Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SATISH KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ZARIF AHMED & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/02/1997
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, S. SAGHIR AHMAD
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
This appeal by special leave arises from the judgment
of the Allahabad High Court, made on October 2, 1982 and
August 9, 1983 in Civil Revision No.3613/78.
The admitted position is that the appellant-landlord
had entered into an agreement of lease with the respondent-
tenant on August 30, 1969 for a period of 11 months for rent
@ Rs.220/- per mensem. Notice of demand for arrears and also
for termination of tenancy for non-payment was delivered to
the respondent on April 8, 1972. Thereafter, the appellant
filed suit on the same cause side for ejectment of the
respondent. The trial Court decreed the suit on May 19,
1977. The tenants then filed the revision in the High Court.
The learned single Judge referred the following two
questions for decision by a Division Bench:
"1. Whether any term of a lease
deed required under Section 107 of
the Transfer of property Act to be
registered, could be pressed into
service for a collateral purpose
within the meaning of the proviso
to Section 49 of the Indian
Registration Act ?
2. Whether in the instant case, the
relationship of landlord and
tenant, the rate of rent and the
period for which the original lease
has been granted could be looked
into as a collateral purpose under
the proviso to Section 49 of the
Indian Registration Act?"
The Division Bench has answered the reference and held
that the lease deed is inadmissible evidence and cannot be
looked into and oral evidence in proof of the tenancy is
also inadmissible. After the reference was answered, the
learned single Judge, following the reference order, allowed
the revision and set aside the decree of eviction. Thus,
this appeal by special leave.
The only question that arises for consideration is:
whether the unregistered lease deed is admissible in
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evidence ? Section 17(1)(d) of the Registration Act
postulates Thus:
"(1) the following document shall
be registered if the property to
which it relates is situate in a
district in which and if it may
have been executed on or after the
date on which, Act No.XVI of 1864,
or the Indian Registration Act,
1866, or the Indian Registration
Act, 1871 or the Indian
Registration Act, 1877, or the
Indian Registration Act, 1908 came
or comes into force, namely ---
(d) leases of immovable property
from year to year, or for any term
exceeding one year, or reserving a
yearly rent."
"Instrument" has been defined in Section 2(14) of the
Indian Stamp Act, 1899 postulating that "[I]nstrument
includes every document by which any right or liability is,
or purports to be created, transferred, limited, extended
extinguished or record.
Section 3 of the Transfer of Property Act 1882 (for
short the ‘TP Act’) also defines "instrument" to mean a non-
testamentary instrument. Section 107 of the TP Act regulates
how lease is to be made. The first part thereof provides
that a lease of immovable property from year to year, or for
any term exceeding one year, or reserving a yearly rent, can
be made only be a registered instrument. The second part
thereof gives exception to the first part and provides that
all other leases of immoveable property may be made either
by a registered instrument or by oral agreement accompanied
by delivery of possession.
The question, therefore, that arises is : whether a
lease of immoveable property from month to month or for 11
months is a compulsorily registerable document, through it
was reduced to writing as an instrument defined under
Section 2(14) of the Stamp Act? A conjoint reading of the
first part of section 107 rad with Section 17(1) (d) of the
Registration Act, as extracted hereinbefore, does indicate
that a lease of immoveable property from year to year, or
for any term exceeding one year or reserving a yearly rent
should be made only by a registered instrument and all other
instruments, though reduced to writing and possession is
delivered thereunder, are not compulsorily registerable
instruments.
Section 49 of the Registration Act prohibits receiving
in evidence certain types of documents. It reads as under :
"No document required by Section 17
by any provision of the Transfer of
Property Act, 1882 to be registered
shall--
(a) affect any immovable property
comprised therein, or
(c) be received as evidence of any
transaction affecting such property
or conferring such power;
unless it has been registered:"
The proviso is not applicable to the facts in this case
and, therefore, it is not necessary to look into the
exceptions engrafted vis-a-vis receipt of a documents
comprising of three circumstances mentioned therein, namely,
unregistered document used for therein, namely, unregistered
document used for enforcement of specific performance under
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the Specific Relief Act or used as an evidence of part
performance of the contract under Section 53-A of the TP Act
or using evidence for collateral transactions. The combined
effect of all the provisions is that an unregistered leases
deed executed from month to month for a period not exceeding
11 months, though reduced to writing and possession is
delivered thereunder to a tenant, is not a compulsorily
registerable instrument and, therefore, the prohibition
contained in Section 49 of the Registration Act is
inapplicable. Therefore, the document is admissible in
evidence to consider the effect of the immovable property
contained therein or to receive as an evidence of any
transaction vis-a-vis such property.
The High Court, therefore, was not right in reaching
the conclusion that an unregistered document is inadmissible
in evidence and cannot be looked into for the purpose of
effecting the rights as landlord and tenant created under
the document.
The appeal is accordingly allowed. The judgment of the
High Court stands set aside and the decree of the trial
Court stands restored, but in the circumstances, without
costs.