IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT MADRAS
SATHI KUMAR SUKUMARA KURUP
Manakula Vinayagar Educational Trust, Rep. by its Secretary M. Dhanasekaran, S/o. Mahalingam – Appellant
Versus
Chinnadurai @ Janarthanan – Respondent
| Table of Content |
|---|
| 1. substantial questions of law framed. (Para 4 , 6) |
| 2. arguments against plaintiff's claims. (Para 5 , 8 , 10) |
| 3. legal principles concerning evidence admission. (Para 14 , 15) |
| 4. need for trial court evidence review. (Para 20 , 22) |
| 5. judgment affirmed against the defendant. (Para 26 , 27) |
JUDGMENT :
(SATHI KUMAR SUKUMARA KURUP, J.)
This Second Appeal had been filed to set aside the decree and judgment dated 28.01.2013 passed in A.S. No. 3 of 2009 by the learned Principal Sub Judge, Pondicherry, confirming the decree and judgment dated 06.09.2006 passed in O.S. No. 770 of 2004, by the learned II Additional District Munsif, Pondicherry.
2. The Appellant in this Second Appeal is the Defendant before the learned II Additional District Munsif, Pondicherry in O.S. No. 770 of 2004. The Respondent/Plaintiff filed the said suit in O.S. No .770 of 2004 praying to grant the relief of declaration to declare that he is the owner of the 'C' Schedule mentioned property in the plaint and for a consequential permanent injunction in respect of the “C” schedule property restraining the Defendants, their men, servants, agents or anyone from in any manner interfering with the same.
3. The bri

Property disputes necessitate substantive evidence from both parties, and failure to present evidence may result in adverse inferences against the non-compliant party.
The courts affirmed that ownership through valid title and continuous possession determines property rights, emphasizing that plaintiffs must assert declarations before counter-claims can be adjudica....
The central legal point established in the judgment is the shift of burden to the defendants to prove lack of possession and title when the plaintiffs have established continuous possession and title....
The jurisdiction of the High Court in second appeals is limited to substantial questions of law, and it will not interfere with concurrent findings of fact unless such questions arise.
The court upheld that possession is key in injunction cases, reaffirming the presumption in favor of older title documents when evidence of possession is compelling.
Claimants must provide valid title documents and evidence of ownership in property disputes; reliance on non-title documents like patta is insufficient.
A plaint cannot be rejected based on the defendants' defenses; only the plaint and accompanying documents should be considered.
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