Chowdamma (Dead) By L.R vs Venkatappa (Dead) By Lrs on 25 August, 2025

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Supreme Court of India

Chowdamma (Dead) By L.R vs Venkatappa (Dead) By Lrs on 25 August, 2025

Author: Prashant Kumar Mishra

Bench: Prashant Kumar Mishra, Sanjay Karol

2025 INSC 1038                                                            REPORTABLE

                                       IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                                       CIVIL APPEAL NO. 11330 OF 2011


               Chowdamma (D) by LR and                                 ….Appellant(s)
               Another

                                                     Versus

               Venkatappa (D) by LRs and                               ….Respondent(s)
               Another


                                                JUDGMENT

PRASHANT KUMAR MISHRA, J.

1. This Appeal calls in question the impugned order dated

28.10.2010 passed by the High Court of Karnataka at Bangalore in

Regular First Appeal No.935 of 2005, whereby the High Court allowed

the said appeal filed by the plaintiffs and set aside the judgment of the

learned Civil Judge (Senior Division) Holalkere, dated 24.03.2005 in

O.S No.102/2001, consequently decreed the suit for partition filed by

the plaintiffs.

2. The defendants in O.S.No.102/2001 are the appellants herein,

and the plaintiffs are respondents. The parties shall be referred to as
Signature Not Verified

per their position before the Trial Court for convenience.
Digitally signed by
NAVEEN D
Date: 2025.08.25
19:12:48 IST
Reason:

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 1 of 25
The genealogical chart germane to the present dispute is as

under:

FACTUAL MATRIX

3. The case of the plaintiffs is that their grandfather, namely

Thimmabovi Vellappa, had two sons: Dasabovi @ Dasappa and

Venkatappa. Dasabovi had two wives. The first wife, Bheemakka @

Sathyakka, is the mother of the plaintiffs. The second wife,

Chowdamma, is defendant No.1, and their son is defendant No.2.

Dasabovi died about five years prior to the filing of the suit, leaving

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 2 of 25
behind plaintiff Nos.1 and 2 and defendant Nos.1 and 2. The suit

schedule lands bearing Survey Nos.39/1B, 149, 41/lP, 37/1, 37/lA,

and 29/9, and the house bearing No.38, situated in Devigere and

Kallahally village, Hosadurga Taluk.

4. About five years prior to the filing of the suit, during the lifetime

of Dasabovi’s father, the properties were divided between the father of

the plaintiffs and his brother, Venkatappa. As a consequence, the suit

schedule lands and the house property fell into the share of Dasabovi.

After the partition, the plaintiffs became the manager of the joint

family properties, and both the plaintiffs and the defendants were

cultivating the suit schedule properties.

5. During the lifetime of Dasabovi, another property bearing No.

37/1 of Kallahally Village, Hosadurga, was purchased out of joint

family funds and in the name of the joint family. However, the said

property was registered in the name of defendant No.1 (Chowdamma).

6. After the birth of plaintiff Nos.1 and 2 to the first wife of

Dasabovi, he fell in love with defendant No.1 (Chowdamma) and

entered into a relationship with her. After some time, she was brought

into his house and began living with him as his wife. In view of the

second wife entering the house, the first wife and her children were

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 3 of 25
driven out. Consequently, Bheemakka, the first wife, along with the

plaintiffs, went to her paternal home at Antharagange Village.

7. Even though the first wife and her children left the house of

Dasabovi, he continued to visit them on several occasions. After the

death of Dasabovi, the plaintiffs also visited their father’s residence at

Galirangaiahnahatti Village, as they were in joint possession and

enjoyment of the suit schedule properties.

8. It is alleged that defendant No.1, who was a Panchayat member,

exerted her influence, and got the names of herself and her children

entered in the revenue records. Based on the change in the revenue

entries, the defendants declined to acknowledge the plaintiffs as being

in joint possession of the suit schedule properties. Hence, the

plaintiffs were compelled to demand their share in the family

properties. Having been denied the same, the plaintiffs have filed

O.S.No.102/2001 seeking partition of the suit schedule property to

the extent of half share, along with other consequential reliefs.

9. The defendants contended that the defendant No.1 is the only

wife of the deceased Dasabovi, and hence, the plaintiffs have no right,

title, or interest over the suit schedule properties. They denied the

marriage of Dasabovi with the plaintiffs’ mother and claimed that they

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 4 of 25
inherited the properties pursuant to a partition effected between the

deceased Dasabovi and his brother Venkatappa.

10. The Trial Court, on framing six issues, dismissed the suit of the

plaintiffs. Aggrieved by the same, the plaintiffs filed a Regular First

Appeal being Regular First Appeal No.935/2005 before the High

Court. The High Court, after relying on the evidence of P.W.2

(Hanumanthappa), which established the relationship of the plaintiffs’

mother with the deceased Dasabovi and observing that the defendants’

reliance was based solely on denial, further noted that defendant No.1

had deliberately chosen not to enter the witness box.

11. Considering the above, the High Court set aside the judgment of

the Trial Court in O.S. No.102/2001 and decreed the suit in favour of

the plaintiffs. Aggrieved thereby, the present Appeal has been

preferred by the defendants.

SUBMISSIONS

12. The learned counsel for the defendants/appellants submitted

that the High Court clearly erred in setting aside a well-

reasoned judgment and decree rendered by the Trial Court. It is

contended that the plaintiffs/respondents were admittedly not

residing in the village where the suit schedule property is situated.

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Hence, their claim that they were in joint possession of the suit

schedule property is unsustainable. It is further contended that the

plaintiffs/respondents have miserably failed to adduce cogent and

reliable evidence to prove that the plaintiffs’ mother was married to

Dasabovi. Mere submission of genealogical tree is not a proof of

factum of marriage. It is strenuously urged that the High Court was

wholly unjustified in drawing adverse inference for defendant no.1’s

failure to depose as she was medically unfit due to arthritis. It is also

argued that the plaintiffs failed to discharge the burden of proving

existence of a valid marriage between their mother and Dasabovi. It is

further argued that the High Court failed to appreciate that the

revenue records are in the name of the defendants and despite

challenge by the plaintiffs, the higher revenue authorities dismissed

their claim holding that they have failed to prove that they are the

legal heirs of deceased Dasabovi.

13. Per contra, the learned counsel for the plaintiffs/respondents

has argued that the Trial Court recorded a perverse finding in respect

of the marriage of plaintiffs’ mother with Dasabovi despite there being

sufficient evidence on record. In such a view of the matter, the High

Court has rightly set aside the judgment of the Trial Court which does

not warrant interference in this Appeal. According to the learned

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 6 of 25
counsel for the plaintiffs/respondents, a reading of plaintiffs’ evidence,

particularly the evidence of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), would clearly

prove that the plaintiffs’ mother was married to Dasabovi. Defendant

No.1 has not entered the witness box to disapprove the said fact. The

High Court has rightly concluded that the plaintiffs’ mother was

married to Dasabovi. It is further argued that the revenue records are

neither proof of title nor the said could be used to prove the factum of

marriage. The plaintiffs having successfully discharged their burden

of proof, the onus shifted on the defendants which was not discharged

by them. Therefore, the finding regarding marriage is unimpeachable.

The learned counsel for the respondents would pray for dismissal of

this Appeal.

ANALYSIS

14. We have heard the learned counsel for both the parties and

perused the material available on record.

15. The case of the defendants is that one Thimmabovi Vellappa had

two sons, namely Dasabovi and Venkatappa. A partition was effected

in the year 1962-1963 and Items Nos. 1 to 3 fell to the share of

Dasabovi. It is further stated that Items Nos. 4 to 6 were subsequently

purchased by Dasabovi through registered sale deeds. The defendants

contend that the deceased Dasabovi never married the mother of the

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 7 of 25
plaintiffs, and that defendant No.1, Chowdamma, is the only wife of

the deceased Dasabovi. The defendants further submitted that the

plaintiffs were never in possession of the suit schedule properties, and

denied that the plaintiffs and defendants were residing together in

Galirangaiahnahatti or Kallahalli jointly.

16. The plaintiffs, on the other hand, contend that their mother was

the first wife of the deceased Dasabovi. They stated that, after he

married a younger woman, their mother was forced to leave the

matrimonial home and reside at her parental house. It is admitted by

both parties that the properties standing in the name of the deceased

Dasabovi were ancestral in nature.

17. The principal issue that arises for our consideration is whether

the plaintiffs have succeeded in establishing a valid marital

relationship between their mother, Bheemakka @ Sathyakka, and the

deceased Dasabovi, primarily on the basis of the oral testimony of

P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa).

18. The High Court, while considering the issue of valid marital

relationship between the plaintiffs’ mother and the deceased Dasabovi,

relied on the evidence of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa). The witness stated

in his evidence that he knows the families of both the plaintiffs and

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 8 of 25
the defendants. He further stated in his evidence that deceased

Dasabovi married the plaintiffs’ mother, Bheemakka, and through her,

begot plaintiff Nos. 1 and 2. Later, the deceased Dasabovi married

defendant no.1, which led to the plaintiffs’ mother being ousted from

the matrimonial home. Thereafter, she resided in her parental home in

Antharagange village. The witness further deposed that the deceased

Dasabovi would regularly visit the plaintiffs and their mother at

Antharagange village. P.W.2 also stated that even after the death of

the deceased, the plaintiffs used to visit their father’s village to attend

the agricultural operations regularly.

19. It is observed that, both P.W.1 (Venkatappa) and D.W.1

(Balachandrappa) being interested witnesses, their evidence cannot

be relied upon to establish the relation between the deceased Dasabovi

and the plaintiffs’ mother. Further, D.W.3 (Thimmappa), who is the

son of the sister of the father of Dasabovi, supports the claim of the

defendants. However, he has no knowledge of any marriage between

the deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother. D.W.4 (V.

Thimmappa), who is the son of Dasabovi’s brother, has also deposed

on similar lines with D.W.3.

20. In the present case, there is a paucity of documentary and

contemporaneous material to conclusively establish the marital

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 9 of 25
relationship between the deceased Dasabovi and the mother of the

plaintiffs. In such circumstances, the best possible evidence assumes

crucial significance. The testimony of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa) is the

sole evidence adduced in support of the existence of such a

relationship. Accordingly, the evidentiary value of the testimony of the

P.W.2 must be examined in light of the principles laid down under

Section 50 of the Indian Evidence Act 18721.

PROOF OF RELATIONSHIP

21. Section 50 of the Evidence Act makes provision regarding

“Opinion on relationship, when relevant”. The said provision is

reproduced hereunder for ready reference:

“50. Opinion on relationship, when relevant.––When the
Court has to form an opinion as to the relationship of one
person to another, the opinion, expressed by conduct, as to
the existence of such relationship, or any person who, as a
member of the family or otherwise, has special means of
knowledge on the subject, is a relevant fact:

Provided that such opinion shall not be sufficient to prove a
marriage in proceedings under the Indian Divorce Act, 1869 (4
of 1869), or in prosecution under sections 494, 495, 497 or
498 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860).

Illustrations

(a) The question is, whether A and B, were married.
The fact that they were usually received and treated by their
friends as husband and wife, is relevant.

(b) The question is, whether A was the legitimate son of B. The
fact that A was always treated as such by members of the
family, is relevant.”

1 For short, “the Evidence Act

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 10 of 25

22. The principle underlying Section 50 of the Evidence Act has been

explained by this Court in Dolgobinda Paricha v. Nimai Charan

Misra and Ors.2, wherein this Court observed thus:

“(6)….when the court has to form an opinion as to the
relationship of one person to another the opinion expressed by
conduct as to the existence of such relationship of any person
who has special means of knowledge on the subject of that
relationship is a relevant fact. The two illustrations appended
to the section clearly bring out the true scope and effect of the
section. It appears to us that the essential requirements of the
section are — (1) there must be a case where the court has to
form an opinion as to the relationship of one person to
another; (2) in such a case, the opinion expressed by conduct
as to the existence of such relationship is a relevant fact; (3)
but the person whose opinion expressed by conduct is relevant
must be a person who as a member of the family or otherwise
has special means of knowledge on the particular subject of
relationship; in other words, the person must fulfil the
condition laid down in the latter part of the section. If the
person fulfils that condition, then what is relevant is his
opinion expressed by conduct. Opinion means something more
than mere retailing of gossip or of hearsay; it means judgment
or belief, that is, a belief or a conviction resulting from what
one thinks on a particular question. Now, the “belief” or
conviction may manifest itself in conduct or behaviour which
indicates the existence of the belief or opinion. …”

23. P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), aged 75 years and a resident of

Antharagange village, Bhadravati Taluk, in his evidence dated

08.02.2005 affirmed having personal knowledge of the relationship

between the deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother. He stated

that he was acquainted with both the plaintiffs’ mother and defendant

No.1. He unequivocally stated that the deceased Dasabovi married the

plaintiffs’ mother, Bheemakka, 57 years ago at Antharagange village,

in accordance with the prevailing customs of their community.

2 AIR 1959 SC 914.

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 11 of 25

24. P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa) further asserted that the plaintiffs’

mother was the first wife of the deceased Dasabovi, and that the

deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother resided at

Galirangaiahnahatti, where the plaintiffs were born. He stated that the

deceased Dasabovi later brought defendant No. 1 into the household,

and at her instance, the plaintiffs were ousted, compelling them to

reside at Antharagange village. P.W.2 also testified that the deceased

Dasabovi visited the Antharagange village on several occasions. Even

after his demise, the plaintiffs continued to visit the deceased’s village

to attend agricultural operations.

25. The testimony of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), being that of a person

residing in the same village and having a long-standing familiarity

with both the plaintiffs and the defendants, coupled with his

awareness of the events pertaining to the relationship between the

deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother, cannot be dismissed as

mere hearsay. On the contrary, it reflects a narration of events

personally witnessed or known to him directly. Such evidence, being

rooted in personal knowledge, falls within the ambit of Section 50 of

the Evidence Act.

PROOF OF PEDIGREE

26. At this juncture, it is appropriate to refer to the genealogical tree

Ex.P-7, which has been produced by the plaintiffs. The genealogical

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 12 of 25
tree outlines the plaintiffs’ descent from the deceased Dasabovi

through his first wife, Bheemakka. It also reflects the second branch

of the family, namely, the first defendant Chowdamma, the second

wife and the second defendant (son born through the second wife).

27. This Court in State of Bihar v. Radha Krishna Singh and

Ors.3 emphasized:

“194. Before, however, opening this chapter it may be
necessary to restate the norms and the principles
governing the proof of a pedigree by oral evidence in the
light of which the said evidence would have to be
examined by us. It is true that in considering the oral
evidence regarding a pedigree a purely mathematical
approach cannot be made because where a long line of
descent has to be proved spreading over a century, it is
obvious that the witnesses who are examined to depose to
the genealogy would have to depend on their special
means of knowledge which may have come to them
through their ancestors but, at the same time, there is a
great risk and a serious danger involved in relying solely
on the evidence of witnesses given from pure memory
because the witnesses who are interested normally have a
tendency to draw more from their imagination or turn and
twist the facts which they may have heard from their
ancestors in order to help the parties for whom they are
deposing. The court must, therefore safeguard that the
evidence of such witnesses may not be accepted as is
based purely on imagination or an imaginary or illusory
source of information rather than special means of
knowledge as required by law. The oral testimony of the
witnesses on this matter is bound to be hearsay and their
evidence is admissible as an exception to the general rule
where hearsay evidence is not admissible. …

195. In order to appreciate the evidence of such
witnesses, the following principles should be kept in
mind:

“(1) The relationship or the connection however close
it may be, which the witness bears to the persons
whose pedigree is sought to be deposed by him.

3 (1983) 3 SCC 118

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 13 of 25
(2) The nature and character of the special means of
knowledge through which the witness has come to
know about the pedigree.

(3) The interested nature of the witness concerned.
(4) The precaution which must be taken to rule out
any false statement made by the witness post litem
motam or one which is derived not by means of
special knowledge but purely from his imagination,
and
(5) The evidence of the witness must be substantially
corroborated as far as time and memory admit.”

28. Although in the present dispute, P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa) does

not expressly affirm or refer to the genealogical chart marked as

Ex.P.7, his testimony neither deviates from nor contradicts the familial

relationships outlined therein. On the contrary, his account is broadly

consistent with the structure depicted in the chart. P.W.2 stated with

familiarity regarding the plaintiffs’ descent and inter se relationships

within the family.

29. Though P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa) is not a blood relative of either

party, he demonstrated long-standing familiarity with both the

plaintiffs and deceased Dasabovi. His belonging to the same village as

the plaintiffs reflects community-level proximity and sustained

acquaintance with the familial relations in issue. This satisfies the

statutory requirement of “special means of knowledge” under Section

50 of the Evidence Act. The specificity of his statements, particularly

in identifying the relationship of plaintiffs’ mother with the deceased

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 14 of 25
Dasabovi, indicates that he speaks from personal observation and not

speculative knowledge.

30. There is no material on record to suggest that P.W.2

(Hanumanthappa) is an interested witness. His deposition is free from

embellishment and stood the cross-examination. There is no

indication that his testimony was tailored to suit the litigation or

introduced as an afterthought (Post litem motam). The narrative

appears to be rooted in long-standing village familiarity and reflects

natural continuity.

31. Thus, in the totality of circumstances, and particularly in the

absence of contemporaneous documentary evidence, the evidence of

P.W.2 assumes evidentiary significance in establishing the nature of

the relationship between the deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’

mother. His evidence is consistent with Section 50 of the Evidence Act

and is being rooted in personal knowledge and long-standing

acquaintance with both the plaintiffs and defendants.

32. It is further fortified by the fact that P.W.2’s testimony was

unimpeached in the cross-examination and warrants an inference in

favour of the subsistence of a valid marital relationship between the

deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother. Furthermore, the

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 15 of 25
plaintiffs’ regular visit to the deceased’s village, even after his demise,

corroborates the factum of cultivation of the suit lands by the

plaintiffs.

33. Though Ex.P-7, by itself, does not constitute conclusive proof, it

operates as corroborative evidence and, when read along with the oral

testimony of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), it supports the inference of a

valid marital relation between the deceased Dasabovi and the

plaintiffs’ mother.

PRESUMPTION OF MARRIAGE

34. At this juncture, it becomes imperative to address the question

as to whether the relationship between the deceased Dasabovi and the

plaintiffs’ mother can be presumed to be a valid marital union, in the

absence of formal documentary proof.

35. It would be beneficial to refer to Badri Prasad v. Dy. Director

of Consolidation and Ors.4 wherein this Court held as follows:

“…. A strong presumption arises in favour of wedlock where
the partners have lived together for a long spell as husband
and wife. Although the presumption is rebuttable, a heavy
burden lies on him who seeks to deprive the relationship of
legal origin. Law leans in favour of legitimacy and frowns upon
bastardy. …”

4 (1978) 3 SCC 527

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 16 of 25

36. Similarly, in Andrahennedige Dinohamy and Anr. v.

Wijetunge Liyanapatabendige Balahamy and Ors.5, wherein the

Privy Council observed that:

“….where a man and woman are proved to have lived together
as man and wife, the law will presume, unless the contrary be
clearly proved, that they were living together in consequence of
a valid marriage and not in a state of concubinage”.

37. In Mohabbat Ali Khan (Plaintiff) v. Mahomed Ibrahim Khan

and Ors. (Defendants)6, the Privy Council observed that:

“… The law presumes in favour of marriage and against
concubinage when a man and a woman have cohabited
continuously for a number of years. …”

38. The foregoing authorities indicate that the legal position

enunciates a presumption in favour of a marriage where a man and

woman have engaged in prolonged and continuous cohabitation. Such

a presumption, though rebuttable in nature, can only be displaced by

unimpeachable evidence. Any circumstance that weakens this

presumption ought not to be ignored by the Court. The burden lies

heavily on the party seeking to question the cohabitation and to

deprive the relationship of legal sanctity.

39. It can be elicited from the evidence of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa)

that the deceased Dasabovi was regularly visiting the plaintiffs’ mother

and plaintiff Nos.1 and 2 at Antharagange village. A reasonable

5 1927 SCC OnLine PC 51
6 1929 SCC OnLine PC 21

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 17 of 25
presumption can, therefore, be drawn that the deceased Dasabovi

maintained the relationship with the plaintiffs’ mother even after

marrying defendant No.1. This, in turn, gives rise to a presumption

that the deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother have lived as

husband and wife.

40. Such prolonged cohabitation, coupled with the testimony of

P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), attracts a strong presumption in favour of a

valid wedlock. Although the presumption is rebuttable, the onus lies

on defendant No. 1 to disprove the legitimacy of the relationship. In

the present case, defendant No. 1, except for mere denial, has not

substantiated any material, oral or documentary, to rebut the

presumption of a valid marriage between the deceased Dasabovi and

the plaintiffs’ mother.

41. It is a well-settled principle that the burden of proof lies upon

the party who asserts a fact. In the present case, the plaintiffs have

positively asserted that the deceased Dasabovi had a valid marital

relationship with their mother. This assertion is supported by the oral

testimony of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), the consistent conduct of the

deceased Dasabovi in regularly visiting the plaintiffs’ residence, and

the absence of any contrary material from defendant No.1.

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42. In view of the above, this Court is of the opinion that the

plaintiffs have discharged the burden of proof placed upon them. They

have sufficiently established that the deceased Dasabovi lived with

their mother, Bheemakka @ Sathyakka, as husband and wife.

BURDEN OF PROOF AND ONUS OF PROOF

43. This Court in Anil Rishi v. Gurbaksh Singh7 observed thus:

“19. There is another aspect of the matter which should be
borne in mind. A distinction exists between burden of proof
and onus of proof. The right to begin follows onus probandi. It
assumes importance in the early stage of a case. The question
of onus of proof has greater force, where the question is, which
party is to begin. Burden of proof is used in three ways: (i) to
indicate the duty of bringing forward evidence in support of a
proposition at the beginning or later; (ii) to make that of
establishing a proposition as against all counter-evidence; and

(iii) an indiscriminate use in which it may mean either or both
of the others. The elementary rule in Section 101 is inflexible.

In terms of Section 102 the initial onus is always on the
plaintiff and if he discharges that onus and makes out a case
which entitles him to a relief, the onus shifts to the defendant
to prove those circumstances, if any, which would disentitle
the plaintiff to the same.”

44. Also, in Addagada Raghavamma and Anr. v. Addagada

Chenchamma and Anr.8, this Court observed as follows:

“12. … There is an essential distinction between burden of proof
and onus of proof : burden of proof lies upon the person who
has to prove a fact and it never shifts, but the onus of proof
shifts. …Such considerations, having regard to the
circumstances of a particular case, may shift the onus of
proof. Such a shifting of onus is a continuous process in the
evaluation of evidence. …”

7 (2006) 5 SCC 558
8 1963 SCC OnLine SC 37

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 19 of 25

45. As it is seen that the plaintiffs have successfully discharged their

burden of proof regarding the factum of marriage, the onus now shifts

to the defendants to rebut the same.

46. The defendants, except for denying the marriage between the

deceased Dasabovi and the plaintiffs’ mother, have not produced any

oral or documentary evidence to challenge the legal sanctity of the said

marriage. The contention that the plaintiffs’ mother did not belong to

the same caste as the deceased Dasabovi, is wholly bereft of any proof

or material. In the absence of the same, the said assertion collapses

merely into speculation.

47. The defendants have produced a genealogical chart marked as

Ex.D-2, which refers only to themselves and the deceased Dasabovi,

while omitting the plaintiffs and their mother. In contrast, Ex-P-7,

produced by the plaintiffs, includes both the plaintiffs and the

defendants, presenting a more consistent family structure. The

defendants’ failure to justify the exclusion of the plaintiffs in Ex.D-2

undermines the credibility of their denial.

48. It is also noted that it is not the case of the defendants that the

plaintiffs were born from a marriage between the first wife,

Bheemakka, and any other man. In view of the same, it can be

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 20 of 25
conclusively held that the defendants failed to discharge their onus to

disprove the factum of a valid marriage between the plaintiffs’ mother

and the deceased Dasabovi.

REVENUE RECORDS NOT PROOF OF TITLE

49. In the absence of any substantive rebuttal, the defendants seek

refuge in the revenue records. However, their reliance on the revenue

records (Ex.P1-P6) is of no avail, as such records only hold

presumptive value and don’t confer title. This Court in Suraj Bhan

and Ors. v. Financial Commissioner and Ors.9 observed thus:

“9. … It is well settled that an entry in revenue records does
not confer title on a person whose name appears in record-of-
rights. It is settled law that entries in the revenue records
or jamabandi have only “fiscal purpose” i.e. payment of land
revenue, and no ownership is conferred on the basis of such
entries. So far as title to the property is concerned, it can only
be decided by a competent civil court (vide Jattu Ram v.
Hakam Singh
, (1993) 4 SCC 403). …”

PARTIES FAILURE TO ENTER WITNESS BOX: CONSEQUENCES

50. The failure of the defendants to substantiate their claims

through documentary evidence is eclipsed by a more consequential

omission. In a case where the principal controversy turns on matters

lying within her exclusive personal knowledge, the silence of defendant

No.1, her absence from the witness box, is not a procedural lapse but

a calculated withdrawal from scrutiny.

9 (2007) 6 SCC 186

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 21 of 25

51. The conspicuous silence of defendant no.1 strikes not merely as

omission but as deliberate evasion. Defendant No. 1, who lies at the

heart of the controversy, chose not to step into the witness box and

depose regarding the relationship between the plaintiffs’ mother and

her husband. Her testimony bore direct relevance not only to the

status of plaintiffs’ mother but also her own position. The only

justification advanced was that defendant No.1, being an octogenarian

and suffering from arthritis, was unable to attend the Court

proceedings.

52. However, this defence is conclusively dismantled by the record

itself. The deposition of D.W.1 (Balachandrappa) clearly indicates that

defendant No. 1 was physically present in the Court during the

examination of D.W.2 (G.V. Venkatappa), D.W.3 (Thimmappa) and

D.W.4 (V. Thimmappa). It further emerges that defendant No.1 was

also present in the Court when the evidence of P.W.1 (Venkatappa)

was being recorded. If defendant No.1 was capable of attending the

Court on multiple occasions, no explanation remains for her failure to

offer her own testimony, except for calculated restraint.

53. This inference is inescapable. This is not a case of medical

inability but of deliberate silence. In civil proceedings, particularly

where the facts lie exclusively within the personal knowledge of the

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 22 of 25
party, the refusal to enter the witness box carries grave evidentiary

consequences.

54. This principle is neither novel nor uncertain. This Court in

Vidhyadhar v. Manikrao and Anr.10 held thus:

“17. Where a party to the suit does not appear in the witness-
box and states his own case on oath and does not offer himself
to be cross-examined by the other side, a presumption would
arise that the case set up by him is not correct …. ”

55. The present case is a compelling invocation of the above

principle. Defendant No.1, though physically present in the Court

during the trial, abstained from stepping into the witness box to rebut

the plaintiffs’ assertions — assertions that strike at the very core of

the dispute. In the absence of cogent medical evidence to support her

alleged incapacity, her abstention from the witness box constitutes

deliberate circumvention of the evidentiary burden resting upon her.

56. In the present factual matrix, the adverse presumption under

Section 114(g) of the Evidence Act is inevitable.

57. This Court cannot overlook that defendant No. 1, while central to

the controversy, chose not only to abstain from entering the witness

box but also wilfully bypassed the statutory remedy available to those

pleading physical incapacity.

10 (1999) 3 SCC 573

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 23 of 25

58. Order XXVI, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908,

permits the recording of evidence through a commission in cases of

age or infirmity. Yet, no application was filed invoking the said

provision, nor was any explanation tendered for its non-invocation. In

a dispute where the foundational facts lie squarely within her

exclusive knowledge, such omission assumes critical significance. Her

refusal to depose, despite the existence of a procedural safeguard

specifically tailored to her alleged condition, cannot be dismissed as

inadvertent. Rather, it reflects a conscious evasion from the

evidentiary process, compounded by her unexplained failure to avail

an accessible legal alternative, is not a neutral act. It constitutes wilful

shielding from judicial scrutiny.

59. A Court of law cannot offer refuge to studied silence where a

duty to disclose exists. The plaintiffs anchored their claim in

measured and unwavering testimony of P.W.2 (Hanumanthappa), an

account rooted in personal knowledge and long-standing familiarity,

which withstood the rigours of cross-examination. His evidence,

unshaken and consistent, found further corroboration in the

genealogical chart presented by the plaintiffs. It, therefore, stands

established that the plaintiffs have discharged the evidentiary burden

imposed upon them by law. In contrast, the defendants, bereft of

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 24 of 25
probative material or candour, resorted solely to denials. When

measured against the touchstone of preponderance of probabilities,

the scales unambiguously tilt in favour of the plaintiffs.

60. It is our firm opinion the impugned judgment dated 28.10.2010

passed by the High Court of Karnataka in Regular First Appeal

No.935/2005 does not suffer from any infirmity whatsoever so as to

warrant interference by this Court.

61. Hence, the present Appeal fails and is dismissed as being devoid

of merit.

No order as to costs.

………………………………………..J.
(SANJAY KAROL)

.……………………………………….J.
(PRASHANT KUMAR MISHRA)

NEW DELHI;

AUGUST 25, 2025.

C.A. NO. 11330 OF 2011 Page 25 of 25



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