K Raghavalu Chetty
v.
Adinarayana Chetty
(High Court Of Judicature At Madras)
No. | 16-12-1908
[2] The plaintiff in this connection argues that the 6th defendant, having in his written statement admitted the plaintiff s claim ought not to have been allowed to resile from the plea and allege that the deed was without consideration and fraudulent. The District Judge allowed, the 6th defendant to alter his original plea because he was satisfied that the original plea was made in ignorance and without; proper legal advice by the 6th defendant who had only recently ceased to be a minor. In these circumstances we think that the District Judge was right in allowing the 6th defendant to set up the true case, although it differed from his original plea. We observe that the District Judge gave the plaintiff the opportunity to adduce further evidence to rebut the defendant s new plea, but the plaintiff failed to show that it was not true.
[3] We, therefore, reverse the decree of the District Judge and restore the decree of the District Munsif with costs in this and in the lower appellate Court, except the costs awarded to the plaintiff by the District Judge s order of the 10th April 1905.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties -------
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE BENSON
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE MILLER
Eq Citation
(1909) ILR 32 MAD 323
2 IND. CAS. 616
LQ/MadHC/1908/217
HeadNote
A. Evidence Act, 1872 — S. 115 — Defendant 6th defendant, a minor, allowed to benefit from rule of public policy — Defendant 6th defendant alleged that his father when he (6th defendant) was a child transferred the plaint property to the plaintiff without consideration and in order to use the transfer as a cloak against the creditors — Courts found that this plea was proved — Held, on that finding plaintiff s suit should have been dismissed — Plaintiff s pleader argued that 6th defendant should not be allowed to defeat the operation of the deed as it was twice used in Court, apparently with success, as a cloak against creditors : but the 6th defendant was then a minor and there is nothing to show that he knew that the deed was without consideration and fraudulent — Indeed his original plea in this suit admitting the deed rather indicates that he had then no knowledge of its real character — 6th defendant, having in his written statement admitted the plaintiff s claim ought not to have been allowed to resile from the plea and allege that the deed was without consideration and fraudulent — District Judge allowed, 6th defendant to alter his original plea because he was satisfied that the original plea was made in ignorance and without; proper legal advice by the 6th defendant who had only recently ceased to be a minor — District Judge gave the plaintiff the opportunity to adduce further evidence to rebut the defendant s new plea, but the plaintiff failed to show that it was not true — Decree of the District Judge and restore the decree of the District Munsif with costs in this and in the lower appellate Court, except the costs awarded to the plaintiff by the District Judge s order of the 10th April 1905