Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
IDHYADHAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANKIKRAO & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/03/1999
BENCH:
D.P.Wadhwa, S. Saghir Hamad
JUDGMENT:
S.SAGHIR AHMAD, J.
Leave granted.
Vidhyadhar, the appellant before us, who shall
hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff, had instituted a
suit against the respondents, who shall hereinafter be
referred to as defendant Nos. 1 and 2 respectively, for
redemption of the mortgage by conditional sale or in the
alternative for a decree for specific performance of the
contract for repurchase which was decreed by the trial court
on 29.4.1975. The decree was upheld by the Lower Appellate
Court by its judgment dated 28.9.1976 but the High Court, by
the impugned judgment dated 3.5.1991, set aside both the
judgments and passed a unique order to which a reference
shall be made presently in this judgment. The plaintiff is
in appeal before us.
The property in dispute is 4.04 acres of land of
survey plot No. 15 of Kasba Amdapur, District Buldana. The
whole area of survey plot No.15 is 16.09 acres and except
the land in dispute, namely, an area of 4.04 acres, the
entire land is in possession of the plaintiff. Defendant
No.2 was the owner of the whole Plot No.15. On 24th of
March, 1971, he executed a document styled as "Kararkharedi"
in favour of defendant No.1 for a sum of Rs. 1500/- and
delivered possession thereof to the latter. There was a
stipulation in the document that if the entire amount of
Rs.1500/- was returned to defendant No.1 before 15th of
March, 1973, the property would be given back to defendant
No.2. This land was subsequently transferred by defendant
No.2 in favour of the plaintiff for a sum of Rs.5,000/- by a
registered sale deed dated 19.6.1973.
After having obtained the sale deed, the plaintiff
filed the aforesaid suit in which it was given out that
defendant No.2 had offered the entire amount to defendant
No.1 but the latter did not accept the amount and,
therefore, defendant No.2 had to send it by money order on
7.6.1973 which was refused by defendant No.1. A notice,
dated 5.6.1973, had also been sent by defendant No.2 to
defendant No.1. It was pleaded that since the document,
executed by defendant No.2 in favour of defendant No.1, was
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a mortgage by conditional sale, the property was liable to
be redeemed. It was also pleaded in the alternative that if
it was held by the Court that the document did not create a
mortgage but was an out and out sale, the plaintiff as
transferee of defendant No.2, was entitled to a decree for
reconveyance of the property as defendant No.2 had already
offered the entire amount of sale consideration to defendant
No.1 which, the latter, had refused and which amount the
plaintiff was still prepared to offer to defendant No.1 and
was also otherwise ready and willing to perform his part of
the contract. Defendant No.2 admitted the whole claim of
the plaintiff by filing a one-line written statement in the
trial court. But defendant No.1 contested the suit and
pleaded that the document in his favour was not a mortgage
by conditional sale but was an out and out sale and since
the amount of consideration had not been tendered within the
time stipulated therein, the plaintiff could not claim
reconveyance of the property in question. The trial court
framed the following issues:-
"1. Does the plaintiff prove that the defendant No.2
mortgaged the suit field with the defendant No.1 for
Rs.1500/- on 24.3.71?
2. Does the plaintiff prove that the suit field was
purchased by him from the defendant No.2 for Rs.5,000/- on
19.6.73?
3. Is the plaintiff entitled to redeem the mortgage
executed by the defendant No.2 in favour of defendant No.1?
4. Was the defendant No. 2 ready and willing to
repurchase the suit field prior to 15.3.71?
5. Is the plaintiff entitled to claim retransfer of
the suit field from the defendant No.1?
6. Relief and costs?"
The finding on issue No.1 was that defendant No.2 had
mortgaged the land in question to defendant No.1 for
Rs.1500/- on 24.3.1971. On issue No.2, it was found that
defendant No.2 had transferred the property in favour of the
plaintiff for a sum of Rs.5,000/- on 19.6.1973 by a
registered sale deed and, therefore, the plaintiff was
entitled to redeem the mortgage executed by defendant No.2
in favour of defendant No.1. Issue Nos. 4 and 5 were
decided in the negative as the trial court had held the
document in question to be a mortgage deed. In view of
these findings, the suit was decreed and the trial court
passed the following order:-
"It is hereby declared that the amount due to the
defendant-1 on the mortgage mentioned in the plaint dated
24-3-71 is Rs.1500/-. It is further ordered and decreed
that the plaintiff to pay into court on or before 29-10-75
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or any later date into which time for payment may be
extended by the Court the said sum of Rs.1500/-.
That on such payment and on payment thereafter before
such date as the Court may fix of such amount as the Court
may adjudge due interest as may be payable under rule 10,
together with such subsequent interest as may be payable
under rule 11 of the order 34 of the first schedule to the
Code of Civil Procedure 1908, the defendant-1 shall bring
into Court all documents in his possession or power relating
to the mortgage property in the plaint mentioned and all
such documents shall be delivered over to the plaintiff or
to such person as he appoints, and the defendant-1 shall, if
so required, reconvey or retransfer the said property from
the said mortgage and clear of and from all encumbrances
created by the defendant-1 or any person claiming under him
or any person under who he claims, and free from all
liability whatsoever arising from the mortgage or this suit
and shall, deliver up the plaintiff quiet and peaceful
possession of the said property. And it is further ordered
and decreed - that, in default of payment as aforesaid, the
defendant-1 may apply to the Court for a final decree that
the plaintiff be debarred from all right to redeem the
property."
This decree was confirmed in appeal but, as pointed
out above, was reversed by the High Court in the second
appeal.
The High Court was of the opinion that the plaintiff
had not paid the entire amount of sale consideration to
defendant No.2. Out of a sum of Rs.5,000/-, for which sale
deed was executed, a sum of Rs.500/- alone had been paid to
defendant No.2 before the Sub-Registrar and the rest of the
amount was not paid. The High Court further held that the
document "Kararkharedi" which purports to have been executed
for a sum of Rs.1500/- by defendant No.2 in favour of
defendant No.1 was, in fact, executed for a sum of Rs.800/-
which was paid before the Sub-Registrar. The High Court,
then, disposed of the suit by directing that the land in
question shall be restored to defendant No.2 who shall pay
back a sum of Rs.800/- (in instalments) to defendant No.1
and a sum of Rs.500/- (in instalments) to the plaintiff.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that
the sale deed, executed by defendant No.2 in favour of the
plaintiff, was not challenged by defendant No.2 who, on the
contrary, had admitted the entire claim set out by the
plaintiff in his plaint and, therefore, the High Court was
in error in setting aside the sale deed. It is also
contended that defendant No.1 who had challenged the sale
deed as fictitious had not appeared as a witness in the case
and had avoided the witness box in order to avoid
cross-examination and, therefore, an adverse inference
should have been drawn against him and this plea ought to
have been rejected by the High Court which, it is also
contended, could not have legally set aside the findings of
fact in second appeal. It is also contended that defendant
No.1 being a stranger to the sale deed should not have been
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allowed to raise the plea relating to inadequacy or
non-payment of consideration money.
Learned counsel for defendant No.1, on the contrary,
has tried to justify the interference by the High Court at
the stage of second appeal by contending that the findings
recorded by the Courts were not borne out by the evidence on
record and were perverse which could be set aside under
Section 100 C.P.C. He also contended that the document of
title in favour of defendant No.1 was misread as a mortgage
deed although it constituted an out and out sale. Moreover,
on the commission of default, as contemplated by the
document in question, the whole transaction, even if it was
a mortgage, converted itself into an absolute sale as agreed
upon between the parties. The sale having thus become
absolute in favour of defendant No.1, no title was left in
defendant No.2 to convey it to the plaintiff through the
sale deed in question.
Let us examine the respective contentions. Beginning
with the pleadings, defendant No.2 in his written statement
filed before the trial court, admitted the claim of the
plaintiff.
Annexure P-III to the Special Leave Petition is the
true translation of the copy of written statement filed by
defendant No.2 in the suit. It reads as under:-
"IN THE COURT OF HON’BLE CIVIL JUDGE SENIOR DIVISION
BULDANA:-
R.C. S.No.195/73 F.F.__________
Plaintiff : Vidhyadhar Vishnupant Ratnaparkhi
- Versus -
Defendant : 1) Manikrao Babarao Deshmukh 2) Pandu
Ganu Bhalerao
- WRITTEN STATEMENT OF DEFENDANT NO.2 PANDU GANU
BHALERAO
1) The suit filed by Plaintiff is admitted. Hence
this written statement.
Buldana Dt.20.12.73
Sd/- ( Pandu Ganu Bhalerao ) I, defendant No. 2 state
on oath that the contents of para 1 of the written statement
are true as per my personal knowledge.
Hence this affidavit is signed and executed at Buldana
on this 20.12.73.
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Sd/- ( Pandu Ganu Bhalerao )" The Lower Appellate
Court has noticed this and observed in its judgment as
under:-
"Defendant No.2 filed his written statement at Ex.15
which is extremely brief comprising only a sentence, stating
that the suit filed by the plaintiff is admitted by him."
Even while plaintiff was in the witness box, defendant
No.2 declined to cross examine the plaintiff which shows
that defendant No.2 after admitting the case of the
plaintiff, had no interest in the litigation particularly as
he had already transferred the property in favour of the
plaintiff.
It was defendant No.1 who contended that the sale
deed, executed by defendant No.2 in favour of the plaintiff,
was fictitious and the whole transaction was a bogus
transaction as only Rs.500/- were paid as sale consideration
to defendant No.2. He further claimed that payment of
Rs.4,500/- to defendant No.2 his home before the
registration of the deed was wholly incorrect. This plea
was not supported by defendant No.1 as he did not enter into
the witness box. He did not state the facts pleaded in the
written statement on oath in the trial court and avoided the
witness box so that he may not be cross examined. This, by
itself, is enough to reject the claim that the transaction
of sale between defendant No.2 and the plaintiff was a bogus
transaction.
Where a party to the suit does not appear into the
witness box and states his own case on oath and does not
offer himself to be cross examined by the other side, a
presumption would arise that the case set up by him is not
correct as has been held in a series of decisions passed by
various High Courts and the Privy Council beginning from the
decision in Sardar Gurbakhsh Singh vs. Gurdial Singh and
another, AIR 1927 Privy Council 230. This was followed by
the Lahore High Court in Kirpa Singh vs. Ajaipal Singh and
others, AIR 1930 Lahore 1 and the Bombay High Court in
Martand Pandharinath Chaudhari vs. Radhabai Krishnarao
Deshmukh, AIR 1931 Bombay 97. The Madhya Pradesh High Court
in Gulla Kharagjit Carpenter vs. Narsingh Nandkishore
Rawat, AIR 1970 Madhya Pradesh 225 also followed the Privy
Council decision in Sardar Gurbakhsh Singh’s case (supra).
The Allahabad High Court in Arjun Singh vs. Virender Nath
and another, AIR 1971 Allahabad 29 held that if a party
abstains from entering the witness box, it would give rise
to an inference adverse against him. Similarly, a Division
Bench of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in Bhagwan Dass vs.
Bhishan Chand and others, AIR 1974 Punjab & Haryana 7, drew
a presumption under Section 114 of the Evidence Act against
a party who did not enter into the witness box. Defendant
No.1 himself was not a party to the transaction of sale
between defendant No.2 and the plaintiff. He himself had no
personal knowledge of the terms settled between defendant
No.2 and the plaintiff. The transaction was not settled in
his presence nor was any payment made in his presence. Nor,
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for that matter, was he a scribe or marginal witness of that
sale deed. Could, in this situation, defendant No.1 have
raised a plea as to the validity of the sale deed on the
ground of inadequacy of consideration or part-payment
thereof? Defendant No.2 alone, who was the executant of the
sale deed, could have raised an objection as to the validity
of the sale deed on the ground that it was without
consideration or that the consideration paid to him was
highly inadequate. But he, as pointed out earlier, admitted
the claim of the plaintiff whose claim in the suit was based
on the sale deed, executed by defendant No.2 in his favour.
The property having been transferred to him, the plaintiff
became entitled to all the reliefs which could have been
claimed by defendant No.2 against defendant No.1 including
redemption of the mortgaged property.
Learned counsel for defendant No.1 contended that
since the plaintiff had filed the suit on the basis of sale
deed, executed by defendant No.2 in his favour and had
sought possession over that property from defendant No.1, it
was open to the latter to show that plaintiff had no title
to the property in suit and, therefore, the suit was liable
to be dismissed. It was contended that in his capacity as a
defendant in the suit, it was open to defendant No.1 to
raise all the pleas on the basis of which the suit could be
defeated.
In Lal Achal Ram vs. Raja Kazim Hussain Khan, 1905
(32) Indian Appeals 113, the Privy Council laid down the
principle that a stranger to a sale deed cannot dispute
payment of consideration or its adequacy. This decision has
since been considered by various High Courts and a
distinction has been drawn between a deed which was intended
to be real or operative between the parties and a deed which
is fictitious in character and was never designed as a
genuine document to effect transfer of title. In such a
situation, it would be open even to a stranger to impeach
the deed as void and invalid on all possible grounds. This
was also laid down in Kamini Kumar Deb vs. Durga Charan Nag
& Ors., AIR 1923 Calcutta 521 and again in Saradindu
Mukherjee vs. S.M. Kunja Kamini Roy & Ors., AIR 1942
Calcutta 514. The Patna High Court in Jugal Kishore Tiwari
& Anr. vs. Umesh Chandra Tiwari & Ors., AIR 1973 Patna 352
and the Orissa High Court in Sanatan Mohapatra and others
vs. Hakim Mohammad Kazim Mohammad and others, AIR 1977
Orissa 194 have also taken the same view.
The above decisions appear to be based on the
principle that a person in his capacity as a defendant can
raise any legitimate plea available to him under law to
defeat the suit of the plaintiff. This would also include
the plea that the sale deed by which title to the property
was intended to be conveyed to plaintiff was void or
fictitious or, for that matter, collusive and not intended
to be acted upon. Thus, the whole question would depend
upon the pleadings of the parties, the nature of the suit,
the nature of the deed, the evidence led by the parties in
the suit and other attending circumstances. For example, in
a landlord- tenant matter where the landlord is possessed of
many properties and cannot possibly seek eviction of his
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tenant for bona fide need from one of the properties, the
landlord may ostensibly transfer that property to a person
who is not possessed of any other property so that that
person, namely, the transferee, may institute eviction
proceedings on the ground of his genuine need and thus evict
the tenant who could not have been otherwise evicted. In
this situation, the deed by which the property was intended
to be transferred, would be a collusive deed representing a
sham transaction which was never intended to be acted upon.
It would be open to the tenant in his capacity as defendant
to assert, plead and prove that the deed was fictitious and
collusive in nature. We, therefore, cannot subscribe to the
view expressed by the Privy Council in the case of Lal Achal
Ram (supra) in the broad terms in which it is expressed but
do approve the law laid down by the Calcutta, Patna and
Orissa High Courts as pointed out above.
In the instant case, the property which was mortgaged
in favour of defendant No.1 was transferred by defendant
No.2, who was the owner of the property, to plaintiff. This
transfer does not, in any way, affect the rights of
defendant No.1 who was the mortgagee and the mortgage in his
favour, in spite of the transfer, subsisted. When the
present suit for redemption was filed by the plaintiff,
defendant No.2, as pointed out above, admitted the claim of
the plaintiff by filing a one-sentence written statement
that the claim of the plaintiff was admitted. When the
plaintiff entered into the witness box, defendant No.2 did
not cross examine him. He did not put it to the plaintiff
that the entire amount of consideration had not been paid by
him. Defendant No.1 alone raised the question of validity
of the sale deed in favour of the plaintiff by pleading that
it was a fictitious transaction as the sale consideration
had not been paid to defendant No.2 in its entirety. Having
pleaded these facts and having raised the question relating
to the validity of the sale deed on the ground that the
amount of consideration had not been paid, defendant No.2
did not, in support of his case, enter into the witness box.
Instead, he deputed his brother to appear as a witness in
the case. He did enter into the witness box but could not
prove that the sale consideration had not been paid to
defendant No.2. On a consideration of the entire evidence
on record, the trial court recorded a positive finding of
fact that the sale deed, executed by defendant No.2 in
favour of the plaintiff, was a genuine document and the
entire amount of sale consideration had been paid. This
finding was affirmed by the Lower Appellate Court but the
High Court intervened and recorded a finding that although
the property which was mentioned to have been sold for a sum
of Rs.5,000/-, the plaintiff had, in fact, paid only Rs.
500/- to defendant No.2. The amount of Rs.4,500/- which was
indicated in the sale deed to have been paid to defendant
No.2, prior to registration, was not correct. It was for
this reason that the High Court while redeeming the property
directed that the amount of sale consideration which was
paid by the plaintiff to defendant No.2 shall be returned by
defendant No.2 and the property would revert back to him.
The findings of fact concurrently recorded by the
trial court as also by the Lower Appellate Court could not
have been legally upset by the High Court in a second appeal
under Section 100 C.P.C. unless it was shown that the
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findings were perverse, being based on no evidence or that
on the evidence on record, no reasonable person could have
come to that conclusion.
The findings of fact concurrently recorded by the
lower Courts on the question of title of the plaintiff on
the basis of sale deed, executed in his favour by defendant
No.2, have been upset by the High Court on the ground that
full amount of consideration does not appear to have been
paid by plaintiff to defendant No.2. It will be worthwhile
to reproduce the findings recorded by the High Court on this
question. The High Court observed:-
"14. As already stated above, the plaintiff had paid
a nominal amount of Rs.500/- before the Sub-Registrar and
got the document executed considering the plight of the
defendant No.2 that his seven acres of land was already
mortgaged with the plaintiff and, in fact, no further
consideration of Rs.4,500/-, as alleged, had been paid to
the defendant No.2. This conclusion is supported by the
conduct of the defendant No.2, who had served the plaintiff
with a notice alleging that the sale-deed executed in his
favour was a sham and bogus one and without any
consideration. Even a complaint came to be made before the
police about the said bogus transaction, which was
subsequently withdrawn in view of the fact that the
defendant No.2’s lands to the extent of 7 acres were already
mortgaged with the plaintiff. All these would show that the
plaintiff was pursuing the defendant No.2 to transfer his
property in his favour to the extent of 4 acres 4 gunthas
and under pressure the defendant No.2 admitted to have
received the sum of Rs.4,500/-. As stated above, this
admission was made by the defendant No.2 in one sentence.
Therefore, considering all these aspects, the learned lower
appellate Court has held that no consideration has passed in
favour of the defendant No.2 except the sum of Rs.500/- only
alleged to have been paid before the Sub- Registrar. It is
apparent that the plaintiff might have purchased the
property only for Rs.2,000/- i.e. Rs.1,500/- which were to
be paid to the defendant No.1 for redemption of mortgage and
Rs.500/- paid to the defendant No.2 before the
Sub-Registrar.
15. Considering all the above facts and
circumstances, I am of the view that the conclusion arrived
at by the learned lower appellate Court directing the
defendant No.1 to receive the amount of redemption and to
deliver the possession of the suit field to the plaintiff is
not correct. It is pertinent to note that the transaction
between the defendant No.1 and 2 itself was a money- lending
transaction and that the sale-deed was a mortgage sale.
Therefore, the defendant No.1 cannot become the owner of the
property. Even, as held by the learned trial Court, that
nothing has been placed on record by the defendant No.1 to
support his contention that he had paid Rs.700/- at home,
and the consideration of Rs.800/- had been paid before the
Sub-Registrar to defendant No.2, the learned trial Court
observed that it is doubtful whether this amount of Rs.700/-
has also been paid to the defendant No.2 by the defendant
No.1. This shows that the said mortgage was only for
Rs.800/- and that the amount of Rs.700/- has not passed to
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the defendant No.2 from defendant No.1. It is clear that
except Rs.500/- nothing has been paid by the plaintiff to
defendant No.2 as the amount of Rs.4,500/- alleged to have
been paid at home to the defendant No.2 has not been
established. Therefore, the view taken by both the Courts
below under no circumstances, can be sustained."
The circumstances relied upon by the High Court had
already been considered by the Courts below and ultimately
the Lower Appellate Court proceeded to say as under:-
"But it would appear as though that all this
discussion is wothless in view of the fact that deft. No.2
himself admitted in his deposition that he executed the sale
deed in favour of the plaintiff and accepted the price. His
written statement and deposition is quite eloquent on that
point. On the fact of these admission, there cannot be any
other circumstance which would assist the Court to hold that
the document executed in favour of the plaintiff by
defendant No.2 as bogus, sham and without consideration,
notwithstanding the fact that the circumstances and the
facts of the case infallibly point that the document of sale
does not convey the real transaction that had taken place
between plaintiff and defendant No.2. As such although with
reluctance, it has to be held that the plaintiff had
purchased the property from defendant No.2."
In the face of the findings recorded by the trial
court as also by the Lower Appellate Court on the question
of execution of sale deed by defendant No.2 in favour of the
plaintiff with the further finding that it was a valid sale
deed which properly conveyed the title of the property in
question to the plaintiff, it was not expected of the High
Court to set aside those findings merely on the ground that
the circumstances which had already been considered by the
lower Courts, appeared to suggest some other conclusion from
proved facts.
Let us scrutinise the circumstances relied upon by the
High Court.
In order to prove his case, the plaintiff had examined
defendant No.2 as a witness who admitted to have executed
the sale deed in favour of the plaintiff and further
admitted to have received the entire amount of sale
consideration. The High Court has adversely commented upon
the production of defendant No.2 as a witness by saying as
under:-
"Next witness examined by the plaintiff was defendant
No.2. The plaintiff, while examining this witness, has not
incorporated the name of this witness in the list of witness
nor any application was made for the examination of
defendant No.2. The willingness of the defendant No.2 was
also not placed on record, to appear as a witness for the
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plaintiff."
This is wholly an erroneous view.
Summoning and attendance of witnesses has been
provided for in Order 16 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Order 16 Rule 1 which speaks of list of witnesses and
summons to witnesses provides as under:-
"R. 1. List of witnesses and summons to witnesses.
(1) On or before such date as the Court may appoint,
and not later than fifteen days after the date on which the
issues are settled, the parties shall present in Court a
list of witnesses whom they propose to call either to give
evidence or to produce documents and obtain summons to such
persons for their attendance in Court.
(2) A party desirous of obtaining any summons for the
attendance of any person shall file in Court an application
stating therein the purpose for which the witness is
proposed to be summoned.
(3) The Court may, for reasons to be recorded, permit
a party to call, whether by summoning through Court or
otherwise, any witness, other than those whose names appear
in the list referred to in sub-rule (1), if such party shows
sufficient cause for the omission to mention the name of
such witness in the said list.
(4) Subject to the provisions of sub-rule (2), summons
referred to in this rule may be obtained by parties on an
application to the Court or to such officer as may be
appointed by the Court in this behalf."
Rule 1A which allows production of witnesses
without summons provides as under:-
"R. 1A. Production of witnesses without summons.
Subject to the provisions of sub-rule (3) of Rule 1,
any party to the suit may, without applying for summons
under rule (1), bring any witness to give evidence or to
produce documents."
These two Rules read together clearly indicate that it
is open to a party to summon the witnesses to the Court or
may, without applying for summons, bring the witnesses to
give evidence or to produce documents. Sub-Rule (3) of Rule
1 provides that although the name of a witness may not find
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place in the list of witnesses filed by a party in the
Court, it may allow the party to produce a witness though he
may not have been summoned through the Court. Rule 1A which
was introduced by the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment)
Act, 1976 with effect from 1.2.1977 has placed the matter
beyond doubt by providing in clear and specific terms that
any party to the suit may bring any witness to give evidence
or to produce documents. Since this Rule is subject to the
provisions of Sub-Rule (3) of Rule 1, all that can be
contended is that before proceeding to examine any witness
who might have been brought by a party for that purpose, the
leave of the Court may be necessary but this by itself will
not mean that Rule 1A was in derogation of Sub-Rule (3) of
Rule 1. The whole position was explained by this Court in
Mange Ram vs. Brij Mohan & Ors., AIR 1983 SC 925 = (1983) 4
SCC 36 = 1983 (3) SCR 525, in which it was held that
Sub-Rule (3) of Rule 1 and Rule 1A operate in two different
areas and cater to two different situations. It was held:-
"There is no inner contradiction between sub-rule (1)
of Rule 1 and Rule 1A of Order XVI. Sub-rule (3) of Rule 1
of Order XVI confers a wider jurisdiction on the Court to
cater to a situation where the party has failed to name the
witness in the list and yet the party is unable to produce
him or her on his own under Rule 1A and in such a situation
the party of necessity has to seek the assistance of the
Court under sub-rule (3) to procure the presence of the
witness and the Court may if it is satisfied that the party
has sufficient cause for the omission to mention the name of
such witness in the list filed under sub-rule (1) of Rule 1,
the Court may still extend its assistance for procuring the
presence of such a witness by issuing a summons through the
Court or otherwise which ordinarily the Court would not
extend for procuring the attendance of a witness whose name
is not shown in the list. Therefore, sub-rule (3) of Rule 1
and Rule 1A operate in two different areas and cater to two
different situations."
In view of the above, even though the name of
Defendant No.2 was not mentioned in the list of witnesses
furnished by the plaintiff, he was properly examined as a
witness and his testimony was not open to any criticism on
the ground that he was produced as a witness without being
summoned through the Court and without his name being
mentioned in the list of witnesses.
The next circumstance relied upon by the High Court in
discarding the sale deed is that defendant No.2 himself had
given a notice to the plaintiff in which it was set out that
the sale deed was a sham transaction for which the
consideration was not paid. In relying upon this
circumstance, the High Court overlooked the fact that
defendant No.2, in his capacity as a witness for the
plaintiff, had stated in clear terms that this notice was
issued to the plaintiff at the instance of defendant No.1.
Defendant No.2 also stated that the complaint made by him to
the police in that regard was withdrawn by him. This
circumstance, therefore, also could not have been legally
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relied upon by the High Court in holding that full amount of
consideration was not paid.
It could not be ignored that the plaintiff’s case had
been admitted in unequivocal terms by defendant No.2 in his
written statement. It could also not be ignored that when
plaintiff examined himself as a witness in the suit,
defendant No.2 refused to cross-examine him. The
circumstance, which, however, clinches the matter is the
statement of defendant No.2 on oath in which he admitted
that he had executed a sale deed in favour of the plaintiff
and had obtained full amount of consideration. The sale
deed is a registered document which recites that out of the
amount of Rs.5,000/-, which was the sale price, a sum of Rs.
4,500/- had been paid earlier while Rs.500/- was paid before
the Sub-Registrar. This recital read in the light of the
admission made by defendant No.2 in his written statement
and, thereafter, in his statment on oath as a witness
clearly establishes the fact that defendant No.2 had
executed a sale deed in favour of plaintiff for a price
which was paid to defendant No.2.
Even if the findings recorded by the High Court that
the plaintiff had paid only Rs.500/- to defendant No.2 as
sale consideration and the remaining amount of Rs.4,500/-
which was shown to have been paid before the execution of
the deed was, in fact, not paid, the sale deed would not,
for that reason, become invalid on account of the provisions
contained in Section 54 of the Transfer of Property Act
which provide as under:-
"54. "Sale" is a transfer of ownership in exchange
for a price paid or promised or part- paid and
part-promised.
Such a transfer, in the case of tangible immoveable
property of the value of one hundred rupees and upwards, or
in the case of a reversion or other intangible thing, can be
made only by a registered instrument.
In the case of tangible immoveable property, of a
value less than one hundred rupees, such transfer may be
made either by a registered instrument or by delivery of the
property.
Delivery of tangible immoveable property takes place
when the seller places the buyer, or such person as he
directs; in possession of the property.
A contract for the sale of immoveable property is a
contract that a sale of such property shall take place on
terms settled between the parties.
It does not, of itself, create any interest in or
charge on such property."
The definition indicates that in order to constitute a
sale, there must be a transfer of ownership from one person
to another, i.e., transfer of all rights and interests in
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the properties which are possessed by that person are
transferred by him to another person. The transferor cannot
retain any part of his interest or right in that property or
else it would not be a sale. The definition further says
that the transfer of ownership has to be for a "price paid
or promised or part-paid and part-promised". Price thus
constitutes an essential ingredient of the transaction of
sale. The words "price paid or promised or part-paid and
part- promised" indicate that actual payment of whole of the
price at the time of the execution of sale deed is not sine
qua non to the completion of the sale. Even if the whole of
the price is not paid but the document is executed and
thereafter registered, if the property is of the value of
more than Rs.100/-, the sale would be complete.
There is a catena of decisions of various High Courts
in which it has been held that even if the whole of the
price is not paid, the transaction of sale will take effect
and the title would pass under that transaction. To cite
only a few, in Gyatri Prasad vs. Board of Revenue & Ors.,
1973 Allahabad Law Journal 412, it was held that non-payment
of a portion of the sale price would not effect validity of
sale. It was observed that part payment of consideration by
vendee itself proved the intention to pay the remaining
amount of sale price. To the same effect is the decision of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Sukaloo & Anr. vs. Punau,
AIR 1961 M.P. 176 = ILR (1960) M.P. 614.
The real test is the intention of the parties. In
order to constitute a "sale", the parties must intend
transfer the ownership of the property and they must also
intend that the price would be paid either in presentii or
in future. The intention is to be gathered from the recital
in the sale deed, conduct of the parties and the evidence on
record.
Applying these principles to the instant case, it will
be seen that defendant No.2 executed a sale deed in favour
of the plaintiff, presented it for registration, admitted
its execution before the Sub-Registrar before whom remaining
part of the sale consideration was paid and, thereafter, the
document was registered. The additional circumstances are
that when the plaintiff instituted a suit on the basis of
his title based on the aforesaid sale deed, defendant No.2,
who was the vendor, admitted in his written statement, the
whole case set out by the plaintiff and further admitted in
the witness box that he had executed a sale deed in favour
of the plaintiff and had also received full amount of
consideration. These facts clearly establish that a
complete and formidable sale deed was executed by defendant
No.2 in favour of the plaintiff and the title in the
property passed to plaintiff. The findings recorded by the
High Court on this question cannot, therefore, be upheld.
The judgment of the High Court on this point is also
erroneous for the reason that it totally ignored the
provisions contained in Section 55(4)(b) of the Transfer of
Property Act which are set out below:-
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"55. In the absence of a contract to the contrary the
buyer and seller of immoveable property respectively are
subject to the liabilities, and have the rights, mentioned
in the rules next following, or such of them as are
applicable to the property sold:
(1) .........................................
(2) ........................................
(3) ........................................
(4) The seller is entitled-
(a) ................................... (b) Where the
ownership of the property has passed to the buyer before
payment of the whole of the purchase-money, to a charge upon
the property in the hands of the buyer, any transferee
without consideration or any transferee with notice of
non-payment, for the amount of the purchase-money, or any
part thereof remaining unpaid, and for interest on such
amount or part from the date on which possession has been
delivered.
(5) .........................................
(6) ........................................."
Clause (b) extracted above provides that where the
ownership of the property is transferred to the buyer before
payment of the whole of the sale price, the vendor is
entitled to a charge on that property for the amount of the
sale price as also for interest thereon from the date of
delivery of possession. Originally, there was no provision
with regard to the date from which interest would be payable
on the amount of unpaid purchase money. The Special
Committee which suggested an amendment in this Section gave
the following reason:-
"This Clause is also silent as to the date from which
the interest on the unpaid purchase money should run. It
seems fair that it should run from the date when the buyer
is put in possession."
It was on the recommendation of the Special Committee
that the words "from the date on which possession has been
delivered" were inserted into this Clause by Section 17 of
the Transfer of Property (Amendment) Act, 1929 (XX of 1929).
This Clause obviously applies to a situation where the
ownership in the property has passed to the buyer before the
whole of the purchase money was paid to the seller or the
vendor. What is contained in this Clause is based on the
English doctrine of Equitable Lien as propounded by Baron
Rolfe in Goode & Anr. v. Burton, (1847) 74 RR 633 = 1 Ex.
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189. This Clause confers statutory recognition on the
English Doctrine of Equitable Lien. As pointed out by the
Privy Council in Webb & Anr. vs. Macpherson, 30 Indian
Appeals 238, the statutory charge under this paragraph is
inflexible. The charge does not entitle the seller to
retain possession of the property as against the buyer but
it positively gives him a right to enforce the charge by
suit. (See: Venkataperumal Naidu vs. Rathnasabhapathi
Chettiar, AIR 1953 Madras 821; Shobhalal Shyamlal
Kurmi vs. Sidhelal Halkelal Bania, AIR 1939 Nagpur 210 and
Basalingaya Revanshiddappa vs. Chinnaya Karibasappa, AIR
1932 Bombay 247).
In view of the above, the High Court was wholly in
error in coming to the conclusion that there was no sale as
only a sum of Rs.500/- was paid to defendant No.2 the
balance amount of Rs.4,500/- was not paid. Since the title
in the property had already passed, even if the balance
amount of sale price was not paid, the sale would not become
invalid. The property sold would stand transferred to the
buyer subject to the statutory charge for the unpaid part of
the sale price.
Learned counsel for defendant No.1 thereafter
contended that the deed dated 24th of March, 1971 was not a
mortgage deed but an out and out sale with the result that
the property having been transferred to defendant No.1 was
not available for being sold to plaintiff. This contention
must meet the same fate as it met in the Courts below.
The document is headed as MORTGAGE BY CONDITIONAL SALE
(KARARKHAREDI). It is mentioned in this deed that the
immovable property which was described in areas and
boundaries was being mortgaged by conditional sale in favour
of defendant No.1 for a sum of Rs.1500/- out of which
Rs.700/- were paid at home while Rs.800/- were paid before
the Sub-Registrar. The further stipulation in the deed is
that the aforesaid amount of Rs.1500/- would be returned to
defendant No.1 on or before 15th March, 1973 and the
property would be reconveyed to defendant No.2. If it was
not done then defendant would become the owner of the
property.
Mortgage by conditional sale is defined under Section
58(c) as under:-
"58. (a)......................................
(b)...................................... (c)Where the
mortgagor ostensibly sells the mortgaged property -
on condition that on default of payment of the
mortgage-money on a certain date the sale shall become
absolute, or on condition that on such payment being made
the sale shall become void, or on condition that on such
payment being made the buyer shall transfer the property to
the seller, the transaction is called a mortgage by
conditional sale and the mortgage a mortgagee by conditional
sale:
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Provided that no such transaction shall be deemed to
be a mortgage, unless the condition is embodied in the
document which effects or purports to effect the sale.
(d).....................................
(e).....................................
(f).....................................
(g)....................................."
The Proviso to this Clause was added by Section 19 of
the Transfer of Property (Amendment) Act, 1929 (XX of 1929).
The Proviso was introduced in this Clause only to set at
rest the controversy about the nature of the document;
whether the transaction would be a sale or a mortgage. It
has been specifically provided by the Amendment that the
document would not be treated as a mortgage unless the
condition of repurchase was contained in the same document.
The basic principle is that the form of transaction is
not the final test and the true test is the intention of the
parties in entering into the transaction. If the intention
of the parties was that the transfer was by way of security,
it would be a mortgage. The Privy Council as early as in
Balkishen Das & Ors. vs. Legge, 27 Indian Appeals 58, had
laid down that, as between the parties to the document, the
intention to treat the transaction as an out and out sale or
as a mortgage has to be found out on a consideration of the
contents of document in the light of surrounding
circumstances. The decision of this Court in Bhaskar Waman
Joshi vs. Shrinarayan Rambilas Agarwal, AIR 1960 SC 301 =
1960 (2) SCR 117 and C.I.T., Assam, Tripura & Manipur vs.
Nand Lal Agarwal, AIR 1966 SC 902 = 1966 (2) SCR 918 are
also to the same effect.
The contents of the document have already been
considered above which indicate that defendant No.2 executed
a mortgage by conditional sale in favour of defendant No.1.
He had promised to pay back Rs.1500/- to him by a particular
date failing which the document was to be treated as a sale
deed. The intention of the parties is reflected in the
contents of the document which is described as a mortgage by
conditional sale. In the body of the document, the mortgage
money has also been specified. Having regard to the
circumstances of this case as also the fact that the
condition of repurchase is contained in the same document by
which the mortgage was created in favour of defendant No.1,
the deed in question cannot but be treated as a mortgage by
conditional sale. This is also the finding of the Courts
below.
So far as the contention of the learned counsel for
defendant No.1 that the mortgage money was not paid within
the time stipulated in the document and, therefore, the
transaction, even if it was a mortgage, became an absolute
sale, is concerned, the finding of the Courts below is that
this money was tendered to defendant No.1 who refused to
accept it. Defendant No.2 had thus performed his part of
the agreement and had offered the amount to defendant No.1
so that the property may be reconveyed to him but defendant
No.1 refused to accept the money. He, therefore, cannot
complain of any default in not paying the amount in question
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within the time stipulated in the deed. Since there was no
default on the part of defendant No.2, the document would
not convert itself into a sale deed and would remain a
mortgage deed. The suit for redemption was, therefore,
properly filed by the plaintiff who was the assignee of
defendant No.2.
For the reasons stated above, the appeal is allowed
and the impugned judgment passed by the High Court is set
aside. The judgment and decree passed by the trial court as
upheld by the Lower Appellate Court are restored but without
any order as to costs.