Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAMZAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. HUSSAINI
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/11/1989
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 529 1989 SCR Supl. (2) 287
1990 SCC (1) 104 JT 1989 Supl. 354
1989 SCALE (2)1310
ACT:
Limitation Act, 1963: Article 54 Specific performance of
contingent contract--Period of limitation--Determination of.
HEADNOTE:
The period of limitation of three years for specific
performance of a contract begins to run under the third
column of Article 54 of the Limitation Act, 1963 from the
date fixed for the performance, or, if no such date is
fixed, when the plaintiff has notice that performance is
refused.
Under an agreement dated June 23, 1965 the plaintiff-
respondent, sister of the defendant-appellant, undertook to
redeem the disputed property under mortgage and the appel-
lant agreed to execute the sale deed of the said property in
her favour on the date she took papers of the registry in
her possession. She redeemed the property in 1970. The
appellant, however, failed to respect the agreement in spite
of repeated demands.
The respondent served a notice in July 1984 demanding
specific performance before filing the suit. The appellant
pleaded limitation. The trial court decided the issue in
favour of the respondent. That order was confirmed by the
High Court on the view that since the cause of action of the
suit was dependent on the redemption of the mortgage and no
period was fixed within which it was necessary for the
respondent to have redeemed the mortgage, it could not be
said that a date was ’’fixed" within the meaning of the
third column of Article 54.
Allowing the appeal by special leave,
HELD: 1.1 The requirement of Article 54 of the Limita-
tion Act, 1963 is not that the actual day should necessarily
be ascertained upon the face of the deed, but that the basis
of the calculation which was to make it certain should be
found therein. [291A-B]
1.2 In the instant case, under the agreement the date
for the appellant to execute the sale deed was fixed, al-
though not by mentioning
288
a certain date but by a reference to the happening of a
certain event, namely, the redemption of the mortgage; and,
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immediately after the redemption by the respondent, the
appellant became liable to execute the sale deed which the
respondent was entitled to enforce. The period of limitation
thus started running on that date. The case, is, therefore,
covered by the first part of Article 54 (third column) and
not the second part. [291B-C]
R. Muniswami Goundar & Anr. v.B.M. Shamanna Gouda &
Ors., AIR 1950 Madras 820 and Duncombe v. The Brighton Club
JUDGMENT:
Sathula Venkanna v. Namuduri Venkatakrishnayya & Anr.,
AIR 1918 Madras 492; Kruttiventi Mallikharjuna Rao v. Vemuri
Pardhasaradhirao, AIR 1944 Madras 218 and Kashi Prasad v.
Chhabi Lal & Ors’., AIR 1933 Allahabad 410 (2) distin-
guished-
2. The agreement in the instant case is a typical
illustration of a contingent contract within the meaning of
s. 31 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 and became enforce-
able as soon as the event of redemption happened. The doc-
trine of id certum est quod certum reddi potest is clearly
applicable to the case. [290D-E]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4754 of
1989.
From the Judgment and Order dated 17.5.1989 of the
Rajasthan High Court in S.B. Civil Revision Petition No 450
of 1988.
V.M. Tarkunde, B.L. Kachhawan and Badridas Sharma for
the Appelant.
Aruneshwar Gupta and S. Kumar for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHARMA, J. Special leave is granted.
2. This appeal arises out of a suit filed by the re-
spondent against her brother, the appellant, for specific
performance of an alleged contract of sale dated 23.6.1965
in respect of a house. The property was under a mortgage and
according to the plaintiff’s case, the defendant had
agreed to execute a deed of sale on the redemption of the
mort-
289
gage by her, which she did in 1970. In spite of her repeated
demands the defendant failed to respect the agreement which
necessitated the institution of the suit.
3. The defendant-appellant, besides pleading limitation,
denied the agreement as also the plaintiff’s allegation that
she had redeemed the mortgage.
4. The question of limitation was taken up by the trial
court as a preliminary issue and decided in favour of the
plaintiff. The order has been confirmed by the High Court by
the impugned judgment.
5. The plaintiff served a notice in July 1984 demanding
specific performance before filing the suit. It has been
contended on behalf of the appellant that since the alleged
agreement is said to have been executed in June 1965, the
suit is barred by limitation, and alternatively, even count-
ing the period of limitation from the alleged redemption in
1970, the suit has been filed after more than 14 years, that
is, long after the expiry of three years’ period prescribed
under Article 54 of the Limitation Act of 1963. The High
Court has rejected the argument holding that since the cause
of action of the suit was dependent on the redemption of the
mortgage and no period was fixed within which it was neces-
sary for the respondent to have redeemed the mortgage, it
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cannot be said that a date was ’fixed’ within the meaning of
the third column of Article 54, which reads thus:
Description period of Time from which
of suit limitation period begins to run
"54. For specific three years The date fixed for the
per-
performance. formance, or, if no
such
date is fixed, when the
plaintiff has notice
that
performance is
refused."
As the notice preceding the suit was admittedly served
within three years, the defendant’s plea of limitation was
rejected.
6. The relevant provisions in the alleged agreement of
sale as quoted in the judgment of the trial court reads as
follows:
290
"This house is under mortgage with Jethmal
Bastimal for Rs. 1000. When you will get this
house, the description of which is given
below, redeemed from M/s Jeth Mat Bastimal and
take the papers of the registry in your pos-
session,
on that day I will have the sale
deed of the said house, written, executed and
registered in your favour."
(emphasis supplied
The question is whether a date was ’fixed’ for the perform-
ance of the agreement and in our view the answer is in the
affirmative. It is true that a particular date from the
calander was not mentioned in the document and the date was
not ascertainable originally, but as soon as the plaintiff
redeemed the mortgage, it became an ascertained date. If the
plaintiff had, immediately after the redemption, flied the
suit, could it be thrown out on the ground that she was not
entitled to the specific performance asked for? We do not
think so. She would have been within her rights to assert
that she had performed her part of the contract and was
entitled to insist that her brother should complete his
part. The agreement is a typical illustration of a contin-
gent contract within the meaning of s. 31 of the Indian
Contract Act, 1872 and became enforceable as soon as the
event of redemption (by the plaintiff hereself) happened. We
agree with the view of the Madras High Court in R. Muniswami
Goundar and Another v.B.M. Shamanna Gouda and Others, AIR
1950 Madras 820 expressed in slightly different circum-
stances. The doctrine of id certurn est quod certum reddi
potest is clearly applicable to the case before us which in
the language of Herbert Broom (in his book dealing with
legal maxims) is that certainty need not be ascertained at
the time; for if, in the fluxion of time, a day will arrive
which will make it certain, that is sufficient. A similar
question had arisen in Duncombe v. The Brighton Club and
Norfolk Hotel Company, [1875] 10 QB 371, relied upon in the
Madras case. Under an agreement, the plaintiff had supplied
some furniture to the defendant for which payment was made
but after .some delay. He claimed interest. The rule at
Common Law did not allow interest in such a case, and the
plaintiff in support of his claim relied upon a statutory
provision which could come to his aid only if the price was
payable at a certain time. Blackburn, J. observed that he
did not have the slightest hasitation in saying that the
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agreement contemplated a particular day, which, when the
goods were delivered would be ascertained, and then the
money would be payable at a certain time; but rejected the
plaintiff’s demand on the ground that the price did not
become payable by the written instrument at a certain time.
The other learned Judges did not agree with him, and held
that the statute did
291
not require that the document should specify the time of
payment by mentioning the day of payment. If it specified
the event upon which the payment was to be made, and if the
time of event was capable of being ascertained, the require-
ments of the section were satisfied. The same is the posi-
tion in the case before us. The requirement of Article 54 is
not that the actual day should necessarily be ascertained
upon the face of the deed, but that the basis of the calcu-
lation which was to make it certain should be found therein.
We, accordingly, hold that under the agreement the date for
the defendant to execute -the sale deed was fixed, although
not by mentioning a certain date but by a reference to the
happening of a certain event, namely, the redemption of the
mortgage; and, immediately after the redemption by the
plaintiff, the defendant became liable to execute the sale
deed which the plaintiff was entitled to enforce. The period
of limitation thus started running on that date. The case
is, therefore, covered by the first part of Article 54
(third column) and not the second part.
7. The learned counsel for the respondent relied on
several decisions in support of the opinion of the High
Court in the impugned judgment but they do not appear to
help him. In Sathula Venkanna v. Namuduri Venkatakrishnayya
and Another, AIR 1918 Madras 492, it was observed that in
cases where a right to enforce specific performance vests in
a third party to whom the ascertainment of the date on which
performance becomes due need not necessarily be known, the
doctrine certum est quod certum reddi potest does not apply.
Without expressing their final opinion the learned Judges
observed that it might be right to apply the doctrine be-
tween the actual parties to the contract who would get the
benefit and be subject to the liabilities under that con-
tract; "but in cases where a person is entitled to bring a
suit on the contract who may not and need not, and very
likely may not be aware of the date becoming fixed", the
doctrine could not apply. In Kruttiventi Mallikharjuna Rao
v. Vemuri Pardhasaradhirao, AIR 1944 Madras 2 18, the vendor
promised to execute the sale deed when both of his brothers,
who were studying elsewhere, returned to the village. It was
held that it was not a case where it could be said that a
date was fixed for the performance of the contract as the
event mentioned therein was too indefinite to be regarded as
fixing a date. The performance was dependant on both the
brothers of the vendor coming to the village, in which the
intending purchaser had no say at all. Apart from the ques-
tion of limitation, the defendant could not effectively rely
upon such a clause to defeat the very contract. In Kashi
Prasad v. Chhabi Lal and Others, AIR 1933 Allahabad 410(2),
the plaintiff created two usufructuary mortgages and there-
after a third mortgage in
292
favour of the defendants for a sum of Rs.8,500. Out of this
sum an amount of Rs.6,000 was left with the mortgagees for
payment to the earlier creditors. The suit was instituted on
the allegation that the defendants had failed to redeem the
earlier mortgages. The plaintiff prayed for a direction to
the defendants to redeem the mortgages. The document did not
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indicate as to the time when the defendants were obliged to
redeem the earlier mortgages, and a plea of limitation was
taken on the ground that the date was fixed by necessary
implication and could be ascertained by reference to the
surrounding circumstances. In this background the court
observed that the use of the word ’fixed’ implies that it
should be fixed definitely and should not be left to be
gathered from surrounding circumstances of the case. All
these cases are clearly distinguishable.
8. For the reasons mentioned above, the impugned judg-
ments of the High Court and the trial court are set aside
and the suit is dismissed. The appeal is accordingly al-
lowed, but the parties are directed to bear their own costs
throughout.
P.S.S. Appeal
allowed.
293