Can a Purported Successor Company Be Impleaded as a Necessary and Proper Party in a Service-Charge Recovery Suit?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number C.A. No.-000046-000047 – 2026
Diary Number 9053/2022
Judge Name HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PANKAJ MITHAL
Bench HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PANKAJ MITHAL; HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE S.V.N. BHATTI
Precedent Value Binding authority on necessary and proper party tests under Order I Rule 10 CPC
Overrules / Affirms Affirms
Type of Law Civil Procedure; Companies Act (Part IX)
Questions of Law
  • Whether a company claiming successorship under Part IX of the Companies Act is a necessary and proper party to a suit for recovery of service charges
  • Whether a High Court, in exercise of supervisory jurisdiction under Article 227, may set aside an interlocutory impleadment order as if sitting in appeal
Ratio Decidendi
  1. A “necessary party” is one without whom no effective decree can be passed; a “proper party” is one whose presence enables a complete and final decision but who need not be in favour of or against whom decree is made.
  2. A plaintiff as dominus litis cannot be compelled to add a defendant against its wishes unless the party proves necessity.
  3. A certificate of incorporation does not conclusively establish successorship under Part IX, especially when statutory conditions (seven or more partners, execution of deeds) are not satisfied and the predecessor continues to exist.
  4. Appellant’s late impleadment (nine years after knowledge) and absence of any relief claimed against it show it is neither necessary nor proper party.
  5. High Court’s supervisory intervention, though generally sparing, was justified to correct an incorrect interlocutory order.
Judgments Relied Upon
  • Ramesh Hirachand Kundanmal v. Municipal Corporation of Greater Bombay (1992)
  • Kasturi v. Iyyamperumal (2005)
  • Mumbai International Airport (P) Ltd. v. Regency Convention Centre & Hotels (2010)
  • Vidur Impex & Traders (P) Ltd. v. Tosh Apartments (2012)
  • Kanaklata Das v. Naba Kumar Das (2018)
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court
  • Established tests under Order I Rule 10 CPC for “necessary” and “proper” parties
  • Dominus litis principle
  • Scope and limits of supervisory jurisdiction under Article 227
  • Statutory requirements for conversion under Part IX of the Companies Act and implications of certificate of incorporation
Facts as Summarised by the Court
  • Heirs of original owner filed suit for service-charge recovery against respondent No.3, who did not contest and suit proceeded ex-parte in 2014.
  • Appellant filed impleadment application in 2018 claiming to be successor of respondent No.3 under Part IX; relied on certificate of incorporation.
  • High Court set aside impleadment order under Article 227, holding appellant neither necessary nor proper party.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On All subordinate courts dealing with impleadment under Order I Rule 10 CPC
Persuasive For High Courts assessing supervisory jurisdiction under Article 227
Follows Ramesh Hirachand Kundanmal; Kasturi v. Iyyamperumal; Mumbai International Airport; Vidur Impex; Kanaklata Das

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Reaffirms that mere production of a certificate of incorporation does not conclusively establish successorship under Part IX of the Companies Act.
  • Clarifies that plaintiffs as dominus litis cannot be compelled to add a defendant against their wishes unless the proposed party proves it is necessary or proper.
  • Emphasises that late impleadment applications—especially after ex-parte proceedings and a long delay—will weigh heavily against granting relief.
  • Affirms that suits for service charges focus on the user’s liability and do not require landlord-tenant relationship or sub-tenant’s successor to be joined.
  • Confirms High Courts may invoke Article 227 to correct interlocutory errors when an order is patently incorrect, even though supervisory power is generally sparing.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. Scope of Article 227: While supervisory jurisdiction is limited, it may intervene to correct an interlocutory order that is clearly incorrect.
  2. Necessary vs. Proper Party Tests: Reiterated from Ramesh, Kasturi, Mumbai Int’l Airport and Vidur Impex:
    • Necessary party: without whom no effective decree can be passed.
    • Proper party: whose presence aids a complete decision but against whom no relief is sought.
  3. Dominus Litis Principle: A plaintiff chooses its adversary; courts cannot force impleadment absent necessity or propriety.
  4. Part IX Companies Act Analysis: Conversion requires statutory conditions (seven or more partners, formal deeds); certificate of incorporation alone is not conclusive and predecessor firm continued to exist.
  5. Delay and Knowledge: Appellant’s acknowledgment of summons in 2008 and nine-year delay in applying for impleadment justified its rejection.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner (Appellant)

  • High Court erroneously set aside an interlocutory impleadment order, effectively sitting in appeal under Article 227.
  • Appellant is successor to respondent No.3, in occupation and liable for service charges; certificate of incorporation is prima facie proof.
  • Continuous service-charge payments since 1991 with owners’ knowledge amount to admission of liability.
  • Any decree against defunct respondent No.3 would inevitably target appellant, making it necessary for effective decree.

Respondent No.1 (Owners’ Heirs)

  • Appellant is unauthorized occupant seeking to legitimize illegal possession.
  • Summons served in 2008 bear appellant’s acknowledgment; long silence shows waiver.
  • Certificate of incorporation does not establish succession; predecessor firm remains extant.
  • As dominus litis, they are under no compulsion to add a party against whom no relief is claimed.

Factual Background

Heirs of the original owner filed a suit for recovery of monthly service charges against respondent No.3, who defaulted and the suit proceeded ex-parte in February 2014. In April 2018, appellant claimed to be a successor company under Part IX of the Companies Act and sought impleadment, relying on its certificate of incorporation. The trial court allowed impleadment, but the High Court, in February 2022, set aside that order under Article 227, holding the appellant neither a necessary nor proper party to a suit solely for service-charge recovery.

Statutory Analysis

  • Order I Rule 10 CPC: Governs joinder of parties; requires direct legal interest (necessary party) or facilitation of complete adjudication (proper party).
  • Article 227 Constitution: Supervisory powers of High Courts are sparing; cannot sit as an appellate court but may correct palpable errors.
  • Companies Act, Part IX (Conversion of Firms): Conversion of a partnership into a company mandates at least seven partners and execution of deeds; certificate of incorporation does not automatically validate succession absent statutory criteria.

Alert Indicators

  • ✔ Precedent Followed – existing law on necessary and proper parties under Order I Rule 10 CPC has been affirmed and applied.

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