These appeals originate from orders by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur, which allowed review petitions and miscellaneous petitions, leading to the quashing and setting aside of a Trial Court order. The Trial Court had initially dismissed an application to implead M/S J N REAL ESTATE (the appellant, originally defendant no. 8) as one of the defendants in a suit. The dispute revolves around a property, with three different parties asserting individual titles based on two different wills executed by the deceased testator, Mr. Indramohan Pradhan, and subsequent sale agreements. One will (dated 03.02.2001) was in favour of Mr. Sameer Ghosh (original defendant no. 3), who later entered into an agreement to sell the property to the appellant (defendant no. 8). Another will (dated 07.07.2001) was in favour of the testator’s two sons (original defendants no. 1 and 2), one of whom (Shailendra Pradhan, original plaintiff) filed the main suit for specific performance and permanent injunction. The appellant sought to be impleaded, claiming substantial interest in the property.
Law Involved:
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC): Primarily, Order 1 Rule 10, which deals with the addition, substitution, or striking out of parties to a suit.
Constitution of India: Article 227 (supervisory jurisdiction of the High Court)6.
Precedent Law: The Supreme Court referred to its earlier decisions, notably Mumbai International Airport (P) Ltd. v. Regency Convention Centre & Hotels (P) Ltd. (2010) and Kasturi v. Iyyamperumal (2005). These cases define what constitutes a “necessary party” and a “proper party” in a suit for specific performance. A “necessary party” is someone whose presence is essential for the effective adjudication and decree, without whom no effective decree can be passed. A “proper party” is someone whose presence is desirable for complete and effective adjudication of the controversy, though not essentia.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court deliberated whether the High Court was correct in allowing the impleadment of the appellant (defendant no. 8) in the original suit. The Court noted that the High Court had interfered with the Trial Court’s decision, which had correctly applied Order 1 Rule 10 CPC . The High Court’s reasoning stemmed from a “serious doubt on the genuineness of the entire transaction” between Sameer Ghosh (original defendant no. 3) and the appellant (defendant no. 8).
The Supreme Court, applying the principles from Kasturi v. Iyyamperumal, reasoned that in a suit for specific performance of a contract for sale, only the parties to the contract or their legal representatives are “necessary parties”. A subsequent purchaser of the property would be a “necessary party” only if their rights would be affected irrespective of whether they had purchased the property with or without notice of the contract. In this case, the main controversy was between the original plaintiff (Shailendra Pradhan) and the original defendants (the two sons) over the specific performance of an agreement based on one will, and the property’s title. The Court found that the appellant was neither a “necessary party” nor a “proper party” to the specific performance suit filed by the original plaintiff . The Court stated that the genuineness of the documents related to the transaction involving the appellant should be looked into during the trial and did not warrant impleadment at this stage . The High Court’s intervention under Article 227 CPC to second-guess the Trial Court on this matter was deemed inappropriate .
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeals . It set aside the impugned orders passed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur dated 12.12.2023 and 12.06.2023 . This means that the appellant (M/S J N REAL ESTATE) is not to be impleaded as a defendant in the original civil suit. The Court clarified that all contentions remain open for the parties concerned to be canvassed before the Trial Court .
M/S J N Real Estate V. Shailendra Pradhan And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 611: (DoJ 22-04-2025)




