Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
D.S. THIMMAPPA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SIDDARAMAKKA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/03/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1960 JT 1996 (4) 324
1996 SCALE (3)704
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
We have heard learned counsel on both sides.
The appellant had two sale deeds dated April 24, 1900
and July 20, 1968, an executed by the respondent
transferring the schedule property. On the later data, i.e.,
July 20, 1968, an agreement of reconveyance was also
executed by the appellant with a stipulation that in the
event of the respondent repaying Rs. 5000/- within eight
years from that date in one lump sum, she would be entitled
to have the sale deed executed and registered in her favour.
It is the case of the respondent that before the expiry of
eight years, some time in June 1976, she had approached the
appellant but he avoided the reconveyance. Consequently, she
requested her lawyer to issue a notice which came to be
issued to the appellant to be present before the sub-
Registrar to receive the amount and execute the sale deed
but he failed to do that. On July 19, 1976 The sub-Registrar
had issued notice calling upon the appellant to be present
in the sub- Registrar’s office. Although he received the
notice, he was not present to receive the amount and
facilitate registration of the sale deed on July 20, 1976.
Consequently, the suit for specific performance came to be
filed.
The trial Court, after adduction of evidence by both
the parties had accepted the plea of the respondent that she
had offered payment within the limitation but Thimmappa had
avoided the receipt thereof. The appellate Court reversed
the decree on the finding that the time is the essence of
contract. The deed of reconveyance stipulates eight years
period from the date of execution of the sale deed and
since the respondent had not obtained reconveyance within
that period, the period of limitation expired by efflux of
time. Therefore, the suit was barred by limitation. The High
Court of Karnataka in Second Appeal No.6 of 1988 by judgment
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and decree dated January 23, 1995 reversed the decree of the
appellate Court and restored that of the trial Court. Thus
this appeal by special leave.
Shri Javali, learned senior counsel for the appellant,
contended that in view of the specific recital in the deed
of reconveyance that the respondent had to have the
reconveyance executed within eights years from July 20, 1968
and since she had not had the conveyance executed, the suit
is barred by limitation. We find no force in the contention.
It is settled law that unless the deed of agreement of
sale stipulated a date for performance, time is not always
essence of the contract. It would be seen that Thimmappa had
the land purchased from the respondent and there was an
agreement of reconveyance on condition that the respondent
should return the consideration paid under the sale deeds,
viz., Rs.5,000/- within eight years from that date. The
appellant had gone to the extent of even denying the
executing of reconveyance. Therefore, the High Court has
gone into the question of the probability of the respondent
approaching the appellant for reconveyance before the expiry
of the limitation. The High Court has, therefore, rightly
gone into the question whether there was an agreement of
reconveyance and whether the respondent had performed her
part of the contract in seeking reconveyance. That being the
material questions which hinge upon the discretion to be
exercised by the Court to enforce for specific performance f
the contract, the appellate Court had not adverted to that
material part. But merely it relied upon the plea of
limitation. Under those circumstances, the High Court has
not committed any error of law in interfering with the
decree of the appellate Court and considering relevant
circumstantial evidence that unless the respondent had in
the first instance approached and the appellant avoided the
receipt of the consideration and execution of sale deed, the
respondent had no occasion to approach an advocate to get
the notice issued asking the appellant to be present before
before the Sub-registrar for execution of sale deed under
Article 54 of the Schedule to the Limitation Act 21 of 1963,
limitation for specific preference begins to run from the
date fixed in the contract or from the date of refusal to
execute the sale deed. Since time is not the essence of the
contract, the respondent had offered the payment of the
amount before the expiry of the date of reconveyance but the
appellant had refused to reconvey the same. The cause of
action arose an expiry of eight years from the date of
execution of later sale deed i.e. July 20, 1973. The
appellant by conduct refused to execute the sale deed on
July 19 1976 the suit was filed on July 20, 1976. The suit
was filed within limitation from the date of refusal, i.e.,
July 19, 1976, i.e., next day. It is not a case of
appreciation of evidence by the High Court in Second Appeal
but one of drawing proper inference from proved facts which
the first appellate court has failed in law to draw proper
inference from proved facts and non application of law in
the proper perspective. We, therefore, hold that the suit
was filed within limitation. We do not find any illegality
warranting our interference.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed. No costs.