Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PULAVARTHI VENKATA SUBBA RAOAND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VALLURI JAGANNADHA RAO & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/03/1963
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 591 1964 SCR (2) 310
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1969 SC 971 (5)
R 1971 SC 664 (23)
ACT:
Relief to agriculturists-Scaling down of debts-Compromise
decree--Nature-Whether can be scaled down-Whether re
judicata-Madras Agriculturists Relief (Amendment) Act, 1948
(Mad. 23 of 1948), s. 16 (ii)-Madras Agriculturists Relief
Act, 1938 (Mad. 4 of 1938), 8. 19.
HEADNOTE:
A suit was filed in 1941 for the recovery of Rs. 50,000.
The respondents prayed for the scaling down of the amount
due from them under the Madras Agriculturists Relief Act,
1938, on the ground that they were agriculturists. The suit
was compromised for Rs. 37,0001/- Some payments were also
made.
In 1949, another application was made by the respondents for
the scaling down of the debt on the ground that they were
agriculturists and hence were entitled to the benefits of
the Act of 1938 as amended in 1948. The contention of the
decree-holder was that the Amending Act was not applicable
in view of the provisions of s. 16 (ii) of the Amending Act
as the compromise decree had become final. Moreover, the
earlier compromise decree operated as res indicate. Another
contention was that the judgment-debtors were not agri-
culturists as they were a joint Hindu family owning an
estate for which a peshkash of more than Rs. 500/- was
payable. The trial court held that the decree was liable to
be scaled down in view of the provisions of the Amending
Act. The matter was taken to the High Court in revision.
The High Court directed the trial court to take evidence and
submit its finding on the point whether the appellants were
agriculturists or not. The finding of the trial court was
that the judgment-debtors constituted a joint Hindu family
which owned an estate for which peshkash of more than Rs.
500/- was payable and hence were not agricultrists.
The High Court came to the conclusion that the estat Was not
held jointly but in definite shares. The peshkash in
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respect of the two villages constituting an estate could not
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be aggregated. Under the circumstances, the peshkash paid
by the individual judgment-debtors did not exceed Rs. 500/-
and hence the judgment debtors were agriculturists. The
High Court also held that the compromise decree could not be
regarded as final for purposes of s. 16 (ii) of the Amending
Act, and the principle of res judicata did not apply. It
was also held that the judgment-debtors were entitled to
have the decree scaled down. The appellants came to this
Court by special leave.
Held that the appeal had no merit and must fail. The
judgment-debtors were agriculturits and the peshkash paid by
them individually did not exceed Rs. 500/-. Hence they were
entitled to get their debts scaled down.
Held also, that all decrees which had been executed and
satisfied before the commencement of the Amending Act in
January, 1949, were unaffected by the Amending Act, but all
decrees which were not final and which remained to be
executed, either wholly or in part, were subject thereto.
However, the decree-holder was not to be required to refund
any sum which might have been paid or realized by him. No
distinction was made between decrees passed after contest
and decrees passed on compromise. Both kinds of decrees
were amenable to the provisions of s. 19 (2) of the Act of
1938 and s. 16 (ii) of the Amending Act of 1948. The case
was thus governed by s. 16 (iii) and not by s. 16 (ii).
Held also, that although the conduct of the respondents in
omitting to press the claim for reduction of the amount of
the claim on the first occasion was significant, yet that
did not constitute res judicata, either statutory or
constructive. The compromise decree was not a decision by
the Court. It was the acceptance by the Court of something
to which the parties had agreed. The compromise decree
merely set the seal of the court on the agreement between
the parties and the court did not decide anything, A
decision of the court was not implicit in the compromise.
Only a decision by the court could be res judicata, whether
it be statutory under s. II of the Code of Civil Procedure
or constructive as a matter of public policy on which the
entire doctrine rests. The earlier decision could not
strictly be regarded as a matter which was "heard and
finally decided". The decree might have created an estoppel
by conduct between the parties but that had not been pleaded
and tried at any time.
Held also, that the Act of 1938 as amended in 1948 conferred
upon the petty agriculturists the right to get their
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debts scaled down in order to save them from the oppressive
loans taken at usurious rates of interest.
Arunachala Mudaliar v. C. A. Muruganatha Mudaliar, [1954] S.
C. R. 243 and Venakataratnam v. Seshamma, 1. L. R. (1952)
Mad. 492, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 17 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 6, 1955, of
the High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Guntur in C. R. P. No.
656 of 1950.
N.Narsaraju, Advocate-General, Andhra Pradesh and T. V. R.
Tatachari, for the appellants.
T. Satyanarayan, for the respondents.
1963. March 13. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH J.-This appeal on certificate granted by the
High Court of Andhra Pradesh, is directed against its
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judgment dated April 6, 1955, dismissing Civil Revision
Petition No. 656 of 1950. The High Court held that the
respondents were agriculturists within the Madras
Agriculturists Relief Act, 1938 (called for brevity "the
Act") and were entitled to a scaling down of the decree in
O. S. No. 52 of 1941, dated August 27, 1945. The decree-
holders are the appellants before us. We will now give the
facts relevant to the present appeal.
The respondents were members of an undivided
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Hindu family and the following genealogy is useful in
following the facts :-
Valluri Jagannadha Rao I
-------------------------
Srivatsankara Rao Narasimha Rao
---------------------
jagannadha Rao II Satyanarayanamurthi
(1st respondent) (2nd respondent)
Srivatsankara Rao
(5th respondent)
----------------------
Narasimha Rao Subba Rao
(3rd respondent) (4th respondent)
Narasimha Rao had taken loans on promissory notes from the
ancestors of the present appellants, and a suit was filed
for Rs. 50,000 odd in 1941 against the family. That suit
was O. S. No. 52 of 1941. In that suit, an application was
made by the respondents, claiming to be agriculturists, for
the scaling down of the amount. The plaintiffs in the case
denied that the defendants were agriculturists. The suit,
however, ended in a compromise decree for Rs. 37,000/- on
August 23, 1945, as against the claim for Rs. 50,964-1-9.
It appears that some payments were also made towards this
decretal amount. On February 21, 1949, the judgment-debtors
made another application in the suit (Interim Application
No. 279 of 1949) for scaling down the decretal amount on the
ground that they were agriculturists entitled to the
benefits of the Act, as amended in 1948. The decrec-holders
have raised three defences, (i) that the Amending Act was
not applicable in view of the provisions of s. 16 (ii) of
the Amending Act as the compromise decree had
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"become final" (ii) that the earlier compromise decree
operated as res judicata, and (iii) that the judgment-
debtors were not agriculturists as they were a joint Hindu
family owning an estate for which a peshkash of more than
Rs. 500/- was payable.
The Subordinate judge, Narsapur, before whom the application
was made, framed two issues as follows :-
(1) Whether the petitioners are
agriculturists entitled to the benefits of the
Act, and
(2) Whether the present petition is barred
under s. 16 (ii) of the Amending Act Madras
Agriculturists Relief (Amendment) Act (No.
XXIII), 1948.
The learned Subordinate judge first considered the second
issue which was one of law and by his order dated March 15,
1950 held that the decree was liable to be scaled down in
view of the provisions of the Amending Act. He then set
down the first issue for trial and posted the case for
evidence on the question whether the judgment-debtors were
agriculturists. The decree-holders meanwhile filed an
application for revision (C. R. P. No. 656 of 1950) on
April 28, 1950. The High Court heard this application on
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August 20, 1952, and decided to call for a a finding from
the Subordinate judge whether the judgment-debtors were
agriculturists. A preliminary order was made by the High
Court directing the Subordinate judges to take evidence and
to submit his finding on this point and the parties were to
be given an opportunity to object to the finding after it
was received. The Subordinate Judge, after recording the
evidence, submitted his finding on December 17, 1952. He
held that the judgment debtors constituted a joint Hindu
family which owned an estate for which a peshkash of more
than
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Rs. 500/- was payable and were thus not agriculturists.
When this finding was received in the High Court, the
revision application consideration. The High Court
Subordinate judge that the ding Act were applicable, that
could not be regarded as final was taken up for agreed with
the provisions of the amen the compromise decree for
purposes of cl. (ii) of s. 16 of the Amending Act, and that
the principle of res judicata did not apply. The High Court
endorsed the opinion of the Subordinate judge that the
judgment-debtors were entitled in law to have the decree
scaled down, provided they were agriculturists. The High
Court then considered the second question, and differing
from the Subordinate Judge, came to the conclusion that the
judgment-debtors were agriculturists and entitled to have
the decree scaled down. The decree-holders have appealed.
Before dealing with the questions that arise in this case, a
few more facts relevant to the question whether the
judgment-debtors can be considered to be agriculturists or
not, may be stated. The family, it is admitted, owned two
villages, namely, Kalagampudi and Pedamamidipalli, which
were an estate as defined in the Madras Estates Land Act.
The villages belonged to Valluri Jagannadha Rao 1, the
original holder, and were his self-acquired properties.
jagannadha Rao I executed a will in respect of these and
other properties on March 20, 1902 (exh. A 17). By that
Will, he gave a life-estate in the two villages to his two
sons--Valluri Srivatsankara Rao and Valluri Narasimha Rao-
and an absolute estate to such of the sons of these two as
might be living at the termination of each of the life
estates, respectively. The will provided further that if
any of his sons left no son , the sons of his other son
would be absolutely entitled to the properties at the end of
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the life estate. It was also provided that if his two sons
wished to divide the property, the elder son Srivatsankara
Rao was to take Kalagampudi and the younger son, the other
village. The two sons divided the properties in which they
were given life estates, vide, exhibit B I dated June 14,
1911. Srivatsankara Rao took Kalagampudi and Narasimha Rao
took Pedamamidipalli. Srivatsankara Rao died on December
15, 1936, without leaving a son, and jagannadha Rao II and
Satyanarayanamurthi, the two sons of Narasimha Rao, became
absolutely entitled to Kalagampudi in equal shares. On
February 18, 1941, Narasimha Rao executed a sale-deed (exh.
A 57) in respect of two-fifth share in Pedamamidipalli
village in favour of Subhadradevi, his daughter. Narasimha
Rao died on May 17, 1943, and jagannadha Rao II and
Satyanarayanamurthi became entitled to a half share each in
the three-fifth share in Pedamamidipalli village in addition
to the half share in Kalagampudi. The judgment-debtors
claimed that there was a partition between the two sons of
Narasimha Rao in 1946.
The peshkash, which was payable for the two villages when
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they were in the name of jagannadha Rao I, was Rs. 979-3-0
(vide exh. I. A. dated 6.10.1879). After the death of
Shrivatsankara Rao in 1936, the two villages were separately
Registered. Pedamamidipalli was registered in the name of
Narasimha Rao and Kalagampudi in the name of his sons. The
peshkash was then apportioned between the two villages and
Rs. 483-12-10 was fixed as peshkash for Pedamamidipalli
village and Rs. 495-6-2, for Kalagampudi village. This is
stated in the proceedings of the Collector, West Godavari,
(exh. A 4), dated April 24, 1940.
To decide whether the conclusion of the Subordinate judge or
of the High Court is right, it is necessary at this stage to
read a few provisions of
317
the Act. ’Agriculturist’ is defined by s. 3 (ii) of the Act
and the relevant parts of the definition are as follows : --
"(ii) ’agriculturist’ means a person who--
(a) has a saleable interest in any agri-
cultural or horticultural land in the State of
Madras, not being land situated within a
municipality or cantonment, which is assessed
by the State Government to land revenue (which
shall be deemed to include peshkash and quit-
rent), or which is held free of tax under a
grant made, confirmed or recognized by
Government ; or
(b) holds an interest in such land under a
landholder under the Madras Estates Land Act,
1908, as tenant, ryot or undertenure holder ;
or
x x x x x x x
Provided that a person shall not be deemed to
be an ’agriculturist’ if he-
(D) is a landholder of an estate under the
Madras Estates Land Act, 1908, or of a share
or portion thereof, whether separately
registered or not, in respect of which estate,
share or portion any sum exceeding five
hundred rupees is payable as peshkash, or any
sum exceeding one hundred rupees is payable
under one or more of the following heads,
namely, quitrent, jodi, kattubadi, poruppu or
other due of a like nature, or is a janmi
under the Malabar Tenancy Act, 1929, who is
liable as such janmi to pay to the State
Government any some exceeding five hundred
rupees as land revenue."
The word ’Person’ is defined by cl. (i) of s. 3 as including
an undivided Hindu family.
318
The contention of the judgment-debtors was that there were
two persons who were legatees under the will. They took
the villages not as ancestral properties but as self-
acquired properties and the peshkash payable on these two
villages must be divided between them before s. 3 (ii),
proviso(D) of the Act was made applicable. The contention
on the side of the decree-holders was that these properties
were held by an undivided Hindu family and the sons of
Narasimha Rao took the properties under the will as
ancestral properties,and the peshkash in respect of the two
villages must be added together for the, purpose of the
application of the said proviso. The High Court held the
properties taken by the two sons of Narasimha Rao under the
will were their separate properties and not ancestral
properties, as there were no words to showa contrary
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intention.The High Court also referred to the conduct of the
respondents in partitioning the villages and held that the
property was held not jointly but in definite shares. The
High Court therefore, held that the peshkash in respect
two villages could not be agreggated. The High Court
accordingly, broke up the Peshkash in respect of
Kalagampudi and the three-fifth share of Pegamamidipalli
into two halves and held that as each Esn of Narasimha Rao
was required to pay only his share the peshkash paid by them
individually did not exceed Rs. 500/- mentioned in proviso
(D), and that the judgment-debtors were,
therefore,agriculturists. This part of the case was not
challenged before us by the learned Advocate-General of
Andhra Pradesh.Indeed, the decision of the High Court is
supported by C.N. Arunachala v. C. A. Muruganatha Mudaliar
character of the property inherited by the of Narasimha Rao,
and this fundamental not be questioned. We Mudaliar (1), in
respect of the the two sons fact could must then start with
the conclusion that the judgment-debtors are agriculturists.
Before we consider the other objections to
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 243.
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the claim of the respondents to have the decree scaled down,
we will deal with another argument on this part of the case.
It is contended that the High Court was in error in
interfering with. the finding that the respondents are not
agriculturists in an application for revision under s. 115,
Civil Procedure Code. This, in our opinion, is not a
correct summing up of what the High Court did. The High
Court had called for a finding and it was to be subject to
objections by the parties. The High Court could have called
for the evidence and itself given a finding. In re-
examining the evidence with a view to reaching a correct
finding on the question whether the judgment-debtors were
agriculturists or not, the High Court was not interfering in
revision with a finding of fact, but was drawing the correct
inference from evidence it had itself ordered to be recorded
before considering the law applicable to the case. In our
opinion, this objection has no validity.
It was next argued that the respondents cannot claim the
benefit of the Act, because the compromise decree must be
considered to have become a final decree and the second
clause of s. 16 of the Amending Act and not the third
applied, and in any event, the respondents were concluded by
the compromise decree which operated as res judicata. To
understand this argument, it is necessary to read s. 19 of
the Act and s. 16 of the Amending Act. Section 19 of the
Act was amended by the addition of sub-s. (2) in 1948.
Section 19, as amended, reads :-
"19 (1) Where before the commencement of this
Act, a court has passed a decree for the
repayment of a debt, it shall, on the
application of any judgment-debtor who is an
agriculturist or in respect of a Hindu joint
family debt, on the application of any member
of the family whether or not he is the judg-
ment-debtor, or on the application of the
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decree-holder, apply the provisions of this
Act to such decree and shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in the Code of Civil
Procedure 1908, amend the decree accordingly
or enter satisfaction, as the case may be :
Provided that all payments made or amounts
recovered, whether before or after the
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commencement of this Act, in respect of any
such decree shall first be applied in payment
of all costs as originally decreed to the
creditor.
(2) The provisions of sub-section
(1) shall also apply to cases where, after
the commencement of this Act, a Court has
passed a decree for the repayment of a debt
payable at such commencement."
The Amending Act also provided by s. 16
"16. The amendments made by this Act shall
apply to the following suits and proceedings,
namely
(i) all suits and proceedings instituted
after the commencement of this Act;
(ii)all suits and proceedings instituted
before the commencement of this Act, in which
no decree or order has been passed, or in
which the decree or order passed has not
become final, before such commencement;
(iii)all suits and proceedings in which the
decree or order passed has not been excuted or
satisfied in full before the commencement of
this Act :
Provided that no creditor shall be required to
refund any sum which has been paid to or
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realized by him, before the commencement of
this Act."
The contention of the appellants is that a compromise decree
is a decree which finally determines the rights of the
parties and the case is, therefore, governed by cf. (ii) of
s. 16 and not by cl. (iii); as claimed by the respondents.
There seems to have been at one time some difference of
opinion in the interpretation of this section in the High
Court, but the view which has prevailed is that the section
applies only to those decrees which can be said to be final
in contra-distinction to decrees which are merely
interlocutory or preliminary. It has also been held now for
a long time in the High Court that cl. (iii) governs all
cases of money decrees in which the decree passed has not
been executed or satisfied in full before the commencement
of the Act. See Venkataratnam v. Seshamma (1). In other
words, all decrees which have been executed and satisfied
before the commencement of the Amending Act on January 12,
1949, are unaffected by the Amending Act, but all decrees
which are not final and which remain to be executed either
wholly or in part, are subject thereto, but the proviso
states that in scaling down such decrees, the decree holder
would not be required to refund any sum which might have
been paid or realised by him. No distinction is made
between decrees passed after contest and decrees passed on
compromise. Both the kinds of decrees are amenable to the
provisions of s. 19 (2) and also of s. 16 (iii). There
being no distinction between decrees passed after contest
and decrees passed on compromise, the words "in which the
decree or order passed has not become final" in cl. (ii) of
s. 16, cannot be held to refer to a compromise decree but to
decrees which are final such as final decrees for
foreclosure, etc., in suits on mortgages. The prevailing
interpretation of the section in the High Court is
preferable in view of the generality
(1) I.L.R. 1952 Mad. 492.
322
of the words used in ss. 19 (2) and 16 (iii). In any event,
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it would be improper to unsettle a view of law which has now
become inveterate. This case was governed by s. 16 (iii),
read with s. 19 (2) and the respondents were entitled to
broach the question of the scaling down of the decree once
again.
The appellants then seek to reach the same result by
invoking the principle of res judicata. It is contended
that the earlier decision amounts to res judicata and the
respondents- were not entitled to raise the same issue which
by implication must be held to be decided against them by
the compromise judgment and decree. In the alternative, it
is contended that the earlier compromise decree creates an
estoppel against the respondents because the appellants at
that time had shown some concession in the amount which they
were claiming and a decree for a lessor amount was passed.
This estoppel was said to be an estoppel by judgment. In
our opinion, these contentions cannot be accepted. The Act
as amended confers this right upon petty agriculturists to
save them from the operation of loans taken at usurious
rates of interest. No doubt the conduct of respondents in
omitting to press the claim for reduction of the amount of
the claim on the first occasion is significant, but this did
not Constitute res judicata, either statutory or
constructive. The compromise decree was not a decision by
the Court. It was the acceptance by the Court of something
to which the parties had agreed. It has been said that a
compromise decree merely sets the seal of the court on the
agreement of the parties. The court did not decide
anything. Nor can it be said that a decision of the court
was implicit in it. Only a decision by the court could be
res judicata, whether statutory under s.11 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, or constructive as a matter of public
policy on which the entire doctrine rests. The respondents
claim to raise the issue
323
over again because of the new rights conferred by the
Amending Act, which rights include, according to them, the
re-opening of all decrees which had not become final or
which had not been fully executed. The respondents are
entitled to take advantage of the amendment of the law
unless the law itself barred them, or the earlier decision
stood in their way. The earlier decision cannot strictly be
regarded as a matter which was "heard and finally decided".
The decree might have created an estoppel by conduct between
the parties; but here the appellants are in an unfortunate
position, because they did not plead this estoppel at any
time. They only claimed that the principle of res judicata
governed the case or that there was an estoppel by judgment.
By that expression, the principle- of res judicata is
described ’in English law. There is some evidence to show
that the respondents had paid two sums under the consent
decree, but that evidence cannot be looked into in the
absence of a plea of estoppel by conduct which needed to be
raised and tried. The appellants are, however,, protected
in respect of these payments by the proviso to cl. (iii) of
s. 16 of the Amending Act.
In our opinion, this appeal has no merits and must fail. It
is accordingly dismissed, but in the circumstances of the
case, we make no order about costs in this Court.
Appeal dismissed.
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