Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3419 1988
PETITIONER:
HAMZABI AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SYED KARIMUDDIN AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/11/2000
BENCH:
V.N.Khare, Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
RUMA PAL,J
The question to be determined in this case is whether
Section 53-A of the Transfer of Property Act has any impact
on the right of redemption granted by Section 60 of that
Act. The right of the mortgagor to redeem had its origin as
an equitable principle for giving relief against forfeiture
even after the mortgagor defaulted in making payment under
the mortgage deed. It is a right which has been jealously
guarded over the years by Courts. The maxim of once a
mortgage always a mortgage and the avoidance of provisions
obstructing redemption as clogs on redemption are
expressions of this judicial protection.[ See: Pomal Kanji
Govindji V. Vrajlal Karsandas Purohit AIR (1989) SC 436 in
this context] As far as this country is concerned, the right
is statutorily recognised in Section 60 of the Transfer of
Property Act. The section gives the mortgagor right to
redeem the property at any time after the principal money
has become due by tendering the mortgage money and claiming
possession of the mortgaged property from the mortgagee.
The only limit to this right is contained in the proviso to
the section which reads: Provided that the right conferred
by this section has not been extinguished by act of the
parties or by decree of a Court.
While the expression decree of Court is explicit
enough, the phrase act of parties has given rise to
controversy. One such act may be when the mortgagor sells
the equity of redemption to the mortgagee. This Court in
Narandas Karsondas V. S.A. Kamtam and Another AIR 1977 SC
774 has said that in India it is only on execution of the
conveyance and registration of transfer of the mortgagors
interest by registered instrument that the mortgagors right
of redemption will be extinguished. Section 53-A provides
for another equitable principle viz. the doctrine of part
performance. The Chancery Court had developed the principle
of part performance to deal with situations when a person
took an unfair advantage of the transaction entered into and
then denied the transaction itself. The party seeking to
resist dispossession must have altered his position and done
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some act under the contract so that it would amount to fraud
in the opposite party to take advantage of the contract not
being in writing. The principle was statutorily recognised
in the United Kingdom by Section 4 of the Statute of Frauds,
1677. In India, Section 53-A similarly protects the
possession of persons who may have acted on a contract of
sale but in whose favour no legally valid sale deed may have
been executed or registered. The section reads: 53A.
Part performance. - Where any person contracts to transfer
for consideration any immoveable property by writing signed
by him or on his behalf from which the terms necessary to
constitute the transfer can be ascertained with reasonable
certainty,
and the transferee has, in part performance of the
contract, taken possession of the property or any part
thereof, or the transferee, being already in possession,
continues in possession in part performance of the contract
and has done some act in furtherance of the contract,
and the transferee has performed or is willing to
perform his part of the contract,
then, notwithstanding that the contract, though
required to be registered, has not been registered, or,
where there is an instrument of transfer, that the transfer
has not been completed in the manner prescribed therefor by
the law for the time being in force, the transferor or any
person claiming under him shall be debarred from enforcing
against the transferee and persons claiming under him any
right in respect of the property of which the transferee has
taken or continued in possession, other than a right
expressly provided by the terms of the contract:
Provided that nothing in this Section shall affect the
rights of a transferee for consideration who has no notice
of the contract or of the part performance thereof.
The conditions necessary under this Section for making
out the defence of part performance to an action in
ejectment by the owner have been extricated in Nathulal V.
Phoolchand 1969 (3) SCC 120 as: (1) that the transferor has
contracted to transfer for consideration any immovable
property by writing signed by him or on his behalf from
which the terms necessary to constitute the transfer can be
ascertained with reasonable certainty;
(2) that the transferee, has, in part performance of
the contract, taken possession of the property or any part
thereof, or the transferee, being already in possession
continues in possession in part performance of the contract
(3) That the transferee has done some act in
furtherance of the contract; and
(4) That the transferee has performed or is willing to
perform his part of the contract.
The language of the section is mandatory, and if the
conditions are fulfilled then notwithstanding that the
contract, though required to be registered, has not been
registered, or, where there is an instrument of transfer,
that the transfer has not been completed in the manner
prescribed therefor by the law for the time being in force,
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the transferor or any person claiming under him is debarred
from enforcing against the transferee any right in respect
of the property of which, the transferee has taken or
continued in possession, other than a right expressly
provided by the terms of the contract See Sardar Govindrao
Mahadik and Another V. Devi Sahai and Others 1982 (1) SCC
237.
This Court in Narandas Karsondas V. S.A. Kamtam and
Another (supra) was not called upon to decide whether the
equity of redemption could also be extinguished by part
performance of a contract of sale under Section 53-A. When
a mortgagor/vendee agrees to sell the mortgaged property to
the mortgagee/putative vendee in possession, the mortgagees
status is subsumed or merged in his rights as a putative
vendee under Section 53-A against the transferor, provided
of course the pre-conditions for the application of Section
53-A are fulfilled. Given the mandatory language of Section
53-A, it must be held that in such a situation the equity of
redemtion in the mortgagor/vendee is lost to the extent that
the mortgagor cannot reclaim possession of the mortgaged
property. To hold to the contrary, would not only defeat
the mandate of Section 53-A but would result in an anomalous
situation. An owner who may not have mortgaged his property
cannot be in a worse position vis-Ã -vis the vendee than an
owner who may have mortgaged the subject matter of sale to
the vendee. The only right left with the owner in both
cases is to sue for the completion of the contract. Let us
now consider the facts of this case. The subject matter of
dispute is a house at Mohalla Boiwada, Aurangabad. The
house belonged to one Mohd. Hussain. In 1951, Mohd.
Hussain created a usufructuary mortgage of the house for 7
years in favour of the Petitioner No.1 for a consideration
of Rs.700/-. If the amount were not repaid within the
period of 7 years, the mortgagee would be entitled to retain
the mortgaged house in her possession till the payment of
amount or by filing suit for foreclosure get the same
foreclosed. In 1953 Mohd. Hussain agreed to sell the house
to petitioner No.1s husband Mohd. Yarkhan for Rs.825/-.
The agreement is evidenced by a document dated 8th July,
1953 which records that Mohd. Hussain had received Rs.15/-
as earnest from Mohd.Yarkhan and:
transferred the possession of the mortgage of the
house by way of as a sale (sic). The remaining amount will
be received in cash before the competent authority at the
time of registration. Hence, I have given these few
sentences as an Isar Pawati. The registration will be
effected on dated 15th July, 1953.
Mohd. Hussain died before any sale deed was
registered. On 21st June, 1954 a sale deed was executed by
Amir Hussain and Rabiyabi, the son and daughter of Mohd.
Hussain in favour of Petitioner No.1. This document records
that the sale of the house was effected for a consideration
of Rs.900/- and that after adjusting the mortgage amount of
Rs.700/- the remaining amount of Rs.200/- had been received
in cash. The document, however, was not registered.
According to the petitioners, after this, Mohd.Yarkhan
improved the mortgaged property and made various additions
and alterations and converted the two room house into a 15
roomed one. On 12th January, 1965 a sale deed was executed
by which Amir Hussain, Rahimabi, Rabiyabi, Anisabi, and
Hamidabi, all claiming to be the children of Mohd. Hussain,
sold the house to the Respondent No.1 for a sum of
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Rs.3000/-,out of which an amount of Rs. 600/- was retained
by respondent No.1 for the purpose of redeeming the mortgage
in favour of the petitioner No.1. Five months later, the
respondent No.1 filed a suit against the petitioner No.1 for
redemption of the mortgage and for possession of the house.
The Trial Court dismissed the suit inter alia on the ground
that the petitioner No.1 was not the true mortgagee but her
husband Mohd. Yarkhan was. The respondent No.1 preferred
an appeal before the District Judge. The District Judge,
while upholding the finding that Mohd. Yarkhan was the
actual mortgagee, reversed the decision of the Trial Court
and passed a decree permitting the respondent No.1 to redeem
the mortgage. The High Court in Second Appeal was of the
view that because of the concurrent finding that the
petitioner No.1 was really the benamidar of Mohd. Yarkhan,
the suit should have been dismissed as Mohd.Yarkhan had
never been made a party. It was noted that had Mohd.Yarkhan
been a party, he could have claimed protection from eviction
under Section 53-A of the Transfer of the Property Act. The
parties conceded the position before the High Court. The
appeal was accordingly allowed and the decree of the
District Judge set aside. The suit was remanded to the
Trial Court with a direction that the respondent No.1 should
be permitted to add Mohd. Yarkhan as a party to the suit
and if this was done then Mohd. Yarkhan should be given an
opportunity to file his written statement and to raise all
the contentions which were open and available to him and the
suit should then be disposed of on merits. By the time the
matter was remanded back, Mohd. Yarkhan was dead. As such
his legal heirs namely the petitioners Nos.2 to 7 before us
were added as defendants in the suit. They filed a written
statement in which they inter alia claimed the right to
retain possession of the house by virtue of Section 53-A of
the Act. After framing of fresh issues, the Trial Court
again dismissed the respondent No.1s suit on 31st October,
1977. The Trial Court held that the agreement of sale dated
8th July, 1953 was proved; that Rahimabi, Anisabi, and
Hamidabi were also the children of Mohd. Hussain along with
Amir Hussain and Rabiyabi; that Amir Hussain and Rabiyabi
had executed the sale deed on 21st June, 1954 in favour of
the petitioner No.1 as benamidar of Mohd. Yarkhan; that
the respondent No.1 had purchased the house with notice of
the agreement for sale dated 8th July, 1953 and the part
performance thereof, that the petitioners had been able to
establish all the ingredients of Section 53-A and that
because of this the respondent No.1 was not entitled to
redeem the house or seek possession of it. On appeal, the
Assistant Judge by his judgment dated 20th December, 1980
upheld the findings of the Trial Court on all issues but
held that the plea under Section 53-A of the Act was not
available to the petitioners as there was no evidence that
Mohd. Yarkhan was ready and willing to perform his part of
the contract. This was based on the finding that the
agreement to sell mentioned that the sale deed was to be
executed and the sale completed on 15th July, 1953 and that
there was no evidence that Mohd.Yarkhan had offered to pay
the balance consideration and get the deed executed on 15th
July, 1953 or during Mohd. Hussains lifetime. The
Assistant Judge negatived the submission of the petitioners
that the execution of the sale deed on 20th June, 1954
showed that Mohd. Yarkhan was willing to perform the
contract dated 15th July, 1953. In reversing the decree of
the Trial Court and allowing the respondent no.1 to redeem
the mortgage by payment of Rs.600/- to the petitioner, the
District Judge noted that: The evidence has been brought
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on record to the effect that certain improvements have also
been made by the mortgagees in the mortgaged property and
that therefore the plaintiff is not entitled to get the
possession of the suit property as it exists now. This
question will be finally decided while passing a final
decree ordering the delivery of possession.
The petitioner No.1 had died during the proceedings
before the Trial Court. The remaining petitioners
challenged the decision of the Assistant Judge before the
High Court. The High Court held that as a matter of law the
equity of redemption was not extinguished even if the
conditions under Section 53-A of the Act had been fulfilled
by the petitioners. As such, the High Court was of the view
that the respondent No.1 was entitled to redeem the mortgage
and dismissed the appeal. The petitioners have impugned the
decision of the High Court before this Court. After
granting special leave on 27th September, 1988, it was found
necessary to have a factual finding of the High Court
whether the appellants were ready and willing to perform
their part of Agreement dated the 8th July, 1953.
Presumably this was because the principle of law enunciated
by the High Court was unacceptable. The appeal was directed
to be heard after the finding of the High Court on the point
was received, on the evidence on record and within the ambit
of Second Appeal keeping in view the findings recorded by
the Trial Court. The High Court by its decision dated 3rd
February, 1989 came to the conclusion that the petitioners
were not ready and willing to perform the agreement dated
8th July 1953. The High Court deduced this from the fact
that in the written statement filed by petitioner No.1 in
1965 there was no mention regarding willingness to perform
the part of the contract either on the petitioner No.1s or
Mohd. Yarkhans part. The second ground for finding
against the petitioners was that the balance consideration
was not paid even when Amir Hussain and Rabiyabi executed
the unregistered sale deed in favour of the petitioner No.1
on 20th June, 1954. The basic facts as narrated in this
judgment have been accepted by all the Courts. The question
remains whether the Assistant Judge and the High Court were
right in drawing the inference from the established facts
that the Mohd. Yarkhan was not ready and willing to perform
his part of the contract dated 8th July, 1953. If the
inference was perverse and the petitioners are therefore
entitled to the protection of Section 53-A, then for the
reasons stated earlier, the respondent No.1s right of
redemption does not survive and the appeal must be allowed.
The decision in Mahadiks (supra) is instructive as that was
a case where the question of readiness and willingness of
the mortgage/vendee was in issue. In that case, the owner,
Mahadik, had morgaged his house to Sahai. The mortgage was
not a usufructuary mortgage. Although Sahai was given
possession of the house nevertheless he was accountable to
Mahadik for the rent earned from the house. The mortgagor,
Mahadik was also required to pay interest on the rent amount
to secure which the mortgage has been created. A draft deed
of sale was prepared on 5th October 1945 under which Mahadik
purportedly sold the house to Sahai in consideration for
finalising the accounts of the mortgage, repaying the other
creditors of the mortgagor and payment of the balance
consideration money in cash at the time of registration.
The sale deed was not registered. In the suit filed by
Mahadik for redemption and possession, Sahai claimed
protection under Section 53A of the Act. The High Court
found in favour of Sahai. This Court reversed the finding
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having determined from the facts that no action had been
taken by Sahai in furtherance of the sale deed. Sahai had
not settled the mortgage accounts nor had he paid the
creditors of the mortgagor. Sahais possession was also not
relatable to the contract of sale. In an application filed
by Sahai in proceedings subsequent to the execution of the
sale deed, Sahai had claimed that an amount of Rs.27,792 .23
was due under the mortgage from Mahadik. This Court also
found that the agreement on which Sahai had relied was not a
concluded contract because the parties were not ad idem.
According to Mahadik, the agreement did not correctly
reflect the negotiations between the parties which was that
there would be a conditional sale. That was why Mahadik had
refused to execute the deed of sale. Sahais defence was
negatived but it is apparent that Mahadiks case proceeded
on the basis that had Sahai been successful in establishing
his claim under Section 53-A, Mahadik would not have been
entitled to possession. In the present case, there is no
dispute that the agreement of sale dated 8th July 1953 was a
concluded contract. Yarkhan, the actual mortgagee and
putative vendee had acted in terms of the agreement for sale
dated 8th July, 1953. The reason given by the Assistant
Judge for holding that Yarkhan was not ready and willing to
perform his part of the contract of sale was that in terms
of the agreement dated 8th July 1953, the sale was to be
completed by 15th July 1953 and that there was no evidence
that Yarkhan had called upon Mohd. Hussain to execute the
sale deed on that date. This inference of lack of readiness
and willingness assumes that the time mentioned in the
contract was of the essence of the contract. There is no
evidence in support of this. On the other hand, the
agreement does not state that if the registration were not
effected on 15th July 1953, there would be no sale. The
mentioning of the date appears to be a term in favour of the
vendee casting a duty on the vendor to complete the vendees
title within the time specified. The term cannot be
construed against the vendee to limit his right to have the
sale completed on a subsequent date. The reasoning of the
High Court is equally unacceptable. Yarkhan was not a party
to the suit as originally filed. The High Court in
remanding the matter to the Trial Court had specifically
held that Yarkhan should be added as a party and that he
should be permitted to raise the defence of Section 53-A.
This was done. To reject the plea of the willingness of
Yarkhan on the basis of the earlier written statement filed
by the petitioner No. 1 was, to say the least, erroneous.
The second reason given by the High Court is factually
incorrect. The balance consideration had in fact been paid
to Amir Hussain and Rabiyabi when the unregistered sale deed
was executed as averred by Yarkhan and admittedly recorded
in the sale deed dated 20th July 1954. The contract for
sale required Mohd. Hussain to pay Rs.15/- as earnest
money. This had been done. Yarkhan had paid not only the
consideration envisaged under the agreement of sale but an
additional amount as demanded by two of the heirs of Mohd.
Hussain. Yarkhan had drafted the deed of sale and taken it
for registration to the Registration Office. Two of the
heirs had even executed the deed of sale. It is also in
evidence that subsequent to the deed, Mohd. Yarkhan had
exercised rights of ownership and altered his position under
the contract by adding several rooms to the existing
structure at some expense. Yarkhan had, therefore, asserted
his possession qua-owner. This was also in terms of the
agreement of sale. Short of actual registration of the deed
of sale, there was nothing else that Yarkhan could do. As
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stated in Maneklal Mansukhbhai vs. Hormusjii Jamshedji
Ginwalla & Sons AIR 1950 SC 1: The defendant and his
predecessor in interest were willing to perform their part
of the contract. As a matter of fact, they have performed
the whole of it. All that remains to be done is the
execution of a lease deed by the lessor in favour of the
lessee and of getting it registered.
The four conditions under Section 53-A of the Act
having been fulfilled by the petitioners pre-decessor in
interest, it must be held that the respondent No.1 is
debarred from claiming possession of the mortgaged property.
The judgment of the High Court is accordingly set aside and
the appeal allowed without any order as to costs.