Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANILAL MOHANLAL SHAH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SARDAR SAYED AHMED SAYED MAHMAD AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/04/1954
BENCH:
HASAN, GHULAM
BENCH:
HASAN, GHULAM
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1954 AIR 349 1955 SCR 108
CITATOR INFO :
D 1967 SC1344 (7,10)
ACT:
Civil Procedure Code (Act V of 1908), Order XXI, rules 84
and 85-Provisions requiring deposit of 26 per cent of-
purchase money immediately after sale and payment of balance
within 15 days of the sale-Whether mandatory-Non-compliance
with such provisions-Legal effect thereof on sale--Inherent
powers-Whether can be exercised-Civil Procedure Code-order
21, rule 72-Decree-holder not to bid for or purchase
property without permission-This provision directory.
HEADNOTE:
Held, that the provisions of rules 84 and 85 of Order XXI
of the Code of Civil Procedure requiring the deposit of 25
per cent of the purchase money immediately on the person
being declared as a purchaser and the payment of the balance
within 16 days of the sale are mandatory and if these
provisions are not complied with there is no sale at all.
Non-payment of the price on the part of the defaulting pur-
chaser renders the sale proceedings as a complete nullity.
The inherent powers of the Court cannot be allowed to cir-
cumvent the mandatory provisions of the Code and relieve the
purchasers of their obligation to make the deposit.
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Under Order XXI, rule 72, of the Code of Civil Procedure a
decree-holder cannot purchase property at the Court-auction
in execution of his own decree without the express
permission of the. Court and that when he does so with such
permission, he is entitled to a set-off, but if he does so
without such permission, then the court has a discretion to
set aside the sale upon the application by the judgment-
debtor, or any other person whose interests are affected by
the sale. As a matter of pure construction this -provision
is directory and not mandatory.
Rai Radha Krishna and Others v. Bisheshar Sahai and Others
(49 1. A. 312), Munshi Md. Ali Meah v. Kibria Khatun (15
Weekly Notes (Cal.) p. 350) Sm. Annapurna Dasi v. Bazley
Karim Fezley Moula (A.I.R. 1941 Cal. 85), Nawal Kishore and
Others v. Buttu Mal and Subhan Singh (I.L.R. 57 All. 658),
Haji Inam Ullah v. Mohammad Idris (A.I.R. (30) 1943 All.
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282), Bhim Singh v. Sarwan Singh (I.L.R. 16 Cal. 33),Nathu
Mal v. Malawar Mal and Others (A.I.R. 1931 Lah. 15) and A.B.
Davar v. Thinda Ram (A.I.R. 1938 Lah. 198) referred to:
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 93 of
1953.
Appeal by Special Leave granted by the Supreme Court of
India by its Order dated the 5th March, 1951, from the
Judgment and -Decree dated the 28th January, 1949, of the
High Court of Judicature at Bombay in Appeal from Order No.
43 of 1947 arising out of the Order dated the 14th April,
1947, of the Court of the Joint First Class Sub-Judge at
Ahmedabad in Darkhast No. 249 of 1940.
Appellant No. I in person for self and co-appellants.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (J. B.
Dadachanji and A. C. Dave, with him) for respondent No. 1.
1954. April 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GHULAM HASAN J.-This appeal brought by the auction-
purchasers by special leave raises the question of the
validity of a sale of certain properties which took place on
August 13, 1942. The respondents are the judgment-debtor
and the legal representative of the deceased decree-holder.
The decree-holder applied on March 30, 1940, for execution
of his decree by sale of 4 lots of property
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belonging to the judgment-debtor. The properties were
valued it Rs. 1,50,000 and were subject to a previous
mortgage of Rs. 60,000 existing in favour of the
auction--purchasers. It appears that under the terms of the
mortgage-deed the mortgagees were entitled to proceed in the
first instance against -the first 3 lots and against the
fourth lot only in the event of a deficiency in sale price
to cover the deceretal amount. The first 3 lots with which
alone we are concerned in the appeal were sold to the
mortgagees for Rs. 53,510 on August 13, 1942. They were
sold free from the encumbrance under the order of the Court
passed at the instance of the decree-holder and the
mortgagees but without notice to the judgment-debtor. It
may, however,, be noted that on the application of certain
third parties their right of annuity over the properties
sought to be sold was notified in the sale proclamation. On
the same date the mortgagees applied for a set-off stating
that the purchase price was Rs. 53,510 while the amount due
to them was Rs. 1, 20,000. The Court allowed the set-off
then and there. It is important to bear in mind that the
mortgagees had filed no suit and obtained no decree to
recover the money due on the mortgage.
The order notifying the claim to annuity was challenged by
the Judgment-debtor in’ revision to the High Court but it
was dismissed on November 10, 1943 by Sen J. who observed
that as the sale had already taken place, the proper remedy
of the judgment-debtor was to move the Court for setting
aside the sale. Thereupon the judgment-debtor applied on
November 20, 1943, under Order XXI, rule 90, of the Civil
Procedure Code to have the sale set aside (Exhibit 51).
Allegations imputing fraud and collusion to the mortgagees
were made in the application, in particular it was alleged
that the 3 lots were purchased at a grossly. inadequate
price by under-valuing them in the proclamation and that the
mortgagees not having paid 25% of the bid, the sale should
not have been sanctioned in their favour. While this
application was pending, the judgment-debtor made another
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application on January 15, 1947, challenging the sale as a
nullity on the ground that the purchaser had neither
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made the deposit required under rule 84 of Order XXI, nor
paid the balance of the purchase-price as required by rule
86, and praying for. resale of the property to realise the
price. The order allowing set-off was attracted as being
without jurisdiction. No separate order was passed on this
application as the application Exhibit 51 was granted on the
same grounds. The trial Court found that at the time of
attachment on April 30, 1940, lots Nos. I and 2 and lot No.
3 were valued at Rs. 40,000 each separately but at the time
of proclamation of sale on March 6, 1942, the first two were
valued at Rs. 45,000 and the third at Rs. 8,000 only. The
property did not consist of mere survey numbers but
admittedly had bungalows, and superstructures and in the
opinion of the Court the subsequent valuation was bound to
mislead bidders. The. Court, however, set aside the sale
on the ground that the provisions of Order XXI, rules 84 and
85, had not been complied with in that the price was not
deposited but a set-off was wrongly claimed and allowed in
the absence of the judgment-debtor by the Court which had no
authority or jurisdiction. The Court observed.
"There is nothing to show that these opponents took any
permission from the Court to bid at the auction and in fact
they could hardly have obtained any such permission, they
being mortgagees whose dues had yet to be proved and
determined. If they could ask for set-off, there is no
reason why they should not be required also to seek previous
permission from the Court to bid under Order XXI, rule 72,
of the Civil Procedure Code. It may be noted that one of
these opponents is himself a pleader and he was not
justified in taking such an unauthorised order from the
Court without fully acquainting with all the facts. Under
all these circumstances, these opponents can with little
justification avoid the consequences of noncompliance with
the provisions of Order XXI, rules 84 and 85, referred to
above. ’Without proving their claim under the mortgage,
they have succeeded in purchasing for a gross under-value
these properties and even that value they have not paid in
Court by taking recourse to the device of set-
off................................. In my opinion, there
could not be a
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more fraudulent and materially irregular procedure than what
has taken place in the present case at the instance of these
mortgagees, to the great detriment and injury of the present
applicant, viz., the judgment debtor."
The Court held that the application under rule 90 was barred
by limitation but this being a case of a void sale and not
of a mere material irregularity the Court was bound to re-
sell the property irrespective of any application being made
by the judgment-debtor.
The High Court of Bombay (Chagla C. J. and Gajendragadkar
J.) dismissed the appeal of the mortgagee-purchasers on the
ground that the order of the trial Court was under Order
XXI, rule 84 and/or rule 86, of the Civil Procedure Code and
therefore. no appeal lay against such an order. The High
Court held that the order of set-off was without
jurisdiction and the subsequent deposit of the purchase
price on December 14, 1945, made long after the period had
elapsed was of no avail.
One of the auction-purchasers, who is a pleader, has himself
argued the appeal before us. The principal question which
falls to be considered is whether the failure to make the
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deposit under Order XXI, rules 84 and 85, is only a material
irregularity in the sale which can only be set aside under
rule 90 or whether it is wholly void. It is argued that the
case falls within the former category and the application
under rule 90 being barred by limitation, the sale cannot be
set aside. It is also contended that the Court having once
allowed the set-off and condoned the failure to deposit, the
mistake of the Court should not be allowed to prejudice the
purchasers who would certainly have deposited the purchase
price but for the mistake. We are of opinion that both the
contentions are devoid of substance. In order to resolve
this controversy a reference to the relevant rules of Order
XXI of the Civil Procedure Code will be necessary. These
rules are 72, 84, 85 and 86:
" 72. (1) No holder of a decree in execution of which
property is sold shall, without the express permission of
the Court, bid for or purchase the property.
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(2) Where a decree-holder -purchases with such permission,
the purchase-money and the amount due on, the decree may,
subject to the provisions of section 73, be set off against
one another.........................
(3) Where a decree-holder purchases, by himself or through
another person, without such permission, the Court may, if
it thinks fit, on the application of the judgment-debtor or
any other person whose interests are affected by the sale,
by order set aside the
sale ..............................................
"84. (1) On every sale of immovable property the person
declared to be the purchaser shall pay immediately after
such declaration a deposit of twenty-five per cent. on the
amount of his purchase-money to the officer or other person
conducting the sale, and in default of such deposit, the
property shall forthwith be resold.
(2) Where the decree-holder is the purchaser and is
entitled to set off the purchase-money under rule 72, the
Court may dispense with the requirement of this rule.
" 85. The full amount of purchase-money -payable shall be
paid by the purchaser into Court before the Court closes on
the fifteenth day from the sale of the property :
Provided that, in calculating the amount to be so paid into
Court, the purchaser shall have the advantage of any set-off
to which he may be entitled under rule 72.
86. In default of payment within the period mentioned in
the last preceding rule, the deposit may, if the Court
thinks fit, after defraying the expenses of the sale, be
forfeited to the Government, and the, property shall be re-
sold, and the defaulting purchaser shall forfeit all claim
to the property or to any part of the sum for which it may
subsequently be sold."
The scheme of the rules quoted above may be shortly stated.
A decree-holder cannot purchase property at the Court-
auction in execution of his own decree without the express
permission of the Court and that when he does so with such
permission, he is entitled to a set-off, but if he does so
without such permission, then
15
114
the Court has a discretion to set aside the sale upon the
application by the judgment-debtor, or any other ’person
whose interests are affected by the sale (Rule.72). As a
matter of pure construction this provision is obviously
directory and not mandatory - See Rai Radha Krishna and
Others v. Bisheshar Sahai and Others (1). The moment a
person is declared to be the purchaser, he is bound to
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deposit 25 per cent. of the purchase-money unless he happens
to be the decree-holder, in which case the Court may not
require him to do so (Rule 84).
The provision regarding the deposit of 25 per cent. by the
purchaser other than the decree-holder is mandatory as the
language of the rule suggests. The full amount of the
purchase-money must be paid within fifteen days from the
date of the sale but the decree-holder is entitled to the
advantage of a set-off. The provision for payment is,.
however, mandatory... (Rule 85). If the payment is not made
within the period of fifteen days, the Court has the
discretion to forfeit the deposit, and there the discretion
ends but the obligation of the Court to re-sell the property
is imperative. A further consequence of non-payment is that
the defaulting purchaser forfeits all claim to the property
(Rule 86).
It is not denied that the purchasers had not obtained any
decree on foot of their mortgage and the claim of Rs.
1,20,000 which they put forward before the execution Court
had not been adjudicated upon or determined. The
mortgagees, one of whom is a pleader, applied on the day of
the sale claiming a set-off on foot of the mortgage. The
Court without applying its mind to the quest-ion immediately
passed the order allowing the set-off. This claim was
obviously not admissible under the provisions of rule 84
which applies only to the decree-holder. The Court had
clearly no jurisdiction to allow a set-off. The appellants
misled the Court into passing a wrong order and obtaining
the advantage of a set-off while they knew perfectly well
that they had got no decree on foot of the mortgage and
their claim was undetermined. There was default in
(1) 49 I.A. 312.
115
depositing 25 percent of the purchase-money and further
there was no payment of the full amount of the purchase-
money within fifteen days from the date of the sale. Both
the deposit and the payment of the purchase-money being
mandatory under the combined effect of rules 84 and 85, the
Court has the discretion to forfeit the deposit but it was
bound to re-sell the property with the result that on
default the purchaser forfeited all claim to the property.
These provisions leave no doubt that unless the deposit and
the payment are made as required by the mandatory provisions
of the rules, there is no sale in the eye of law in favour
of the defaulting purchaser and no right to own and possess
the property accrues to him.
In two cases decided by the Calcutta High Court, viz.,
Munshi Md. Ali Meah v. Kibria Khatun (1), and Sm.
Annapurna Dasi v. Bazley Karim Fazley Moula (2), the sale
was held to be no sale where the purchaser had failed to
deposit the balance of the purchase-money as required by
rule 85. A similar view was taken by a Division Bench of
the Allahabad High Court in Nawal Kishore and Others v.
Buttu Mal and Subhan Singh (3). The provisions of rule 86
were held to be mandatory in another decision of the same
Court, Haji Inam Ullah v. Mohammad Idris (4), and it was
held that the Court was bound to re-sell the property upon
default irrespective of any application being made by any
party to the proceedings. -The case of Bhim Singh v. Sarwan
Singh (5) was a case of failure to make a deposit as
required by section 306 of the Code of 1882 (corresponding
to rule 85 of the present Code). The Court treated it as a
material irregularity in conducting the sale which must be
enquired into upon the application under section 311,
(corresponding to rule 90 of the present Code), and not by a
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separate suit to set aside the sale. The Court did not
apply its mind to the question whether the provisions of
section 306 being mandatory the sale should not be treated
as a nullity for non-compliance with those provisions, The
decision of
(1) 15 Weekly Notes (Cal.) P. 350.
(2) A.I.R. 1941 Cal. 85.
(3) 57 All. 658.
(4) A.I.R. (30) 1943 All; 282.
(5) 16 Cal. 33.
116
a single Judge (Tapp J.) in Nathu Mal v. Malawa Mal and
Others (1) is distinguishable upon its facts. There the
auction-purchaser had actually tendered the money but the
payment was postponed by consent of parties pending the
disposal of the objection by the judgment debtor. We do not
agree with the remark made in that case that the provisions
of rule 85 are intended "to be directory only and not
absolutely mandatory." A Division Bench of the same Court
(Tek Chand and Abdul Rashid JJ.) held in A. R. Davar v.
Jhinda Ram (2), that the Court had no jurisdiction to extend
the time for the payment of the balance of the purchase-
money under rule 85 and must order resale under rule 86.
Having examined the language of the relevant rules and the
judicial decisions bearing upon the subject we are of
opinion that the provisions of the rules requiring the
deposit of 25 per cent. of the purchase-money immediately on
the person being declared as a purchaser and the payment of
the balance within 15 days of the sale are mandatory and
upon non-compliance with these provisions there is no sale
at all. The rules do not contemplate that there can be any
sale in favour of a purchaser without depositing 25 per
cent. of the purchase-money in the first instance and the
balance within 15 days. When there is no sale within the
contemplation of these rules, there can be no question of
material irregularity in the conduct of the sale. Non-
payment of the price on the part of the defaulting purchaser
renders the sale proceedings as a complete nullity. The
very fact that the Court is bound to resell the property in
the event of a default shows that the previous proceedings
for sale are completely wiped out as if they do not exist in
the eye of law. We hold, therefore, that in the
circumstances of the present case there was no sale and the
purchasers acquired. no rights at all.
It was urged before us that the Court could allow a set-off
in execution proceedings under its inherent powers apart
from the provisions of Order XXI, rule 19, of the Civil
Procedure Code. We do not think that the inherent powers of
the Court could be invoked to
(1) A.I.R. 1931 Lah. 15.
(2) A.I.R. 1938 Lah. 195.
117
circumvent the mandatory provisions of the Code and relieve
the purchasers of their obligation to make the deposit. The
appellants by misleading the Court want’ to benefit by the
mistake to which they themselves contributed. They cannot
be allowed to take advantage of their own wrong;
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.