Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
KRISHNA PRASAD AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GAURI KUMARI DEVI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/03/1962
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1464 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 564
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1967 SC 801 (39)
F 1969 SC 971 (15,16)
D 1971 SC1678 (6,16)
ACT:
Execution--Personal decree against mortgagor--Mortgaged
estate vesting in the State--Effect on claim pending--Bihar
Land Reforms Act, 1950(Act 30 of 1950), s. 4(d).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant obtained a preliminary decree, on an anomalous
mortgage of a share in the Zamindari village of Sonchari
Mouza in the Patna District and khudkasht land appertaining
to the Mouza, against the mortgaged properties with a
direction for a personal decree for the balance and there
followed a final mortgage decree on 30.9.1947. An
application for execution against the mortgaged properties
was dismissed on 9.1.1954 as in the meantime the mortgaged
properties which constituted an estate within the meaning of
s. 2(1) of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, had vested in
the State.
Execution was sought personally against the mortgagor by
attachment and sale of other, properties of the mortgagor
and it was ultimately ordered by the executing court. The
565
Patna High Court in revision held that in view of s. 4(d) of
the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, the execution petition
could not proceed and dismissed it.
On appeal to this Court it was contended that s. 4(d) of the
Act prohibited execution only against the mortgaged property
not in respect of the personal decree. It was brought to
the notice or this Court that the appellant had preferred a
claim tinder the Act and that the Claim Officer had deter-
mined a sum of Rs. 58,100/- with interest at 4 per cent as
payable to the appellant from the compensation payable on
abolition of the Estate.
Held, that s. 24(5) of the Act made the compensation payable
on acquisition of the mortgaged estate a kind of substituted
security against which the mortgage claim would be enforced
under the provisions of the Act. According to the Scheme of
the Act the debts of the proprietors in respect of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
estate were to be investigated and adjusted exclusively by
the Tribunal tinder the Act. On a proper construction, s.
4(d) of the Act precluded the executing Court from enforcing
the direction for a personal decree for realising the mort-
gage debt at present ; it could only be done eventually if
the realisation from the mortgaged property was found
insufficient to satisfy the decree, as in the present case
the whole of the mortgaged property was an estate, in
respect of which a claim was pending.
Lion Insurance Association Ltd. v. Tucker (1883) 12 Q.B.D.
176, Raqhubir v. Basudevanand, (1953) I.L.R 32 Pat. 581,
Mahanth Sukhdeo Das v. Kashi Prasad Tiwari, A.I.R. 1958 Pat.
630 and Rana Sheo Ambar Singh v. The Allahabad Bank Ltd.,
(1962) 2 S.C.R. 441 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL, APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 352 of
1959.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 8, 1957,
of the Patna High Court in Civil Revision No. 590 of 1955.
L.K. Jha and B. P. Jha, for the appellants.
Sarjoo Prasad and R. C. Prasad, for the respondent.
1962. March 5. The judgment of the Court delivered by
566
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This appeal has been brought to, this
Court with a certificate issued by the Patna High Court and
it raises as short question about the scope and effect of
the provisions of section 4(d) of the Bihar Land Reform Act,
1950 (30 of 1950) (hereinafter called the Act). The res-
pondent Smt. Gauri Kumari Devi along with her husband, Babu
Shyamakant Lal, executed a regisbored anomalous mortgage in
favour of the appellants Babu Krishna Prasad and his three
sons on the 10th of July, 1937, for a sum of Rs. 35,000/-.
The document evidenced a combination of ’Sudharna’ as well
as simple mortagage and the period specified in it was five
years. The respondent was the principal mortgagor and by
the mortgage deed she mortgaged 10 annas and 8 pies Hakiat
Milkiat of village Sonchari Mouza No. 11 912 in the district
of Patna which was the Zamindari property and 16.41 acres of
khudkasht land appertaining to khata No. 3 of the said
Mouza.
The appellants sued on this mortgage to recover Rs.
69,816/51/17 in the court of the SubJudge at Patna. The
said suit ended in a decree in favour of the appellants on
the 26th August,1946. The trial Judge ordered that for the
satisfaction of the decretal amount, "the mortgage
properties would be charged preliminary and if the decretal
amount is not fully satisfied from them, then alone the
respondent would be personally liable for the satisfaction
of the balance, if any." That is how a composite decree came
to be passed in the suit. By the final decree which
followed on the 30th September, 1947, the respondents
liability to pay Rs. 52,950/3/- was determined.
The appellants then filed an Execution Case No. 6 of’1952
and that the decretal amount should be realised by sale of
the ’mortgaged Zamindari properties. The respondent raised
an objection against the appellants’ claim on the ground
that the mortgaged properties had in the
567
meanwhile vested in the State of Bihar under the provisions
of the Act and so, they were not liable to sale in execution
proceedings as the respondent had ceased to have any
interest in them. Ultimately, the Execution Case filed by
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
the appellants was dismissed on the 9th January, 1954.
When the respondent contested the Execution Case on the
ground that the mortgaged properties had vested in the State
of Bihar, the appellants applied for transfer of their
decree for the execution to the Gaya Court. They intimated
to the Court that they wanted to execute the decree against
the respondent by. proceeding against or properties other
than those which were the subject-matter of the mortgage and
they alleged that they were entitled so to do by reason of
the personal decree which had been passed against her. The
application made by the appellants for the transfer of
decree was granted and the decree was transferred on the
22nd of January, 1954 with a certificate of non-satisfac-
tion.
The appellants then filed Execution Case No. 19 of 1954 in
the Court of the Subordinate Judge at Gaya and sought to
recover the decretal amount by attachment and sale of other
properties belonging to the respondent. In these
proceedings, the respondent filed an objection under section
47 of Code and it was numbered as Misc. Case No. 96 of
1954. She urged that the appellants had not obtained a
personal decree against her and so., the claim made by them
in their Execution Case was not maintainable. She also
contended that the appellants could not proceed against her
other properties because their remedy was to follow the
compensation money which would be given by the State
of .Bihar to her in lieu of her properties which had vested
in the said State.
It appears that on the 23rd December, 1954, the Misc. Case
No. 96 of 1954 filed by the respondent was allowed ex-parte
by the Sub-Judge at Gayna
568
and, in consequence, the Execution Case No. 19 of 1954 filed
by the appellants was dismissed. The appellants then
applied for review of the said order and prayed that their
Execution Case should be restorer to file and should be
dealt with in accordance with law. On the 20th April, 1915,
the Executing Court allowed the appellants’ application for
review and held that the appellants had obtained a personal
decree against the respondent and that they had a right to
sell the other properties of the respondent in execution of
the said personal decree. That is how the Executing Court
directed that execution should proceed as prayed for by the
appellants.
The respondent challenged this order by preferring a Civil
Revision Application before the Patna High Court and it was
numbered as 590 of 1955. The High Court held that a
personal decree had been passed in favour of the appellants,
though that part of the direction given in the judgment had
not been formally incorporated in the decree. The High
Court therefore, rejected the respondent’s contention that
no personal decree had been passed since an application had
not been made by the appellants under Order 34 Rule 6 of the
C.P.C. The High Court also rejected the respondent’s argu-
ment that a Review Application did not lie against the first
order passed by the Executing Court, though it thought that
there was some substance in ’the contention raised by the
respondent that, on the merits, the review need not have
been granted. Even so, the High Court did not choose to
base its decision on this contention. It has allowed the
Revision Application on the merits because it has held that
the appellants have no right to execute the personal decree
by proceeding to sell the other properties of the
respondent, for section 4(d) of the Act constitutes a bar
against such proceedings. on this view, the High Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
allowed the Revision Application, set aside the order passed
by the Executing
569
Court in favour of the appellants and has ordered that the
Execution Application filed by the appellants should be
dismissed. The appellants then applied for and obtained a
certificate from the High Court and it is with the said
certificate that they have come to this Court; and so, the
point which falls to be decided is in regard to the scope
and effect of section. 4(d) of the Act. We ought to add
that the respondent’s objection against the competence of
the appellants’ application for review has not been pressed
before us.
Before dealing with the said point, it would be convenient
to state some material facts. The first material fact is
that all the properties mortgaged by the respondent in
favour of the appellants constitute an estate under section
2(1) of the Act, so that we are dealing with a case where
the entire mortgaged property belonging to the mortgagor
proprietor has vested in the State of Bihar. It is not a
case where part of the properties mortgaged has vested in
the State while some of them continue to be vested in the
mortgagor.
The second point which has to be borne in mind in dealing
with the present controversy is that the appellants seek to
execute the personal decree against the respondent. There
is no doubt that under 0. 34 R. 6 of the Code, a personal
decree can be passed on an application made by the mortgagee
decree-holder only where the net proceeds of any sale held
under 0.34 R. 5 are found to be insufficient to pay the
amount due to the decree-holder, that is to say, it is only
after the mortgagee decree-bolder has exhausted his remedy
against the mortgaged property that he is entitled to apply
to recover the balance from the mortgagor judgment-debtor
personally otherwise than out of the properties mortgaged.
It may be that in the
570
case of a composite decree, an application as contemplated
by 0. 34 R. 6, may not be necessary ; but in that
connection, it may be relevant to bear in mind that under
the normal procedure prescribed by 0. 34 R.6, recovery of
the balance due under a mortgage decree is ordered on an
application by the mortgagee decree-holder where it is shown
that the net proceeds of any sale held under the mortgage
decree are insufficient to pay the amount due under the
decree. Besides, the order passed by the trial Court in its
judgment which has been treated in substance to constitute a
personal decree in the present proceedings, makes the
position quite clear. The learned Judge directed that for
the ’satisfaction of the decretal ’amount, the mortgaged
properties would be charged preliminary and he added that if
the decretal amount is not fully satisfied from them, then
the appellants would be entitled to proceed against the
respondent personally. In other words, the decree clearly
and unambiguously provides that the appellants would be
justified in executing the personal decree against the
respondent only if and after they have exhausted their
remedy against the mortgaged properties and have not been
able to recover the whole of the decretal amount by that
process. That is the second material fact which-has to be
borne in mind.
Then the third fact to which reference must be made is that
after the prescribed notification was issued and the
mortgaged properties belonging to the respondent had vested
in the State of Bihar, the appellants applied under section
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
14 of the Act notifying their claim under the mortgage
decree to the Claims Officer, and, in fact, on the 24th
November, 1956, the Claims Officer has determined that a sum
of Rs. 58,100/- plus future interest at 4% per annum over
the principal amount only but limited to the total interest
not exceeding the amount of the principal, would be payable
to the
571
appellants out of the compensation amount payable to the
respondent in respect of the properties mortgaged. This
fact was not known to the respondent at the time when her
Revision Application was argued before the High Court,
because it appears that the respondent did not appear in the
proceedings before the Claims Officer. The said fact has,
however, been stated before us by the respondent on an
affidavit and its correctness is not disputed by the
appellants. It is in the light of these facts that we have
to decide whether the High Court was right in holding that
the appellants’ application for execution at the present
stage is incompetent in view of the provisions of section
4(d) of the Act.
Let us then briefly refer to the relevant provisions of the
Act which would enable us to construe section 4(d) and
determine its scope and effect. As is well-known, the Act
was passed to provide for the transference to, the State of
the interests of proprietors and tenure- holders in land and
of the mortgages and lessees of such interests and to
provide for the constitution of a Land Commission for the
State of Bihar with powers to advise the State Government on
the agrarian policy to be pursued by the said Government
consequent upon such transference and for other matters
connected therewith. The object of the Act which is writ
large on its provisions was to eliminate the intermediaries
and establish direct relation between the State and the
cultivators. This policy has subsequently been adapted in
many other States in order to bring about the much needed
agrarian reform, Section 2(1) defines estate" meaning any
land included under one entry in any of the general
registers of revenue-paying lands and revenue-free prepared
and maintained under the law for the Lime being in forever
by the Collector of a district and includes revenue-free
land not entered in any
572
register and a share in or of an estate. It is common
ground that the mortgaged properties with which we are
concerned in the present appeal are an estate under section
2(i). Similarly, it is common ground that the respondent is
a proprietor as defined in s. 2 (o). Section 3 enables the
State Government to declare from time to time by noti-
fication that the estates or tenures of a proprietor or
tenure-holder, specified in the notification, have passed to
and become vested in the State. The notification
contemplated by s. 3 (1) has been issued in respect of the
estate in question. Section 4 prescribes the consequences
of vesting of an estate or tenure in the State. Broadly
stated, the effect of s. 4(a) is that an estate in respect
of which a notification has been issued shall, with effect
from the date of vesting vest absolutely in the State free
from all encumbrances and the proprietor of the said estate
shall cease to have any interests in such estate, other than
the interest expressly saved by or under the provisions of
the Act. That takes us to section 4(d) which provides that
no suit shall lie in any Civil Court for the recovery of.
any money due from such proprietor or tenure-holder the
payment of which is secured by a mortgage of, or is a charge
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
on, such estate or tenure and all suits and proceedings for
the recovery of any such money which may be pending on the
date of vesting shall be dropped. It is conceded that s.
4(d) takes in cases where decrees have been passed and that
the word "proceedings" used in its latter portion covers
execution proceedings. It is, however, urged that the bar
created by a. 4 (d) applies only to execution proceedings
which are taken by mortgagees decree-holders to recover
their decretal amount from estates which have vested in the
State and that execution proceedings in which decree-holders
seek to recover their decretal dues from properties other
than those which have vested in the State are outside the
mischief
573
of s. 4 (d). In other words, Mr. Jha for the appellants
contends that the High Court was in error in adopting the
broad and literal construction of section 4(d).
Before we deal with this argument, it would be convenient to
refer to the other relevant sections of the Act. Section
14(1) prescribes the time within which a secured creditor
has to file his claims. Every creditor, whose debt is
secured by a mortgage of an estate, has, within the
prescribed time, to notify in the prescribed manner his
claim in writing to the Claims Officer appointed in that
behalf. It is the function of the Claims Officer to
determine the amount of debt legally ’and justly payable to
each creditor in respect of his claim. Thus, it is clear
that a mortgagee decree-holder has to apply within the
specified time before the Claims Officer and that the Claims
Officer would have to determine what is legally and justly
due to him. Section 14(3) makes it clear that if the
mortgagee decree-holaer fails to notify his claim as
required by s. 14(1), the said claim shall be barred,
subject to the proviso which it is unnecessary to consider.
The effect of section 14(3), therefore, is that if a claim
of the nature referred to in subsection (1) is not duly
notified to the Claims Officer within the time and in the
manner prescribed by the said sub-section, the said claim
would be barred. The penalty for non-compliance with
section 14(1) is thus clear. Section 15 requires the
creditor to furnish full particulars and documents in
support of his claim. Section 16(1) lays down that the
Claims Officer shall determine the principal amount justly
due to each creditor and interest due at the date of such
determination in respect of such principal amount, ’the
determination to be made in accordance with the rules made
under the Act. Section 16(2) prescribes a scheme for the
scaling down of the debts due by the judgment-debtor.
Clauses (b) and (d) of section 16(2)
574
clearly suggest that the policy of the Act, inter alia, is
to give relief to the debtors whose estates have by
operation of the law vested in the State. Section 17
provides for an appeal against the decision of the Claims
Officer to a Board whose constitution is prescribed by
section 18(1). Section 18(3) lays down that the decision of
the Board and, where no appeal has been preferred to the
Board, the decision of the Claims Officer shall be final.
So, the scheme of Chapter IV which consists of sections 14
to 18 clearly is that all claims based on mortgages relating
to estates have to be submitted to the Claims Officer and
the amounts due to the creditors have to be determined in
accordance with the principles laid down by the Act. Where
the whole of the property mortgaged is an estate, there can
be no doubt that the procedure prescribed by Chapter IV has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
to be followed in order that the amount due to the creditor
should be determined by the Claims Officer. The decision of
the Claims Officer or the Board has been made final by the
Act.
Chapter V deals with the problem of the assessment of
compensation. Section 24 provides for the rates of
compensation. Section 24(5) lays down, inter alia, that in
the case where the interest of a proprietor is subject to a
mortgage, or charge, the compensation shall first be payable
to the creditor holding such mortgage or charge and the
balance’ if any, shall be payable to the proprietor. It
adds that the amount of compensation payable to a creditor
shall be the amount determined under Chapter IV which,
notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the time
being in force, shall not in any case exceed the amount of
compensation payable in respect of the estate or portion
thereof which is subject to such mortgage, and where there
are two or more such creditors, the compensation shall be
payable to
575
them in the order determined under the said Chapter. This
provision is, in a sense, consequential and it provides for
the payment of the amount already determined to be justly
and legally due to the creditor and so, a claim which is
made under section 14 would be determined under section 16
and the amount so determined will be paid under a. 24(5).
Chapter VI deals with the payment of compensation, and
section 32 provides for the manner of its payment. Thus,
the scheme of Chapters IV, V & VI is clear. The provisions
in the said Chapters constitute an integrated and self-
sufficient Code for the determination of the amount due to
the creditors in question and for their payments, and s.
section 35 which occurs in Chapter VIII prescribes a bar to
the jurisdiction of Civil Courts in the matters included in
it. Under this section, ’no suit shall be brought in any
Civil Court in respect of any entry in or omission from a
Compensation Assessment Roll or in respect of any order
passed under Chapters II to VI or concerning any matter
which is or has already been the subject of any application
made or proceedings taken under the said Chapters. There
can, therefore, be no doubt that the scheme of the Act
postulates that where the provisions of the Act apply,
claims of creditors have to be submitted before the Claims
Officer, the claimants have to follow the procedure
prescribed by the Act and cannot avail of any remedy outside
the Act by instituting a suit or any other proceedings in
the court of ordinary civil jurisdiction.
It is in the light of this scheme of the Act that we must
revert to section" 4(b) and determine what its true scope
and effect are. Mr. Jha contends that in construing the
words of Section 4(d) it would be necessary to bear in mind
the object of the Act which was merely to provide for the
transference to
576
the State of the interests of the proprietors and tenure-
holders in land and of the mortgagees and lessees of such
interests. It was not the object of the Act, says Mr. Jha,
to extinguish debts due by the proprietors or tenure holders
and so, it would be reasonable to confine the operation of
is. 4(d) only to the claims made against the estates which
have vested in the State and, no others. In our opinion,
this argument proceeds on an imperfect view of the aim and
object of the Act. It is true that one of the objects of
the Act was to provide for the transference to the State of
the estates as specified. But as we, have already seen, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
provisions contained in section 16 in regard to the scaling
down of the debts due by the proprietors and tenure-holders
clearly indicate that another object which the Act wanted to
achieve was to give some redress to the debtors whose
estates have been taken away from them by the notifications
issued under section 3. Therefore, in construing s. 4(d), it
would not be right to assume that the interests of the
debtors affected by the provisions of the Act do not fall
within the protection of the Act. Mr. Jha fairly conceded
that if the words used in a. 4(d) are literally construed
and they are given their natural grammatical meaning, it
would not be easy to limit the operation of s. 4(d) to
execution proceedings where relief is claimed against the
properties which have vested in the State. The relevant
clause in section 4(d) provides that all suits and
proceedings for the recovery of any such money which may be
pending on the date of the vesting shall be dropped; and
these words are wide enough to include within their sweep
execution proceedings, even though the recovery of the
amount due may have been claimed by the decree-holder from
properties other than those which have vested in the State.
The only limitation imposed by the clause is that the execu-
tion proceedings should be for the recovery of any such
money meaning any money due from the
577
proprietor on the strength of a mortgage executed by him in
respect of an estate. We have already emphasized that in
the present case, the whole of the mortgaged property is an
estate and, therefore, it is unnecessary for us to consider
what would be the effect of the provisions of s. 4(d) in
cases where part of the mortgaged property is an estate and
part is not. It is alsounnecessary to consider whether
s.4(d) would create abar even in cases where the
compensation amount payable to the mortgagor is insufficient
to satisfy the mortgagee decree- holder’s claim even to the
extent of the amounts scaled down under section 16.
Mr. Jha, however, suggested that rules of grammer should not
be allowed to have an overriding effect if it is shown that
putting a literal and grammatical construction on the
relevant words would lead to unreasonable or anomalous
results and in support of this argument, he has invited our
attention to the observations made by Brett, M. R. in the
case of the Lion Insurance Association Ltd. v. Tucker.(1)
"When you construe a statute or document" observed Brett, M.
R., "you do not construe it, according to the mere ordinary
general meaning of the words, but according to the ordinary
meaning of the words as applied to the subject-matter with
regard to which they are used, unless there is something
what obliges you to read them in a sense which is not their
ordinary sense in the English. language as so applied.
That., I take it, is the cardinal rule." We do not see how
this principle can assist Mr. Jha in the present case. The
scheme of the relevant provisions of the Act to which we
have already referred unambiguously suggests that where the
whole of the mortgaged property is an estate, certain
consequences follow. The decree-holder has to make a claim;
the claim has to be inquired into by the Claims Officer; the
amount due to the decreeholder has to be determined by the
Claims Officer
(1) (1883) 12 Q.B.D. 176, 186.
578
and the amount so determined has to be paid to the decree-
holder from out of the compensation money payable to the
judgment-debtor. Having regard to the said scheme, it is
difficult to confine the application of s. 4(d) only to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
execution proceedings in which the decree-holder seeks to
proceed against the estate of the debtor. In fact, an
execution proceeding to recover the decretal amount from the
estate which has already vested in the State, would be
incompetent because the said estate no longer belong to the
judgment-debtor. That being so, we are satisfied that on
the facts of this case, the High Court was fight in holding
that the application made by the appellants to execute the
decree against the respondent by proceeding against her non-
mortgaged properties is incompetent at the present stage.
The amount due to the appellants under the decree in
question has been already determined by the Claims Officer
and the appellants must first seek to recover that amount as
provided by the relevant provisions of the Act before they
proceed to execute the personal decree.
This conclusion follows even on the terms of the decree
itself. We have already seen that the direction issued by
the trial Court is explicit and clear. The said direction
which is consistent with the provisions of 0. 34 B. 6 would
enable the appellants to proceed personally against the
respondent only if it is shown that the decretal amount is
not fully satisfied from the proceeds of the mortgaged
property. In the present case, the mortgaged property
cannot be sold because it has vested in the State free of
encumbrance; but in lieu of the mortgaged property, the
respondent has become entitled to certain compensation
amount and the appellants are given the statutory right to
receive the amount due to them from the said compensation
amount under section 2 4 (5). This provision is some what
similar to the provision of section 73(2) of the
579
Transfer of Property Act which provides, inter alia that
where the mortgaged property is acquired under the Land
Acquisition Act, or any other enactment for the time being
in force providing for the compulsory acquisition of
immoveable property, the mortgagee shall be entitled to
claim payment of the mortgage-money, in whole or in part,
out of the amount due to the mortgagor as compensation. In
a sense, the compensation amount payable to the respondent
may prima facie, be treated to be like a security
substituted in the place of the original’ mortgaged property
under section 73(2) of the Transfer of Property Act.
However that may be, the terms of the decree require that
the appellants must first seek their remedy from the said
compensation amount before they can proceed against the non-
mortgaged property of the respondent. The relevant
directions in the decree do not justify the appellants’
contention that because the mortgaged property has vested in
the State, they are entitled to execute the personal decree
without taking recourse to the remedy available to them
under section 24(5) of the Act.
It now remains to refer to some decisions of the Patna High
Court to which our attention was drawn during the hearing of
this appeal. In Raghubir v. Budevanand, (1) the High Court
has held that section 4(d) of the Act is not applicable to a
case where money is secured by a mortgage or charge on
estates, some of which are notified under section 3 of the
Act and the others are not notified. In such a case,
according to the High Court a. 4 (d) will be a bar to the
suit or execution proceedings so far as the vested estates
are concerned, but the creditor will be entitled to
prosecute the suit or execution proceedings as regards the
estates or portions of estates which are not vested in the
State. Since we are dealing with a case where the whole of
the mortgaged property is an estate, it
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
(1) (1953) I.L.R. 32, 581.
580
is unnecessary for us to consider whether the view taken by
the Patna High Court in this cue is correct or not.
In Mahanth Sukhdeo Das v. Kashi Prasad Tiwari (1) the full
Bench of the High Court had occasion to consider whether a
mortgagee decreeholder of the interest of the proprietor
whose estate has vested in the State, is entitled to proceed
against the Bakasht lands of the proprietor comprised in the
said estate for recovery of the amount due to him under the
mortgage decree, and it was held that in such a case, the
mortgagee can not be forced to seek his remedy under section
14 and to satisfy his mortgage debt out of the compensation
payable under the Act, It appears that the Full Bench was
inclined to take the view that the interest of the judgment-
debtor in the bakasht land was one of the interests saved by
section 6 and that, in consequence, the bakasht lands conti-
nued to remain in the possession of the ex-propriotor not in
the character of bakasht lands but as raiyati lands; and
since these lands were a part (if the security offered by
the mortgage-deed, the decree-holder was entitled to proceed
against them without taking his remedy under section 14 of
the, Act. This conclusion was based on the view that the
effect of a. 4(d) read with sections 3 and 6 of the Act was
not to destroy the mortgage in its entirely but only with
respect to that part of the estate which had vested
absolutely in the State and no interest therein is left with
the mortgagor proprietor or tenure-holder. It is conceded
by Mr. Jha that this decision also proceeds on the assump-
tion that the mortgage security consists of an estate which
has vested in the State and of bakasht lands which did not,
in substance, vest in the State but continued with the
mortgagor as raiyati lands. Therefore, it is not necessary
for us to examine the merits if the conclusion reached by
(1) A.I.R. 1958, Pat. 630.
581
the Fall Bench in this case. It may, however, be not out of
place to add incidentally that Mr. Sarjoo Prasad for the
respondent has suggested that the assumption made by the
Fall Bench about the character of the bakasht lands by
virtue of the provisions of section 6 is inconsistent with
the decisions of this Court in Rana Sheo Ambar Singh v. The
Allahabad Bank Ltd. (1). His argument is that the
provisions of section 6 of the Act correspond to the
provisions of section 18 of the U. P. Zamindari Abolition
and Land Reforms Act (1 of 1951), and that what this Court
has said about the effect of the provisions of section 18,
has shaken the validity of the conclusion of the Full Bench
in regard to the effect of section 6 of the Act. We, do not
think it necessary to consider this point as well in the
present appeal. In any case, both the decisions on which
Mr. Jha has relied afford no assistance to us in dealing
with the point with which we are concerned in the present
appeal.
The result is, the order passed by the High Court if;
confirmed and the appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed
(1)[1962] 2. S.C.R. 44 1.
582