Supreme Court Upholds Ancestral Property Division, Bars Fresh Challenge to Compromise Decree. The case originates from a long-standing family property dispute. In 1974, a registered family partition occurred [3(a)]. In 1998, the appellants (sons) filed a suit (O.S. No. 219/1998) seeking partition of ancestral property from their father and mother [3(b), 4].
During this, in 1999, the appellants’ grandfather filed another suit (O.S. No. 58/1999) for partition, stating 7 acres of joint family property were mistakenly left out of the 1974 partition1. A compromise decree was passed on 18 January 2000 in the 1999 suit, dividing the 7 acres equally among the grandfather, appellants’ father, and his five brothers, giving 1 acre to the father12. Subsequently, on 2 August 2002, the appellants’ 1998 partition suit was decreed, and they received half of their father’s share, meaning 0.5 acres from the 7-acre plot.
In 2003, the appellants filed the current suit (No. 1/2003) to declare the 18 January 2000 compromise decree null and void, claiming the 7 acres were their father’s property, not ancestral, and seeking half of it5They alleged their father colluded with his father and brothers, and that they were not parties to the compromise suit. The Trial Court dismissed this 2003 suit on 2 March 2007, and the High Court dismissed their appeal on 23 September 2022, leading to the current appeal before the Supreme Court.
Law Involved
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC):
Order 23 Rule 3: Deals with compromise of suits and states that a court must satisfy itself that a lawful agreement or compromise has been reached before passing a decree.
Order 23 Rule 3A: Imposes a bar on filing a fresh suit to set aside a decree on the ground that the compromise on which it was based was not lawful.
Section 96(3): States that no appeal shall lie from a decree passed by the Court with the consent of parties.
Order 2 Rule 2: Pertains to the inclusion of the whole claim in a suit, preventing subsequent suits for claims omitted from earlier litigation.
Principles of Res Judicata and Constructive Res Judicata: Bar re-agitation of claims already decided or that ought to have been raised in previous litigation.
Indian Contract Act, 1872: Agreements void or voidable under this Act are not deemed lawful for the purpose of a compromise.
Case Law: Pushpa Devi Bhagat v. Rajinder Singh (2006) 5 SCC 566, which summarized the legal position regarding consent decrees.
ReasoningThe Supreme Court upheld the concurrent findings of the lower courts against the appellants.
1.Nature of Property: The appellants failed to prove that the 7 acres were not ancestral property. The Trial Court correctly concluded it was joint family property, purchased from family funds in the father’s name when he was a minor.
2. Representation & Consent Decree Validity: The appellants’ interest was represented by their father in the 1999 partition suit where the compromise decree was passed38. The Court found no fraud.
3. Bar to Fresh Suit: The Court emphasized that once a compromise decree is passed after the court’s satisfaction, it cannot be challenged by filing a fresh suit due to the specific bar under Order 23 Rule 3A CPC and Section 96(3) CPC, nor by appeal.
4. Sole Remedy: Citing Pushpa Devi Bhagat, the Court clarified that the only remedy to challenge a consent decree (even on grounds of coercion, as alleged by appellants regarding their father) is to file a recall application before the same court that passed the decree1719. The appellants’ father never did so and admitted the consent decree’s validity.
5.Father’s Rights: If the 7 acres were the father’s self-acquired property, he would have full liberty over it, and if he had no grievance against the consent decree, the appellants could not challenge it.
6.Procedural Bars: The appellants’ suit was also barred under Order 2 Rule 2 CPC for not including all relevant properties from their earlier suit21. Additionally, the suit was hit by principles of res judicata or constructive res judicata, as the claim for partition of the 7 acres had already been settled in previous litigations.
Holding The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, finding no reason to interfere with the High Court’s impugned order dated 23 September 2022. The Court affirmed that the appellants’ suit was without merit and barred by law.
Manjunath Tirakappa Malagi And Another V. Gurusiddappa Tirakappa Malagi (Dead Through Lrs)
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 517: (DoJ 21-04-2025)




