The Supreme Court has held that a decree cannot be interpreted merely on the basis of the label attached to it and that, in appropriate cases, a decree may possess characteristics of both a preliminary and a final decree.
The bench of Justice K. V. Viswanathan and Justice S. V. N. Bhatti restored execution proceedings in a long-running property dispute and criticised the procedural confusion that had prolonged litigation for years, calling it a “Comedy of Errors.”
The dispute arose from a flat purchased jointly by Jennifer Messias and her husband Peter Messias in 1991 from their combined income. Following their judicial separation, Jennifer instituted a suit seeking partition and separate possession of her share in the property. In 2012, the trial court declared that she was entitled to a one-half share in the flat and also awarded mesne profits of ₹1,500 per month until she obtained possession. The court further directed appointment of an Advocate Commissioner for effecting partition and also laid down a mechanism in case partition by metes and bounds was not possible.
The matter, however, became embroiled in procedural complications. Jennifer initially attempted execution of the decree. After the dismissal of that execution petition, she moved an application under Order XX Rule 18 of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC). Following the death of Peter Messias, Leonard G. Lobo was brought on record as legal representative and the litigation continued.
An Advocate Commissioner subsequently examined the property and reported that the flat could not be physically divided by metes and bounds because of its nature and dimensions. Based on this report, the executing court directed sale of the property and distribution of proceeds among the parties. The High Court, however, intervened and held that a preliminary decree could not be directly executed, requiring the parties first to obtain a final decree.
The Supreme Court disagreed with the High Court’s approach. The Court observed that the High Court had focused excessively on the nomenclature of the decree while ignoring its substantive content and operative directions.
The Court extensively discussed the distinction between preliminary and final decrees under the CPC. The settled legal position that while a preliminary decree declares rights and liabilities, a final decree works out those rights through further proceedings. However, the Court emphasized that in certain situations, a decree may simultaneously contain elements of both categories.
The Court identified several significant features. The decree had already determined the parties’ respective shares in the property, declared Jennifer’s entitlement to possession, fixed mesne profits for deprivation of possession, and provided a mechanism for sale if physical partition proved impossible.
The Court found that these aspects demonstrated that the rights and liabilities had substantially been worked out and that requiring the appellant to initiate another round of proceedings for a formal final decree would serve no practical purpose. According to the Court, insisting on such procedural formalities in the facts of the case amounted to an unnecessary academic exercise.
The Bench also noted that the earlier Advocate Commissioner had already concluded that partition by metes and bounds was impossible. Therefore, auction of the property and division of sale proceeds remained the only realistic method of implementing the decree.
The Supreme Court restored the execution proceedings and directed the trial court to proceed with the auction process through the Advocate Commissioner.
The Court also permitted both parties to participate in bidding and directed that mesne profits be appropriately accounted for while distributing sale proceeds.
The Court directed the trial court to complete the process within two months.
Case Details
Case Title: Syed Iftikhar Andrabi Versus National Investigation Agency, Jammu
Citation: JURISHOUR-1299-SC-2026
Case No.: SLP (CRIMINAL) NO. 1090 OF 2026
Date: 18/005/2026

