Order VII Rule 11 CPC — Rejection of plaint — Illusory cause of action and barred claim — Plaint liable to be rejected (Paras 10–14)
Issue: Whether plaint in partition suit challenging 1988 sale deeds after nearly four decades disclosed a sustainable cause of action.
Facts: Plaintiffs claiming through late M.C.Chandrasekaran sought declaration that 1988 sale deeds executed in favour of actress Sridevi and her family members were null and void and also sought partition of 2.70 acres at Sholinganallur; defendants contended that plaintiffs were not Class-I heirs, that sale deeds stood unquestioned since 1988, and that plaintiffs falsely pleaded knowledge only in 2023 after patta mutation.
Held: Court found alleged cause of action to be illusory and vexatious, holding that plaintiffs had slept over alleged rights for nearly 40 years despite long-standing registered sale deeds and revenue records in defendants’ favour; plaint was liable to rejection under Order VII Rule 11 CPC. (Paras 10–14)
Limitation — Suit challenging long-standing sale deeds — Delay defeats claim — Limitation to be strictly enforced (Paras 11–14)
Issue: Whether suit filed in 2025 challenging sale deeds of 1988 was barred by limitation.
Facts: Sale deeds in favour of Sridevi and family were executed on 19.04.1988 and remained unquestioned during lifetime of alleged co-sharer M.C.Chandrasekaran, who died in 1995; plaintiffs pleaded that fraud and patta entries came to knowledge only in 2023.
Held: Mere plea of subsequent knowledge could not revive stale claims where registered transactions and possession remained open and continuous for decades; suit instituted after nearly 40 years was ex facie barred by limitation and liable to dismissal under Section 3 of the Limitation Act, 1963. (Paras 11–14)
Order VII Rule 11 CPC — Scope of enquiry — Court need not entertain patently meritless litigation (Paras 13–14)
Issue: Whether Court must mechanically proceed to trial merely because plaint contains formal averments.
Facts: Trial Court dismissed application for rejection of plaint holding that only plaint averments could be examined and disputed questions required trial. Defendants relied upon prior litigation, revenue proceedings and admitted dates appearing from plaint itself to show suit was barred and frivolous.
Held: Though ordinarily only plaint averments are examined under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, Court is not bound to proceed with manifestly vexatious, legally barred and meritless litigation; judicial time should not be wasted on frivolous claims. Trial Court order refusing rejection of plaint was set aside and plaint rejected. (Paras 13–14)
RATIO
While deciding an application under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, the Court is ordinarily confined to plaint averments; however, where the plaint itself discloses that the claim is manifestly vexatious, illusory and ex facie barred by limitation, the Court is not bound to drive parties to trial merely on formal pleadings. Long-settled registered transactions and accrued rights cannot be unsettled after decades by pleading belated knowledge or vague allegations of fraud.
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