The case of Channappa (D) Thr. LRs. v. Parvatewwa (D) Thr. LRs. (2026 INSC 343) involves a civil dispute over property ownership and the legal bars against successive litigation under the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC).
Factual Background
- Suit I (2002): Parvatewwa filed a suit seeking to declare a 1961 adoption deed in favor of Channappa null and void [2.1, 2.2]. The Trial Court dismissed the suit in 2006, and her subsequent appeals were eventually dismissed, affirming the validity of the adoption [2.3, 4.7, 4.8].
- Suit II (2007): While the appeal for the first suit was still pending, Parvatewwa filed a second suit alleging that Channappa had illegally dispossessed her [2.4, 3.4]. In this suit, she sought a formal declaration of ownership and recovery of possession of the same property [3.4].
- The Defense: Channappa argued that Suit II was barred by Section 11 (res judicata) and Order II Rule 2 of the CPC, as the ownership dispute was substantially the same as in the first suit and the relief should have been claimed then [3.5].
Decisions of the Lower Courts
The Trial Court and the First Appellate Court concurrently held that Suit II was barred by res judicata and Order II Rule 2 [4.10, 5.11]. However, the High Court of Karnataka overturned these findings in a Second Appeal, decreeing the suit in favor of Parvatewwa’s legal representative [6.4].
Supreme Court’s Legal Analysis
The Supreme Court set aside the High Court’s judgment, focusing on three critical legal pillars:
- Order II Rule 2 CPC (Multiplicity of Suits): The Court emphasized that a plaintiff must include the whole of their claim in a single suit. Since Parvatewwa was fully aware that Channappa was asserting absolute ownership during the first litigation, she was required to seek a declaration of title and possession at that time. Failing to do so barred her from instituting a subsequent suit for those omitted reliefs .
- Constructive Res Judicata: Under Explanation IV to Section 11 of the CPC, any matter that “might and ought” to have been made a ground of attack in a former proceeding is deemed to have been decided. The Court ruled that because the ownership issue could and should have been resolved in Suit I, Parvatewwa could not agitate the same issue through fresh litigation.
- Scope of Second Appeal (Section 100 CPC): The Court criticized the High Court for interfering with the concurrent findings of the lower courts. It held that a High Court in a Second Appeal cannot reassess the entire factual matrix or disturb findings of fact unless they are shown to be perverse or based on no evidence, which was not the case here.
- Interlocutory Orders (Section 105 CPC): The Court clarified that the dismissal of an earlier interlocutory challenge to the suit’s maintainability did not prevent the defendants from raising those same legal objections in an appeal against the final decree.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that Suit II was a clear abuse of the legal process and was barred by established procedural laws . The appeal was allowed, the High Court’s judgment was set aside, and Suit II was dismissed.
2026 INSC 343
Channappa (D) Thr. Lrs. V. Parvatewwa (D) Thr. Lrs. (D.O.J. 09.04.2026)




