Civil Appeal No. 6595 of 2015
Civil Appeal No. 6595 of 2015
Civil Appeal No. 6595 of 2015
Appellant(s)
VERSUS
H.B. SHIVAKUMAR
...Respondent
JUDGMENT
R.F. Nariman, J.
1.
Leave granted.
2.
Within a few days from the filing of this suit, the defendant
in the first suit filed a suit being suit number O.S. 1650 of 1990 in
the City Civil Court at Bangalore against one L.C. Ramaiah and
the said Shri Hanumanthappa stating that the defendants had
attempted to trespass into the suit schedule property about 15
days prior to the suit being filed, and asked for a permanent
injunction against the said defendants restraining them from
interfering with the peaceful possession and enjoyment of the
suit schedule property. The plaintiff also claimed to be the owner
in possession of the suit schedule property.
4.
16th May, 1990, the defendant not only referred to his own suit
which had by then already been filed, but specifically stated as
follows:4. The boundaries furnished by the plaintiff to old
survey site No.13, in the plaint schedule is totally
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plaintiff in O.S. No. 1386 of 1990 was put on notice that his suit
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7.
2009, the City Civil Court at Bangalore decreed the suit O.S. No.
1386 of 1990. It turned down the plea of limitation by stating that
since in the original written statement the defendant had admitted
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dated 5th March, 2015, the High Court reversed the said
judgment on limitation stating that the original written statement
filed on 16th May, 1990 had clearly stated that the plaintiff did not
have the necessary title to the suit schedule property, and as the
amendment of the plaint was moved long after three years from
16th May, 1990, it was clear that it was time-barred.
O.S. No.
argued that the plaintiffs title was clearly denied in the original
written statement and three years having elapsed from the said
date, the amendment was obviously time-barred. Further, the
judgment dated 28th March, 2002 itself made it clear that the
amendment was allowed subject to the plea of limitation being
raised. He further argued that the amendment made introduced a
completely new cause of action based on fresh facts and
therefore any amendment made could not possibly relate back
as such amendment would be clearly time-barred.
13.
v. Union of India & Anr., (2011) 9 SCC 126, this Court while
construing Article 58 of the Limitation Act held as follows:-
*
*
Period of
limitation
*
*
Part III- Suits Relating To Declarations
*
*
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16.
Amir Khan, 47 IA 255 (1920), stated the law as follows:That there was full power to make the amendment
cannot be disputed, and though such a power
should not as a rule be exercised where the effect is
to take away from a defendant a legal right which
has accrued to him by lapse of time, yet there are
cases where such considerations are out-weighed
by the special circumstances of the case.
18.
Leach & Co. Ltd. v. Jardine Skinner & Co., 1957 SCR 438, at
pages 450 to 451.
19.
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20.
of cases where despite the fact that a legal right had accrued to
the defendant by lapse of time, yet this consideration was
outweighed by the special circumstances of the case, namely,
that no new material fact needed to be added at all, and only an
alternative prayer in law had necessarily to be made in view of
the original plea in law being discarded.
21.
reported in 1957 SCR 595. Here again it was held that the
amendment did not really introduce a new fact at all, nor did the
defendant have to meet a new claim set up for the first time after
the expiry of the period of limitation.
22.
Similarly,
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21
28.
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29.
Applying the law thus laid down by this Court to the facts
of this case, two things become clear. First, in the original written
statement itself dated 16th May, 1990, the defendant had clearly
put the plaintiff on notice that it had denied the plaintiffs title to
the suit property. A reading of an isolated para in the written
statement, namely, para 2 by the trial court on the facts of this
case has been correctly commented upon adversely by the High
Court in the judgment under appeal. The original written
statement read as a whole unmistakably indicates that the
defendant had not accepted the plaintiffs title. Secondly, while
allowing the amendment, the High Court in its earlier judgment
dated 28th March, 2002 had expressly remanded the matter to
the trial court, allowing the defendant to raise the plea of
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limitation.
It is clear
that the doctrine of relation back would not apply to the facts of
this case for the reason that the court which allowed the
amendment expressly allowed it subject to the plea of limitation,
indicating thereby that there are no special or extraordinary
circumstances in the present case to warrant the doctrine of
relation back applying so that a legal right that had accrued in
favour of the defendant should be taken away. This being so, we
find no infirmity in the impugned judgment of the High Court. The
present appeal is accordingly dismissed.
J.
(A.K. Sikri)
J.
(R.F. Nariman)
New Delhi;
August 26, 2015.
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