Supreme Court of India

CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 10940-10941 OF 2014 Judgment Date: Dec 10, 2014

                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                    CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 10940-10941 OF 2014
                (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS.996-997 of 2013)

BALURAM                                                         ...APPELLANT

                                    VERSUS

P. CHELLATHANGAM & ORS.                                        ..RESPONDENTS

                               J U D G M E N T

ADARSH KUMAR GOEL, J.
1.    Leave granted.
2.    These appeals have been preferred against Orders dated
24th November, 2011 and 18th September, 2012 passed by  the  High  Court  of
Madras,  Bench  at  Madurai  in  C.R.P.  No.2610  of  2010  and  in   Review
Application No.1 of 2012 in C.R.P. No.2610 of 2010 respectively.
3.    The question raised for our consideration is whether  the  High  Court
was justified in reversing the Order of the trial Court allowing the  prayer
of the appellant to be added as a party in a suit for  specific  performance
filed by Respondent No.1-plaintiff.
4.    Case of the plaintiff in O.S. No.3 of  2007  filed  in  the  Court  of
District Judge, Kanyakumari, is that K. Jagathees and  R.  Subbaram  Babu  @
Subbaram, Respondent Nos.2 and 3 respectively (original  defendants  in  the
suit) acting as trustees of "Subbaiah Paniker  Family  Welfare  Trust"  (for
short "the Trust") entered into the agreement dated 9th  December,  2003  to
sell the suit property in  favour  of  the  plaintiff.   The  price  of  the
property was settled at Rs.22,000/- per  cent.   A  sum  of  Rs.1  lakh  was
received as advance.  The plaintiff was ready and  willing  to  perform  his
part of the contract but the defendants failed  to  execute  the  sale  deed
even in extended time.  When called upon to do so, they took the stand  that
the sale deed could be executed only  if  the  beneficiaries  of  the  Trust
agreed to the sale which was not a valid ground.
5.    During pendency of the suit, the appellant filed  I.A. No.584 of  2008
in O.S. No.3 of  2007  in  the  Court  of  District  Judge,  Kanyakumari  at
Nagercoil, for being impleaded as defendant, pleading that  he  will  suffer
prejudice being beneficiary of the Trust if the sale is effected at a  throw
away price.  According to him, the value  of  the  property  was  more  than
Rs.50,000/- per cent while the proposed sale was for Rs.22,000/-
per cent.
6.    The application was opposed  by  the  plaintiff  submitting  that  the
beneficiary was a stranger to the agreement  and  was  not  a  necessary  or
proper party.
7.    The trial Court accepted the application.  It held that the  plaintiff
was not a stranger to the subject matter of dispute and was entitled  to  be
impleaded as a party.  Reliance was placed on the  Judgment  of  the  Madras
High Court in S.D. Joseph and Other vs. E. Ebinesan  and  others[1]  holding
as follows :
"Every  member  who  is  having  interest  and  right  should  be  given  an
opportunity of being heard and the court must  see  whether  subject  matter
could be factually adjudicated upon in the absence of proposed parties in  a
case where the property belonged to YMCA, a public Trust."

8.    Aggrieved by the Order of the trial  Court,  the  respondent-plaintiff
preferred a revision petition under Article 227 of the  Constitution  before
the High Court with the plea that the  appellant  was  not  a  necessary  or
proper party and thus the order of the  trial  Court  impleading  him  as  a
party defendant was erroneous.  Reliance was placed on the Judgment of  this
Court  in  Bharat  Karasondas  Thakkar  vs.  Kiran  Construction   Co.   and
others[2].  The High Court upheld the plea of the  plaintiff  and  dismissed
the I.A. No.584 of 2008 filed by the appellant in  the  suit  filed  by  the
respondent-plaintiff.  It was further observed that since suit  property  is
a Trust property, the trial Court can look into the relevant  provisions  of
law and  examine  whether  permission  of  the  Court  was  required  before
entering into the sale agreement.
9.     Aggrieved  by  the  Order  of  the  High  Court,  the  appellant  has
approached this Court.
10.   We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
11.   Learned counsel for the appellant vehemently submitted that  the  view
taken by the High Court is patently erroneous.  The appellant was  certainly
a proper  party  and  the  trial  Court  was  justified  in  exercising  its
jurisdiction under Order I Rule 10(2) of the Code of Civil  Procedure,  1908
in impleading the appellant as a party.  Even if the Trustee had  the  right
of alienation, the Court was entitled to control the exercise of power of  a
Trustee under Section 49 of the Indian Trusts  Act,  1881  (for  short  "the
Trusts Act").  The appellant was entitled to be  impleaded  as  a  party  to
safeguard his right as beneficiary of the Trust so  that  the  Trustees  did
not exercise their power of  alienation  unreasonably.   Reliance  has  been
placed on Judgment of this court in Mumbai International  Airport  (P)  Ltd.
vs. Regency Convention Centre & Hotels (P) Ltd.[3].
12.   Learned  counsel  for  Respondent  No.1  however,  opposed  the  above
submission and supported the impugned order passed by the  High  Court.   It
was submitted that since the appellant  was  neither  necessary  nor  proper
party, application for impleading the appellant as  a  party  could  not  be
entertained.  The appellant was stranger to the transaction  and  could  not
object to the sale in question.
13.   After due consideration of the rival submissions, we are of  the  view
that the High Court erred in interfering with the order of the  trial  Court
impleading the appellant as a party defendant.   Admittedly,  the  appellant
is a beneficiary of the Trust and under the provisions of  the  Trusts  Act,
the Trustee has to act reasonably in exercise of  his  right  of  alienation
under the terms of the trust deed.  Appellant cannot thus be  treated  as  a
stranger.  No doubt, it may be permissible  for  the  appellant  to  file  a
separate suit, as suggested by Respondent No.1, but  the  beneficiary  could
certainly be held to be a  proper  party.   There  is  no  valid  reason  to
decline his prayer to be impleaded as  a  party  to  avoid  multiplicity  of
proceedings.  Order I Rule 10(2), CPC enables, the Court to add a  necessary
or proper party so as to "effectually and  completely  adjudicate  upon  and
settle all the questions involved in the suit".
14.   In Mumbai International Airport (supra) this Court observed :
13. The general rule in  regard  to  impleadment  of  parties  is  that  the
plaintiff in a suit, being dominus litis, may  choose  the  persons  against
whom he wishes to litigate and cannot be compelled to sue a  person  against
whom he does not seek any relief. Consequently, a person who is not a  party
has no right to be impleaded against the wishes of the plaintiff.  But  this
general rule is subject to the provisions of Order 1 Rule 10(2) of the  Code
of Civil Procedure ("the Code", for short), which provides  for  impleadment
of proper or necessary parties. The said sub-rule is extracted below:

"10. (2) Court may strike out or add parties.-The court may at any stage  of
the proceedings, either upon or without the  application  of  either  party,
and on such terms as may appear to the court to  be  just,  order  that  the
name of any party improperly joined, whether as plaintiff or  defendant,  be
[pic]struck out, and that the name of any person  who  ought  to  have  been
joined, whether as plaintiff or defendant,  or  whose  presence  before  the
court may be  necessary  in  order  to  enable  the  court  effectually  and
completely to adjudicate upon and settle all the questions involved  in  the
suit, be added."

14. The said provision makes it clear that a court may, at any stage of  the
proceedings (including suits for specific performance), either upon or  even
without any application, and on such terms as may appear to it to  be  just,
direct that any of the following persons may be added as a  party:  (a)  any
person who ought to have been joined as  plaintiff  or  defendant,  but  not
added; or (b) any person whose presence before the court  may  be  necessary
in order to enable the court to effectively and completely  adjudicate  upon
and settle the questions involved in the suit. In short, the court is  given
the discretion to add as a party, any person who is found to be a  necessary
party or proper party.

15. A "necessary party" is a person who ought  to  have  been  joined  as  a
party and in whose absence no effective decree could be  passed  at  all  by
the court. If a "necessary party" is  not  impleaded,  the  suit  itself  is
liable to be dismissed. A "proper party"  is  a  party  who,  though  not  a
necessary party, is a person  whose  presence  would  enable  the  court  to
completely, effectively  and  adequately  adjudicate  upon  all  matters  in
dispute in the suit, though he need not be a person in favour of or  against
whom the decree is to be made. If a person is not found to be  a  proper  or
necessary party, the court has no jurisdiction to implead him,  against  the
wishes of the plaintiff. The fact that  a  person  is  likely  to  secure  a
right/interest in a suit property, after the suit  is  decided  against  the
plaintiff, will not make such person a necessary party or a proper party  to
the suit for specific performance.

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19. Referring to suits for  specific  performance,  this  Court  in  Kasturi
[(2005) 6 SCC 733], held that the following persons are to be considered  as
necessary parties: (i) the parties to the contract which  is  sought  to  be
enforced or their legal representatives; (ii) a transferee of  the  property
which is the subject-matter of the contract. This Court also explained  that
a person who has a direct interest in the subject-matter  of  the  suit  for
specific performance of an agreement of sale may be impleaded  as  a  proper
party on his application under Order 1 Rule 10  CPC.  This  Court  concluded
that a purchaser of the suit  property  subsequent  to  the  suit  agreement
would be a necessary party as he would be affected if he  had  purchased  it
with or without notice of the contract, but a  person  who  claims  a  title
adverse to that of the defendant vendor will not be a necessary party.

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22. Let us consider the scope and ambit of Order 1 Rule 10(2) CPC  regarding
striking out or adding parties. The said sub-rule is not about the right  of
a non-party to be impleaded as a party, but about  the  judicial  discretion
of the court to strike out or add parties at any stage of a proceeding.  The
discretion under the sub-rule can be exercised either suo  motu  or  on  the
application of the plaintiff or the defendant, or on  an  application  of  a
person who is not a party to the suit. The court can strike  out  any  party
who is improperly joined. The court can add anyone as a plaintiff  or  as  a
defendant if it finds that he is a necessary party  or  proper  party.  Such
deletion or addition can be without any conditions or subject to such  terms
as the court deems fit to impose.  In  exercising  its  judicial  discretion
under Order 1 Rule  10(2)  of  the  Code,  the  court  will  of  course  act
according to reason and fair play and not according to whims and caprice."

15.   In the present case, the appellant could not be held to be a  stranger
being beneficiary of the Trust property.  The trial Court was  justified  in
impleading him as a party.  The High Court erred  in  interfering  with  the
order of the trial Court.
16.   Accordingly, we allow this appeal, set aside  the  impugned  order  of
the High Court and restore that of the trial Court dated 10th August,  2010,
impleading the appellant as a party defendant in the suit.   There  will  be
no order as to costs.

                          ................................................J.
                                                               (T.S. THAKUR)


                         .................................................J.
                                                         (ADARSH KUMAR GOEL)
NEW DELHI
DECEMBER 10, 2014