IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE, ANDHRA PRADESH AT HYDERABAD TUESDAY, THE TWENTY SIXTH DAY OF JULY TWO THOUSAND AND ELEVEN Present HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE G. BHAVANI PRASAD SECOND APPEAL No.1392 of 2010 Between: Mohd. Mahamopod Khan .. Appellant AND Smt. Ameena Bee .. Respondent The Court made the following: HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE G. BHAVANI PRASAD SECOND APPEAL No.1392 of 2010 JUDGMENT: The Second Appeal is directed against the judgment and decree in A.S.No.30 of 2008, on the file of the Judge, Family Court-cum-Additional District Judge, Mahabubnagar, dated 27.09.2010. 2. The Second Appeal is being disposed of at the stage of admission without ordering any notice to the respondent/plaintiff after hearing Sri K. Venkatesh Gupta, learned counsel for the second appellant. 3. The suit for declaration of ownership, recovery of possession and future mesne profits was originally for a permanent injunction having been later converted by way of an amendment into such a suit of comprehensive nature. The plaintiff claimed ownership and possession of the suit property under a purchase from her father under a registered Sale Deed, dated 31.07.1997, and she claimed initially interference with her possession by the defendant who is no other than her brother and later dispossession by him in February, 2002. The defendant ultimately pleaded in the suit that his father orally gifted the properties to him and delivered possession to him which he also admitted by a declaration, dated 09.10.1985, before a notary. The defendant claimed to be enjoying the properties as absolute owner and possessor since then. It was only the subsequent differences with his father and sister that led to the forgery of registered Sale Deed and exchange of notices. The municipality appeared to have mutated the name of the plaintiff in collusion with the plaintiff without notice to the defendant and he claimed to be residing in the suit premises and to be running a small business therein, the alleged subsequent incidents between him and the plaintiff resulting in reports to the police and criminal cases. The defendant, therefore, desired the suit to fail. The decree in O.S.No.123 of 1999 was claimed by him to be against a dead person after the death of his father. 4. The trial Court framed issues about the ownership of the suit property, the gift in favour of the defendant, the entitlement of the plaintiff to the suit reliefs, etc., and during the trial, P.W.1 and D.W.1 were examined and Exs.A-1 to A-24 and B-1 to B-38 were marked. 5. The trial Court rendered its judgment on 17.01.2008 tracing the factual background of the dispute and considering the evidence of the plaintiff as P.W.1 about the execution of Ex.A-1-registered Sale Deed, dated 31.07.1997, in her favour. The trial Court also referred to Ex.A-2-Encumberance Certificate, Ex.A- 12-Ownership Certificate issued by the municipality, Exs.A-3 to A-7 and Ex.A-11-Tax Receipts, Exs.A-15 to A-22-Electricity Receipts and Tax Receipts and the other documents relating to the litigation before the various Courts between the plaintiff, the defendant and their father. The oral gift was considered by the trial Court to have not been probablised by the evidence of D.W.1 notwithstanding Exs.B-1 to B-27 and the claim that the objections of the defendant were not considered by the municipality was also not accepted. Though oral gift was recognized by the personal law of the parties, the trial Court disbelieved the same in view of O.S.No.236 of 1997 between the defendant and his father and the injunction obtained by the father himself against the defendant in that suit. The pleadings of that suit were also extracted and the trial Court considered the conduct to be not in support of any inference of an oral gift. The trial Court also referred to the mutation of the properties in favour of the plaintiff and ultimately considered the evidence of the plaintiff to be more cogent and acceptable than that of the defendant. Consequently, it granted the suit reliefs to the plaintiff. 6. In appeal against the said judgment and decree, the impugned judgment was rendered by the first Appellate Court which again referred to the factual background for the dispute and framed points for consideration about the ownership of the suit property with the defendant or the plaintiff and the entitlement of the plaintiff to the suit reliefs. The first Appellate Court also went into the question of oral gift and considered the evidence of D.W.1 to be insufficient to probablise the oral gift when the date of the oral gift was not specified in the written statement or in the complaint in C.C.No.118 of 2001 marked as Ex.B-29. The first Appellate Court also noted that the alleged declaration by the father on 09.10.1985 before a notary was not produced before the Court and the alleged mutation in favour of the defendant at any point of time was also not proved. The documents marked on behalf of the defendant were considered to be insufficient to probablise the oral gift and the non-examination of any witness connected with the alleged oral gift was also taken adverse note of. Coming to the version of the plaintiff about the purchase under Ex.A-1-registered Sale Deed, the first Appellate Court, with reference to the decisions of the apex Court and this Court on this aspect, considered Ex.A-1 to be not vitiated by the alleged suspicious circumstances raised by the defendant. The first Appellate Court observed that apart from the presumption of genuineness of the registered Document, the evidence of P.W.1 which was unshattered by any cross-examination need not be disbelieved and the first Appellate Court did not find any merit in the contention that the relations between the plaintiff and her father were not cordial. The execution of Ex.A-1 was not disbelieved on the ground of the plaintiff not visiting the dead body of her father as it was found to be due to fear of her brother and the sale consideration having been recited to have been paid at the Registrar’s office before the Registrar. The suggestion that the mental condition of his father was not good was also not accepted. The first Appellate Court found that there was nothing unnatural in the same and one of the attestors of Ex.A-1 died and the absence of any other witnesses was also not taken any serious note. The transaction under Ex.A-1 was upheld and consequently, the first Appellate Court also did not find any ground to interfere with the findings of the trial Court on re-appreciation of the evidence. 7. The confirmation of the judgment and decree of the trial Court by the impugned judgment and decree led the unsuccessful defendant to file the present second appeal and in the memorandum of grounds of appeal, the defendant, apart from repeating the factual background of the second appeal, contended that it is not for the defendant to prove his case and disprove the case of the plaintiff and it is squarely on the plaintiff to prove her case. The non-examination of any attesting witness for Ex.A-1 by the plaintiff was mainly relied upon, apart from the other circumstances relating to the alleged possession and enjoyment of the suit property by the defendant. The substantial questions of law said to be arising in the second appeal are about the absence of establishment of title of the plaintiff notwithstanding any weakness in the case of the defendant, the non-proving of the registered Sale Deed by non-examination of any attesting witnesses and the absence of establishment of possession of the plaintiff. The defendant also attempted to contend the decree against the father in the earlier suit to be against a dead person and thus, primarily, the suspicious circumstances surrounding Ex.A-1-Registered Sale Deed were the main basis for the second appeal. 8. The point for consideration is whether there are any substantial questions of law involved in the second appeal. 9. Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (for short, ‘C.P.C’), mandates that a second appeal may lie only if the High Court is satisfied that the case involves a substantial question of law and the said substantial question of law has to be formulated by the High Court in order to enable it to entertain the second appeal. Order XLII Rule 2 C.P.C also mandates formulation of a substantial question of law as required by Section 100 C.P.C, and the apex Court has, time and again, deprecated admission of a second appeal as a matter of course without the existence of any substantial question of law. Therefore, it is mandatory for the Court to consider whether any substantial question of law exists herein in order to enable it to entertain this second appeal. 10. Sri K. Venkatesh Gupta, learned counsel for the second appellant, referred to K. LAXMANAN VS. THEKKAYIL PADMINI[1] wherein the apex Court was considering the truth, legality and validity of a deed of will involved in that case. Observing that such a document has to be proved in terms of Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (for short, ‘the Act’), the apex Court cautioned that the question should not be casually considered, as such a finding has a very important bearing on rights of both parties. While noting the exception carved out by the proviso to Section 68 of the Act in respect of examining at least any one attesting witness, the apex Court was considering the facts of that particular case which showed that the attesting witness who was alive was not examined and no reason was assigned for his non-examination and there was the denial of an identifying witness about making any identification at the time of registration of the Sale Deed and the non-admission of the execution of the gift deed by the executant. As the person who was called to prove the document denied having signed as an identifying witness, the execution of the gift deed was found to be vitiated by suspicious circumstances and thus, it was clear that it was on the facts of the particular case that the apex Court came to such a conclusion. 11. Learned counsel for the second appellant also relied on A. RAMLOO VS. G. SREERAMACHANDRA MURTHY[2], wherein a learned Judge of this Court was referring to the plaintiff therein filing only the sale deeds, but not proving them as per Section 68 of the Act by examining the attesting witnesses. Though the said observation of the learned Judge appears to be broadly in tune with the contentions of the second appellant herein, the observations seem to be more on the facts of that particular case and were without taking into account the statutory provision under Section 68 of the Act. 12. The proviso to Section 68 of the Act clearly lays down that it shall not be necessary to call an attesting witness in proof of the execution of any document, not being a will, which has been registered in accordance with the provisions of the Indian Registration Act, 1908 (16 of 1908), unless its execution by the person by whom it purports to have been executed is specifically denied. In the present case, the executant was no more by the time the trial was taken up and the executant was not claimed to have denied the execution of the registered Sale Deed at any time during his life after its execution and the document is admittedly a registered document and, therefore, the proviso to Section 68 of the Act squarely applies to the document and it shall not be necessary for the plaintiff to call an attesting witness in proof of the execution of any document. One of the attestors was admittedly no more by the time of the trial and the non-examination of the other persons connected with the execution and registration of the document was attempted to be projected as presenting suspicious circumstances in the second appeal, but the trial Court which had seen the plaintiff and the defendant in flesh and blood while recording their evidence had considered on a close analysis of the evidence, the claims of the plaintiff to be more acceptable. The conclusions are not based on any unreasonable or fanciful considerations, but the trial Court had taken into account the circumstances probablising the absence of any cordial relationship between the defendant and his father and the absence of any improbability in the transaction under Ex.A-1 between the plaintiff and her father. Similarly, the first Appellate Court also in its own wisdom, dealt with all the factual circumstances arising out of the evidence on record and had come to the same conclusion as the trial Court had. The concurrent findings of fact by the trial Court and the first Appellate Court considering the probablisation of the execution of Ex.A-1-registered Sale Deed by the plaintiff’s father in favour of the plaintiff cannot be considered to involve any substantial question of law and whether Ex.A-1 was probablised or not is a pure question of fact on which the trial Court and the first Appellate Court cannot be considered to have committed any illegality or irregularity. 13. The perceptions of the second appellant that the plaintiff did not establish her title and that she succeeded only on the weakness of his case are not reflected in the judgments of the trial Court or the first Appellate Court and Ex.A-1-registered Sale Deed cannot be considered to have not been proved in accordance with the provisions of Section 68 of the Act. Under the circumstances, the factual questions raised by the second appellant cannot amount to substantial questions of law and the second appeal cannot be entertained. 14. In the result, the Second Appeal is dismissed without costs at the stage of admission. ______________________ G. BHAVANI PRASAD, J Date: 26th July, 2011 KL HON’BLE SRI JUSTICE G. BHAVANI PRASAD SECOND APPEAL No.1392 of 2010 Date: 26th July, 2011 KL [1] 2008 (TLS) 47742 [2] 1999 (2) ALD 590