Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3130 of 2002
Special Leave Petition (civil) 8261 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Ashan Devi & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Phulwasi Devi & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/11/2003
BENCH:
Shivaraj V. Patil & D.M. Dharmadhikari.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Dharmadhikari J.
This appeal and the connected special leave petition arise out of
the same execution proceedings and the impugned order dated
23.4.2001 passed by the High Court of Patna.
The principle question involved is whether a purchaser of a
vacant land under registered Sale Deed and claiming to be in
possession of the land can maintain an application under Order 21
Rule 97 of the Code of Civil Procedure complaining of his alleged
dispossession in execution of the decree of specific performance of
contract of sale obtained ex parte by the decree holder against the
original owner of the suit property?
For the sake of easy understanding, the parties shall be
described in their status in the executing proceedings as Decree
Holder, Judgement Debtor and Objector. For the purpose of these
appeals, we do not consider it necessary to go into greater details of
the proceedings in the suit which resulted in passing of the decree of
specific performance of the contract.
Bare facts necessary for the purpose of decision are as under :-
According to the decree holder, an Agreement of Sale was
obtained on 12.07.1984 from the judgment debtor in respect of the
suit lands which are now potential building sites on the outskirts of
Patna city. The case of the decree holder is that when she filed the
suit no. 22/87 against her vendors for specific performance of
Agreement of Sale dated 12.7.1984, she was not aware that the
Objectors had obtained title to the suit property by four separate sale
deeds in the year 1985 and got them registered in Calcutta where the
vendors resided. The purchasers were not made parties to the suit.
The case of the Objectors is that pursuant to the execution of
the registered sale deeds, they obtained possession of the land and
got their names mutated in the records of the Patna Municipality.
According to them, they had no knowledge of any prior agreement of
sale existing in favour of the Decree Holder.
The vendors did not contest the suit for specific performance of
agreement of sale filed by the Decree Holder. An ex-parte decree of
specific performance of contract was passed on 08.11.1990 in favour
of the Decree Holder. The decree was put in execution by Decree
Holder by depositing the balance consideration of sale in the court. A
registered sale deed was executed by the court in favour of the
decree holder as the judgment debtors absented despite notice and
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failed to execute it. According to the Decree Holder, on 5.9.1996,
through the process issued by the executing court, possession of the
decreed property was obtained by the Decree Holder through Court
Nazir without any obstruction or resistance from any one.
On 21.9.1996, the Objectors filed an application under Order
XXI Rule 99 before the executing court complaining their illegal
dispossession and seeking restoration of possession to them. It was
urged that they were not parties to suit for specific performance of
the contract and could not have been dispossessed in execution of
the decree. Their case was that they had no knowledge of any alleged
prior agreement in relation to the same property existing in favour of
the Decree Holder. It was alleged that the suit for specific
performance and the decree obtained ex-parte against the judgement
debtors were collusive.
The application under Order XXI Rule 99 filed by the Objectors
was opposed by the Decree Holder stating that with prior knowledge
of the agreement of sale, the Objectors having obtained the sale
deeds, the decree of specific performance can be executed against
them in accordance with section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act,
1963. Preliminary objection was also raised by the Decree Holder on
the maintainability of application under Order XXI Rule 99 of the
Code. It was urged that since the Objectors did not offer any
resistance or obstruction to the execution of the decree and were not
present at the time of its execution through court, they cannot be
held to have been ’dispossessed’ physically or actually within the
meaning of Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code.
On the basis of the pleadings of the Objectors in their
application under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code and the reply
submitted by the Decree Holder to the same, the executing court
framed a preliminary issue on the maintainability of the application
filed by the Objectors. Issues on merits were also framed; as to
whether the suit for specific performance was filed with knowledge of
execution of registered sale deeds and deliberately the registered
purchasers were not impleaded as parties to the suit OR whether
Objectors purchased the property with full knowledge of prior
agreement of sale with the decree holder. The executing court
decided all the contesting issues including preliminary objection on
maintainability of application under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code in
favour of the Objectors. By order dated 02.6.2000, it directed
restoration of possession of the property in dispute to the Objectors.
Aggrieved by the order of the executing court allowing
objection under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code, the Decree Holder
preferred an appeal to the High Court. The learned single Judge of
the High Court of Patna by its impugned order dated 23.4.2001,
allowed the appeal of the Decree Holder. The High Court came to the
conclusion that as in execution of the decree, the Objectors were not
’actually and physically dispossessed’, the application under Order
XXI Rule 99 of the Code was not maintainable and the executing
court could not have decided the competing claims of the parties to
the property in the course of execution proceedings. The High Court
set aside the order of the executing court and observed that the
Objectors may resort to a separate suit for enforcing their rights and
title to the property. The High Court also observed that if such a suit
is filed, the findings and observations recorded by the executing court
and the High Court would not be binding on the parties nor prejudice
their contentions in that suit that may be filed.
Aggrieved by the reversing judgment of the High Court, the
Objectors are in this appeal. The connected special leave petition has
been filed by the Decree Holder as they feel aggrieved only by the
last direction of the High Court giving liberty to the Objectors to file a
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separate suit for their rights, without being prejudiced by findings
and conclusions reached in proceedings under Order XXI Rule 99 of
the Code.
We have heard both the learned senior counsel Shri P.S. Mishra
appearing for the Objectors and Shri R.S. Suri for the Decree Holder
at sufficient length. On behalf of the Objectors, it is contended that
they being in possession under registered sale deeds and their names
having also been mutated in records of Patna Municipality, the
delivery of possession of the land in execution of decree of specific
performance to the Decree Holder was clearly a case of
’dispossession’ within the meaning of Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code.
Reliance is placed on Brahmdeo Chaudhary vs. Rishikesh Prasad
Jaiswal & Anr. [1997 (3) SCC 694]; Shreenath & Anr. vs.
Rajesh & Ors. [1998 (4) SCC 543]; Silverline Forum Pvt. Ltd.,
vs. Rajiv Trust & Anr. [AIR 1998 SC 1754]; and Tanzeem-E-
Sufia vs. Bibi Haliman & Ors. [2002 (7) SCC 50]
The second contention advanced is that the decree holder had
full knowledge of the registered sale deeds existing in favour of the
Objectors and without impleading the Objectors, an ex-parte decree
of specific performance was obtained against the original vendors. It
is contended that the Objectors being subsequent purchasers under
sale deeds were necessary parties to the suit in accordance with the
provisions of section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. It is
contended that the decree in the absence of the Objectors who were
necessary parties to the suit, is not executable. Reliance is placed on
Ram Sworup Singh vs. Mahabir Mahton [AIR 1960 Patna 235];
Chinna Vanan vs. Alamelu & Ors. [1975 Vol.I Madras Law
Journal Reports 263]; and Vimala Ammal vs. C. Suseela & Ors.
[AIR 1991 Madras 209].
We need not go into the question whether the Objectors as
subsequent purchasers of the suit properties were necessary parties
to the suit for specific performance based on alleged prior agreement
of sale, because both parties plead want of knowledge of each
other’s transactions at the time the registered sale deeds were
obtained by the Objectors and at the time of institution of suit by the
Decree Holder.
We would, first, take up for consideration the main question
involved between the parties as to whether the Objectors could have
made application under Order XXI Rule 99 to the executing court and
seek adjudication of their right and title through the executing court
in accordance with Order XXI Rule 101 of the Code or their remedy
lay in filing an independent suit. Order XXI Rule 99 & 101 read as
under :-
"O.XXI, Rr.99. Dispossession by decree-holder or
purchaser. \026 (1) Where any person other than the
judgment-debtor is dispossessed of immovable property
by the holder of a decree for the possession of such
property or, where such property has been sold in
execution of a decree, by the purchaser thereof, he may
make an application to the Court complaining of such
dispossession.
(2) Where any such application is made, the Court shall
proceed to adjudicate upon the application in accordance
with the provisions here contained.
O. XXI, Rr.101. Question to be determined.- All
questions (including questions relating to right, title or
interest in the property) arising between the parties to a
proceeding on an application under rule 97 or rule 99 or
their representatives, and relevant to the adjudication of
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the application, shall be determined by the Court dealing
with the application, and not by a separate suit and for
this purpose, the Court shall, notwithstanding anything to
the contrary contained in any other law for the time being
in force, be deemed to have jurisdiction to decide such
questions."
It is necessary at this stage to take into account the objects of
drastic amendments introduced to the Code of Civil Procedure by Act
No. 104 of 1976. This court in the case of Shreenath & Anr. (supra),
has compared the unamended provisions of the Code in Order XXI
and the provisions introduced after amendment. It is noticed that
earlier under the Code, third party ’dispossessed’ in the execution of
the decree was required to institute an independent suit for
adjudication of its right and claims. In order to shorten the litigations
concerning same properties between same and third parties, claims
of third parties to the property in execution are now required to be
determined by the executing court itself in accordance with provisions
under Order XXI Rule 101 with right of appeal to the higher court
against such adjudication treating it to be a ’decree’ under Order XXI
Rule 103 of the Code. On the amendments introduced to the Code by
Amendment Act of 1976, this Court observed thus :-
’In interpreting any procedural law, where more than one
interpretation is possible, the one which curtails the
procedure without eluding justice is to be adopted. The
procedural law is always subservient to and is in aid of
justice. Any interpretation which eludes or frustrates the
recipient of justice is not to be followed.’
In case of Brahmdeo Chaudhary (supra), the provisions of
Order XXI Rule 97 of the Code, as amended, came up for
construction. They read thus :-
"O.XXI, Rr.97. Resistance or obstruction to
possession of immovable property. \026 (1) Where the
holder of a decree for the possession of immovable
property or the purchaser of any such property sold in
execution of a decree is resisted or obstructed by any
person obtaining possession of the property, he may
make an application to the Court complaining of such
resistance or obstruction.
(2) Where any application is made under sub-rule (1), the
Court shall proceed to adjudicate upon the application in
accordance with the provisions herein contained."
The question raised in that case was whether the Objector
cannot claim adjudication of his claim being third party to the decree
under execution until he is ’actually dispossessed’. The argument
advanced was that application under Order XXI Rule 97 at the
instance of Objector is not maintainable to the executing court
because such application complaining ’resistance and obstruction’ by
the third party could be filed only by the Decree Holder under
Order XXI Rule 97 of the Code. It was argued that the remedy of the
third party to the executing court is only after he suffers
dispossession in execution of the decree. Thereafter, he has to
complain under Order XXI Rule 99 and seek adjudication of his claims
and rights. This Court negatived that contention and observed thus :-
’On the contrary the statutory scheme envisaged by
Order XXI Rule 97 CPC clearly guards against such a
pitfall and provides a statutory remedy both to the
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decree-holder as well as to the obstructionist to
have their respective say in the matter and to get proper
adjudication before the executing court and it is that
adjudication which subject to the hierarchy of appeals
would remain binding between the parties to such
proceedings and separate suit would be barred with a
view to seeing that multiplicity of proceedings and parallel
proceedings are avoided and the gamut laid down by
Order XXI Rule 97 to 103 would remain a complete code
and the sole remedy for the parties concerned to have
their grievance once and for all finally resolved in
execution proceedings themselves.’
The case of Brahmdeo Chaudhary (supra) was relied by this
Court in the case of Silverline Forum Pvt. Ltd.,(supra). It was
held that the remedy under Order XXI Rule 99 in execution is
available to a party only on his dispossession but a third party who is
resisting or obstructing the execution of decree can also seek
adjudication of his claims and rights by making application under
Order XXI Rule 97 of the Code.
In the case of Tanzeem-E-Sufia(supra), the third party who
was in possession of a part of premises had filed a separate suit for
declaration of its right and title. In executing proceedings, the
Decree Holder in respect of the entire decretal property, complained
of obstruction and resistance to the execution by the third party.
Even on these facts, this Court held that the application of Decree
Holder required adjudication under Order XXI Rule 97 of the Code
and the application of the third party also necessitated adjudication of
its rights under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code irrespective of the fact
that for part of the property, the third party had filed an independent
suit for declaration of its title to the suit property.
The above mentioned decided cases of this Court clearly
indicate that the provisions of Order XXI Rule 97 and 99 have been
widely and liberally construed to enable the executing court to
adjudicate the inter se claims of the decree holder and the third
parties in the executing proceedings themselves to avoid prolongation
of litigation by driving parties to file independent suits.
The word "dispossessed" as used in Order XXI Rule 99 of the
Code has been narrowly construed to be an ouster from actual and
physical possession of the property by several High Courts. See AIR
1954 Mad 516 (519); 1966 (32) Cut. LT 972; and AIR 1978
Goa 48.
Salmond on jurisprudence explains that the word "possession"
is a word of ’open texture’. Its legal meaning has to be ascertained
from the context. The property involved in the present case is open
vacant land. Such property is possessed by a person who has control
over the same. This ’control’ over the property means ’power to
exclude all others’. The test then for determining whether a man is in
possession of anything is whether he is in ’general control’ of it -
maybe that he is not in actual and physical possession or using the
same.
The Objectors have laid evidence before the executing court to
show that after obtaining by recitals in the sale deeds delivery of
possession of the property, the names of purchasers were also
mutated in the municipal’s records. Merely because at the time of
execution of the decree through Court Nazir, the Objectors were not
physically present on the property, it cannot be said that the delivery
of possession to the Decree Holder by the court does not amount to
the Objectors’ legal ouster or ’dispossession’. The word ’possession’,
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therefore, has to be given contextual meaning on facts of a particular
case and the nature of the property involved.
In interpreting the provisions of Order XXI Rule 97 of the Code
and the other provisions in the said order, the aims and objects for
introducing amendment to the Code cannot be lost sight of. Under
the unamended Code, third parties adversely affected or
dispossessed from the property involved, were required to file
independent suits for claiming title and possession. The Legislature
purposely amended provisions in Order XXI to enable the third
parties to seek adjudication of their rights in execution proceedings
themselves with a view to curtail the prolongation of litigation and
arrest delay caused in execution of decrees. See Bhag Mal vs. Ch.
Parbhu Ram [1985 (1) SCC 61].
The High Court in the impugned judgment dated 23.4.2001 has
construed the word "dispossessed" under Order XXI Rule 99 of the
Code to mean actual and physical dispossession. The reasoning
adopted is that if the expression ’dispossessed’ is thus not narrowly
construed, ’anybody apprehensive of dispossession or anybody
claiming right although not actually dispossessed can come within the
purview of Rule 99 and there would be flood-gate and a decree holder
who obtained a decree by due process of law would be frustrated in
not getting the fruit of the decree’.
There is fallacy in the above reasoning. As has been held by
this court in the case of Brahmdeo Chaudhary (supra), a third
party resisting or obstructing the execution of the decree can also
seek adjudication of his rights under Order XXI Rule 97 in the same
way as the Decree Holder. If that be so, it seems illogical that the
third party which complains of actual dispossession because of the
delivery of possession in execution to the Decree Holder should not
be allowed to claim adjudication of his rights through the executing
court. An interpretation of the provision which promotes or fulfils the
object of the amended provisions of the Code of curtailing litigation,
has to be preferred to the one which frustrates it. The High Court also
lost sight of the fact that the property involved was a vacant land and
it could have been possessed only by having ownership and control
over it. Mere physical absence of the third party at the time of
execution of the decree was not a relevant fact to reject application
under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code. From the trend and ratio of
decisions of this Court surveyed above, if the Objectors would have
been present at or near the vacant land at the time of execution of a
decree and had offered obstruction or resistance to the execution,
they would have been entitled to seek adjudication of their rights and
claims through the executing court under Order XXI Rule 97. On the
same legal position and reasoning even though the Objectors were
not in actual and physical possession of the vacant land, but as a
result of delivery of possession of the land through Nazir to the
decree holder, lost their right and control over the land to put it to
their use, they will have to be treated to have been "dispossessed"
within the meaning of Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code. Such
interpretation would fulfil aim and object of the amended provisions
of the Code by allowing adjudication of disputes of title between the
decree holder and the third party in the executing court itself without
relegating them to an independent litigation.
In view of the discussion aforesaid, in our opinion, the
executing court was well within law in recording evidence and
adjudicating the claim of the third party. The executing court rightly
rejected the preliminary objection to the maintainability of application
of the Objectors under Order XXI Rule 99 of the Code and decided
the other issues on merits of their claims arising between the Decree
Holder and the Objectors.
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The High Court in appeal mainly concentrated its decision on
the question of tenability of application under Order XXI Rule 99 at
the instance of the Objectors and having rejected the said application
did not in detail deal with other issues on merits arising between the
decree holder and the objectors. The issues on merits which were
liable to be re-examined by the appellate court, as the first court of
facts and law, were :-
(1) Whether the decree holder at the time of
institution of suit had knowledge of the execution
of the registered sale deeds in favour of the
Objectors and yet they deliberately avoided to
make them as parties to the suit and thus
obtained in collusion with the vendors an ex-parte
decree of specific performance of the contract;
OR
(2) Whether the Objectors had full knowledge of
existence of prior agreement of sale executed by
the vendors in favour of the decree holder and
despite such knowledge they purchased the suit
property to frustrate the agreement existing in
favour of the decree holder.
As the appellate court, having rejected the Objectors’
application under Order XXI Rule 99, has not in greater details gone
into the contested issues on merits, it is necessary to set aside the
impugned order of the High Court and remand the case to it for
decision of the appeal afresh in accordance with law.
In the result, the appeal preferred by the Objectors succeeds
and is allowed. The impugned order of the High Court dated
23.4.2001 is hereby set aside and the case is remanded to the High
Court for deciding the issues on merits in accordance with law.
The permission sought by Decree Holder to file the connected
Special Leave Petition \005\005\005\005\005CC 8261/2001 is refused.
In the circumstances, the costs incurred in these proceedings
shall abide the final result of the appeal to be decided by the High
Court.