In Madan Lal vs. Suresh Kumar (Deceased) through LRs &Anr., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh set aside an order of the First Appellate Court for a significant procedural impropriety regarding the admission of additional evidence. The Court ruled that an application under Order XLI Rule 27 of the CPC cannot be adjudicated independently or in isolation prior to the final hearing of the main appeal. Reaffirming established Supreme Court precedents, the Court held that the necessity of additional evidence can only be determined when the appellate court examines the entire record during the hearing on merits; therefore, such applications must be taken up and decided alongside the main appeal to ensure a satisfactory pronouncement of judgment.
- Factual Background and Procedural Challenge
The petitioner, Madan Lal, preferred a first appeal against a trial court judgment and decree from 2025. During the pendency of this appeal before the District Judge, Kullu, the petitioner moved an application under Order 41 Rule 27 of the CPC seeking permission to prove a document known as a “Patta” as additional evidence. The First Appellate Court decided this application independently on May 25, 2026, and separately listed the main appeal for a final hearing on a later date. The petitioner challenged this isolated disposal under Article 227 of the Constitution, arguing it was a technical and legal error to decide the application before the main appeal.
- Impropriety of Isolated Disposal
The High Court emphasized that deciding an application for additional evidence prior to hearing the main appeal is legally inappropriate and procedurally flawed. The Court clarified the following principles:
- Stage of Decision: The proper stage to consider an application under Order 41 Rule 27 is at the time of the final hearing of the appeal on its merits.
- Determination of Necessity: It is only when the appellate court delves into the records during the final hearing that it can truly determine if the additional evidence is required to enable it to pronounce judgment or to clear up obscurities in the interest of justice.
- Judicial Discretion: If the court finds the document necessary for a more satisfactory decision, it allows the application; otherwise, it is dismissed at that stage.
- Reliance on Supreme Court Precedents
The High Court’s ruling was buttressed by several landmark Supreme Court decisions:
- State of Rajasthan vs. T.N. Sahani (2001): Established that taking a view on the application before the hearing of the appeal is inappropriate.
- Eastern Equipment & Sales Limited vs. Ing. Yash Kumar Khanna (2008): Reiterated that the appellate court ought to take up the pending appeal along with the application for additional evidence.
- K. Venkataramiah vs. Seetharama Reddy (1963): Clarified the scope of using additional evidence to fill obscurities so the court can pronounce judgment in a satisfactory manner.
- Final Outcome and Directions
Finding that the order dated May 25, 2026, failed to withstand judicial scrutiny, the High Court allowed the petition and set aside the isolated order. The Court issued the following directives:
- Revival of Application: The application under Order 41 Rule 27 CPC was ordered to be revived to its original number.
- Joint Adjudication: The District Judge, Kullu, was requested to take up and decide the application along with the main appeal at the time of its final hearing.
- Fresh Decision: The appellate court must now consider both the appeal and the application afresh in accordance with the law.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 335
Madan Lal V. Suresh Kumar (Deceased) Through Lrs&Anr. (D.O.J. 19.06.2026)
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