The case involves Kisan Vithoba Aakhade (D) Through LRs and Others (Appellants) against Suresh Tukaram Nerkar (Respondent), concerning a dispute over property ownership and possession. The plaintiff (Respondent) filed a suit seeking a declaration of ownership and possession with a consequential injunction against interference with an open space adjacent to a residential building. The plaintiff, however, did not seek recovery of possession. A sale deed (Ext. 81) produced by the plaintiff showed the property as 150 square metres, but revenue records indicated 109.70 square metres. The defendants were accused of dumping waste and manure on the property. The 9th defendant, who alone contested the suit, claimed the property was ancestral and used as a dung heap, and also alleged an oral partition. The trial court and the first appellate court rejected the suit, but the High Court overturned these concurrent findings.
Law Involved:
The case primarily involved the interpretation and application of Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, concerning declaratory relief, particularly when a plaintiff does not seek recovery of possession.
The legal principles surrounding the establishment of title and possession were central to the dispute.
The High Court’s decision hinged on the perversity of the findings of fact made by the lower courts regarding the plaintiff’s title and the defendants’ possession.
Order 41 Rule 27 of the Civil Procedure Code was also relevant regarding the acceptance of documents produced in the first appeal.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court upheld the High Court’s decision, which found the concurrent findings of the trial court and the first appellate court to be “perverse”.
- Title Establishment: The High Court correctly identified that the lower courts erred in their reading of the document establishing the plaintiff’s title. Despite a clear title deed, the trial court found that the title to the entire ‘ABCD’ area was not established. The High Court noted that the plaintiff’s sale deed conveyed 150 square metres, and the revenue records, though showing a corrected area, were credible.
- Possession: The High Court found the lower courts’ findings on the defendants’ possession to be perverse. While the defendants were dumping waste, this act did not negate the plaintiff’s claim to possession or establish the defendants’ possession. The 9th defendant’s claim of an oral partition in 1971 and ancestral property was not substantiated and did not establish a valid claim of possession-in-common. Furthermore, the first appellate court had acknowledged that the plaintiff’s vendor used the open plot for tying cattle, indicating the vendor’s possession.
- Application of Specific Relief Act: The trial court and first appellate court dismissed the suit under Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, incorrectly assuming that the plaintiff ought to have sought recovery of possession. The High Court implicitly corrected this by overturning their decision, recognising that a declaration of ownership with consequential injunction was appropriate given the circumstances and the nature of the plaintiff’s possession.
Holding: The Supreme Court found no merit in the appeal and consequently dismissed it. This means the Supreme Court affirmed the High Court’s judgment, which had overturned the trial court and first appellate court’s rejection of the suit. Therefore, the High Court’s finding that the lower courts’ conclusions on the plaintiff’s title and the defendants’ possession were “perverse” stands upheld. The plaintiff’s claim for declaration of ownership and consequential injunction is, by implication, affirmed.
Kisan Vithoba Aakhade (D) Through LRs and Others Vs Suresh Tukaram Nerkar
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1092: (DoJ 09-09-2025)




