Judgment Case ID: 6242

Judgment:
ivil Appeal No. 2635 of 1989. From the judgment and order dated 3.11.82 of the Madras High Court in Second Appeal No. 2136 of 1979. J. Ramamurti	 R. Vagai and K.K. Mani for the appellant. section Padmanabhan	 Mrs. Anjani and K. Ramkumar	 for the respondent. The judgment of the Court was delivered by OZA	 J. Leave granted. Heard learned counsel for the par ties. Facts necessary for this appeal are	 that the petitioner appellant original defendant purchased the suit property by registered sale deed dated 27.12.1950 executed by Asirvada Nadar	 Ponnammal and Devadasan in favour of the present petitioner appellant for a consideration of Rs.7	000. On 4.1.1951 the present respondent executed a rent agreement in favour of the present appellant for the building acknowledg ing her as her landlady @ Rs.80 per month. In 1963 the mother of the appellant by name of Rama lakshmi Ammal died. In 1974 the respondent filed the suit from which the present appeal arises viz. Suit No. 79 of 1974 against the petitioner appellant for conveyance of the property of the petitioner in favour of the respondent on the ground of a 'Yadast ' which was for the first time pro duced with the suit and is alleged to have been written by the mother of the petitioner on 24.12. 1950 which is marked as exhibit A 11	 in favour of the respondent. This document provided that respondent could get conveyance of the proper ty in the suit from the petitioner after paying the sale price of Rs.7	000 and Rs. 1	000 for registration expenses. This 'Yadast ' (so called agreement) was on a plain piece of paper which is neither stamped nor registered nor attested. It is also significant that although this document is al leged to have been written on 24.12.50 even before the sale 'deed of the property itself was executed in favour of the appellant but this document was not even mentioned in the notice which was served by the respondent on the present appellant before this suit nor there is any reference any where in any earlier correspondence nor there is a mention of this document in the sale deed dated 27.12.1950 which apparently is of a date subsequent to 24.12.1950 nor there is any mention of it in the rent 836 agreement dated 4.1.1951 to which the present respondent himself is a party. By judgment dated 8.11.1978 the trial court (Sub Judge) relying on this 'Yadast ' decreed the suit filed by the respondent. On appeal the Additional District Judge after detailed examination of all the facts and evidence came to the find ings of fact that the present petitioner acquired title to the property on the basis of the sale deed which is a regis tered document in her favour and this property was leased out to the respondent under a rent agreement. It also held that as the mother of the petitioner was not a party to the sale deed she had no right to agree to convey the property or to ask the daughter to convey the suit property in favour of the respondent. The plaintiff respondent was not a party to the sale deed (transferor) but is only a stranger who became a tenant under the rent agreement. 1n fact the sale deed was executed by some other person and therefore this 'Yadast ' could not be said to be an agreement to reconvey the property as apparently both the parties to the 'Yadast ' one making the commitment to reconvey and another in whose favour the commitment is made	 are not parties at all to the original transaction of sale. The learned Additional District Judge also came to the conclusion that this document was not genuine and is a forged document which is invalid and was just got up for the purposes of this suit and it has seen the light of the day for the first time after 23 years after the date on which it purports to have been executed and for all these 23 years it was never referred to also. The learned appellate Court also felt that the suit for specific performance was barred as it was filed more than 20 years after the alleged 'Yadast ' (agreement.) The learned Judge of the High Court in second appeal by the impugned judgment interfered with the finding of fact arrived at by the lower appellate court which was the final court of facts and went on at length to reassess the evi dence and not only to reassess but unfortunately the circum stances have even been imagined to suggest the connection between the 'Yadast ' and the sale deed when in fact there is no mention of this kind of document in the sale deed al though it bears a date even earlier to the sale deed and it is on this ground that the special leave petition is filed. The learned counsel appearing for the appellant contend ed that the suit for specific performance of the contract could only be decreed 837 against the executant of the contract provided the executant had a right to dispose of the property about which the suit is filed. Admittedly the mother .of the present appellant who is alleged to have executed the 'Yadast ' is not the owner of the property and the sale deed is in favour of the present appellant does not disclose that the present appel lant purchased the property either as Benami on behalf of the mother or as a nominee of the mother. It appears there fore that a theory of some loan and repayment was invented but the learned Judge of the High Court failed to notice that even if this agreement was genuine it could only be enforced against the executant and not against the present appellant. In fact the theory of loan which was suggested and a case was sought to be made out that the sale deed was not an out and out sale but only as a guarantee for the loan and therefore this 'Yadast ' was in substance a document of reconveyance. The learned Judge of the High Court failed to notice that the respondent is not the person who executed the sale deed in favour of the appellant. In fact both the parties to the 'Yadast ' are strangers to the sale deed and the sale deed does not refer to any one of them nor there is anything in the sale deed to indicate that it was not an out and out sale. Unfortunately	 the learned Judge of the High Court has not even discussed the reasons on the basis of which the learned first appellate court had come to a finding of fact that this document is a forgery and could not be said to be a genuine document. The learned first appellate court came to this conclu sion on the basis.of the circumstances which could not be denied although this document bears a date earlier than the sale deed and the rent agreement to which the respondent himself is a party but there is no mention of this document in anyone of those two documents. There is no reference about this document for all these years i.e. from 1950 to 1974 even in the suit notice. It is also a circumstance relied on by the lower appellate court that it is on ordi nary piece of paper not a stamped paper. It is not regis tered and it is not attested and in view of these circum stances and especially of the fact that during the lifetime of Ramalakshmi Ammal	 mother who is alleged to be the executant this document did not see the light of the day nor was referred to at any stage. The learned lower appellate court came to a finding of fact and the High Court unfortu nately has not given reasons as to why these circumstances should not be considered. The learned Judge has chosen to interfere with the findings of fact solely on the basis of one ground 838 that the evidence of the scribe of this document 'Yadast ' was not discussed by the lower appellate court but the evidence of the scribe who has chosen to write such a docu ment is worthless and the learned lower appellate court therefore was fight in not relying on this evidence. Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides as under: "Second appeal: (1) Save as otherwise expressly provided in the body of this Code or by any other law for the time being in force	 an appeal shall lie to the High Court from every decree passed in appeal by any Court subordinate to the High Court	 if the High court is satisfied that the case involves a substantial question of law. (2) An appeal may lie under this section from an appellate decree passed ex parte. (3) In an appeal under this section	 the memorandum of appeal shall precisely state the substantial question of law involved in the appeal. (4) Where the High Court is satisfied that a substantial question of law is involved in any case	 it shall formulate that question. (5) The appeal shall be heard on the question so formulated and the respondent shall	 at the hearing of the appeal	 be allowed to argue that the case does not involve such ques tion: Provided that nothing in this sub section shall be deemed to take away or abridge the power of the court to hear	 for reasons to be recorded	 the appeal on any other substantial question of law	 not formulated by it	 if it is satisfied that the case involves such question" A perusal of this Section clearly indicates that the High Court had the jurisdiction to interfere only when a substan tial question of law is involved and even then it is expect ed that such a question shall be so framed although the court is not bound by that question as the proviso indi cates. There may be some other substantial questions of law which may need decision and which can be so decided. 839 After going through the judgment of the High Court in this appeal we find that there is no substantial question of law and much less a question of law on the basis of which the learned Judge exercised jurisdiction under Section 100 and interfered with the findings of fact. The only reason on the basis of which the High Court exercised jurisdiction under Section 100 is what has been said by the learned Judge himself: "As already stated	 its failure to consider the evidence of P.W. 2 as well as its wrong surmise that exhibit B 16 series contained the signatures of Ramalakshmi Ammal	 has affected the validity of the finding rendered by it. " It is well known that P.W. 2 is the scribe of a document which has been found to be forged by the lower appellate court and therefore a person who can go to the extent of manufacturing a document to suit one of the parties to the litigation	 in our opinion	 cannot be said to be an inde pendent witness and the lower appellate court was right in discarding his testimony. Unfortunately the High Court felt that he was an independent witness. The learned Judge felt that the signatures on exhibit B 16 of Ramalakshmi Ammal is a mere surmise but this inference itself appears to be nothing but imagination as the signa tures prove the receipt by Ramalakshmi Ammal of a notice from Tuticorin Municipality for the collection of house tax. This all in the opinion of the learned Judge was a substantial question of law which called for interference and it is clear that on such questions which have no sub stance and which could not be said to be even question of law	 the interference by the High Court in second appeal could not be justified. At best the two questions on which the High Court chose to interfere quoted above could be said to be questions of appreciation of evidence. In our opinion therefore the High Court was not fight in interfering with the findings of fact arrived at by the learned lower appellate court. The appeal is therefore allowed	 the judgment of the High Court is set aside and that passed by the lower appellate court is restored. The appellant shall be entitled to costs of this appeal. Costs quantified at Rs.3	000. N.V.K. Appeal allowed.

Summary:
The appellant purchased the suit property by a regis tered sale deed dated 27th December	 1950 for a considera tion of Rs.7	000. On 1st January	 1951	 the respondent executed a rent agreement in favour of the appellant ac knowledging her as landlady at Rs.80 per month. The mother of the appellant died in 1963. In 1974	 the respondent filed a suit against the appellant for conveyance of the suit property in his favour on the basis of a 'ya dast '	 alleged to have been written by the mother of the appellant on 24th December	 1950 in his favour providing for conveyance of the property in his favour after .paying the sale price of Rs.7	000 and Rs.1	000 for registration ex penses. This 'yadast ' was however neither stamped	 regis tered	 nor attested. It was marked as exhibit A 11. The Trial Court decreed the respondent 's suit relying on the 'yadast '. On appeal the Additional District Judge after detailed examination of all the facts involved in the case and the evidence of the parties	 came to the finding that the appel lant acquired title to the property on the basis of the sale deed which was a registered document in her favour and that the suit property was leased out to the respondent under a rent agreement	 and that as the mother of the appellant was not a party to the sale deed she had no right to agree o convey the property or to ask her daughter to convey the same in favour of the respondent. He also came to the con clusion that the Yadast was not a genuine document but a forged one which was just got up for the purposes of the suit. He accordingly allowed the appeal	 and held that the suit for specific performance was further barred as it was filed more than 20 years after the alleged 'Yadast '. 834 The High Court in Second Appeal	 however interfered with the findings of fact arrived at by the lower Appellate Court solely on the basis that the evidence of the scribe of the 'Yadast ' was not discussed by the lower appellate Court	 and accordingly allowed the Second Appeal. In the Special Leave Petition to this Court	 it was contended on behalf of the appellant that the suit for specific performance of the contract could only be decreed against the executant of the contract provided the executant had a right to dispose of the property about which the suit was filed	 and that there was no question of law on the basis of which the High Court exercised jurisdiction under Section 100 C .P.C. and interfered with the findings of fact. Allowing the appeal	 this Court HELD: 1. Section 100 C.P.C. clearly indicates that the High Court had the jurisdiction to interfere only when a substantial question of law is involved and even then it is expected that such a question shall be so framed although the court is not bound by that question as the proviso indicates. There may be some other substantial questions of law which may need decision and which can be so decided. [838G H] In the instant case	 the Single Judge of the High Court has chosen to interfere with the findings of fact solely on the basis of one ground	 that the evidence of the scribe of the 'Yadast ' PW 2 was not discussed by the lower appellate court	 and its failure has affected the validity of the finding rendered by it. This was no substantial question of law	 much less a question of law on which the High Court could interfere with the findings of fact. At best the questions on which the High Court chose to interfere could be said to be questions of appreciation of evidence. [837H; 839F] 2. The suit for specific performance of the contract could only be decreed against the executant of the contract provided the executant had a right to dispose of the proper ty about which the suit is filed. [836H; 837A] In the instant case	 admittedly the mother of the appel lant who	 was alleged to have executed the 'Yadast ' was not the owner of the property. Both the parties to the 'Yadast ' were strangers to the sale deed	 and the sale deed does not refer to any one of them nor there is anything in the sale deed to indicate that it was not an out and out sale. [837D] 835