Civil litigation frequently raises an important procedural question:
Can a later suit for specific performance be barred under Order II Rule 2 CPC because an earlier suit for injunction had already been filed?
The Supreme Court in Sucha Singh Sodhi v. Baldev Raj Walia (2018) clarified the scope of Order II Rule 2 CPC and explained an important procedural principle:
A suit for injunction and a suit for specific performance may arise from distinct causes of action and are not automatically barred merely because an earlier proceeding existed between the same parties.
The judgment remains a leading authority on cause of action, injunction suits, specific performance, and bar of subsequent suits under CPC. The Court emphasized that the applicability of Order II Rule 2 CPC depends on whether the later relief was available on the same cause of action pleaded in the earlier suit.
Introduction
Order II Rule 2 CPC seeks to:
- Prevent multiplicity of litigation
- Avoid splitting of claims arising from the same cause of action
- Prevent repeated proceedings for omitted reliefs
The rule requires:
A plaintiff must include the whole claim arising from one cause of action in a single proceeding.
However, an important legal issue arises:
Will a later suit for specific performance become barred if an earlier injunction suit concerning the same property had already been instituted?
The Supreme Court clarified:
The decisive test is whether both suits arise from the same cause of action and whether the omitted relief was available on that factual foundation.
Case Details
Case Name
Sucha Singh Sodhi v. Baldev Raj Walia
Year
2018
Citation
(2018) 6 SCC 733
Court
Supreme Court of India
Relevant Provision
Order II Rule 2, Civil Procedure Code, 1908
Subject Matter
Specific Performance, Injunction and Order II Rule 2 CPC
Facts of the Case
The dispute arose from an agreement to sell immovable property.
The plaintiff alleged that:
- An agreement to sell had been executed between the parties
- Possession of the property had been delivered
- The defendant later threatened dispossession and interference with possession
Initially, the plaintiff instituted a suit seeking:
Permanent injunction to protect possession of the property
Subsequently, the plaintiff withdrew the injunction suit and later instituted:
A suit for specific performance of the agreement to sell
The defendants objected and argued that:
- Relief of specific performance was available earlier
- Failure to seek such relief attracted Order II Rule 2 CPC
- The later suit was barred because the earlier suit had already been instituted
The matter eventually reached the Supreme Court.
Issues Before the Court
Issue 1
Whether the suit for specific performance was barred under Order II Rule 2 CPC?
Issue 2
Whether a suit for injunction and suit for specific performance arise from the same cause of action?
Issue 3
Whether omitted relief in an earlier injunction suit automatically bars later proceedings?
Issue 4
What constitutes the “same cause of action” under Order II Rule 2 CPC?
Judgment of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court held:
The subsequent suit for specific performance was not barred under Order II Rule 2 CPC.
The Court clarified:
The cause of action for permanent injunction and the cause of action for specific performance are distinct and independent.
The Court observed that:
- The injunction suit arose from apprehension of dispossession and interference with possession
- The suit for specific performance arose from refusal or failure to honour contractual obligations under the agreement to sell
- The factual foundation of both proceedings was materially different
The Supreme Court emphasized:
Order II Rule 2 CPC applies only when the relief claimed later was available on the cause of action pleaded in the earlier suit.
Accordingly:
Since the causes of action differed, the subsequent suit was maintainable.
Cause of Action Test
The Supreme Court reiterated:
Cause of Action
Cause of action means:
The bundle of material facts necessary to obtain judicial relief
The Court clarified:
Similarity of parties or property alone is insufficient.
The real test is:
Whether the later relief arose from the same factual foundation pleaded in the earlier proceeding.
Also Read: Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Co. v. Union of India (1969)
Legal Principles Established
1. Same Cause of Action Is Essential
The Court held:
Order II Rule 2 CPC applies only where both proceedings arise from the same cause of action.
2. Injunction and Specific Performance May Arise from Different Causes
The Court clarified:
Threat to possession and refusal to perform a contract constitute different legal foundations.
3. Omitted Relief Is Barred Only If Available Earlier on Same Cause
The Court emphasized:
A later relief becomes barred only if it could have been claimed on the same cause of action pleaded in the earlier suit.
4. Procedural Law Must Not Defeat Legitimate Claims
The judgment reaffirmed:
Order II Rule 2 CPC prevents splitting of one cause of action but does not prohibit relief arising from a distinct legal grievance.
Why This Case is Important?
This judgment remains important because it:
- Explains Order II Rule 2 CPC
- Clarifies distinction between injunction and specific performance suits
- Defines cause of action test
- Prevents wrongful dismissal of later proceedings
- Clarifies omitted relief doctrine
The judgment remains relevant in:
- CPC studies
- Property disputes
- Specific performance litigation
- Injunction suits
- Judiciary examinations
Key Takeaways
| Concept | Principle |
|---|---|
| Order II Rule 2 CPC | Applies only to same cause of action |
| Injunction Suit | Based on interference with possession |
| Specific Performance | Based on refusal to perform contract |
| Omitted Relief | Bar applies only if same cause exists |
| Legal Test | Identity of factual foundation |
Conclusion
Sucha Singh Sodhi v. Baldev Raj Walia (2018) remains a landmark judgment on Order II Rule 2 CPC and cause of action. The Supreme Court clarified that a suit for injunction and a suit for specific performance may arise from distinct legal foundations, and emphasized that a later proceeding is barred only where the omitted relief arose from the same factual cause of action pleaded in the earlier suit.


