This case involves a long-standing land dispute dating back to a 1926 grant by the Government of Mysore. The land, measuring 3 acres 39 guntas, was purchased by Smt. Marakka (grandmother of the appellants) via a registered sale deed in 1939-40, with mutation recorded in her name.
The respondents (descendants of the original grantee) initiated numerous legal proceedings over decades to challenge the sale and reclaim the land, alleging issues with its transfer and even filing criminal complaints against officials…. A significant point was a High Court observation in 2014, while quashing criminal proceedings against a Special Tehsildar, that its observations should not prejudice the Civil Court in determining the validity of the 1939-40 sale deed 45.
The current appeals arose from the First Appellate Court’s common order dated 03.01.2022, which allowed two applications filed by the respondent: I.A. No. 2, seeking permission to produce a Mutation Register extract (No. 5/1939-40), and I.A. No. 5, seeking permission to raise additional grounds in two pending regular appeals . The appellants challenged this order via a writ petition, which the High Court rejected, leading to the present civil appeals before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved The primary legal provisions and principles involved are:
Article 227 of the Constitution of India: Under which the appellants’ writ petition was filed in the High Court.
Code of Civil Procedure (CPC):
Order XI Rule 14 CPC: Pertaining to the production of documents. This rule allows a court to order any party to produce relevant documents in their possession or power at any time during a suit….
Order VII Rule 11 CPC: Pertaining to the rejection of a plaint…. The appellants had previously filed an application under this rule.
Reasoning The Supreme Court’s reasoning centred on the First Appellate Court’s misapplication of legal principles and its misinterpretation of a prior High Court order:
Misinterpretation of High Court’s Previous Order: The Supreme Court found that the First Appellate Court was “unnecessarily influenced” by the High Court’s observation in a criminal proceeding. This observation had stated that the quashing of criminal proceedings against a Tehsildar should not prejudice the Civil Court’s determination of the validity of the sale deed. The Supreme Court clarified that this simply meant the Civil Court should decide on its own merits, not that it was barred from examining the sale deed’s validity.
Improper Order for Document Production (I.A. No. 2): The Supreme Court held that the order allowing the production of the Mutation Register (I.A. No. 2) was “totally misconceived and suffers from an error of exercise of jurisdiction”. The Court noted that the Trial Court had previously observed that the validity of the sale deed had to be adjudicated, and the plaintiff needed an opportunity to prove their case. The order for production was thus flawed given the procedural history.
Validity of Additional Grounds (I.A. No. 5): Conversely, the Court found no “illegality” in the order allowing the respondent to raise additional grounds in the regular appeal .
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal in part.
The order allowing I.A. No. 2 (for the production of the Mutation Register extract) was set aside8.
The order allowing I.A. No. 5 (for raising additional grounds in the regular appeal) was affirmed .
The Civil Appeals were disposed of in these terms.
Sri Shrikanth Ns & Ors. V. K. Munivenkatappa & Ors.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 557: (DoJ 23-04-2025)




