P. Kumarakurubaran (the appellant) initiated a civil suit (O.S. No. 310 of 2014) seeking various reliefs, including a declaration of his ownership over a property, declaring several deeds (a sale deed of 1988, a settlement deed of 2012, and a General Power of Attorney deed of 2012) as null and void, and seeking permanent injunctions. The appellant alleged that his father, who was given a Power of Attorney (PoA) for construction purposes in 1978, illegally executed a sale deed in 1988 in favour of Respondent No.1 (his granddaughter) without the appellant’s knowledge or authority. Further alienations of the property were alleged. The appellant claimed to have approached authorities and filed complaints after discovering these transactions. The respondents (P. Narayanan & Ors.) filed an application under Order VII Rule 11 of the Civil Procedure Code (CPC), seeking to reject the plaint on grounds that the suit was undervalued and barred by limitation. The Principal District Court, Chengalpet, dismissed the respondents’ application, finding that the plaint raised triable issues and could not be rejected at the threshold8. However, the High Court allowed the respondents’ Civil Revision Petition, overturning the trial court’s decision and dismissing the suit, primarily on the ground that it was barred by limitation.
Law Involved:
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC): Specifically, Order VII Rule 11, which deals with the rejection of a plaint. This rule allows a plaint to be rejected if it does not disclose a cause of action, if the relief claimed is undervalued and not corrected, or if the suit appears from the statement in the plaint to be barred by any law, among other reasons.
Limitation Act, 1963: Article 59, which prescribes a period of three years for suits seeking cancellation of an instrument, starting from when the plaintiff first knows the facts entitling them to such relief.
Specific Relief Act: Section 34, relating to suits for declaration of a right14.
Principles of Procedural Law: The Supreme Court reiterated that powers under Order VII Rule 11 CPC should be used sparingly and that a “mini-trial” or adjudication of mixed questions of law and fact at the preliminary stage is impermissible.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court found that the High Court committed a jurisdictional error by rejecting the plaint on the ground of limitation.
Improper “Mini-Trial”: The High Court effectively conducted a “mini-trial” by delving into the question of when the appellant acquired knowledge of the alleged fraudulent transactions4…. This issue of “knowledge” is a mixed question of law and fact, which cannot be conclusively determined without a full-fledged trial involving oral and documentary evidence.
Triable Issues Ignored: The plaint contained specific and serious allegations regarding fraudulent alienation, misuse of the Power of Attorney (which was allegedly for construction, not alienation), and lack of authority for the father to execute the deeds. These allegations present contested issues that necessitate a detailed adjudication through a trial, as correctly identified by the Additional District Judge.
Limitations of Order VII Rule 11: The Court emphasized that a plaint should only be rejected if it is “patently absurd or inherently improbable” or if the suit is clearly time-barred “from the statements in the plaint itself”. In cases where the date of knowledge is disputable and requires evidence, rejection at the threshold is improper.
Nature of PoA: The PoA given to the father was specifically for building construction and related activities, not to sell or alienate the property. The alleged execution of sale and settlement deeds by the father without such authority renders the transactions potentially fraudulent and without jurisdiction, further highlighting the need for a full trial.
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeals. It set aside the High Court’s judgment and order dated 03.09.2020. The criminal proceedings were restored to the file of the Additional District Judge, Chengalpattu, with a direction to proceed with the trial on its merits without being influenced by the observations made by the High Court.
P. Kumarakurubaran V. P. Narayanan And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 598: (DoJ 29-04-2025)




