Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA KAMAKSHYANARAYAN SINGH BAHADUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CHOHAN RAM AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/10/1952
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1952 AIR 401 1953 SCR 108
CITATOR INFO :
F 1967 SC1390 (8)
ACT:
Transfer of Property Act (IV of 1882), ss. 66, 65-A-Mortgage
-Mortgagor in possession-Power to lease-Law before amendment
Act of 1929-Permanent lease by mortgagor-Validity.
HEADNOTE:
Under the law as it stood prior to the enactment of s. 65-A
of the Transfer of Property Act, by Act XX of 1929, the
question whether the mortgagor in possession had powar to
lease the mortgaged property has got to be determined with
reference to the
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authority of the mortgagor as the bailiff or agent of the
mortgagee to deal with the property in the usual course of
management. It has to be determined general principles
and not the distinction between an English mortgage and a
simple mortgage or the considerations germane to s.66 of
the Transfer of Property Act, and the true position is that
the mortgagor in possession may make a lease conformable to
usage in the ordinary course of -management; for instance,
he may create a tenancy from year to year in the case of
agricultural lands or from month to month in the case of
houses. But it is -not competent to him to grant a lease
unusual terms or to alter the character of the land or to
authorise its use in a manner, or for a purpose, different
from the mode in which he himself had used it before he
granted the mortgage. And it is for the lessee, if he wants
to resist the claim of the mortgagee, to establish that the
lease in his favour was granted the usual terms in the
ordinary course of management.
Where a mortgagor granted a permanent lease of the
mortgaged property in the year 1925 and the High Court
upheld the lease -as against a person who had purchased the
properties in a sale held in execution of a decree obtained
by the mortgagee the mortgage, the ground that the lease
did not impair the security of the mortgagee: Held, that the
lease was not binding the mortgagee or the auction
purchaser as it was not a lease granted in the usual course
of management, even though it did not impair the security.
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Madan Mohan Singh v. Raj Kishore Kumari (1916) 21
C.W.N. 88, approved. Balmukund v. Motilal (1915) 20 C.W.N.
350, dissented from. Banee Prasad v. Beet Bhunjun Singh
(1868) 10 W.R, 325, explained.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 73 of 1950. Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated
the 26th January, 1944, of the High Court of Judicature at
Patna (Fazl Ali C. J. and Chatterji J.) in Appeal from
Original Decree No. 4 of 1941, arising out of Judgment and
Decree dated the 20th September, 1940, of the Court of the
Additional Subordinate Judge of Hazaribagh in Title Suit No.
45 of 1939.
S. N. Mukherjee for the appellant.
Gangacharan Mukherjee and A. N. Sinha for the respondents.
1952. October 23. The judgment of the Court was delivered
by BHAGWATI J,
110
BHAGWATI J.-The question that arises for our consideration
in this appeal is whether prior to the enactment of section
65-A of the Transfer of Property Act in 1929 a mortgagor in
possession had the power to grant a permanent lease of the
mortgaged property so as to bind the mortgagee.
One Raja Nilkanth Narain Singh was the owner of Gadi
Sirampur and he executed the 1st August, 1914, a simple
mortgage of Gadi Sirampur in favour of the Chota Nagpur
Banking Association Limited. In 1920 the Bank filed a suit
against his son Wazir Narain Singh to enforce the mortgage
security and obtained a mortgage decree the 29th November,
1921. The Bank purchased a third share of Gadi Sirampur in
execution of that decree the 28th October, 1922.
Proceedings were taken to set aside this sale. During the
pendency of these proceedings it appears that the 5th
November, 1925, Wazir Narain Singh granted a permanent lease
of four villages Nawadih, Koldih, Pandna and Chihutia by a
registered Patta to one Hiraman Ram who was the Manager and
Karta of his joint Hindu family. The Permanent lease was
taken by him in his own name and in the name of his son
Chohan Ram. An agreement was subsequently arrived at
between the Bank and Wazir Narain Singh that if Wazir Narain
Singh paid to the Bank or before the 16th August, 1926,
the sum of Rs. 1,10,631-4-0 the sale would be set aside.
Wazir Narain Singh executed the 14th August, 1926, a
mortgage of Gadi Sirampur in favour of the Manager of the
Court of Wards in charge of the plaintiff’s estate during
-his minority to secure repayment of a sum of Rs. 1,47,000
and out of the same satisfied the dues of the Bank and the
sale in favour of the Ban was accordingly set aside. The
plaintiff through the Manager of the Court of Wards filed a
suit the 4th February, 1929, to enforce this mortgage and
he impleaded as co-defendants in that suit Hiraman Ram as
defendant 20 and his father Dilo Ram as defendant 19. A
final decree for sale was passed the 18th September, 1931,
and the
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Plaintiff purchased Gadi Sirampur at the auction sale held
in execution of this decree the 6th April, 1935. Delivery
of possession was obtained by the plaintiff through the
Court the 16th February, 1936. Dilo Ram died after the
mortgage decree but Hiraman Ram and his son Chohan Ram
continued in actual possession of the disputed villages and
the plaintiff therefore filed the 16th November, 1939, the
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suit, out of which this appeal arises, in the Court of the
Additional Subordinate Judge of Hazaribagh against Hiraman
Ram and Chohan Ram, defendants 1 and 2, for khas possession
of these villages. The plaintiff contended that he was
subrogated to the position of the Bank, that the decree
which had been passed in the mortgage suit was binding the
defendants, that he was the auction purchaser in execution
of that mortgage decree and that the Patta -being subsequent
to the plaintiff’s mortgage thus came to an end and he was
entitled to recover khas possession from the defendants.
Defendant 2 filed his written statement contesting the
plaintiff’s claim. He denied that the plaintiff. was
subrogated to the position of the Bank. He contended that
the decree in the mortgage suit was not binding him as he
was not :a party to that suit. lie further contended that
the Patta could not be put an end to by the auction sale of
the mortgaged property. The defendant I filed a separate
written statement. He denied that he was the Manager and
Karta of the joint Hindu family. He also contended that
there was a partition amongst the members of the joint
family within a year after their possession of the
properties in suit and the properties had been allotted at
that partition to the defendant 2.
The trial Court hold that, the plaintiff was subrogated to
the position of the Bank. It also held that the defendant 1
was the Manager and Karta of the joint family and that the
defendant 2 was fully represented in the mortgage suit, that
the decree in the mortgage suit was binding the defendants
and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover possession
112
of the said properties and mesne profits from the
defendants. The defendants appealed against this decree to
the High Court of Judicature at Patna. The High Court
negatived the contention in regard to constructive res
judicata which was urged behalf of the plaintiff. It then
considered the further contention that Wazir Narayan Singh
had, after creating the mortgage in favour of the Bank no
power to grant the permanent lease in question to the
defendants. After considering all the authorities which
were cited before it, it came to the -conclusion that the
question whether Wazir Narayan Singh had got such power or
not had to be determined with reference to the provisions of
section 66 of the Transfer of Property Act and the crucial
test was whether the lease rendered the mortgagee’s security
insufficient. In spite of the fact that there was no
allegation in the plaint that the defendant’s lease had the
effect of rendering the security of -the Bank insufficient,
the High Court went into this question and a calculation
of some figures came to the conclusion that the lease of the
disputed villages in favour of the defendants did not in any
way render the security of the bank insufficient. It
therefore held that the lease was valid and was not affected
by the plaintiff’s mortgage, decree or by the execution sale
under that decree and accordingly dismissed the plaintiff’s
suit. The plaintiff obtained leave to appeal to the Privy
Council from this decision of the High Court and the appeal
was admitted the 9th January, 1946.
Both the Courts below found that the plaintiff was
subrogated to the position of the Bank. They also found
that the defendant 2 was sufficiently represented in the
mortgage suit. These findings were not challenged before us
and the only question which survived for our consideration
was whether Wazir Narayan Singh had the power to grant a
permanent lease to the defendants so as to bind the
plaintiff.
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The question whether Wazir Narayan Singh had
such power has got to be determined under -the law as it
stood prior to the enactment of section 65-A of
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the Transfer of Property Act by Act XX of 1929. The
mortgagor’s power to lease the mortgaged property was the
subject-matter of conflicting judicial decisions. Relying
upon the rule of English common law under which the
mortgagor had no power to lease, it was held in some cases
that a mortgagor could not ordinarily without the
concurrence of the mortgagee execute a lease which could be
binding the mortgagee. In other cases a distinction was
drawn between English mortgages and other mortgages and it
was considered that the mortgagor in India remained the
owner and when in possession could prima facie exercise the
rights of ownership inclusive of the power to grant leases
of the mortgaged property. The Question was decided with
reference to section 66 of the Transfer of Property Act and
it was held that the mortgagor could grant leases which were
not wasteful in their effect the mortgagee’s security.
This was the principle deduced by Jenkins C.J. in Balmukund
v. Motilal(1) from the old case of Banee Pershad v. Beet
Bhunjun Singh(1). This line of reasoning was not adopted in
other cases which laid down a different rule, viz., that a
mortgagor in possession might grant a lease conformable to
usage in the ordinary course of management but was not
competent to grant a lease unusual terms or authorise the
use of land in a manner, or for a purpose, different from
the mode in which he himself had used it before he granted
the mortgage. This was laid down by Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee
J. in Madan Mohan Singh v. Raj Kishore Kumari(3)and was
followed in a number of cases. There was thus a conflict of
decisions which was sought to be resolved by the enactment
of section 65-A of the Transfer of Property Act which dealt
with the mortgagor’s power to lease while lawfully in
possession of the mortgaged property.
"It is an elementary rule that though a mortgagor may assign
the mortgaged premises, the assignee can only take subject
to the encumbrances, and if the
(1) (1915) 20 C. W. N. 350.
(2) (i868) 10 W.R. 325.
(3) (i9i6) 21 C, W. N. 88.
114
property is sold or foreclosed by the mortgagee, any
interest which the mortgagor may have created since the
mortgage will be destroyed"’. (Ghosh Mortgage, Vol. I, p.
212.) As was observed by Lord Selborne in Corbett v.
Plowden(1), "If a mortgagor left in possession, grants a
lease without the concurrence of the mortgagee (and for this
purpose, it makes no difference whether it is an equitable
lease by an agreement under which possession is taken or a
legal lease by actual demise), the lessee has a precarious
title, inasmuch as although the lease is good as between
himself and the mortgagor who granted it, the paramount
title of the mortgagee may be asserted against both of
them." It does not however follow that a lessee from the.
mortgagor acquires no interest whatever in the property
demised to him. A person taking a lease from a mortgagor
after the mortgage does acquire an interest in the equity of
redemption and can claim to redeem that footing. But this
right of redemption does not necessarily mean that a lease
of this character is always operative against the mortgagee.
Merely because a lessee acquires an interest in the
mortgaged property which is sufficient to enable him to
redeem the mortgage it does not follow that the interest
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which the lessee has thus acquired is operative against the
mortgagee. The true position is somewhere in the middle of
these two extremes. The mortgagee is not normally bound by
the acts of the mortgagor with reference to the mortgaged
property. " But if a mortgagee takes his security with
knowledge of the purposes to which the land is applied and
allows the mortgagor to remain in possession he *ill be
bound by the acts done by the mortgagor in accordance with
the usual course." (Ghosh Mortgage, Vol. I, p. 212.) As
indicated in the observations of Sir James Parke in Pope v.
Briggs (2) the mortgagor might be considered as acting in
the nature of a bailiff or agent for the mortgagee. Con-
sequently, if the mortgagor, -after he has granted the
(1) (1884) 25 Ch. D. 678 at p. 681.
(2) (1829) 9 Barn. & Cres. 245 at p. 258.
115
mortgage, deals with the property in the usual course of
management, the interest created by him may be rightly
deemed operative against the mortgagee. An illustration of
this view is found in the ease of Moreland v. Richardson(1)
where a person took a mortgage of a burial -ground and it
Was held that, as the object of the burial ground is to
grant rights of burial, this’ being the mode in which such
property is dealt with, the mortgagee was not entitled to
disturb the graves of those who had been: buried the land,
while the mortgagor continued to hold it., The mortgagor
could thus in the usual course of management create a ten-
ancy from year to year in the case of agricultural land or
from month to month in the case of property consisting of
houses and his dealings with the mortgaged property in the
usual course of management would be operative against the
mortgagee. [Per Mukherjee J. in Madan Mohan Singh v. Raj
Kishore Kumari(2)]
"Whether the mortgagor possesses any larger powers of
leasing is however very questionable. The only reported
case in which such a power was recognized is Banee Pershad
v. BeetBhunjun Singh(1) but the report in Sutherland is very
meagre. The judgment too does not give forth any certain
sound (sic.). It is only said that a mortgagor is not
restricted in the management of the property by making a
mortgage and that so long as nothing takes place to impair
the value of the mortgagee’s security the mortgagor does not
exceed his powers in making a lease for a term. The learned
judges add perhaps somewhat unnecessarily that their
decision should not go beyond the particular facts of the
case before them." (Ghosh Mortgage, Vol. I, p. 213.)
This case of Banee Pershad v. Beet Bhunjun Singh(3
was considered by Jenkins C. J. in Balmukund v. Motilal(4)
as an authority for the proposition that as long as nothing
took place which impaired the value or impeded the operation
of the mortgage, the mortgagor in creating a temporary lease
acted within his powers and these observations of Jenkins
C.J. were
(1) (1857) 24 Beav. 33.
(2) (1916) 21 C.W..N. 88 at pp. 91, 92.
(3) (1868) 10 W.R. 325.
(4) (1915) C.W.N. 350,
116
considered by the Courts as justifying the applicability of
the provisions of section 66 of the Transfer of Property Act
while determining the binding nature of the leases created
by. the mortgagor in possession the mortgagee.; Mukherjee
J. had occasion, to consider this very case in Madan Mohan
Singh v. Raj Kishore kumari(1) and he cited it in support of
the proposition that the interest created by the mortgagor
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while dealing with the mortgaged property in the usual
course of management could be rightly deemed operative
against the mortgagee. The following observations of
Mukberjee J. in this connection at page 91 are very
apposite:-
"As the case is very imperfectly reported, we have
examined the record and ascertained the questions in
controversy. The proprietor of an estate mortgaged it the
12th March, 1861. the 7th July, t862, the mortgagor
granted an ijara potta of the property for a term of ten
years. The mortgagee subsequently sued the mortgagor alone
and got a decree; at the execution sale which-followed, the
property was sold the 24th December, 1863. The purchaser
sued the 12th March, 1867, to eject the lessee, the
ground that as he had acquired the property in the condition
in ’Which it was when mortgaged, the lease, which would
otherwise run till the 7th July, 1872, did not bind him.
’The Court of first instance overruled this contention ’as
too broadly formulated, and held that as the mortgagor had
in good faith granted the lease for a limited term a fair
and reasonable rent, the mortgagee or the purchaser in
execution of his decree could not repudiate it, specially as
the mortgage deed did not prohibit the grant of temporary
leases to middlemen or cultivators. appeal, the District
Judge affirmed this view and declined to accept the broad
contention that leases of all descriptions granted by a
mortgagor were void as against the mortgagee. second
appeal to this Court, Jackson and Mitter JJ. took
substantially the same view."
(1) (1916) 21 C.W.N. 88.
117
These observations of Mukherjee J. point out what
was the ratio decidendi of that case. The question of the
sufficiency or insufficiency of the security was not really
gone into but the Court considered that the lease was
granted in good faith, was for a limited term and stipulated
a fair and- reasonable rent and it was therefore operative
against the mortgagee. The Court was really guided by the
consideration that the mortgagor dealt with the property in
the usual course of management and the interest which was
thus created by the mortgagor in the usual course must
rightly be deemed operative against the mortgagee. ,The case
of Banee Pershxd v. Beet Bhunjan Singh(1) therefore is
really no authority for the wide proposition that a
mortgagor was not restricted in the management of the
property by making a mortgage and that so long as nothing
took place,to impair the value, or impede the operation of
the mortgage the mortgagor would be well within his powers
in making a lease for a term.
In our opinion section 66 of the Transfer of Property
Act has nothing to do with the mortgagor’s power to lease
the mortgaged property. Section 66 is a statutory,
enactment of the powers of the mortgagor in.possession in
regard to waste of mortgaged property. The mortgagor in
possession is not liable for what in terms of the English
Law of Real Property is known as permissive waste, i.e., for
omission to repair or to prevent natural deterioration. He
is however liable for destructive waste is acts which are
destructive or permanently injurious to the mortgaged
property if the security was insufficient or would be
rendered insufficient by such acts. This section therefore
has no application to the grant of a lease by the mortgagor
in possession.
The only relevant consideration is whether, the
mortgagor in possession having the authority to deal with
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the property in the usual course of management, the lease
granted by him can be rightly deemed operative against the
mortgagee., The true position has been stated in the
following terms by,, Mukherjee, in Madan Mohan Singh v. Baj
Kishore Kumar(2)
(i) (1868) 1o W.R. 325.
16
(2) (1916) 21 C.W.N. 88 at page 92.
118
"The true position thus is that the mortgagor in
possession may make a lease conformable to usage in the
ordinary course of management, for instance, he may create a
tenancy from year to year in the case of agricultural lands
or from month to month in the case of houses. But it is not
competent to the mortgagor to grant a lease unusual terms,
or to alter the character of the land or to authorise its
use in a manner or for a purpose different from the mode in
which he himself had used it before he granted the
mortgage."
The question whether the mortgagor in possession has
power to lease the mortgaged property has got to be
determined with reference to the authority of the mortgagor
as the bailiff or agent for the mortgagee to deal with the
property in the usual course of management. It has to be
determined general principles and not the distinction
between an English mortgage and a simple mortgage or con-
siderations germane to section 66 of the Transfer of
Property Act. Having regard therefore to the position that
section 66 has no application to leases of the mortgaged
property, the decision of Jenkins C.J. in Balmukund v.
Motilal(1) and the cases following that line of reasoning do
not govern the question before us.
While we are this subject we would like to em-
phasise that it is for the lessee if be wants to resist the
claim of the mortgagee to establish that the lease in his
favour was granted the usual terms in the ordinary course
of management. Such a plea -if established-and it must not
be overlooked- that the burden of proof in this matter is
upon him-would furnish a complete answer to the claim of the
mortgagee. If the lessee failed to establish this position
he would have certainly no defence to an action at the
instance of the mortgagee.
No allegation was made behalf if of the defendants that
the grant of the permanent lease was a dealing with the
mortgaged property in the usual course of management by the
mortgagor, In the absence of
(9) (1915) 20 C.W.N. 350,
119
any such plea we are of the opinion that there was no.
answer to the plaintiff’s claim and the permanent lease
granted by Wazir Narayan to the defendants could not prevail
against the plaintiff.
We have therefore come to the conclusion that Wazir Narayan
Singh had no power to grant the permanent lease in question
to the defendants, that the same was not binding and
operative against the plaintiff, that the defendants had
ample opportunity to@ redeem the mortgage if they so desired
but did not choose to exercise their right of redemption,
that the execution sale of Gadi Sirampur including the four
villages in question was binding them and that the
plaintiff was entitled to khas possession of the four
villages of which the defendants were in wrongful
possession. The appeal is allowed. The decree passed -by
the High Court dismissing the plaintiff’s suit is set aside
and the decree passed by the trial court in favour of the
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plaintiff is restored with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellant: Ganpat Bai.
Agent for respondent No. 1: B. B. Biswas.