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Johnson Vs. Ouseph

Johnson vs Ouseph

Disposition Appeal allowed Court Kerala Decided Nov 09, 2006
~5 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/731009

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Citation
Court
Kerala High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
F.A.O. No. 262 of 2006
Subject
Property
Disposition
Appeal allowed

Case Summary

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

- CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE, 1908.[C.A. No. 5/1908]. Order 9, Rule 4: [V.K. Bali, CJ, Kurian Koseph & K. Balakrishnan Nair, JJ] Restoration of Petition for enhancement of maintenance dismissed for default Held, Application under Order 9, Rule 4 C.P.C., is not maintainable. Reason being while exercising powers under ...

Key legal issue
Property
Outcome / disposition
Appeal allowed
Acts & sections
Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) , 1908 - Order 33, Rule 1

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Johnson

Advocate Babu Joseph Kuruvathazha, Adv.

Respondent

Ouseph

Legal References

Acts
Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) , 1908 - Order 33, Rule 1
Reported In
AIR2007Ker175

Excerpt

- code of civil procedure, 1908.[c.a. no. 5/1908]. order 9, rule 4: [v.k. bali, cj, kurian koseph & k. balakrishnan nair, jj] restoration of petition for enhancement of maintenance dismissed for default held, application under order 9, rule 4 c.p.c., is not maintainable. reason being while exercising powers under section 7(2)(a) and entertaining maintenance petition under section 125 of cr.p.c., family court cannot be deemed or treated as civil court. proceedings for maintenance before the family court under section &(2)(a) is criminal in nature. [kunhimohammammed v nafeesa, 2003 (1) klt 364; 2004 cri lj 1000 (ker) overruled]. reference to full bench; held, single judge cannot refer the case to full bench. he can refer the case to division bench. power to refer to full bench is expressly reserved to division bench. merely because a single judge/division bench entertains another view or merely because another view is possible, the judgment shall not be distinguished. - there is a motor shed in the properties belonging to the appellant and there is electric connection as well......by his father. the contention is that under order xxxiii, rule 1 of the code of civil procedure, for the purpose of assessing the means of the plaintiff to pay the court-fee, the subject-matter of o.s. no. 2138 of 2004 is to be excluded. counsel relies on explanation 1 to rule 1 of order xxxiii, which provides that a person is an indigent person, if he is not possessed of sufficient means (other than property exempt from attachment in execution of a decree and the subject-matter of the suit) to enable him to pay the fee prescribed by law for the plaint in such suit. laying emphasis on the words 'the subject-matter of the suit' the counsel contends that even if the property is the subject-matter of another suit, the value of that property cannot be taken into account for assessing the means of the plaintiff. the words employed in explanation 1 to rule 1 of order xxxiii are 'the subject-matter of the suit' and not subject-matter of 'a suit' or 'any suit'. the only irresistible conclusion that could be arrived at is that the value of a property could be excluded from the purview of assessment of the means of the plaintiff only if the property is the subject-matter of that suit itself. even if the property is the subject-matter of another suit, that is not a ground to exclude it from the purview of rule 1 of order xxxiii or to exclude it from valuation so as to assess the indigency or otherwise of the plaintiff. only when the property in question is the subject-matter of the same suit filed by the indigent person, such property could be excluded as provided in explanation 1 to rule 1 of order xxxiii of the code of civil procedure.5. the contentions raised by the appellant are devoid of merit. the appeal is accordingly dismissed.6. learned counsel for the appellant prays for a reasonable time to enable the appellant to pay the court-fee. it is only just and reasonable to grant one month's time to the appellant to pay the court-fee.

Full Judgment

K.T. Sankaran, J.

1. This appeal is filed against the order dated 25-8-2006 refusing leave to file the suit as an indigent person. The appellant/plaintiff instituted the suit against his father for realisation of money. The court-fee payable in the suit is Rs. 29,750/-. The contention of the appellant is that he has no property or income except the properties shown in the schedule to the application for leave to file the suit as an indigent person. Item No. 1 in the C schedule is his residential property and item No. 2 of C schedule is the property assigned to the appellant by his father. The B schedule properties are the movables belonging to the appellant. He contended that except those mentioned in B and C schedule, he has no other properties, assets or income.

2. The respondent contended that the appellant is a person having sufficient means to pay the court-fee. A commission was taken out to disprove the contentions raised by the appellant. The Commissioner filed Ext. C1 report. The report of the Commissioner shows that the house of the appellant is having an area of 1200 sq. feet. There is a cattle shed, in which 7 cattle could be accommodated. The Commissioner had seen 4 cows in the cattle shed. The Commissioner has also reported that in the house belonging to the appellant he saw a Television set, Tape recorder, Sewing Machine, V.C.D, Fridge, Heater, Fan etc. There is a motor shed in the properties belonging to the appellant and there is electric connection as well.

3. The Court below disbelieved the evidence of the appellant as P.W. 1, and held that no attempt was made by the appellant to assail the Commissioner's report and to set aside the same. A contention was raised that the Commissioner had inspected some other property and not the property belonging to the appellant. This belated contention was negatived by the Court below. The house was shown to the Commissioner by the father of the appellant. The Court below has noticed that if the property inspected by the Commissioner is not owned by the appellant, an application could be filed by the appellant directing the Commissioner to visit the correct place, but that was not done by the appellant. The appellant admitted in evidence that the movables found by the Commissioner are kept in his own house. The Court below concluded that the evidence of P.W. 1, when considered along with Ext. C1 report, would prove that the appellant has sufficient means to pay the court-fee.

4. The learned Counsel for the appellant had also raised a contention that the properties mentioned in the schedule to the application filed for permission to file the present suit as an indigent person is the subject-matter of O.S. No. 2138 of 2004 on the file of the Munsiffs Court, Irinjalakuda, filed against the appellant by his father. The contention is that under Order XXXIII, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for the purpose of assessing the means of the plaintiff to pay the court-fee, the subject-matter of O.S. No. 2138 of 2004 is to be excluded. Counsel relies on Explanation 1 to Rule 1 of Order XXXIII, which provides that a person is an indigent person, if he is not possessed of sufficient means (other than property exempt from attachment in execution of a decree and the subject-matter of the suit) to enable him to pay the fee prescribed by law for the plaint in such suit. Laying emphasis on the words 'the subject-matter of the suit' the counsel contends that even if the property is the subject-matter of another suit, the value of that property cannot be taken into account for assessing the means of the plaintiff. The words employed in Explanation 1 to Rule 1 of Order XXXIII are 'the subject-matter of the suit' and not subject-matter of 'a suit' or 'any suit'. The only irresistible conclusion that could be arrived at is that the value of a property could be excluded from the purview of assessment of the means of the plaintiff only if the property is the subject-matter of that suit itself. Even if the property is the subject-matter of another suit, that is not a ground to exclude it from the purview of Rule 1 of Order XXXIII or to exclude it from valuation so as to assess the indigency or otherwise of the plaintiff. Only when the property in question is the subject-matter of the same suit filed by the indigent person, such property could be excluded as provided in Explanation 1 to Rule 1 of Order XXXIII of the Code of Civil Procedure.

5. The contentions raised by the appellant are devoid of merit. The appeal is accordingly dismissed.

6. Learned Counsel for the appellant prays for a reasonable time to enable the appellant to pay the court-fee. It is only just and reasonable to grant one month's time to the appellant to pay the court-fee.

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