Shambhu Prasad Singh vs Mst. Phool Kumari & Ors
Supreme
Court of India
Shambhu
Prasad Singh vs Mst. Phool Kumari & Ors on 24 March, 1971
Equivalent
citations: 1971 AIR 1337, 1971 SCR 181
Author:
Shelat
Bench:
Shelat, J.M.
PETITIONER:
SHAMBHU
PRASAD SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MST.
PHOOL KUMARI & ORS.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT24/03/1971
BENCH:
SHELAT,
J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT,
J.M.
DUA,
I.D.
BHARGAVA,
VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1971
AIR 1337 1971 SCR 181
ACT:
Hindu
Law--Family arrangement--Principles for deciding whether a document is family
arrangement. Adverse possession--When established.
HEADNOTE:
Raj
Kumar, the common ancestor of the parties had four sons- Lalji Singh, Amar
Singh, Ramji Singh and Raghunandan Singh. Amar Singh had three sons, namely,
Sonadhari, Girwardhari and Nankhu father of present appellant. In 1898 Amar
Singh purchased the land on which the house in dispute stood from his own funds
but in the name of his brother Lalji Singh. Nankhu was taken in adoption by
Ramji Singh. Shortly thereafter in 1915, a document Ex. I was executed between Raj
Kumar's descendants. In it the claim of Nankhu to a half share in the house in
dispute was recognised. In 1949, Nankhu and the appellant filed the instant
suit for a declaration of their half share in the house in dispute. The defendants
(present respondents) were the branches of Sonadhari and Girwardhari. The suit
was resisted inter alia on the following grounds: (i) that Ex. 1 was not a
family arrangement but only a deed of relinquishment; and therefore Nankhu who
had no anterior title to the house in dispute did not acquire any interest in
it by virtue of Ex. 1; (ii) that even if he had an interest in the house he
lost it by reason of adverse possession by the respondent. The trial court decreed
the suit. The decree was upheld by the Single Judge of the High Court. The
Division Bench however decided both the points of dispute in favour of the
respondents. It held that there was no dispute or conflict of interest between the
branches of Amar Singh and Ramji Singh, and that Amar Singh and Nankhu had
acted in concert in the execution of Ex. I which was therefore not a family
arrangement. It upheld the claim of the respondents that Nankhu and the appellant
had lost title to the house by the adverse possession of the respondents. The
visits of Nankhu and his wife to the house were held by the Division Bench to
be 'in the nature of visits of guests of the defendants'. In appeal to this
Court against the judgment of the High Court.
HELD:
(i) The arrangement under challenge has to be considered as a whole for
ascertaining whether it was made to allay disputes, existing or apprehended, in
the interest of harmony in the family or the preservation of property. It is
not necessary that there must exist a dispute actual or possible in the future,
in respect of each and every item of property among all members arraigned one
against the other. It would be sufficient if it is shown that there were actual
or possible claims and counterclaims by parties in settlement whereof the
arrangement as a whole had been arrived at, thereby acknowledging title in one
to whom a particular property falls on the assumption (not actual existence in
law) that he had an anterior title therein. [191 F-G] Pullaiah v. Narasimham,
A.I.R. 1966 S. C. 1837, Sahu Madho Das v. Mukund Ram, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 22 and
Rani Mewa Kuwar v. Rani Hulas Kuwar. (1873-74) L.R. I I.A. 157 at 166, applied.
182 Williams v. Williams, (1867) 2 Ch. A. 294, referred to. An examination of
the terms of Ex. I showed that it was incorrect to assume, as the High Court
did, that in the disputes amongst the different branches of the family, Nankhu
and Amar Singh were acting in concert, or that there was no conflict of
interest among them. The parties to Ex. 1
arrived at a settlement in view of claims and cross claims by some against the
others. Taken as a whole and in the light of the recitals and the statements in
the operative part of the document indicating conflict amongst the members of
the family, the document represented an arrangement bona fide entered into, for
settling existing or at any rate apprehended disputes, and therefore, satisfied
the tests of a family arrangement laid down in the decisions of this Court. In
this view Nankhu must be said to have acquired a half share in the house in
dispute under Ex. 1. [193 H, 194 E-G] (ii) Adverse possession has to have
characteristics of adequacy, continuity and exclusiveness. The onus to establish
these characteristics is on the adverse possessors. Accordingly, if a holder of
title proves that he too had been exercising during the currency of his title various
acts of possession, then, the quality of those acts, even though they might not
be sufficient to constitute adverse possession as against another, may be
abundantly sufficient to destroy that adequacy and interrupt that exclusiveness
and continuity which is demanded from a person challenging by possession the
title which he holds. As between co-sharers, the possession of one cosharer is
in law the possession of all co-sharers. Therefore to constitute adverse
possession, ouster of the non-possessing co-sharer has to be made, out. As
between them therefore, there must be evidence of open assertion of a hostile
title coupled with exclusive possession and enjoyment by one of them to the
knowledge of the other. But once the possession of a cosharer has become
adverse as a result of ouster, a mere assertion of a joint title by the
dispossessed co-sharer would not interrupt the running of adverse possession.
He must actually and effectively break up the exclusive possession of his
co-sharer by reentry upon the property or by resuming possession in such a
manner as it was possible to do. For this purpose the mere fact that a
dispossessed co-sharer
comes and stays for a few days as a guest is not sufficient. [194 H-195 E] Kuthali
Moothavar v. Paringati Kunharankutcy, (1921) 48 I.A. 395, 404, Lakshmi Reddy v.
Lakshmi Reddy, [1957] S.C.R. 195, 202, Mohammad Bagar v. Naim-un-Nisa Bibi
A.I.R. 1956 S.C. 548 and Wantakal Yalpi Chenabasavana Gowd v. Y. Mahabaleshwarappa,
[1955] 1 S.C.R. 131, 138, followed. Ammakannu Ammal v. Naravanaswami Mudaliar,
A.I.R. 1923 Mad. 633, approved. in view of the evidence in the present case the
Division Bench was not justified in interfering with the finding of fact
concurrently given by the Trial Court and the learned Single Judge that the
adverse possession by Baijnath which commenced from 1933 was sufficiently
interrupted by acts of possession by Nankhu, and therefore his title was not extinguished
by adverse possession. [199 A-B] The appeal must accordingly be allowed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL
APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1655 of 1966.
Appeal
from the judgment and decree dated August 25, 1964 of the Patna High Court in
Letters Patent Appeal No. 119 of 1958.
D.
Goburdhun and R. Goburdhun, for the appellant. S. V. Gupte, D. P. Singh and N.
Nettar, for respondent No.
1.
U. P. Singh for respondents Nos. 2 to 4. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by Shelat, J.-Two questions arise in this appeal. The first is
whether the transaction evidenced by Ex. 1, dated March 20, 1915 was a family
arrangement so as to confer on the appellant an,, his father, Nanhku Prasad,
since deceased, title to a half share in the house in dispute. The second is
that even if it was so, whether such title became extinguished as a result of
adverse possession for the statutory period by Baijnath, the deceased husband
of respondent 1.
The
parties are near relations. The following genealogy explains the relationship
amongst them Rajkumar Singh Lalji Singh Amar Singh Ramji SinghRaghunandan
Reshmi Kuer Patreja KuerSingh Nanhku Pd. Suba Faujdar Balkeshwar Singh (Plff.
No.1) Shambu Pd. Decnath
Singh (Plff. No. 2) Sonadhari Girwardhari Kamaldhari Tarke shwar Pd. Baijnath
Pd. Alias alias Daljit Nanu Babu Kamta Prasad (Deft. No. 2) died in 1948 Phul
Kumari Devi (sons of Deft. (widow) 2-Nos. 3 to 7) Deft. No. 1.
There
is no dispute that Amar Singh purchased from his own funds under a registered
deed, dated January 20, 1898, the ,,land on which the house in dispute stands.
His son, Nankhu, the deceased father of the present appellant, was taken in
adoption sometime prior to March 20, 1915 by Ramji Singh and his wife Patreja
Kuer as they had no issue, whereupon Nankhu ceased to have any interest in the
properties owned by Amar Singh and his branch. In 1933, Nankhu and the present
appellant, then a minor, filed Suit No. 33 of 1933 against Sonadhari
Tarkeshwar, Baijnath and Reshmi Kuer (the widow of Amar Singh, wrongly
described by the High Court as the wife of Rajkumar in the genealogy set out in
its judgment) in respect of certain properties which bad nothing to do with the
house in dispute. The written statement filed in that suit was that Nankhu had
been paid the price of his share in the house in dispute and that the entire
house, consequently, belonged to and was since then in the ex- clusive
possession of the defendants. That suit went upto the High Court when in 1941 a
compromise application was filed by the parties settling that suit. But, as the
suit had nothing, as aforesaid, to do with the house in dispute, nothing was
said about the allegation that Nankhu had been paid off in respect of his
interest in that house. In 1949, Nankhu and the appellant filed the instant
suit for a declaration of their half share in the house in dispute. In answer
to the suit, the respondents raised three defenses : (1) that Nankhu and the
appellant derived no interest under Ex. 1. (2) that assuming that they derived
such interest, it was relinquished by them on being paid the price thereof, and
(3) that in any event they lost their interest by reason of adverse possession
by the respondents The Trial Court rejected all the three defenses raised by
the respondents and decreed the suit, holding that Nankhu had acquired one half
share in the said house under Ex. I. Against that decree, two appeals were
filed in the High Court, one by respondent
I and the other by some of the other respondentdents. These appeals were
heard first by a learned Single Judge of the High Court. Before the learned
Single Judge, the finding of the Trial Court that Nankhu and the present
appellant had not relinquished their interest in the house on their being paid
the price thereof was not disputed. The only questions agitated before the
learned Single Judge, therefore, were whether Nankhu had a half share, that is
to say, whether he derived his title to ,the half share under and by virtue of
Ex. 1, and if so, whether he lost it as a result of adverse possession by the
respondents.
In
respect of the first question. the parties urged two conflicting pleas. Nankhu
and the appellant contended that Ex. I was a family arrangement under which he
got half share in the house and that that family arrangement was valid and
binding on the parties. The respondents, on the other hand, contended that Ex.
I was only a Ladavi deed, that is, a deed of relinquishment. The argument on behalf
of Nankhu and the appellant was that there were outstanding disputes between
the different branches of the family of Rajkumar, and those disputes were
ultimately settled at the instance of and with the aid of certain family
friends resulting in Ex. I by way of a family arrangement. Therefore, even if
Nankhu and the appellant were not able to show their anterior title to the
house, they were entitled under Ex. I to a half share therein. The learned
Single Judge accepted the contention raised by Nankhu and the appellant. His
reasoning in this connection was that although the land on which the suit house
stood was purchased by Amar Singh out of his own funds, it was purchased in the
furzi name of Lalji, but there was no evidence that Lalji ever admitted to be
the furzidar of Amar Singh. Consequently, though Nankhu, by his ,adoption, lost
all interest in the properties of Amar Singh, yet the fact that in Ex. I Amar
Singh acknowledged Nankhu having a half share in the house indicated that there
was some apprehension in the mind of Amar Singh of a future dispute and that it
was such an apprehended dispute which Ex. 1, while dealing with the house,
settled. The learned Single Judge added that ,even assuming that there was no
existing or apprehended dispute and the settlement was made out of
consideration for the peace of the family or preservation of its properties,
the settlement would have to be regarded as a family arrangement. Regarding the
plea of adverse possession, 'he upheld the finding of the Trial Court that
Nankhu and the appellant had established their acts of possession during the
statutory Period, and that consequently, the continuity and exclusiveness of
the respondents' adverse possession had been disrupted. On these findings, he
dismissed the appeals and confirmed the decree passed by the 'Trial Court. Respondent
I thereupon filed a letters patent appeal which was heard by a Division Bench
of the High Court. The same two questions were reagitated, namely, as to the
nature of Ex. 1, and as to the adverse possession. On the first question, the
reasoning adopted by the Division Bench was on the following lines :
(1)
that the executants of Ex. I formed three conflicting groups, namely,
(a)
Suba, Faujdar and Balkeshwar, constituting one group of members of Lalji's branch,
being executants 1 to 3;
(b)
Raghunandan and his son, Kamaldhari, being executants 4 and 5 and constituting Raghunandan's
branch; and
(c)
Amar Singh for himself and as the guardian of Baijnath, then a minor, Sonadbari
for himself and as guardian of his minor son, Tarkeshwar, and Nankhu, who had,
as earlier stated, gone to the line of Ramji on his adoption, being executants
6,7 and 8;
(2)
that the disputes, in settlement of which Ex. I was executed by these three
groups, were, as its recitals show :
(a)
conflicting claims made by the said three sets of executants as to whether they
were joint or separate in status, the claim of executants 1 to 3 being that all
the members of Rajkumar's family were still members of an undivided Hindu
family, and that therefore, although the properties stood in the names of and
were in possession of individual members, they continued to be joint family
properties including properties standing in the names of female members,
namely, Reshmi and Patreja;
(b)
the allegation by executants 4 and 5 (Raghunandan's branch) that all the four branches
of Rajkumar's four sons were separate and yet claiming share in the properties
standing in the names of members of Lalji's branch, and
(c)
the claim by executants 6, 7 and 8 (Amar Singh, Sonadhari and Nankhu-by now in the
line of Ramji) that the parties were separate in status, and therefore, the properties
in the names of the two said females belonged exclusively to them and the members
of the other branches had no interest whatsoever in them-,
(3)
that the Trial Court and the learned Single Judge were in error in holding that
what Ex. I did was to evidence relinquishment by the rest of the members of the
family of their
claims
in properties standing in the names of or in possession of particular members, and
thereby acknowledging their anterior title in such properties. In fact Nankhu
had no such anterior title, nor could be in law have any such title in the
house in dispute in view of his having got out of Amar Singh's branch as a
result of his adoption by Ramji;
(4)
that there was no subsisting or apprehended dispute between Amar Singh and his family,
on the one hand, and Nankhu on the other, the latter not having made any
claim
for a share in the house in dispute, and that therefore, there was no question
of preservation of peace or family property, there being nothing on record to
show that Nankhu had held out any threat to the family peace or property;
therefore, there was a total want of mutuality as in consideration of Nankhu
getting a half share, Amar Singh got nothing in return and cases of the type of
Williams v. Williams(1) had no application;
(5)
that the recitals in Ex. I showed that the only dispute which prevailed at the
time was "branchwise" and in that dispute Nankhu did not set up any
contest against Amar Singh and his branch and indeed, both of them acted in
concert, both claiming that the members of Rajkumar's family were separate and
the properties standing in the names of Reshmi and Patreja were their exclusive
properties;
(6)
that acknowledgement of exclusive title of Amar Singh and Sonadhari (executants
6 and
7)
to certain properties, and likewise acknowledgement of exclusive title of
Nanhku (executant No. 8) to certain other properties set out in paras 3 and 4
of Ex. I were not by way of settlement of any existing or apprehended dispute
between them, and therefore, that part of Ex. I could not be regarded as
providing any consideration for conferring the half share in the disputed house
on Nanhku. On this reasoning the Division Bench declined to treat Ex. I as a
family arrangement. The conclusion of the Bench clearly signified that it had
relied on two fundamental premises: (1) that there were only three sets of
executants, the third set consisting ;of executants 6, 7 and 8, and (2) that
Amar Singh and Nanhku had acted in concert as there were no conflicting claims
by and between them. In view of this conclusion there was no need for the Divi-
sion Bench to go into the question of adverse possession. However, it decided
to do so for the reason that although the finding on the question of adverse
possession was concurrent, it had bee,-, seriously challenged before it. On
this question, the Division Bench firstly relied on the Municipal Assessment
Register for 1900-1901, (Ex. D), and the extract from the Demand Register of a
Patna Municipality for 1915-16, (Ex. E). Ex. D showed the name of Amar Singh as
the sole owner of the property. Ex. E mentioned Sonadhari and Baijnath only as
the owners of the house as Amar Singh had died soon after Ex. I was brought
into existence. The Division Bench was impressed by the fact that though only
recently, in March 1915, Nanbku's half share in the house had been acknowledged
in Ex. 1, his name was deliberately omitted in Ex. E, which meant that
Sonadhari and Baijnath had openly asserted their title to the whole of the
house and yet anhku took no steps to assert his title. Nor did he at any time
(1) [1867] 2 Cb. A. 294. pay his share of the municipal taxes and the costs of
repairs carried out later on by Baijnath. The Division Bench was also impressed
with the fact that even when Baijnath, in his written statement in suit No. 33
of 1933, claimed that Nanhku's share had been paid off and be had since then
been in exclusive possession of the entire house, Nankhu took no steps to
vindicate his title until he and his son filed the present suit in 1949. The
Division Bench came to the conclusion that there was not only an assertion of a
hostile claim by Baijnath but that that assertion was accompanied by an ouster which
remained open and continuous throughout the statutory period. As regards the
evidence khat Nanhku and sometimes his wife came and stayed in the house, the
Division Bench took the view that these were casual visits "in the nature
of visits of guests of the defendants", and therefore, did not have the
effect of interrupting the continuity and the exclusiveness of possession by
the respondents.
The Bench even observed that the respondents had completed their title by
adverse possession long before Baijnath claimed exclusive possession in his
said written statement in 1933. In this view, the Division Bench held that
Nanhku's title in the house was extinguished by adverse possession. The
Division Bench accordingly allowed the respondents' appeal with costs all throughout.
Both the conclusions of the Division Bench have been challenged before us as
incorrect. On the question as to the nature of Ex. I a large number of
decisions were cited at the bar to show when a transaction can be said to be a
family arrangement. It is not necessary to advert to them as most of them have
been considered by this Court in its previous decisions, wherein principles as
to when an agreement can properly be regarded as a family arrangement have been
set out, Thus, in Pullaiah
v. Narasimham(1) after setting out how courts in England view family
arrangements, Subba Rao, J. (as he then was) observed that the concept of such
a family arrangement has also been accepted by courts in India, adapting the
concept to suit the family set up in this country which is different in many
respects from that obtaining in England. After examining some earlier decisions
which be characterized as illustrations of how family arrangements were viewed,
he summarized the law as to a family arrangement as follows: - Briefly stated,
though conflict of legal claims in praesenti or in future is generally a condition
for the validity of a family arrangement, it is not necessarily so. Even bona fide
disputes, present or possible, which may (1) A. I. R. 1966 S. C. 1837. not involve
legal claims will suffice. Members of a joint Hindu family may, to maintain
peace or to bring about harmony in the family, enter into such a family arrange-
ment. If such an arrangement is entered into bona fide and the terms thereof
are fair in the circumstances of a particular case, Courts will more readily
give assent to such arrangement than to avoid it".
Even
in England, family arrangements are viewed as arrange- ments governed by
principles which are not applicable to dealings between strangers. The courts,
when deciding the rights of parties under family arrangements, consider what is
most for the interest of families and have regard to considerations which in
dealings between persons not members of the same family would not be taken into
account. Matters which would be fatal to the validity of similar transactions
between strangers are not objections to the binding effect of family
arrangements. (see Halsbury's Laws of England, (3rd Ed.), Vol. 17, 215). Thus,
in Williams v. Williams(1) the Court held that a family arrangement might be
such as the court would uphold although there were no rights in dispute, and if
sufficient motive for the arrangement was proved, the Court would not consider
the adequacy of consi- deration. But the question of consideration or mutuality
would arise, as Williams' case (1) shows, when other considerations, such as
existing or an apprehended dispute or the question of preservation of property
or honour of the family, are absent, so that it is not necessary for a valid family
arrangement that there must exist actual competitive claims or disputes or that
the arrangements must be backed by proper consideration. Even disputes likely
to arise in future or preservation of family property and honour would be
sufficient to uphold an arrangement bona fide made between the members of a
family. What actually happens when such a family arrangement is made is
explained by Bose, J., in Sahu Madho Das v. Mukund Ram(1) in the following
words :
"It
is well settled that a compromise or family arrangement is based on the assumption
that there is an antecedent title of some sort in the parties and the agreement
acknowledges and defines what that title is, each party relinquishing all claims
to property other than they had previously asserted, to the portions allotted
to them respectively. That explains why no conveyance is required in these
cases to pass the title from the one in whom it resides to the person receiving
it under the (1) [1867] 2 Ch. A. 294. (2) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 22. family
arrangement. It is assumed that the title claimed by the person receiving the property
under the arrangement had always resided in him or her so far as the property
falling to his or her share is concerned and therefore no conveyance is necessary."
He
went on to say that this was not the only kind of arrangement which the courts
would uphold, and that they would take the next step of upholding "an
arrangement under which one set of persons abandons all claims to all title and
interest in all the properties in dispute and acknowledges that the sole and
absolute title to all the properties resides in only one of their number
(provided he or she had claimed the whole and made such an assertion of title)
and are content to take such properties as are assigned to them as gifts pure
and simple from him or her or as a conveyance for consideration when
consideration is present". In such a kind of arrangement where title in
the ,(entire property is acknowledged to reside in only one of them and
thereupon that person assigns parts of it to others there would be a transfer
by that agreement itself which obviously in such a case would
need a registered document. This decision lays down the assumption underlying a
family arrangement, namely, of an anterior title and its acknowledgement in one
to whom a property or part of it falls under the arrangement. (see also Rani
Mewa Kuwar v. Rani Hulas Kuwar(1). Therefore, it is not necessary that there
must exist an anterior title sustainable in law in such a person which the others
acknowledge. The arrangement under challenge has to be considered as a whole
for ascertaining whether it was made to allay disputes, existing or
apprehended, in the interest of harmony in the family or the preservation of
property. It is not necessary that there must exist a dispute, actual or
possible in the future, in respect of each and every item of property and amongst
all members arrayed one against the other. It would be sufficient if it is
shown that there were actual or possible claims and counter,claims by parties
in settlement whereof the arrangement as a whole had been arrived at, thereby
acknowledging title in one to whom a particular property falls on the
assumption (not actual existence in law) that he had an anterior title therein.
In the light of these decisions we must now examine Ex. I to see if the
contention of the appellant that it was a family arrangement is correct or not.
The document Ex. 1, after reciting the death of the common ancestor, Rajkumar,
his leaving him surviving four sons and the (1) (1873-1874) L. R. 1 I. A. 157.
at 166. deaths of certain other family members thereafter, reads as follows : "Signs
of ill feeling developed among us, the executants Nos. 1 to 8, and at the time
of survey and settlement operations, dispute in connection with the properties
arose. On account of dispute, wrong statements and claim were made. On account
of which the names of some of us, the executants were recorded in a wrong
manner on the record of rights and in the office of the land Registration
Department, in respect of some of the properties having regard to the real
state of affairs and title. At the time of the survey and settlement operations
,etc. the claims and allegations of us, the executants Nos. 1 to 3, were that
we, the executants, are all members of the joint family and the properties
standing in the names ,of a certain member of the family as well as those in
the name of certain female member of the family, belong to the joint family.
Contrary to this, the to 5 were that all the four sons of Raj Kumar Singh became
separate and that executants Nos. 1 to 3 always continued to remain separate from
the (other) executants and executants Nos. 4 and 5 separate from the (other) executants
and executants Nos. 6 to 8 separate from the other executants, but in spite of
this allegation of separation, executants Nos. 4 and 5, on account of dispute,
made contrary to the real state of affairs with respect to certain properties
owned and possessed by to 8 also made allegations and claims of separation and
it was alleged that executants Nos. 1 to 5 (?) neither had nor have any
connection and concern with the properties, which were and are in the names of
Mosst. Patriga Kuer and Mosst. Reshmi Kuer, although no party was member of a
joint family, nor was any property joint. As the dispute among us, the
executants is contrary to the real state of affairs, and in case the said
dispute continues there is apprehension ,of consideration loss and damage to
us, the executants, therefore, on the advice of the well wishers of the parties
,and of the respectable persons and on the advice of the legal advisers of the parties,
as also with a view to set at rest all kinds of dispute, it was settled that
all the disputes should be put to an end by executing a deed of agreement by
way of a deed of relinquishment of claims (ladavi) and the property, which is
actually ,owned and possessed by a certain party should be declared to belong
to that party exclusively, and as a matter of fact, the family of us, the
executants, is separate and the property, which stands in the name of a certain
person, has been purchased from his or her funds, and in respect of his or her
name should continue to remain entered in the land Registration Department etc.
and the name should be entered if the same is not entered and the other parties
totally gave up their claim with respect thereto." Then follow parts 1 to
4 in each of which certain properties are set out, and in respect of which,
title of each of the four sets of the executants is acknowledged by the rest.
Para 4, which relates to properties falling to the share of Nanhku, executant
8, commences with the declaration by the rest of the executants, including Amar
Singh and Sonadhari, that Nanhku was the adopted son of Ramji and Patreja Kuer,
that certain properties set out therein were exclusively acquired by Patreja Kuerand
that Nanhku, as the adopted son of Ramji and Patreja Kuer, was exclusively
entitled to them on the death of Patreja, and' 'that "we, the executants
Nos. 1 to 5, 6 and 7, and the heirs of executant No. 6 neither have nor shall
have any claim, title or possession and connection in respect thereof in any
manner and on any allegation". Following up the arrangement made in Paras
I to 4, four schedules giving particulars of properties which were acknowledged
to be belonging to the four sets of' executants were appended to Ex. 1. As
regards two houses,. ;one at Rajipur and the other in dispute, Schs. 3 and 4
both set out a half share in them as belonging to executants 6 and 7 and the other
half as belonging to executant 8, i.e. Nanhku, in each of them.
As
already stated, the fundamental premise on which the Division Bench proceeded
to consider Ex. I was that there were three sets of executants, namely, those
belonging to Lalji's branch, i.e., executants 1 to 3, those belonging to
Raghunandan's branch i.e., executants 4 and 5, and the third set consisting of
Amar Singh and Sonadhari executants 6 and 7, and Nanhku, executant 8. The second
premise on which the Division Bench rested its entire reasoning was that
whereas there were disputes between the three sets of executants, there were no
disputes between Amar Singh, Sonadhari and Nankhu, that in fact the three of
them acted in concert, and that therefore, one half share given to Nanhku in
the house in dispute was altogether voluntarily given without any anterior title
and without any claim or dispute raised by Nanhku in, respect thereof. In our
view, both the premises were incorrect rendering the conclusion drawn therefrom
untenable. it is true that Amar Singh had in 1898 purchased out of his own
moneys the land on which the, suit house stands. It is also true that Nanhku
was adopted sometime. before the execution of Ex. 1, and therefore, on the date
of its execution he could not have any valid claim enforceable in law any property
belonging to Amar Singh and his branch. But, as stated earlier, a dispute or a
contention, the settlement of which can constitute a family arrangement, need
not be one which is actually sustainable in law. The harmony in a family can be
unsettled even by competitive and rival claims which cannot be upheld in law.
Therefore, if Amar Singh and the other executants or some of them were to
challenge, for instance, the factum or the validity of Nanhku's adoption, or if
notwithstanding his adoption, Nanhku were to make a claim in properties held by
Amar Singh and his branch or if some of the executants were to claim that the
'family of Rajkumar was still a joint and undivided family or that though the
members of the family were separate, the properties held in the individual
names of some of them including Reshmi Kuer and Patreja Kuer were joint, there would
be sufficient disputes to constitute a settlement of them a family arrangement.
A claim, made by executants 1 to 5 that the properties held by Reshmi Kuer and
Patreja Kuer were not their separate properties but-were joint family
properties, liable to be partitioned amongst all, was bound to affect both Amar
Singh and Nanhku, If such a claim were to be persisted and dragged to a court
of law there is no gainsaying that it would put into jeopardy not only the
interests of Amar Singh and Nanhku but also the harmony of the family. The
recitals in Ex. I clearly show that whereas members of Lalji's branch were
claiming that the family was still joint and undivided, and therefore, they had
interest in all the properties irrespective of their standing in the names of
particular individuals, Raghunandan and his son claimed that the members
of the family were not joint and yet claimed share in all the properties
including those standing in the names of Reshmi Kuer and Patreja Kuer. Thus the
claims by executants '1 to 5 were definitely hostile to the interests of Amar
Singh to ':the extent of the properties standing in the name of Reshmi Kuer and
of Nanhku to the extent of the properties standing in the name of Patreja Kuer.
The claims made by the branches of Lalji and Raghunandan sought to bring all
the properties into hotch potch including those held by Resbmi Kuer and Patreja
Kuer, thus, affecting the rights of Amar Singh and Nanhku in the different
properties and not the same properties. Their interests, therefore, were not
identical and there was thus no reason for them to act jointly. Indeed, there
was no evidence whatsoever and nothing in Ex. I itself to show that they were
acting in concert as assumed by the Division Bench. 13-1 S. C. India/71 It is
true that the recitals in Ex. I do not expressly set out any conflict of claims
between Amar Singh and Nanhku. Nevertheless, it is significant that in para 4
of Ex. I the executants found it necessary to insert therein a declaration not
only by executants 1 to 5, but also executants 6 and 7 that Nanhku was the
adopted son of Ramji and Patreja Kuer, that on the death of Patreja Kuer he, as
such adopted son, was absolutely entitled to the properties set out therein in
addition to those which stood in the name of Patreja Kuer. If the adoption of
Nankhu was accepted by all and was not made the subject matter of any doubt or
dispute, there was no necessity of including such a declaration and in
particular joining executants 6 and 7 in such a declaration. If Amar Singh and Nanhku
were acting in concert why had Amar Singh and his son, Sonadhari as executants
6 and 7, to be joined as declarants to the adoption of Nanhku. Para 4 of Ex. I
also shows that there were certain bonds and mortgage deeds standing in the
name of Patreja Kuer which were acquired from out of the personal funds of
Ramji. Such a statement had to be acknowledged in paragraph 4 presumably ,because
rights in those bonds and deeds were not admitted to be the exclusive rights of
Patreja. If those rights were to be treated as joint family property, as
claimed by executants 1 to 5, Amar Singh would get a share in them and to that
extent his interest must be said to be in conflict with that of Nanhku. A
similar result would follow if properties standing in the name of Rashmi Kuer
were to be treated as joint family properties. It would not, therefore, be
correct to assume that in the disputes amongst the different branches of the
family. Nanhku and Amar Singh were acting in concert or that there' was no
conflict of interest between them. In our judgment, the parties to Ex. I
arrived at a settlement in view of claims and cross claims by some against the
others. Taken as a whole and in the light of the recitals and the statements in
the operative part of the document indicating conflicts amongst the members of
the family, the document represented an arrangement bona fide entered into, for
settling existing or at any rate apprehended disputes, and therefore, satisfied
the tests of a family arrangement laid down in the decisions earlier referred
to. In this view Nanhku must be said to have acquired a half share in the house
in dispute under Ex. 1. On the question of adverse possession by a co-sharer
against another co-sharer, the law is fairly well settled. Adverse possession
has to have the characteristics of adequacy, continuity and exclusiveness. The
onus to establish these characteristics is on the adverse possessor.
Accordingly, if a holder of title proves that he too had been exercising during
the currency of his title various acts of possession, then, the quality of
those acts, even though they might not be sufficient to constitute adverse
possession as against another, may be abundantly sufficient to destroy that
adequacy and interrupt that exclusiveness and continuity which is demanded from
a person challenging by possession the title which he holds. (see Kuthali Moothavar
v. Paringati Kunharankutty(1). As between co-sharers, the possession of one
cosharer is in law the possession of all co-sharers. Therefore, to constitute
adverse possession, ouster of the non-possessing cosharer has to be made out.
As between them, therefore, there must be evidence of open assertion of a
hostile title coupled with exclusive possession and enjoyment by one of them to
the knowledge of the other. (see Lakshmi Reddy v. Lakshmi Reddy(1) and also
Mohammad Baqar v. Naim-un-Nisa Bibi.(3)) But, once the possession of a
co-sharer has become adverse as a result of ouster, a mere assertion of a joint
title by the dispossessed co-sharer would not interrupt the running of adverse
possession. He must actually and effectively break up the exclusive possession
of his co-sharer by re- entry upon the property or by resuming possession in
such a manner as it was possible to do. (see Wuntakal Yalpi Chanabasavana Gowd
v. Y. Mahabaleshwarappa(4)). The mere fact that a dispossessed co-sharer comes
and stays for a few days as a guest is not sufficient to interrupt the
exclusiveness or the continuity of adverse possession ,so as not to extinguish
the rights of the dispossessed co-sharer. (see Ammakannu Ammal v. Naravanaswami
Mudaliar(5)). On this issue, the parties led considerable evidence, oral and
documentary. On examination of that evidence, both the Trial Court and the
learned Single Judge gave a concurrent finding that even if the possession by
the respondents was adverse the appellant and his father had done acts of
possession at various intervals which were sufficient to interrupt both the
continuity and the exclusiveness of possession by the respondents. The Division
Bench, however, did not agree with the concurrent finding on a reappraisal of
the evidence. by it. It is not necessary for us to go into the details of that
evidence once again as certain facts clearly emerge out of the evidence to
prevent the extinguishment of Nanhku's and the appellant's title in the
property as a result of adverse possession by the respondents. The principal
facts which impressed the Division Bench were (i) that though in the Demand
Register of Patna Municipality for 1915-16 (Ex. E) Sonadhari and Baijnath were
the only (1) [1921] 48 I. A. 395, 404. (3) A. I. R. 1956 S. C. 548. (5) A. I.
R. 1923 Mad. 633. (2) [1957] S.C.R. 195, 202. (4) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 131, 138. persons
named as occupiers, Nanhku had not taken steps to include his name, (2) that
all throughout it was Sonadhari and Baijnath who paid the municipal taxes and Nanhku
at no time paid his share of the taxes or his share in the cost of repairs and
laying of a water pipe in the house, and (3) that though in his written
statement in suit No. 33 of 1933 Baijnath claimed that he was in exclusive
possession of the house as he had paid Nanhku the proportionate price of his
share, Nanhku did not take any steps to vindicate his title until he and his
son filed the present suit in 1949 by which time the statutory period for
adverse possession had already been completed. There was, however, evidence (if
Nanhku and his wife having stayed on different occasions in the house. But the
Division Bench was of the view that such acts of possession were only casual
and did not have the effect of interrupting the adverse possession of the
respondents. It needs to mention in this connection that Nanhku was all along
residing in a village and not in Patna, Therefore, his acts of possession could
only be when he came down from his village for some work to Patna. In 1915-1916,
when Sonadhari got his name and that of Baijnath entered in the Demand Register
(Ex. E) it might be that Nanhku did not know that they had omitted his name.
His half share in the house had been acknowledged in Ex. I only recently by
Amar Singh and Sonadhari as well. Relations between the parties had not yet
become unfriendly so as to make Nanbku suspect that his name would be
deliberately omitted in the municipal records or that possession by Sonadhari
and later on by Baijnath would be treated by them as adverse. Baijnath, no
doubt, was using the whole house, but so long as his possession did not amount
to ouster his possession would be that of both the co-sharers. If Baijnath used
the entire house, except when Nanhku stayed in it during his occasional visits,
Nanhku would naturally think that Baijnath should pay the taxes. It was not the
case of the respondents that Baijnath ever demanded a share in the taxes or a
share in the cost of repair and that such a demand was refused by Nanhku. The
High Court on these facts was not right in observing that the title of Baijnath
was already completed by adverse possession long before Baijnath filed his
written statement in 1933, as mere use and enjoyment by him of the house, in
the absence of such use amounting to ouster, would not make it adverse
possession. It was for the first time that in the written statement filed in
1933 Baijnath openly asserted his title to the whole of the house. Since that
assertion was accompanied by the fact that he was in enjoyment of the whole
house that act would amount to ouster and adverse possession would commence as
from that date. Obviously, the earlier possession could not be tacked on to the
subsequent possession because the plea in that very written statement was that
Baijnath had paid off the price of Nanhku's share thereby implied admitting
Nankhu's title to a half share in the house. Suit No. 33 of 1933, in which
Baijnath filed the said written statement, was settled in 1941. In the compromise
application filed by Nankhu and Baijnath, both of them stated that they were
residing in that house. That assertion by Nanhku was never disputed by
Baijnath. But apart from that assertion there was the fact that Nanhku had no
other place to reside in Patna. His case was that whenever he visited Patna he
used to stay in the house in dispute. Apart from that assertion being natural,
his evidence in that connection was corroborated by Prabhu Narain, P.W. 4, an
Advocate residing in the neighbourhood. The Division Bench brushed aside his
evidence without giving any adequate reason although it bad been accepted by
both the Trial Court and the learned Single Judge. In the light of this
evidence it is not possible to say that all throughout the period from 1933
till the statutory period for adverse possession was completed Nanhku had not
stayed in the house at any time. Respondent herself admitted that on suit No.
33 of 1933 being settled, relations between Nanhku and Baijnath became
friendly. If that be so, it was natural that Nankhu would stay in the house
whenever be visited Patna in 1941 and thereafter.
The
Municipal Survey Khasra (Ex. 2), dated December 19, 1933 mentions Nanhku along
with Sonadhari and Baijnath as owners of the house. Since this entry was made
after Baijnath had made a hostile claim to the entire house in the written
statement filed in suit No. 33 of 1933 on September 16, 1933, the entry must
presumably have been made at the instance of Nanhku. Such an act on his Part
would be a clear assertion of his title in the house. Under the Bihar and Orissa
Municipal Survey Act, 1 of 1920, before such khasra was finalised it had to be
published and objections to it, if any, had to be invited and disposed of. No
objection was ever raised by Baijnath to the said khasra. It is surprising that
Baijnath did not resist the entry in the khasra although he had made a claim to
the whole of the property only three months before the date of the khasra. That
indicates that his claim *as merely a counterblast against Nanhku's suit. The
view of the Division Bench that the occasional putting up by Nanhku and his
wife in the disputed house was merely casual and was. in the nature of visits
as guests of the respondents cannot be accepted. Such stay, however occasional,
would. not be casual as it was accompanied by an open assertion of his title as
evidenced by the khasra (Ex. 2). It could not also be that he stayed in the
house as the guest of the respondents because after he filed the suit in 1933
and until it was settled, his relations with Baijnath could not have been
friendly. These acts on the part of Nanhku Were ample enough to interrupt the
continuity and the exclusiveness of possession by Baijnath. The Division Bench
also relied on a sale deed (Ex. C) dated October 12, 1933, executed by Baijnath
and Tarkeshwar in favour of one Kamalnain Pandey. The High Court appears to
have taken the view that, the land sold under Ex. C appertained to for was part
of the land on which Amar Singh had put up the disputed house, and that
although Baijnath and Tarkeshwar sold part of that land, no objection was taken
at any time to such a sale by Nanhku. The recitals in Ex. C show that the land,
sold under Ex. C. was jointly purchased on January 20, 1898 by. Amar Singh and
one Gajadhar Singh for construction of a house thereon. Amar Singh had a share
in the said land to the extent of I katha 15 dhurs while his c0-purchaser had a
share of 2 kathas 15 dhurs. The recitals further show that Amar Singh's
original intention in purchasing the land was to build a house thereon. He appears
to have given up that idea as till this sale took place the land was lying
waste and unutilised. It is important to note that this sale was for I katha 10
dhurs, out of 1 katha 15 dhurs which was the share of Amar Singh. This land
obviously could not be the land on which the house in dispute was built, for,
if that was so, Baijnath could not have ,sold away I katha 10 dhurs out of the
total extent of katha 15 dhurs to which Amar Singh was entitled. The house
could not have stood on 5 dhurs only. Therefore, the land sold under Ex. C was
a land different from the one on which the disputed house was situate. This
conclusion is also borne out by the description of the sold land in the
schedule to Ex. C where its northern boundary is described as follows: "North
: Parti (waste) land thereafter the house of us, the executants." This
description shows that between the disputed house and the land sold under Ex. C
there was to the north of it some waste .land. The land sold under Ex. C being
different land, the High Court was not right in relying on that sale deed to
prove adverse possession on the ground at Nanhku never took objection to the
said sale. He could not, as this land had nothing to do with the house in dispute.
Besides the evidence discussed above, there was other evidence. But the
incidents therein described were irrelevant on the question of adverse
possession as they took place in 1948 and thereafter, that is to say, a long
time after title by adverse possession would have been completed if such
adverse possession were to be accepted as established. In view of the evidence
discussed above the Division Beach was not justified in interfering with the
finding of fact concurrently given by the Trial Court and the learned Single
Judge that the adverse, possession by Baijnath which commenced from 1933 was
sufficiently interrupted by acts of possession by Nanhku, and therefore, his
title was not extinguished by adverse possession. In the view we take on both
the questions, the appeal must be allowed and the judgment and decree of the
Division Bench must be set aside and the judgment and decree passed by the
Trial Court and upheld by the learned Single Judge must be restored. The respondents
will pay to the appellant his costs all throughout. G.C.
Appeal allowed.
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