The case of Dinesh Kumar v. Poonam Vermacenters on the legal principles of abatement under the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) and whether the death of one co-plaintiff causes an entire suit to fail.
Core Legal Principle
The High Court reaffirmed that the death of one of several plaintiffs does not cause a suit or appeal to abate in its entirety if the “right to sue” survives to the remaining plaintiffs. In cases involving co-owners, the estate is considered sufficiently represented by the surviving parties, and technical failures to substitute heirs do not invalidate the entire proceeding.
Factual Background
- The Suit: Two sisters, Poonam Verma and Rano Devi, filed a suit for possession and permanent prohibitory injunction regarding a shop that they inherited from their parents.
- The Tenancy: The defendant, Dinesh Kumar, had originally entered into a tenancy agreement with the plaintiffs’ mother in 2000 but allegedly stopped paying rent and remained in unauthorized possession after the tenancy expired in 2006.
- Procedural Issue: During the trial, plaintiff No. 2 (Rano Devi) died. An application to bring her legal heirs on record was dismissed by the trial court, leading to the suit being abated specifically as it related to her.
- The Appeal: The defendant argued that because the suit property was “inseparable and indivisible,” the dismissal of the application for one plaintiff meant the entire suit had abated automatically.
The High Court’s Findings
Justice Romesh Verma dismissed the defendant’s appeal, relying on Order 22 of the CPC and various Supreme Court precedents:
- Survival of Right to Sue: Under Order 22 Rule 2, if there are multiple plaintiffs and the right to sue survives for the remaining ones, the court must proceed with the case. Since Poonam Verma (plaintiff No. 1) was still on record and shared the same right to the property, the suit could legally continue.
- Representation by Co-owners: The court noted that a co-owner is an owner of the entire property. One co-owner can file a suit to recover property against a stranger (like an unauthorized occupant), and any decree obtained enures to the benefit of all co-owners.
- Substance Over Technicality: The court emphasized that the “entire estate was represented” through the surviving plaintiff. It held that the law does not favor dismissing an entire case on a technicality when the core legal interest is still represented in court.
Conclusion
The High Court found no substantial question of law and upheld the lower courts’ decrees. The defendant was ordered to hand over vacant possession of the shop and pay arrears for use and occupation. The court concluded that the suit did not abate in its entirety just because one sister passed away during the litigation.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 198
Dinesh Kumar V. Poonam Verma (D.O.J. 22.04.2026)
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