Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JANAK RAJ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GURDIAL SINGH AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/11/1966
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 608 1967 SCR (2) 77
CITATOR INFO :
R 1968 SC 86 (7)
D 1968 SC 954 (4)
R 1982 SC 989 (61)
E&R 1990 SC1828 (9)
RF 1992 SC 385 (6,7,11)
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), O.XXI. rr. 89-92-Ex
parte money decree-Sale of property in execution-Decree set
aside before confirmation-If sale could be confirmed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a stranger to the suit, was the auction-
purchaser of the judgment-debtor’s immovable property in
execution of an ex parte money decree. On the question
whether he was entitled to a confirmation of the sale, under
O.XXI, r. 92, Civil Procedure Code, notwithstanding the fact
that after the holding of the sale the ex parte decree was
set aside.
HELD : The sale should be confirmed.
The law makes ample provision for the protection of the
interests of the judgment-debtor, when his property is sold
in execution. He can file an application for setting aside
the sale under the provisions of O.XXI, rr. 89 and 90.
Apart from exceptional cases when a court will refuse to
confirm a sale because it was held without giving notice to
the judgment debtor, or the court was misled in fixing the
reserve price, or where there was no decree in existence at
the time when the sale was held, ordinarily, if a sale had
been validly held, an application for setting it aside can
only be made under O.XXI, rr. 89 to 91. If no such
application was made, or when such an application was made
and disallowed, the court has no choice but to confirm the
sale. [78 F-H; 79 H; 80 A-B]
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1322(N) of
1966.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 24,. 1965,
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of the Punjab High Court in L.P. Appeal No. 20 of 1965.
The appellant appeared in person.
D. D. Sharma and M. C. Bhatia, for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mitter, J. This is an appeal from a judgment and order of
the Punjab High Court dated December 24, 1965 on a
certificate granted by the said court.
The question involved in this appeal is, whether a sale of
immovable property in execution of a money decree ought to
be confirmed when it is found that the ex parts decree which
was put into execution has been set aside subsequently.
The facts are simple. One Swaran Singh obtained an ex parte
decree on February 27, 1961 against Gurdial Singh for Rs.
519/-. On an application to execute the decree, a warrant
for the attachment
78
of a house belonging to the judgment-debtor was issued on
May 10, 1961. At the sale ’which took place, the appellant
before us be,came the highest bidder for Rs. 5,100/- on
December 16, 1961. On the 2nd of January 1962, the
judgment-debtor made an application to have the ex parte
decree set aside. On January 20, 1962 he filed an objection
petition against the sale of the house on the ground that
the house which was valued at Rs. 25,000/- had been
auctioned for Rs. 5,000/- only and that the sale had not
been conducted in a proper manner inasmuch as there was no-
due publication of it and the sale too was not held at the
proper hour. By an order dated April 19, 1962, the
executing court stayed the execution of the decree till the
disposal of the application for setting aside the ex parte
decree. On October 26, 1962 the ex parte decree against the
defendant-judgment-debtor was set aside. On November 3,
1962 the auction purchaser made an application for revival
of the execution proceedings and for confirmation of the
:sale under O.XXI, r. 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure. On
November 7, 1962 the judgment-debtor filed an objection
thereto contending that the application for revival of
execution proceedings was not maintainable after setting
aside the ex parte decree and that the auction purchaser was
in conspiracy and collusion with the decree-holder and as
such not entitled to have the sale confirmed. It is to be
noted here that the case of collusion was not
:substantiated. On August 31, 1963 the executing court
over-ruled the objection of the judgment-debtor and made an
order under O.XXI, r. 92 confirming the sale. This was
affirmed by the first ,appellate court. On second appeal to
a single Judge of the Punjab High Court, the auction
purchaser lost the day. An appeal under cl. 10 of the
Letters Patent in the Punjab High Court met the same fate.
Hence this appeal.
Before referring to the various decisions cited at the Bar
and noted in the judgment appealed from, it may be useful to
take into consideration the relevant provisions of the Code
of Civil Procedure. So far as sales of immovable property
are concerned, there are some special provisions in O.XXI
beginning with r. 82 and ending with r. 103. If a sale had
been validly held, an application for setting the same aside
can only be made under the provisions of rr. 89 to 91 of
O.XXI. As is well-known, r. 89 gives a judgment-debtor the
right to have the sale set aside on his depositing in, court
-a sum equal to five per cent of the purchase money fetched
at the :sale besides the amount specified in the
proclamation of sale as that for the recovery of which the
sale was ordered, less any amount which may, since the date
of sale, have been received by the decree holder. Under
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sub-r. (2) of r. 92 the court is obliged to make an order
setting aside the sale if a proper application under r. 89
is made accompanied by a deposit within 30 days from the
date of :sale. Apart from the provision of r. 89, the
judgment-debtor has
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the right to apply to the court to set aside the sale on the
ground of a material irregularity or fraud in publishing or
conducting it provided he can satisfy the court that he has
sustained substantial injury by reason of such irregularity
or fraud. ’Under r. 91 it is open to the purchaser to apply
to the court to set aside the sale on the ground that the
judgment-debtor had no saleable interest in the property
sold. Rule 92 provides that where no application is made
under any of the rules just now mentioned or where such
application is made and disallowed the court shall make an
order confirming the sale and thereupon the sale shall
become absolute. Rule 94 provides that where the sale of
immovable property has become absolute, the court must grant
a certificate specifying the property sold and the name of
the person who at the time of sale was declared to be the
purchaser. Such certificate is to bear date of the day on
which the sale becomes absolute. Section 65 of the Code of
Civil Procedure lays down that where immovable property is
sold in execution of a decree and such sale has become
absolute, the property shall be deemed to have vested in the
purchaser from the time when it is sold and not from the
time when the sale becomes absolute. The result is that the
purchaser’s title relates back to the date of sale and not
the confirmation of sale. There is no provision in the Code
of Civil Procedure of 1908 either under O.XXI or elsewhere
which provides that the sale is not to be confirmed if it be
found that the decree under which the sale was ordered has
been reversed before the confirmation of sale. It does not
seem ever to have been doubted that once the sale is con-
firmed the judgment-debtor is not entitled to get back the
property even if he succeeds thereafter in having the decree
against him reversed. The question is, whether the same
result ought to follow when the reversal of the decree takes
place before the confirmation of sale.
There does not seem to be any valid reason for making a dis-
tinction between the two cases. It is certainly hard on the
defendant-judgment-debtor to have to lose his property on
the basis of a sale held in execution of a decree which is
not ultimately upheld. Once however it is held that he
cannot complain after confirmation of sale, there seems to
be no reason why he should be allowed to do so because the
decree was reversed before such confirmation. The Code of
Civil Procedure of 1908 contains eleborate provisions which
have to be followed in cases of sales of property in
execution of a decree. It also lays down how and in what
manner such sales may be set aside. Ordinarily, if no
application for setting aside a sale is made under any of
the provisions of rr. 89 to 91 of O.XXI, or when any
application under any of these rules is made and disallowed,
the court has no choice in the matter of confirming the sale
and the sale must be made absolute. If it was the intention
of the Legislature that the sale was not to be made absolute
80
because the decree had ceased to exist, we should have
expected a provision to that effect either in O.XXI or in
Part 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure of 1908 which
contains ss. 36 of 74 (inclusive).
It is to be noted however that there may be cases in which,
apart from the provisions of rr. 89 to 91, the court may
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refuse to confirm a sale, as, for instance, where a sale is
held without giving notice to the judgment-debtor, or where
the court is misled in fixing the reserve price or when
there was no decree in existence at the time when the sale
was held. Leaving aside cases Eke these, a sale can only be
set aside when an application under r. 89 or r. 90 or r. 91
of O.XXI has been successfully made.
Provisions in the Code of Civil Procedure over the years
have not been unanimous in this respect. In Sorimuthu v.
Muthukrishna(1) Madhavan Nair, J. traced the course of these
provisions from the Code of 1859 up to the Code of 1908.
The relevant sections in the Code of 1859 were ss. 256, 259
and 260. The net effect of these provisions was that no
sale of immovable property would become absolute until the
sale had been confirmed by the court’ and after the sale had
become absolute, the court was to grant a certificate to the
purchaser stating that he had purchased the right, title and
interest of the defendant in the property sold. Sec. 314
and S. 316 of the Act of 1877 correspond in part with s.
256 and s. 259 of the Act of 1859. Sec. 316 was amended
in 1879. The proviso to this section as amended was to the
effect that the purchaser was to have title to the property
sold from the date of the confirmation of the sale only if
the decree under which the sale took place was subsisting at
that date. Sec. 316 with the proviso was re-enacted in the
Code of 1882. In the Code of 1908 s. 316 was split up into,
s. 65 and O.XXI r. 94 but the proviso was not included
either in s. 65 or in r. 94 of O.XXI.
Elaborate arguments were put forward in the Madras case just
now cited as to the cause and effect of the deletion of the
proviso to S. 316 of the Code of 1908. Madhavan Nair, J.
referred to the report of the Select Committee which
considered the Bill to amend the Civil Procedure Code of
1877 as -showing that the alteration was effected in order
to preclude the doubt which had arisen in Bombay where a
certificate had been granted to an auction purchaser in
ignorance of the fact that the decree under which the sale
took place had been previously reversed in appeal. Probably
the decision which the Select Committee had in mind was the
case of Basappa v. Dundayya (2) before the said decision in
the High Court of Bombay. In that case, the court had
observed that it was the duty of the purchaser to satisfy
himself before he applied for confirmation of the sale that
the decree was still in existence. The learned Judge
Madhavan Nair, J. pointed out that neither in the Act of
(1) A.I R. 1933 Madras 598.
(2) I.L,R. 2 Bombay 540.
8l
1859 nor in the Act of 1877 was there any specific statement
of’ law regarding the time when the title to the property
vested in the auction purchaser as is to be found in s. 316
of the Act of 1877 after the amendment in 1879, which was
repeated as s. 316 of the Act of 1882, and in the present
Act of 1908. Further, according to the learned Judge :
"By s. 49, Amending Act of 1879, it was
enacted that the title of the auction
purchaser to the property would start from the
date of the certificate and in order that it
may be so formal recognition was given to the
principle that there must be a decree in
existence at the time of the certificate; and
that the proviso came to be enacted as a
necessary condition upon which would depend
the commencement of the title of the auction
purchaser ; and when the law on the latter
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point was altered, there was no need for the
existence of the proviso and so it was dropped
out from the new Code."
Nothing has been urged before us which would lead us to take
a contrary view. Under the present Code of Civil Procedure,
the Court is bound to confirm the sale and direct the grant
of a certificate vesting the title in the purchaser as from
the date of sale when no application as is referred to in r.
92 is made or when such application is made and disallowed.
We may now proceed to take note of a few decisions before
the Code of 1908 came into force. In Subbayya v.
Yellamma(1) which was decided in the year 1885 the suit
having been instituted in 1876, the facts were as follows.
The plaintiff obtained a decree against the defendant for
Rs. 5,617/12/0. On the death of the defendant, his son was
made a party to the suit as a representative of his father
and when the son died, the grandson was made a party to the
suit as representative of his grandfather. In 1883 the
decree-holder attached certain lands and the grandson the
petitioner before the High Court, filed an objection to the
attachment claiming the property as his own. The objection
and the claim were disallowed by the District Judge by order
dated August 20, 1883. On December 5, 1883, the petitioner
filed an appeal in the High Court against that order and the
High Court on February 22, 1884 reversed the order of the
District Judge. In the meantime the lands attached were put
up for sale and were purchased on February 22, 1884-the same
day as the High Court allowed the order disallowing the
petitioner’s claim. The District Judge was not aware of the
order of the High Court nor did it appear which order was
made first in point of time on February 22. The highest
bidder was a stranger to the suit who had paid the purchase
money
(1) I.L. R. 9 Madras 130.
82
and was a bona fide purchaser. On August 16, 1884, the
petitioner filed a petition in the District Court praying
that the attached lands might be given to and put in his
possession. This was dismissed by the District Judge. The
petitioner applied to the High Court in revision under s.
622 of the Code of Civil Procedure on the ground that the
District Judge had refused to exercise the authority vested
in him to restore the petitioner to possession under the
order of the High Court and on the ground that the confirma-
tion was made without jurisdiction. He also presented an
appeal against the order as a question between the decree-
holder and petitioner, parties to the suit, relating to
execution. The High Court observed that the petitioner
might have applied to the District Court to stay the
execution pending the sale, but did not do so, and he might,
by diligence, after the appeal order was made have prevented
the sale certificate and the possession from being given to
the purchaser, but he did not do so. In these
circumstances, the Court felt that even if it had the power
to order the District Judge to deliver possession to the
appellant, it would be inclined to refuse to do so.
In Rewa Mahton v. Ram Kishen Singh(1) the Judicial Committee
observed that notwithstanding anything in s. 246 of the Code
of Civil Procedure of 1877, the auction purchaser was not
bound to inquire whether the judgment-debtor held a cross
decree of higher amount against the decree-holder any more
than he was to inquire, in an ordinary case, whether the
decree, under which -execution had issued, had been
satisfied or not.
In Zain-ul-Abdin Khan v. Muhammad Asghar Ali Khan(2) certain
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sales had been held in execution of an ex parts decree and
some of the properties were bought by bona fide purchasers.
The ,decree wag modified afterwards as a result of an appeal
to Her Majesty in Council and it was found that as the
decree finally stood, it would have been satisfied without
the sales in question having taken place. The judgment-
debtor sued the purchasers of some of the sales including
holders of the decree and bonafide purchasers. It was held
by the Judicial Committee that as against the bonafide
purchasers Who were strangers, the suit must be dismissed.
In Doyamoyi Dasi v. Mojundar(3) which the Code of 1882 both
the learned Judges held in favour of the judgment-debtor.
Maclean, C.J remarked that when the ex parte decree was
discharged, no decree in the suit remainded and that being
the position no sale could be confirmed when the decree
under which was made had ceased to exist. Both the learned
judges referred to s. 316 of the Code which included the
proviso.
(1) I.L.R. 14 Calcutta 18. (2) I.L.R. 10
Allahabad, 166.
(3) I.L.R. 25 Calcutta 175.
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In Chitambar Shrinivasbhat v. Krishnappa(1) there was an ex
parte decree which was found to have been fraudulently
obtained by the first defendant against the plaintiff and in
execution thereof certain lands belonging to the plaintiff
had been sold by auction and purchased by the second
defendant. The plaintiff sued to set aside the sale and to
recover possession of the land. It was found that although
the decree was obtained by fraud,the property was sold at a
considerable undervalue and the purchaser had no knowledge
of the fraud. It was held by the Bombay High Court that a
purchaser for valuable consideration without notice of the
fraud was not liable to have the sale in his favour set
aside. It will thus be seen that even before 1908 the
different High Courts were always disposed to uphold the
auction purchase in favour of a stranger to the suit when he
was no party to a fraud against the judgment-debtor and
where the case did not clearly fall within the proviso to s.
316 of the Code of 1882.
Let us now examine a few decisions given under the Code of
1908. In Shankar v. Jawaharlal(2) a Full Bench of the
Judicial Commissioner’s Court at Nagpur went elaborately
into the question and came to the conclusion that:
" a private satisfaction of a decree certified
in court after the sale of immovable property
has been held and before the confirmation of
the sale is ordered, does extinguish the
decree and prevent the Court from confirming
the sale in favour of the auction purchaser,
if he be the decree-holder himself, but it
does not extinguish the decree and prevent the
court from confirming the sale where a third
person has purchased the property bonafide at
the auction sale."
In Kabiruddin v. Krishna Rao(3) an application to set aside
the decree under O.XXI r. 89 was made by the judgment-debtor
after the expiry of 30 days from the date of sale. The
decree had been satisfied before the date of the
application. It was held by the Judicial Commissioner’s
Court, by a majority, that the lower court was bound to
reject the application made under O.XXI r. 89 and therefore
to confirm the sale.
In Nanhelal v. Umrao Singh(4) the decree-holder and judgment
debtor had agreed to adjust the decree before confirmation
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of an execution sale. Allowing the appeal from Nagpur, the
Judicial Committee held that when once a sale had been
effected and third party’s interest intervened, there was
nothing in O.XXI r. 2 to suggest that the sale could be
disregarded and the court could refuse to confirm the sale
on that ground. The Board pointed out:
(1) I.L.R. 26 Bombay 543.
(3) A.I.R. 1928 Nagpur 136.
(2) A.I.R. 1928 Nagpur 265.
(4) A.I.R. 1931 P.C. 33
84
"The only means by which the judgment-debtor
can get rid of a sale, which has been duly
carried out, are those embodied in r. 89,
viz., by depositing in court the amount for
the recovery of which the property was sold,
together with 5 per cent on the purchase money
which goes to the purchaser as statutory
compensation, and this remedy can only be
pursued within 30 days of the sale........
That this is so is, in their Lordships’
opinion, clear under the wording of r. 92,
which provides that in such a case (i. e.,
where the sale has been duly carried out), if
no application is made under r. 99:
"the Court shall make an order confirming the
sale and thereupon the sale shall become
absolute"."
This aspect was stressed in the judgment of Madhavan Nair,
J. who also referred to certain instances where sales had
been refused to be confirmed on grounds other than those
contained in O.XXI rr. 89 and 90. The learned Judge pointed
out that these were instances where the court held that in
law there was no sale at all. In Sorimuthu’s case(1)
Madhavan Nair, J. refused to set aside the execution sale of
property in favour of a stranger auction purchaser on the
ground that the decree leading to the sale had been upset in
appeal before the confirmation of the sale.
In Birdichand v. Ganpatsao(2) it was held that it did not
matter that the sale had not been confirmed at the date of
the reversal of the decree unless there was a successful
application under rr. 89, 90 or 91 of O.XXI.
In Amhujammal v. Thangavelu Chettiar (3) it
was observed:
"There is no provision in the Code for the
cancellation of a sale merely because of the
cancellation of the decree and though it is in
accordance with justice that a person who has
succeeded in appeal should get from the
opposite party such restitution as is
possible, there is no principle of justice
whereby an innocent third party who has pur-
chased in a valid auction held by the Court
should be deprived of his property, merely
because the decree under which the sale was
held has been cancelled in appeal. On general
principles the judgment-debtor can look to the
decree-holder to give restitution when the
decree has been set aside in appeal, but there
is no general -principle which would give him
a similar right to look to a third party who
has for good consideration purchased the
property sold through the Court."
(1) A.I.R. 1933 Mad. 598. (2) A.I.R. 1938
Nagpur 525.
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(3) A.I.R. 1941 Madras 399.
85
In S. Chokalingam v. N. S. Krishna(1) there was a Letters
Patent Appeal out of restitution proceedings in the Sub-
Court at Madurai. The first respondent was the judgment-
debtor, the second respondent was the decree-holder-
purchaser and the appellant was a purchaser from the decree-
holder-purchaser. A Division Bench of the Madras High Court
observed:
"If the purchaser were to lose the benefit of
his purchase on the contingency of the
subsequent reversal of the decree, there will
be no inducement to the intending purchasers
to buy at execution sale and consequently the
property would not fetch its proper price at
such sales, and the net result would be that
the judgment-debtor would be the ultimate
sufferer. This wise policy of protecting the
title of the stranger purchaser, even though
in any individual case it may work some
hardship, is clearly conceived in the
interests of the general body of judgment-
debtors so that purchasers will freely bid at
the auction without any fear of later
objection. But in the case of a
decree-holder-purchaser the rule is different
and in that case the purchase is subject to
the final result of the litigation between the
decree-holder and the judgment-debtor."
In Lalji Sah v. Sat Narain(2) the Patna High Court held that
auction sale of property belonging to a minor for grossly
inadequate price due to gross negligence of the guardian
would not affect the auction purchaser for value who was not
a creature of the decree-holder and a suit to set aside such
sale did not lie.
In Mani Lal v. Ganga Prasad(3) it was held that the mere
fact that the auction purchaser knew that the judgment-
debtor had filed an appeal against the decree in which the
sale was held would not affect the bonafide nature of his
purchase even if the decree was ultimately reversed.
In Abdul Rahim v. Abdul Haq(4) which was a decision of a
single Judge of the Lahore High Court, it was held that the
sale in execution of a decree could not be set aside merely
on the ground that after the date of the sale but before its
confirmation, the judgment-debtor was declared to be a
member of an agricultural tribe entitled to protection under
the provisions of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act.
All the judgments so far noticed are against the contention
of the respondent. Our attention was however drawn to a
judgment of the Calcutta High Court in Baburam Lal v. Debdas
Lala(5).
(1) A.I.R. 1964 Madras 404. (2) A.I.R. 1962
Patna 182.
(3) A.I.R. 1951 Allahabad 832. (4) A.I.R. 1936
Lahore 191.
(5) A.I.R. 1959 Calcutta 73.
86
There is an observation to the effect that where the lower
Court’s decree has been reversed in appeal, the execution
proceedings cannot go on. In that case, there was no sale
in execution and the question before the court was, whether
the plaintiff should be allowed to proceed with the
execution of a decree for Rs. 1,493-1-6 when as the result
of the final decree it was found that the defendant was
entitled to Rs. 1,589-0-8 as owelty money from the decree-
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holder.
The decision in Ariatullah v. Seshi Bhusan (1) cited by the
respondent is really of no help. There a sale was held in
execution of a decree for an amount in respect of which
there was no decree existing at the time. It was observed
that the fact that subsequently to the sale the decree,-
holder obtained a decree entitling him to the amount for
which the sale was held would not validate the sale.
For the reasons already given and the decisions noticed, it
must be held that the appellant-auction purchaser was
entitled to a confirmation of the sale notwithstanding the
fact that after the holding of the sale the decree had been
set aside. The policy of the Legislature seems to be that
unless a stranger auction-purchaser is protected against the
vicissitudes of the fortunes of the suit, sales in execution
would not attract customers and it would be to the detriment
of the interest of the borrower and the creditor alike if
sales were allowed to be impugned merely because the decree
was ultimately set aside or modified. The Code of Civil
Procedure of 1908 makes ample provision for the protection
of the interest of the judgment-debtor who feels that the
decree ought not to have been passed against him. On the
facts of this case, it is difficult to see why the judgment-
debtor did not take resort to the provisions of O.XXI r. 89.
The decree was for a small amount and he could have easily
deposited the decretal amount besides 5 per cent of the
purchase money and thus have the sale set aside. For
reasons which are not known to us he did not do so.
Lastly, it was contended that the amendment of s. 47 of the
Code of Civil Procedure altered the whole situation inasmuch
as by the Amending Act of 1956 auction purchasers are to be
treated as parties to the suit. We are not here concerned
with the question as to whether restitution can be asked for
against a stranger auction-purchaser at a sale in execution
of a decree under s. 144 of the Code of Civil Procedure and
express no opinion thereon. In our opinion, on the facts of
this case, the sale must be confirmed.
Although we have noticed some decisions where the right of
the auction-purchaser decree-holder in circumstances similar
to the
(i)A.I.R. 1920 Calcutta 99.
87
case before us was discussed or the right of a purchaser in
regard to a sale held after the setting aside of the decree
was touched upon, our judgment must not be taken as
adjudication upon any of these points.
In the result, the appeal is allowed. The order of the High
Court is set aside and that of the executing court affirmed.
The appellant is entitled to the costs of this appeal.
V.P.S. Appeal
allowed..
88