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  • Burden of Proof on the Party Alleging Sham/Nominal Document - The initial burden lies on the party asserting that a document is sham, nominal, or not genuine. They must provide sufficient evidence to prove their claim. For example, the burden of proof as to whether a document is benami, nominal, sham, etc., should be on the person who sets up such pleas ["Gottipati Narasimhulu Naidu VS Devineni Gangi Naidu - Andhra Pradesh"]. Similarly, the burden is on the defendants to prove that the document was not executed and that it was a sham and nominal transaction ["KULANDAI MARIE vs MARIE ROCK EMILE - Madras"], ["V. Nirmala vs V. Vimala - Madras"].

  • Shift of Burden of Proof - Once the party claiming the document is sham or nominal adduces evidence, the burden shifts to the opposing party to prove the document's genuineness or that it was acted upon. The burden of proof remains firmly with the party producing the document. It is their obligation, throughout the trial, to establish that the document in question is valid and enforceable ["CHEN JIN QUAN vs TENAGA NASIONAL BERHAD - High Court"], ["CHEN JIN QUAN vs TENAGA NASIONAL BERHAD - High Court"]. Evidence such as registered deeds, consideration, and circumstances of execution are critical in shifting this burden.

  • Evidence Required to Prove Sham/Nominal Nature - To prove a document is sham or nominal, parties often rely on:

  • Lack of consideration or unsupported recitals ["KULANDAI MARIE vs MARIE ROCK EMILE - Madras"], ["V. Nirmala vs V. Vimala - Madras"]
  • Evidence that the document was never acted upon or intended to be acted upon ["PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD, Vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER, - Madras"], ["S. Ajija Begum VS S. Aisha Bevi (Died) - Madras"]
  • Circumstances indicating coercion, illiteracy, or absence of genuine intent ["MANGTIN BAI VS RAHIBAI - Chhattisgarh"], ["Mangtin and Others v. Rahibai and Others - Chhattisgarh"]
  • Oral testimony explaining the fictitious or sham nature ["PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD, Vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER, - Madras"], ["PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD, Vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER, - Madras"]

  • Court’s Approach - Courts examine all evidence, including documents, witness testimony, and surrounding circumstances, to determine if a document is sham or nominal. The absence of proof showing the document was acted upon or that it was executed with genuine intent leads courts to conclude it is sham or nominal. The courts below have erroneously held that the document Ex.A2 is sham and nominal... and should have held that the evidence is insufficient ["S. G. Raju VS Rajammal - Madras"].

Analysis and Conclusion:Proving a document as sham or nominal requires the party asserting this to first establish a prima facie case with credible evidence. Once established, the burden shifts to the other party to prove the document’s authenticity or that it was acted upon genuinely. Courts emphasize that filing only affidavit or self-serving document will not be sufficient ["PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD, Vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER, - Madras"], and that the burden of proof is of importance only where... a party must eventually fail ["Kanta VS Santosh - Punjab and Haryana"]. The key is to demonstrate circumstances, lack of consideration, or that the document was never acted upon, supported by credible evidence and oral testimony.

Proving a Document as Sham or Nominal: Burden of Proof and Evidence Guide

Introduction

In legal disputes involving property transactions, contracts, or agreements, one common challenge arises: how to prove a document as sham and nominal, and on whom does the burden of proof shift? These terms often surface in civil litigation where a party claims a document was created merely for appearance, without real intent or effect. Understanding this can be crucial for protecting rights in property deals, tenancy issues, or business contracts.

Courts in India, guided by the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, Civil Procedure Code, 1908, and judicial precedents, apply specific criteria to determine if a document is sham (collusive to deceive) or nominal (no real transfer). This guide breaks down the process, evidentiary standards, and burden dynamics, drawing from key case law. Note: This is general information, not specific legal advice—consult a qualified lawyer for your case.

Defining Sham and Nominal Documents

A sham document is executed with collusion to deceive third parties or evade law, simulating a transaction without true intent. As defined, it ostensibly creates rights or obligations but is executed with the collusion of parties to deceive third parties or the law, often with an ulterior motive Hanuman Prasad Mishra VS Addl Dist Judge Court No 4 Lucknow - 2019 0 Supreme(All) 403.

A nominal document, on the other hand, appears genuine but effects no real transfer of title, rights, or interest—merely a formality. It appears to be a genuine transaction but, in reality, does not effectuate any transfer of rights, title, or interest SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159.

Key distinction: Sham involves active deception; nominal lacks substance.

Essential Elements to Prove

To establish either:- Apparent validity: Document looks authentic on its face Hanuman Prasad Mishra VS Addl Dist Judge Court No 4 Lucknow - 2019 0 Supreme(All) 403.- Ulterior motive or collusion: Secret intent like tax evasion or creditor fraud Hanuman Prasad Mishra VS Addl Dist Judge Court No 4 Lucknow - 2019 0 Supreme(All) 403.- No actual transfer: No change in possession, title, or obligations SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159.- Absence or inadequacy of consideration: Not conclusive alone, but supportive when combined with other factors Sahul Hameed Rowther VS K. C. P. Mohideen Pichai - 1947 0 Supreme(Mad) 360.

Transactions part of deceptive schemes are typically sham, while formalities without effect are nominal SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159.

Evidentiary Requirements: Building Your Case

Proving a sham or nominal document demands strong evidence. Courts look beyond the paper to substance, examining intent, execution, and conduct.

Burden of Proof: Who Bears It?

The initial burden lies on the party alleging the document is sham or nominal. They must prove it on a preponderance of probabilities, showing ulterior motives or no real effect SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159. Mere denial isn't enough—corroborative evidence is required.

The burden does not shift easily to the defendant. It shifts only if the alleging party first shows the transaction lacks bona fides: not shift on the defendant. ... the document to be sham and bogus would only shift if the transaction is bonafide SHESHRAO PANDHARI GHULE vs YADAV JYOTIBA BHOSALE.

Once alleged as sham, the opposing party may need to prove validity, like actual payment or possession transfer Sahul Hameed Rowther VS K. C. P. Mohideen Pichai - 1947 0 Supreme(Mad) 360. In one case: W hen the plaintiffs alleged that Ex.B1 is a sham and nominal document and was not given effect to, it is for them to prove the same Ramalingam VS Palaniyandi Mudaliar (Died) - 2013 Supreme(Mad) 2581.

In labor disputes alleging sham contracts: Even though he submitted that the contract is sham and nominal, the Management in order to prove the legality of the contract, has marked a contract agreement PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER - 2021 Supreme(Online)(MAD) 10666, but the worker still bore the preliminary burden.

Courts emphasize: It is settled position that the burden of proof lies on the plaintiff to prove the truth and genuineness of the document (in reverse, for validity) G. Jothimani VS P. C. Renganathan (Deceased) - 2018 Supreme(Mad) 64.

Types of Evidence Admissible

In a release deed dispute, plaintiffs failed to prove sham despite allegations, as they couldn't disprove execution or effect Ramalingam VS Palaniyandi Mudaliar (Died) - 2013 Supreme(Mad) 2581.

Judicial Approach and Standard of Proof

Courts adopt a holistic view: facts, intent, execution, post-document conduct SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159. Standard is preponderance, but fraud/collusion needs clear and satisfactory evidence Hanuman Prasad Mishra VS Addl Dist Judge Court No 4 Lucknow - 2019 0 Supreme(All) 403.

Mere absence of consideration isn't enough without suspicious circumstances Sahul Hameed Rowther VS K. C. P. Mohideen Pichai - 1947 0 Supreme(Mad) 360. Mere oral denial or absence of direct evidence does not suffice; corroborative circumstantial evidence is often necessary SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159.

In employer-employee cases, alleging sham contract shifts some proof to management, but initial onus remains: the burden of proof to prove the document lies upon the party who assert it Shree Ji Sarees Through: Its Proprietor Sh. Pankaj Jain VS Ved Prakash Sharma - 2015 Supreme(Del) 840.

Key Case Law Insights

These precedents show courts demand affirmative proof from the challenger.

Additional Considerations

In fraud cases, clean hands required: misleading courts leads to dismissal Shree Ji Sarees Through: Its Proprietor Sh. Pankaj Jain VS Ved Prakash Sharma - 2015 Supreme(Del) 840.

Conclusion and Key Takeaways

Proving a document sham or nominal hinges on demonstrating collusion, no real transfer, and ulterior motives via oral, circumstantial, and documentary evidence. Critically, the burden starts with the alleging party and shifts only after prima facie proof of invalidity—rarely automatic.

Key Takeaways:- Gather possession records, payment proofs, witness testimonies early.- Combine evidence; single factors like low consideration insufficient.- Courts prioritize substance over form.- Always plead specifics in pleadings.

For tailored advice, engage a legal expert. Stay informed to safeguard transactions.

References:- SATISH KUMAR MATHURA PRASAD SHRIVASTAVA VS JAGDAMBA PRASAD, NARMADA PRASAD - 2002 0 Supreme(MP) 159Sahul Hameed Rowther VS K. C. P. Mohideen Pichai - 1947 0 Supreme(Mad) 360Hanuman Prasad Mishra VS Addl Dist Judge Court No 4 Lucknow - 2019 0 Supreme(All) 403Naduvatheyath Sulochana D/o Sulochana Muzhakkunnu Amsom VS Syndicate Bank Branch Manager, Thalassery - 2021 0 Supreme(Ker) 1131- SHESHRAO PANDHARI GHULE vs YADAV JYOTIBA BHOSALEPIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER - 2021 Supreme(Online)(MAD) 10666PIRAMAL HEALTH CARE LTD, Vs THE PRESIDING OFFICER,Ramalingam VS Palaniyandi Mudaliar (Died) - 2013 Supreme(Mad) 2581Angalammal VS T. V. Nagappa Mudaliar (Died) - 2020 Supreme(Mad) 462G. Jothimani VS P. C. Renganathan (Deceased) - 2018 Supreme(Mad) 64Shree Ji Sarees Through: Its Proprietor Sh. Pankaj Jain VS Ved Prakash Sharma - 2015 Supreme(Del) 840Madras Cements Limited represented by its Assistant Manager VS T. M. T. Kannammal Educational Trust, represented by its Chairman, T. Nagar - 2014 Supreme(Mad) 4272

#ShamDocument, #BurdenOfProof, #LegalGuide
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