LAWS(PAT)-1980-2-11

LALMUNI DEVI Vs. SHIV SHANKAR TIWARY

Decided On February 02, 1980
LALMUNI DEVI Appellant
V/S
SHIV SHANKAR TIWARY Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is an appeal under section 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure by the decree-holders and arises out of an order passed on an objection petition filed by the Judgment-debtors-respondents first party, in the execution court, objecting to the delivery of possession of a house in pursuance of a compromise decree between the parties.

(2.) It appears from the facts stated in the compromise decree that the decree-holder Bhagwat Prasad Tiwary, ancestor of the appellants, and Saryug Tiwary, respondent second party, besides being members of a joint family which possessed various landed properties at various places, were also carrying on certain business in partnership. It further appears that some dispute having arisen between the parties, Saryug Tiwary instituted a suit in the year 1964 on the original side of the Calcutta High Court for various declaration and dissolution of some business. In that suit a compromise decree was passed on 29th February, 1968. In accordance with the said compromise, properties mentioned in Part II in Schedule A were allotted to Bhagwat Tiwary and those mentioned in Part I of the said Schedule to Saryug Tiwary. Some properties, however, were left joint. The two houses, one situated in the town of Calcutta and the other in the village home of the parties at Manpura in the district of Saran, were incorporated in the said compromise decree. Whereas the Calcutta house was allotted to the branch of Saryug Tiwary being described in item No. 71, the ancestral house in village Manpura was allotted to the branch of Bhagwat Tiwary. It was described in item No. 46 of the relevant schedule as follows :-

(3.) I will first consider the argument regarding the vagueness of the decree. Mr. Kailash Roy, learned Counsel appearing for the appellants, invited our attention to the statements made in the objection petition filed by the respondents first party. In paragraph 11 of the objection petition it is stated that in village Manpura, the ancestral village home of the parties, over plot no. 1133 two houses were situate, one being towards the north and the other towards the south, but their area was not identified. They also delienated the two houses aforesaid in a sketch map appended to their objection petition. Mr. Kailash Roy contended that one of the aforesaid houses was pucca and the other was kacha and in this view of the matter, when item No. 46 described the property that what was allotted to the decreeholder was "a pucca brick built house", the property became obviously identifiable and absence of other particulars with reference to its plot number and boundary etc. did not matter as the description in paragraph 19 of the compromise petition and in Serial No 46 of the Schedule referring the house as pucca brick built house, was sufficient for identifying the same. Learned Counsel indicated his willingness and readiness for appointment of a pleader commissioner if it was thought so necessary by the executing court to find out the physical features of both the houses so as to examine as 10 whether the above description, namely, "pucca brick built house" was by itself sufficient to exclude the other house unmistakably. He also contended that the description of the house allotted to Saryug Trwary in Serial No. 7i of his Schedule was also described in brief as "premises no. 6, Mot Lane, Calcutta-13".