HANDLEY, AYLING
Maikal Servai – Appellant
Versus
Thambuswami Servai – Respondent
1. Plaintiff has based his suit on title by inheritance and as it is found that he and 1st defendant are only illegitimate sons of Arulappa Servai, the original owner, he is no heir at all.
2. The Subordinate Judge has, however, given him a decree on the strength of the principle laid down in Asher v. Whittock 1 Q.B. 1 : 35 L.J.Q.B. 17 : 11 Jur. (N.S.) 925 : 13 L.T. 254 : 14 W.R. 26 and followed in Sundar v. Parbati 12 A. 51 (P.C.) : 16 I.A. 186 : 5 Sar. P.C.J. 448 and Narayana, How v. Dharmaehar 26 M. 514 : 13 M.L.J. 146 that mere possession of property gives an interest which can be enforced in a suit against a trespasser. No doubt a suit is maintainable on such-a basis; but if plaintiff seeks to rely on it, it should be clearly set up so that the contesting defendants may know what they have to meet. There is no indication of such a claim in the plaint, which, as already stated, bases the suit on title by inheritance and nothing else; and the contention appears to have been first set up in the course of the hearing in the lower Appellate Court. We consider, following Somasundarani Chetty v. Vadivelu Pillai 31 M. 531 : 4 M.L.T. 344 and Shiro Kumari Debi v. Govind Shaw Tant
Login now and unlock free premium legal research
Login to SupremeToday AI and access free legal analysis, AI highlights, and smart tools.
Login
now!
India’s Legal research and Law Firm App, Download now!
Copyright © 2023 Vikas Info Solution Pvt Ltd. All Rights Reserved.