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Mohammad Sami Vs. Ashraf Ali and Others

Mohammad Sami vs Ashraf Ali and Others

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Nov 23, 1992
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/451807

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Citation
Court
Allahabad High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Civil Misc. Writ Pitition No. 13368 of 1988
Subject
Civil

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Civil- finding of fact - Order 21 Rules 66 and 90 of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 and Article 226 of Constitution of India - Executing Court as well as the Appellate Court concurrently recorded a finding of fact that petitioner judgment debtor has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of any alleged irr...

Key legal issue
Civil
Acts & sections
Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), 1908 - Order 21, Rules 66 and 90; Constitution of India - Article 226

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Mohammad Sami

Advocate Mr. R.H. Zaidi, Adv.

Respondent

Ashraf Ali and Others

Advocate Mr. S.K. Garg, Adv. and ;T.P. Singh, S.C.

Legal References

Acts
Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), 1908 - Order 21, Rules 66 and 90; Constitution of India - Article 226
Reported In
AIR1993All135

Excerpt

civil- finding of fact - order 21 rules 66 and 90 of code of civil procedure, 1908 and article 226 of constitution of india - executing court as well as the appellate court concurrently recorded a finding of fact that petitioner judgment debtor has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of any alleged irregularity and does not call for any interference. - - 3. the executing court as well as the appellate court have concurrently recorded a finding of fact that the petitioner judgment-debtor has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of any alleged irregularity. what was complained of by the petitioner was the alteration in the sale proclamation of the date of sale from 13th february to 12th february, 1982. this has been found by the court below to be of no consequence in as much as the auction sale did actually take place on 12th february, 1982, which was the date appointed therefor in the proclamation issued under rule 66 of order xxi of the code. 4. under rule 90 of order xxi of the code, as amended by this court, no sale can be set aside on the ground of irregularity or fraud unless upon the facts proved the court is satisfied that the applicant has sustained substantial injury by reason of such irregularity or fraud. 5. for the foregoing reasons, the court is clearly of the opinion that the orders, impugned herein, are perfect and do not call for any interference by this court......upheld.2. heard sri r. h. zaidi and sri t. p. singh, learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and contesting respondents nos. 1 and 2 respectively.3. the executing court as well as the appellate court have concurrently recorded a finding of fact that the petitioner judgment-debtor has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of any alleged irregularity. as noticed by the appellate court, it was not alleged by the petitioner that there was any fraud of irregularity in conducting the auction sale. what was complained of by the petitioner was the alteration in the sale proclamation of the date of sale from 13th february to 12th february, 1982. this has been found by the court below to be of no consequence in as much as the auction sale did actually take place on 12th february, 1982, which was the date appointed therefor in the proclamation issued under rule 66 of order xxi of the code. it is not the case of auction sale taking place on a date other than the date notified in the proclamation for sale. the view of the courts below that the petitioner had not sustained any substantial injury by the election of the date of sale in the sale proclamation from 13th february to 12th february, 1982, has not been demonstrated to suffer from any such vice which may warrant interference by this court in exercise of its special and extraordinary jurisdiction under art. 226 of the constitution of india.4. under rule 90 of order xxi of the code, as amended by this court, no sale can be set aside on the ground of irregularity or fraud unless upon the facts proved the court is satisfied that the applicant has sustained substantial injury by reason of such irregularity or fraud. the question as to whether any substantial injury has been sustained by the petitioner is purely a question of fact and the courts below have recorded a concurrent finding that the petitioner has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of the irregularity alleged by him.5. for the.....

Full Judgment

ORDER

1. Mohammad Sami, the judgment-debtor in original suit No. 435 of 1973, decided by the 1st Addl. Munsif, Nagina, district Bijnor, seeks to challenge the order and judgment dated 13th September, 1982 passed by the Special Judge (Addl. District Judge), Bijnor where by the order and judgment of the learned Munsif rejecting theobjection of the petitioner under Order XXI Rule 90 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, hereinafter called the Code, has been upheld.

2. Heard Sri R. H. Zaidi and Sri T. P. Singh, learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and contesting respondents Nos. 1 and 2 respectively.

3. The executing court as well as the appellate court have concurrently recorded a finding of fact that the petitioner judgment-debtor has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of any alleged irregularity. As noticed by the appellate court, it was not alleged by the petitioner that there was any fraud of irregularity in conducting the auction sale. What was complained of by the petitioner was the alteration in the sale proclamation of the date of sale from 13th February to 12th February, 1982. This has been found by the court below to be of no consequence in as much as the auction sale did actually take place on 12th February, 1982, which was the date appointed therefor in the proclamation issued under Rule 66 of Order XXI of the Code. It is not the case of auction sale taking place on a date other than the date notified in the proclamation for sale. The view of the courts below that the petitioner had not sustained any substantial injury by the election of the date of sale in the sale proclamation from 13th February to 12th February, 1982, has not been demonstrated to suffer from any such vice which may warrant interference by this Court in exercise of its special and extraordinary jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the Constitution of India.

4. Under Rule 90 of Order XXI of the Code, as amended by this Court, no sale can be set aside on the ground of irregularity or fraud unless upon the facts proved the Court is satisfied that the applicant has sustained substantial injury by reason of such irregularity or fraud. The question as to whether any substantial injury has been sustained by the petitioner is purely a question of fact and the courts below have recorded a concurrent finding that the petitioner has not sustained any substantial injury by reason of the irregularity alleged by him.

5. For the foregoing reasons, the Court is clearly of the opinion that the orders, impugned herein, are perfect and do not call for any interference by this Court.

6. In the result, the petition fails and is hereby dismissed. No order as to costs.

7. Petition dismissed.

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