Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHAGWATI PRASAD SAH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHAGWATI PRASAD SAH AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/10/1963
BENCH:
ACT:
pre-emption--Muhammadan Law--Nature of --If right could
be exercised in respect of lease hold interest--Land sold
with house thereon--If pre-emption allowable regarding house
only--Constitutionality of law of pre-emption--Constitution
of India, Art. 19(1) (g).
HEADNOTE:
One Chathilal Sah of Sahebganj, Bihar, was the owner of
a house and two golas which stood on a rent-paying land and
he executed a will bequeathing the said property to his
daughter and nephew in equal shares. In 1940 the nephew
sold one half of the property to respondent No. 1 who two
years later acquired under a patta some adjoining lands. In
1949 respondent No. 3 alleging to be the husband of the
daughter sold the remaining half of the property to
appellants 1 and 2. In December 1949 respondent filed a
title suit for declaration that he has a right to pre-empt
the property purchased by appellants 1 and 2 and for
directing them to transfer the same to him. The trial court
dismissed the suit but in the appeal before the Subordinate
Judge he succeeded and the High Court dismissed the appeal
presented by the appellant. The present appeal is by special
leave granted by this Court.
Before this Court four contentions were raised by the
appellants, two of which being pure questions of fact and
not having been raised in the courts below were not
considered by this Court. The questions of law raised were
(a) the right of pre-emption infringes the fundamental right
of a citizen under Art. 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution and
(b) there is no right of pre-emption in respect of leasehold
interest and therefore there cannot be a right of pre-
emption in respect of a house standing on such land.
Held: (i) The law of pre-emption vis-a-vis co-sharers
does not infringe the fundamental right conferred under Art.
19(1) (f) of the Constitution.
Bahu Ram v. Baij Nath, [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 724 and
Nuri Mian v.Ambica Singh, (1917) I.L.R. 44 Cal. 47.
(ii) A right of pre-emption is annexed to full ownership
of property of co-sharers. It is not attached to property
held on subordinate tenure, such as lease etc. It is an
incident of the co-sharer’s property operating both as a
right and as a burden in different situations. It is a
right of substitution taking in the entire bargain. It must
take the whole or nothing. It does not matter if the
inability to take the house arises out of a voluntary act or
out of a legal limitation inherent in the nature of the
property transferred. It is reciprocal in operation, that
is, if the situation was reversed and the vendor became the
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pre-emptor, he should
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be in a position to pre-empt the co-sharers’ whole bargains.
The two doctrines which may, for convenience be referred to
as "entire bargain" and "reciprocity" cannot operate unless
both the co-sharers are full owners of their respective
properties. Akar or a house standing on a freehold land is
subject to the right of preemption, but a house on a
leasehold land stands on a different footing. As there is
no right of pre-emption in respect of a land on subordinate
tenure the right of pre-emption cannot be enforced against
the house either, as the pre-emptor cannot be substituted
for the entire bargain. The right must fail also on the
ground that the super-structure disannexed from the land
would be movable property and it is well settled that the
right of pre-emption cannot be enforced in respect of
movables.
Case law reviewed.
Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh, [1959] S.C.R. 878, Goblad
Dayal v. Inayatullah, (1885) I.L.R. 7 All 775, Sakina Bibi
v. Amiran, (1888) I.L.R. 10 All 472, Dashrathlal v. Bai
Dhondubai, A.I.R. (1941) Bom. 262, Shri Audh Behari Singh v.
Gajadhar Jaipuria, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 70, Mr. Bibi Saleha v.
Amiruddin(1929)I.L.R. 8 Pat. 251, Baboo Ram Golam Singh v.
Nursingh Sabey, (1876) 25 W.R. 43 Mohammad Jamil v. Khub Lal
Raut, (1921) 5 Pat. L.J. 740, Phul Mohammad Khan v. Qazi
Kutubuddin, A.I.R. 1937 Pat. 578, Mooroof ly Ram v. Baboo
Hari Ram, (1867) 8 W.R. 106, Rameshwar Lal v. Ramdeo Jha,
A.I.R. 1957 Pat. 695, Nathuni Ram v. Gopinath, A.I.R. 1962
Pat. 226 (F.B), Zahur v. Nur Ali, (1880) I.L.R. 2 All 99 and
Chariter Dusadh v. Bhagwati Pandey A.I.R. 1934 Pat. 596.
Per Raghubar Dayal J--While agreeing with the majority
judgment on other points, no opinion is expressed on the
point whether in certain circumstances the pre-emptor can or
cannot pre-empt part of the property sold. There have been
cases where partial pre-emption has been allowed.
Zainab Bibi v. Umar Hayat Khan, (1936) All. L.J. 456 and
Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh, [1959] S.C.R. 878.
Sale of leasehold interest in land is not pre-emptible
and that the super-structure of the house is also not pre-
emptible and therefore the plaintiff-pre-emptor cannot pre-
empt the property sold. The appeal should be allowed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 672 of
1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 10, 1958, of the Patna High Court in Appeal from
Appellate Decree No. 716 of 1954.
S.P. Varma, for the appellants.
Sarjoo Prasad and Mohan Behari Lai, for the respondents.
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October 10, 1963. The Judgment of P.B. Gajendragadkar,
K. Subba Rao, K.N. Wanchoo and J.C. Shah JJ., was delivered
by Subba Rao J. Raghubar Dayal J. delivered a separate
Opinion.
SUBBA RAO J.--This appeal by special leave is directed
against the judgment of the High Court of’ Judicature at
Patna and raises mainly the question of the scope of the
right of pre-emption under the Mohamedan law as applied by
custom in Bihar.
The facts lie in a small compass. On June 17, 1930,
Chathilal Sah of Sahebganj, who was the owner of a house and
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two golas bearing holdings Nos. 184 and 185 situated in
mahalla Sahebganj, executed a will bequeathing the said
property to his daughter Parbati Kuer and nephew Ram Swarup
in equal shares. Under the said will Ram Swarup was to get
the entire property in case Parbati Kuer died unmarried or
issueless. On July 18, 1940, Ram Swarup sold one-half of
the said property to the plaintiff-respondent 1. On July
27, 1942, the plaintiff-respondent 1 acquired under a patta
some lands adjoining the said property. On October 10,
1949, defendant 3 (respondent 3 herein), alleging to be the
husband of the said Parbati Kuer, sold the remaining half of
the disputed property to defendants 1 and 2. It may be
mentioned at this stage that the land on which the said
house and golas stand is Dih-Basgit Lagani (rent-paying)
land. On December 10, 1949, respondent 1 filed Title Suit
No. 214 of 1949 in the First Court of the Munsif at Chapra
for a declaration that he has a right to pre-empt the
property purchased by appellants 1 and 2 and for directing
them to transfer the said property to him. To that suit,
the first appellant and his two sons were made defendants 1,
2 and 2A and their vendor was made defendant 3. The
defendants contested the suit, inter alia, on the ground
that the ceremonies of pre-emption were not performed and
that under the Mohamedan, law the plaintiff was not entitled
to pre-emption, as the land on which the said house and
golas stood was "rent-paying" land. The learned Munsif
dismissed the suit. But, on appeal the Subordinate
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Judge of Chapra allowed the appeal and granted a decree for
pre-emption in favour of the plaintiff-respondent 1. On
appeal, the High Court agreed with the Subordinate Judge and
dismissed the appeal. Defendants 1, 2 and 2A have preferred
the present appeal by ’special leave against the Judgment of
the High Court.
Mr. Varma, learned counsel for the appellants, raised
before us the following four points: (1) the right of pre-
emption infringes the fundamental right of a citizen under
Art. 19(1) (f) of the Constitution and it is not saved by
cl. (5) thereof: (2) the first respondent failed to
establish his title and, therefore, his suit should have
been dismissed on that ground; (3) the ceremonies of pre-
emption were performed only on October 11, 1949 whereas the
sale deed in favour of the appellants was executed and
registered on October 20, 1949 and, as the said performance
of the ceremonies was premature, they having been performed
before the sale was completed, the right of pre-emption
could not be enforced; and (4) there is no right of pre-
emption in respect of leasehold interest and, therefore,
there cannot be a right of pre-emption in respect of a house
standing on such land, as Mohamedan law does not recognize a
right of pre-emption in mere super-structure.
Mr. Sarjoo Prasad, learned counsel for the respondents
controverts the correctness of the said propositions. We
shall deal with his arguments in the course of the judgment.
To appreciate the first contention, some dates may be
recapitulated. Respondent 1 purchased one-half share of the
property by a sale deed dated July 18, 1940. Appellants 1
and 2 purchased the other half of the property on October
10, 1949. The suit was filed on December 10, 1949. The
Munsif dismissed the suit on April 14, 1953. The
Constitution came into force on January 26, 1950. The
appellants had no fundamental right on the date when they
purchased the property. But it is said that under the law
of pre-emption a person who seeks the assistance of a court
with a view to enforce the right of pre-emption is bound to
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establish that the
109
right existed on the date of the sale, on the date of the
institution of the suit, and also on the date of the decree
of the primary court--See Nuri Mian v. Ambica Singh(1) and,
therefore, the restriction on the appellants’ fundamental
right to acquire the property was not finally imposed before
the Constitution, but became crystallized into an
irrevocable restriction only at the time of the passing of
the decree which was subsequent to the coming into force of
the Constitution. We need not express our opinion on this
question, as it has been held by this Court in Bhau Ram v.
Baij Nath(2) that a right of pre-emption vis-a-vis co-
sharers was not an unreasonable restriction on the
fundamental right of a person to acquire, hold and dispose
of property. But learned counsel contends that decision
should be confined to a case of co-sharers who are related
to each other, and should not be extended to co-sharers who
are not related to each other. Reliance is placed upon the
following observations in that judgment found at p. 1483:
"If an outsider is introduced as a co-
sharer in a property it will make common
management extremely difficult and destroy the
benefits of ownership in common."
This sentence does not, in our view, sustain the distinction
sought to be made by the learned counsel between co-sharers
who are relatives and co-sharers, who are not relatives.
The word "outsider" in the said passage can only mean a
person who is not a co-sharer. The judgment of this Court
finally settled the question as between co-sharers.
Following the decision we hold that the law of pre-emption
vis-a-vis co-sharers does not infringe the fundamental right
conferred under Art. 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution.
The second question, namely, that of the plaintiff’s
title does not call for consideration by us. It was not
raised in the courts below, and it being a pure question of
fact, we cannot allow it to be raised for the first time
before us. We, therefore, disallow it.
(1) [1917] I.L.R. 44 Cal. 47. (2) A.I.R. 1962 S.C. 1476.
110
The next point raised by the learned counsel is that the
ceremonies of pre-emption performed in this case were
premature, as the sale was completed only on October 20,
1949 whereas the ceremonies were performed on October 11,
1949. This Court, by a majority, held in Ram Saran v.
Domini Kuer(1) that the registration under the Registration
Act is not complete till the document to be registered has
been copied out in the records of the Registration Office as
provided in s. 61 of that Act. Learned counsel contends
that a perusal of the sale deed dated October 10, 1949, ex
facie shows that it was copied only on October 20, 1949.
The question as to when a document was copied out in the
concerned register is certainly a question of fact. The
argument was not raised either before the trial court or
before the first appellate court. No issue was framed on
the point. It was raised for the first time before the High
Court. The learned Judges of the High Court pointed out
that if the appellants wanted to take advantage of the said
point, it was their duty to have raised it either in the
trial court or in the first appellate court and to have
adduced evidence by calling for the register from the
registration department to show on what date the actual
copying of the record was made under s. 61 of the
Registration Act. In the circumstances, the learned Judges
refused to allow the appellants to raise the point. The
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High Court, in our opinion, was certainly right in
disallowing the appellants from raising the question of fact
for the first time in second appeal. If the plea had been
taken at the earliest point of time, the respondents might
have had many defences and might have explained the various
dates found on the documents. We cannot allow the
appellants to raise the said plea.
Now we come to the substantial point raised in the
appeal. The right of pre-emption is sought to be enforced
in respect of a rent-paying land with a house thereon.
Learned counsel for the appellants contends that the right
of pre-emption does not arise
(1) A.I.R. 1961 S.C. 1747.
111
on the sale of a leasehold interest in land and that in the
absence of such a right there cannot be a right of pre-
emption in respect of the super-structure alone. Learned
counsel for the respondents, on the other hand, contends
that under Mohamedan law the right of pre-emption exists in
the case of akar i.e., a house or mansion, to enable
the co-sharer to have peaceful enjoyment thereof and that
the fact that there is no right of pre-emption in respect of
a leasehold interest in land does not in any way detract
from that right. He further contends that whatever might
have been the strict incidents of the right of pre-emption
under Mohamedan law, this Court cannot ignore the modern
evolution of law recognizing the transferability and
heritability of leasehold interest in land.
Before we consider the problem thus presented for our
decision, it would be convenient at the outset to notice
certain general principles relevant to the present enquiry.
It has not been disputed that Hindus in the Province of
Bihar came to adopt the Mohamedan law of pre-emption as a
custom. This was because under the Muslim rule the law of
pre-emption under the Mohamedan law was administered as a
rule of common law of the land in those parts of the country
which came under their domination. We must, therefore,.
look to Mohamedan law to ascertain the incidents of the
right of pre-emption unless it is established in a
particular case that by custom the said law has been
modified to any extent. Being a customary law, it is not
permissible for courts to extend the custom beyond the
limits within which upto now it has been recognized. The
concept of rationalization is out of place in the
ascertainment of the customary incidents of the right of
pre-emption. This Court in Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh(1)
considered the law on the subject and laid down the
propositions flowing from the discussion. The following
propositions are relevant to the present enquiry: (1) The
right of pre-emption is simply a right of sub-
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 8 78.
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situation, but not of re-purchase i.e., the pre-emptor takes
the entire bargain and steps into the shoes of the original
vendee; (2) it is a right to acquire the whole of the
property sold and not a share of it; and (3) the right being
a very weak right, it can be defeated by all legitimate
methods, such a.s the vendee allowing the claimant of a
superior or equal right being substituted in his place. It
is, therefore, settled law that the pre-emptor must take the
entire bargain: he cannot split up the bargain and claim to
be substituted in respect of a portion of it either on the
ground that he does not require a part of it or for the
reason that he is entitled to claim pre-emption only in
respect of a part of it. Further, the right being a weak
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one, a court need not be astute to rationalize the doctrine
so as to make it fit into modern trends of property law.
Indeed, it should be reluctant to extend it beyond the
incidents clearly recognized by Mohamedan law or by custom.
With this background let us now turn to the question
that arises in this case. The subject can conveniently be
considered under three heads: the pre-emptor; (ii) the
vendor; and (iii) the property in respect of which the right
is claimed. In Baillie’s "Digest of Moohummudan Law" the
following passage appears at p. 478:
"When it is said that akar (such as
mansions, vine-yards and other kinds of land)
are proper objects of the right of pre-
emption, it is by virtue of a right of milk,
or ownership, that they are so."
Mahmood 3. in Gobind Dayal v. Inayatullah(1) observed at p.
779 thus:
"pre-emption is a right which the owner of
certain immovable property possesses, as
such, for the quiet enjoyment of that
immovable property, to obtain, in substitution
for the buyer, proprietary possession of
certain other immovable property, not his own,
on such terms as these
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on which such latter immovable property is
sold to another person."
The same learned Judge in Sakina Bibi v.
Amiran(1) states that in the pre-emptive
tenement (the tenement by the ownership of
which the pre-emptor wants to exercise his
right of pre-emption ), the pre-emptor should
have vested ownership and not a mere
expectancy of inheritance or a reversionary
right, or any other kind of contingent right,
or any interest which falls short of full
ownership. Beaumont C.J. in Dashrathlal v.
Bai Dhondubai(2), after considering the law on
the subject, accepted the view that the custom
of preemption only exists as between
free holders, that is to say neighbouring
lands in respect whereof the custom is claimed
to apply must be freehold and that the land
sought to be pre-empted must also be free
hold. This Court, in Shri Audh Bihari Singh
v. Gajadhar Jaipuria(3), has laid down the
correct legal position thus:
"........the benefit as well as the
burden of the right of pre-emption run with
the land and can be enforced by or against the
owner of the land for the time being although
the right of the pre-emptor does not amount to
an interest in the land itself."
This legal requirement of the full ownership
of the pre-emptor may be traced either to the
fact that "in ancient times Mohamedan law did
hot recognize leases although it recognized
hire of|and for the purpose of user, or to the
circumstance that the right was conferred to
enable the pre-emptor to prevent an
undesirable person from becoming his
neighbour" which would not be the case if he
was only a temporary occupant of the property
in respect whereof the right arose. Whatever
may be the reason, it may safely be held now
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that the pre-emptor must be the owner of the
property in respect whereof he claims the
right of pre-emption.
(1) (1888)I.L.R.10 All. 472, 477. (2) A.I.R.
1941 Bom.262.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 70, 80.
1 SCI/64--8
114
The next question, namely, the quantum of
interest which the vender shall possess in the
land sought to be pre-empted depends upon the
doctrine of reciprocity. Unless the land in
respect of which the custom is claimed and the
land sought to be pre empted are freeholds,
the principle of reciprocity will
be defeated..To illustrate: "A" has full
ownership in a land in respect of which he
claims the right of pre-emption;the co-sharer
vendor has only a leasehold interest in
respect of the land sought to be pre-empted;
if the pre-emptor had sold the land earlier,
the vendor having only a leasehold interest in
his land, could not have claimed the right of
pre-emption in respect of his land, for he had
no full ownership in the land. The absence of
this reciprocity gives an advantage to one of
the sharers which the Mohamedan law does not
permit. This doctrine of reciprocity has been
succinctly stated by Mahmood J. in Gobind
Dayal v. Inavatullah(1) in the passage we have
extracted earlier. In Mt. Bibi Saleha v.
Amiruddin(2) the said doctrine was restated.
It was held therein that a mukarraridar
holding under a co-sharer had no right to pre-
empt as against another co-sharer and as a
mukarraridar could not claim pre-emption, the
co-sharer on the doctrine of reciprocity,
which is well understood in the Mohamedan law,
could not claim pre-emption against the
mukarraridar. A Full Bench of the Bombay High
Court in Deshrathlal v. Bai Dhondubai(3) has
given its approval to the said principle.
This Court in Shri Audh Behari Singh v.
Gajadhar Jaipuria(4) succinctly put the legal
position in the following words:
"The crux of the whole thing is that
the benefit as well as the burden of the right
of pre-emption run with the land and can be
enforced by or against the owner of the land
for the time being although the right of the
pre-emptor does not amount to an interest in
the land itself."
That leasehold interest is not subject to the
law of pre-emption has been well settled: see
Baboo Ram
(1) [1885] I.L.R. 7 All. 775. (2) [1929]
I.S.R. 8 pat 251.
(2) A.I.R. 1941 Bom. 262. (4) [1955] 1
S.C.R. 70,80.
115
Golam Singh v. Nursingh Sabey(1), Mohammad
Jamil v. Khub Lal Raut(2); Sakina Bibi v.
Amiran(3); Phul Mohammad Khan v. Qazi
Kutubuddin(4); Moorooly Ram v. Baboo Hari
Ram(5); Rameshwar Lal v. Ramdeo Jha(6); and
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Nathuni Ram v. Gopinath(7). Indeed this legal
position has not been controverted by learned
counsel for the respondents.
Now let us address ourselves to the main
contention of the respondents, namely, that
the right of pre-emption exists in the
Mohamedan law in respect of akar which
includes a building, that the main purpose
intended to be served by the said right is to
prevent an undesirable person from becoming
the sharer of the house and that, therefore,
it would be unrealistic to negative that right
in the case of a house on the ground that the
land on which the house stands is a leasehold
interest. Reliance is placed upon the
following passage in Charles Hamilton’s "The
Hedaya", 2nd Edn., at p. 558:--
"It is observed, in the abridgment of
Kadooree, that Shaffa does not affect even a
house or trees when sold separately from the
ground on which they stand. This opinion
(which is also mentioned in the Mabsoot) is
approved; for as buildings and trees are not
of a permanent nature, they are therefore of
the class of movables."
Relying upon this passage it is contended that, as in the
present case the house was sold along with the ground, the
doctrine of "Shaffa" applies to the house. But this passage
must be understood on the assumption that the right of pre-
emption exists in respect of the land on which the house
stands. In Baillie’s "Digest of Moohummudan Law", the legal
position is made clear. Therein the author says at pp. 479-
480:
"When a person has purchased a palm-
tree to cut it down, or when he has purchased
it absolutely, there is no right of pre-
emption in it. But
(1) [1876] 25 W.R. 43. (2) [1921] 5 Pat.
L.J. 740.
(3)[1888] I.L.R. 10 All. 472, 477. (4) A.I.R.
1937 Pat. 578.
(5) [1867] 8 W.R.106. (6) A.I.R. 1957
Pat. 695.
(7) A.I.R. 1962 Pat. 226 (F.B.)
116
if it be purchased with its roots and the
ground on which it stands, it is liable to the
right. The rule is the same with regard to
buildings purchased for removal, and the same
buildings purchased with their foundations;
and there is no preemption in the former
case, while there is in the latter."
This passage indicates that a building sold as a
superstructure is not subject to the right of pre-emption,
for it would be in effect a sale of a movable. Unless the
house is sold with its foundations, that is to say with the
land on which it stands, there is no right of pre-emption in
regard thereto. Though it may be said that in the present
case the house was sold with its foundations, the same
principle will have to be applied, for the right of pre-
emption cannot be invoked in the case of a leasehold
interest. In effect and substance the right is sought to be
invoked in the case of the building decors the foundations
which the law does not permit. Reliance is placed upon the
proposition found in para. 370 of Wilson’s Anglo-Muhammadan
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Law, which reads:
"If a house is sold apart from the ground
on which it stands with a view to being pulled
down, so that it is in fact a sale of the
materials, no right of pre-emption arises with
respect to it. If it is sold for occupation as
a house, then preemption can be claimed on the
ground of vicinage by the owner of any
adjoining land or house (and perhaps by the
owner of the site itself, supposing him to be
a different person from the vendor of the
house, even though he should happen to own no
land except that covered by the house)."
It is said that the words in the brackets conceding the
right of the owner of a site to pre-empt the house sold as a
house indicates that the real principle is whether the house
is sold as a habitate or only as materials and that in the
former case irrespective of the ownership of the land or the
existence of the right of pre-emption in respect thereof,
the sale of the house can be pre-empted. The opening word
117
of the passage, namely, "perhaps", shows that the author
himself is not sure of the legal position. That apart, the
illustration only deals with a land in respect of which
there can be a right of pre-emption, i.e., the owner of the
land has a freehold interest therein. Strong reliance is
placed upon the decision of a Division Bench of the
Allahabad High Court in Zahur v. Nur Ali(1). There, a
dwelling house was sold as a house to be inhabited as it
stood with the same right of occupation as the vendor had
enjoyed, but without the ownership of the site. It was held
that the right of pre-emption under the Mohamedan law
attached to such house. The judgment is not a considered
one. The learned Judges observed at p. 100 thus:
"The seller not only sold the materials
of the house, but such interest as he
possessed as an occupier of the soil. The
house was sold as a house to be inhabited on
the spot with the same right of occupation as
the seller had enjoyed.’’
The learned Judges distinguished the texts cited on the
ground that they applied only to the sale of the materials
of a house or a house capable of and intended to be removed
from its site. This judgment no doubt supports the
contention of learned counsel for the respondents; but the
learned Judges have not considered the well settled
principle that there cannot be a right of pre-emption in
respect of a land over which the vendor has no full
ownership. The decision suffers from the infirmity that the
said well settled principle has escaped the attention of the
court. Reliance is also placed on the decision of a Division
Bench of the Patna High Court in Chariter Dusadh v. Bhagwati
Pandey(2). There, the question was whether the pre-emptor
had the milkiyat or ownership in the property on account of
which he claimed the right of pre-emption. The pre-emptor
was birtdar though he was described as a tenant in the
Record of-Rights for a particular purpose. The court held
(1) (1880)I.L.R. 2 All. 99. (2) A.I.R. 1934 Pat. 596.
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that he was a full owner. This decision does not really
support the respondents. There is a direct decision of a
Full Bench of the Patna High Court on the question now
raised, in Nathuni Ram v. Gopinath(1). There, as here, a
right of pre-emption was claimed in respect of a house which
stood on a leasehold land. After a full discussion of the
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subject, Choudhary J., speaking for the Full Bench, came to
the following decision, at p. 229:
"On a careful consideration of the
authorities and the principle of law involved
in the case, my concluded opinion is that,in
case of a sale of different properties, the.
right of pre-emption cannot be exercised with
respect to one or some of them only if the
enjoyment thereof is dependent on the property
over which that right is not and cannot be
exercised in law and consequently, where the
land is sold with a house thereon, pre-emption
cannot be allowed. with respect to the house
only apart from the land over which the right
could not be exercised on account of its being
a leasehold property. The sale of a house for
inhabitation or occupation, without the sale
of its foundations and the land over which the
foundations stand, is inconceivable, except,
as pointed out in Hedaya, in case of the sale
of the upper story of a house."
We agree with the conclusion. As this judgment has
considered the earlier decisions on the subject, we need not
again refer to them.
To summarize: A right of pre-emption is annexed to full
ownership of property of co-sharers. It is not attached to
property held on subordinate tenure, such as leases etc. It
is an incident of the co-sharer’s property operating both as
a right and as a burden in different situations. It is a
right of substitution taking in the entire bargain. It must
take the whole or nothing. It does not matter if the
inability to take the whole arises out of a voluntary act or
out of a legal limitation inherent in the nature of the
(1) A.I.R. 1962 Pat. 226 (F.B.)
119
property transferred. It is reciprocal in operation, that
is, if the situation was reversed and the vendor became the
pre-emptor, he should be in a position to pre-empt the co-
sharer’s whole bargain. The two doctrines which may, for
convenience, be referred to as "entire bargain" and
"reciprocity" cannot’ operate unless both the co-sharers are
full owners of their respective properties. Akar or a house
standing on a freehold land is subject to the right of
preemption, but a house on a leasehold land stands on a
different footing. As there is no right of preemption in
respect of a land held on a subordinate tenure, the right of
pre-emption cannot be enforced against the house either, as
the pre-emptor cannot be substituted for the entire bargain.
The right must fall also on the ground that the super-
structure disannexed from the land would be movable property
and it is well settled that the right of pre-emption cannot
be enforced in respect of movables.
We, therefore, hold that the first respondent has no
right to pre-empt the sale executed in favour of the
appellants. In the result, the appeal is allowed, the
decrees of the Subordinate Judge’s Court and the High Court
are set aside and that of the trial Court is restored. The
appellants will have their costs throughout.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J.---I agree that the law of pre-emption
regarding co-sharers does not infringe the fundamental right
conferred under Art. 19(1)(g), that the pre-emptor must be
the owner of the property in respect whereof he claims the
right of pre-emption, that the vendor must have proprietary
right in the property sold and sought to be pre-empted, that
the sale of lease-hold interest is not subject to the law of
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pre-emption and that the sale of the super-structure of a
house is not pre-emptible. I also agree that the pre-emptor
must pre-empt for the entire property sold if that be pre-
emptible. I would, however, not like to express an opinion
upon the point whether, in certain circumstances, the pre-
emptor can or cannot
120
pre-empt part of the property sold. There have been cases
where partial pre-emption has been allowed. Some of the
exceptional cases have been referred to at p. 778 of ’Muslim
Law as Administered in India & Pakistan’ by K.P. Saksena, IV
Edition.
In Zainab Bibi v. Umar Havat Khan(1) the preemptor was
allowed to pre-empt that part of the property sold which was
pre-emptible and in support of the decision it was stated at
p. 457:
"So far as the Mohammedan Law is
concerned, there is no doubt that where
several properties are sold in portions of
which a pre-emptor has the right of pre-
emption, he is entitled to preempt that
portion only on payment of a proportionate
price. On this point there was a consensus of
opinion among the three Imams as quoted in
the Fatawa Alamgiri, referred to in Omur Khan
v. Mooras Khan (1865 N.W.P. H.C.R. 173,
174)"
This Court did express an opinion in Bishan Singh v.
Khazan Singh(2):
"The general law of pre-emption does not
recognize any right to claim a share in the
property sold when there are rival claimants.
It is well established that the right of pre-
emption is a right to acquire the whole of the
property sold in preference to other persons
(See Mool Chand v. Ganga Jal: ILR 11 Lah.
258, 273)
" In that case the dispute lay between two rival preemptors
and arose in these circumstances. One preemptor pre-empted
the entire sale and obtained the decree on condition that he
would deposit a certain amount within a certain time. But,
before he could deposit the amount, the rival pre-emptor
instituted another suit for the pre-emption of the entire
property sold and impleaded in that suit the first pre-
emptor. The rights of the two pre-emptors were found to be
equal. The entire property sold was clearly pre-emptible.
It was, in this context, that the observation
(1) 1936 A.L.J. 456.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 878,884.
121
was made. It would be a matter for consideration at the
appropriate time whether there can be any exception to this
general rule that the entire property sold must be pre-
emptor by the pre-emptor in his suit.
I would therefore rest my decision on the facts that the
sale of the lease-hold interest in land is not pre-emptible
and that the super-structure of the house is also not pre-
emptible and that therefore the plaintiff pre-emptor cannot
pre-empt the sale of the property sold. I therefore agree
that the appeal be allowed, the decrees of the Subordinate
Judge and the High Court be set aside and that of the trial
Court be restored and that the appellants would have their
costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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