and J.B. Dadachanji, Advs. (in C.A. No.
1782 of 1966) and M.C. Chagla and A.G. Pudissery, Advs. (in C.A. No. 1783 of 1966
For Respondents/Defendant: O.P. Malhotra, and J.B. Dadachanji, Advs. (in C.A. No.
1783 of 1966) and, M.C. Chagla, and A.G. Pudissery, Advs. (in C.A. No. 1782 of 1966)
JUDGMENT
K.S. Hegde, J.
1 . These connected appeals by certificate arise from the decision of the High Court of
Kerala in Appeal Suit No. 569 of 1963 on its file. Civil Appeal No. 1782 of 1966 is filed
by the plaintiff in the suit and Civil Appeal No. 1783 of 1966 is filed by the second
defendant (who shall hereinafter be referred to as the defendant), who is contesting this
appeal.
2 . The suit was for specific performance on the basis of an oral agreement alleged to
have been entered into on 9.9.1121 (Malayalam Era) between the plaintiff and the 1st
defendant who died very soon after the filing of the suit. The suit was contested by the
second defendant, his widow. The trial court decreed the suit as prayed for but in
appeal the High Court did not accept the agreement pleaded by the plaintiff but still
granted a decree directing the defendant to execute a sale deed in favour of the plaintiff
in respect of item No. 1 of the plaint schedule properties less one acre of paddy field at
its east for a sum of Rs. 11500/-.
3. Originally the plaintiff was the owner of the suit properties. He sold the same to the
1st defendant on 9.9.1121 (Malayalam Era) under Exh. P-1. According to the plaintiff at
the time of the execution of P-1, there was an oral agreement between him and the 1st
defendant whereunder the 1st defendant agreed to reconvey the properties sold for the
very price it was sold whenever the plaintiff calls upon him to reconvey them. The suit
from which these appeals arise has been founded on the basis of the said agreement.
The 1st defendant died even before he could file his written statement in the case.
Before his death he had gifted the suit properties by means of a registered deed in
favour of the defendant. She denied the agreement pleaded in the plaint but on the
other hand she stated that just before his death her husband had agreed to sell to
plaintiff item No. 1 of the suit property less one acre of paddy field for a sum of Rs.
11500 but due to the illness of her husband the sale in question could not be effected.
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She proceeded further and averred as follows in paragraph 10 of her written statement.
This defendant has been asked by the 1st defendant before his death that even
after his death the properties in item No. 1 (in the plaint schedule which are the
subject matter of the contract) as mentioned in paragraph 7, except the nilam
on the eastern part thereof, should be assigned to the plaintiff for a
consideration of Rs. 11500 and accordingly this defendant is willing to give
such property as mentioned above to the plaintiff.
After the defendant filed her written statement, the plaintiff did not amend his plaint
and pray for any relief on the basis of the agreement pleaded by the defendant nor did
he inform the court that he was ready and willing to accept the agreement pleaded by
the defendant or that he was willing to perform his part of that agreement. The suit
proceeded on the basis of the agreement pleaded in the plaint.
4 . The 1st question that arises for decision is whether the agreement pleaded in the
plaint is true. The burden of proving that agreement is naturally on the plaintiff. The
agreement in question as mentioned earlier is said to be an oral agreement. Therefore
the plaintiff's task is all the more difficult. The sale deed Exh. P. 1 proceeds on the basis
that it evidences an outright sale. It does not either specifically or by implication lend
support to the case put forward by the plaintiff. On the other hand it records the
following condition stipulated by the vendor :
Subject to the stipulation that during my life time the schedule properties shall
not be mortgaged or assigned to anyone else without my knowledge and
consent, I completely convey and surrender to you all my remaining rights and
possession, and the properties are given to your possession on receipt of the
sale consideration of Rs. 24,500.
From this clause it is clear that the plaintiff conveyed all his rights, title and interest in
the suit properties to the vendee subject to the afore-mentioned stipulation. It is not
necessary to consider whether the restriction in question is a valid one. Even if we
assume that the same is valid, it does not support the plaintiff's case. On the other
hand, by implication it negatives his case. At best the clause referred to above merely
confers on the vendor a right to pre-empt. Hence by implication it negatives the
plaintiff's case that there was an agreement to reconvey the suit properties. The plaintiff
has not given any satisfactory explanation why the contract relating to reconveyance
was not incorporated in the sale deed. To explain this important omission he has
examined P.W. 2, who claims to be a document writer of considerable experience. He
claims that the document in question was written by one of his assistants. His evidence
is to the effect that the vendor and the vendee wanted to incorporate the agreement as
regards re-conveyance in Exh. P. 1 itself but he advised them that it could not be done.
This is a strange legal advice. This evidence is on the face of it unbelievable. There is
also no satisfactory explanation why the alleged agreement was not reduced into
writing.
5 . In support of the alleged agreement reliance was tried to be placed on Exh. P-2,
which is said to be a document signed by the first defendant after the present suit was
filed and before his death. The High Court was unable to accept the genuineness of this
document. It opined that this document must have been got up by the plaintiff with the
assistance of P.W. 7, his brother. From the High Court's judgment we find that though
the document contains hardly few lines, for completing the same as many as three
different types of ink had been used. The original document has not been called for and
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therefore we have to proceed on the basis that the observations made by the High Court
are correct. The very recitals in the document show that it is a suspicious document. For
all these reasons we are unable to place any reliance on this document. It may be again
emphasized at this stage that this document has come into existence after the institution
of the present suit.
6. The principal witnesses who are examined in support of the oral agreement pleaded
in the case are P.Ws. 1, 2 and 7. We have already referred to the evidence of P.W. 2. He
does not appear to us to be a reliable witness. P.W. 1 is no other than the plaintiff
himself. P.W. 7 is his brother. P.W. 1 has no children and P.W. 7 is his nearest heir.
Therefore it is quite clear that both P.Ws. 1 and 7 are interested witnesses. Their
evidence cannot carry much weight.
7 . The story put forward by the plaintiff in the plaint is an improbable one. It is true
that the plaintiff and the 1st defendant are first cousins. It is also true that their
relationship was very cordial. But if the 1st defendant could not trust the plaintiff to
advance a sum of Rs. 24,000 without security as could be gathered from the plaintiff's
evidence, we fail to see why the 1st defendant should have relied on the oral
assurances given by the plaintiff in the matter of reconveying the property. From the
averments made by the defendant in her written statement it does appear that when the
1st defendant was in his death bed being stricken by cancer, there was some talk about
reconveying a portion of the suit properties to the plaintiff. It may also be as held by
the trial court that the suit property was worth more than Rs. 24,000 at the time of its
sale.
8. It appears likely that neither side has come forward with the true version. But before
a court can grant a decree for specific performance, the contract pleaded must be a
specific one and the same must be established by convincing evidence. Rarely a decree
for specific performance is granted on the basis of an agreement supported solely by
oral evidence. That apart, as mentioned earlier, in this case the oral testimony adduced
in support of the agreement pleaded is a highly interested one. We do not think that the
trial court was justified in relying on that testimony for granting the decree prayed for.
The trial court itself observed in the course of its judgment (para 12) that "there is no
clear cut evidence for proving the terms of the oral contract which is alleged to have
been entered into by the plaintiff and the 1st defendant". This finding alone should have
been sufficient to non-suit the plaintiff. Therefore we agree with the High Court, though
for reasons other than those mentioned by it that the plaintiff has failed to prove the
agreement pleaded in the plaint.
9. This takes us to the decree passed by the High Court in respect of plaint item No. 1.
This decree is purported to have been passed on the basis of the admission made by the
defendant. It may be noted that the agreement pleaded by the defendant is wholly
different from that pleaded by the plaintiff. They do not refer to the same transaction.
The plaintiff did not at any stage accept the agreement pleaded by the defendant as
true. The agreement pleaded by the plaintiff is said to have been entered into at the
time of the execution of Exh. P-1 whereas the agreement put forward by the defendant
is one that is said to have been arrived at just before the filing of the suit. The two are
totally different agreements. The plaintiff did not plead either in the plaint or at any
subsequent stage that he was ready and willing to perform the agreement pleaded in
the written statement of defendant. A suit for specific performance has to conform to
the requirements prescribed in Forms 47 and 48 of the 1st Schedule in the Civil
Procedure Code. In a suit for specific performance it is incumbent on the plaintiff not
only to set out the agreement on the basis of which he sues in all its details, he must go
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further and plead that he has applied to the defendant specifically to perform the
agreement pleaded by him but the defendant has not done so. He must further plead
that he has been and is still ready and willing to specifically perform his part of the
agreement. Neither in the plaint nor at any subsequent stage of the suit the plaintiff has
taken thos pleas. As observed by this Court in Pt. Prem Raj v. The D.L.F. Housing and
Construction (Private) Ltd. and Anr. MANU/SC/0039/1968 : [1968]3SCR648 that it is
well settled that in a suit for specific performance the plaintiff should allege that he is
ready and willing to perform his part of the contract and in the absence of such an
allegation the suit is not maintainable.
10. The High Court purported to rely on the decision of this Court in Srinivas Ram
Kumar v. Mahabir Prasad and Ors. MANU/SC/0021/1951 : [1951]2SCR277 in support of
the decree passed by it. We do not think that the ratio of that decision is applicable to
the facts of this case. Therein the plaintiff brought a suit for specific performance of an
agreement to sell a house alleging that he had paid Rs. 30,000 towards the price and
had been put into possession in part performance of the contract but the defendant
pleaded that the amount of Rs. 30,000 was received as a loan and the plaintiff was put
into possession only to facilitate the payment of interest. This Court accepted the plea
of the defendant and negatived the claim of the plaintiff and refused to decree the
specific performance prayed for by the plaintiff but at the same time this Court thought
that on the peculiar facts of that case, it was appropriate to grant a decree in favour of
the plaintiff for Rs. 30,000 which admittedly remained unpaid. As seen earlier before a
decree for specific performance can be given the plaintiff has to plead and satisfy the
court about his willingness to perform his part of the contract. Hence in our opinion the
decision in Srinivas Ram Kumar's case MANU/SC/0021/1951 : [1951]2SCR277 :
[1951]2SCR277 does not bear on the facts of the present case.
11. For the reasons mentioned above we dismiss Civil Appeal No. 1782 of 1966 and
allow Civil Appeal No. 1783 of 1966. In the result the suit from which these appeals
arise stands dismissed.
12. Now coming to the question of costs, on the facts and circumstances of this case
we think it is appropriate to direct the parties to bear their own costs throughout. Our
reasons for doing so are these : It is proved that the suit properties were sold to the 1st
defendant at a very low price. There must have been some good reason for doing so but
the parties have not chosen to place the true version before the Court. It is also proved
that the 1st defendant before his death was willing to re-sell a portion of the suit
properties. He had directed his wife to re-sell the major portion of item No. 1 of the
plaint schedule to the plaintiff for a consideration of Rs. 11,500 though its price at that
time is proved to be much more than Rs. 11,500. As seen earlier, the defendant was
willing to sell item No. 1 in the plaint schedule to the plaintiff for Rs. 11,500. She
expressed her readiness to do so in her written statement. She is evidently not willing
to stand by that offer now because of the enormous rise of price of properties in recent
times. Mr. M.C. Chagla, learned Counsel for the defendant told us at the time of the
hearing that the property concerned in the defendant's appeal is now worth over a lac of
rupees. That appears to be the reason why the defendant is backing out of the offer
made by her in her written statement. All that one need say is that all is not well with
defendant's case either.
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