LAWS(ALL)-1951-1-27

MST. MULLAR DEVI Vs. MOHAR LAL

Decided On January 02, 1951
Mst. Mullar Devi Appellant
V/S
Mohar Lal Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THIS is an application in revision. The plaintiff, who is the applicant in this Court, filed a suit for the ejectment of the defendant opposite party from a shop which he alleged he had purchased from one Mst. Ananti by a sale deed dated the 2nd October, 1937. The defendant denied the plaintiff's title. He -admitted that the shop had at one time belonged to Mst. Ananti but contended that after her death it had devolved upon her daughter's sons and that be Was their tenant.

(2.) THE trial court found in favour of the plaintiff and decreed the suit. The defendant appealed and the lower appellate court, without going into the merits, remanded the case to the trial court with a direction that Mst. Ananti's daughter's sons should be impleaded as parties to the suit. The defendant had not sought to make the daughter's sons part ties to the suit nor had they made any application on their own behalf. The direction of the appellate court that they should be added as parties Was made of its own motion It is contended in this Court that in making that order the lower appellate court had either exercised a jurisdiction not vested in it by law or that it had acted illegally or with material irregularity in the exercise of it? jurisdiction. Looking at Order 1, rule 10 it is dear that the Court must, before it can say that the daughter's son? ought to be added as defendants, find either that they "ought to have been joined or that their presence before the Court is necessary in order to enable the Court effectually and completely * to adjudicate upon and settle all the questions involved in the suit". In my opinion the daughter's eons were not necessary parties. In Rashi v. Sadashiv, I.L.R. 21 Bom. 229 Farran, C.J., delivering the judgment of the Court said.

(3.) ON this point the learned Chief Justice said: