Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 197 of 1999
PETITIONER:
Subbegowda (Dead) by LR.
RESPONDENT:
Thimmegowda (Dead) by LRs.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/04/2004
BENCH:
R.C. LAHOTI & ASHOK BHAN.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
R.C. Lahoti, J.
Thimmegowda, the sole respondent herein, has died
during the pendency of these proceedings and his widow and
one daughter (major and unmarried) are on record as legal
representatives of the deceased. Thimmegowda and
Subbegowda were real brothers. Thimmegowda did not have
any son. His family consisted of his wife and four daughters.
Narayani (or Narayana), impleaded as appellant No.2, is the son
of Subbegowda. Subbegowda, the appellant No.1, has also died
during the pendency of these proceedings.
Thimmegowda, having no male issue, adopted Narayani,
the son of his younger brother Subbegowda. A deed of adoption
dated 4.6.1965 was executed and registered. On 1.8.1969,
another deed came to be executed and registered by
Thimmegowda and this deed is the subject matter of controversy
in these proceedings. The deed is styled as ’Settlement Deed’.
The contents of the deed reveal what had impelled
Thimmegowda to execute the deed. Thimmegowda had
agricultural land but was unable to carry out agricultural
operations. Out of his four daughters, he had performed the
marriage of the two and the remaining two, respectively aged 10
and 4 years at that time, were yet to be married and were
residing with the parents. The deed goes on to state ___
"I have not given right of any kind over my
properties to you, my adopted son Narayani.
You represented to me that in case I hand over
the total responsibility of the family properties
to you, you together with your natural father
and brothers would manage the properties and
discharged the existing dates of the family and
further that you would require the power
through written records, I am today executing
this settlement deed in your favour, my
adopted son Narayani. I have made this
arrangement so that hereafter you may in a
wise manner alongwith your natural father
improve my property and manage the same as
per your wish without any obstruction.
Hereafter I shall have no objection for your
management of the family properties. You shall
look after my welfare and that of my wife and
children and you shall get my daughters
married. Since you have taken the
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responsibility of my welfare and that of my
wife and since the responsibility of protecting
us has been taken over by you and further
since you have to discharge the debts incurred
by me till now for the family, I have handed
over the possession of schedule properties
under this settlement deed to you. In case
either my wife or I incur any further debt
hereafter you shall not be responsible for the
same. You shall not violate any one of the
above said conditions. In case you violate any
condition, I shall have the right to cancel this
settlement deed. You shall have the right to
enjoy hereafter all the treasure, trove, water,
plants etc. in the schedule property and you
shall have the right to sell, gift and alienate the
same and may enjoy the same from generation
to generation peacefully."
(emphasis supplied)
The above statement is followed by a schedule wherein six
landed properties are listed. Below the schedule there is yet
another endorsement made by the executant Thimmegowda as
under:-
"I have settled the six items of properties
as mentioned above and therefore have
executed this settlement deed.
Sd/- on behalf of minor Narayani his
natural father, Subbegowda as guardian.
Since you, Narayani have been under my
care and custody since the beginning and since
I wanted to give you something for yours
livelihood, I have through this settlement deed
entrusted the schedule properties to you. The
approximate value of the schedule properties is
Rupees one thousand (Rs.1000/).
Sd/- Thimmegowda
Sd/- Witnesses"
(emphasis supplied)
On 9.11.1970, Thimmegowda filed a suit against Narayani
and his natural father Subbegowda seeking setting aside of the
settlement deed dated 1.8.1969 on the ground of fraud and
misrepresentation and the consequential relief of restoration of
possession over the suit schedule properties. The trial Court
dismissed the suit on the finding that any circumstances vitiating
the voluntary execution and registration of the deed were not
made out. Fraud and misrepresentation, as alleged by the
plaintiff, were not proved. First appeal preferred by the plaintiff
was dismissed. A second appeal was preferred. The High Court
framed and dealt with a single substantial question of law ___
"Whether a deed purported to be a settlement deed could be
validly executed with a term enabling the settler to have the
deed set aside and in such a case whether such a deed could
convey valid title to the settlee?" In a brief judgment, dealing
with the question of law as framed, the High Court formed an
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opinion that the power of revocation of settlement deed was
expressly reserved to himself by the settler in the deed itself
and, therefore, the settler was fully justified in law to invoke the
revocation clause. Other issues were of no significance. It was
open for the executant to cancel the deed of settlement and that
having been done the suit was liable to be decreed. The High
Court set aside the judgments and decrees of the trial Court and
the first appellate Court and passed a decree in favour of the
plaintiff. Feeling aggrieved, the defendants namely Narayani,
the adopted son, and his natural father Subbegowda are in
appeal of whom, as already stated, Subbegowda has died.
The singular substantial question to be decided in the case
is what is the true nature of the deed dated 1.8.1969? Though
called a Settlement Deed, what was the intention of the
executant behind executing the deed? The question of
construction of a document is to be decided by finding out the
intention of the executant, firstly, from a comprehensive reading
of the terms of the document itself, and then, by looking into ___
to the extent permissible ___ the prevailing circumstances which
persuaded the author of the document to execute it. If the
executant intended to transfer property the Court would lean in
favour of holding the transferee having been vested with interest
in the property. Where an intention to transfer property within
the meaning of Section 5 of Transfer of Property Act, 1882
cannot be spelled out, the document will be given effect to as it
reads and as is explicit from what is set out in the deed itself.
In Raj Bajrang Bahadur Singh Vs. Thakurain Bakhtraj
Kuer, AIR 1953 SC 7, this Court was called upon to examine
what the testator had intended the legatee to take under a will in
the context of the expressions like Malik Kamil (absolute owner)
and Naslan bad naslan (generation after generation) having
been used in the will in reference to the interest which was
sought to be demised. This Court held that such words, though
descriptive of a heritable and alienable estate in the donee and
connoting full propriety rights, may not have been used with the
intention of conferring absolute rights if there could be
something in the context or in the surrounding circumstances to
permit such an inference being drawn. "In cases where the
intention of the testator is to grant an absolute estate, an
attempt to reduce the powers of the owner by imposing restraint
on alienation would certainly be repelled on the ground of
repugnancy; but where the restrictions are the primary things
which the testator desires and they are consistent with the whole
tenor of the will, it is a material circumstance to be relied upon
for displacing the presumption of absolute ownership implied in
the use of the word "malik".
For the interpreter of documents it is common knowledge
that a transfer of property or a creation of interest therein may
be accompanied by conditions, covenants or restraints.
Condition may be condition precedent ___ a condition which must
be performed before the grant or alienation takes effect to
create an interest in property, or may be condition subsequent
___ a condition which has an effect of enlarging or defeating the
interest already created or vested. In either case the condition
will be annexed with the estate and would run with the same. In
Philip John Vs. CIT Calcutta \026 AIR 1964 SC 587, vide para
14, this Court has dealt with conditions __ precedent and
subsequent, in the context of gift of shares. A covenant is not
annexed with the estate and runs independently of it which may
give rise to a cause of action for specific performance or for an
action in damages. A restraint or a limitation has the effect of
curtailing the quantum of the estate affected thereby.
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The contents of the deed dated 1.8.1969 reveal the
relevant circumstances. The executant himself had filed the suit
and deposed to in support of plaint averments. The deed is
subscribed to by Subbegowda too, who affixed his thumb mark
on the deed. Narayani was minor and Subbegowda was acting
for himself and for Narayani too as his guardian ___ being the
natural father. Thus, the deed dated 1.8.1969 is a bi-party
document in a way. Narayani was taken in adoption more than
4 years before the date of execution of the deed dated 1.8.1969,
the reason being that Thimmegowda had no male issue of his
own. Whatever interest in the property may have been created
in favour of Narayani by virtue of his having been born into the
family by virtue of adoption, Thimmegowda had not specifically
created any interest in favour of his adopted son in any of the
properties owned by him. The principal anxiety of
Thimmegowda, which also was working as consideration for
execution of document, was to see that his agricultural lands
were properly managed so that the debts payable by him could
be discharged and his minor unmarried daughters could be taken
care of by being married. Narayani was minor. Thimmegowda
was obviously acting upon the assurance given by Subbegowda,
his own brother, that the adopted son Nayarani with
Subbegowda would manage the property and fulfil the
expectations of Thimmegowda, as set out in the deed. A
comprehensive reading of the document shows that the
settlement as per the terms of the document was not a transfer
of property in favour of the adopted son; it was merely an
arrangement or at best an entrustment of the scheduled
property to his adopted son and the latter’s natural father for the
purpose of proper management without obstruction by anyone
else including himself so that the welfare of himself, his wife and
his children ___ specially the unmarried daughters ___ was
assured. It is clear from the oral evidence adduced by the
plaintiff that his wishes were not fulfilled. Though the pleas of
fraud and undue influence vitiating the execution of deed are not
substantiated, yet there can be no denying of the fact that
Nayarani and his natural father did not come up to those
expectations of Thimmegowda which had persuaded him as
primary and essential considerations for the execution of the
deed. Nothing prevented Thimmegowda from cancelling such
settlement and depriving Narayani and his natural father from
management over the scheduled property. Though at the end of
the main document Thimmegowda has used the expression like
permitting the settlee to enjoy the property and also for the right
of sale and gift relating to property being conferred and the
settlee and his heirs also going on enjoying the property but
this stray sentence at the end of the document cannot be read
in isolation dissected from the earlier part of the document which
in very many words clearly demonstrates the intention of the
executant of entrusting the management only of the scheduled
property to Narayani and his natural father. May be if the
settlee would have come up of the expectations of the settlor,
the latter would not have objected to the settlee continuing in
the enjoyment of the property and dealing with the same as if
owner thereof. This is further clarified from the additional
statement made by settlor just before concluding the execution
of the document where he said that Narayani having been
entrusted to the care and custody, as adopted son, of
Thimmegowda, he was executing the deed with an intention to
maintain the settlee for his life. There is no recital in the deed
which may be read or be capable of being construed as a demise
in praesenti vesting absolute title in the property in Nayarani in
present or in future. Whatever was given to Narayani and his
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natural father by the deed was capable of being cancelled or
revoked under the power of revocation expressly reserved by
Thimmegowda to himself.
The deed dated 1.8.1969 does not amount to transferring
the scheduled property to Narayani. It was only an
arrangement, called ’settlement’ with the power of revocation
expressly reserved to the author, subject to which reservation
the arrangement was intended to come in effect. It has not
been the case of the appellant before us, nor could it have been,
that the scheduled property was gifted by Thimmegowda to
Narayani. Had it been so, the question of testing validity of gift
by reference to Section 126 or holding it to be onerous gift
within the meaning of Section 127 of the Transfer of Property
Act 1882 could have arisen. We need not dwell further on this
aspect of the issue.
A conditional transfer or a settlement accompanied by
conditions is not unknown to the law of real property. It is
permissible in law to annex or encumber any grant or alienation
with condition or limitation which will operate and the court will
give effect to it unless there is some provision of law which
annuls or invalidates such condition, restraint or limitation.
None has been brought to our notice.
The High Court has rightly formed an opinion that the deed
could be revoked. Nothing has been brought to our notice to
take a view to the contrary and hold that such a power of
revocation could not have been reserved by Thimmegowda to
himself.
The appeal is dismissed. The judgment and decree passed
by the High Court is maintained. No order as to the costs.