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  4. 2024/
  5. January

Sri Pranesh Chandra Bhowmik vs. Sri Partha Bhowmik and Ors

Decided on 31 January 2024• Citation: RSA/49/2022• High Court of Tripura
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                                  HIGH  COURT   OF TRIPURA                          
                                          AGARTALA                                  
                                      RSA NO.49  of 2022                            
                    Sri Pranesh Chandra  Bhowmik,                                   
                    S/o. Late Pramatha Chandra Bhowmik,                             
                    Vill. & P.O. Bhagabannagar,                                     
                    P.S. & Sub-Division-Kailashahar,                                
                    District-Unakoti Tripura.                                       
                                                             ……….Appellant.         
                                       Versus                                       
                    1. Sri Partha Bhowmik,                                          
                    S/o. Late Pratap Chandra Bhowmik                                
                    of Vill. Kalipur, P.O. Paitur Bazar,                            
                    P.S. & Sub-Division-Kailashahar,                                
                    District-Unakoti Tripura, PIN-799279                            
                    2. Smt. Khela Rani Bhowmik,                                     
                    W/o. Late Pratap Chandra Bhowmik                                
                    of Vill. Kalipur, P.O. Paitur Bazar,                            
                    P.S. & Sub-Division-Kailashahar,                                
                    District-Unakoti Tripura, PIN-799279                            
                    4. Smt. Papiya Bhowmik,                                         
                    D/o. Late Pratap Chandra Bhowmik,                               
                    W/o. Sri Nirmal Datta                                           
                    Vill. Paitur Bazar at present Durgapur,                         
                    P.O. Paitur Bazar, P.S. & Sub-Division-Kailashahar,             
                    District-Unakoti Tripura, PIN-799279.                           
                                                         ………..Respondents.          
                    For Appellant(s)   :    Mr. H. Deb, Adv.                        
                    For Respondent(s)  :    Ms. R. Purkayastha, Adv.                
                    Date of Hearing    :    19.01.2024                              
                    Date of delivery of                                             
                    Judgment and Order :    31.01.2024                              
                    Whether fit for                                                 
                    Reporting          :    YES                                     
                                         JUSTICE  BISWAJIT   PALIT                  
                           HON‟BLE   MR.                                            
                                      Judgment   &Order                             
                             The appellant Pranesh Chandra Bhowmik is before        
                    the High Court. He has preferred this Second Appeal under       

                                           Page 2 of 14                             
                    Section 100 of CPC  challenging the judgment and decree         
                    dated 25.08.2022 passed by Learned District Judge, Unakoti      
                    District, Kailashahar in connection with Title Appeal No. 05 of 
                    2021 allowing the Title Appeal and by  setting aside the        
                    judgment and decree dated 07.12.2020  passed by Learned         
                    Civil Judge, Senior Division, Court No.  1, Kailashahar,        
                    Unakoti Tripura, in connection with case No. T.S.(P) 35 of      
                    2018.                                                           
                    02.      The  gist of  the appeal  in brief is that the         
                    respondent plaintiffs filed one suit for partition before the   
                    Court of  Learned Civil Judge,  Senior Division, Unakoti        
                    District, Kailashahar against the present  appellant as         
                    defendant  alleging interalia that one  Pratap  Chandra         
                    Bhowmik,  predecessor of the present  respondent-plaintiff      
                    and present appellant-defendant got allotment of suit land      
                    on 25.05.1984 from the Government of Tripura and Khatian        
                    bearing No.437 was created in their name jointly and they       
                    started possessing the suit land jointly. The respondent-       
                    plaintiffs issued to reside at Kalipur, Kailashahar with their  
                    predecessor Pratap Chandra Bhowmik and after his death on       
                    13.10.1995 the respondent-plaintiffs have been residing at      
                    Kalipur, Kailashahar. The appellant-defendants and  the         
                    respondent-plaintiffs were/are in joint possession of the suit  
                    land and on 12.11.2016 the respondent-plaintiffs requested      
                    the appellant-defendant for partition of the suit land but he   

                                           Page 3 of 14                             
                    refused to make   the same.  After that the respondent-         
                    plaintiffs filed the suit. In the said suit before the Learned  
                    Court below,  the  appellant-defendant after receipt  of        
                    summons  appeared  and contested the suit by filing written     
                    statement and took the plea that the suit land had already      
                    been partitioned amicably in between the present appellant-     
                    defendant  and   said  Pratap  Chandra   Bhowmik,   the         
                    predecessor of the  respondent-plaintiff and said Pratap        
                    Chandra Bhowmik(since dead) by executing an unregistered        
                    deed of sale agreement (sharan Lipi) on 11.02.1987 as part      
                    performance of contract had handed over his share in the        
                    suit land to the appellant-defendant on 11.02.1987 receiving    
                    Rs.5000/-(rupees five thousand only) as full construction of    
                    his share with condition to execute registered deed of sale     
                    after obtaining  necessary  sale  permission  from  the         
                    Government.  The  suit  of the  respondent-plaintiff was        
                    registered by the Learned Trial Court vide case No. T.S.(P)35   
                    of 2018 and after trial the Learned Trial Court dismissed the   
                    suit.                                                           
                    03.      Challenging  the   dismissal, the  respondent-         
                    plaintiffs had preferred an appeal before the Learned District  
                    Judge, Unakoti District, Kailashahar and the Learned District   
                    Judge, after hearing both the parties allowed the appeal and    
                    by his judgment  pleased to set aside the judgment  and         
                    decree passed by the Learned Trial Court on the ground that     

                                           Page 4 of 14                             
                    the deed  of agreement   (sharan Lipi) executed  by the         
                    predecessor of the respondent-plaintiffs was not registered     
                    as per Section 17(1A) of the Registration Act. As the Learned   
                    First Appellate Court did not consider the said deed of sale    
                    agreement (sharan Lipi) on 11.02.1987 and in the amended        
                    Act the provision regarding compulsory registration of sale     
                    agreement was enacted with effect from 24.09.2001, so, the      
                    present appellant-defendant by challenging the judgment         
                    has preferred this appeal before the Court. At the time of      
                    admission  of second   appeal  the following substantial        
                    question of law was formulated by order dated 19.01.2023:       
                                       “(i) Whether the finding of the learned first
                                       appellate Court is contrary to Section 17(1A)
                                       of Registration Act, 1908 and Section 53A of 
                                       the Transfer of Properties Act, 1882? “      
                    04.      Learned  Trial Court in deciding the suit framed 4     
                    nos. of issues which are as follows:                            
                                                 ISSUES                             
                                       (i) Whether the suit is maintainable?        
                                       (ii) Whether the suit land is joint property?
                                       (iii)Whether predecessor or  plaintiffs      
                                       executed any „Sharanlipi‟ and sold his share in
                                       favour of defendant on 11.02.1987 and        
                                       handed over possession of his share over the 
                                       suit land to defendant?                      
                                       (iv) Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to any
                                       relief as prayed for and or any other        
                                       relief/reliefs in this suit?                 
                    05.      And  both the parties of the appeal have adduced       
                    oral/documentary evidences on record before the Learned         
                    Trial Court which are as follows:                               
                             (A) Plaintiffs Exhibits:-                              
                                          ‟                                         

                                           Page 5 of 14                             
                             Ext.-1:- Khatian No.437.                               
                             Ext.-2:- Another Khatian No. 437.                      
                             Ext.-3:- Attested copy of survival certificate of      
                             deceased Pratap Chandra Bhowmik.                       
                             Ext.-4:- Death  certificate of deceased Pratap         
                             Bhowmik.                                               
                             (B)                      :-                            
                                 Plaintiffs‟ Witnesses                              
                             PW.-1  Partha Bhowmik.                                 
                             PW.-2  Smt. Minu Bhowmik (Dey)                         
                                                       -                            
                             (C) Defendant‟s  Exhibits:                             
                              Ext.A- Agreement for sale dated 11.02.1987.           
                             (D)                         :-                         
                                  Defendant‟s Witnesses                             
                              DW.-1 Sri Nanigopal Deb.                              
                              DW.-2 Sri Pradesh Bhowmik.                            
                              DW.-3  Md. Abdulla.                                   
                              DW.-4  Pranesh Roy.                                   
                             Finally, by judgment and order dated 07.12.2020        
                    Learned Trial Court dismissed the suit of the respondent-       
                    plaintiffs on contest with costs. The order of Learned Trial    
                    Court is as follows:                                            
                                       “In the result, the suit of the plaintiffs is
                                       dismissed on contest with cost.              
                                       The case is disposed on contest.             
                                       Make necessary entry in the relevant Trial   
                                       Registrar & CIS.                             
                                       Prepare decree accordingly and put up before 
                                       me for signature within 15 (fifteen) days from
                                       today latest on 21.12.2020.                  
                                       Consign the record to the record room after  
                                       due compliance.”                             
                    06.      But  the Learned  Court  below at  the time  of        
                    deciding issue Nos. 1 and 4 gave the following observation in   
                    last para.                                                      

                                           Page 6 of 14                             
                              Thus,  therefore, considering all, I find the         
                             “                                                      
                    defendant is entitled to get benefit under Section 53(A) of     
                    T.P. Act and possession of the defendant is protected under     
                    said possession and the suit of the plaintiffs for partition is 
                    not maintainable and plaintiffs are not entitled to get any     
                    relief in this suit. Accordingly, issue Nos. 1 and 4 are decided
                    in negative and against the plaintiffs.                         
                                                     ”                              
                    07.      Challenging that judgment  the plaintiffs of the       
                    original suit as appellants preferred First Appeal before the   
                    Learned Court of Learned District Judge, Unakoti District,      
                    Kailashar which was numbered as T.A. 05 of 2021 and the         
                    Learned  District Judge, Unakoti  District, Kailashar by        
                    judgment dated 25.08.2022  allowed the appeal by setting        
                    aside the judgment and decree of the Learned Court below.       
                    The operative portion of the judgment  and order of the         
                    Learned First Appellate Court is as follows:                    
                                       “In the result, the appeal filed by the      
                                       plaintiffs-appellants is allowed. Consequently,
                                       the judgment and decree passed by the        
                                       learned trial court are set aside.           
                                       Prepare appellate decree accordingly.        
                                       Send down the LCR along with a copy of this  
                                       judgment.                                    
                                       The case stands disposed of accordingly.”    
                    08.      Thereafter, the  defendants  as  appellant has         
                    preferred this appeal as already stated. In course of hearing,  
                    Learned Counsel for the appellant confined his argument         
                    only on the point that the disputed Sharan Lipi(Exhibit-A)      
                    executed on 11.02.1987 was not required to be registered in     

                                           Page 7 of 14                             
                    view of the provision provided under Section 17(1A) read        
                    with Section 49 of the Registration Act and submitted that      
                    the said provision was introduced by way of amendment of        
                    the Registration Act in the year 2001, and (Exhibit-A) was      
                    executed in the year 1987, so, there was no scope to place      
                    any reliance on the finding of Learned First Appellate Court    
                    that Sharan Lipi (Exhibit-A) was proved to be unregistered      
                    one. So, according to Learned Counsel, the judgment of the      
                    Learned First Appellate Court was perverse, as the Learned      
                    First Appellate Court did not consider the relevant provision   
                    of law and was pleased to set aside the finding of Learned      
                    Trial Court and relied upon one citation reported in (2023) 2   
                    TLR SC 32 wherein in para                                       
                                             13 of the said judgment, Hon’ble       
                    the Apex Court observed as under:                               
                                       “13. Under the circumstances, as per proviso 
                                       to section 49 of the Registration Act, an    
                                       unregistered document affecting immovable    
                                       property and required by Registration Act or 
                                       the Transfer of Property Act to be registered,
                                       may be received as evidence of a contract in a
                                       suit for specific performance under Chapter II
                                       of the Specific Relief Act, 1877, or as evidence
                                       of any collateral transaction not required to
                                       be  effected by  registered instrument,      
                                       however, subject to section 17(1A) of the    
                                       Registration Act. It is not the case on behalf
                                       of  either of  the  parties that  the        
                                       document/Agreement to Sell in question       
                                       would fall under the category of document as 
                                       per section 17(1A) of the Registration Act.  
                                       Therefore, in the facts and circumstances of 
                                       the case, the High Court has rightly observed
                                       and held relying upon proviso to section 49 of
                                       the Registration Act that the unregistered   
                                       document in question, namely, unregistered   
                                       Agreement to Sell in question shall be       
                                       admissible in evidence in a suit for specific

                                           Page 8 of 14                             
                                       performance and the proviso is exception to  
                                       the first part of section 49.”               
                             Relying upon  the said citation, Learned Counsel       
                    for the appellant submitted that Learned  First Appellate       
                    Court did not consider the aforesaid principle of law laid      
                    down by the                                    rroneous         
                                Hon’ble Apex Court and came to an e                 
                    finding and prayed  before the  Court to  set aside the         
                    judgment of the Learned First Appellate Court upholding the     
                    judgment of the Learned Trial Court below.                      
                    09.      On    the   contrary,  Learned   Counsel,  Ms.         
                    Purkayastha at the time of hearing fairly submitted that the    
                    citation referred by Learned Counsel  for the  appellant        
                    supports the case of the respondent-plaintiffs and according    
                    to her  the  principle of law  laid down   by  the  said        
                    judgment/citation is applicable in  a  suit for  specific       
                    performance of contract. She further submitted that the         
                    provision of Section 17(1A) and Section 49 of the Indian        
                    Registration Act is not supporting the case of the appellant-   
                    defendant and furthermore, Section 53(A) of the Transfer of     
                    Property Act will also not be applicable in the present case,   
                    since Exhibit-A was not duly registered as required by law      
                    under Section 17(1A) and Section 49 of the Registration Act.    
                    10.      Further, Learned  Counsel also relied upon one         
                                                                   in Ameer         
                    citation of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India                  
                    Minhaj vs. Dierdre Elizabeth (Wright) ISSAR and Ors dated       
                    04.07.2018 reported in (2018) 7 SCC 639  wherein in para        

                                           Page 9 of 14                             
                    nos. 10 and 12 of the said citation                             
                                                     Hon’ble the Apex Court         
                    observed as under:                                              
                                       “10. On a plain reading of this provision, it is
                                       amply clear that the document containing     
                                       contract to transfer the right, title or interest
                                       in an immovable property for consideration is
                                       required to be registered, if the party wants
                                       to rely on the same for the purposes of      
                                       Section 53-A of the 1882 Act to protect its  
                                       possession over the stated property. If it is
                                       not  a  registered document, the only        
                                       consequence provided in this provision is to 
                                       declare that such document shall have        
                                       no  effect for  the purposes of the said     
                                       Section 53-A of the 1882 Act. The issue, in our
                                       opinion, is no more res integra. In S. Kaladevi
                                       v. V.R. Somasundaram:(2010) 5 SCC 401 this   
                                       Court has restated the legal position that   
                                       when an unregistered sale deed is tendered in
                                       evidence, not as evidence of a completed sale,
                                       but as proof of an oral agreement of sale, the
                                       deed can be received as evidence making an   
                                       endorsement that it is received only as      
                                       evidence of an oral agreement of sale under  
                                       the proviso to Section 49 of the 1908 Act.   
                                       11. Section 49 of the 1908 Act reads thus:   
                                             “49. Effect of non›registration of     
                                             documents required to be registered.›  
                                             No document required by section 17 or  
                                             by any provision of the Transfer of    
                                             Property Act, 1882 (4 of 1882)], to be 
                                             registered shall›                      
                                       (a) affect any immovable property comprised  
                                       therein, or                                  
                                       (b) confer any power to adopt, or            
                                       (c) be  received as  evidence of any         
                                       transaction affecting such property or       
                                       conferring such power,                       
                                       unless it has been registered:               
                                       Provided that an unregistered document       
                                       affecting immovable property and required by 
                                       this Act or the Transfer of Property Act, 1882
                                       (4 of 1882), to be registered may be received
                                       as evidence of a contract in a suit for specific
                                       performance under Chapter II of the Specific 
                                       Relief Act, 1877 (1 of 1877), or as evidence of
                                       any collateral transaction not required to be
                                       effected by registered instrument.”          
                                       "12. In the reported decision, this Court has
                                       adverted to the principles delineated in K.B.
                                       Saha and  Sons (P) Ltd. V. Development       
                                       Consultant Ltd.:(2008) 8 SCC 564, and has    
                                       added one more  principle thereto that a     
                                       document is required to be registered, but if
                                       unregistered, can still be admitted as       
                                       evidence of a contract in a suit for specific
                                       performance. In view of this exposition, the 
                                       conclusion recorded by the High Court in the 
                                       impugned  judgment:  Dierdre Elizabeth       
                                       (Wright) Issar v. Ameer Minhaj, 2016 SCC     

                                          Page 10 of 14                             
                                       OnLine Mad 31541 that the sale agreement     
                                       dated 09-07-2003 is inadmissible in evidence,
                                       will have to be understood to mean that the  
                                       document though exhibited, will bear an      
                                       endorsement that it is admissible only as    
                                       evidence of the agreement to sell under the  
                                       proviso to Section 49 of the 1908 Act and    
                                       shall not have any effect for the purposes of
                                       Section 53-A of the 1882 Act. In that, it is 
                                       received as evidence of a contract in a suit for
                                       specific performance and nothing more. The   
                                       genuineness, validity and binding nature of  
                                       the document or the fact that it is hit by the
                                       provisions of the 1882 Act or the 1899 Act, as
                                       the case may be, will have to be adjudicated 
                                       at the appropriate stage as noted by the trial
                                       court after the parties adduce oral and      
                                       documentary evidence.”                       
                    11.      Learned  Counsel further submitted that even if        
                    the appellant-defendant wants to get  any benefit under         
                    Section 53(A) of the T.P. Act in that case also in view of the  
                                                                   the  said        
                    provision laid down by the Hon’ble Apex  Court                  
                    document i.e., Exhibit-A was supposed to be registered but      
                    here in  the  given case  Exhibit-A was  proved  to  be         
                    unregistered, so, legally no reliance can be placed upon said   
                    Exhibit-A and finally submitted the said document may be        
                    used in a suit for Specific Performance of Contract and urged   
                    before the Court for dismissal of the appeal.                   
                    12.      I have  heard submission of Learned Counsels of        
                    both the sides at length and gone through the records of the    
                    Learned Courts  below. This present  appeal is preferred        
                    challenging the judgment of  the Learned  First Appellate       
                    Court who by  the judgment was  pleased to set aside the        
                    judgment passed  by Learned Trial Court. The respondent-        
                    plaintiffs claimed for partition of the suit land on the basis of
                    joint possession. On the other hand, the defendant-appellant    

                                          Page 11 of 14                             
                    took the plea that the suit land was already been handed        
                    over to him in pursuance of Exhibit-A on 11.10.1987. So,        
                    question of partition does not arise but the Learned Court      
                    below, dismissed the suit of the respondent-plaintiffs but      
                    made an observation that in view of Section 53(A) of the T.P.   
                    Act the possession of the appellant-defendant was protected.    
                    13.      Now,  here I would like to refer herein below the      
                    relevant provision of Section 17(1A) of the Registration Act    
                    which provides as under:                                        
                                       “[(1-A) The documents containing contracts   
                                       to transfer for consideration, any immovable 
                                       property for the purpose of Section 53-A of  
                                       the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (4 of     
                                       1882), shall be registered if they have been 
                                       executed on or after the commencement of     
                                       the Registration and Other Related Laws      
                                       (Amendment)  Act, 2001  and,  if such        
                                       documents are not registered on or after such
                                       commencement, then, they shall have no       
                                       effect for the purposes of the said Section 53-
                                       A.]”                                         
                    14.      Further, Section 49  of  the Registration  Act         
                    provides as under:                                              
                                       “49. Effect of non-registration of documents 
                                       required to be registered.—No document       
                                       required by section 17 [or by any provision of
                                       the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (4 of     
                                       1882),] to be registered shall—              
                                       (a) affect any immovable property comprised  
                                       therein, or                                  
                                       (b) confer any power to adopt, or            
                                       (c) be received as evidence of any transaction
                                       affecting such property or conferring such   
                                       power,                                       
                                       unless it has been registered:               
                                       [Provided that an unregistered document      
                                       affecting immovable property and required by 
                                       this Act or the Transfer of Property Act, 1882
                                       (4 of 1882), to be registered may be received
                                       as evidence of a contract in a suit for specific
                                       performance under Chapter II of the Specific 
                                       Relief Act, 1877 (1 of 1877) [***] or as     
                                       evidence of any collateral transaction not   
                                       required to be  effected by registered       
                                       instrument.]”                                

                                          Page 12 of 14                             
                             From  the aforesaid provisions of law it appears       
                    that Exhibit-A as relied upon by the defendant-appellant may    
                    be received as evidence of a contract in a suit for specific    
                    performance or as evidence of any collateral transaction not    
                    required to be effected by registered instrument.               
                    15.      Now   I would  like to refer herein  below the         
                    provision of Section 53(A) of the Transfer of Property Act,     
                    which provides as under:                                        
                                       “[53-A. Part performance.—Where any person   
                                       contracts to transfer for consideration any  
                                       immovable property by writing signed by him  
                                       or on  his behalf from which the terms       
                                       necessary to constitute the transfer can be  
                                       ascertained with reasonable certainty:       
                                       and the transferee has, in part performance of
                                       the contract, taken possession of the property
                                       or any part thereof, or the transferee, being
                                       already in possession, continues in possession
                                       in part performance of the contract and has  
                                       done some act in furtherance of the contract,
                                       and the transferee has performed or is willing
                                       to perform his part of the contract,         
                                       then, notwithstanding that [***], where there
                                       is an instrument of transfer, that the transfer
                                       has not been  completed in the manner        
                                       prescribed therefor by the law for the time  
                                       being in force, the transferor or any person 
                                       claiming under him shall be debarred from    
                                       enforcing against the transferee and persons 
                                       claiming under him any right in respect of the
                                       property of which the transferee has taken or
                                       continued in possession, other than a right  
                                       expressly provided by the terms of the       
                                       contract:                                    
                                       Provided that nothing in this section shall  
                                       affect the rights of a  transferee for       
                                       consideration who has no notice of the       
                                       contract or of the part performance thereof.]”
                             From   the  conjoint reading  of the  aforesaid        
                    provisions of law it appears that  unless the purported         
                    document is registered under Section 17(1A) or Section 49       
                    of the Registration Act then Section 53(A) shall have no        
                    effect for the proposed purpose.                                

                                          Page 13 of 14                             
                    16.      Thus, finding of the Learned Trial Court that the      
                    appellant defendant is entitled to get protection under         
                    Section 53(A) of the T.P. Act was perverse not binding upon     
                    the respondent-plaintiffs.                                      
                    17.      In view of the principle of law laid down by the       
                                      , the  citation as referred by Learned        
                    Hon’ble Apex Court                                              
                    Counsel for the appellant-defendant is based on suit for a      
                    specific performance of contract cannot be applied in this      
                    case. Rather the citation as referred by Learned Counsel for    
                    the respondent-plaintiffs is very much applicable for the just  
                    decision of this case. There was/is also no contrary evidence   
                    on record from the side of the appellant-defendant that he      
                    was adversely possessing the suit land denying the right,       
                    title, interest of the present respondent plaintiffs.           
                    18.      So, after hearing both the sides and after going       
                    through the judgments of the Learned Court below it appears     
                    that Learned  First Appellate Court after considering all       
                    aspects has rightly and reasonably delivered the judgment       
                    setting aside the judgment of the Learned Trial Court below     
                    and after going through the same it appears to me that there    
                    is no scope on the part of this Court to interfere with the     
                    judgment  passed by  Learned  First Appellate Court. The        
                    substantial question of law as formulated by the Court is       
                    accordingly answered  in  negative against  the present         
                    appellant-defendant of this appeal.                             

                                          Page 14 of 14                             
                    19.      In the result, the appeal filed by the appellant-      
                    defendant is hereby dismissed on contest with costs. The        
                    judgment and decree dated 25.08.2022  passed by Learned         
                    District Judge, Unakoti District, Kailashahar allowing the Title
                    Appeal No. 05 of 2021 by setting aside the judgment and         
                    decree dated 07.12.2020  passed by  Learned Civil Judge,        
                    Unakoti District, Kailshahar in connection with case No.        
                    T.S.(P) 35 of 2018 is hereby upheld and accordingly it is       
                    affirmed. Pending application, if any, also stands disposed of. 
                             Prepare  decree accordingly and send down  the         
                    LCRs along with copy of the judgment.                           
                                                                JUDGE               
             MOUMITA       Digitally signed by                                      
                           MOUMITA DATTA                                            
                           Date: 2024.02.05                                         
             DATTA                                                                  
                           11:15:42 +05'30'                                         
             Purnita