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Balak and ors. Vs. Aley Hasan and ors.

Balak and ors. vs Aley Hasan and ors.

Type Court Judgment Court Allahabad Decided Oct 31, 1916
~2 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/472901

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Citation
Court
Allahabad
Judge
Decided On
Subject
Criminal

Case Summary

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

Practice - Finding of Judge, form of--Precision and definiteness--Civil Procedure Code (Act V of 1903), Order XX, Rules 4, 5. - - The second Court has done precisely the same thing, with the converse proposition.

Key legal issue
Criminal

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Balak and ors.

Respondent

Aley Hasan and ors.

Legal References

Reported In
AIR1917All212(1); 37Ind.Cas.304

Excerpt

practice - finding of judge, form of--precision and definiteness--civil procedure code (act v of 1903), order xx, rules 4, 5. - - the second court has done precisely the same thing, with the converse proposition.1. this case unfortunately illustrates the danger of not using precise language at some portion or other of the judgment. we strongly recommend judges of the courts below, when giving judgment, whatever they may say in their reasons, to conclude their findings by saying that they find as a fact certain specified things. the sole question raised in this case is whether there was mortgage or not, and inasmuch as a mortgage exists and was recorded in the patwari's papers, the only question is whether it can be satisfactorily proved. the first court held against it. it is quite true that it held that the witnesses were subservient to the plaintiff and that they were tutored; but if one is to be very precise, it never found that they were not telling the truth. it is only by implication that it found that they were not to be believed. the second court has done precisely the same thing, with the converse proposition. the second court has agreed that they were certainly not independent but that they should have been believed, and has sent the case back to be determined upon a basis which would only be legal if it accepted the execution of the mortgage. we think that the language, although somewhat lacking in precision, can only be fairly construed as a finding of fact that the witnesses were found to be credible witnesses: in other words, that the mortgage was proved. by that finding we are bound, and we must, therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.

Full Judgment

1. This case unfortunately illustrates the danger of not using precise language at some portion or other of the judgment. We strongly recommend Judges of the Courts below, when giving judgment, whatever they may say in their reasons, to conclude their findings by saying that they find as a fact certain specified things. The sole question raised in this case is whether there was mortgage or not, and inasmuch as a mortgage exists and was recorded in the patwari's papers, the only question is whether it can be satisfactorily proved. The first Court held against it. It is quite true that it held that the witnesses were subservient to the plaintiff and that they were tutored; but if one is to be very precise, it never found that they were not telling the truth. It is only by implication that it found that they were not to be believed. The second Court has done precisely the same thing, with the converse proposition. The second Court has agreed that they were certainly not independent but that they should have been believed, and has sent the case back to be determined upon a basis which would only be legal if it accepted the execution of the mortgage. We think that the language, although somewhat lacking in precision, can only be fairly construed as a finding of fact that the witnesses were found to be credible witnesses: in other words, that the mortgage was proved. By that finding we are bound, and we must, therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.

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