JUDGMENT
1. First defendant is the appellant.
2. The plaintiffs case is as follows:
The plaintiffs father Munusami Naicker purchased the suit property by means of a sale deed dated 7-8-1957 for a sum of Rs. 300/-from one Amitha Bibi and others. The plaintiff and Defendants are the legal representatives of the said Munusami Naicker, being brothers and sister, Munusami Naicker was the Joint Family Manager when he was alive.
The second defendant has stealthily applied for sub-division of an extent of 5 cents out of 2.77 acres and manipulated to get the same without the concurrence of the plaintiff. The joint family had sunk two wells from out of the joint family properties. The second defendant is trying to get separate service connection to the joint family well to irrigate his properties which are at a distance. The plaintiff therefore demanded for partition and separate possession by issuing notice. The second defendant has sent a reply with false allegations. The plaintiff has therefore filed a suit for injunction against the Electricity Board giving separate service connection to the second defendant. It was dismissed on the ground that the plaintiff has to seek his remedy by filing a suit for partition. The plaintiff is in joint possession and enjoyment of the properties in which he is entitled to separate 1/6th share and possession. Hence the suit.
3. The first defendant filed a written
statement stating as follows; There was never
a joint family nor any joint family property to
be managed since the suit property was pur
chased by the first defendant out of his own
earnings as a plumber in the Corporation of
. Madras. Out of sentiment, the sale deed was
taken in the name of the father. There is no
coparcenary property in which the plaintiff
could claim in his share. First defendant alone
was cultivating the entire property in his own
right and taking the income. The claim of the
plaintiff that he is in joint possession is not
correct. The other members of the family have
executed a release deed in favour of the first
defendant conceding that they have no right
over the suit properties. But, out of love and
affection, the first defendant has given some
properties to his brothers. When the first
defendant offered some lands to the plaintiff,
he declined to accept it. A family settlement
was arrived at in the year 1964. It is not known
why the plaintiff has not pressed his claim far
all these two years even though he has issued a
notice for partition in 1971. The suit is barred
by limitation. The injunction suit filed by the
plaintiff is pending in the High Court in
Second Appeal. The suit is liable to be
dismissed.
4. On the above pleadings, after trial, the learned District Munsif has held that the first defendant has purchased the property in the name of his father and the plaintiff is therefore not entitled to any share in the same and dismissed the suit.
5. Aggrieved over the same, the plaintiff has preferred an appeal to the Sub-Court, Chengalpattu. The learned Sub-Judge has held that the plaintiff has got a right over the suit property as a co-sharer and since the suit property is a joint family property, and not the self-acquired property of the first defendant, the plaintiff is entitled to a decree for partition and allowed the appeal granting a decree in faVour of the plaintiff.
6. Aggrieved over the same, the first defendant has preferred this Second Appeal.
7. The plaintiff has filed the suit for partition of the suit property into six equal shares and for allotment of one such share to him in respect of the property in S. No. 1/1, at Sathancheri village measuring an extent of 2.77 acres contending that it was a property purchased by his father Munusami Naicker as the Manager of the Hindu Joint Family and since he died intestate and since there was no division among the joint family members, he is entitled to 1/6th share. The first defendant has resisted the same by contending that even though the sale deed in respect of the property stands in the name of his father, it was actually purchased by him from out of his own earnings in the name of his father so that, his father can command respect from the villagers as an elderly person presiding over panchayats in the suit village. The defendants 2, 4 and 5 have also supported the case of the first defendant by adopting the written statement filed by the first defendant. The third defendant remained ex parte. The trial Court has accepted the case of the defendants and held that the suit property is separate property of the first defendant and therefore, the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief prayed for and dismissed the suit on that ground.
8. The lower appellate Court has reversed the judgment of the trial Court on two grounds viz., the receitals in the release deed
under Ex. A-8 executed by the fourth defendant in favour of the first defendant shows that there was division of the suit property and also on the ground that in the suit filed by the plaintiff in O.S. No. 628/1974 against the second defendant for injunction, the appellate Court has held that the plaintiff us a co-sharer is entitled to a share in the property and the said finding is binding on the plaintiff. The learned counsel appearing for the appellant would argue that the evidence both oral and documentary would show that the property was purchased by the first defendant benami in the name of his father Munusami Naicker and therefore, thejudgment of the appellate Court that the plaintiff is entitled to a share on the ground that it was the property purchased by Munusami Naicker has to be set aside. The learned counsel would argue that the endorsement in Ex. B-1 itself would show that the money was paid by the first defendant at the time of the purchase of the property. Ex. B-l, is the registration copy of the sale deed executed by Amitha Bi in favour of Munusami Naicker, in which the endorsement regarding the payment of consideration is to the effect that the money was paid by the first defendant on behalf of his father Munusami Naicker. The consideration was paid only by the first defendant is seen from the above endorsement. The first defendant was employed as a plumber in the Corporation, while his father was doing cooly work in the village. It is not the case of the plaintiff that there was any ancestral property from which there was surplus income enabling Munusami Naicker to purchase this property from Amitha Bi.
9. In the decision reported in Ranga-nayaki Ammal v. Srinivasan, (1978) 1 Mad LJ 56 it is held as follows:
“In a Hindu Joint family, if one member sues for partition on the foot that the properties claimed by him are joint family properties then three circumstances ordinarily arise. The first is an admitted case when there is no dispute about the existence of the joint family properties at all. The second is a case where certain properties are admitted to be joint family properties and the other properties in
which a share is claimed are alleged to be the accretions or acquisitions from the income available from joint family properties or in the alternative have been acquired by a sale or conversion of such available properties. The third head is that the properties standing in the names of female members of the family are benami and that such a state of affairs has been deliberately created by the manager or the head of the family and that really the properties or the amounts standing in the name of female members are properties of the joint family.”
In the case on hand, it is the case of the defendant that there is no joint family prope’r-ties at all. It is not the case of the plain tiff that there are certain properties admitted to be the joint family properties and the suit property is an accretion or acquisition from the income of the joint family properties. We are not concerned with the third head. The burden is therefore on the plaintiff to establish that the suit property is the joint family property. But, in view of the fact that it is not in dispute that the fat her was only a cooly, that there was no ancestral property and there was no surplus income for the father and in view of the fact that the first defendant is employed in the Corporation, it cannot be stated that the plaintiff has established that it is a joint family property. It has been laid down in the decision reported in Sant Ram v. Parmanand, AIR 1978 Punj and Har 158 as follows (Para 21):
“The person who asserts and alleges any property to be Hindu Joint Family property has to prove the same. In order to be successful in this he should either prove that the property was inherited from the common ancestor and as such being ancestral property, it should be presumed to be joint family property. In the alternative, satisfactory evidence has to be led to warrant a conclusion that the property was acquired with the aid of joint family nucleus which, in its turn, has to satisfy a further test that such a nucleus was sufficient to acquire the property in question. In order to come to a conclusion from the joint family nucleus, the fact that karta or any member of the joint family acquiring the same had other source of income also from which
the property in question was in fact acquired is also relevant and has a material bearing for determination of the controversy.”
The plaintiff has not let in any evidence satisfying the requirements referred above. Therefore, it cannot be stated that the plaintiff has established that the suit property is a joint family property. There is one other fact which has to be considered and it is as follows: “The plaintiff himself has purchased the property along with the fourth defendant in the year 1957 and he has sold the same in favour of one Chandra Naicker under Ex. B-3 on 1-11-1960.” This would go to show that even though the plaintiff claims to be a joint, family member, and the acquisition made by his father is a joint family property, he had treated the property purchased by him along with his brother the 4th defendant as his individual and separate property and sold the same in favour of one Chandra Naicker. This he could have done it if the property purchased by him along with the fourth defendant was also treated as the joint family property. This sale deed under Ex. B-3 being later in point of time to Ex. B-1, it would show that the subsequent treatment of the property was also as his separate property. When the fourth defendant and the plaintiff has purchased certain properties under Ex. B-2 from Subramania Mudaliar on 1-11-1957 and when this property was sold by the plaintiff alone, in favour of Chandra Naicker — the fourth defendant, it indicates that even at the time of the purchase of the property by the plaintiff and his brother Chandra Naicker, it was purchased only on behalf of the plaintiff. Otherwise, there is no necessity for executing a sale deed in favour of Chandra Naicker -the fourth defendant by the plaintiff when Chandra Naicker himself is a purchaser along with the plaintiff under Ex. B-2. Exs. B-1 and B-2 are two sale deeds within a gap of three months. Therefore, the property purchased under Ex. B-1 cannot be considered to be a purchase made by the joint family member. The treatment of the property under Ex. B-2 subsequently under Ex. B-3 shows that there was no blending of the properties purchased by one of the members of the joint family along with the property Of the joint
family. In this connection, it is necessary to recall the law laid down by the Supreme Court in the decision reported in Mallesappa v. Mallappa, regarding the doctrine of blending. It has been held in the above decision as follows (para 10):–
“Where a member of a join! Hindu family blends his self-acquired property with property of the joint family, either by bringing his self-acquired property into a joint family account, or by bringing joint family property into his separate accoun!, the effect is that all the property so blended becomes a joint family property,”
When we analyse the two sale deeds under Exs. B-2 and B-3 in the light of the above decision, we are able to see that the property purchased by the plaintiff and the fourth defendant under Ex. B-2 was not blended with any other property of the joint family, to hold that there was blending and the property purchased under Ex. B-2 is a joint family property. The same theory applies to the case on hand regarding Ex. B-1 also.
10. The next question that arises for consideration is whether the theory of benami purchase made by the first defendant could be accepted. As per the decision reported in Mussammat Bilas Kunwar v. Desraj Ranjit Singh, 29 Mad LJ 335 : (AIR 1915 PC 96), benami dealing is common to Hindus and Mahomedans alike and it is quite unobjectionable. The Supreme Court while considering the plea of benami and the onus of proof and the right of person to take plea of benami in respect of property purchased by him, has held that Section 4 of the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988, applies only to suits to be filed or defences to be taken in respect of the property held benami i.e., benami transactions after the coming into force of the Act and not to those suits filed and defences taken in respect of such benami transactions and pending final decision, at the time of coming into force of the Act, as had been held in the earlier decision in Mithilesh Kumar v. Prem Behare Khare, . Therefore, the first defendant is entitled to take the. plea of benami when the property is shown to have
been purchased by him from out of the consideration paid by him in the name of his father. We have already seen the source of consideration, in capacity of the father purchasing the property, motive for the first defendant purchasing the property, in the name of his father etc. Therefore, when we analyse the case of the first defendant in the light of the decision reported in Nand Kishore Mehra v. Sushila Mehra, , we can safely hold that the first defendant is entitled to take this plea of benami and the evidence has shown that Ex. B-1 is only a benami transaction.
11. It is not open for the defendants to raise a plea of benami in view of the decision in the earlier suit to the effect that the suit property belongs to Munusami Naicker. The earlier suits in O.S. No. 628/1974 is a suit for injunction filed by the plaintiff against the second defendant and the Electricity Board in which the second defendant has taken the plea that the properly was purchased by brother Murugesa Naicker benami in the name of his father Munusami Naicker and he is the owner of the property and as such, he has sold the same in his favour. In that suit, the appellate Court has held that the Benami pleaded by the second defendant is not acceptable and has held that the property was purchased only by Munusami Naicker. As already observed by me, the earlier suit is for injunction in which the defendant has taken a plea of benami as a defence. It is not a suit on title. Further, the first defendant was not a party in the said suit. But, it is no doubt true that the second defendant against whom the said suit was filed was claiming title to the property through the first defendant.
12. Whether the principle of res judicata is applicable is the only question that arises for consideration. It is a recognised principle of law as laid down in the decision reported in Ishwardas v. State of Madhya Pradesh, , that in order to sustain the plea of res judicata it is not necessary that all the parties to the two litigations must be common, and all that is necessary is that the issue should be between the same parties or
between parties under whom they or any of them claim. Once the question at issue in two suits is found to be the same, the fact that the material which led to the decision in the earlier suit was not again placed before the Court in the second suit cannot make the slightest difference The plea of res judicata may be sustained without anything more, if the question at issue and the parties are the same, subject of course, to the other conditions prescribed by Section 11. The question whether the property was purchased by the first defendant benami in the name of his father was an incidental question, which was considered on account of the defence raised by the defendants in the said suit. The main issue in the above suit is whether the plaintiff in the said suit is entitled to injunction. It is only incidentally the question of benami purchase was considered by the Court. As per the decision reported in Jagdish Chandra Deo v. Gour Hari Mahato, AIR 1936 PC 258, a party raising plea of res judicata is not entitled to go into the question of res judicata, when it has not been properly raised by the pleadings or in the issues particularly in those issues. The issue raised in the earlier suit is whether the appellant-plaintiff is a co-sharer of the plaint schedule property and as such whether he is entitled for the relief of injunction to restrain the first defendant from getting electric service connection. The first defendant referred in the above issue is the second defendant herein. It is thus seen that there was no specific issue with regard to the nature of the transaction under Ex.B.1 herein. But at the same time, it cannot be disputed that the question of benami nature of the sale under Ex.B.1 was also incidentally considered by the appellate Court in the said suit.
13. The first Defendant herein was also not a party. But the first defendant in the said suit who is the second defendant herein is a person claiming under the first defendant herein. But, yet, in view of the fact that in the earlier suit, there is no specific issue properly raised by the pleadings in the said suit. I am of opinion that the present suit cannot be dismissed applying the principles of res judicata. Considering these aspects, I am of opinion that the judgment and decree of the appellate
Court to the effect that the transaction under Ex.B.1 is not a benami transaction and the property is a joint family property on account of the purchase made by their father and therefore the plaintiff is entitled to a partition of his share in the suit cannot be substantiated. In that view, I am of the opinion that the appeal is to be allowed.
14. In the result, the appeal is allowed setting aside the judgment and decree of the lower appellate Court and dismissing the suit. No costs.
15. Appeal allowed.