Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
POMAL KANJI GOVINDJI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VRAJLAL KARSANDAS PUROHIT & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/11/1988
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
RANGNATHAN, S.
CITATION:
1989 AIR 436 1988 SCR Supl. (3) 826
1989 SCC (1) 458 JT 1988 (4) 307
1988 SCALE (2)1287
CITATOR INFO :
F 1989 SC1110 (11,14,16,18)
ACT:
Transfer of Property Act, 1882/Sections 60 and 76--
Whether long term mortgages are clog on equity redeemable at
the mortgagor’s instance before the stipulated period--
Tenants inducted by mortgagee’s can be evicted on
termination of mortgage.
%
Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act
1947, Lease created by mortgagee in possession of urban
immovable property--Tenancy whether entitled to statutory
protection of Rent Act.
HEADNOTE:
In the matter giving rise to the Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 8219 of 1982 the plaintiffs filed a suit
alleging that their father, who dies in the year 1956, had
mortgaged the suit property for 30,000 Koris by a registered
mortgage deed dated 20th April, 1943, executed in favour of
the power of attorney holder and manager of the defandants
Nos. l and 2. The defendant No. 3 is the heir of the
attorney who was also managing the properties of the
defendants Nos. I and 2. The mortgage property consisted of
two delis having residential houses, shops, etc. The
mortgagees had inducted tenants in the suit property being
defandants Nos. 4 to 9 in the original suit. When the
mortgage transaction took place the economic condition of
the father of the plaintiffs was weak and he was heavily
indebted to others. Taking advantage of that situation, the
mortgagees took mortgage deed from him on harsh and
oppressive conditions by getting incorporated a long term of
99 years for redemption of mortgage. Though possession was
to be handed over to the mortgagees, they took condition for
interest on the part of principal amount in the mortgage
deed. Mereover, the mortgagees were given liberty to spend
any amount they liked for the improvement of the suit
property and were also permitted to rebuild the entire
property.
A registered notice to the defendants Nos. I and 2 was
given to redeem the mortgage, but they failed to do so,
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hence, the present suit was filed to redeem the mortgage and
to recover actual possession from the defendants Nos. 4 to 9
who were the tenants Inducted by the mortgagees.
PG NO 827
Defendant No. 1 resisted the suit alleging that the term
of the mortgage was for 99 years, so the suit filed before
the expiry of that period was premature. The defendant No. 3
resisted the suit by filing the written statement. The
defendants Nos. 4 to 9 resisted the suit on the grounds that
the plaintiffs were not entitled to redeem the mortgage and
even if they were so entitled, they could not get actual
physical possession from the tenants who were protected by
the Bombay Rent Act, because they were inducted by the
mortgagees. The Court proceeded against defendants Nos. 2/1
to 2/7 (heirs of mortgagee-defendant No. 2) ex-parte, and a
preliminary decree for redemption of mortgage was passed on
2nd April, 1974 by the Trial Court. But this ex-parte
decree was set aside by the District Court in the appeals
filed by the heirs of defendant No. 2 on the ground that
summons of the suit had not been duly served upon them.
Thereafter defendent No. 2/1 filed his written statement
alleging that the suit was bad for non-joinder of the
sisters of the plaintiffs as parties. Moreover, as per the
terms and conditions of the mortgage deed, there was
usufructuary mortgage for 20,000 koris, and the remaining
10.,000 koris were advanced to the mortgagor at monthly
interest at the rate of 1/2 per cent. There was a condition
in the mortgage deed that the mortgagor would pay principal
amount us well as the interest at the time of redemption.
When the suit was filed in the year 1972, the mortgagees
were entitled to recover interest on 10,000 Koris for a
period of 29 years, that the total mortgage amount along
with interest would come to 47,400 koris equivalent to Rs.
15800 and the Civil Judge had no jurisdiction to try such
suit; that the court fees was also not sufficient; that it
was not true that the father of the plaintiffs was of weak
economic condition. The grand father of the plaintiffs was
as Advocate and the father of the plaintiffs was the clerk
of an advocate. ’The plaintiff No. l was also working as an
Advocate at the time of the mortgage, so they knew the legal
position; that at the relevant time the prevalent custom in
Kutch State was to take mortgages of long term for ’99 years
and when it was permissible to take mortgage deeds with such
a long term, it was also necessary to give permission for
rebuilding the whole property, for better enjoyment of lt.
So these terms could not amount to clog on equity of
redemption of mortgage, the mortgagees did not take any
undue advantage and they were not present physically when
the transaction took place through their power of attorney
holders. If the conditions of mortgage deed did not amount
to clogs on equity of redemption, the suit would be clearly
premature. The plaintiff No. I had subsequently became a
Civil Judge and was ultimately the Chairman of the Tribunal
so if the said terms and conditions of the mortgage were
onerous and oppressive, he would not have sat idle for 29
years. But he remained silent because he was aware of the
PG NO 828
said custom. The prices of immovable properties had
increased tremendously, therefore, the suit had been filed
with mala fide intention; that in case the Court comes to
the conclusion that there was a clog on equity or redemption
and the plaintiffs were entitled to the redemption, then the
interest on 10,000 koris should be awarded to the mortgages;
and that the suit should be dismissed as there was no clog
on equity of redemption and the Court had no jurisdiction to
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try the suit. The other defendants remained absent.
The Trial Court while decreeing the suit came to the
conclusion that there was mortgage transaction between the
father of the plaintiffs and the mortgagees on 20th April,
1943, that the terms and conditions in the mortgage deed
being harsh and oppressive, amounted to clog on equity of
redemption, so the plaintiffs were entitled to file the suit
even before the expiry of the term of the mortgage; that the
sisters of the plaintiffs were not necessary parties to the
suit and even if they were, a co-mortgagor was entitled to
file the suit for redemption so the suit was not bad for
want of non-joinder of necessary parties; that it had
jurisdiction to try the suit; that the mortgagees were not
entitled to claim interest on 10,000 koris and that the
plaintiffs were entitled to recover possession from the
defendants Nos. 4 to 9 who were the tenants inducted by the
mortgagees.
The appeals filed by the mortgagees as well as the
tenants were dismissed by the first appellate Court holding
that the terms and conditions of the mortgage deed were
oppressive and harsh, there was clog on equity of redemption
and the mortgagor should be freed from that bondage that the
tenants had no right to he in possession and were not
entitled to the protection of the Bombay Rent Control Act
after the redemption of the mortgage. The High Court
dismissed the second appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 9993 of 1983 is an appeal by the
tenant. Civil Appeal No. 397 of l980 is also an appeal by
the tenant. In this case the decree-holder instituted a
regular suit for redemption of the mortgage property. The
suit was dismissed. Thereupon the respondent No. l preferred
an appeal to the District Judge where the suit was decreed.
The defendants filed a second appeal which was dismissed.
The decree-holder made an application for final decree. The
Court while giving the final decree for redemption of the
mortgage directed the judgment-debtors to hand over the
possession of the mortgage property within three months on
the decree-holder making payment of dues in respect of
the mortgage in the court. In pursuance of the final decree
the decree-holder took out the execution proceedings and
PG NO 829
deposited the dues in the Court and claimed possession of
the mortgage property from the appellant herein stating that
he was a tenant in the possession of the property. Notice
was issued to the tenant, who submitted his objection
stating that he was a tenant, not to be evicted in the
execution of the decree and that he was entitled to get the
protection under the Bombay Rent Control Act. The District
Judge held that there was no conduct on the part of the
decree-holder which would stop him from claiming physical
possession from the tenant of the mortgagee in possession.
The High Court rejected the appeal summarily. Hence the
appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 1286 of 1981 is also an appeal by the
tenant. The appellant is the tenant of the mortgagee
inducted in 1955. The property was mortgaged in 1948 for a
period of five years. It appears that the tenant was
inducted after the period of redemption had expired. The
mortgagor had a right to redeem after the expiration of the
mortgage. The first appellate court came to the conclusion
that the tenants were not protected under the provision of
the Bombay Rent Control Act. The appellant preferred this
appeal in this Court.
On behalf of the appellants it was contended that in the
former Kutch District there was a custom to mortgage for a
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long term of 99 years and when the period was long,
naturally the mortgagee would he required to give full
authority to repair and reconstruct the mortgaged property
with a view to keep pace with new demands of changing
pattern, so the condition should not he treated as clog on
equity of redemption; (2) that there is no evidence to lead
to the conclusion that there was any undue influence; (3)
that the provision for the payment towards cost and expenses
of repairs and construction did not amount to a clog on the
equity of redemption; (4) that on the evidence and the facts
the transactions did not amount to clog on the equity of
redemption; (5) that in Civil Appeal No. 9993 of 1982 the
plaintiff’s were not entitled to recover possession from the
appellants, who are tenants in the mortgage properties,
since their rights are protected under the Bombay Rents,
Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act? 1947 as the said
Act applies to the area of Kutch in the Bombay State.
Therefore, no decree for eviction could he passed against
them except in accordance with the provisions of the said
Act; (6) that the Trial Court did not make any finding as to
when the tenants were inducted, either before or after the
rent restriction Act was made applicable to the area of’
Kutch and (7) that the High Court has erred in not following
the said legal position entrenched by a line of decisions of
this Court with the rights of a tenant inducted by a
mortgagee with possession would enure beyond the period of
PG NO 830
redemption of the mortgage if his rights are enlarged by
subsequent tenancy legislation in force in the area in which
the property is situated.
Dismissing the Appeals,
HELD: 1. The Court will ignore any contract the effect
of which is to deprive the mortgagor of his right to redeem
the mortgage. [844E]
2. The rights and liabilities of the mortgagor are
controlled by the provisions of section 60 of the Transfer
of Property Act, 1882. [846F]
3. Any provision inserted to prevent. evade or hamper
redemption is void. [846G]
4. The doctrine "clog on the equity of redemption" is a
rule of justice, equity and good conscience. It must be
adopted in each case to the reality of the situation and the
individuality of the transaction [847A]
5. Freedom of contract is permissible provided it does
not lead to taking advantage of the oppressed or depressed
people. The law must transform itself to the social
awareness. Poverty should not be unduly permitted to curtail
one-s right to borrow money on the ground of justice, equity
and good conscience on just terms. If it does, it is bad.
Whether it does or does not. however, depends upon the facts
and the circumstances of each case. [847H; 848A]
6. Whether in the facts and the circumstances of these
cases. the morgage transaction amounted to clog on the
equity of redemption, is a mixed question of law and fact.
[848D]
7. Courts do not look with favour at any clause or
stipulation which clogs equity of redemption. A clog on the
equity of redemption is unJust and unequitable. The
principles of English law, as we have noticed from the
decisions referred to hereinbefore which have been accepted
by this Court in this country, looks with disfavour at clogs
On the equity of redemption. Section 60 of the Transfer of
Property Act, in India, also recognises the same position.
(848D-E]
8. It is a right of the mortgagor on redemption, by
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reason of the very nature of the mortgage, to get back the
subject of the mortgage and to hold and enjoy as he was
entitled to hold and enjoy it before the mortgage. If he is
PG NO 831
prevented from doing so or is prevented from redeeming the
mortgage, such prevention is bad in law. If he is so
prevented, the equity of redemption is affected by that
whether aptly or not, and it has always been termed as a
clog. Such a clot is inequitable. The law does not
countenance it. [848F-G]
9. Whether or not in a particular transaction there is a
clog on the equity or redemption, depends primarily upon the
period of redemption, the circumstances under which the
mortgage was created, the economic and financial position of
the mortgagor, and his relationship vis-a-vis him and the
mortgagee, the economic and social condition in a particular
country at a particular point of time, customs if any,
prevalent in the community or the society in which the
transaction takes place, and the totality of the
circumstances under which a mortgage is created, namely
circumstances of the parties, the time, the situation, the
clauses for redemption either for payment of interest or any
other sum, the obligation of the mortgagee to construct or
repair or maintain the mortgaged property in cases of
usufructuary mortgage to manage as a matter of prudent
management, these factors must be co-related to each other
and viewed in a comprehensive conspectus in the background
of the facts and the circumstances of each case, to
determine whether these are clogs on equity of redemption.
[848H; 849A-C]
10. A mortgage is essentially and basically a conveyance
in law or an assignment of chattels as a security for the
payment of debt or for discharge or some other obligation
for which il is given The security must, therefore, be
redeemable on the payment or discharge of such debt or
obligation. ,any provision to the contrary, notwithstanding,
is a clog or fetter on thc equity of redemption and, hence.
bad and void. "Once a mortgage must always remain a
mortgage", and must not be transformed into a conveyance or
deprivation of the right over the
property. [849D-E]
11 . The law must respond and be responsive to the felt
and discernible compulsions of circumstances that would be-
equitable. fair and just, and unless there is anything to
the contrary in the Statute, law must take cognisance of
that fact and act accordingly. Ia the context of fast
changing circumstances and economic stability, long-term for
redemption makes a mortgage an illusory mortgage, though not
decisive. [850D-E]
12. Even apart from section 76(a) of the Transfer of
Property Act if the words of the mortgage deed clearly and
indubitably express an intention to allow expressly creation
PG NO 832
of a tenancy beyond the term of’ the mortgage, then only
the lease created in exercise of the power expressly
conferred by the mortgage deed would be binding on the
mortgagor. If the words of the mortgage deed do not clearly
and indubitably disclose the intention to allow expressly
the creation of a tenancy beyond the terms of the mortgage,
the mere fact that the mortgage deed authorises the
mortgagee with possession to induct a tenant would not
create a tenancy binding on the mortgagor after the
redemption of the mortgage. [857E-G]
13. In the instant cases the tenancy rights did not come
to be enlarged by the Tenancy Legislation after the tenant
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was put into possession by the mortgagee and the tenancy
created in favour of the tenants by the mortgagor did not
have the concurrence of the morfgagor so as to claim tenancy
rights even after redemption of the mortgage. [866C]
Khatubai Nathu Sumra v. Rajgo Mulji Nanji and Ors.,
A.I.R. 1979 Gujarat 171; Lalji Purshottam v. Thacker
Madhavji Meghaji, 17 Gujarat Law Reporter 497; Maganlal
Chhotalal Chhatrappati and Ors. v. Bhalchandra Chhaganlal
Shal, 15 Gujarat Law Reporter 193; Soni Motiben v. M/s.
Hiralal Lakhasmhi, 22 Gujarat Law Reporter 473; Vadilal
Chaganlal Soni and Others v. Gokaldas Mansukh and Other,
A.I.R. 1953 Bombay 408; Sarjug Mahto and Others v. Smt.
Devruo Devi and Others, A.I.R. 1963 Patna 114; Kunjbiharilal
v. Pandit Prag Narayan, A.I.R. 1922 Oudh 283; S. V.
Venkatarama Reddiar v. Abdul Ghani Rowther & Ors., A.I.R.
1980 Mad. 276 and Devkinandan and Another etc. v. Roshan Lal
and Others, A.I.R. 1985 Rajasthan 11, approved.
Santley v. Wilde, [1989] 2 Ch. 474; Vermon v. Betheli,
28 E.R. 838 and 839; G. and C. Kreglinger v. New Patagonia
Meat and Cold Storage Company Ltd., [1914] Appeal Cases 25;
All lndia Film Corporation v. Raja Gyan Nath, [1969] 3 SCC
79; Sachalmal Parasram v. Ratnabai, [1973] 3 SCC 198 and Om
Prakash Garg v. Ganga Sahai & Ors., [1987] 3 SCC 553, relied
on.
Seth Ganga Dhar v. Shankar Lal & Ors., [1959] S.C.R. 509
and Jadavji Purshottam v. Dhami Navnitbhai Amaratlal & Ors.,
[1987] 4 SCC 223, distinguished,
Aziz Khan v. Duni Chand and Others, A.I.R. 1918 P.C. 48;
Jarrah Timber & Wood Paving Corporation v. Samuel, 119031 2
Ch. l; Chhedi Lal v. Babu Nandan, AIR 1944 Allahabad 204;
PG NO 833
Bhika and Anr. v. Sheikh Amir and Ors., A.l.R. 1923 Nagpur
60; Mahabir Gope v. Harbans Narain Singh, [1952] SCR 775;
Hariher Prasad Singh v. Must. of Munshi Nath Prasad, [1956]
S.C.R. l; Asa Ram v. Mst. Kam Kali, [1958] SCR 986; Dahya
Lal v. Rasul Mohammed Abdul Rahim, [1963] 3 SCR 1; Madan Lal
v. Bedri Narain and Others, [1987] 3 S.C.C. 460; Mulla’s
Transfer of Property Act, 7th Edition, pages 401 and 402;
Rashbehary Ghose’s ’Law of Mortgage’ 6th Edition, pages 227
and 228; Dalal’s Rent Act 4th Edn. page 814 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No 9993 of
1983 etc
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.12.1982 of the
Gujarat High Court in S A No. 168 of 1982.
B.K. Mehta, Kajinder Sachhar, T.U. Meita, S.K.
Dholakia. Vimal Dave Krishan Kumar. Mrs C.M. Chopra, P.H.
Parekh, Ms. Sunita Sharma, Mrs. Rani Chhahra. R C Bhatia and
P.C. Kapur for the appearing parties
The Judgment of that Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUMKHARJI. J. These appeals and the special
leave petition are directed against the decision of the
High Court of Gujarat, upholding the right of the
mortgagors to redeem the properties before the period
stipulated In the deeds. as well as the right of the
mortgagors to recover possession of the properties from the
tenants and/or the mortgagees without resort to the relevant
Rent Restriction Act. All these matters were separately
canvassed before us as these involved varying facts, yet
the fundamental common question is, whether long term
mortgages in the present infaltionary market in fast moving
conditions are clogs on equity of redemption and as such the
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mortgages are redeemable at the mortgagors’ instance before
the stipulated period and whether the tenants who have been
inducted by the mortgagees can be evicted on the termination
of the mortgage or do these tenants enjoy protection under
the relevant Rent Restriction Acts. One basic fact that was
emphasised in all these cases was that all these involve
urban immovable properties. In those cirumstances, whether
the mortgages operate as clogs on equity of redemption is a
mixed question of law and facts. It is necessary to have a
conspectus of the facts involved in each of the cases
herein. We may start with the facts relating to Special
Leave Petition (Civil ) No. 8219 of 1982 because that is a
typical case.
PG NO 834
In this matter by our order dated 9th January, 1988 we
had directed that this special leave petition should be
heard first in these series of matters. We do so
accordingly. We grant leave and dispose of the appeal by the
judgment herein along with other appeals.
This is an appeal from the judgment and order of the
Gujarat High Court, dated 26th April, 1˜82 dismissing the
second appeal. The High Court observed that the learned
Judge had followed the judgment of the said High Court in
Khalubai Nathu Sumra v. Rajgo Mulji Nanji and others, AIR
1979 Gujarat 171 where the learned Single Judge in the
background of a mortgage, where the mortgagor was
financially hard-pressed and the mortgage was for 99 years
and the term gave the mortgagee the right to demolish
existing structure and construct new one and the expenses of
such to be reimbursed by mortgagor at the time of
redemption, it was held that the terms were unreasonable,
unconscionable and not binding. In order, however, to
appreciate the contentions urged therein, it will be
necessary to refer to the decision of the first Appellate
Court, in the instant case before us. By the judgment, the
Assistant Judge, Kutch at Bhuj in Gujarat disposed of two
appeals. These appeals arose from the judgment and decree
passed by the Civil Judge, Bhuj, in Regular Civil Suit No.
35/72 by which the decree for redemption of mortgage was
passed and the tenants inducted by the mortgagees were also
directed to deliver up possession to the mortgagors. The
plaintiffs had filed a suit alleging that the deceased
Karsandas Haridas Purohit was their father and he died in
the year 1956, he had mortgaged the suit property to
Kanasara Soni Shivji Jotha and Lalji Jetha for 30,000 Koris
by a registered mortgage deed dated 20th April, 1943. The
moltgage deed was executed in favour of Soni Govindji
Nalayanji who was the power of attorney holder and manager
of the defendants Nos. 1 and 2. The defendant No. 3 is the
heir of said Govindji Narayanji and he was also managing
the properties of the defendants Nos I and 2. The mortgage
property consisted of two delis in which there were
residential houses, shops etc. The mortgagees had inducted
tenants in the suit property and they were defendants Nos. 4
to 9 in the original suit When the mortgage transaction took
place, thc economic condition of the father of the
plaintiffs was weak. he was heavily indebted to other
persons. It was alleged and it was so held by the learned
Judge and upheld by the Appellate Judge that the mortgagees
took advantage of’ that situation and took mortgage deed
from him on harsh and oppressive conditions. They got
incorporated long term of 99 years for redemption of
mortgage. It is further stated that though possession was to
be handed over to the mortgagees, they took condition for
interest on the part of principal amount in the mortgage
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PG NO 835
deed. Moreover, the mortgagees were given liberty to spend
any amount they liked for the improvement of the suit
property. They were also permitted to rebuild the entire
property. Thus these terms and conditions, according to the
Appellate Judge, were incorporated in the mortgage deed to
ensure that the mortgagors were prevented for ever from
redeeming the mortgage. The terms and conditions, according
to the Assistant Judge, Bhuj, being the first Appellate
Court were unreasonable, oppressive and harsh and amounted
to clog on equity of redemption and, as such, bad and the
plaintiffs were entitled to redeem the mortgage even before
the expiry of the term of mortgage. A registered notice to
the defendants Nos. I and 2 was given to redeem the mortgage
but they failed to do so, hence, the present suit was filed
to redeem the mortgage and to recover actual possession from
the defendants Nos. 4 to 9 who were the tenants inducted by
the mortgagees.
The defendant No. 1 resisted the suit. It was his case
that the term of mortgage was for 99 years, so the suit
filed before the expiry of that period was premature. The
defendant No. 3 resisted the suit by written statement. The
defendants Nos. 4 to 9 resisted the suit on the grounds that
the plaintiffs were not entitled to redeem the mortgage and
even if they were so entitled, they could not get actual
physical possession from the tenants who were protected by
the provisions of the relevant Bombay Rent Act. It was their
case that the plaintiffs were not entitled to get actual
possession of the premises in which they were inducted by
the mortgagees. The defendants Nos. 2/1 to 2/7 who were
the heirs of mortgagee Shivji Jetha were residing in London
and New Delhi, so the personal service of summons could not
be effected upon them. The summons was published in the
local newspapers but none of them appeared before the Court
so the Court proceeded ex-parte against them. The trial was
conducted and a preliminary decree for redemption of
mortgage was passed on 2nd April, 1974 by the Trial Court.
Thereafter, the decree-holder applied for final decree so
the notices were issued to all the defendants. The heirs of
Shivji Jetha appeared in response to that notice and filed
applications before the Trial Court to set aside the ex-
parte decree on the ground that summons of the suit had not
been duly served upon them. That prayer was rejected by the
Trial Court. Thereafter, they filed Civil Misc. Appeals in
the District Court. The appeals were allowed by the District
Court and the ex-parte decree for redemption of mortgage was
set aside. The Trial Court was directed to proceed with the
suit after permitting the concerned defendants to take part
in the proceedings right after receiving their written
statements. Accordingly defendant No. 2/1 appeared in the
PG NO 836
suit and filed his written statement while other defendants
remained absent.
It was the case of the defendant No. 2/1 that the
sisters of the plaintiffs had not been joined as parties in
the suit, so the suit was bad for want of necessary parties.
Moreover, as per the terms and conditions of the mortgage
deed dated 20th April, 1943, there was usufructuary mortgage
for 20,000 koris and the remaining l0,000 koris were
advanced to the mortgagor at monthly interest at the rate of
1/2 per cent. There was a condition in the mortgage deed
that the mortgagor should pay principal amount as well as
the interest at the time of redemption. When the suit was
filed in the year 1972. the mortgagees were entitled to
recover interest on l0,000 koris for a period of 291 ears .
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That interest would be 17,400 koris so the total mortgage
amount will be Rs.47400 which would be equivalent to Rs.
15,800) and and the Civil Judge had no jurisdiction to try
such suit so the plaint Should have been returned for
presentation in the proper court. It was further alleged
that the court fees paid by the plaintiffs was also not
sufficient. Moreover, it was not true that the father of the
plaintiffs was of weak economic condition. The grand father
of the plaintiffs was an Advocate and the father of the
plaintiffs was the clerk of an Advocate. The plaintiff No. l
was also working as an Advocate at the time of the mortgage.
so they knew the legal position. It was further alleged that
at the relevant time the prevalent custom in Kutch State was
to take mortgages of long term for 99 years and when it was
permissible to take mortgage deeds with such a long term It
was also necessary to give permission for rebuilding the
whole property, for better enjoyment of it. So long term
mortgage and the conditions for reconstruction of the
property could not amount to clogs on equity of redemption
of mortgage it was the case of the mortgagees and/or
tenants. The mortgagees did not take any, it was pleaded.
undue advantage and they were not present physically when
the transaction took place through their power of attorney
holders If the conditions in the mortgage deed did not
amount to clogs on equity of redemption, the suit would be
clearly premature. It may be mentioned that the plaintiff
No. 1 had subsequently become a Civil Judge and was
ultimately the Chairman of the Tribunal so if the said terms
and conditions of the mortgage were onerous and oppressive,
he would not have sat idle for 29 years. But he remained
silent because he was aware of the custom, It was pleaded.
It was alleged that the prices of immovable properties had
increased tremendously, therefore, th. suit had been filed
with mala fide intention. It was averred that in case the
Court came to the conclusion that there was clog on equity
of redemption and the plaintiffs were entitled to the
PG NO 837
redemption, then the interest on 10,000 koris should be
awarded to the mortgagees. In the premises, it was averred
that the suit should be dismissed as there was no clog on
equity of redemption and the court had no jurisdiction to
try the suit The Trial Court then recorded additional
evidence in the suit and ultimately decreed the suit on 28th
September, 1978. The Trial Court came to the conclusion that
there was mortgage transaction between the father of the
plaintiffs and Soni Shivji Jetha and Lalji Mulji on 20th
April, 1943. The Trial Court further came to the conclusion
that the terms and conditions in the mortgage deed were
harsh and oppressive, which amounted to clog on equity of
redemption, so the plaintiffs were entitled to file the suit
even before the expiry of the term of the mortgage. The
Trial Court also came to the conclusion that the sisters of
the plaintiffs were not necessary parties to the suit and
even if they were necessary parties, a co-mortgagor was
entitled to file the suit for redemption, so the suit was
not bad for want of non-joinder of necessary parties. The
Trial Court further came to the conclusion that it had
jurisdiction to try the suit and held that the mortgagees
were not entitled to claim interest on 10,000 koris. It was
further directed that the plaintiffs were entitled to
recover possession from the defendants Nos. 4 to 9 who were
the tenants inducted by the mortgagees. Accordingly, a
preliminary decree was passed in the suit.
Aggrieved thereby the mortgagees filed Regular Civil
Appeal No. 149/78 and the tenants filed Regular Civil Appeal
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No. 150/78. These were disposed of by the judgment of the
first Appellate Court The learned Judge of the first
Appellate Court framed the following issues:
"(1) Whether the terms and conditions in the mortgage
deed dated 20.4.1943 amount to clog on equity of redemption?
(2) Whether the decree passed is bad for want of
jurisdiction with trial court?
(3) Whether the mortgagees are entitled to get interest
on 10,000 koris?
(4) Whether the tenants are protected from the effect
of redemption decree by virtue of the provisions of Bombay
Rent Act?
PG NO 838
(5) Whether the decree passed by the trial court is
legal and proper?
(6) What order?"
It is not necessary any longer in view of the findings
made and the subsequent course of events to detain ourselves
on all the issues. For the purpose of the present appeal is
well as the connected appeals we are concerned with two
issues, namely, Issue Nos. 1 and 4 stated above, in other
words, whether the terms and conditions of the mortgage deed
dated 20th April, 1943 amounted to clog on equity of
redemption and secondly, whether the tenants are protected
from the effect of redemption decree by virtue of the
provisions of the Bombay Rent Act. The learned Assistant
Judge in the first appeal had noted that it was not in
dispute that the document. Ext. 103 dated 20th April, 1943,
the certified copy of which was also produced at Ext. 51 was
executed by the father of the plaintiffs in favour of
Kansara Soni Shivji Jetha. According to this document, an
usufructuary mortgage was created on the suit property for
20,000 koris and the possession was to be delivered to the
mortgagees. Over and above that a further amount of 10,000
koris was also paid to the mortgagor for which he had to pay
interest at the rate of 1/2 per cent per month. The mortgage
period was fixed for 99 years and after the expiry of that
period, the mortgagor had to pay 30,000 koris as principal
amount along with interest due on 10,000 koris. This was a
registered document and it was acted upon by the parties.
The learned Trial Judge held that the long term of 99
years for redemption coupled with other circumstances,
indicated that there was clog on equity of redemption It was
argued that the long term for redemption was not necessarily
a clog on equity of redemption. Certain deeisions were
referred to. The Trial Court noted that there was no quarrel
with the proposition of law that long term itself could not
amount to clog on equity of redemption, when the bargain
otherwise was reasonable one and the mortgagee had not taken
any undue or unfair advantage. But, if in a mortgage with
long term of redemption, there were other circumstances to
suggest that the bargain was unreasonable one and the
mortgagee had taken unfair advantage, then certainly long
term also will be clog on equity of redemption. It is a
question to be judged in the light of the surrounding
circumstances. It may be noted here that there was a
condition in the mortgage deed permitting construction of
structure after demolishing the existing structure, costs of
which were to be paid by the mortgagor. After examining the
PG NO 839
facts and the relevant decisions, the first Appellate Court
came to the conclusion that the terms were oppressive and
harsh and there was clog on equity of redemption and the
mortgagor should be freed from that bondage.
Shri Rajinder Sachar, Shri B.K. Mehta as well as Shri
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Dholakia urged on behalf of their respective clients that in
former Kutch district, there was a custom to take mortgages
for long term of 99 years and when the period was long.
naturally the mortgagee would be required to give full
authority to repair and reconstruct the mortgaged property
with a view to keep pace with new demands of changing
pattern, so the condition permitting the mortgagee to
reconstruct the whole premises was natural consequence of
long term and that should not be treated as clog on equity
of redemption. The learned Assistant Judge had rejected the
similar contention made before him on behalf of the
mortgagees and tenants in view of the decisions of the
Gujarat High Court which were also arising out of the
decisions in the suits filed in Kutch district and in those
cases it was held that there was clog on equity of
redemption. We will deal with some Gujarat decisions
separately, presently. The learned Assistant Judge referred
to another circumstance i.e., to the condition of mortgage
which indicated the oppressive nature of the term. By
mortgage deed being Ext. 103 usufructuary mortgage was
created for 20,000 koris only and additional mortgage of
10,000 koris was also created for which the mortgagor had
to pay interest at the rate of 1/2 per month. Furthermore,
the mortgagor was not allowed to discharge interest
liability periodically, but he had to pay to whole amount of
interest at the end of 99 years at the time of redemption of
the mortgage. Naturally, there would be hugh accumulation
of interest which for all practical probabilities in most of
the cases will be an impossibility to discharge. It was
held that the purpose was to ensure that the right of
redemption could never be exercised. On the other hand, it
was contended before the learned Assistant Judge that the
transaction was bona fide because reasonable consideration
was paid as mortgage money. They was no direct contact
between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. There could not be
any collusion. The mortgagees were abroad. The learned
Assistant Judge examined the evidences of one Madhavji
Shivji Soni in order to show comparable instances for
reasonableness of the consideration. The learned Assistant
Judge after discussing the evidence proceeded on the
assumption that the consideration paid as mortgage money was
reasonable and proper and, according to him, it did not make
any difference if the other conditions in the mortgage deed
were found to be oppressive and amounting to clog on equity
of redemption.
PG NO 840
Attention of the learned Assistant Judge was drawn to
the fact that this was a bona fide transaction at the time
when made, but subsequently, the prices of immovable
properties increased so the plaintiffs had come forward to
file suits after a lapse of long time. It was highlighted
that the plaintiff No. I was serving as a Civil Judge and if
he came to know that the transaction was oppressive, he
would not have sat idle for such for a long period.
Reference was made to the decision of this Court in Seth
Ganga Dhar v. Shankar Lal & Ors., [1959] S.C.R. 509. We will
examine that decision in detail. The learned Assistant Judge
came to the conclusion on point No. 1 that there was clog on
equity of redemption and accordingly answered the Issue No.
1 in the affirmative. With the other issues we are not
concerned in this appeal except Issue No. 4. Regarding Issue
No. 4, as mentioned hereinbefore, which is on the question
whether the tenants are protected from the effect of
redemption decree by virtue of the provisions of the Bombay
Rent Act, it may be mentioned that the tenants had filed
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regular civil appeal and it was urged before the learned
Assistant Judge that even if the mortgage was redeemed, the
tenants inducted by the mortgagees would be entitled to
continue in possession of the properties in question as
they were protected by the provisions of the said Rent Act.
There was no dispute in this case and in the facts of the
other three appeals that thc tenants were inducted by the
mortgagees after the mortgage was created. It is also true
that in all these mortgage deeds, there was provision that
the mortgagees were competent to lease out the suit property
and if in exercise of that power, they inducted the tenants
in the suit properties, their tenancies would not come to an
end on the redemption of mortgage, it was argued. The Full
Bench of the Gujarat High Court in Lalji Purshottam v.
Thacker Madavji Meghaji, 17 Gujarat Law Reporter 497 held
that the mortgagee in possession might lease the property,
but authorisation to the mortgagee to let out the property
to any other tenant would not amount to an intention to
create tenancy beyond the term of mortgage. Following the
said decision, however, it was held that the tenant had no
right to be in possession and was not entitled to the
protection of the Bombay Rent Act after the redemption of
the mortgage. The appeal was accordingly disposed of.
As mentioned hereinbefore, there was a second appeal to
the High Court and thc High Court expressed the view in
brief order and dismissed the second appeal on 26th April,
1982 It appears, however, that in second appeal two
questions were agitated, (1) the question of jurisdiction
and Damdupat and (2) the tenants’ right to be in possession.
So far as the question of jurisdiction and Damdupat, the
High Court observed that the Assistant Judge was right. This
PG NO 841
point is not before us in this appeal under Article 136 of
the Constitution. So far as the question of tenants’ right
to be in possession after the redemption of mortgage, the
High Court followed the decision in Khatubai Nathu Sumra v.
Rajgo Mulji Nanji and others, (supra).
Before we deal with the question of law and the
respective submissions, we may briefly so far as relevant
for the present purpose refer to the facts of the other
three appeals.
Civil Appeal No. 9993 of 1983 is an appeal by the
tenant arising out of the Regular Civil Appeal No. 150 of
1978 before the learned Assistant Judge, Kutch, at Bhuj,
referred to hereinbefore. The facts have been set out
hereinbefore and it is not necessary to reiterate these. We
will deal with the contentions in respect of the same at the
appropriate stage.
Civil Appeal No. 397 of 1980 is also an appeal by the
tenant. It arises from the judgment and order of the High
Court of Gujarat, dated 7th November, 1978 in Civil Revision
Application No. 1447 of 1978. One Naranji Nanshi Thacker
(hereinafter referred to as the decree-holder) instituted a
Regular Civil Suit No. 10 of 1968 in the Court of the
learned Civil Judge (J.D.), Bhuj. The suit was originally
dismissed on 29th November, 1967. It was a suit for
redemption of the mortgaged property located in the town of
Bhuj. Thereupon, the respondent No. I preferred an appeal to
the District Judge where the suit was decreed. The
defendants filed a second appeal which was dismissed and the
decree-holder made an application for final decree and the
Court gave the final decree on 30th November, 1974. While
giving the final decree for redemption of the mortgage a
direction was given in the decree to the judgment debtors to
hand over the possession of the mortgaged property within
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three months on the decree-holder making payment of dues in
respect of the mortgage in the Court. In pursuance of the
final decree the decree-holder took out the execution
proceedings and deposited the dues in the Court. At the same
time the decree-holder claimed possession of the mortgaged
property from one Shambhulal Vallabhji Thacker, the
appellant herein, stating that he was a tenant in the
possession of the property. The notice was issued to
Shambhulal Vallabhji, who appeared before the Court and
submitted his obJections stating that he was a tenant
protected by law and he could not be evicted in the
execution of the decree obtained by the decree-holder. He
also stated that he was entitled to get the protection under
the Bombay Rent Control Act.
PG NO 842
The learned District Judge held that there was no conduct on
the part of the decree-holder which would estop him from
claiming physical possession from the tenant of the
mortgagee in possession. It was contended that when the
mortgagee leased out the mortgaged property under the
ordinary prudent management of the mortgaged property the
mortgagor on redemption of the mortgage was not entitled to
recover physical possession of the property from the tenant.
The learned Judge negatived this contention. The High Court
rejected the appeal summarily. Hence, this appeal.
Civil Appeal No. 1286 of 1981 is also an appeal by the
tenant. The appellant is the tenant of the mortgagee. The
plaintiffs Nos. 1 to 6 are the heirs and legal
representatives of deceased Mehta Kanji Bhagvanji. It may be
mentioned that the tenant was inducted by the mortgagee in
1955. The property was mortgaged in 1948 for a period of
five years. It appears, therefore, that the tenant was
inducted after the period of redemption had expired. The
mortgagor had a right to redeem after the expiration of the
mortgage. It was contended that though the mortgagee had
inducted tenants in the suit property with a mala fide
intention on the part of the mortgagee, it was still an act
of prudent management. The first Appellate Court on the
question before us, namely, whether the tenant was protected
by the Bombay Rent Act, came to the conclusion after
discussing all the relevant evidence and relying on the
decision of the Lalji Purshottam v. Thacker Madhavji
Meghaji (supra) that the tenants were not so protected
under the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act in the facts of
the case The appellant preferred this appeal and this is in
issue in this case .
Shri Rajinder Sachar appearing for the appellant-
mortgagee in Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 8219 of 19X
2 drew our attention to the evidence of Vrajlal which
appears at page 163 of the Special Leave Petition (Civil)
No. 8219/82 wherein he stated about the execution of the
documents. He stated that when document, Exhibit No. 51 was
made, his father’s economic (financial) position was bad. On
his father, there was a debt of 12,000 koris of Kansara
Motilal Madhavji. There was also sundry debt of 7,000--8,000
koris. His father was an Advocate in Kutch since old times.
He was in service. The younger brother was studying.
Therefore, father-mortgagor was in need of money, it was
clear. Motilal Madhavji was pressing for his debt. They were
staying in suit property and had no property except the suit
property. He tried to explain the circumstances in which the
mortgage deed was executed.
PG NO 843
Shri Sachar drew our attention to the observations of
the Judicial Committee in the case of Aziz Khan v. Duni
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Chand and others, A.I.R. 1918 P.C. 48, where it was held
that even where the transaction in question was undoubtedly
improvident in the absence of any evidence to show that the
money-lender had unduly taken advantage of his position, it
was difficult for a Court of justice to give relief on
grounds of simple hardship. Shri Sachar tried to urge in the
facts and circumstances of the instant case that there is no
evidence to lead to the conclusion that there was any undue
influence. Great deal of reliance, however, by the
appellants as well as the respondents was placed on the
observations of this Court in Seth Ganga Dhar v. Shankar Lal
& others, (supra). There, this Court observed that the rule
against clog on equity of redemption embodied in section 60
of the Transfer of Property Act empowers the Court not only
to relieve a mortgagor of a bargain whereby in certain
circumstances his right to redeem the mortgage is wholly
taken away, but also where that right is restricted. The
extent of the latter power is, however, limited by the
reason that gave rise to it, namely, the unconscionable
nature of the bargain, which, to a court of equity, would
afford sufficient ground for relieving the mortgagor of his
burden, and its exercise must, therefore, depend on whether
the bargain, in the facts and circumstances of any
particular case, was one imposed on the mortgagor by taking
advantage of his difficult and impecunious position at the
time when he borrowed the money. In that case it was held
that in a suit for redemption where the mortgage deed, by
two distinct and independent terms provided that the
mortgage would not be redeemed for eightyfive years all(l
that it could be redeemed only after that period and within
six months thereafter, failing which the mortgagor would
cease to have any claim on the mortgaged property and the
mortgage deed would be deemed to be a deed of sale in favour
of the mortgagee, and it was clearly evident from the facts
and circumstances of the case that the bargain was quite
fair and as between parties dealing with each other on equal
footing. 1. was held that the term providing for a period of
eightyfive years was not a clog on the equity of redemption
and the mere length of the period could not by itself lead
to an inference that the bargain was in any way oppresive or
unreasonable. The term was enforceable in law and the suit
for redemption filed before the expiry of the period was
premature. It was further held that the term that on the
failure of the mortgagor to redeem within the specified
period of six months. he would lose his right to do so and
the mortgage deed was to be deemed to be a deed of sale in
favour of the mortgagee, was clearly a clog 011 the equity
of redemption and as such invalid but its invalidity could
not in any way affect the validity of the other term as to
the period of the mortgage, that stood apart. It was
PG NO 844
explained by Sarkar, J. as the learned Chief Justice then
was, that the rule against clogs on the equity of redemption
is that, a mortgage shall always be redeemable and a
mortgagor’s right to redeem shall neither be taken away nor
be limited by any contract between the parties. This
principle was clearly established by the observations of
Lindley M.R. in Santley v. Wilde, [1899] 2 Ch. 474. where
the Master of Rolls observed as follows:
"The principle is this: a mortgage is a conveyance of
land or an assignment of chattles as a security for the
payment of a debt or the discharge of some other obligation
for which it is given. This is the idea of a mortgage: and
the security is redeemable on the payment or discharge of
such debt or obligation, any provision to the contrary
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notwithstanding. That, in my opinion, is the law. Any
provision inserted to prevent redemption on payment or
performance of the debt or obligation for which the security
was given is what is meant by a clog or fetter on the equity
of redemption and is therefore void. It follows from this,
that "once a mortgage always a mortgage".
The right of redemption, therefore, cannot be taken
away. The Courts will ignore any contract the effect of
which is to deprive the mortgagor of his right to redeem the
mortgage. It was further reiterated at page 515 of the
report in Seth Ganga Dhar’s case (supra) that the rule
against clogs on the equity of redemption no doubt involves
that the Courts have the power to relieve a party from his
bargain. If he has agreed to forfeit wholly his right to
redeem in certain circumstances, that agreement will be
avoided. But the Courts have gone beyond this. They have
also relieved mortgagors from bargains whereby the right to
redeem has not been taken away but restricted. It is a power
evolved by the early English Courts of Equity for a special
reason. All through the ages the reason has remained
constant and the Court’s power is, therefore, limited by
that reason. The extent of this power has, therefore, to be
ascertained by having regard to its origin. It is better to
refer to the observations of Northington L.C. in Vermon v.
Bethell, 28 E.R. 838 and 839. Lord Chancellor observed
therein as follows:
"This court, as a court of conscience, is very jealous
of persons taking securities for a loan, and converting such
securities into purchases. And therefore I take it to be an
established rule, that a mortgagee can never provide at the
PG NO 845
time of making the laon for any event or condition on which
the equity of redemption shall be discharged, and the
conveyance absolute. And there is great reason and justice
in this rule, for necessitous men are not, truly speaking,
free men, but, to answer a present exigency, will submit to
any terms that the craft may impose upon them."
The same view was reiterated by Viscount Haldane L.C.
in G. and C. Kreglinger v. New Patagonia Meat and Cold
Storage Company Ltd., [1914] Appeal Cases 25, where it was
observed at pages 35 and 36 of the report as follows:
"This jurisdiction was merely a special application of
a more general power to relieve against penalties and to
mould them into mere securities. The case of the common law
mortgage of land was indeed a gross one. The land was
conveyed to the creditor upon the condition that if the
money he had advanced to the feoffor was repaid on a date
and at a place named, the fee simple would revest in the
latter, but that if the condition was not strictly and
literally fulfilled he should lose the land for ever. What
made the hardship on the debtor a glaring one was that the
debt still remained unpaid and could be recovered from the
feeoffor notwithstanding that he had actually forfeited the
land to the mortgagee. Equity, therefore, at an early date
began to relieve against what was virtually a penalty by
compelling the creditor to use his legal title as a mere
security.
My Lords, this was the origin of the jurisdiction which
we are now considering, and it is important to bear that
origin in mind. For the end to accomplish which the
jurisdiction has been evolved ought to govern and limit its
exercise by equity judges. That end has always been to
ascertain, by parol evidence if need be, the real nature and
substance of the transaction, and if it turned out to be in
truth one of mortgage simply, to place it on that footing.
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It was, in ordinary cases, only where there was conduct
which the Court of Chancery regarded as unconscientious that
it interfered with freedom of contract. The lending of
money, on mortgage or otherwise, was looked on with
suspicion, and the court was on the alert to discover want
of con-science in the terms imposed by lenders."
PG NO 846
The reason justifying the Court’s power to relieve a
mortgagor from the effects of his bargain is its want of
conscience. Putting it in more familiar language the Court’s
jurisdiction to relieve a mortgagor from his bargain depends
on whether it was obtained by taking advantage of any
difficulty or embarrassment that he might have been in when
he borrowed the moneys on the mortgage. Length of the term,
according to Sarkar, J. in the aforesaid decision, was not
by itself oppressive and could not operate as a clog on the
equity of redemption. There was a term in the mortgage deed
that the mortgagees could spend any amount on repairs and
those expenses would be paid, according to the account
produced by the mortgagees. All that it meant was that in
claiming moneys on account of repairs and construction the
mortgagees had to show from their accounts that they had
spent these moneys. This Court on that basis held that the
clause which provided that the mortgage had to be redeemed
within the specified period of six months was bad. The
principle, however, is that it was not an unconscionable
bargain and it did not in effect deprive the mortgagor of
his right to redeem the mortgage or so to curtail his right
to redeem that it has become illusory and non-existent,
then there was no clog on equity of redemption. It has to be
borne in mind that the English authorities relied upon by
Sarkar, J. and the principles propounded by this Court in
the case of Seth Ganga Dhar’s, case (supra) were in the
background of a sedate and fixed state of affairs. The
spiral and escalation of prices of the immovable properties
was not then there. Today, perhaps, a different
conspectus would be required to consider the right to redeem
the property after considerable length of time pegging the
price to a small amount of money, the value of which is fast
changing.
The rights and liabilities of the mortgagor are controlled
by the provisions of section 60 of the Transfer of Property
Act, 1882. The clog on redemption has been noted in Mulla’s
Transfer of Property Act. 7th Edition, page 401 that a
mortgage being a security for the debt, the right of
redemption continues although the mortgagor fails to pay the
debt at due date. Any provision inserted to prevent, evade
or hamper redemption is void. That is implied in the maxim
"once a mortgage always a mortgage". Collins, M.R. in Jarrah
Timber & Wood Paving Corporation v. Samuel, [1903] 2 Ch. 1
at page 7 observed that it is the right of a mortgagor on
redemption, by reason of the very nature of a mortgage to
get back the subject of the mortgage and to hold and enjoy
as he was entitled to hold and enjoy it before the mortgage.
PG NO 847
The doctrine clog on the equity of redemption" is a
rule of justice, equity and good conscience. It must be
adopted in each case to the reality of the situation and the
individuality of the transaction. We must take note of the
time, the condition, the price spiral, the term bargain and
the other obligations in the background of the financial
conditions of the parties. Therefore, in our opinion, in
view of the evidence it is not possible to hold that there
was no clog on the equity of redemption in these cases.
A very large number of decisions have been cited at the
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Bar. Shri T.U. Mehta, Shri Rajinder Sachar, Shri B.K. Mehta
and Shri Dholakia very ably and painstakingly argued this
case in respect of their cotentions.
Our attention was drawn to the observations of the
Allahabad High Court in Chhedi Lal v. Babu Nandan, A.I.R.
1944 Allahabad 204 where it was held that the provision
inserted to prevent redemption on payment or performance of
the debt or obligation for which security was given, was a
clog on equity of redemption. Condition in mortgage was in
that case that if mortgagee constructed new building by
demolition of mortgaged property which was kachcha
structure, mortgagor would pay cost of construction at the
time of redemption. Stipulation in circumstances of the
case, it was held, did not amount to clog on equity of
redemption. It was argued before us by th. mortgagees that
the provision for the payment towards cost and expenses of
repairs and construction did not amount to a clog on the
equity of redemption because the repairs and construction
were to be effectuated to keep the property in good
condition. In the aforesaid decision Verma, J. at page 207
of the report observed that in the case before the Court it
was not pleaded that any pressure and undue influence had
been exercised upon the mortgagors. Verma. J referred to the
observations of the Viscount Haldane L.C. in G & C.
Kreglinger v. New Patagonla Meat and Cold .Storage Co.,
(supra) and Lindley M.R. in Santley v. Wilde, (supra). Sir
Tej Bahadur Sapru argued before Verma, J. that it is not his
contention that the mortgagee in this case tried to gain a
collateral advantage. His argument was that a onerous term
has been incorporated in the deed which placed such a burden
on the mortgagor as to make it impossible for him to redeem.
There is a freedom of contract between the mortgagor and the
mortgagee as observed by Verma, J. at page 207 of the report
We must, however, observe that we live in a changed time.
Freedom of contract is permissible provided it does not lead
to taking advantage of the oppressed or depressed people.
The law must transform itself to the social awareness.
PG NO 848
Poverty should not be unduly permitted to curtail one’s
right to borrow money on the ground of justice, equity and
good conscience on just terms. If it does, it is bad.
Whether it does or does not, must, however, depend upon the
facts and the circumstances of each case.
Reference was also be made to the case of Bhika and
Anr. v. Sheikh Amir and Ors., A.I.R. 1923 Nagpur 60 where
there was no provision under which power was given to the
executant of the Deed to pay off the amount which was the
consideration for the Deed, and no accounts were to be
rendered or required. It was held that relief against an
agreement forming a clog on the equity of redemption can
only be obtained if it was challenged within a reasonable
time. It was an equitable relief which cannot be granted as
a matter of course. In that decision Sri Vivian Bose, as the
learned counsel appearing for the appellant unsuccessfully
sought to obtain relief against an agreement containing a
clog on the equity of redemption.
Whether in the facts and the circumstances of these
cases, the mortgage transaction amounted to clog on the
equity of redemption, is a mixed question of law and fact.
Courts do not look with favour at any clause or stipulation
which clogs equity of redemption. A clog on the equity of
redemption is unjust and unequitable. The principles of
English law, as we have noticed from the decisions referred
to hereinbefore which have been accepted by this Court in
this country, looks with disfavour at clogs on the equity of
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redemption. Section 60 of the Transfer of Property Act, in
India, also recognises the same position.
It is a right of the mortgagor on redemption, by reason
of the very nature of the mortgage, to get back the subject
of the mortgage and to hold and enjoy as he was entitled to
hold and enjoy it before the mortgage. If he is prevented
from doing so or is prevented from redeeming the mortgage,
such prevention is bad in law. If he is so prevented, the
equity of redemption is affected by that whether aptly or
not, and it has always been termed as a clog. Such a clog is
inequitable. The law does not countenance it. Bearing the
aforesaid back-ground in mind, each case has to be judged
and decided in its own perspective. As has been observed by
this Court that long-term for redemption by itself, is not a
clog on equity of redemption. Whether or not in a particular
transaction there is clog on the equity of redemption,
depends primarily upon the period of redemption, the
circumstances under which the mortgage was created, the
economic and financial position of the mortgagor, and his
PG NO 849
relationship vis-a-vis him and the mortgagee, the economic
and social conditions in a particular country at a
particular point of time, custom, if any, prevalent in the
community or the society in which the transaction takes
place, and the totality of the circumstances under which a
mortgage is created, namely, circumstances of the parties,
the time, the situation, the clauses for redemption either
for payment of interest or any other sum, the obligations of
the mortgagee to construct or repair or maintain the
mortgaged property in cases of usufructuary mortgage to
manage as a matter of prudent management, these factors must
be co-related to each other and viewed in a comprehensive
conspectus in the background of the facts and the
circumstances of each case, to determine whether these are
clogs on equity of redemption.
These principles have been recognised by this Court in
Ganga Dhar v. Shankar Lal (supra). It has also to be borne
in mind that long-term for redemption in respect of
immovable properties was prevalent at a time when things and
the Society were, more or less, in a static condition. We
live in changing circumstances. Mortgage is a security of
loan. It is an axiomatic principle of life and law that
necessitous men are not free men. A mortgage is essentially
and basically a conveyance in law or an assignment of
chattels as a security for the payment of debt or for
discharge of some other obligation for which it is given.
The security must, therefore, be redeemable on the payment
or discharge of such debt of obligation. Any provision to
the contrary, notwithstanding, is a clog or fetter on the
equity of redemption and, hence, bad and void. "Once a
mortgage must always remain a mortgage", and must not be
transformed into a conveyance or deprivation of the right
over the property.
This is the English law based on principles of equity.
This is the Indian law based on justice, equity and good
conscience. We reiterate that position. Though, long-term by
itself as the period for redemption, is not necessarily a
clog on equity but in the changing circumstances of
inflation and phenomenal increase in the prices of real
estates, in this age of population-explosion and
consciousness and need for habitat, long-term, very long-
term, taken with other relevant factors, would create a
presumption that it is a clog on equity of redemption. If
that is the position then keeping in view the financial and
economic conditions of the mortgagor, the clause obliging
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the payment of interest even in case of usufructuary
mortgage not periodically but at the time of ultimate
redemption imposing a burden on the mortgagor to redeem, the
clauses permitting construction and reconstruction of the
PG NO 850
building in this inflationary age and debiting the mortgagor
with an obligation to pay for the same as an obligation for
redemption, would amount to clog on equity.
Section 60 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882,
conferred on the mortgagor the right of redemption. This is
a statutory right. The right of redemption is an incident of
a subsisting mortgage and it subsists so long as the
mortgage subsists. See the observations in R. Ghose "Law of
Mortgage" 6th Edn. page 227.
Whether in a particular case there is any clog on the
equity of redemption, has to be decided in view of its
background of the particular case. The doctrine of clog on
equity of redemption has to be moulded in the modern
conditions. See Mulla: ’Transfer of Property Act’, 17th
Edn. 402. Law does not favour any clog on equity of
redemption.
It is a settled law in England and in India that a
mortgage cannot be made altogether irredeemable or
redemption made illusory. The law must respond and be
responsive to the felt and discernible compulsions of
circumstances that would be equitable, fair and just, and
unless there is anything to the contrary in the Statute,
Court must take cognisance of that fact and act accordingly.
In the context of fast changing circumstances and economic
stability, long-term for redemption makes a mortgage an
illusory mortgage, though not decisive. It should prima
facie be an indication as to how clogs on equity of
redemption should be judged.
In the facts and the circumstances and in view of the long
period for redemption, the provision for interest (1/2% per
annum payable on the principal amount at the end of the long
period, the clause regarding the repairs etc., and the
mortgagor’s financial condition, all these suggest that
there was clog on equity. The submissions made by Mr. Sachar
and Mr. Mehta are, therefore, unacceptable.
In that view of the matter, we are of the opinion that
the decision of the High Court as well as the Courts below
that there existed clog on the equity of redemption in case
of these mortgages, is correct and proper, and we hold so
accordingly.
Before we dispose of the contentions on the second aspect,
we must deal with some of the decisions of the Gujarat High
Court to which reference had been made and some of which
also referred before us. We have noticed the decision of the
PG NO 851
Gujarat High Court in Khatubai Nathu Sumra v. Rajgo Mulji
Nanji and others, (supra). In Maganlal Chhotalal Chhatrapati
and Ors. v. Bhalchandra Chhaganlal Shah, 15 Gujarat Law
Reporter 193. P.D. Desai, J. as the learned Chief Justice
then was, held that the doctrine of clog on the equity of
redemption means that no contract between a mortgagor and
mortgagee made at the time of the mortgage and as a part of
the mortgage transaction or, in other words, as a part of
the loan, would be valid if it in substance and effect
prevents the mortgagor from getting back his property on
payment of what is due on his security. Any such bargain
which has that effect is invalid. The learned Judge
reiterated that whether in a particular case long term
amounted to a clog on the equity of redemption had to be
decided on the evidence on record which brings out the
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attending circumstances or might arise by necessary
implication on a combined reading of all the terms of the
mortgage. The learned Judge found that this long term of
lease along with the cost of repairing or reconstruction to
be paid at the time of redemption by the mortgagor indicated
that there was clog on equity of redemption. The learned
Judge referred to certain observations of Mr. Justice
Macklin of the Bombay High Court where Justice Macklin had
observed that anything which does have the appearance of
clogging redemption must be examined critically, and that if
the conditions in the mortgage taken as a whole and added
together do create unnecessary difficulties in the way of
redemption it seems that is a greater or less clog upon the
equity of redemption within the ordinary meaning of the
term. In our opinion, such observations will apply with
greater force in the present inflationary market. The other
decision to which reference may be made is the decision of
the Gujarat High Court in Soni Motiben v. M/s. Hiralal
Lakharnshi, 22 Gujarat Law Reporter 473. This also
reiterates the same principle. In Vadilal Chhaganlal Soni
and Others v. Gokaldas Mansukh and Others, A.I.R. 1953
Bombay 408 also, the same principle was reiterated. In that
case, it was held by Gajendragadkar J., as the learned Chief
Justice then was, that the agreement between the mortgagor
and mortgagee was that the mortgagor was to redeem the
mortgage 99 years after its execution and the mortgagee was
given full authority to build any structure on the plot
mortgaged after spending any amount he liked It was held
that the two terms of the mortgage were so unreasonable and
oppressive that these amounted to clog on the equity of
redemption. Similar was the position in the case of Sarjug
Mahto and other. v. Smt. Devrup Devi and Others A.I.R. l963
Patna 114, where also the mortgage was for 99 years. In
Chhedi Lal v. Babu Nandan’s case (supra), the court
reiterated that freedom of contract unless it is vitiated by
undue influence or pressure of poverty should be giver. a
PG NO 852
free play. In the inflationary world, long term for
redemption would prima facie raise a presumption of clog on
the equity of redemption. See also the observations in
Rashbehary Ghose’ ’Law of Mortgage’ 6th Edn. pages 227 and
228.
Bearing the aforesaid principles in mind we must
analyse the facts involved in these appeals. It has been
noticed in S.L.P. (Civil) No. 8219 of 1982 that the High
Court of Gujarat by its order impugned had dismissed the
second appeal. The High Court had merely observed in
dismissing the second appeal that the First Appellate Court
had followed the decision of the Gujarat High Court in
Khatubai Nathu Sumra v. Rajgo Mulji Nanji and Others,
(supra). We have noted the salient features of the said
decision. The High Court, therefore, found no ground to
interfere with the decision of the First Appellate Court and
accordingly dismissed the second appeal. The First Appellate
Court by its judgment disposed of Civil Regular Appeal No.
149 of 1978 and another civil appeal which was the appeal by
the tenant was also disposed of by the said judgment. The
learned Judge of the Appellate Court had referred to the
ratio of the decision in Gangadhar v. Shankerlal (supra).
The learned Judge bearing in mind the principle of the
aforesaid decision and the relevant clause of Ext. 103 came
to the conclusion that the clauses amounted to clog on the
equity of redemption in the facts of this case. Shri Sachhar
tried to urge before us that on the evidence and the facts
in this case having regard to the position of the parties,
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the transaction did not amount to clog on the equity of
redemption. It was emphasised by the First Appellate Court
that the fact that the son of the mortgagor subsequently
became Civil Judge would not affect the position because
what was relevant was the financial condition at the time of
the transaction. We have further to bear in mind that it has
come out in the evidence that the father of the plaintiff
was residing in the suit property at the relevant time and
there was no other residential house except the suit
property. The First Appellate Court, therefore, emphasised
in our opinion rightly that if there was no pressure from
the creditor, no body would like to mortgage the only house
which is sole abode on the earth.
In that view of the matter and in view of the position
in law, we are of the opinion that the First Appellate Court
was right in the view it took.
The First Appellate Court referred to the decision of
Kunjbiharilal v. Pandit Prag Narayan, AIR 1922 Oudh 283. In
that case there was a condition that the mortgagor should
PG NO 853
pay interest along with the principal amount at the time of
redemption after 50 years. It was held that the intention
was to see that right of redemption could never be
exercised. If the condition was such which would result in
making redemption rather difficult, if not impossible, it
would be a dog on the equity of redemption and could not be
enforced. Similar was the position of the Allahabad High
Court in Rajai Singh v. Randhir Singh, A.I.R. 1925 Allahabad
643. There the term fixed for redemption was of 96 years and
there was a stipulation for payment of interest along-with
principal not periodically but only at the time of
redemption. In the instant case before us the mortgagor was
required to pay the whole amount of interest at the end of
99 years which will practically make the redemption
impossible. Applying the well-settled principles which will
be applicable to the facts of this case in determining
whether there was in fact a clog on the equity of
redemption, we are of the opinion what the First Appellate
Court was right in holding that there was a clog on equity
of redemption.
On the second aspect of the question whether the right
of the tenants of the mortgagees are protected after the
redemption of mortgage, reliance was placed by the First
Appellate Court on the decision of the Full Bench of the
Gujarat High Court in Lalji Purshottam v. Thacker Madhavji
Meghaji, (supra). There urban immovable property was
mortgaged with possession, mortgagee creating lease during
the subsistence of the mortgage. The question was whether
after redemption of mortgage such lease is binding on the
mortgagor. It was held that Section 76(a) of the Transfer of
Property Act would not apply to such cases. There must be
express words showing an intention if tenancy was to be
created beyond the term of the mortgage. Mere reference that
mortgagee is entitled to lease property does not create a
binding tenancy on the mortgagor. After the redemption of
the mortgage the relationship of landlord and tenant does
not exist. Such tenant, therefore, does not get any
protection under section 12 of the Bombay Rent Control Act,
it was held. The Gujarat High Court had referred to several
decisions of this Court. In Mahabir Gope v. Harbans Narain
Singh, [1952] SCR 775 which was a decision dealing with a
lease created by a mortgagee with possession under the Bihar
Tenancy Act, this Court reiterated that the general rule is
that a person cannot by transfer or otherwise confer a
better title on another than he himself has. A mortgagee
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cannot, therefore, create an interest in the mortgaged
property which will enure beyond the termination of his
interest as mortgagee. Further the mortgagee, who take
possession of the mortgaged property, must manage it is
Person of ordinary prudence would manage if it were his own;
PG NO 854
and he must not commit any act which is destructive or
permanently injurious to the property. Reliance may be
placed for this purpose on section 76, clauses (a) and (e)
of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. It was held that the
provisions of sections 20 and 21 of the Bihar Tenancy Act,
did not apply to the lessees since they were not ’settled
raiyats’ and the lessees could not claim to have secured
under the statute occupancy rights in the land. It was
further held that the mortgagor was entitled to the
possession of the land upon redemption of the mortgage. In a
slightly different context in Harihar Prasad Singh v. Must.
of Munshi Nath Prasad, [1956] S.C.R. 1 this Court was
concerned with a mortgage with possession effected on
agricultural land. This Court had to consider in that
decision whether under the provisions of the Bihar Tenancy
Act the tenant inducted on the mortgaged property during the
pendency of the mortgage could claim right to remain in
possession after the redemption. Venkatarama Ayyer, J.,
speaking for the Court pointed out that if the tenant could
not resist the suit for ejectment either by reason of
section 76(a) of the Transfer of Property Act or section 2 1
of the Bihar Tenancy Act, the tenant could not get such a
right as a result of the interaction of both those sections.
This Court ultimately held that the tenants inducted by the
mortgagee with possession had failed to establish that they
had any right of occupancy over the suit lands and that the
plaintiffs were entitled to a decree in ejectment, with
future mesne profits as claimed in the plaint. Thus a right
claimable under section 76(a) of the Transfer of Property
Act because of a lease created in the course of prudent
management of the property was put on a different footing
altogether from a right created by a special statute.
Similarly, in Asa Ram v. Mst. Ram Kali. [1958] SCR 986,
the question before this Court was again of mortgage of
agricultural land when the mortgage was with possession and
of the tenant inducted by the mortgagee with possession. In
Dahya Lal v. Rasul Mohammed Abdul Rahim, [ 1963] 3 SCR 1,
this Court was concerned with the case of a tenant inducted
on agricultural land by a mortgagee in possession. There
under the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948, a
tenant lawfully inducted by the mortgagee on the land would
on redemption of the mortgage be deemed to be a tenant of
the owner mortgagor under section 4 of the Bombay Tenancy
and Agricultural Act. This Court held that all persons other
than those mentioned in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of section
4 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948,
who lawfully cultivated land belonging to other persons
whether or not their authority was derived directly from the
PG NO 855
owner of the land must be deemed tenants of the lands under
section 4 of the said Act. So, therefore, the Bombay Tenancy
Act required at the relevant time the lawful cultivation by
tenant. This Court had also considered this question in
Prabhu v. Ramdev, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 676. There the same
problem again arose in connection with a person inducted
into agricultural land as a tenant by an usufructuary
mortgagee and the question was whether the rights of such a
tenant were protected by the provisions of the Rajasthan
Tenancy Act, 1955. In view of the special status, the tenant
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in question was held to be entitled to the protection. It
must be noted as observed by the Full Bench of the Gujarat
High Court that all the cases that we have so far considered
are cases of agricultural lands and in each of these cases
the question was examined from two points; first, whether
the lease could be said to be a lease granted in the course
of prudent management and, in the alternative, whether the
rights of the tenant inducted by the mortgagee with
possession had been enlarged as a result of a special
statute dealing with the rights of tenants of agricultural
lands.
This question, however, has been agitated before this
Court in the background of the non-agricultural lands
especially in urban areas. In All India Film Corporation v.
Raja Gyan Nath, [1969] 3 SCC 79, the question was in respect
of lease of a cinema house granted by the mortgagee with
possession. Hidyatullah, C.J. delivering the judgment of the
Court. observed in paragraph 7 that a general proposition of
law is that no person can confer on another a better title
than he himself has. A mortgagee is a transfer of an
interest in specific immovable property for the purpose of
securing repayment of a loan. A mortgagee’s interest lasts
only as long as the mortgage has not been paid off. It was
further observed by the learned Chief Justice that on
redemption of the mortgage the title of the mortgagee comes
to an end. It was held that section 111(c) of the Transfer
of Property Act provides that a lease of immovable property
determines where the interest of the lessor in the property
terminates on, or his power to dispose of the same, extends
only to the happening of any event--by the happening of such
event. The duration of the mortgagee’s interest determines
his position as the lessor. But there is one exception. That
flows from section 76(a) which lays down liabilities of a
mortgagee in possession. It is provided there that when
during the continuance of the mortgage, the mortgagee takes
possession of the mortgaged property, he must manage the
property as a person of ordinary prudence would manage it if
it were his own. It was observed that this principle applied
ordinarily to the management of agricultural lands and has
been extended to urban property so as to tie it up in the
hands of lessees or to confer on them rights under special
PG NO 856
statutes. It was emphasised by the Chief Justice that lease
would continue to bind the mortgagor or persons deriving
interest from him if the mortgagor had concurred to grant
it. Ultimately, this Court in that case held that on the
termination of the mortgage in the events that had happened
in that particular case, that since there was no landlord
and no tenant, the provisions of the Rent Restriction Act
could not apply beyond the date of the termination of the
mortgagee’s interest. Similar, is the view in the case of
Sachalmal Parasram v. Ratnabai, [1973] 3 S.C.C. 198. There,
the question was whether the tenant was protected under the
Madhya Pradesh Accommodation Control Act, 1961. The Court
did not accept the rights of the tenant in possession.
The question whether the tenant from usufructuary
mortgagee of building was entitled to protection on
redemption of mortgage, was considered by the Full Bench of
the Madras High Court in S.V. Venkatarama Reddiar v. Abdul
Ghani Rowther & Ors., A.I.R. 1980 Mad. 276. There Justice
Natarajan, as the learned Judge then was, of the Madras High
Court delivering the judgment of the Full Bench of the said
Court held that if a tenancy was created by a mortgagee with
possession, the ties of landlord and tenant were snapped eo
instanti the mortgage is redeemed and, unless there is a
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fresh forging of the relationship of landlord and tenant
between the mortgagor and the erst-while tenant by (i) the
voluntary act of the parties or (ii) a deemed forging of the
relationship by express provision in the Act itself, the
erstwhile tenant cannot claim protection under the Act so as
to perpetuate his occupation of the building as a tenant.
The rule of exception contained in Section 76(a) of the T.
P. Act cannot be readily and automatically invoked by a
tenant let into possession of urban property by a mortgagee
with possession. The principle of exception afforded by
section 76(a) of that Act applies ordinarily to the
management of agricultural lands and has seldom been
extended to urban property so as to tie it up in the hands
of lessees or to confer on them rights under special
statutes. It may be open to a tenant inducted upon urban
property by a mortgagee with possession to rely upon Section
76(a) to claim tenancy right for the full term of the
tenancy notwithstanding the redemption of the mortgage
earlier. But, it is for the person who claims such benefits
to strictly establish the binding nature of the tenancy,
created by the mortgagee, on the mortgagor. Reference may be
made to a Full Bench decision of the Rajasthan High Court in
Devkinandan and another etc. v. Roshan Lal and others,
A.I.R. 1985 Rajasthan 11 where several relevant authorities
have been discussed. The question before the Full Bench was
whether a tenant of a mortgagee in possession is entitled to
PG NO 857
the protection of the provisions of the Rajasthan Premises
(Control of Rent and Eviction) Act, 1950 against the
mortgagor after the redemption of the mortgage. P.K.
Banerjee, C.J. delivering the judgment of the Court after
discussing all relevant authorities held that in respect of
tenancy of urban property or premises, the mortgagee in
possession has no right to jeopardise the right of the
mortgagor by giving a tenancy which would continue even
after the redemption of the mortgage. This negates the
submission that as a matter of prudent management the
tenants had been inducted and after induction the tenants
got their rights enlarged. In Lalji Purshottam v. Thacker
Madhavji Meghaji, (supra), where the Full Bench of the
Gujarat High Court had considered the effect of continuation
of tenancy under the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging Houses
Rates Control Act, 1947 which are precisely the cases in the
facts of the instant appeals, after discussing all the
relevant provisions of the Act including the theory of the
prudent management the Full Bench of the Gujarat High Court
observed that where a lease is created by the mortgagee in
possession of an urban immovable property, such a lease
would not be binding on the mortgagor after redemption of
mortgage assuming that the lease is such as a prudent owner
of property would have granted in usual course of
management. The Court observed that that was so because
section 76(a) could not apply to a case of urban immovable
property and hence a lease created by the mortgagee in
possession of an urban immovable property would not be
binding on the mortgagor after redemption of the mortgage.
Even apart from section 76(a) of the Transfer of Property
Act if the words of the mortgage deed clearly and indubitaly
express an intention to allow expressly creation of a
tenancy beyond the term of the mortgage, then only the
lease created in exercise of the power expressly conferred
by the mortgage deed would be binding on the mortgagor. If
the words of the mortgage deed do not clearly and
indubitably disclose the intention to allow expressly the
creation of a tenancy beyond the terms of the mortgage, the
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mere fact that the mortgage deed authorises the mortgagee
with possesion to induct a tenant would not create a tenancy
binding on the mortgagor after the redemption of the
mortgage. In such a case a tenant inducted on the property
by a mortgagee with possession when the tenancy of that
tenant is not binding on the mortgagor after the redemption
of the mortgage, is not protected under the provisions of
the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947. We are of the opinion that the aforesaid view
expressed by the Chief Justice Diven on behalf of the Full
Bench represents the correct position in law in respect of
the second aspect of the question canvassed before us.
PG NO 858
We have noticed the view of the Full Bench of the
Rajasthan A High Court on this aspect. This question was
again envisaged by this Court in the background of the
Rajasthan Premises Act in Om Prakash Garg v. Ganga Sahai &
Ors., [1987] 3 SCC 553 holding that on passing of the final
decree of redemption of the mortgage, the lease did not
subsist and the tenant is not entitled to protection under
the Rajasthan Premises (Control of Rent & Eviction) Act,
1950. Again viewing this question in the context of the
Bombay Rents, Hotel & Lodging House Rates Control Act, 1947
in Jadavji Purshottam v Navnitbhai Amaratlal & Ors., [1987]
4 SCC 223, in which the judgment was delivered by Natarajan
J., and one of us was a party to that decision, it was held
that it was recognised by this Court in a number of cases
that the question of imprudent management of the mortgaged
property by the mortgagee would not arise where the rights
of the tenant were enlarged by the tenancy legislation
enacted after the tenant was put in possession by the
mortgagee. Hence, in that case the question was whether the
tenancy rights of the appellant-tenant, who was inducted by
the mortgagee, came to be enlarged by tenancy legislation
after he was put in possession by the mortgagee. The fact
founding that case was that the tenant-appellant was not
inducted into possession soon after the execution of
mortgage deed and the mortgagee was put in possession of the
property but long thereafter. In fact, there was already a
tenant on the mortgage Property when the mortgagee was
put in possession. During the period o f tenancy of that
tenant the Saurashtra Act 22 of 1951 came to be enacted and
gave protection to the tenants from paying exorbitant rent
and from unreasonable eviction. Despite the enlargement of
his tenancy right by the Act. that tenant vacated the lease
premises in 1956 and thereafter the mortgagee inducted the
appellant in possession. It was held that that was a case
where the Saurashtra Act was already in force when the
appellant cannot be inducted into possession. The tenancy
rights of the appellant cannot be said to have become
enlarged after the mortgagee granted him the lease by
subsequent legislation enacted for affording protection to
tenants. The fact that the mortgagee had granted lease only
for period of one year will not alter the case in any
manner as not only had the mortgagee executed the lease
deed after the expiry of the lease period but also because
the restriction of the lease period to one year was of no
consequence in view of the provisions contained in the
Saurashtra Act 22 of 1951. The enlargement of the tenancy
rights cannot also be claimed on the basis of the fact that
the Bombay Rent Act had been enacted after the appellant was
inducted into the property because the Saurashtra Act was
already In force when the mortgagee granted lease to the
appellant and it was only from January’ 64 the Bombay Rent
PG NO 859
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act came to replace the Saurashtra Act. In Civil Appeal No.
9993 of 1982, Pomal Kanji Govindji & Ors. v. Vrajlal
Karsandas Purohit ,& Ors., Shri B.K. Mehta took us to the
factual background. The appellants who are tenants in the
mortgage properties being defendants Nos. 4 to 9 in the
original suit had resisted the suit for redemption and
contended that the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover
possession from them since their rights are protected under
the Bombay Rents. Hotel and Lodging House Rates Control Act,
1947 and the said Act has applied to the area of kutch in
the Bombay State. Therefore, no decree for eviction could be
passed against them except in accordance with the provisions
of the said Act. The High Court held that redemption of
mortgage was possible and the suit was maintainable as
mentioned hereinbefore. However, as regards the question of
protection of the tenants under the Bombay Rent Act, Shri
Mehta proceeded to submit that the learned Judge did not
make any finding as to when the tenants were inducted nor
did he express his opinion about the evidence of respondent
No. 5. Shri Mehta further submitted that the learned Judge
did not make any finding as to when their tenants were
inducted, either before or after the rent restriction Act
was made applicable to the area of Kutch. On that basis,
following the Full Bench decision of the Gujarat High Court
in Lalji Purshottam v. Thacker Madhavji Meghaji, (supra),
the courts below rejected the claim of he tenants. Shri
Mehta submitted hat the High Court has erred in not
following the settled legal position entrenched by a line of
decision of this Court that he rights of a tenant inducted
by a mortgagee with possession would enure beyond the period
of redemption of the mortgage if his rights are enlarged by
subsequent tenancy legislations in force in the area in
which the property is situated. He drew our attention to the
decision in the case of Mahabair Gope v. Harbans Narain,
(supra). There as mentioned hereinbefore this Court had
found that the provisions of sections 20 and 21 of the Bihar
Tenancy act, did not apply to the lessees since they were
not ‘settled raiyats’. Shri Mehta also drew our attention
to the observations of this Court in Asa Ram v. Mst. Ram
Kali, (supra). He also drew our attention to Dahya Lal v.
Rasul Mahommed, (supra) which we have discussed
hereinbefore. Similar, was the position in Prabha v. Ramdev
(supra) which is also being discussed hereinbefore.
Reference was made to the decision in All India Film
Corporation v. Gyan Nath, (supra), the basis of which has
been explained hereinbefore. The said decision will not be
applicable in respect of the facts and circumstances of the
case and in view of the terms of the renancy. Our attention
was drawn by Shri Mehta to the observations of this Court in
Madan Lal v. Badri Narain and others, [1987] 3.S.C.C. 460.
In that case, it was contended before this Court that there
PG NO 860
was no such rule of general acceptance that a lease of urban
property by the mortgagee in possession cannot be regarded
to be an act of prudent management within the meaning of
section 76(a) of the Transfer of Property Act which carves
out an exception to the general rule that a mortgagee in
possession cannot create, in the tenant inducted by him, a
right to continue in possession beyond the period of
redemption. Before this Court, in that case, a reference
was made to the Full Bench decision of the Rajasthan High
Court in Devkinandan v. Roshan Lal, (supra). But in view of
the facts that there was no definite finding the question
whether the alleged lease was an act prudent management on
the part of the mortgagee in possession in terms of section
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76(a) was left open and that to be determined by the learned
trial Judge. It has been held by this Court in numerous
decisions that in case of immovable properties in urban
areas, unless the leases specifically and categorically make
an exception in favour of the tenant that they would
continue in possession even after the expiry of termination
of the leases, and those leases were acts of prudent
management, in no other case, the tenants inducted by the
mortgagee would be titled to the production under the Rent
Act after the redemption of mortgage.
In this connection, it will be appropriate here to
refer to the position as mentioned in the Mulla’s ‘Transfer
of Property Act’, 7th Edn. pages 513 and 514, which is as
follows:
"Whether a mortgagee in possession can by reason of
clause (a) grant a lease of the mortgaged property has been
considered in several decisions of the Supreme Court. In
Mahabir Gope v. Harbans Narain, (1952 S.C.R. 775, the
Supreme court observed that the right conferred under clause
(a) was an exception to the general rule that a person
cannot confer a better title on another than he possesses
himself. The Court pointed out that it followed that though
a mortgagee may, if it is prudent, grant leases, these would
determine on redemption. The Court recognised, however,
that in some cases the granting of a lease in the course of
prudent management might result in the tenant acquiring
rights under other laws so that he could not be evicted by
the mortgagor, but this was an exception, and could not
apply where the mortgage deed prohibits such a lease either
expressly, or by necessary implication. These observations
do not appear to have been followed in Harihar Prasad Singh
v. Deonarayan Prasad, [1956] S.C.R. 1 where the Suprerne
PG NO 861
Court held that even a lease created by a mortgagee in
possession in the course of prudent management though
binding on the mortgagors after redemption, could not create
the rights of a raiyat on the tenants. The question was next
considered in Asa Ram v. Ram Kali, [1958] S.C.R. 986, where
the Supreme Court held that the creation of a lease which
would create occupancy rights in favour of the tenants could
not be regarded as a prudent transaction. In Prabhu v.
Ramdev, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 676. however, the Supreme Court
without referring to Asa Ram s case held that a tenant of a
mortgagee can invoke the benefit of subsequent Tenancy
legislation which provided that such a tenant could not be
evicted except in the circumstances set out in that
legislation. The Court explained Mahabir Gope’s case as
being a decision given with reference to the normal
relationship of landlord and tenant. and stressed that the
Supreme Court in that case had contemplated an extraordinary
situation arising from a tenant acquiring rights under other
laws. The Court explained Harihar Prasad Singh’s case as
having been decided on the peculiar facts of the case, viz,.
that in that case the tenants were not entitled under the
Local law to invoke the protection of that law. In Film
Corporation Ltd. v. Gyan Nath, [1970] 2 S.C.R. 581 the
Supreme Court again considered the question. The Court did
not refer to either Harihar Prasad Singh,s case (supra) or
Prabhu v. Ramdev (supra). The Court observed that the
principle laid down in Mahabir Gope’s case (supra) that a
bona fide and prudent lease would bind the mortgagor
"ordinary’’ applies only to agricultural lands and has
"seldom" been extended to urban property. This observation
is strictly speaking, obiter, as the Court found that the
lease in question was neither bona fide nor prudent in view
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of the long term and the low rent. It is respectfully
submitted that there is no warrant for limiting sec. 76(a)
to agricultural land. Whether a particular lease is bona
fide or prudent is a question of fact; obviously a lease of
urban land which would confer on the lesson the protection
of special statutes such as the Rent Acts would prima facie
be imprudent. In Sachalmal Parasram v. Ratanbai, [1987] 3
S.C.C. 198, however, the Supreme Court has repeated the
obiter observation in the Film Corporation case (supra) that
except in the case of agricultural land acts of a mortgagee
would not bind the mortgagor.
PG NO 862
It is respectfully submitted that the position could be
more satisfactorily stated with reference to the language of
clause (a). The right conferred by that clause is to manage
the property during the subsistence of the mortgage. It is
unlikely that a prudent manager would create a lease for a
period longer than the mortgage, or in circumstances which
would give the lessee rights after the redemption of the
mortgage. Such leases would prima facie be imprudent, and
not binding on the mortgagor as beyond the powers conferred
by clause (a). If, however, it can be shown in any given
case that such a lease was prudent, it would bind that
mortgagor, even after redemption, and even though the lessee
acquires thereunder rights of a permanent or quasi-permanent
nature. No question of imprudence can arise where, as in
Prabhu v. Ramdev, [1966] 3 S.C.R. 676 the rights of the
tenant were enlarged by Tenancy legislation enacted after
the tenant was put in possession by the mortgage. It is
submitted that this statement of the law is consistent with
all the Supreme Court decisions quoted above."
We are of the opinion that the rationale of the various
decisions of this Court have been explained by Chief Justice
Diven in the Full Bench decision of the Gujarat High Court
in Lalji Purshottam v. Madhavji Meghaji, (supra) which is
the correct enunciation of law The learned Chief Justice
observed at pages 514 and 515 of the report as follows:
"In our opinion, on the general aspect of the matter
based on facts on which judicial notice can be taken it is
clear that so far as leases of agricultural lands are
concerned, when a lessee cultivates land by the very process
of cultivation he brings inputs and improves the fertility
of the soil. Constant and continuous cultivation by proper
manuriny etc. would improve the fertility of the soil and on
the determination of the lease, that fertility would still
remain in the land. It is, therefore, necessary that
security of tenure should be given to the tenant of
agricultural land so that by his proper husbandry and
agricultural practices, he himself may derive good benefits
from the land and also improve the fertility of the soil. It
is because of this aspect that in all countries legislation
has been enacted to protect the actual tiller of the soil,
fixity of tenure has been given and all the different
measures of tenancy legislation regarding agricultural lands
PG NO 863
have provided for sufficiently long leases and protection of
his tenure so as to induce the agriculturist to put in his
best efforts and best inputs as they are called now-a-days,
during the term of the lease. A prudent owner of property
would, therefore, see to it that the term of lease which he
grants in respect of agricultural land is sufficiently long
to induce the tenant to put in the best efforts which would
incidentally benefit the owner of the land by improving the
fertility of the land itself. In contrast, to the
agricultural lands. so far as non-agricultural and urban
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lands are concerned, on determination of the lease the
tenant who has been on the property under the terms of the
lease is bound to put back the property in the condition in
which it was at the time when he entered into possession and
nothing is normally done by the tenant which is likely to
improve the quality of the soil property by his own ettorts
put in during the terms of the tenancy. There is, therefore,
no question of a prudent owner of urban immovable property
granting a long term lease merely with a view to improve the
quality of the land. Barring Rent Control and Rent
Restriction Act which deal with urban immovable property, in
areas where there is scarcity of accommodation both for
residential and nonresidential purposes, there is no concept
of protection to tenants of urban immovable property. We are
of opinion that this is the rationale behind the distinction
which the Supreme Court has pointed out between leases of
agricultural lands and leases of urban immovable property
while dealing with the provisions of sec. 76(a) of the
Transfer of Property Act, whereas a a prudent owner would
not ordinarily speaking think of creating a long term lease
purely as a matter of prudent management, an owner of
agricultural land in the course of prudent management would
create a long term lease purely from the aspect of prudent
management. In our opinion therefore, the word "seldom" used
Hidayatullah C.J. in All India Film Corporation’s case
(supra) while dealing with the application of the exception
carved out by see 76(a) to urban immovable property has to
be read as not being extended at all and it is merely a term
of the phrase to say that this exception has seldom been
extended to urban immovable property."
PG NO 864
We have noted hereinbefore the ratio and the basis of
the decision of this Court in Jadavji Purshottam v. Dhami
Navnitbhai Amaratlal (supra). Shri Mehta submitted that
there was no clear finding as to when the tenants were
inducted whether before or after the Rent Restriction Act
and therefore, he pleaded that the matter should be referred
to the larger Bench. In view of the facts found in this case
which were similar to the facts mentioned in Jadavji
Purshottam’s case, (supra) there is no specific authority in
the lease which stated that the lease would continue beyond
the period of mortgage. There is no extended authority as
contemplated in Jadavji Purshottam’s case found in this
case. The submission was that the matter should be
considered by a larger Bench in the light of the Jadavji
Purshottam’s case (supra). We are unable to accept the said
submission. In this case the words in the mortgage deed, as
we are taken through, did not clearly allow creation of
tenancy beyond the period of mortgage. That, in any event,
would not have been prudent management. hence, there is no
finding that the mortgage deed permitted, either expressly
or impliedly. creation of tenancy beyond the period. We
think that the tenants were not entitled to protection after
redemption of mortgage. Furthermore, in all these cases the
authority of the mortgagees to lease out the property,
expressed or implied, was circumscribed by a stipulation
that the mortgagee should re-deliver the possession of the
property when the mortgage was redeemed. In that context, we
are of the opinion that the submissions on behalf of the
tenants cannot be entertained.
As mentioned hereinbefore, Sh. B.K. Mehta, especially
in the background of the facts in C.A. No.9993/83, has made
certain submissions relying on the observations of this
Court in Jadavji Purshottam’s case (supra). That decision
requires recapitulation of the basic principle. That
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decision reiterated that the tenant-appellant therein was
not inducted into possession soon after the mortgage deed
was executed and the mortgagee was put into possession of
the property hut long thereafter. It is not necessary to
detain us on the facts of this case. The basis of that
decision was: whether the Saurashtra Act was already in
force. The appellant therein was inducted into possession
and his tenancy rights could not have become enlarged after
the mortgagee granted him the lease by a subsequent
legislation enacted for affording protection to tenants. In
this case, relying on the said decision it may be reiterated
that the tenancy right was not created by a mortgagee in
possession, wherein the mortgagor had not concurred in the
grant of a lease beyond the period of mortgage. The question
in that decision was whether the lease granted to the tenant
by the appellant had the approval or concurrence of the
PG NO 865
mortgagor so as to entitle the tenant to claim tenancy right
even against the mortgagor after redemption of the mortgage.
In all these cases the major term in the mortgage deed was
that the possession would be delivered on redemption. In
none of these cases was there any term, at least none was
adverted to, which stipulated any condition in the mortgage
deed which entitled the mortgagees to create tenancy beyond
the period of the mortgage. This factor along with the
condition in the mortgage deed postulating the obligation to
deliver possession at the expiry of the term of mortgage to
the mortgagors, in our opinion, are the decisive factors
showing that the tenants did not get their rights enlarged
on the coming into force of the subsequent Rent Legislation.
The very Preamble to the Bombay Rents, Hotel and Lodging
House Rates Control Act, 1947 indicates that it was "An Act
to amend and consolidate the law relating to the control of
rents and repairs of certain premises, of rates of hotels
and lodging houses and of evictions (and also to control the
charges for licence of premises etc.)". It was thought
expedient to amend and consolidate the law relating to the
control of rents and repairs of certain premises. But that,
in our opinion, has indeed never been construed as
enlarging the rights of any group of tenants who were not
the tenants of the mortgagors. Hence, the question of
enlargement of right by tenancy legislation of persons who
were in occupation but had no rights as tenants of the
mortgagors, would not arise in the context of these cases.
Incidentally, it may be referred that in appeal from
S.L.P. No. 8219/82, this question does not arise.
In C.A. No. 1286/81, the tenancy after the period of
mortgage was not bona fide. In C.A. No. 9993/83, it was
submitted that the tenants were inducted after the mortgage
on 28th April, 1943. The Bombay Rent Act was made applicable
to the area of Kutch in September, 1951.
See Dalal’s Rent Act 4th Edn. page 814 on that basis it
was submitted that as there was no Act in the area of Kutch
which is in pari materia with the Bombay Rent Act and
therefore the rights of the tenants were enlarged by the
subsequent Act. In view of the tact that the mortgage deed
did not contemplate rights of the mortgagees to grant
tenancy beyond the period of mortgage, and had imposed an
obligation that on the expiry of the period of mortgage,
mortgagors were entitled to the possession of the demised
premises . In our opinion, these contentions cannot be
entertained.
PG NO 866
Incidentially, it may also be mentioned that in C.A.
No. 1286/81, the suit property was mortgaged in 1948 for a
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period of 5 years. The tenant was inducted by the mortgagee
in 1955. The period of mortgage had expired in 1953.
Apparently, the mortgagee had inducted the tenant after
expiry of the period of mortgage, and such a conduct was
grossly imprudent management, and was not bona fide. Such
tenant cannot, in any event, claim any protection.
Having considered the facts and the circumstances and
the ratio of the decision in Jadavji Purshottam’s case
(supra), we are clearly of the opinion that the tenancy
rights did not come to be enlarged by the Tenancy
Legislation after the tenant was put into possession by the
mortgagee and the tenancy created ia favour of the tenants
by the mortgagor did not have the concurrence of the
mortgagor so as to claim tenancy rights even after
redemption of the mortgage. See the observations in para 12
of the Jadavji Purshottam’s case (supra).
In the premises, the appeals must fail and are
dismissed. Civil Miscellaneous Petition in C.A. No. 397/80
must also fail and is dismissed. The parties will pay and
bear their own costs.
A.P.J. Appeals dismissed.