Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
REET MOHINDER SINGH SEKHON
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHINDER PARKASH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/07/1989
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1775 1989 SCR (3) 610
1989 SCC (4) 30 JT 1989 (3) 379
1989 SCALE (2)268
ACT:
Limitation Act 1908: Suit for redemption of mortgage-limita-
tion period.
Limitation Act, 1963: Sections 19 and 30--When recital
in sale deed constitutes an acknowledgment for computation
of period of limitation.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant is the successor in interest of the mort-
gagor of the suit property. The suit property was mortgaged
on 22.5.1886. In the normal course the suit for redemption
should have been filed on or before 22.5.1946, the limita-
tion for such a suit being 60 years under the Limitation
Act, 1906. The appellant, however, filed the suit for re-
demption only on 28.12.1968. The defence to the plea of
limitation urged was that the son of the original mortgagee,
while selling the property on 1.11. 1913, had specifically
acknowledged the right of the mortgagor to redeem the
property. It was claimed that this acknowledgment constitut-
ed a fresh starting point for computing the period of limi-
tation. The Trial Court accepted the plea and granted decree
for redemption. The Additional District Judge however ac-
cepted the appeal of the respondents. The High Court, in
appeal, confirmed the order of the Additional District Judge
and held that the sale deed had nowhere acknowledged the
right of the mortgagor to redeem the land.
Before this Court, it was contended on behalf of the
appellant that the recital in the sale deed clearly con-
tained a specific acknowledgment by the mortgagee of a
subsisting right of redemption in the mortgagor. On the
other hand, it was contended that the said recital did not
serve as an acknowledgment. It was further urged by the
respondents that even otherwise the suit should have been
filed within 7 years of the coming into force of the Limita-
tion Act, 1963, i.e., on or before 1.4.1971, and that it was
actually instituted only on 18.4.1973.
Allowing the appeal, setting aside the orders of the
Additional District Judge and the High Court, and restoring
the decree for redemption passed by the Trial Court, this
Court,
611
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HELD: (1) The period of limitation cannot be extended by
a mere passing recital regarding the factum of the mortgage
but the statement on which the plea of an acknowledgment is
based must relate to a subsisting liability. The words used
must indicate the jural relationship between the parties and
it must appear that such a statement is made with the inten-
tion of admitting such jural relationship. [613G-6 14A]
Tilak Ram v. Nathu, AIR 1967 S.C. 935, referred to.
(2) In the instant case, it is not correct to treat the
recitals in the document as a mere narration of the previous
mortgage that had been created on the property. The words
spell out a clear intention that the moneys due under the
mortgage still remained unpaid and also that the mortgagor
had a subsisting right of redemption which he could enforce
against the mortgagee. [614E-F]
(3) In the Trial Court the plaintiff-appellant had
adverted to the provisions of the Limitation Act, 1963 and
the position that the suit should have been filed within 7
years of the application of the new Act, and had urged that
the suit was within time. The Trial Court had accepted the
contention of the plaintiff-appellant on this point. It
could not have been so accepted if the suit had in fact been
instituted only in 1973. In the cause title of the suit in
the Trial Court the date of institution is set out as
28.12.1968/18.4.1973. This position does not appear to have
been specifically challenged either in the Trial Court or in
the first Appellate Court. The High Court in its judgment
has pointed out that the suit had been filed on 28th of
December, 1968. In this state of the record, this Court has
to proceed on the basis that the suit had been filed on 28th
of December, 1968 and therefore to hold that the suit had
been filed in time. [615B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3 108 of
1989.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.1.86 of the Punjab
and Haryana High Court in R.S.A. No. 1510 of 1977.
Harbans Lal and Ashok K. Mahajan for the
Appellant.
Jitender Sharma for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. We grant leave in the Special Leave Peri-
612
tion and proceed to dispose of the appeal on the merits
after hearing both sides.
The appellant is the successor in interest of the mort-
gagor of the suit property. The suit property was mortgaged
on 22.5. 1886. In the normal course the suit for redemption
should have been filed on or before 22.5. 1946, the limita-
tion for such a suit being 60 years under the Limitation
Act, 1908. The appellant, however, filed the suit for re-
demption only on 28.12. 1968. He sought to meet the plea of
limitation by urging that the son of the original mortgagee,
while selling the property on 1.11.19 13, had specifically
acknowledged the right of the mortgagor to redeem the
property. It was claimed that this acknowledgment constitut-
ed a fresh starting point for computing the period of limi-
tation.
If the plea of the mortgagor were right and the Limita-
tion Act, 1908, had continued to be operative, the suit for
redemption could have been filed on or before the 1st of
November, 1973. However, in the meantime the Limitation Act,
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1963 replaced the Limitation Act of 1908. The period of
limitation for a suit for redemption was reduced under the
new Act to 30 years. Section 30 of the Act, however, provid-
ed as follows:
S. 30. Provision for suits, etc., for which
the prescribed period is shorter than the
period prescribed by the Indian Limitation
Act, 1908.
Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act--
(a) any suit for which the period of limita-
tion is shorter than the period of limitation
prescribed by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908,
may be instituted within a period of seven
years next after the commencement of this Act
or within the period prescribed for such suit
by the Indian Limitation Act, 1908, whichever
period expires earlier:
By virtue of this provision, the suit for redemption could
have been filed, if the appellant’s plea that the sale deed
dated 1.11.1913 constituted a fresh starting point for
computation of the period of limitation is accepted, on or
before the 1st of January, 1971, having regard to the fact
that the Limitation Act. 1963 came into force on 1.1.1964.
613
The first question for consideration in this appeal is
whether the sale deed of 1.11.19 13 contained an acknowl-
edgement by the original mortgagee of a subsisting right of
redemption on the part of the mortgagor as on the date of
the sale deed viz. 1.11.19 13. The sale deed contained the
following recitals:
"Now I of my own accord have sold all my
mortgagee rights along with the original
mortgage consideration and interest which
according to the terms of the aforesaid mort-
gage deed has accrued and is payable to the
instant vendor .......... The rights and
interest regarding recovery of original mort-
gage money and interest according to mortgage
deeds executed by Jangi Khan original mortga-
gor deceased and redemption of the mortgaged
land which hence to fore vested in the instant
vendor stand vested in the purchaser .....
(underlining by us)
On behalf of the appellants it is submitted that the
words extracted above clearly contained a specific acknowl-
edgement by the mortgagee of a subsisting right of redemp-
tion in the mortgagor. On the other hand. for the respond-
ents, it is contended--and this contention was accepted by
the High Court--that the recitals mentioned above do not
serve as an acknowledgment. The High Court observed:
"The mortgagee Mool Raj gave the description
of the mortgage only with a view to showing
his status but nowhere did he acknowledge his
liability for redemption of the mortgage.
According to the recital in the deed, whatever
rights as a mortgagee he had in the suit land
were transferred to the vendee. There was
nothing more than this. The right of the
mortgagor to redeem the land, and his liabili-
ty to redeem the same, was nowhere acknowl-
edged."
The respondents strongly rely on this finding and also rely
on the decision of this court in Tilak Ram v. Nathu, AIR
1967 S.C. 935.
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We are of the opinion that the High Court erred in
accepting the above contention. It is true, as pointed out
in Tilak Ram v. Nathu, that the period of limitation cannot
be extended by a mere passing recital regarding the factum
of the mortgage but that the statement on which the plea of
an acknowledgement is based must relate to a subsisting
liability. The words used must indicate the jural relation-
ship between
614
the parties and it must appear that such a statement is
made with the intention of admitting such jural relation-
ship. But, in our opinion, the recitals in the sale deed on
1.11.1913 fulfil_ the above requirements. The fact of Nanak
Chand having obtained a mortgage with possession had already
been recited in an earlier part of the sale deed. The pass-
sages in the sale deed, which have been extracted by us
above, contain two specific recitals. The first is that "the
original consideration and interest under had accrued and
Was payable to the instant vendor." These words acknowledge
that the mortgage had not been redeemed and that the mort-
gage moneys remained outstanding to the mortgagee From the
mortgagor as on the’ date of the sale deed. The second
recital is even more specific. It says that what stands
transferred to the purchaser is not only the fight of the
mortgagee for recovering the principal amounts and interest
according to the mortgage deed (which, as earlier stated,
still remained outstanding) but also "the rights and inter-
est" regarding the redemption of the mortgaged land. These
words are, of course, a little inappropriate because the
right of redemption is in the mortgagor and not in the
mortgagee. But, read as a whole, the second sentence we have
quoted here from the sale deed clearly manifests an inten-
tion on the part of the mortgagee to acknowledge that his
right to recover the moneys under the mortgage deed as well
as his liability to have the property redeemed by the mort-
gagor in the event of his paying off the moneys due under
the instrument both stand vested in the purchaser. We are of
the opinion that it is not correct to treat the recitals in
the document as a mere narration of the previous mortgage
that had been created on the property. The words spell out a
clear intention that the moneys due under the mortgage still
remained unpaid and also that the mortgagor had a subsisting
right of redemption which he could enforce against the
mortgagee. In this view of the matter the contention on
behalf of the appellant that the recitals in the document of
1.11.1913 constituted an acknowledgement of liability for
redemption within the meaning of section 19 of the Limita-
tion Act deserves to be accepted.
On behalf of the respondents it is submitted that, even
if the above position is accepted, the suit should have been
filed on or before 1.4.1971 but that it was actually insti-
tuted only on 18.4.1973. Our attention is drawn to the
cause title of the suit in the trial court where the suit is
described as Case Civil Suit No. 204 of 1973 and the date of
institution is set out as 28.12.1968/18.4.1973. It is sub-
mitted that perhaps the suit had been flied on 28.12.1968
with defects and that the defects had been rectified subse-
quently so that the suit can be properly said to have been
instituted only on 18.4.1973. It has been numbered
615
only as a suit of 1973. It is, therefore, contended that in
any event the suit was barred by limitation being beyond
1.4.1971. This contention is without force. This point does
not appear to have been specifically taken either in the
trial court or in the first appellate court. On the other
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hand in the trial court the plaintiff had adverted to the
provisions of the Limitation Act and the position that the
suit should have been filed within 7 years of the applica-
tion of the new Act and urged that the suit was within time.
This contention was accepted by the trial court. It could
not have been so accepted if the suit had in fact been
instituted Only in 1973 as at present submitted. That apart
the High Court in the course of its judgment has pointed out
that the present suit had been filed on 28th of December,
1968. In this state of the record we have to proceed on the
basis that the suit had been filed on 28th of December,
1968, and, therefore hold, for the reasons stated earlier,
it had been filed in time.
For the reasons above mentioned, we set aside the order
of the High Court confirming the order of the Additional
District Judge and restore the decree for redemption passed
by the trial court. We would only like to clarify that there
were two mortgage deeds the redemption of which had been
sought by the plaintiff in the suit. We are concerned in
this appeal only with the property mortgaged under the deed
of mortgage dated 22.5.1986 by Jangi Khan in favour of Nanak
Chand and sold on 1.11.1913 by Mool Raj, son of Nanak Chand,
to the predecessor-in-interest of the present respondent.
The concurrent findings of the three courts in respect of
the other mortgage are not, in any way, disturbed by our
judgment.
The appeal, therefore, stands allowed and the appellant
will be entitled to his costs.
R.S.S. Appeal
allowed.
616