Virender Kumar Dubey vs Dhrupdeo Mali on 8 April, 2025

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Patna High Court

Virender Kumar Dubey vs Dhrupdeo Mali on 8 April, 2025

Author: Arun Kumar Jha

Bench: Arun Kumar Jha

          IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT PATNA
           CIVIL MISCELLANEOUS JURISDICTION No.671 of 2022
     ======================================================
     Virender Kumar Dubey Son of Late Bhrigunath Dubey, Resident of Village-
     Sasamusa, P.S.- Kuchaikot, District- Gopalganj.

                                                                 ... ... Petitioner/s

                                        Versus

1.   Dhrupdeo Mali Son of Adalat Manjhi, Resident of Sawnahi Patti, Tola
     Dhum Nagar, P.S.- Fulwaria District- Gopalganj.
2.   Kumari Kavita Wife of Dhrupdeo Mali, Resident of Sawnahi Patti, Tola
     Dhum Nagar, P.S.- Fulwaria District- Gopalganj.
3.   Sima Devi W/o Mukul Kumar Tiwari, Resident of Village- Kotwa, P.S.
     Gopalganj Town, District- Gopalganj.
4.   Sarita Devi W/o Mukul Kumar Tiwari, Resident of Village- Kotwa, P.S.
     Gopalganj Town, District- Gopalganj.
5.   Mukul Kumar Tiwari Son of Late Bharat Tiwari, Resident of Village-
     Kotwa, P.S. Gopalganj Town, District- Gopalganj.
6.   Dr. Subhash Chandra S/o Babu Bacha Prasad Roy, Resident of Village-
     Chhathu Bathua, P.O. and P.S.- Uchakagaon District- Gopalganj
7.   Smt Veena Roy W/o Dr. Subhash Chandra, Resident of Village- Chhathu
     Bathua, P.O. and P.S.- Uchakagaon District- Gopalganj

                                               ... ... Respondent/s
     ======================================================
     Appearance :
     For the Petitioner/s   :      Mr. Chandrakant, Advocate
                                   Mr.Vikash Kumar Shukla, Advocate
     For the Respondent/s   :      Mr. Jitendra Kishore Verma,Advocate
                                   Mr. Ranjan Kumar Srivastava, Advocate
                                   Mr. Anjani Kumar, Advocate
                                   Mr. Abhishek Kumar Srivastava, Advocate
                                   Ms. Kumari Shreya, Advocate
     ======================================================
     CORAM: HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE ARUN KUMAR JHA
     CAV JUDGMENT
      Date : 08-04-2025

                     The instant civil miscellaneous petition has been filed

      by the petitioner for quashing the order dated 16.08.2022 passed

      in Title Suit No. 889 of 2017 by learned Sub Judge-XVI,

      Gopalganj, whereby and whereunder the petition dated
 Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
                                            2/19




         22.03.2022

filed under Order 1 Rule 10 and Section 151 of the

Code of Civil Procedure (for brevity ‘the Code’) for adding the

petitioner as a party defendant has been rejected.

2. Briefly stated, the facts leading to the present case

are that the plaintiffs/respondents 1st set filed Title Suit No. 889

of 2017 on 17.10.2017 before the court of learned Sub Judge-

XVI, Gopalganj seeking declaration that the suit land is the

purchased land of the plaintiffs and had been coming into their

peaceful possession till the time they were dispossessed by the

defendants 1st set/respondents 2nd set who are tresspassers. The

plaintiffs further sought recovery of possession and entry of the

suit land by the defendants 1st set in their sale deed as illegal and

void. The plaintiffs also sought permanent injunction against the

defendants 1st set from making any change over the suit land.

The intervenor/petitioner, on coming to know about pendency of

Title Suit No. 889 of 2017 on 08.03.2022, enquired into the

matter, applied for certified copy of the plaint as well as order

sheets and after obtaining these documents, filed impleadment

petition under Order 1 Rule 10 and Section 151 of the Code for

adding him as party defendant on the ground that the

petitioner is a necessary and proper party having bonafide right,

title and interest over the disputed land. The petitioner put
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forward his case that the land in question appertaining to Khata

No. 130, Khesra No. 1232, 1233 and 1234, area 7 katha 10

dhurs situated in Mauza – Sareya, Ward No. 4, Thana No. 83

under P.S. and District – Gopalganj was khatiyani land of Dal

Sah. On 01.12.1941, Dal Sah executed a registered gift deed in

favour of his daughter Jyotiya and one Bikarma Sah and they

came into peaceful possession over the land in question. Out of

the said land, Jyotiya transferred 2 katha 10 dhurs land to the

grandfather of the petitioner namely, Kamal Dubey on

30.08.1948 and Kamal Dubey came into possession over the

said land. Kamal Dubey died leaving behind his son Bhrigunath

Dubey, who died leaving behind his two sons, the petitioner

Virendra Dubey and co-owner Ravindra Dubey. The petitioner

and his brother came into joint possession on 2 katha 10 dhurs

land. The petitioner raised 4 feet high boundary wall around the

land. The petitioner further submitted that on the basis of the

sale deed of 1948, the petitioner has been coming into title and

possession of the suit land and therefore, he is a necessary party.

However, the plaintiffs/respondent nos. 1 and 2 contested the

claim of the petitioner by filing reply on 11.04.2022 and the

learned trial court after hearing the parties dismissed the

intervention petition of the petitioner vide order dated
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16.08.2022. The said order is under challenge before this Court.

3. Learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that

the impugned order is bad in the eyes of law as well as on facts.

It is an arbitrary and illegal order. The learned trial court

exceeded its jurisdiction in passing the impugned order. The

learned trial court has failed to appreciate that the petitioner is a

necessary and proper party having bonafide right, title and

interest over the suit land. The learned trial court has not

considered that it is the object of the provision under Order 1

Rule 10(2) of the Code to bring on record all the persons who

are necessary parties to the dispute so that dispute may be

finally determined in their presence and multiplicity of

proceeding may be avoided. Learned counsel further submitted

that the learned trial court has failed to consider that the

grandfather of the petitioner had purchased 2 katha 10 dhurs

land by virtue of registered sale deed dated 30.08.1949 and the

same land is the suit property of Title Suit No. 889 of 2017.

Learned counsel further submitted that the plaintiffs have

deliberately not made the petitioner party and the learned trial

court did not take this fact into consideration and rejected the

application for impleadment only on the ground that the

boundary of the land mentioned by the intervenor is different
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from the boundary of the land mentioned in the suit of the

plaintiffs. The learned trial court has further held that the

petitioner did not file on record the document of registered gift

deed dated 01.12.1941 and only advanced his claim on the basis

of the registered sale deed dated 30.08.1948. Learned counsel

further submitted that the learned trial court further missed the

point when it held that the plaintiffs have brought the suit

against the defendants for recovery of possession and there

appears no interest of the intervenor in the present suit.

4. In support of his contention learned counsel for

the petitioner referred to a decision of this Court in the case of

Singheshwar Rai Vs. Babulal Rai and another, reported in

AIR 1980 Patna 187, wherein the learned Single Judge held

that the issues involved in the suit cannot be read as issues

involved between the parties to the suit and held that as opposite

party no. 2 had direct interest in the suit properties, the decision

of the learned Munsif was not bad or wrong that the presence of

opposite party no. 2 as a defendant was essential for

adjudicating upon all the issues involved in the suit effectively

and completely. Learned counsel also referred to a decision of

Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Razia Begum Vs.

Sahebzadi Anwar Begum, reported in AIR 1958 SC 886 which
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was relied by the learned Single Judge. Learned counsel then

referred to a decision of this Court in the case of Shanti Singh

& Ors. Vs. Mr. Jugeshwar Nath Srivastava & Ors., reported in

2024(1) PLJR 493 wherein finding that petitioners have

substantial interest in the property in dispute, they were ordered

to be impleaded as co-appellants relying on the decision of

Kasturi Vs. Iyyamperumal, reported in (2005) 6 SCC 733 and

Mumbai International Airport Pvt. Ltd. Vs. Regency

Convention Centre & Hotels Pvt. Ltd., reported in (2010) 7

SCC 471. Thus, learned counsel submitted that the impugned

order is not sustainable in the eyes of law and same may be set

aside.

5. On the other hand, learned counsel appearing on

behalf of respondent nos. 1 and 2 vehemently contended that

there is no infirmity in the impugned order and the same does

not require any interference. Learned counsel for the

respondents submitted that the suit land originally belonged to

Dal Sah who died leaving behind two daughters, Jyotiya Devi

and Budhiya Devi. Budhiya Devi had a son Bikrama Sah, whose

wife was Parbati Devi and they had 4 sons, Nand Lal Sah,

Mohan Sah, Chote Lal Sah and Brij Lal Sah. The total area of

suit property appertaining to Khata No. 130, Plot Nos. 1232,
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1233 and 1234 is 7 katha 11 dhurs and on 01.12.1941 the

original owner namely, Dal Sah gifted the entire land to his

daughters Jyotiya Devi and Budhani Devi. On 21.06.1983,

Jyotiya Devi and all the legal representatives of deceased

Budhiya Devi sold 2 katha 10 dhurs of land in favour of

defendant nos. 4 and 5 who took their respective possession,

mutated their names in revenue record, constructed their

boundary wall and fixed an iron gate and in boundary of these

sale deeds names of grandfather of intervenor or the intervenor

are not mentioned. Further, on 01.12.1993, Jyotiya Devi gifted 2

katha 13 dhurs of land in favour of her daughter namely,

Laxmina Devi, who came in its peaceful possession. Thereafter,

on 10.06.1994 and 14.08.1997 the legal representatives of

Budhiya Devi sold the remaining land, i.e., 2 katha 7.5 dhurs to

Beena Srivastava and after the death of Beena Srivastava, her

legal representative namely, Rajendra Prasad Srivastava and his

daughter and son sold the land to defendant nos. 1 to 3 on

03.03.2016 (two sale deeds) and on 14.03.2016 (one sale deed).

On 08.04.2015, defendant nos. 4 and 5 sold their purchased land

in favour of plaintiffs/respondents 1st set and handed over

peaceful possession. Accordingly, plaintiffs mutated their names

in revenue record and started their peaceful possession. Learned
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counsel further submitted that some scuffle took place between

the plaintiffs and defendants 1st set with regard to right of

passage in the suit land and defendant no. 3 filed a complaint

case bearing Complaint Case No. 4300 of 2016 in which the

intervenor was a witness and was examined on 18.07.2016 and

he had been fully aware about possession, right and title of the

plaintiffs. The defendants 1st set also filed Title Suit No. 562 of

2017 for easementary right and permanent injunction against the

plaintiffs in which the name of intervenor is missing though

intervenor appeared as a witness in the complaint of defendants

1st set. Learned counsel further submitted that the claim of the

intervenor is based on sale deed executed by Jyotiya Devi in

favour of grandfather of the intervenor dated 30.08.1948 but the

name of grandfather of the intervenor-petitioner has not been

recorded in any revenue record nor he came in possession over

the land in question. Therefore, it is clear that the alleged sale

deed is a forged document and was created at the instance of

defendants 1st set only to delay the disposal of the case. Learned

counsel further submitted that the boundary as mentioned in the

plaint as well as intervention petition are different and

moreover, the intervention petition is based on forged document

and for this reason, the learned trial court has passed a perfectly
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valid order.

6. Learned counsel further submitted that, in fact, the

petitioner has been set up by the defendants 1 st set. Despite

knowing about the pendency of the suit of the

plaintiffs/respondents 1st set, the defendants 1st set did not

appear in the case and set up the intervenor after manufacturing

forged document and the intervention petition was rejected by

the learned trial court. Meanwhile, 4 witnesses have been

examined on behalf of the plaintiffs and vide order dated

28.04.2023, the evidence of the plaintiffs was closed then the

defendants 1st set filed an application on 29.04.2023/09.05.2023

to recall the ex-parte order passed on 03.08.2018. The

intervention petition has been filed to delay the matter though

the intervenor-petitioner has all along been knowing about the

pendency of Title Suit No. 889 of 2017. Learned counsel further

submitted that the petitioner is neither a necessary party nor a

proper party. The alleged sale deed which has been filed by the

petitioner by way of supplementary affidavit never came into

picture anywhere prior to filing of the intervention petition.

Moreover, the petitioner is trying to canvas his own case and if

he is aggrieved, he has his own cause of action and he could

agitate the same by filing an independent suit. The
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plaintiffs/respondents 1st set have not sought any relief against

the petitioner and question involved in the suit can be decided

without making the petitioner party and for this reason the

petitioner is neither a necessary nor proper party and his

presence is not necessary to effectively and completely decide

the suit. Learned counsel further submitted that the petitioner

did not file original sale deed and even before this Court he has

only filed photo copy.

7. Learned counsel referred to a decision of Hon’ble

Supreme Court in the case of Kasturi Vs. Iyyamperumal,

reported in (2005) 6 SCC 733, wherein the Hon’ble Supreme

Court considered who are necessary party or proper party and

held that the test for determining the question who is a

necessary party, are (i) there must be a right to some relief

against some party in respect of the controversy involved in the

proceedings and (ii) no effective decree can be passed in

absence of such party. Learned counsel submitted that in the

present case intervenor-petitioner is not even a proper party

whose presence may enable the court to proceed with the matter

and dispose it of effectively and completely though such person

may not be a necessary party. Learned counsel also referred to

another decision of learned Single Judge of this Court in
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C.W.J.C. No. 8460 of 2014 (Uma Shankar Prasad & Ors. Vs.

The State of Bihar through the Collector & Ors.), wherein the

learned Single Judge held that the plaintiffs filed suit for

declaration of title over the suit property and also mentioned

that cause of action for the suit arose only after receiving a

notice by defendants alleging encroachment by the plaintiffs

over the suit land. The intervenors-petitioners claim their own

independent title denying the title of the plaintiffs as well as

defendants and the learned Single Judge held that relief sought

by plaintiffs is not detrimental to petitioners’ title and interest

which they might have over suit land as the decree to be passed

in suit could not be binding upon them. Learned Single Judge

further held that the person seeking to be added as party in the

suit, must be the person who would be bound by the result of the

suit which may legally affect him by curtailing his legal rights

over the suit property and thus refused to interfere with the

impugned order rejecting the claim of the intervenors-

petitioners.

8. Learned counsel for the respondents relied on two

decisions of this Court wherein this Court refused to allow the

impleadment of such persons who were found to be not

necessary or proper parties. Their presence was not found to be
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necessary before the court to enable the Court to completely,

effectively and adequately adjudicate upon all matters. In the

case of Sunderpati Devi Vs. Most. Kishora Devi & Ors.

passed in Civil Miscellaneous Jurisdiction No. 1933 of 2017,

wherein this Court held that the scope of a suit for partition

cannot be enlarged to include declaration of status for a third

party. Similarly, in the case of Braj Bhushan Deva Vs.

Shambhu Devi and Others passed in Civil Miscellaneous

Jurisdiction No. 605 of 2016, wherein this Court found that

presence of intervenors was not at all necessary in the given

facts and circumstances. Thus, learned counsel submitted that

there is no infirmity in the impugned order and the same may be

affirmed.

9. I have given my thoughtful consideration to the

submission of the parties and have perused the record.

10. Order 1 Rule 10 (2) of the Code reads as under:

“10 (2). Court may strike out or add
parties – The Court may at any stage of the
proceedings, either upon or without the
application of either party, and on such
terms as may appear to the Court to be
just, order that the name of any party
improperly joined, whether as plaintiff or
defendant, be struck out, and that the
name, of any person who ought to have
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been joined, whether as plaintiff or
defendant, or whose presence before the
Court may be necessary in order to enable
the Court effectually and completely to
adjudicate upon and settle all the questions
involved in the suit, be added.”

11. The purpose and scope of Order 1 Rule 10(2) of

the Code has been settled by various decisions of the Hon’ble

Supreme Court. In the case of Mumbai International Airport

(P) Ltd. v. Regency Convention Centre & Hotels (P) Ltd.,

reported in (2010) 7 SCC 417 the Hon’ble Supreme Court has

discussed the law relating to impleadment of the parties. It will

be pertinent to quote paragraphs 13, 14, 15, 22, 25 & 27 of the

said judgment:-

“13. The general rule in regard to impleadment
of parties is that the plaintiff in a suit, being
dominus litis, may choose the persons against
whom he wishes to litigate and cannot be
compelled to sue a person against whom he
does not seek any relief. Consequently, a
person who is not a party has no right to be
impleaded against the wishes of the plaintiff.
But this general rule is subject to the provisions
of Order 1 Rule 10(2) of the Code of Civil
Procedure
(“the Code”, for short), which
provides for impleadment of proper or
necessary parties. The said sub-rule is
extracted below:

Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
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“10. (2) Court may strike out or add parties.–

The court may at any stage of the proceedings,
either upon or without the application of either
party, and on such terms as may appear to the
court to be just, order that the name of any
party improperly joined, whether as plaintiff or
defendant, be struck out, and that the name of
any person who ought to have been joined,
whether as plaintiff or defendant, or whose
presence before the court may be necessary in
order to enable the court effectually and
completely to adjudicate upon and settle all the
questions involved in the suit, be added.”

14. The said provision makes it clear that a
court may, at any stage of the proceedings
(including suits for specific performance),
either upon or even without any application,
and on such terms as may appear to it to be
just, direct that any of the following persons
may be added as a party: (a) any person who
ought to have been joined as plaintiff or
defendant, but not added; or (b) any person
whose presence before the court may be
necessary in order to enable the court to
effectively and completely adjudicate upon and
settle the questions involved in the suit. In
short, the court is given the discretion to add as
a party, any person who is found to be a
necessary party or proper party.

15. A “necessary party” is a person who ought
to have been joined as a party and in whose
absence no effective decree could be passed at
Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
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all by the court. If a “necessary party” is not
impleaded, the suit itself is liable to be
dismissed. A “proper party” is a party who,
though not a necessary party, is a person
whose presence would enable the court to
completely, effectively and adequately
adjudicate upon all matters in dispute in the
suit, though he need not be a person in favour
of or against whom the decree is to be made. If
a person is not found to be a proper or
necessary party, the court has no jurisdiction to
implead him, against the wishes of the plaintiff.
The fact that a person is likely to secure a
right/interest in a suit property, after the suit is
decided against the plaintiff, will not make
such person a necessary party or a proper
party to the suit for specific performance.

22. Let us consider the scope and ambit of
Order 1 Rule 10(2) CPC regarding striking out
or adding parties. The said sub-rule is not
about the right of a non-party to be impleaded
as a party, but about the judicial discretion of
the court to strike out or add parties at any
stage of a proceeding. The discretion under the
sub-rule can be exercised either suo motu or on
the application of the plaintiff or the defendant,
or on an application of a person who is not a
party to the suit. The court can strike out any
party who is improperly joined. The court can
add anyone as a plaintiff or as a defendant if it
finds that he is a necessary party or proper
party. Such deletion or addition can be without
Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
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any conditions or subject to such terms as the
court deems fit to impose. In exercising its
judicial discretion under Order 1 Rule 10(2) of
the Code, the court will of course act according
to reason and fair play and not according to
whims and caprice.

25. In other words, the court has the discretion
to either to allow or reject an application of a
person claiming to be a proper party,
depending upon the facts and circumstances
and no person has a right to insist that he
should be impleaded as a party, merely because
he is a proper party.

27. On a careful examination of the facts of this
case, we find that the appellant is neither a
necessary party nor a proper party. As noticed
above, the appellant is neither a purchaser nor
the lessee of the suit property and has no right,
title or interest therein. The first respondent-
plaintiff in the suit has not sought any relief
against the appellant. The presence of the
appellant is not necessary for passing an
effective decree in the suit for specific
performance. Nor is its presence necessary for
complete and effective adjudication of the
matters in issue in the suit for specific
performance filed by the first respondent-

plaintiff against AAI. A person who expects to
get a lease from the defendant in a suit for
specific performance in the event of the suit
being dismissed, cannot be said to be a person
having some semblance of title in the property
Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
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in dispute”.

12. Further, the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the

case of Kasturi v. Iyyamperumal (supra) held that for

determining the question who is a necessary party, the tests are

(i) there must be a right to some relief against some party in

respect of the controversy involved in the proceedings and (ii)

no effective decree can be passed in absence of such party. On

the other hand, a proper party is one whose presence may enable

the court to effectively and completely dispose of the matter.

13. Now coming to the facts of this case, the

intervenor-petitioner seeks impleadment on the ground that the

plaintiffs/respondents 1st set have instituted the suit against

defendants 1st set/respondents with regard to the suit property

which is the property of the intervenor-petitioner. Now, the

learned trial court did not allow the impleadment of the

intervenor-petitioner mainly on the ground that the boundary of

the property of the plaintiffs/respondents 1st set are different.

Further, the fact has been noted that the total area of the suit

plots were 7 katha 2 dhurs whereas both the plaintiffs and

defendants are claiming 2 katha 10 dhurs land. Thus there is

doubt over the identity of the suit property that the property of

the plaintiffs and the property of the intervenor are the same.
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Further, the learned trial court has also taken note of the fact that

the intervenor has not produced the document dated 01.12.1941

making the claim of the intervenor-petitioner suspect. Further

more, the plaintiffs have not sought any relief against the

intervenor and are not claiming any right to some sort of relief

against him in respect of the dispute. Further, the court can pass

effective decree on the basis of the claim of the parties to the

suit and not dependent upon the intervention of the intervenor

for passing such decree. It is evident from the record that the

intervenor-petitioner has set up his own independent title over

the suit land and has denied the title of both the plaintiffs as well

as defendants. Even if the suit of the plaintiffs is decreed, the

same would hardly affect the right, title and interest of the

intervenor and in other words, it would not detrimental to the

interest of the intervenor-petitioner as the decree would not be

binding upon him. The result of the litigation would not affect

the intervenor legally and would not curtail his legal rights. The

intervenor-petitioner wants to further his own cause by seeking

impleadment but he is free to chart his own course by instituting

an independent suit for asserting his claim. But under the

provisions of Order 1 Rule 10(2) of the Code, the intervenor-

petitioner could not be joined as a defendant in the present case
Patna High Court C.Misc. No.671 of 2022 dt.08-04-2025
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as he is only a busy body who is trying to intervene in the

matter.

14. In the light of discussion made, I am of the view

that none of decisions cited by learned counsel for the petitioner

is of any help to the case of the petitioner for the simple reason

that facts of those cases are quite different from the facts of the

present case.

15. Having regard to the facts and circumstances and

discussion made, I do not find any error of jurisdiction in

passing the impugned order by the learned trial court and hence,

the order dated 16.08.2022 is affirmed. Accordingly, the present

petition stands dismissed.

(Arun Kumar Jha, J)

DKS/-

AFR/NAFR                AFR
CAV DATE                28.01.2025
Uploading Date          08.04.2025
Transmission Date       NA
 

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