Full Judgment Text
Reportable
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (C) NO……………………OF 2009
CC 5804/2009
Suraj Lamp & Industries (P) Ltd. Thru. DIR …
Petitioner(s)
Vs.
State of Haryana & Anr. … Respondent
(s)
O R D E R
R.V. Raveendran J.
Delay condoned. Issue notice. Petitioner to file
copies of correspondence with State Information
Commissioner as also its title deeds to the disputed
property. As this case is a typical example of an
irregular process spreading across the country, we
propose to refer to some aspects of the case at this
preliminary stage itself.
2. The petitioner, a company incorporated under the
Companies Act, claims that one Ramnath and his family
members sold two and half acres of land in Wazirabad
village, Gurgoan to them by means of an agreement of
sale, General Power of Attorney (for short ‘GPA’) and a
will in the year 1991 for a consideration of
Rs.716,695/-. It is further alleged that the petitioner
verbally agreed to sell a part of the said property
measuring one acre to one Dharamvir Yadav for Rs.60 lakhs
in December 1996. It is stated that the said Dharamvir
Yadav, and his son Mohit Yadav (an ex MLA and Minister),
instead of proceeding with the transaction with the
petitioner, directly got in touch with Ramanath and his
family members and in 1997 got a GPA in favour of
Dharamvir Yadav in regard to the entire two and half
acres executed and registered and illegally cancelled the
earlier GPA in favour of petitioner. The petitioner
claims that when its Director, S.K. Chandak, confronted
Dharamvir Yadav in the year 1999 this behalf, the said
Yadav apologized and issued a cheque for Rs.10 lakhs
towards part payment and agreed to pay the balance of
Rs.50 lakhs shortly but that the said cheque was
dishonoured necessitating a complaint under section 138
of the Negotiable Instrument Act, being filed against
Dharamvir Yadav which is pending in a criminal court at
Patiala House, New Delhi. It is further alleged that in
the year 2001, petitioner lodged a criminal complaint
against Ramanath and members of his family who executed
the sale agreement/ GPA/will in favour of the petitioner
and another complaint against Dharambir Yadav and his son
in the District Court, Gurgoan, for offences punishable
under sections 406, 420, 467, 468, 471 and 120B of IPC.
The petitioner claims that in December 2005 it lodged an
FIR in respect of offences under Sec. 406,467,468,471 and
120B of IPC against all of them.
3. The petitioner claims that as no action was taken on
its FIR by the Station House Officer/Investigation
Officer (‘SHO/IO’ for short), petitioner filed an
application under Right to Information Act, 2004 (‘RTI
Act’ for short) seeking the status, in response to which
the SHO/IO gave contradictory and misleading versions
about the status of the investigation and about the
seizure and custody of the agreement and power of
attorney from the accused. An appeal filed by the
petitioner was disposed of by the Chief Information
Commissioner, Haryana, by an order dated 27.12.2007
merely directing that Police should re-investigate the
FIR as per the order of the court and the Department
should give a specific proper reply about the status of
the documents, to the appellant by 25.1.2008. According
to the petitioner, the Commissioner ought to have
initiated action against the police for giving false and
misleading information under section 20 of the RTI Act.
Petitioner therefore filed a writ petition challenging
the order of the Chief Information Commissioner and
seeking initiation of proceedings under section 20 of the
RTI Act and imposition of penalty. The said writ petition
was disposed of by the High Court by the impugned order
holding that section 20 was directory and not mandatory.
This SLP seeks leave to file an appeal against the said
order.
4. We are of the view that matter involves an issue
whose seriousness is underestimated. The issue to be
addressed is avoidance of execution and registration of
deeds of conveyance as the mode of transfer of freehold
immovable property by increasing tendency to adopt ‘Power
of Attorney Sales’, that is execution of sale agreement/
general power of attorney/will (for short ‘SA-GPA-Will
transactions’) instead of execution and registration of
regular deeds of conveyance, on receiving full
consideration. This method adopted has the following
variants:
(i)Execution of an agreement of sale, one or two powers
of attorney, with or without a will, all unregistered.
(ii)Execution of an agreement of sale, power/s of
attorney and will, registering either all of them, or
any two of them, or any one of them.
5. The ‘Power of Attorney Sales’ as a method of
‘transfer’ was evolved by lawyers and document writers in
Delhi, to overcome certain restrictions on transfer of
flats by the Delhi Development Authority (for short
‘DDA’).
DDA had undertaken large scale development by
constructing of flats. It is stated that when DDA
allotted a flat to an allottee, any transfer of the
assignment by the allottee required the permission of DDA
and such permission was granted only on payment to DDA of
the ‘unearned increase’, that is the difference between
the market value/sale price and the original cost of
allotment. To avoid the cumbersome procedure in obtaining
permission and to avoid payment of the huge part of the
price to the DDA as unearned increase, a hybrid system
was evolved whereby the allottee/holder of the flat, on
receiving the agreed consideration would deliver the
possession of the flat to the purchaser and execute the
following documents :
(a)An Agreement of sale confirming the terms of the
sale, delivery of possession and payment of full
consideration and undertaking to execute any document
when required in future.
(b)An Irrevocable General Power of Attorney in favour
of the purchaser or his nominee authorizing him to
manage, deal with and dispose of the property without
reference to the vendor.
(c)A will bequeathing the property to the purchaser as
safeguard against the consequences of death of the
vendor before transfer.
6. The ‘Power of Attorney Sales’, as noticed above was
adopted to overcome the restrictions/prohibitions in
terms of allotment and the rules of allotment of DDA
governing the allotment of flats. Such transactions were
obviously irregular and illegal being contrary to the
rules and terms of allotment. Further, in the absence of
a registered deed of conveyance, no right, title or
interest in an immovable property could be transferred to
the purchaser. However, the Delhi High Court in a few
cases accepted such ‘Power of Attorney Sales’ as creating
an ‘interest’ in the DDA flat which was so ‘transferred’
and consequently, protected such interest of the
purchaser by issuing injunctions or decrees preventing
the vendor from further dealing with the property. This
led to a general impression the ‘Power of Attorney Sales’
were valid recognized modes of transfer and the very
purpose DDA prohibiting transfers and requiring
permission on payment of certain difference in price was
defeated by this process.
We are not presently concerned with the validity,
propriety or wisdom of such judgments which virtually put
the seal of approval of the court on transactions which
were irregular and illegal. In fact, it is stated that
DDA itself ultimately recognizes ‘Power of Attorney
Sales’ by accepting applications from purchasers under
‘Power of Attorney Sales’ for conversion from leasehold
to freehold and conveyance of the flats. We will
therefore presently exclude the ‘power of attorney sales’
of DDA flats from the purview of the present exercise.
7. What we are concerned is extension of the concept of
such ‘Power of Attorney Sales’ by execution of
SA/GPA/Will with reference to freehold properties.
8. The Registration Act, 1908, was enacted with the
intention of providing orderliness, discipline and public
notice in regard to transactions relating to immovable
property and protection from fraud and forgery of
documents of transfer. This is achieved by requiring
compulsory registration of certain types of documents and
providing for consequences of non-registration. Section
17 of the Registration Act clearly provides that any
document (other than testamentary instruments) which
purports or operates to create, declare, assign, limit or
extinguish whether in present or in future “ any right,
title or interest ” whether vested or contingent of the
value of Rs.100 and upwards to or in immovable property.
Section 49 of the said Act provides that no document
required by section 17 to be registered shall, affect any
immovable property comprised therein or received as
evidence of any transaction affected such property,
unless it has been registered. Registration of a document
gives notice to the world that such a
document has been executed. Registration provides safety
and security to transactions relating to immovable
property, even if the document is lost or destroyed. It
gives publicity and public exposure to documents thereby
preventing forgeries and frauds in regard to transactions
and execution of documents. Registration provides
information to people who may deal with a property, as to
the nature and extent of the rights which persons may
have, affecting that property. In other words, it enables
people to find out whether any particular property with
which they are concerned, has been subjected to any legal
obligation or liability and who is or are the person/s
presently having right, title, and interest in the
property. It gives solemnity of form and perpetuate
documents which are of legal importance or relevance by
recording them, where people may see the record and
enquire and ascertain what the particulars are and as far
as land is concerned what obligations exist with regard
to them. It ensures that every person dealing with
immovable property can rely with confidence upon the
statements contained in the registers (maintained under
the said Act) as a full and complete account of all
transactions by which the title to the property may be
affected and secure extracts/copies duly certified.
9. Recourse to ‘SA/GPA/WILL’ transactions is taken in
regard to freehold properties, even when there is no bar
or prohibition regarding transfer or conveyance of such
property, by the following categories of persons :-
(a)Vendors with imperfect title who cannot or do not
want to execute registered deeds of conveyance.
(b)Purchasers who want to invest undisclosed
wealth/income in immovable properties without any
public record of the transactions. The process enables
them to hold any number of properties without
disclosing them as assets held.
(c)Purchasers who want to avoid the payment of stamp
duty and registration charges either deliberately or on
wrong advice. Persons who deal in real estate resort to
these methods to avoid multiple stamp
duties/registration fees so as to increase their profit
margin.
10. Whatever be the intention, the consequences are
disturbing and far reaching, adversely affecting the
economy, civil society and law and order. Firstly, it
enables large scale evasion of income tax, wealth tax,
stamp duty and registration fees thereby denying the
benefit of such revenue to the government and the public.
Secondly, such transactions enable persons with
undisclosed wealth/income to invest their black money and
also earn profit/income, thereby encouraging circulation
of black money and corruption. This kind of transactions
has disastrous collateral effects also. For example, when
the
market value increases, many vendors (who effected power
of attorney sales without registration) are tempted to
resell the property taking advantage of the fact that
there is no registered instrument or record in any public
office thereby cheating the purchaser. When the purchaser
under such ‘power of attorney sales’ comes to know about
the vendors action, he invariably tries to take the help
of musclemen to ‘sort out’ the issue and protect his
rights. On the other hand, real estate mafia many a time
purchase properties which are already subject to power of
attorney sale and then threaten the previous ‘Power of
Attorney Sale’ purchasers from asserting their rights.
Either way, such power of attorney sales indirectly lead
to growth of real estate mafia and criminalization of
real estate transactions.
11. Some states have made some efforts to control such
‘Power of Attorney Sales’ by subjecting agreements of
sale involving delivery of possession and irrevocable
powers of attorney for consideration, to the same stamp
duty as deeds of conveyance or by making such documents
compulsorily registrable. But the steps taken are neither
adequate nor properly implemented resulting in multiple
transactions in regard to the same property by greedy and
unscrupulous
vendors and/or purchasers giving nightmares to bonafide
purchasers intending to buy a property with certainty
regarding title. It also makes it difficult for lawyers
in tracing and certifying title. Any process which
interferes with regular transfers under deeds of
conveyance properly stamped, registered and recorded in
the registers of the Registration Department, is to be
discouraged and deprecated.
12. The present case is a typical example of the
consequences of not obtaining a registered sale deed.
There is apparently no reason as to why a company
registered under the Companies Act should resort to such
a transaction. Execution of a will by an individual
bequeathing an immovable property to a company, is also
incongruous and absurd. If there was a bar and the
process was adopted to overcome such bar regarding sale
of lands, then courts should not go to their assistance,
as that would amount to perpetuating illegalities. If
there was no bar, then the questions that arise are: why
should a company hold a property in a state of suspended
animation from 1991? How can a company ‘verbally’ agree
to sell a property to someone? What is the reason for the
delay in lodging the complaints? If petitioner had
purchased the property under a registered sale deed,
numerous disputes, litigations and criminal proceedings
could have been avoided. The illegal and irregular
process of ‘Power of Attorney Sales’ spawns several
disputes relating to possession and title, and also
results in criminal complaints and cross complaints and
extra-legal enforcement and forced settlements by land
mafia.
13. We are therefore of the view that the situation
warrants special measures. We are informed that sometime
back in 2008, there was a proposal to amend section 147
of Delhi Municipal Corporation Act, 1957 to check and
discourage ‘power of attorney sales’. There was also a
proposal to have special enactment relating to
registration and recording of title in Delhi. But so far
nothing appears to have fructified. It is the dream of
every citizen to own a house or a plot of land. The
citizens must be enabled by the government to do so with
safety, security and without fear of litigation or
defects in title.
14. We therefore request the Solicitor General to appear
in the matter and give suggestions on behalf of Union of
India. We also direct notice to the States of Punjab,
Haryana, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra
(represented by their respective Chief Secretary/Revenue
Secretary) to consider the following issues:
(a)Whether ‘power of attorney sales’ (that is
transactions involving execution of Sale
Agreement/GPA/Will) instead of regular sales is
prevalent in their respective states?
(b)What are the views of the respective state
government in respect of such transactions?
(c)What steps have been taken and/or proposed to be
taken by the respective states to deal with the chaotic
situation and confusion arising from such transactions?
List the matter in the last week of August, 2009.
_________________J
[R. V. Raveendran]
________________J
[J. M. Panchal]
New Delhi;
May 15,2009.