First, of course, "eval" can do all kinds of things apart from what's going on here. It instructs the shell to re-evaluate its arguments. So for instance, you could do things like this:
b=4
a='b'
eval "$a=3"
echo $b # yields 3
This also means "eval" is a bit dangerous by nature, because it will run whatever command it's given.
a='rm -rf /;b'
eval "$a=3" #Removes all your files and sets b=3
In this case, it seems "eval" is just stripping off some quotes.
eval doftp.sh -1 '"File Name with spaces.txt"'
# is equivalent to:
doftp.sh -1 "File Name with spaces.txt"
Running a shell with a shell script as its argument is equivalent to just running the shell script. It doesn't re-process the arguments - which means something in that shell script probably requires those quotes. (Given that it's called "doftp", maybe it's feeding the quoted string as an argument to "get" or "put" in an FTP client.)
If you had a shell script "args.sh" that printed the arguments you gave to it, for instance:
# args.sh
while [ "$#" -gt 0 ]; do echo "$1"; shift; done
And you ran it like you're running "doftp.sh", this is what you'd see:
$ ./args.sh unquoted '"String with spaces"'
unquoted
"String with spaces"
$ ksh ./args.sh unquoted '"String with spaces"'
unquoted
"String with spaces"
The shell you're running the command in strips off the single quotes, but feeds the string contained in those single quotes as a single argument to the command you're running. "eval" could then be used to do that again:
$ eval ./args.sh unquoted '"String with spaces"'
unquoted
String with spaces
...but apparently that's not what you want here. When ksh gets the string as one of its arguments, it maintains that string as-is unless you subject it to word splitting or something.
eval
here?eval
looks completely useless to me but since you've used both single and double quotes around the file name, I can't see why it wouldn't work.