Legal Provisions Involved: Order VII Rule 11 of CPC; Section 47 of CPC and Sections 61 to 74 of Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
Judgment by: Supreme Court of India.
Judge/Bench: Justice K. Vinod Chandran and Justice Sanjay Kumar.
Facts
The case involved a property dispute within a business family in Tamil Nadu. A partition deed dated 31 December 2018 was signed by all family members dividing the properties. Shortly after, another document dated 2 January 2019 surfaced, described as a “conciliation award,” signed only by one half-brother. One group claimed the partition was not final and alleged that the conciliation document was later created to block their legal remedies.
Key Legal Provisions
Order VII Rule 11 of CPC; Section 47 of CPC and Sections 61 to 74 of Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
Issues Raised
Whether a civil suit can be rejected at the initial stage simply because the partition deed carries admitted signatures, despite allegations of fraud and coercion.
Arguments
One side argued that the documents were final and binding. The other side claimed they were forced and misled, and that the conciliation award was fabricated.
Judgment
The Supreme Court held that serious allegations of fraud and undue influence require a full trial. It restored the civil suit and directed that the matter be heard properly by the civil court.
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