JUDGEMENT
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(1.) Petitioners Shri Kishore and
Bacchan Babu as well as respondent Roop
Kishore are all real brothers having their
landed properties situated in the village. After
the death of their father, they inherited
the property in the ratio of 1 /3rd share each.
According to the petitioners, on 27.2.2001
a family partition took place between the
three brothers in presence of the Panchayat
and other witnesses, in which the respondent
Roop Kishore left his 1/3rd share in
favour of the petitioners, after taking a sum
of Rs. 22,000/- in lieu of his share in the
property. Thereafter, on 12.3.2001, respondent
Roop Kishore filed Original Suit no. 126
of 2001 against the petitioners in the court
of Civil Judge (Junior Division), Aligarh for
partition of his 1 /3rd share in the joint property.
The said suit was contested by the
defendant-petitioners. The trial court, vide its
Judgment and Order dated 16.11.2002,
dismissed the suit of the plaintiff-respondent
with cost. Against the said Judgment and
Order of the trial court, the plaintiff-respondent
Roop Kishore filed appeal on
24.12.2002, which was registered as Civil
Appeal No.10 of 2003 in the court of District
Judge, Aligarh. After lapse of more than 15
months of fling of the appeal, the respondent
Roop Kishore filed an application under Order
41 Rule 27 C.P.C before the appellate
court for obtaining the opinion of Hand- writing
expert with regard to his signatures on
the partition deed dated 27.2.2001. Petitioners
filed objections to the said application and
after hearing the learned counsel for the parties,
the appellate court, vide its order dated
27.9.2004, allowed the said application of the
respondent. Aggrieved by the said order, the
petitioners have filed this writ petition.
(2.) I have heard Sri Amit Saxena, learned
counsel for the petitioners, as well as Sri
Sudhir Dixit, learned counsel for the respondent
and have perused the record. Counter
and rejoinder affidavits have been
exchanged and with the consent of the learned
counsel for the parties, this writ petition is
being disposed of at this stage.
(3.) The respondent can adduce additional
evidence at the appellate stage only under
the provisions of Order 41 Rule 27 C.P.C.,
which reads as under:-
"27 Production of additional evidence in
Appellate Court- (1) The parties to an appeal
shall not be entitled to produce additional
evidence, whether oral or documentary,
in the Appellate Court. But if-
(a) the Court from whose decree the appeal
is preferred has refused to admit evidence which ought to have been admitted,
or
(aa) the party seeking to produce additional evidence, establishes that
notwithstanding the exercise of due diligence, such
evidence was not within his knowledge or
could not, after the exercise of due diligence,
be produced by him at the time when the
decree appealed against was passed, or
(b) the Appellate Court requires any document to be produced or any witness to be
examined to enable it to pronounce judgment,
or for any other substantial cause, the appellate Court may allow such evidence or
document to be produced or witness to be
examined.
2) Whenever additional evidence is allowed to be produced by an appellate Court,
shall record the reason for its admission.";
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