Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RADHAKISAN LAXMINARAYAN TOSHNIWAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRIDHAR RAMCHANDRA ALSHI AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/04/1960
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1368 1961 SCR (1) 248
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1961 SC1747 (15)
R 1969 SC 244 (11,12)
RF 1991 SC1055 (1,5)
ACT:
Pre-emption--Equity if in favour of pre-emptor--Whether
Mohamedon Law or personal law can override provision of
statute law--To defeat a claim of Pre-emption, whether it is
a fraud, Berar Land Revenue Code, 1928.
HEADNOTE:
The vendors executed an agreement for sale in respect of a
certain survey number which according to the agreement was
to be diverted to non-agricultural purposes and thereafter a
sale deed was to be executed. In pursuance to the said
agreement the vendors applied for diversion which was
sanctioned subject to the payment of premium and other
conditions. Before the sale deed was executed respondent
No. 1 Sridhar brought a suit for pre-emption against the
appellant on the ground that he had a co-occupancy in the
survey number in dispute being the owner of the adjoining
survey number. The suit was decreed and on appeal the High
Court inter alia held that the transaction was a sale which
was subject to pre-emption and that the failure to execute
and register a sale deed was a subterfuge to defeat the
right of pre-emption.
The question for decision was (1) whether a right of pre-
emption had accrued to respondent Sridhar under the
provisions of the Berar Land Revenue Code, 1928, and (2)
whether the appellant was guilty of fraud in that in order
to defeat the right of pre-emption the deed of sale was not
executed, but for all intents and purposes the appellant had
become the owner of the property.
Held, that the right of pre-emption in Berar did not arise
from Mohamedon Law and did not exist till it was brought
from Land laws of the Punjab or North West Provinces. The-
right of pre-emption under the Berar Land Revenue Code
extended to transactions of sale, usufructuary mortgages and
leases for 15 years or more and right under Mohamedon Law
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applies only to sales. The word sale has no wider
connotation under s. 176 of the Berar Land Revenue Code than
it has in the Transfer of Property Act. After the
application of Transfer of Property Act to Berar a
transaction of sale could not be effective except through a
registered instrument.
The contract of sale in the instant case created no interest
in favour of the appellant and the proprietary title did not
validly pass from the vendors to the appellant and until
that was completed no right to enforce pre-emption arose.
The transfer of
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property, where the Transfer of Property Act applied, had to
be under the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act only
and neither the Mohamedon Law nor any other personal law of
transfer of property could override the statute law. There
are no equities in favour of a pre-emptor, whose sole object
is to disturb a valid transaction by virtue of the right
created by statute.
Held, further that it is neither illegal nor fraudulent for
the parties to a transfer, to avoid and defeat a claim for
preemption by all legitimate means and a person is entitled
to steer clear of the laws of pre-emption by all lawful
means.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 167 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
November 22, 1951, of the former Nagpur High Court in Second
Appeal No. 720 of 1945.
S. N. Kherdekar, N. K. Kherdekar and A. G. Ratna. parkhi,
for the appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee, S. A. Sohni and Ganpat Rai, for respondent
No. 1.
1960. August 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment and decree of the High Court at Nagpur passed in
second appeal No. 1720 of 1945 confirming the decree of the
District Judge. In the suit out of which this appeal has
arisen the appellant was defendant No. 1 and the respondents
were the plaintiff and defendant Nos. 2 and 3 and the
dispute relates to pre-emption on the ground of co-occupancy
which falls under Ch. XIV of the Berar Land Revenue Code,
1928, hereinafter called the Code.
On April 10, 1943, D. B. Ghaisas and his mother Ramabai
entered into two contracts of sale with the appellant, one
in regard to Survey Nos. 5, 14 and 16 for a sum of Rs.
10,000 out of which Rs. 2,000 was paid as earnest money and
the other in regard to Survey No. 15/1 for Rs. 8,500 out of
which Rs. 500 was paid as earnest money. On April 16, 1943,
the vendors executed a registered sale deed in regard to
Survey No,%. 5, 14 and 16 and the balance of the price
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250
was paid before the Registrar. On April 22, 1943, the
vendors executed a lease of Survey No. 15/1 for 14 years in
favour of Kisanlal and Sitaram who were defendant Nos. 2 and
3 in the suit and are respondents Nos. 2 and 3 in this
appeal. On April 24, 1943, the vendors executed a fresh
agreement of sale in respect of the same field which
according to the agreement was to be diverted to non-
agricultural purposes and thereafter a sale deed was to be
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executed when it was so diverted. The appellant was to pay
the costs of the diversion as well as the premium. In
pursuance of this agreement the vendors applied to the
Deputy Commissioner, Akola, on August 12, 1943, for diver-
sion under s. 58 of the Code and sanction was accorded on
January 22, 1944, subject to payment of premium of Rs. 9,222
and other conditions. The appellant’s case is that as
agreed the vendors were paid this money for deposit and it
was deposited in the Treasury under Challan No. 68 but there
is no finding in favour of the appellant although the trial
court and the District Judge seem to have proceeded on the
premises that this amount was deposited but in the cir-
cumstances of this case it is not necessary to go into this
matter. On February 1, 1944, the sale deed was executed by
the vendors in favour of the appellant and the consideration
in the sale deed was Rs. 17,722.
On September 11, 1943, i.e., before the sale deed was
executed the respondent, Sridhar, brought a suit for pre-
emption against the appellant on the allegation that he had
a co-occupancy in the Survey number in dispute-being the
owner of Survey No. 15/2. In the plaint it was alleged that
the transaction of contract under the documents of April 10,
1943, and April 24, 1943, constituted a sale and therefore
it was subject to respondent Sridhar’s prior right of pre-
emption. It was also alleged that the price was not fixed
in good faith. These allegations were denied. Both the
trial court and the District Judge held that respondent
Sridhar was entitled to preempt and determined the fair
consideration to be Rs. 3,306. The suit was therefore
decreed by the trial court and on appeal by the District
Judge. The appellant took an appeal to the
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High Court which also confirmed the decree of the
subordinate courts.
The High Court has held that the transaction was a sale
which was subject to pre-emption and that the failure to
execute and register a sale deed was a subterfuge to defeat
the right of pre-emption. It also hold that the proceedings
taken for conversion of agricultural land into non-
agricultural land were pendente lite and as the right of
preemption had already accrued by subsequent acts of the
vendors and the vendee it could not be defeated. The High
Court further held that as the order of the Sub-Divisional
Officer allowing conversion was a conditional one the land
could not be said to have been irrevocably diverted to non-
agricultural purposes. The decree of the subordinate courts
was Confirmed and against that judgment the appellant has
come to this court in appeal by
special leave.
The first question for decision is whether a right of pre-
emption had accrued to respondent Sridbar under the
provisions of the Code. Previous to the cession of Berar by
the Nizam of Hyderabad to the British Government in 1853,
the Mohammedan rule of preemption was, according to one
view, in force in the province of Berar and it continued to
be so till the Berar Land Revenue Code of 1896 came into
operation as from January 1, 1897. On the other hand,
according to the view of two writers on the Berar Land
Revenue Code of 1896, the Mohammedan law origin of the right
of pre-emption does not seem to be well-founded. In the
annotation of the Berar Land Revenue Code of 1896 Mr. E. S.
Reynolds wrote in 1896 that although the right of pre-
emption in regard to agricultural land on occupancy tenures
bad been recognised in Berar the right was not based on
Mohammedan law nor did it appear to be ancient and
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immemorial custom. It seems to have been evolved from a
ruling of the Resident acting as the High Court based on r.
10 of the Sub-tenancy Rules. According to Hirurkar (Land
Revenue Code, pp. 126-127) also the right of pre-emption was
not based on the Mohammedan law and did not originally exist
in Berar. It
252
seems to have been brought from the land laws of the Punjab
or the North West Provinces. In the Berar Settlement Rules
and Berar Sub-tenancy Rules of 1866 the right of pre-emption
attached to relinquishment of shares in the case of ryots of
joint holdings and applied to co-sharers and this is
different from the rule of Mohammedan law.
By s. 205 of the Berar Land Revenue Code of 1896 the right
of pre-emption arose when a co-occupant in any Survey number
was transferred by sale, foreclosure of mortgage or
relinquishment in favour of a specified person for valuable
consideration and it vested in every other co-occupant of
the Survey number. It will thus be seen that the right of
pre-emption, which under Mohammedan law attaches to sales
only, was also applicable to foreclosure of mortgages and
relinquishment for valuable consideration. In the year 1907
the Transfer of Property Act (IV of 1882) was extended to
the province of Berar. In 1928, the Code was re-enacted and
it further extended the provisions in regard to pre-emption
in Ch. XIV. Under s. 174 pre-emptive rights arise in
respect of transfers of unalienated land held for
agricultural purposes and before an occupant could transfer
the whole or any portion of his interest he had to give
notice of his intention to all other occupants. Under ss.
176 to 178, the right of pre-emption arises in the case of
transfers by way of sale, usufructuary mortgages, by lease
for a period exceeding fifteen years or in the case of final
decrees for foreclosure in a case of mortgage by conditional
sale. Under a. 183 every occupant in Survey number shall
have the right to pre-empt the interest transferred by civil
suit. Under s. 184 the right also arises in the case of an
exchange. Thus it will be seen that the right of pre-
emption has been by statute extended far beyond what was
contemplated under Mohammedan law and also beyond what was
recognised in the Berar Settlement Rules, Berar Subtenancy
Rules and in the Code of 1896.
The High Court held that the word sale in s. 176 of the Code
had a wider connotation than what it had under s. 54 of the
Transfer of Property. Act. That
253
was based on the judgment of Vivian Bose, J. (as he then
was), in Jainarayan Ramgopal Marwadi v. Balwant Maroti
Shingore (1) which had been approved in later judgments of
that court. It was also of the opinion that the transaction
in dispute gave rise to the exercise of the right of pre-
emption under the rule laid down in Begum v. Mohammad Yakub
(2) and as in the instant case there was in reality a sale
although a registered sale deed had not been executed the
right of pre-emption could not be defeated by the device
that the vendors and the appellant adopted.
According to s. 2 of the Transfer of Property Act which at
the relevant time was in operation in Berar s. 54 is not one
of the sections within ch. 2 of that Act and therefore it
overrides Mohammedan law and the provisions of that section,
being exhaustive as to modes of transfer, govern all sales
in that province and no title passes on a sale except as
provided in that section. Sale is there defined as transfer
of ownership for a price paid or promised or part paid or
part promised and in the case of sale of tangible immoveable
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property of Rs. 100/- or more sale can only be made by a
registered instrument. That is clear from the language of
the section itself where it is stated :-
Section 54 Sale how made:-" Such transfer, in the case of
tangible immoveable property of the value of one hundred
rupees and upwards, or in the case of a reversion or other
intangible thing, can be made only by a registered
instrument ".
It was held by the Privy Council in Immudipattam Thirugnana
S. O. Kondema Naik v. Peria Dorasami (3) which was a case of
a zamindari estate that it could not be transferred except
by a registered instrument. But it was submitted that sale
when used in connection with the general law of pre-emption
is not to be construed in the narrow sense in which it is
used in the Transfer of Property Act and that that had been
accepted by the Judicial Committee in Sitaram Bhaurao
Deshmukh v. Jiaul Hasan Sirajul Khan(4) where
(1) A.I.R. 1939 Nag. 35.
(3) (1900) 28 I.A. 46.
(2) (1894) I.L.R. 16 All. 344.
(4) (1921) 48 I.A. 475.
254
the observations of Sir John Edge, C. J., in Begum v.
Mohammad Yakub (1) had been approved.
In Sitaram Deshmukh’s case (2) one of the two Mohammedan co-
sharers in Bombay by an agreement dated October 14, 1908,
agreed to sell his share to a Hindu. The agreement was
expressly subject to a right ’in the co-sharer to pre-empt.
The vendor informed his co-sharer that he had sold his share
and the latter thereupon, after the customary formalities on
October 15, 1908, claimed to recover the share from the pur-
chaser. The sale deed was executed on November 9, 1908, and
then a suit was filed by the pre-emptor. It was held that
the co-sharer had the right to pre-empt in accordance with
the intention expressed by the parties to the sale and that
intention was to be looked at to determine what system of
law was to apply and what was to be taken to be the date of
the sale with reference to which the formalities were
performed. The question there really was as to what was to
be taken as a sale sufficient to justify the pre-emptor in
proceeding at once to the ceremonies and it was in that
connection that the following observation of Sir John Edge
in Begum v. Mohammad Yakub (1) were quoted :-
" The Chief Justice, Sir John Edge, there observes, in
connection with the question whether the Transfer of
Property Act, which required registration, bad altered the
principle of the Mohammedan Law, which determined what was a
sale for the purposes of the date in reference to which the
ceremonies should be performed; " I cannot think that it was
the intention of the Legislature in passing Act No. IV of
1882 " (the Transfer of Property Act) " to alter directly or
indirectly the Mohammedan law of pre-emption as it existed
and was understood for centuries prior to the passing of Act
IV of 1882 ".
That at all events is in harmony with the conclusion come to
by the High Court at Bombay. The conclusion is, that you
are to look at the intention of the parties in determining
what system of law was to be taken as applying and what was
to be taken to be
(1) (1894) I.L.R. 16 All. 344. (2) (1921) 48 I.A. 475.
255
the date of the sale with reference to which the ceremonies
were performed ".
But it was argued for the respondents that the Privy Council
had not only approved the observation of Sir John Edge, C.
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J., in Begum v. Mohammad Yakub(1) but has also approved the
view of the Calcutta High Court in Jadu Lal Sahu v. Janki
Koer (2). That was a case from Bihar where the right of
pre-emption under Mohammedan Law was judicially recognised
in regard to Hindus also. The question whether the sale
which was to be preempted was the one under s. 54 of the
Transfer of Property Act or the one under the principles of
Mohmmedan Law does not seem to have been the point raised in
that case. It may be pointed out that both in the case
which went to the Privy Council (Sitaram Bhaurao Deshmukh v.
Jaiul Hasan Sirajul Khan (3) and the Calcutta case Jadulal
Sahu v. Janki Koer (2)) sale deeds were executed and
registered before the suits to enforce pre-emption were
filed. In the latter case the kabala was on July 28, 1904
and the ceremonies were performed after that date.
In the Allahabad case, Begum v. Mohammad Yakub (1), there
was a verbal sale of a house which was followed by
possession but there was no registered document. No doubt
there the learned Chief Justice in the majority judgment did
say that to import into the Mohammedan Law of pre-emption
the definition of the word " sale " with restrictions
contained in s. 54 of the Transfer of Property Act would
materially alter Mohammedan Law of preemption and afford
fraudulent persons to avoid the law of pre-emption; with
this view Bannerji, J., did Dot agree. But in our opinion
the transfer of property where the Transfer of Property Act
applies has, as was held by the Privy Council also, to be
under the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act only
and Mohammedan Law of Transfer of Property cannot override
the statute law. Mahmood, J., in Janki v. Girjadat (4)
though in a minority (four judges took a different view) was
of the opinion that a valid and
(1) (1894) I.L.R. 16 All. 344.
(2) (1908) I.L.R. 35 Cal. 575.
(3) (1921) 48 I.A. 475.
(4) (1885) I.L.R. 7 All. 482.
256
perfected sale was a condition precedent to the exercise of
the right of pre-emption and until such sale had been
effected the right of pre-emption could not arise.
Section 17 read with s. 49 of the Registration Act shows
that a transfer of immoveable property where it is worth Rs.
100 or more requires registration and unless so registered
the document does not affect the property and cannot be
received in evidence. The following observations of Mahmood,
J., from Janki v.Girjadat (1) are very apposite:-
" If a valid and perfected sale were not a condi-
tion precedent to the exercise of the pre-emptive right,
consequences would follow which the law of pre-emption does
not contemplate or provide for. In this very case,
supposing the so-called vendor, notwithstanding the
application of the 15th August, 1882 (which cannot amount to
an estoppel under the circumstances) continues or recenters
into possession of the property it is clear that the so-
called vendee would have no, title under the so-called sale,
to enable him to recover possession-the transaction being,
by reason of s. 54 of the Transfer of Property Act,
ineffectual as transfer of ownership. The right of pre-
emption being only a right of substitution, the successful
pre-emptor’s title is necessarily the same as that of the
vendee and if the vendee took nothing under the sale the
preemptor can take nothing either; and it follows that if
the vendee could not oust the vendor, the preemptor could
not do so either, because in both cases the question would
necessarily arise whether the sale was valid in the sense of
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transferring ownership. Again, if notwithstanding a pre-
emptive suit such as this, the so-called vendor, who has
executed an invalid sale which does not in law divest him of
the proprietary right, subsequently executes a valid and
registered sale-deed in favour of a co-sharer other than the
preemptor or in favour of a purchaser for value without
notice of the so-called contract for sale it is difficult to
conceive how the preemptor, who has succeeded in a suit like
the present, could resist the claim of such purchaser for
possession of the property ".
(1) (1885) I.L.R. 7 All. 482.
257
Under s. 54 of the Transfer of Property Act a contract for
sale does not of itself create any interest in or charge on
immoveable property and consequently the contract in the
instant case created no interest in favour of the vendee and
the proprietary title did not validly pass from the vendors
to the vendee and until that was completed no right to
enforce pre-emption arose. As we have said earlier wherever
the Transfer of Property Act is in force Mohammedan Law or
any other personal law is inapplicable to transfers and no
title passes except in accordance with that Act. Therefore
when the suit was brought there was no transfer by way of
sale which could be subject to preemption.
It was next contended that the appellant was guilty of fraud
in that in order to defeat the right of the preemptors a
deed of sale was not executed although as a matter of fact
price had been paid, possession had passed and for all
intents and purposes the appellant had become the owner of
the property and that conduct such as this would defeat the
very law of preemption. The right to pre-empt the sale is
not exercisable till a pre-emptible transfer has been
effected and the right of pre-emption is not one which is
looked upon with great favour by the courts presumably for
the reason that it is in derogation of the right of the
owner to alienate his property. It is neither illegal nor
fraudulent for parties to a transfer to avoid and defeat a
claim for pre-emption by all legitimate means. In the
Punjab where the right of pre-emption is also statutory the
courts have not looked with disfavour at the attempts of the
vendor and the vendee to avoid the accrual of right of pre-
emption by any lawful means and this view has been accepted
by this court in Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh (7) where
Subba Rao, J., observed:-
" The right being a very weak right, it can be
defeated by all legitimate methods, such as the vendee
allowing the claimant of a superior or equal right being
substituted in his place ".
In the present case the transaction of sale had not
(7) [1959] S.C.R. 878,884.
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258
been completed until February 1, 1944, when the sale deed
was executed. Anything done previous to it could not
ordinarily be said to be a fraud to deprive a pre-emptor,
from the exercise of his right of pre-emption. There are no
equities in favour of a pre-emptor, whose sole object is
to disturb a valid transaction by virtue of the rights
created in him by statute. To defeat the law of pre-emption
by any legitimate means is not fraud on the part of either
the vendor or the vendee and a person is entitled to steer
clear of the law of pre-emption by all lawful means.
It was then submitted that the sale deed had as a matter of
fact, been executed on February 1, 1944; but respondent
Sridhar brought the suit not on the cause of action arising
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on the sale dated February 1, 1944, but on the transaction
of April 10, 1943, coupled with that of April 24, 1943,
which being mere contracts of sale created no interest in
the vendee and there was no right of pre-emption in
respondent No. I which could be enforced under the Code.
Mr. Chatterji urged that it did not matter if the sale took
place later and the suit was brought earlier but the suit as
laid down was one to pre-empt a sale of April 1943 when, as
a matter of fact, no sale had taken place. If respondent
Sridhar had based his right of pre-emption on the basis of
the sale of February 1, 1944, the appellant would have taken
such defence as the law allowed him. The defence in regard
to the conversion of the land from agricultural into non-
agricultural site which negatives the right of pre-emption
would then have become a very important issue in the case
and the appellant would have adduced proper proof in regard
to it. The right of pre-emption is a weak right and is not
looked upon with favour by courts and therefore the courts
could not go out of their way to help the pre-emptor.
In our opinion the judgment of the High Court was erroneous
and we would therefore allow this appeal, set aside the
judgment and decree of the High Court and dismiss the suit
with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
259