This case involves Mallesswari (Appellant), the daughter of Munasamy Naidu and Muniammal, and K. Suguna (First Respondent), among others. The dispute originated from a suit (OS No. 192 of 2000) filed by Subramani (Mallesswari’s brother, son of Munasamy Naidu) for partition of ancestral properties. An ex-parte preliminary decree was issued on 25.02.2003. The First Respondent subsequently executed a registered sale deed and a settlement deed for various suit properties on 27.12.2004. Following her father’s death, Mallesswari was impleaded as an heir and sought to amend the preliminary decree, asserting her right as a co-parcener under the Hindu Succession Act (Amendment) Act, 2005 (HSA 2005), claiming an equal share of the property.
Her application was dismissed by the Trial Court on 08.03.2019, which held that she was estopped from challenging the sale deeds as she was a witness to them, and her application was barred by limitation. Mallesswari then filed a Civil Revision Petition (CRP No. 1439 of 2019) in the High Court. The High Court, in its order dated 23.09.2022, acknowledged her entitlement to a share under HSA and remanded the matter to the Trial Court for fresh consideration of her civil appeal. However, following a review application (no. 227 of 2023) filed by the Respondent, the High Court issued another order on 19.10.2024, again remanding the case for fresh enquiry, leading to the current appeal to the Supreme Court.
Law Involved The primary legal provisions and principles pertinent to this judgment include:
Hindu Succession Act (Amendment) Act, 2005 (HSA 2005): This Act grants daughters equal coparcenary rights by birth. The appellant sought to claim a share under this Act and also invoked Section 29A of the Hindu Succession Act (Tamil Nadu Amendment Act), 1989. A key contention was the retroactive application of HSA 2005, which the Trial Court held to be inapplicable.
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC), particularly Section 114 and Order 47 Rule 1: These sections meticulously define and restrict the scope of review jurisdiction.
Principle of Estoppel: The appellant was previously deemed barred from challenging the sale deeds due to her awareness and implied consent as a witness to the transactions.
Doctrine of Lis Pendens: The settlement deed and Will were considered invalid because they were executed while the original suit was pending.
Limitation: The appellant’s application to amend the preliminary decree was deemed barred by limitation, having been filed over 15 years after the preliminary decree and 7 years after she admittedly became aware of the suit.
Reasoning The Supreme Court’s reasoning primarily focused on the strict and limited nature of review jurisdiction under Order 47 Rule 1 and Section 114 of the CPC. The Court emphasised that a review is not an appeal; its sole purpose is to correct errors apparent on the face of the record, not to rehear the case, substitute a new judicial view, or re-examine findings that have already been recorded. It underscored that review powers are not meant to be confused with appellate powers and are reserved for circumstances such as the discovery of new and important matter or evidence, a mistake or error apparent on the face of the record, or any other sufficient reason, and cannot be invoked to correct “grave and palpable errors” that are not self-evident.
The Supreme Court determined that the High Court’s review order of 19.10.2024, which allowed the review application, had transgressed these jurisdictional limits. The Court found that this order went beyond rectifying an apparent error and amounted to a reappreciation of the case’s merits, which is impermissible in review proceedings. The High Court’s initial order dated 23.09.2022 had already set aside the Trial Court’s dismissal of Mallesswari’s application and remanded the matter for fresh consideration of the civil appeal, which properly addressed the appellant’s claims including her coparcenary rights.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, setting aside the High Court’s review order dated 19.10.2024. As a consequence, the High Court’s earlier order dated 23.09.2022 in CRP No. 1439 of 2019 was restored. This means the case is remitted to the Trial Court for a fresh and comprehensive consideration of the civil appeal filed by Mallesswari, addressing her claims regarding coparcenary rights under HSA 2005 and the validity of the property transactions, without the overreaching influence of the High Court’s subsequent review order. The Trial Court has been directed to expeditiously dispose of all pending applications, preferably within three months.
Malleeswari Vs K. Suguna And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 1080: (DoJ 08-09-2025)




