Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CHIDAMBARAIYER AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P. S. RENGA IYER AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/05/1965
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 193 1966 SCR (1) 168
ACT:
Madras Agriculturists Relief Act (Mad. Act IV of 1938), as
amended by Act XV of 1943 and Act XXXII of 1943, s. 9-A(10)
(ii) (b)-Mortgage debt not to be scaled down if mortgagee’s
rights transferred boa fide for valuable consideration-
Transfer of Mortgagee’s rights to family charity in lieu of
sum earlier dedicated to the charity-Such transfer whether
for valuable consideration within the meaning of proviso.
HEADNOTE:
The predecessors-in-interest of the appellants executed in
1930 a registered mortgage deed (Ex.A-1) in favour of the
respondent family for Rs. 31,000. It was a usufructuary
mortgage redeemable after 60 years. The mortgagors filed a
petition under s. 9A and s. 19A of the Madras Agriculturists
Relief Act for scaling down the mortgage debt thereunder.
The mortgagees raised a plea, inter alia, that the mortgage
interest had been transferred to a charity for valuable
consideration and therefore s. 9A(10)(ii)(b) of the Act was
not attracted and hence the mortgage debt was not liable to
be scaled down under the Act. The plea was based on
documents Ex.B-1, Ex.B-2 and Ex.B-3. The learned Subordinate
Judge, held that the transferee-the charity--not being a
transferee for valuable consideration s. 9A(10) (ii) (b) did
not apply, and on this finding he scaled down the mortgage
debt. An appeal was filed by the mortgagees wherein the
High, Court held that the transfer was for valuable
consideration and therefore the debt could not be scaled
down. The mortgagors appealed to the Supreme Court with
certificate.
HELD : (i) The agreement Ex.B-1 executed between members of
the mortgagee family showed that on August 22, 1934, the
family created a trust in respect of a sum of Rs. 36,988-9-8
for a charitable purposes. On September 3, 1939, by EX.B-2,
the usufructuary mortgagee right of the family in Ex.A-1 was
given to the charity in discharge of the obligation
under Ex.B-1. The dedication of the said property was
affirmed by the regular partition deed Ex.B-3. In short
under the said documents the family transferred to the
charity their interest in the usufructuary mortgage Ex.A-
1 in discharge of the obligation to pay the trust a sum of
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Rs. 36,988-9-8. [174 E-G]
(ii) It is implied in the definition of the word
’consideration’ in s. 2(d) of the Contract Act that the
consideration should be ’something which not only parties
regard but the law can regard as having some value’. It is
apparent from the definition that consideration may be
negative or positive. [177 A-B]
(iii) In the present case the family was under an
obligation to pay to the charity the amount set apart to it
under Ex.B-1. The mortgage interest was transferred in
discharge of that obligation. That is to say the charity
agreed as a consideration for the transfer of the mortgage
interest not to enforce its right to recover that amount
from the family. The charity gave up that right in
consideration of the mortgage interest acquired by it.
Therefore it is clear that the family transferred the
mortgage interest in trust to the charity for valuable
consideration with the meaning of s. 9A(10)(ii)(b) of the
Act. [177 B-D]
169
It allowed that the mortgage, Ex.A-1, was rightly held by
the High Court not liable to be scaled down under the
provisions of the Act. [177D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 200 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated November 8, 1955,
of the Madras High Court in A.A.0. No. 577 of 1952.
R. Ganapathy Iyer, S. N. Prasad, and J. B. Dadachanji,
for the appellants.
K. N. Rajagopala Sastri, M. R. Krishna Pillai and M. S. K.
Aiyangar, for respondent no. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. This appeal by certificate raises the question
of the applicability of s. 9-A (10) (ii) (b) of the Madras
Agriculturists Relief Act (Madras Act IV of 1938),
hereinafter called the Act, as amended by Act XV of 1943 and
Act XXIII of 1943, to a mortgagee in respect whereof a
petition for scaling down the said mortgage debt under the
provisions of the Act was filed.
On August 18, 1930, the predecessors-in-interest of the
appellants executed a registered deed of usufructuary
mortgage in favour of the family of Samu Pattar for Rs.
31,000. No interest was stipulated in the document, but the
mortgagee was put in possession of the mortgage property.
The mortgagee had to enjoy the income from the said
property, and after appropriating interest due on the
mortgage and after paying the revenue and the jenmi’s
purappad, he was to pay to the mortgagors one edangali of
paddy every year within the 30th of Makarom. The mortgage
was redeemable after the expiry of 60 years from the date of
the mortgage. The 11th appellant and his deceased father,
Narayana lyer, filed O.P. No. 43 of 1949, on the file of the
Court of Subordinate Judge, Palghat, under s. 9-A and 19-A
of the Act for scaling down the mortgage debt thereunder.
To that petition, appellants 1 to 10 and other mortgagers
were impleaded as respondents 2 to 14, and the mortgagee, as
the first respondent. As the said first respondent-
mortgagee raised the plea that the mortgage interest had
been set apart by the members of his family to a charity,
respondents 15 and 16, who were the seniormost male members
of their respective branches of the mortgageefamily, were
also impleaded as respondents to the said petition.
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The contesting respondents, inter alia, raised two pleas,
namely, (1) the mortgage property was transferred in trust
to
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the charity for valuable consideration and, therefore, s. 9-
A(10) (ii) (b) of the Act was attracted and hence the
mortgage was not liable to be scaled down under the Act; and
(2) the said mortgage right was the subject-matter of a
partition amongst the several members of the joint family
consisting of respondents 1, 15, 16 and others and,
therefore, the said mortgage was exempted under s. 9-A ( 1
0) (ii) (c) of the Act from its operation.
On the first question the learned Subordinate Judge held
that "The transferee, viz., the charity, not being a
transferee for valuable consideration" the proviso to s. 9-
A(10)(ii)(b) did not apply; and on the second question he
held that the partition of the family in the sense of
division in status was effected before the relevant period
and, that apart, as the mortgage interest of the family was
not allotted to some or one of the members of the family but
a trust was created in respect thereof in favour of a
charity s. 9-A(10)(ii)(c) had no application. In the result
he allowed the petition and granted a certificate to the
petitioners and respondents 2 to 14 to the effect that the
amount due under the mortgage on the date he made the order
was Rs. 8.788-14-10.
As the first respondent died pending the proceedings in the
Court of the Subordinate Judge, the 17th respondent, his
younger brother, was brought on record in his place.
Against the order of the learned Subordinate Judge, the 17th
respondent preferred an appeal to the High Court of
Judicature at Madras, being A.A.0. No. 557 of 1952. To that
appeal, the petitioners and other respondents were made
respondents. On the first question, the High Court held
that the family transferred the mortgage interest for
valuable consideration in favour of the charity within the
meaning of para (b) of s. 9-A(10) (ii) of the Act; and on
the second question it held that the expression " partition"
in s. 9-A(10)(ii)(c) meant partition by metes and bounds and
though it was effected during the relevant period the
mortgage interest in the property was not the subject of
partition and, therefore, the said provision was not
attracted to the mortgage in question. In the result, the
High Court, disagreeing with the view expressed by the
learned Subordinate Judge, set aside the order made by him
and dismissed the petition filed by the mortgagors for
scaling down the debt. Against the said order the
mortgagors have preferred, on a certificate issued by the
High Court, the present appeal to this Court.
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Mr. Prasad, learned counsel for the appellants contended
that (i) there was no transfer of the mortgage property in
trust for a charity but the said property continued to be
the property of the joint family, though a charge was
created on its income for some charitable purposes; and (ii)
there was no transfer of the mortgage interest for valuable
consideration.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri, learned counsel for the respondents,
apart from attempting to sustain the finding of the, High
Court that there was a transfer of the mortgage property for
valuable consideration, contended that the transfer of the
mortgage property in trust was an integral step in the
process of partition and, therefore, in law and in fact it
must be held that the said property was also subject of
partition within the meaning of para (c) of s. 9-A (10)
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(ii) of the Act.
At the outset it will be convenient to read the relevant
provisions of s. 9-A (10) (ii) of the Act.
"Nothing contained in this section, except
subsections (1) and (2), shall apply to any
mortgage-
(ii) in respect of property situated in any
other area in the cases mentioned below :-
(a) Where during the period after the 30th
September 1937 and before the 30th January
1948..................."
(b) Where during the period aforesaid, the
mortgagee or any of his successors-in-interest
has interest belonged to, or devolved on, two
or more gage’s rights in the property bona
fide and for valuable consideration,’ then, to
the whole or such part, as the -case may be
(c) Where the mortgagee’s interest in the
property subject to the mortgage or any part
of such interest belonged to, or devolved on,
two or more persons and during the period
aforesaid, a partition has taken place among
such persons, then, to the whole or such part
of the interest, as the case may be.
It will be seen from the said provisions, so far relevant to
the present enquiry, that the mortgagee’s rights under para
(b) or mortgagee’s interest in the property shall have been
bona fide transferred for valuable consideration or shall
have been partitioned Sup.165-12
172
among the joint owners during the period between September
30, 1937, and January 30, 1948, in order to earn the
exemption from the operation of the provisions of s. 9-A(10)
(ii) of the Act. As we agree with the High Court that the
mortgage interest was transferred for valuable consideration
within the meaning of para (b) of s. 9-A ( 10) (ii) of the
Act, we are relieved of the necessity to consider either the
scope or the applicability of para (c) of the said section
to the mortgage in question.
Under para (b) of s. 9-A (10) (ii) of the Act two questions
arise, namely, (1) whether the mortgage rights in the
property were legally transferred in trust in favour of the
charity; and (2) if so, whether the transfer was for
valuable consideration. If there was such a transfer, it is
not disputed that it was effected during the relevant period
mentioned in the section.
Exhibit B-1 is an agreement dated August 22, 1934, executed
between the members of the mortgagee-family. The relevant
part of the document reads :
"All of us have out of our free will and
consent set apart on this day the sum of Rs.
36,988-9-8 found entered against the date 30th
Meenom 1109 M.E. (12th April 1934) in the
ledger book under the head "kulathoorayyan" in
the accounts maintained in respect of our
common family business, the interest accrued
thereon from the aforesaid date, the sum of
Rs. 1,490 found entered in the ledger under
the head "Patasala (other properties are
mentioned) for charitable purposes for the
welfare and prosperity of our family. And it
is stipulated that the undermentioned
ceremonies shall be performed with the income
derived from the aforesaid
properties. . . . . .
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(specific amounts to be spent for different
purposes are given)
It has been stipulated that the management of
the aforesaid properties endowned for purposes
of charity shall be conducted by the
seniormost male members of the respective
branches for each year by rotation, commencing
from first Kanni 1110 M.E. (17th September
1934) and the accounts shall be rendered to
the satisfaction of the members of the rest of
the branches at the end of the year."
The recitals of this documents are clear and unambiguous.
Under this document the members of the family set apart a
specific
173
amount and other properties for charitable purposes. Under
the scheme of administration the seniormost male members of
the different branches of the family were constituted the
managers and they were directed to pay specified amounts for
specific religious purposes. The members of the family were
the authors of the trust. The seniormost male members of
the respective branches were the trustees. The charity was
the beneficiary. The subject-matter of the trust was the
said amount and the properties. All the necessary
ingredients of a trust are present in. the document. It is,
therefore, clear that the document created a valid trust of
the said amount.
Exhibit B-2 dated September 3, 1939, is a part of "schedule,
of partition allotted to the members of the E.N.A.S.
family". It reads :
"Particulars regarding the properties that
have been set apart for charity from our joint
family.-
1. Properties situate in Kunisseri Amsom
which belong to N. C. Sivarama Ayyar of
Nellisseri Grammom and others and which belong
to our family in (usufructuary mortgage) right
for a sum of Rs. 31,000 and which are held
benami in the name of Appathura Pattar alias
Seshan Pattar of Melkode Grammom."
The document contains other items of properties set apart
for charity.
Exhibit B-3, the registration copy of the partition deed
dated September 9, 1939, shows that the schedule was
prepared in connection with the oral partition agreed upon
on September 3. 1939. After orally dividing the properties
among the members of the family and setting aside the said
mortgage interest and other properties for charity, on
September 9, 1939, the said registered partition deed was
executed embodying the terms of the oral partition. It is
common knowledge that before a regular registered partition
deed is effected, there will necessarily be a stage when the
terms embodied in the registered document are agreed upon
orally between the parties. It is a necessary prelude for
executing the formal document. Ex. B-3 appears to be such
a document embodying the terms orally agreed upon between
the parties at an earlier stage. This document governs the
rights of the parties. The relevant recital in the document
reads :
"Out of the immovable properties which were
set apart previously as mentioned in paragraph
2 above, which were reserved in common at that
time and which
174
were acquired subsequently, some immovable
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properties were set apart under schedule 1 for
our common family " private trust" for the
purpose of charity. Under the oral partition
effected on 3rd September 1939 all the
immovable properties belonging to our common
family excluding those set apart for charity
as stated above were partitioned into 9
schedules from A to I in accordance with our
proportionate shares.......... But whereas we
have all agreed that the management in respect
of the properties in the aforesaid schedule I
set apart for charitable purpose and the
expenses, etc. to be met with the income shall
be conducted and caused to be conducted
without default as set out in the aforesaid
agreement entered into between us on 22nd
August 1934 and that we shall also conduct
ourselves in future in accordance with the
terms of the said agreement, no special
stipulation has been made in this partition
deed with regard to the above mentioned
properties endowed for charitable purpose and
the incomes derived therefrom."
This registered partition deed in terms affirmed the earlier
creation of trust.
From these documents it can be reasonably held as follows
(1) On August 22, 1934, the family created a trust in
respect of a sum of Rs. 36,988-9-8 for charitable purposes;
(2) on September 3, 1939, the usufructuary mortgagee right
of the family in Ex. A-1 was given to the charity in
discharge of the obligation undertaken under Ex. B-1; and
(3) the dedication of the said property was affirmed in the
regular partition deed. In short, under the said documents
the family transferred to the charity their interest in the
usufructuary mortgage, Ex. A-1, in discharge of their
obligation to pay the trust a sum of Rs. 36,988-9-8. Indeed
the High Court, on a consideration of the said documents
arrived at exactly the same finding. The learned Judges of
the High Court observed :
"On a comparison of the charity properties
mentioned in Exhibits B-1 and B-2, we find
that item No. 3 in Exhibit B-1 is the same as
item No. 2 in B-2. Similarly item No. 4 in
Exhibit B-1 corresponds to item No. 3 in
Exhibit B-2. Item No. 5 in Exhibit B-1 is
admitted to be item No. 4 in Exhibit B-2 and
item No. 6 in Exhibit B-1 is the same as item
No. 5 in Exhibit B 2. Items Nos. 1 and 2 in
Exhibit B-1 are not mentioned
175
in Exhibit B-2, but they are replaced by item
No. 1 in Exhibit B-2 which is the mortgage.
It is seen that items 1 and 2 in Exhibit B-1
are credit entries of the aggregate amounts in
the family business accounts but what is done
by Exhibit B-2 is the replacement of those
amounts by the mortgage in question. No
evidence has been let in as to what has become
of those two amounts. Evidently being credit
entries they have been converted into tangible
immovable assets for the purposes of con-
ducting the charity. It is more or less in
the nature of substituting a credit entry by
means of sot-De property, i.e., the discharge
of the liability of those credit entries by
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setting apart immovable property. Exhibit B-
3, dated 9th September 1939 is a registered
copy of the partition deed by the members of
the family and paragraphs 2 and 4 of that
document make provision with regard to the
matters in question which run as follows
Later on the learned Judges proceed to state
"We are unable to accept the arguments for the
reasons stated already. It is clear as we
have referred to already that for the amounts
entered as credit in the family business
account which was a liability payable by the
family from and out of the interest under
Exhibit B-1 the religious functions have to be
performed and that there was a substitution of
the mortgage amount under Exhibit B-3. Mr.
Ramachandra Aiyar contends that there is no
oral evidence about that substitution; nor is
it possible to conclude from the meagre and
scantly documentary evidence let in that there
has been any such substitution. The answer to
this argument is that the credit amount in
favour of Kolathu lyen is only a ledger entry
making the liability on the family with regard
to a sum of money out of which certain
charities have to be performed. In Exhibit B-
3 we do not find any credit entry in the name
of Kolathu lyen as well as patasala account.
Those liabilities must be deemed to have been
discharged by item I in Exhibit B-2, namely,
the mortgage amount. The result is the dis-
charge of one liability by another and we are
unable to see that such a state of things
would not amount to a transfer."
176
These observations also make it clear that the learned
Judges clearly held that the mortgage interest in Ex. A-1
was transferred in discharge of the liability undertaken
under Ex. B-1. But strong reliance was placed by the
learned counsel for the appellants on the following
concluding observation of the learned Judges
"In the present case the joint family has lost
the mortgage interest and the trust has gained
that interest. Therefore the transfer under
Ex. B-3 must be deemed to be for valuable
consideration."
Relying upon this observation the learned counsel commented
that the learned Judges held that a mere transfer of an
interest in favour of another was in itself a transfer for
valuable consideration. To accept this argument is to
ignore the elaborate discussion that preceded the said
observation and the relevant extracts from the judgment we
have extracted earlier. In the context of the preceding
discussion the said observation can only mean that the
transfer in favour of a charity in discharge of the earlier
obligation is a transfer for valuable consideration. Agree-
ing with the High Court, we hold that there was a transfer
of the mortgage interest under Ex. A-1 in trust to a
charity in discharge of an earlier obligation undertaken by
the family to set apart a sum of Rs. 36,988-9-8 in favour of
the charity. Under para (b) of s. 9-A (IO) (ii) of the Act,
to attract that provision the transfer shall be for a
valuable consideration. The short question, therefore, is
whether the transfer in trust of a property in discharge of
an earlier obligation was for valuable consideration within
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the meaning of para (b) of s. 9-A(10)(ii) of the Act. So
stated there can only be one answer. The classic definition
of "valuable consideration" is given in Currie v. Misa(1)
thus
"A valuable consideration in the sense of the
law may consist either in some right,
interest, profit or benefit accruing to one
party, or some forbearance,detriment, loss or
responsibility, given, suffered or undertaken
by the other."
Section 2 (d) of the Contract Act defines
consideration thus
"When, at the desire of the promisor, the
promisee or any other person has done or
abstained from doing, or does or abstains from
doing, or promises to do or to abstain from
doing something, such act or abstinence or
promise is called a consideration for the
promise."
(1875 L.R. 10 Ex. 162.
177
So far as is relevant to the present enquiry, the content of
the two definitions is practically the same, though the
expression " valuable" is implied under s. 2(d) of the
Contract Act, for consideration shall be "something which
not only parties regard but the law can regard as having
some value". From the definitions it is apparent that
consideration may be negative or positive. In the present
case the mortgage interest was transferred in trust to the
charity. What was the consideration that passed from the
charity to the family ? The family was under an obligation
to pay to the charity the amount set apart to it under Ex.
B-1. The mortgage interest was transferred in discharge of
that obligation. That is to say, the charity agreed as a
consideration for the transfer of the mortgage interest not
to enforce its right to recover that amount from the family.
The charity gave up that right in. consideration of the
mortgage interest acquired by it. We, therefore, hold that
the family transferred the mortgage interest in trust to the
charity for valuable consideration within the meaning of s.
9-A(10)(ii)(b) of the Act. It follows that the mortgage,
Ex. A-1, was rightly held by the High Court not liable to
be scaled down under the provisions of the Act.
In the reply the learned counsel for the appellants sought
to raise another plea, namely, that there was no valid
transfer of the mortgage deed in favour of the charity
inasmuch as the said transfer was not effected by a
registered document. This plea was not raised at any stage
of the litigation, presumably because Ex. B-3 was a
registered document. We cannot, therefore, permit the
appellants to raise the plea for the first time before us.
In this view it is not necessary to express our opinion on
the question whether para (c) of s. 9-A (10) (ii) of the Act
was attracted to the mortgage in question.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
178