The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgment, restoring the First Appellate Court’s original order. The Court ruled that the High Court exceeded its limited jurisdiction under Article 226 by setting aside findings of fact that were arrived at by a competent civil court after a proper appreciation of evidence. Furthermore, the Court emphasized that the High Court violated the principles of natural justice, specifically audi alteram partem, by deciding the writ petition ex parte without notifying or hearing the appellants, whose property rights were directly impacted by the decision.
- Background: The case originated from a suit for partition and separate possession of properties originally belonging to one Basayya. The plaintiffs (daughters) claimed a share, while the defendants (the granddaughter and purchasers) contested the claim, asserting the properties were self-acquired by the son, Basalingaiah.
- Lower Court Findings: The Trial Court dismissed the suit, finding that the plaintiffs failed to prove the properties were ancestral. The First Appellate Court concurred that the plaintiffs failed to prove their right to the properties; however, it included observations in Paragraph 24 questioning the validity of certain sale deeds and affirming the ownership and possession of the defendant (Basamma).
- High Court Intervention: Respondent No. 1 (a purchaser) filed a writ petition challenging only the observations in Paragraph 24 of the First Appellate Court’s judgment. The High Court allowed the petition, setting aside those findings after dispensing with the notice to the appellants.
Court’s Reasoning
- Limited Scope of Certiorari: The Supreme Court reiterated that High Courts, when exercising writ jurisdiction under Article 226, do not act as courts of appeal and cannot reweigh evidence or disturb findings of fact reached by a competent lower court, provided those findings are based on relevant material.
- Jurisdictional Overreach: The High Court wrongly concluded that the First Appellate Court’s findings were without evidence, when in fact, the lower court had based its conclusions on pleadings, mutation entries, sale deeds, and the conduct of the parties.
- Violation of Natural Justice: The Court underscored that the appellants were necessary parties to the writ petition. By deciding the matter ex parte without allowing the appellants to be heard, the High Court committed a clear violation of the doctrine of audi alteram partem, causing prejudice to the appellants whose ownership and possession rights were under challenge.
Orders Passed
- The judgment of the High Court was set aside.
- The judgment of the First Appellate Court was restored in its entirety.
The respondents were granted liberty to pursue other legal remedies within three months, with the Court clarifying that limitation periods would not bar such adjudication on the merits.
2026 INSC 712
Basamma & Anr. v. Goparappa and Ors. (D.O.J. 16.07.2026)



