Skip to content
How to use Judgment tools
  1. Click Tools to open PDF, Print, Tag, Note, Favourite, and CiteSignal.
  2. Use Brief & Ask in the toolbar for the AI Brief and case chat.
  3. Jump to sections with the pills below the help bar.

In Re: Venkatakrishna Pathar

Type Court Judgment Court Chennai Decided Aug 24, 1926
~4 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/777477

For advocates & juniors · 7-day free trial

Brief this judgment before chambers

Stop skimming 50 pages - get an 18-section AI Brief on this case, ask scoped follow-ups, and find related precedents with Semantic Search. Full trial, no card required.

  • 18-section brief - facts, issues, ratio, relief
  • Ask this case - answers cite the judgment
  • Semantic search - find precedents by meaning
  • Research drawer - sections, cites, related cases

No card required · credentials emailed · Log in if you already have an account

Citation
Court
Chennai
Decided On
Subject
Civil

Case Summary

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

-

Key legal issue
Civil

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

In Re: Venkatakrishna Pathar

Legal References

Cases Referred
In Vaiyapuri Chetty v. Ramachandra Thevar
Reported In
(1927)52MLJ121

Excerpt

- .....to absurdity. he would have it that a suit for relief with reference to immoveable property must be valued under clause (v) and is therefore tantamount to a suit for the possession 'of that property with reference to which relief is sought. therefore a person, claiming the right to drain off water through a house, is, for the purposes of the court fees act, claiming possession of the house, and must value his suit according to the market value of the house, which is absurd. if c1. (v) is applicable to suits for declaration of an easement right and a mandatory injunction enforcing the same, the court must reckon how much land or building is actually affected by the path, drain, or such other relief as is sought, and value accordingly.4. but considering that the subject-matter is neither land, nor house nor garden, but an easement over the same, there seems to be no practical object in ordering courts to apply clause (v). when valuing suits for easement it only imports unnecessary difficulty into what ought to be the plain and simple mechanical process of assessing court-fees.5. there is no doubt in the present case that the plaintiffs have fully paid any fee that is rightly leviable, and the petitioner, 6th defendant, has no case for enhancement.6. the petitions for stay are dismissed and the petitions for revision not admitted and dismissed.

Full Judgment

ORDER

Jackson, J.

1. Petitioner seeks to stay poceedings in O.S. No. 76 of 1926 on the file of the Court of the District Munsif of Palghat pending the revision of a question of the Court-fee proper to the suit.

2. The plaintiffs sue for a declaration of rights of way and drainage over a certain paramba and for a mandatory injunction ordering defendants to remove the fences, walls, etc., that have been built in defiance of the said rights.

3. The plaintiffs sought to value their suit under Section 7, Clause (iv) (d), Courts Fees Act (VII of 1870)as if it were a simple suit for injunction. The. District Munsif has correctly pointed out that it is a suit for declaration and consequential relief falling under Section 7, Clause (iv)(c) He has then held, applying the Madras provisio, that as the relief sought is with reference to immoveable property the valuation shall not be less than half the value of the immoveable property calculated in the manner provided for by paragraph (u)of the section. Accordingly plaintiffs have been ordered to pay half the value of the paramba, which they have reckoned according to Section 7, Clause (v) (b) at five times the revenue. The petitioner, 6th defendant, contends that the value should be calculated according to Section 7, Clause (u)(e), because the suit is really for the paramba and buildings. The District Munsif did right to reject this argument. The plaintiffs are claiming neither the right to possess the buildings nor the right to remove the buildings except in so far as they may affect the right of easement. In Vaiyapuri Chetty v. Ramachandra Thevar (1925) 21 LW 699 the plaintiff sued to restrain the defendants from putting up a fence on the plea that the property was his, and this Court held that the question of title was not incidental and therefore the Madras proviso must apply. In the present suit the question of title is not raised at; all; it is only a question of easement and the difficulty is to decide how far the Madras proviso is applicable to such cases. Inasmuch as the relief sought is the declaration of a right of easement, the relief may be said to be with reference to immoveable property; but it refers to no immoveable property that can be possessed as contemplated by Clause (v). It almost seems that the proviso should be read with the clause, so as to make 'with reference to' mean 'involving the possession of land, houses or gardens; and then the proviso would not be applicable to easements at all. And the petitioner's case supports this interpretation; for it carries the contrary argument to absurdity. He would have it that a suit for relief with reference to immoveable property must be valued under Clause (v) and is therefore tantamount to a suit for the possession 'of that property with reference to which relief is sought. Therefore a person, claiming the right to drain off water through a house, is, for the purposes of the Court Fees Act, claiming possession of the house, and must value his suit according to the market value of the house, which is absurd. If c1. (v) is applicable to suits for declaration of an easement right and a mandatory injunction enforcing the same, the Court must reckon how much land or building is actually affected by the path, drain, or such other relief as is sought, and value accordingly.

4. But considering that the subject-matter is neither land, nor house nor garden, but an easement over the same, there seems to be no practical object in ordering Courts to apply Clause (v). When valuing suits for easement it only imports unnecessary difficulty into what ought to be the plain and simple mechanical process of assessing Court-fees.

5. There is no doubt in the present case that the plaintiffs have fully paid any fee that is rightly leviable, and the petitioner, 6th defendant, has no case for enhancement.

6. The petitions for stay are dismissed and the petitions for revision not admitted and dismissed.

Continue Your Research


AI Briefs · Semantic Search · Save & annotate judgments

Start your 7-day free trial