Tag: possession decree

Supreme Court: Death of Appellant Before Hearing Renders Appellate Judgment Void
Supreme Court

Supreme Court: Death of Appellant Before Hearing Renders Appellate Judgment Void

The Supreme Court held that a decree passed in favor of deceased appellants, whose legal heirs were not substituted, is a nullity. Consequently, the original trial court decree revives and is executable, as a null appellate decree cannot supersede a valid prior decree. Facts Of The Case: The legal heirs of Arjunrao Thakre filed a civil suit challenging the re-allotment of his agricultural land to defendants 3 to 5. The trial court decreed the suit in 2006, declaring the plaintiffs as owners and the subsequent allotment illegal. Defendants 4 and 5 appealed. During the pendency of this first appeal, both appellants died—defendant 4 in 2006 and defendant 5 in 2010—but their legal heirs were never brought on record. Unaware of the deaths, the first appellate court heard and partl...
Tenant Can’t Deny Landlord’s Title, Rules Supreme Court in Key Eviction Case
Supreme Court

Tenant Can’t Deny Landlord’s Title, Rules Supreme Court in Key Eviction Case

The Supreme Court held that in an eviction suit, strict proof of ownership is not required. A tenant cannot deny the landlord's title under whom they entered possession. The Will bequeathing the property, especially when probated, confers sufficient legal sanctity to maintain the eviction proceedings. The bona fide need of the landlord was also upheld. Facts Of The Case: The dispute involves a shop room tenancy initiated in 1953 by Ramji Das, the appellant's father-in-law, with the father of the respondents. Upon Ramji Das's death in 1999, a Will bequeathed the shop to the appellant, Jyoti Sharma. She subsequently filed a suit for eviction on grounds of bona fide need, seeking to expand her husband's adjacent sweets business, and for recovery of rent arrears from January 2000. Th...