Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MURAMLAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DEV KARAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/05/1964
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1965 AIR 225 1964 SCR (8) 239
ACT:
Mortgage- Clog on equity of redemption-Enforceability-
Principle of Justice, equity and good conscience-
Application-Power of Court.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent sought to redeem a mortgage executed in the
State of Alwar in 1919. By a stipulation in the mortgage
deed the mortgagor agreed that if the debt was not paid
within 15 years the mortgagee would become the owner of the
property. The respondent’s case was that the transaction
was a mortgage and that he could redeem the mortgage even
though the stipulated period was over. The appellant
resisted the suit on the ground that the transaction
amounted to a sale and not a mortgage. The trial Judge
dismissed the suit holding that the claim for redemption was
not maintainable after the expiry of the stipulated period.
The Rajasthan High Court on appeal reversed the decision of
the trial Judge holding that the stipulation was a clog on
the equity of redemption and remanded the suit. The
stipulation in question I was as follows,-
"After the expiry of the stipulated period of
15 years this shop would be deemed as an
absolute transfer ’Mala Kalam’ for this
amount. Till the mortgage money is paid, I
shall have no concern with the shop."
Held:If the stipulation were to prevail, the use of the
words ’mala kalam’, which meant that there would be no scope
for the mortgagor to say anything, would indicate that the
mortgagee became the absolute owner of the property.
But the stipulation, which was undoubtedly a clog on the
equity of redemption, must fail and the suit for redemption
must succeed.
240
The equitable principle of justice, equity and good
conscience, long and consistently applied by Civil Courts in
lndia, could be applied in the State of Alwar even though
the Transfer of Property Act had no application there at the
time when the mortgage document was executed or its period
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expired. The strict provisions of the texts of Hindu Law in
this regard would be of no avail.
Namdeo Lokman Lodhi v. Narmadabai, [1953] S.C.R. 1009,
applied.
Pattabhiramier v. Vencatarow Naicken and Narasimha Naicken,
(1870) 13 M.I.A. 560 and Thumbusaway Moodelly v. Hossain
Rowthen,I.L.R. I Mad. 1, considered. ,
Venkata Reddy v. Parvati Ammal, I Mad. H.C. Rep. 460, Ramji
bin Tukaram v. Chinto Sakharam, I Bom. H.C. Rep. 199
(1864), Bapuji Apaji v. Senavaraji Marvadi, I.L.R. 11 Bom.
231, Ramasami Sastrigal V. Samiyappanayakan, I.L.R. 4 Mad.
179, Amba Lal v. Amba Lal, I.L.R. 1957 Raj. 964, Seleh Raj
v. Chandan Mal, I.L.R. 1960 Raj. 88 and Nainu v. Kishan
Singh, A.I.R. 1957 H.P. 46, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 484 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 28, 1958 of the Rajasthan High Court (Jaipur Bench) at
Jaipur in D. B. Civil First Appeal No. 64 of 1951.
Sarjoo Prasad and Harbans Singh, for the appellants.
B. P. Sinha and Naunit Lal, for the respondents.
May 8, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, C.J. This appeal by special leave arises out
of a redemption suit filed by the respondent Dev Karan
against the appellant Murarilal. The mortgage sought to be
redeemed was executed on the 19th March, 1919 for a sum of
Rs. 6,500. The mortgaged property consisted of a shop which
was delivered over in the possession of the mortgagee after
the execution of the mortgage deed. The mortgage deed had
provided that the amount due under the mortgage should be
repaid to the mortgagee within 15 years, whereupon the
property would be redeemed. It had also stipulated that if
the payment was not made within 15 years, the mortgagee
would become the owner of the property. The mortgagor- was
Mangal
241
Ram who died and the respondent claims to be the heir and
legal representative of the said deceased mortgagor. In the
plaint filed by the respondent, it was averred that the
transaction was, in substance, a mortgage and the
mortgagor’s right to redeem was alive even though the
stipulated period of 15 years for the repayment of the loan
had passed. On these allegations, the respondent claimed a
decree for redemption of the suit mortgage on payment of Rs.
6,500. It appears that the original mortgagee Gangadhar had
also died before the institution of the suit, and so, the
appellant Murarilal was impleaded as the defendant on the
basis that he was the only heir and legal representative of
the deceased mortgagee Gangadhar.
The claim for redemption thus made by the respondent was
resisted by the appellant on several grounds. It was
alleged that after the expiry of the stipulated period of 15
years, the property had become the absolute property of the
mortgagee and it was urged that the original transaction
was, in substance, and in reality, not a mortgage but a
sale. Several other pleas were also raised by the appellant
in resisting the respondent’s claim, but it is unnecessary
to refer to them. The learned trial Judge framed
appropriate issues which arose on the pleading of the
parties. In substance, he field that the claim for
redemption made long after the 15 years’ period had expired
could not be sustained. Findings were made on other issues
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also and they were against the respondent. In the result,
the respondent’s suit was dismissed.
The respondent then took the matter in appeal before the
Rajasthan High Court. He urged that the view taken by the
trial Court that the stipulation as to the mortgagor’s
liability to re-pay the loan within 15 years did not bar his
present suit for redemption, because the said stipulation
amounted to a clog on the equity of redemption and as such,
could not affect the mortgagor’s right to redeem, and he
added that the transaction, in substance, was a mortgage and
not a sale, and so, his right to redeem was alive and could
be effectively enforced by the present suit. The High Court
has upheld his first contention that the relevant
51 S.C.-16.
242
provision as to the period within which the mortgage amount
had to be repaid amounted to a clog on the equity of
redemption and could not be pleaded as a bar to the present
suit. But on the question about the character of the origi-
nal transaction itself, the High Court appears to have been
inclined to take the view that the relevant clause on which
the plea about the bar was raised did not really support the
said plea, because it was by no means clear that even after
the expiration of 15 years, the mortgagee was intended to be
the absolute owner of the property. On these findings, the
decree passed by the trial Court dismissing the respondent’s
suit has been reversed and the suit has been remanded to the
trial Court to be disposed of in accordance with law. It is
against this order that the appellant has come to this Court
by special leave. Pending the appeal before this Court,
both the appellant and the respondent have died, and their
respective heirs have been brought on the record.
The first question which calls for our decision is whether
the relevant clause on which the appellant relies makes the
mortgagee the owner of the property at the end of the sti-
pulated period of 15 years. The mortgage provides, inter
alia, that after the house which was the mortgage property
was delivered over to the mortgagee, it was open to him
either to live in it, or to let it out to tenants. The
mortgagee was further given liberty to spend up to Rs. 35
for repairing the house and if more expenses were intended
to be incurred, the &aid expenditure would be incurred
through the mortgagor. On the expenditure thus incurred the
mortgagor was liable to pay interest at the rate of As. 0-6-
0 per cent per month. Then the document proceeded to add
that the mortgagor would get the property redeemed on
payment of the mortgage amount as well as the cost of Patta
which may have been incurred by the mortgagee and the
repairing expenses within a period of 15 years. Then,
occurs the relevant clause: "After the expiry of the
stipulated period of 15 years, this shop would be deemed as
an absolute transfer "Mala Kalam" for this very amount.
Till the mortgage money is paid, I shall have no concern
with the shop." The High Court appears to have taken the
view that the words "Mala Kalam" which occur at
243
the end of the relevant clause do not necessarily import the
notion that the mortgage property would be the absolute
property of the mortgagee. According to the High Court, the
said words literally mean "where there is no scope for
having any say". If that is the meaning of the relevant
words, it seems difficult to accept the view that the
document did not intend to make the mortgagee the owner of
the property at the end of 15 years if the debt due was not
paid within that period. When the document says that there
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would be no scope for the mortgagor to say anything, it
necessarily means, in the context, that the mortgagor would,
in that case, have lost his title to the property, and that
means the mortgagee would become the absolute owner of the
property. Therefore, we feel no difficulty in holding that
if the terms of the document were to prevail, the appel-
lant’s contention that the present suit for redemption is
barred, must succeed. It is common ground that the amount
due under the mortgage deed was not paid by the mortgagor or
his heir within the stipulated period and that would
extinguish the title of the mortgagor and make the mortgagee
to be the owner of the property.
But the question is whether such a stipulation can be
allowed to be pleaded as a bar to the respondent’s claim for
redemption. Just as it is common ground that if the terms
of the document were to prevail, the suit would be barred,
it is also common ground that if the doctrine that the clog
on the equity of redemption cannot be enforced is to prevail
in the present proceedings, the respondent’s action for
redemption must succeed. The fact that a stipulation of the
kind with which we are concerned in the present case amounts
to a clog on the equity of redemption, is not and cannot be
disputed. Therefore, the main question which arises in the
present appeal is: does the equitable doctrine ensuring the
mortgagor’s equity of redemption in spite of a clog created
on such equity by stipulations in the mortgage deed apply to
the present case? This question arises in this form,
because the Transfer of Property Act did not apply to Alwar
at the time when the mortgage was executed nor at the time
when the 15 years’ stipulated period expired.
244
Mr. Sarjoo Prasad for the appellant contends that the High
Court was in error in applying the equitable principle,
because the said principle cannot be invoked in cases where
the Transfer of Property Act does not apply. In support of
this argument, he has very strongly relied on an early
decision of the Privy Council pronounced in 1870, in the
case of Pattabhiramier v. Vencatarow Naicken and Narasimha
Naicken(1). In that case, the Privy Council was dealing
with a Bye-bil-wuffa, or mortgage and conditional sale
usufructuary executed in 1806 under which the mortgagees
were put in possession. The deed contained a condition that
if the mortgagor failed to redeem within five years, the
conditional sale was to be absolute. The mortgagor failed
to redeem within the stipulated period, and the mortgagee,
without foreclosing the mortgage, sold the mortgaged pro-
perty. Thereafter, the mortgagor’s representative sued to
redeem the mortgage under s. 8 of the Madras Regulation
XXXIV of 1802. The Privy Council held that the interest of
the mortgagee after the expiry of the stipulated period had
become absolute. In dealing with this question, Lord
Chelmsford who delivered the opinion of the Board observed
that the form of security with which the Board was concerned
had long been common in India, and he added that the sti-
pulations in such contracts were recognised and enforced
according to their letter by the ancient Hindu law as well
as under Mohammedan law; and in support of this statement,
reference was made to certain passages from Colebrooke’s
Digest on Hindu Law and Baillie’s introduction to his book
on Mohammedan Law of Sale. If the ancient law of the
country, observed Lord Chelmsford, has been modified by any
later rule, having the force of law, that rule must be
founded either on positive legislation, or on established
practice; and since neither any specific statutory provision
had been cited before the Board, nor established practice in
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that behalf had been proved, the Privy Council upheld the
mortgagee’s plea that he became the absolute owner of the
property at the expiration of the stipulated period. While
pronouncing this decision, Lord Chelmsford, however, took
the precaution of adding that while the Board was allowing
(1) [1890] 13 Moore’s I.A. 560
245
the appeal, "it must not be supposed that their Lordships
design to disturb any rule of property established by
judicial decisions so as to form part of the Law of the
Forum wherever such may prevail, or to affect any title
founded thereon." As we will presently point out, the appeal
of Pattabhiramier was pending before the Privy Council for
as many as 10 years. Meanwhile, Indian High Courts were
enforcing the equitable principle that stipulations
contained in mortgage-deeds which amounted to clog on the
equity of redemption could not be enforced. In other words,
the jurisdiction which courts of equity exercised in England
by refusing to enforce clogs on the equity of redemption,
was being exercised by High Courts in India.
However, before we refer to those decisions, it would be
convenient to cite another decision of the Privy Council
pronounced in Thumbusawmy Moodelly v. Hossain Rowthen &
Ors(1). In that case, the Privy Council held that the con-
tract of mortgage by conditional sale is a form of security
known throughout India, and by the ancient law of India, it
must be taken to prevail in every part of India, where it
has not been modified by actual legislation or established
practice, and so, must be enforced according to its letter.
In this case, Sir James W. Colvile who delivered the opinion
of the Board, referred to the earlier decision of the Privy
Council in Pattabhiramiers case(1), noticed the trend of
judicial pronouncements made by the High Courts in India
while Pattabhiramier’s case was pending before the Privy
Council, and strongly reiterated the view that the said
decisions of the High Courts were radically unsound. He
referred to the fact that unfortunately, Pattabhiramier’s
case " slept for nine years, and that in the interval the
Sudar Court, and afterwards the High Court which succeeded
it, continued the course of decision which the former had
given in 1858". Then he mentioned the relevant decisions of
the Madras and the Bombay High Courts and expressed the
opinion that in trying to enforce principles of equity in
dealing with stipulations contained in mortgage documents,
the High Courts were really assuming the functions of
Legislature. So, it is clear that the Privy Council
emphatically
(1) I.L.R. 1 Mad. 1
(2) [1870] 13 M.I.A.
246
declared in 1875 that unless there is a legislative
enactment or established practice to the contrary, terms in
the contract of mortgage by conditional sale must be taken
to prevail in every part of India and must be strictly
enforced according to their letter. Mr. Sarjoo Prasad
naturally relies on these decisions and contends that so far
as the State of Alwar is concerned, there is no legislative
enactment to the contrary, nor is there any established
practice on which the equitable doctrine could be pleaded by
the respondent in support of his case that though 15 years
have elapsed, his right to redeem still survives.
There are two other decisions of the Privy Council to which
we may refer at this stage. In Kader Moideen V. Nepean(1),
the Privy Council was dealing with a case from Burma, and it
observed that the Burmese Courts are directed, in the
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absence of any statutory law applicable to accounts against
a mortgagee in possession, to follow the guidance of
justice, equity, and good conscience. Acting on this
principle, the Privy Council accepted Mr. Haldane’s
contention that there was no rule of abstract justice in
taking the accounts of a mortgagee in possession, and that
the Indian rule, which was embodied in s. 76 of the Transfer
of Property Act, should, though the Act had not been
extended to Burma, be followed there in preference to the
English practice. It would thus be seen that the equitable
principle underlying the provisions of s. 76 was extended to
the case on the specific ground that the Burmese Courts had
been directed by the relevant statutory provision to follow
the guidance of justice, equity and good conscience in the
absence of any statutory law applicable to accounts against
a mortgagee in possession. This decision, therefore, is in
line with the two earlier decisions of the Privy Council.
Similarly, in Mehrban Khan v. Makhna(2), where the Privy
Council was dealing with the provisions in a mortgage deed
conferring on the mortgagee upon redemption an interest in
the mortgaged property, it was held that the said provisions
amounted to a clog or fetter on the equity of redemption and
as such, were void not only against the mortgagor, but also
against the purchaser of his interest,
(1) 25 I.A. 241
(2) 57 I.A. 168
247
since they were inconsistent with the very nature and
essence of a mortgage. In this case, again, s. 28 of
Regulation No. VII which was applicable to the North-West
Frontier Province, had expressly provided that in cases not
otherwise specially provided for, the Judges shall decide
according, to justice, equity and good conscience; and so,
recourse to the equitable doctrine was permissible because
there was the statutory mandate requiring the Judges to
apply the said doctrine where there was no specific
legislative provision in relation to the matter with which
they were dealing.
Though the position of the Privy Council decisions is thus
clear and consistent, the trend of the decisions of the High
Courts in India continued to conform to the same pattern
which was set up by the decision of the Madras High Court in
the case of Venkata Reddi v. Parvati Ammal(1) and adopted by
the Bombay High Court in Ramji bin Tukaram v. Chinto
Sakharam (2). The question was elaborately argued on
several occasions before the said High Courts and the two
earlier decisions of the Privy Council in the case of
Pattabhiramier(3) as well as in the case of Thumbuswamy
Moodelly(4) were cited and yet, the High Courts have con-
sistently adhered to the view that in dealing with mortgage
transactions which contain unfair, unjust or oppressive
stipulations unreasonably restricting the mortgagor’s right
to redeem, the Court would be justified in refusing to
enforce such stipulations and recognising the paramount
character of the equity of redemption. In Bapuji Apaji v.
Sonavaraji Marvati(5), Westropp, C.J., has elaborately
considered the relevant aspects of this question. He
referred to the two Privy Council’s decisions and observed
that the doctrine of Ramji v. Chinto(2) had been uniformly
followed in the Bombay Presidency in a multitude of cases,
and he saw no reason to depart from that decision. In
expressing his firm adherence to the pattern of the law
prescribed by the decision of the Bombay High Court in Ramji
v. Chinto, the learned Chief Justice elaborately considered
all the precedents on the point, trend of authorities
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bearing on the question, the opinion of scholars, and held
that he was inclined
(1)1 Mad. H.C. Rep. 460
(2) 1 Bom. H.C.Rep. 199 [1864]
(3) [1870] 13 M.I.A. 560
(4) I.L.R. 1 Mad. 1.
(5) I.L.R. 11 Bom. 231
248
to take the law to be that which was settled in Ramji v.
Chinto(1) and gave effect to it. So far as the Bombay High
Court is concerned, the practice consistently had been to
follow the decision of Westropp, C.J. till the Transfer of
Property Act was extended to Bombay.
In Madras, we find that same position. In Ramasami
Sastrigal v. Samivappanayakan(2), the majority view of the
Full Bench was that in the Madras Presidency, where con-
tracts of mortgage by way of conditional sale have been
entered into subsequent to the year 1858, redemption after
the expiry of the term limited by the contract must be
allowed. The, point with which we are dealing in the present
appeal was elaborately argued before the Madras High Court;
the opinion expressed emphatically by the Privy Council was
cited, but Turner, C.J., with whose opinion Muttusami Ayyar,
J., agreed made a very significant observation after
elaborately examining the merits of the questions "For these
reasons," said the learned C.J., "we conceive that we shall
not be wanting in due respect for the distinguished tribunal
by whose decisions we are bound, if we follow the course
they have pronounced there were strong reasons for adopting
and apply the rules introduced, however erroneously, by
judicial decisions in these provinces." That view has
prevailed in the Madras High Court ever since.
These decisions show that the High Courts in India conformed
to the view that whether or not there is a statutory
provision directing the Judges to give effect to the
principles of justice, equity and good conscience, it is
their duty to enforce that principle where they are dealing
with stipulations introduced in mortgage transactions which’
appear to them to be unreasonable, oppresive or unjust.
It is true that according to the strict letter of the
ancient Hindu Law, a stipulation that the mortgagor shall
pay the amount advanced to him by the mortgage within a
specified period, was intended to be enforced. The ancient
Hindu law texts use the word "Adhi" to denote pledge of a
movable or mortgage of immovable property. Nar. IV 124
divides Adhi into two sorts, viz., one that is to be
redeemed within
(1) 1 Bom. H.C. Rep. 199 (1864)
(2) I.L.R. 4 Mad. 179 at P. 190
249
a certain time fixed (by agreement at the time of
contracting the debt) or to be retained till the debt is
paid off. In regard to the first category of mortgages, if
the money is not paid at the time fixed, the thing pledged
or mortgaged would belong to the creditor (vide Yaj. 11. 58
and as explained by Mitakshara) (1). It also appears that
if the mortgage is not redeemed even when the debt has grown
to double of the principal by non-payment of the interest
agreed upon, the mortgagor lost his title over the mortgaged
property; so that it must be conceded that under the strict
letter of the Hindu law texts, if a mortgage deed contains a
stipulation for the repayment of the mortgage amount within
a specified period, at the expiration of the said period the
mortgagor may lose his title over the mortgaged property.
The principle underlying this provision appears to be that
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Hindu law as enunciated by the ancient texts, attached
considerable importance to a person keeping his promise.
Though that is so, we ought also to add that according to
Sir R. B. Ghose, ordinarily, time was not of the essence of
the contract of mortgage in Hindu law(1), and in support of
this opinion the learned author quotes with approval
Colebrooke’s opinion.
Basing himself on this position of the Hindu law, Mr. Sarjoo
Prasad contends that we ought to assume that Hindu Law which
was applicable to Alwar recognised the importance of
compelling the mortgagor to perform his promise that he
would repay the debt within a specified time and if he
tailed to do so, he would lose his title over the mortgaged
property. He urged that the dispute between the parties in
the present appeal should be decided in the light of this
position of the Hindu law as well as the principles
enunciated by the Privy Council in the cases of
Pattabhiramier(3) and Thumbusawmy Moodelly (4).
In dealing with this argument, it would be relevant to
observe that traditionally, courts in India have been con-
sistently enforcing the principles of equity which prevent
the enforcement of stipulations in mortgage deeds which un-
reasonably restrain or restrict the mortgagor’s right to
(1) Dr. Kane’s History of Dharmasastra Vol. III. p.,128
(1) Ghose on ’The Law of Mortgage in India’ Tagore Law
Lectures 1875-6, 5th Ed. Vol. I. p. 56.
(3) [1870] 13 M.I.A. 560
(4) I.L.R. 1 Mad. 1
250
redeem. We may, in this connection, refer to some of the
statutes which were in force in India. The old Bengal
Regulation III of 1793 by s. 21 directed the Judges of the
District and City Courts in cases where no specific rule
existed to act according to justice, equity and good con-
science. Similar provision occurs in s. 17 of the Madras
Regulation II of 1802. The Bengal Civil Courts Act, 1887,
and the Madras Civil Courts Act, 1873, contain similar pro-
visions in ss. 37 and 16 respectively. Likewise, in regard
to Courts in the Mufassal of Bombay, Bombay Regulation IV of
1827 by s. 26 provides that the law to be observed in the
trial of suits shall be Acts of Parliament and Regulations
of Government applicable to the case; in the absence of such
Acts and Regulations, the usage of the country in which the
suit arose; if none such appears, the law of the defendant,
and in the absence of specific law and usage, equity ‘and
good conscience. In fact, in Namdeo Lokman Lodhi v.
Narmadabai(1), this Court has emphatically observed that it
is axiomatic that the courts must apply the principles of
justice, equity and good conscience to transactions which
come before them for determination even though the statutory
provisions of the Transfer of Property Act are not made
applicable to these transactions. These observations, in
substance, represent the same traditional judicial approach
in dealing with oppressive, unjust and unreasonable restric-
tions imposed by the mortgagees on needy mortgagors when
mortgage documents are executed.
There is one other circumstance to which we ought to refer.
We do not know what the true position of the Hindu law was
in the State of Alwar at the relevant time. In fact, we do
not know what the provisions of the Contract Act were in the
State of Alwar. Even so, we think it would be reasonable to
assume that civil courts established in the State of Alwar
were like civil courts all over the country, required to
administer justice and equity where there was no specific
statutory provision to deal with the question raised before
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them. Whether or not the Hindu law which prevailed in Alwar
was similar to that prescribed by ancient Hindu Sanskrit
texts, is a point on which no material is produced
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1009
251
before us. It may well be that just as in Bombay and
Madras, notwithstanding the ancient provisions of Hindu Law
which seem to entitle the mortgagee to insist upon the
performance of a stipulation as to time within which the
mortgage debt has to be paid, the High Courts had con-
sistently refused to enforce such stipulations, the Courts
in the State of Alwar also may have adopted the same
approach. In the absence of any material on the record on
the point, we are reluctant to accept Mr. Sarjoo Prasad’s
argument that the doctrine of equity and justice should be
treated as irrelevant in dealing with the present dispute.
In this connection, it is material to refer to the recent
decisions pronounced by the Rajasthan High Court in which
this position has been upheld either because it was
conceded, or because the High Court took the view that the
principles of equity were enforceable in dealing with
mortgage transactions in Rajasthan. In Amba Lal v. Amba
Lal(1), the Rajasthan High Court held that s. 60 and its
proviso contained a general principle of law applicable to
mortgages in this country, which should be applicable even
in those places where the Transfer of Property Act may not
be in force as such, but where its principles may be in
force. The property in question which was the subject-
matter of the mortgage was situated in the State of Udaipur.
Similarly, in the case of Seleh Raj v. Chandan Mal(2) , the
Rajasthan High Court held that the principle underlying s.
60 may well be regarded to be a salutary one and in
accordance with the principles of equity, justice ,and good
conscience. Accordingly it took the view that though the
Transfer of Property Act may not be in force in the
territory in question, it would not be unreasonable to
decide a case in accordance with the principles underlying
the said section. The property with which the Court was
concerned in this case was situated in the State of Jodhpur.
The same principle has been applied in Himachal Pradesh
(vide Nainu v. Kishan Singh)(").
(1) I.L.R. r957 Raj. 964.
(2) I.L.R. 196o Raj. 88.
(3) A.I.R. T957 H.P. 46.
252
Thus, it is clear that the equitable principle of justice,
equity and good conscience has been consistently applied by
Civil Courts in dealing with mortgages in a substantial part
of Rajasthan and that lends support to the contention of the
respondent that it was recognised even in Alwar that if a
mortgage deed contains a stipulation which unreasonably
restrains or restricts the mortgagor’s equity of redemption,
courts were empowered to ignore that stipulation and enforce
the mortgagor’s right to redeem, subject, of course, to the
general law of limitation prescribed in that behalf. We
are, therefore, satisfied that no case has been made out by
the appellant to justify our interference with the
conclusion of the Rajasthan High Court that the relevant
stipulation on which the appellant relies ought to be
enforced even though it creates a clog on the equity of
redemption.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed
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