LAWS(ALL)-1984-6-1

JAMILLUDDIN Vs. QAZI ZAMIRUL HASAN

Decided On June 10, 1984
JAMILLUDDIN Appellant
V/S
QAZI ZAMIRUL HASAN Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THIS is plaintiff's appeal.

(2.) THE property in dispute comprised of certain shops described by letters A, B, C, D and E in the sketch map appended to the plaint and situate in khetasarai, district Jaunpur. THE relief sought in the suit is the eviction of the defendants nos. 4 to 8 from these shops besides arrears of rent and perpetual injunction against the defendants 1 to 3. On May 10, 1966 counsel for the parties in the lower appellate court stated vide paper no, 205-A that the dispute is confined to the shops aforementioned.

(3.) SRI Sankatha Rai, learned counsel for the appellant urged that in view of the findings recorded by the courts below with respect to the title of the plaintiff to the disputed shops, the suit could not be dismissed despite the failure of the plaintiff appellant to establish that there was the relationship of landlord and tenant between him and the defendants 4 to 8. In so far as the question of title to the shop is concerned, this stands concluded on the findings upon fact and there is no perversity or other legal infirmity shown to exist about it. The lower appellate court found distinctly on considering the relevant evidence both oral and documentary that the shop in dispute had been constructed by the predecessor in merest of the plaintiff. The construction was made around the period of 1922-23. The contention for the defendants 1 to 3 to the effect that the shops were raised by their order in or about 1951 was not found made out. With respect to the site, the finding that the predecessors of the plaintiff were the licensees and the construction was raised with the permission of the prelecessors of the defendants 1 to 3 who were the Zamindars. In paragraph 24 of the written statement filed by him the defendant no. 2 set up the licence saying that the father of the plaintiff raised certain constructions on this land with their consent. The same thing is pleaded in paragraph 36 of the written statement filed by the defendants 1 and 3. In the witness box the defendant no. 2 was unable to make out that the shops in question were not raised by the predecessors in interest of the plaintiff or that this was not without the consent of the Zamindars. The licence, therefore, became irrevocable and in view of Sec. 9 of the Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act the building and the site thereof are to be deemed settled with the plaintiff.