Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRI RANGA NILAYAM RAMA KRISHNA RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KANDOKORI CHELLAYAMMA alias MANGAMMA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/10/1950
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1953 AIR 425 1950 SCR 806
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC2113 (7)
ACT:
Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act (IV of 1938), ss. 3
(D), 8, 10, 19--Sale of estate in execution of
decree--Whether owner ceases to be "Agriculturist" pending
application to set aside sale-Applications to set aside sale
and for relief under Act’Maintainability-Order confirming
sale and granting relief--Legality--C.P.C. (1908), O.XXI, r.
90--Execution sale--Appeal against order refusing to set
aside sale--When sale becomes absolute and title passes-
Receiver--Appointment of receiver, effect of.
HEADNOTE:
In execution of a decree obtained on a mortgage a vil-
lage owned by the mortgagor which was included in the mort-
gage was sold by the court on the 6th July 1935 and it was
purhased by the mortgagee. An application by the mortgagor
under 0 .XXI,.r. 90, C.P.C., for setting aside the sale for
irregulrities was dismissed, the sale was confirmed and full
satisifiction of the decree was recorded, on the 6th March
1943. A few days afterwards the mortgagor and his adopted
son made an application under s. 19 of the Madras Agricul-
turists’ Relief Act, 1938, praying for relief under the Act,
and, as this application also was dismissed they preferred
two appeals, one from the order dismissing this application
and the other against the order of 6th March 1943 refusing
to set aside the sale. The High Court of Madras held that,
as the mortgagor’s village had been sold he did not come
within the purview of el. (i)) of the proviso to 6. 3 of the
Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act and so he was entitled to
claim relief under the Act and the debt stood discharged
under the provision of the Act, but the Bale was not liable
to be set aside; and in accordance with this judgment the
decree-holder was directed to pay the amount for which the
property had been sold with interest thereon: ’
Held per FAZL ALl and MUKHERJEA JJ.--(i)that the conclu-
sions arrived at by the High Court were self-contradictory
because if the sale was effective on the date it was held or
confirmed, the decree was also satisfied on that date and
the judgementdebtors were no longer entitled to invoke the
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provisions of the Act; (ii) that the High Court was not
justified in law in deciding the appeal on the footing that
the judgment-debtors ceased to be owners of the village from
the date of sale and on that account were not hit by cl. (D)
of the proviso to s. 3 of the Act inasmuch as when an appeal
is preferred from an order rejecting an application under
O.XXI, r. 90, C.P.C., to set aside an execution sale, the
sale does not become absolute until the matter is finally
decided by the appellate court.
807
Per CHANDRASEKHARA AIYAR J.--After the execution sale in
1935 the only interest which the judgment-debtors had in the
village was to have the sale set aside under the relevant
provisions of the Civil Procedure Code and this interest,
not being an interest contemplated by s. 3 (ii) (a) & (b)
and s. 19 (1) of the Act, they were not "agriculturists" and
were not entitled to any relief under the Act.
Held also, per FAlL ALl and MUKHERJEA JJ.--A person does
not cease to be a land holder of an estate within the mean-
ing of cl. (D) to the proviso to s. 3 of the Act merely
because the estate is placed in the hands of a receiver.
Bhawani Kunwar v. Mathura Prasad Singh (I.L.R. 40 Cal.
89) and Chandramani Shaha v. Anarjan Bibi (I.L.R. 61 Cal.
945) referred
Judgment of the Madras High Court reversed.
JUDGMENT:
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 56 and 57 of
1949. Appeals from the orders of the High Court of Judica-
ture at Madras (Wadsworth and Patanjali Sastri JJ.) dated
24th October, 1945, in A.A.O. Nos. 372 of 1943 and 634 of
1944 which were appeals from the orders of the Subordinate
Judge of Ellore in E.A. No. 440 of 1937 and C.M.P. No. 152
of 1943 in O.S. No. 87 of 1923.
P. Somasundaram (V. V. Choudhry, with him) for the
appellant.
V. Rangachari (K. Mangachari, with him) for the respond-
ents.
1950. October 17. The Court delivered judgment as
follows.
FAZL ALI J. --These appeals arise out of an execution
proceeding, and the main point to be decided in them is what
is the effect of certain provisions of the Madras Agricul-
turists’ Relief Act (Madras Act IV of 1938, which will
hereinafter be referred to as "the Madras Act"), on the
rights of the parties. How this point arises will be clear
from a brief statement of the facts of the case.
It appears that in 1908, one Veeresalingam, the husband
of the first respondent, borrowed a sum of Rs. 9,000 from
one Sitharamayya, and executed a mortgage bond in his fa-
vour. Subsequently a suit was
808
instituted by the mortgagee to enforce the mortgage and a
final decree in that suit was passed on the 19th August,
1926. Thereafter, on the 28th October, 1931,the decree-
holder applied for the execution of the decree by the sale
of the mortgaged property. In 193a, the decree-holder
transferred the decree to one Sobhanadri, after whose death
his son, the appellant before us, was brought on the record
as his legal representative in the execution proceedings.
Several years before the assignment of the decree, Veeresa-
lingam, the defendant, had died and his widow, the first
respondent. was therefore brought on the record as his legal
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representative. On the 6th July, 1935, two items of proper-
ty were sold in execution of the decree and purchased by the
decree- holder, these being :---(1) a village called Tedlam
in in West Godavari District; and (2) 4 acres and 64 cents
of land in Madepalli village. The first property was sold
for Rs. 21,000 and the second for’ Rs. 1,025. As, however,
the amount due under the decree was only about Rs. 17,860
and odd, the sale of the second property was subsequently
set aside and the decree-holder deposited into Court the
excess amount of about Rs. 3,000 and odd after setting off
the decretal amount against the price of the first item of
property. On the 5th August, 1935, the first respondent
filed an application under Order XXI, rule 90, and section
47 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to set aside the sale
held in July, 1935, alleging certain irregularities in the
conduct of the sale. That application was after several
years heard by the Subordinate Judge of Ellore, who by his
order dated the 6th March, 1943, dismissed it and directed
the sale of the first property to be confirmed and full
satisfaction of the decree to be entered. After about 12
days, i.e., on the 18th March, 1943, the first respondent
and the second respondent, who had been adopted by the
former on the 12th March, 1936, under the will of her hus-
band and was subsequently brought on record, filed an appli-
cation under section 19 of the Madras Act praying for cer-
tain reliefs under that Act. This application’ was dismissed
on the 22nd March, 1943. Subsequently, two appeals were
filed on behalf
809
of the respondents (who will hereinafter be sometimes re-
ferred to as judgment-debtors), one against the order refus-
ing to set aside the sale under Order XXI, rule 90 of the
Civil Procedure Code, and the other against the order dis-
missing the application under the Madras Act. These appeals
were heard together by two learned Judges of the Madras High
Court and they took the view that the judgment-debtors’
application under the Madras Act was maintainable notwith-
standing the fact that the sale had been confirmed and full
satisfaction of the decree recorded, and remitted the case
to the trial Court for a finding on the following
questions, namely
(1) whether the applicants were agriculturists; and
(2) if so, what would be the result of applying the
provisions of Madras Act IV of 1938 to the decretal debt
against them ?
So far as regards the judgment-debtors’ appeal against
the order dismissing their application under Order XXI, rule
90, the Learned Judges were inclined to agree with the trial
Court that the sale should stand but declined to pass final
orders in the appeal on the ground that "it would seriously
prejudice the judgment-debtors in the connected application
for relief under section 19 of the Madras Act IV of 1938."
The Subordinate Judge answered the questions referred
to him by the High Court on remand as follows :--
(1) The judgment-debtors were not agriculturists and
were not therefore entitled to the benefits of the Madras
Act;and
(2) If they were agriculturists, they were not liable to
pay anything under the decree, as, in view of the provisions
of the Act, the debt stood discharged on the date of sale.
When however the matter came up before the learned
Judges of the High Court, they reversed the first finding of
the trial Court and held that the judgmentdebtors were
agriculturists within the meaning of the
810
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Act, and that the debt stood discharged in view of section 8
(2) of the Act. At the same time, they held that the sale
was not liable to be set aside, and in this view dismissed
one of the appeals and allowed the other. Then followed
certain proceedings to which it would have been unnecessary
to refer but for the fact that the judgment-debtors have
attempted to rely on "them in support of one of their
preliminary objections to the maintainability of these
appeals.
It appears that on the next day after the judgment of
the High Court was delivered in the two appeals, counsel
for the respondents wrote a letter to the Registrar of the
High Court to direct the posting of the two cases ’for being
mentioned’ before the Court in order to obtain necessary
directions consequent on the orders passed by it in the
appeals. This letter was not placed before the learned
Judges until the judgment had been signed by them and ac-
cordingly the judgment-debtors filed two petitions, one
being a review petition to the High Court and the other
being a petition to the trial Court praying "that the de-
creeholder may be ordered to pay to the petitioners the
purchase money of Rs. 21,000 with interest thereon at 6 per
cent. per annum from the date of sale till the date of
payment." The trial Court dismissed the latter petition on
the ground that it was not maintainable, and the judgment-
debtors filed an appeal against the order. The appeal as
well as the review petition of the judgment-debtors were
heard together by the learned Judges who directed the
decree-holder’s counsel to elect whether his client would
deposit the purchase money into Court or have the sale set
aside. The decree-holder applied for a short adjournment
and ultimately on the 15th November, 1946, his counsel
stated that his client wished to retain the property which
he had purchased and to pay the purchase money into Court.
Thereupon, he was directed to pay the sum of Rs. 21,000
together with interest within a months from that date.
Subsequently, the appellant (decree-holder) having
obtained leave to appeal from the High Court preferred
811
these appeals before us. It may be stated here that along
with the application for leave to appeal, the appellant had
filed an application for excusing the delay in filing the
former application which he accounted for mainly by refer-
ring to the proceedings for the review of the judgments in
the previous appeals to the High Court. This application
was granted and the delay was condoned.
As has been already stated, the main point arising in
these appeals relates to the effect of the Madras Act upon
this litigation. That Act was passed and came into effect
in 1938, while the execution proceedings were still continu-
ing. It will be recalled that the sale took place on the
6th July, 1935; and the application for setting it aside was
not disposed of until the 6th March, 1943. But, strangely
enough, the judgmentdebtors did not apply for any relief
under the Madras Act during this period, and they made their
application only after the sale had been confirmed and
satisfaction of the decree had been entered. How far this
belated application affects the right claimed by the judg-
ment-debtors under the Act is one of the questions raised in
these appeals, and I shall deal with it after referring to
the material provisions of the Act and the findings of the
High Court which have given rise to several debatable
points.
The sections of the Act which are material for the
purpose of these appeals are sections 3, 8 and 19. Section 3
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defines an agriculturist and has a proviso stating that in
certain cases a person shall not be deemed to be an agricul-
turist. The relevant clause of this proviso, to which I
shall also have to advert later, is clause (D) which runs
thus :--
"Provided that a person shall not be deemed to be an
’agriculturist’ if he-
(D) is a landholder of an estate under the Madras Es-
tates Land Act, 1908, or of a share or portion thereof in
respect of which estate, share or portion any sum exceeding
Rs. 500 is paid as peshkash or any sum exceeding Rs. 100 is
paid as quit-rent, jodi, kattubadi,
812
poruppu or the like or is a janmi under the Malabar Tenancy
Act, 1929, who pays any sum exceeding Rs. 500 as land reve-
nue to the Provincial Government. ’ ’
The precise question which is said to arise with refer-
ence to this provision is whether by reason of being the
owners of village Tedlam, the judgment-debtors should be
held to be not entitled to relief under the Act. The other
material sections 8 and 19 run as follows :--
"8. Debts incurred before the 1st October, 1932, shall
be scaled down in the manner mentioned hereunder, namely:-
(1) All interest outstanding on the 1st October, 1937,
in favour of any creditor of an agriculturist whether the
same be payable under law, custom or contract or under a
decree of Court and whether the debt or other obligation has
ripened into a decree or not, shall be deemed to be dis-
charged, and only the principal or such portion thereof as
may be outstanding shall be deemed to be the amount repay-
able by the agriculturist on that date.
(2) Where an agriculturist has paid to any creditor
twice the amount of the principal whether by way of princi-
pal or interest or both, such debt including the principal,
shall be deemed to be wholly discharged.
(3) Where the sums repaid by way of principal or inter-
est or both fall short of twice the amount of the principal,
such amount only as would make up this shortage, or the
principal amount or such portion of the principal amount as
is outstanding, whichever is smaller, shall be repayable.
(4) Subject to the provisions of sections 22 to 25,
nothing contained in sub-sections (1), (2) and (8) shall be
deemed to require the creditor to refund any sum which has
been paid- to him, or to increase the liability of a debtor
to pay any sum in excess of the amount which would have been
payable by him if this Act had not been passed.
813
Explanation.--Where a debt has been renewed or included
in a fresh document in favour of the same creditor, the
principal originally advanced by the creditor together with
such sums, if any, as have been subsequently advanced as
principal shall alone be treated as the principal sum repay-
able by the agriculturist under this section.
19. Where’ before the commencement of this Act, a Court
has passed a decree for the repayment of a debt, it shall,
on the application of any judgmentdebtor who is an agricul-
turist or in respect of a Hindu joint family debt, on the
application of any member of the family whether or not he is
the judgment-debtor or on the application of the decree-
holder, apply the provisions of this Act to such decree and
shall, notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908, amend the decree accordingly or enter
satisfaction, as the case may be:
Provided that all payments made or amounts recovered,
whether before or after the commencement of this Act, in
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respect of any such decree shall first be applied in payment
of all costs as originally decreed to the creditor."
These sections are material, because in the present case
the judgment debtors asked the decree to be amended under
section 19 of the Act and they were held to be entitled to
relief under section 8.
Having referred to the relevant provisions of the Act,
it becomes necessary now to state the main findings of the
High Court upon which the decision of this appeal will turn.
These findings are-
(1) that the sale of Tedlam village, which was held on
the 6th July, 1935, and confirmed on the 6th March, 19-13,
was a good sale;
(2) that by this sale. the title to the Tedlain village
passed to the decree-hoMer. and in hearing the appeal the
High Court was justified in proceeding on the footing that
the judgment-debtors having ceased to be the owners of
Tedlam village after its sale, were not
104
814
hit by clause (D) of the proviso to section a of the Act;
and
(3) that the decree had been satisfied at the date of the
sale and the decree-holder was liable to repay to the judg-
ment-debtors the full price of the property which was sold.
The main contentions directed against the conclusions
arrived at by the High Court are :firstly, that they are
self-contradictory, because if the sale was an effective
sale on the date it was held or confirmed, the decree was
also satisfied on that date and the judgmentdebtors were no
longer entitled to invoke the provisions of the Madras Act;
and secondly, that the view taken by the learned Judges of
the High Court that notwithstanding the appeal against the
order refusing to set aside the sale they could proceed on
the footing that the judgment-debtors had ceased to be the
owners of Tedlarn village on the date of the sale was un-
sound in law.
It will first deal with the second point which appears to me
to require serious consideration. The High Court has in my
opinion rightly proceeded on the footing that the ownership
of Tedlam village would bring the judgment-debtors within
the mischief of clause (D) of the proviso to section 3 of
the Act, and would disentitle them to any relief thereunder.
This view was contested before us on behalf of the judgment-
debtors on two grounds :---(1) that the grant in favour of
the ancestor of the judgment-debtors did not comprise a
whole inam village and what they owned was therefore not an
estate under the Madras Estates Land Act (Madras Act I of
1908); (2) that on the date of the application, the judg-
ment-debtxrs were not landholders of village Tedlam because
the village was in the possession of a receiver since 1st
February, 1937, and the latter was in law the landholder on
the crucial date. None of these contentions however appears
to me to have any force. The first contention was sought to
be supported by Exhibit P-1 which is a register of inams and
which shows that poramboke or waste lands to the extent of
596 acres had to be deducted from the area
815
of the inam. The point however has been dealt with very
fully and clearly by the learned Subordinate Judge, who has
rightly pointed out that it has no force in view of the
Madras Estates Land (Amendment) Act, 1945 [Madras Act No. II
of 1945]. The second point is equally unsubstantial, be-
cause it is well settled that the owner of a property does
not cease to be its owner merely because it is placed in the
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hands of a receiver. The true position is that the receiver
represents the real owner whoever he may be, and the true
owner does not by the mere appointment of a receiver cease
to be a landholder under the Madras Estates Land Act.
I will now revert to the crucial question in the case,
viz., whether the learned Judges of the High Court were
justified in law in deciding the appeal on the footing that
the judgment-debtors had ceased to be the owners of Tedlain
village and on that account they were not hit by clause (D).
of the proviso to section 3 of the Madras Act. At this
stage, it will be useful to refer to certain provisions of
the Civil Procedure Code which directly bear on the question
as to when title to immovable property which is sold in
execution of a decree is deemed to pass to the purchaser.
One of the provisions is Order XXI, rule 92, which provides
that "where no application is made under rule 89, rule 90 or
rule 91, or where such application is made and disallowed,
the Court shall make an order confirming the sale, and
thereupon the sale shall become absolute." The second rele-
vant provision is section 65 which runs thus :--
"Where immovable property is sold in execution of a
decree and such sale has become absolute, the property shall
be deemed to have vested in the purchaser from the time when
the property is sold and not from the time when the sale
becomes absolute."
In Bhawani Kunwar v. Mathurn Prasad Singh(1) the ques-
tion as to when a mortgagee who has purchased certain vil-
lages in execution of the decree acquired title to the
properties purchased by him directly arose for considera-
tion, and the Privy Council rightly pointed
(1) T.L.R. 40 Cal. 89.
816
out that "the sale in execution of the mortgage decree took
effect from the actual date of the sale and not from its
confirmation." In a simple case, the provisions cited above
should settle the controversy, but, in the present case, the
matter has been complicated on account of the appeal against
the order refusing to set aside the sale under Order XXI,
rule 90. In such a case, generally speaking, the true
position seems to be that there is no finality until the
litigation is finally determined by the appellate Court.
This principle has been recognized in a number of cases, but
it will be enough to cite Chandramani Shaha v. Anarjan
Bibi(1). The headnote of that case runs as follows :--
"Where a Subordinate Judge has disallowed an applica-
tion under Order XXI, rule 90, to set aside a sale in execu-
tion, and has made an order under rule (1) confirming the
sale, and an appeal from disallowance has been dismissed by
the High Court, the three years’ period provided by the
Indian Limitation Act, 1908, Schedule I, article 180, for an
application under Order XXI, rule 95. by the purchaser for
delivery of possession runs from the date of the order on
appeal; the High Court having under the Code of Civil Proce-
dure, 1908, the same powers as the Subordinate Judge, the
’time when the sale becomes absolute’, for the purpose of
article 180 is when the High Court disposes of the appeal."
Under article 180 of the Indian Limitation Act, the
period of limitation runs "from the date when the sale
becomes absolute." If we give a narrow and literal meaning
to these words, the period of limitation should be held to
run from the date when the original Court of execution
confirms the sale. But, as was pointed out by the Privy
Council, the High Court as an appellate Court had the same
powers as the trial Court and it is only when the appeal was
dismissed by the High Court that the order of the trial
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Court confirming the sale became absolute. Till the deci-
sion of the appellate Court, no finality was attached to the
order confirming the sale.
(1) I.L.R. 61 Cal. g45.
817
It is clear that in this case the same rule would apply
to the order recording satisfaction of the decree and to the
order confirming the sale. If the order recording satisfac-
tion of the decree was not final and remained an inchoate
order until the appeal was decided, the order confirming
the sale would have the same inchoate character. This
position seems to have been fully conceded in the statement
of their case filed on behalf of the respondents in this
Court.
It is quite clear that in this case the learned Judges
of the High Court have taken up an inconsistent position.
As I have already stated, they have held, for the purpose of
allowing one of the appeals, that the judgment-debtors were
not hit by clause (D)of the proviso to section 3 of the Act
because they ceased to be the owners of Tedlain village at
the date of the sale in 1935. If this conclusion is cor-
rect, it must follow as a matter of logic that the decree
was completely satisfied on the date of the sale, because
the sale fetched a larger amount than what was payable under
the decree and the excess amount was deposited by the de-
cree-holder in Court. The sale and satisfaction must go
together and if finality is to be attached to the sale it
should have been held to attach also to the order recording
satisfaction of the decree. It seems clear to me that if the
decree had ceased to exist, no relief could be claimed by
the judgment-debtors under the Madras Act. On the other
hand, if the appeal had to be decided on the footing that
the order recording satisfaction of the decree was not
final, the same approach should have been made in regard to
the effect of the sale. It is also clear that if the decree
was satisfied on the date of sale by the application of the
provisions of the Act, the sale could not stand, because how
could the property be sold in execution of a decree which
had been already satisfied. Yet, notwithstanding the fact
that nothing was due under the decree, the High Court has
held that the sale was a good sale and was to stand. The
correct approach to the case would have been to assume for
the purpose of the appeals that neither of the orders passed
by the
818
Subordinate Judge was final. On that view, the appeals
to the High- Court could not have been decided on the
footing that the judgment-debtors had ceased to be the
owners of Tedlain property and were therefore not hit by
clause (D) of the proviso to section 3 of the Madras Act.
In my opinion, the judgment of the High Court cannot be
sustained, and the appeal s will have to be allowed.
I will now deal very briefly with two preliminary objec-
tions raised on behalf of the respondents. The first objec-
tion is that the application for leave to appeal to his
Majesty in Council against the order of the High Court was
barred by limitation, inasmuch as the reasons stated in the
affidavit filed by the appellant in the High Court in sup-
port of his application for excusing delay do not consti-
tute sufficient reason within the meaning of section 5 of
the Limitation Act. The answer to this objection will be
found in the facts which have been already narrated. The
delay was caused mainly by reason of the review of the
order of the High Court and the High Court considered that
there as sufficient reason for condoning the delay. This
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Court cannot override the discretion exercised by the High
Court and the matter cannot be reopened in these appeals.
The second objection is based on the fact that the decree-
holder was given a choice by the High Court to elect wheth-
er he would deposit the purchase money or have the sale set
aside, and his counsel told the learned Judges on the 15th
November, 1946 that his client wished to retain the property
which he had purchased and pay the purchase money in cash.
It is contended that in view of this statement it was not
open to the appellant to contend that he need not pay any
amount to the judgment-debtors. This objection also is
entirely devoid of any substance,because there is nothing on
record to show that the appellant has consented to be bound
by the order of the High Court and waived his right to
appeal against it by reason of the election.
The learned counsel for the respondents also contended that
the sale should have been set aside by the
819
High Court because the permission given to the decreeholder
on the 16th February, 1934, to bid and set off the decretal
amount against the purchase price was confined to an earlier
sale and did not extend to the sate which took place on the
16th March, 1935, after the upset price which had been
originally fixed was reduced. Personally, I am inclined to
hold that the permission covered the sale in question, but
in any case it is difficult to hold on the facts stated that
there was any such material irregularity as would vitiate
the sale. The precise argument which is put forward here
was advanced in the Courts below but it did not find favour
either with the Subordinate Judge or with the High Court.
Besides, the respondents cannot raise the point in these
appeals because they have filed no appeal against the order
of the High Court upholding the sale.
In these circumstances, I would allow the appeals, set
aside the orders of the High Court and restore the order of
the learned Subordinate Judge. There will however be no
order as to costs in these appeals.
MUKHERJEA J.--I concur in the judgment just now deliv-
ered by ray learned brother, Fazl Ali J., and there is
nothing further which I can usefully add.
CHANDRASEKHARA AIYAR J.--The facts which have cha given
rise to these appeals and the questions for decision have
been stated in the judgment just now pronounced by my
learned brother Fazl Ali J. I wish to add only a few words
on the main contention advanced for the respondents by
their learned Advocate, Mr. V. Rangachari.
If by reason of the confirmation of sale and satisfac-
tion of the decree having been entered up, the title to the
village had passed indefeasibly to the decreeholder, there
was no longer any decree or decree debt to be scaled down.
If, however, the title did not pass, because it was still
open to the respondents to attack the Court sale under Order
XXI, rule 90, they were landholders of the village and, as
such, they would
820
come within the scope of proviso (D) to section 3 of the
Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act, 1938, which enacts that a
landholder who holds a village paying more than Rs. 100 as
quit rent or jodi is not an agriculturist within the meaning
of the Act.
The apparent inconsistency in the view taken by the High
Court was recognised, if not conceded, by the learned coun-
sel. In one view, there ,,as no longer any decree in respect
of which the Agriculturists’ Relief Act could operate; and
in the other view, the respondents could not take advantage
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10
of the Act, as their ownership of the village precluded
them. Faced with this dilemma, Mr. Rangachari urged a some-
what ingenious argument. He contended that though the. title
passed to the decree-holder on the confirmation of sale and
became vested in him from the date of the sale, the respo-
dents could still be regarded as having an interest in the
village, as the sale was open or liable to challenge and the
title’of the decree-holder was inchoate or incomplete. There
is, however, really no support for this position. On confir-
mation, the title of the decree-holder became absolute or
complete. If the sale was set aside, the title would revest
in the judgment-debtor. There is nothing like an equitable
title in the decree-holder which could be recognised for
certain purposes and not recognised for others.
Under the Madras Act, "agriculturist" means "a person
who has a saleable interest in any agricultural or horticul-
tural land or one who holds interest in such land under a
landholder as a tenant, ryot or undertenure-holder." Section
10, sub-clause (i) of the Act -provides that the right
conferred on an agriculturist to have a debt scaled down
will not apply to any person who, though an "agriculturist"
as defined in the Act, did not on 1-10-1937 hold an interest
in or a lease or sub-lease of any land. After the sale in
1935, the only interest which the judgment-debtors had in
the village was to have the sale set aside, under the rele-
vant provisions of the Civil Procedure Code. This interest
is not the interest contemplated by section 3, sub-clause
(ii) (a) & (b) of the Act which speaks of a
821
saleable interest or interest as a tenant, ryot or underten-
ure holder.
I agree in the conclusion reached by my learned broth-
er.
Appeals allowed.
Agent for the appellant: M.S. Krishnamoorthi Sastri.
Agent for the respondents: M.S.K. Aiyangar.