In Pushpa & Ors. v. Dayawati & Ors. (2026 INSC 603), the Supreme Court of India examined the limits of a High Court’s revisional jurisdiction under Section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC) in relation to a decree passed on admissions under Order XII Rule 6 of the CPC. The case emerged from a family property dispute where the plaintiff (Respondent No. 1) sought recovery of an excess money share from her brother (Defendant No. 3, later represented by his legal heirs/appellants). The plaintiff asserted that because the brother admitted in his Written Statement to receiving Rs. 3 crores out of a Rs. 15 crore ancestral land sale, and since subsequent court orders modified individual family shares to 1/6th (Rs. 2,55,20,833), the brother had mathematically received an excess of Rs. 44,79,167 which should be decreed without a trial.
While the Trial Court dismissed the application on the ground that the issue was a triable dispute requiring formal evidence, the Delhi High Court reversed this in a revision petition and decreed the suit. The Supreme Court, authored by Justice Vipul M. Pancholi, noted that the core question was whether the brother’s statement constituted a clear, unequivocal, and unconditional admission. The apex court held that judgments on admissions under Order XII Rule 6 cannot be claimed as a matter of right and require absolute clarity. Because the funds originated from the father (Respondent No. 2) and issues of privity of contract, the true nature of the intra-family distribution, and legal liability remained highly contested, it constituted a complex triable issue. The Supreme Court ruled that the High Court exceeded its revisional jurisdiction by interfering with a sound finding of fact by the Trial Court, subsequently setting aside the High Court’s decree and restoring the case for regular trial.
1. Family Structure and Contextual History
The litigation involves members of a Hindu family with the following lineage:
- Parents: Shis Ram (Defendant No. 1 / Respondent No. 2) and Chameli (Defendant No. 2 / Respondent No. 3).
- Children: Dayawati (Plaintiff / Respondent No. 1), Daya Ram (Defendant No. 3), Har Prasad (Respondent No. 4), Ramrati (Respondent No. 5), and Leelawati (Respondent No. 6).
- Appellants: Pushpa, Saroj Kumari, and Sudesh are the daughters and legal representatives of the now-deceased Defendant No. 3 (Daya Ram).
In August 2007, the family patriarch (Respondent No. 2) sold ancestral agricultural land spanning roughly 31 bighas 9 biswas for a total consideration of Rs. 15,31,25,000, receiving the entire proceeds into his personal bank account.
2. Procedural Trail & Litigation History
- The Partition Suit: On December 21, 2009, Respondent No. 1 (Dayawati) filed a suit seeking the recovery of Rs. 45,00,000 with interest, alongside partition of family properties, arguing she was entitled to her share of the ancestral land proceeds.
- The Alleged Admission: On March 25, 2010, Defendant No. 3 filed his Written Statement, contentiously stating that the suit was collusive and asserting that, through a private family settlement, each member had already received Rs. 3 crores out of the Rs. 15 crore proceeds.
- Preliminary Share Modification: The High Court initially passed a preliminary partition decree on August 17, 2011, allocating a 1/7th share to each of the seven family members. On March 15, 2013, a Division Bench modified this share to 1/6th each, as one sister (Leelawati) officially relinquished her claim.
- The Application Under Order XII Rule 6: While a final decree was passed for the physical immovable properties, the High Court separated the issue regarding the recovery of Rs. 45,00,000 and framed specific trial issues. Respondent No. 1 then moved an application under Order XII Rule 6 of the CPC, requesting an immediate decree on admissions. She argued that since a 1/6th share mathematically equated to Rs. 2,55,20,833, Defendant No. 3’s admission of receiving Rs. 3 crores meant he held an excess of Rs. 44,79,167 belonging to her.
- Trial Court vs. Revisionary Intervention: Due to changing pecuniary jurisdictions, the suit moved to the District Court. The Additional District Judge dismissed the Order XII Rule 6 application, determining that the controversy was a complex triable issue requiring full evidence. Respondent No. 1 challenged this via a Civil Revision Petition. The Delhi High Court allowed the revision, overturned the Trial Court’s view, and ordered a decree against Defendant No. 3.
3. Key Legal Issues Framework
The Supreme Court targeted the primary legal thresholds:
- The Threshold of Order XII Rule 6: Whether the statements made by Defendant No. 3 in his Written Statement amounted to a clear, unambiguous, unconditional, and legally enforceable admission of liability toward the plaintiff.
- The Scope of Section 115 Revisional Jurisdiction: Whether the High Court exceeded its statutory parameters by overriding the Trial Court’s determination regarding the existence of triable factual issues.
4. Arguments Presented by the Parties
Appellants’ Arguments (Legal Heirs of Defendant No. 3):
- No Direct Liability or Privity: It is undisputed that the land sale money went entirely to the father (Respondent No. 2). Any subsequent amounts given by the father to his son (Defendant No. 3) did not feature any privity of contract or statutory obligation between the brother and sister. If a recovery claim exists, it lies solely against the father who held the primary funds.
- Absence of Clear Admission: There is no unequivocal admission of owing money to the plaintiff. The statement was part of a larger factual matrix concerning an alleged oral family arrangement, making it a disputed matter of trial.
- Excess of Revisionary Power: The High Court improperly used Section 115 to completely reverse a factual finding of the Trial Court concerning the necessity of a trial.
Respondents’ Arguments (Dayawati / Plaintiff):
- Mathematical Certainty: The preliminary decree fixing a 1/6th share had attained finality. Since Defendant No. 3 explicitly admitted on paper to holding Rs. 3 crores, his possession of excess funds beyond his legal share of Rs. 2,55,20,833 is mathematically undeniable, rendering a trial unnecessary.
- Inconsistent Stand: Defendant No. 3 had claimed different share allocations in parallel family litigations, reinforcing the reliability of his excess receipt admission.
5. Court’s Analysis and Final Ruling
The Supreme Court set aside the Delhi High Court’s judgment and allowed the appeal based on the following determinations:
- Discretionary Nature of Order XII Rule 6: A decree on admissions is not an absolute right of a litigant; it is a discretionary power of the court to be used only when an admission is completely clear, unconditional, and unambiguous.
- Existence of Triable Issues: The Court noted that the plaint itself acknowledged the father received the entire consideration sum. Whether the money given by the father to the son was out of the father’s personal share, whether a binding family settlement truly took place, and whether the brother had a direct legal obligation to reimburse his sister are deeply disputed questions of fact. They cannot be summarily decided without a formal trial and the leading of evidence.
- Misuse of Revisional Jurisdiction: The Supreme Court affirmed that under Section 115 of the CPC, a High Court cannot routinely step in to substitute its own view over a subordinate court’s rational interlocutory finding. The Trial Court was well-justified in holding that the issues framed required proper adjudication via evidence.
Consequently, the High Court’s revision order was set aside, the Trial Court’s order was restored, and the matter was sent back to be decided through a standard civil trial.
2026 INSC 603
Pushpa & Ors. V. Dayawati & Ors. (D.O.J. 29.05.2026)




