Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANTAKUMARI & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAKSHMI AMMA JANAKI AMMA (D) BY LRS. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/08/2000
BENCH:
V.N. Khare, J. & S.N. Khare, J.
JUDGMENT:
S. N. VARIAVA,J.
This Appeal is against a Judgment dated 7th August,
1987 in Second Appeal No. 313 of 1981. Briefly stated the
facts are as follows: In 1939 the suit property came to
the share of one Krishnan Nair by virtue of a partition in
his family. As the family of Krishnan Nair had been
conducting several chit funds a number of debts had been
incurred in that business, several suits had been
instituted and several decrees had been passed against the
said Krishnan Nair. Krishnan Nair, therefore, executed a
Sale Deed in 1940 selling the land to his brother-in-law,
one Parameswaran Nair. One of the decree holders got this
property attached in execution of his decree. Parameswaran
Nair filed objection claiming to be owner of the property
by virtue of Sale Deed executed in his favour. The
Executing Court held that the Sale Deed was sham and bogus
and that the same was a benami transaction. The Executing
Court held that the property continued to remain vested in
Krishnan Nair. The property was thus sold in execution.
Thereafter, Krishnan Nair filed a Petition to set aside the
sale. That Petition was dismissed. However, Krishnan Nair
was allowed to get back the property, provided he deposited
the decretal amount, interest and commission. In order to
raise money to so deposit Krishnan Nair then executed a
Sale Deed in favour of one Kesavan Channar for Rs.
1,200/-. The Sale Deed provided that Krishnan Nair was to
receive a consideration of Rs. 1,200/- and the purchaser
was to pay off the creditors. This Sale Deed was
registered and Kesavan Channar was put in possession of the
land. On the same day and simultaneously with the
execution of this Sale Deed another Agreement was executed
by Kesavan Channar in favour of Kochu Kunja Nair. That
Agreement was also registered simultaneously and
immediately after the above mentioned Sale Deed. This
Agreement provided that Kesavan Channar would sell the suit
property to Kochu Kunja Nair for a sum of Rs. 1,400/-
after a period of 10 years, but before 11 years were over.
It must immediately be mentioned that the said Kochu Kunja
Nair was a relative of Krishnan Nair. For the sake of
convenience hereinafter the Sale Deed in favour of Kesavan
Channar will referred to as Exhibit A-5 and the Agreement
to Sell in favour of Kochu Kunja Nair will be referred to
as Exhibit A-6. Before the period of 10 years had expired
Kesavan Channar expired and there was a partition in his
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family. The suit property came to the share of his
daughter, one Lakshmikutty. On 14th February, 1952 Kochu
Kunja Nair assigned his rights under Ext. A-6 to the
predecessor of the present Appellant. For the sake of
convenience this Deed of Assignment will hereinafter be
referred to as Exhibit A-7. At the end of a period of 10
years Lakshmikutty did not sell the property as envisaged
by the Agreement Ext. A-6. Therefore, the predecessor in
title of the Appellant filed Suit No. 198 of 1957 for
specific performance of Ext. A-6. It must be mentioned
that Krishnan Nair was made a party defendant to that Suit.
He was Defendant No. 15. That Suit came to be decreed and
the Appeal filed by Lakshmikutty was dismissed. Second
Appeal filed by Lakshmikutty was also dismissed.
Therefore, Lakshmikutty executed a Sale Deed in favour of
the predecessor of the Appellant on 9th July, 1964. The
predecessor in title took possession of the property
through the Court on 18th July, 1967. On 27th January,
1976 the daughter of Krishnan Nair field Suit No. 128 of
1976 for declaration that she was the owner of the property
and for recovery of possession. This Suit was filed
against the predecessor in title of the Appellant herein.
The other heirs of Krishnan Nair were Defendants Nos. 2 to
6 in that Suit. Those heirs did not actively participate
in that Suit. Thus the real fight was between the daughter
of Krishnan Nair and the predecessor in title of the
Appellant. On 7th March, 1977 the Suit was decreed by the
trial Court. The trial Court held that the Sale Deed, Ext.
A-5 was a genuine document and that it was not a sham
document. The trial Court held that Exts. A-6 and A-7
were benami documents, which had been entered into on
behalf of Krishnan Nair. The trial Court held that the
predecessor of the Appellant was merely a trustee of
Krishnan Nair. The trial Court, however, found that the
predecessor had spent considerable amounts and that it was
necessary to take accounts between the parties. The trial
Court held that as there was no prayer to render accounts
the Suit could not be decreed until accounts were taken and
the predecessor of the Appellant was paid the amounts spent
by him. Therefore, the trial Court refused to give
possession to the daughter of Krishnan Nair. Both parties
went in Appeal. The Appellate Court disposed of both the
Appeals by a common Judgment dated 19th April, 1980. The
Appellate Court held that once the trial Court had
concluded that Ext. A-5 was genuine it automatically
followed that Exts. A-6 and A-7 were also genuine. On
this basis the Appellate Court held that Exts. A-6 and A-7
were not benami transactions and the predecessor of the
Appellant had a right to the suit property. The Appellate
Court, therefore, dismissed the Suit. The daughter of
Krishnan Nair filed a Second Appeal in which the impugned
Judgment dated 7th August, 1987 has been passed. By the
impugned Judgment the High Court has held that the nature
of the transactions clearly indicated that Krishnan Nair
had no intention of selling of the property and that in
order to meet his debts a device had been formulated by
which there was a notional sale to Kesavan Channar with a
condition that the property would be sold back after a
period of 10 years. The High Court held that taken as a
whole the transactions were in the nature of mortgage by
conditional sale. The High Court, therefore, passed
preliminary decree for redemption and directed taking of
accounts. It is this Judgment which has been assailed
before us. It has been seriously contended by Mr. Iyer
that the High Court without formulating any question of law
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had disposed of the Second Appeal and arrived at a
conclusion that the transaction was mortgage by conditional
sale even though there was no pleading to this effect, no
prayer to this effect and neither the trial Court nor the
first Appellate court had come to any such conclusion. It
was submitted that the High Court had interfered with the
concurrent findings of fact by the two Courts below and
that, therefore, the Judgment of the High Court should be
set aside and the Appeal be made absolute. We have heard
counsel for the parties. We have read the Judgments of the
Courts below and all relevant documents. It is to be seen
that the suit was for a declaration that the daughter of
Krishnan Nair is owner of the property and for recovery of
possession. The claim to ownership and possession was on
the basis of interpretation of the documents Exts. A-5,
A-6 and A-7. On an interpretation of the documents the
trial Court has held that there was a sale in favour of
Kesavan Channar but the subsequent Agreements Exts. A-6
and A-7 were merely benami transactions. In effect the
trial Court was also saying, on the interpretation of the
three documents, that the transaction was in the nature of
mortgage by conditional sale. The first Appellate Court
interfered merely on the ground that if Ext. A-5 was found
to be a genuine document it necessarily followed that Exts.
A-6 and A-7 were also genuine transactions and not benami
transactions. No reason appears to have been given by the
first Appellate Court for coming to this conclusion. We
fail to understand as to how merely because Ext. A-5 was
held to be genuine it necessarily followed that Exts. A-6
and A-7 were not benami transactions. In our view, the
Judgment of the first Appellate Court appears to be
erroneous and has rightly been set aside by the impugned
Judgment. As is seen the question is of interpretation of
the three documents. It is not correct to say that the
second Appellate Court has not formulated the question of
law. The second Appellate Court has categorically stated
that there is a substantial question of law between the
parties inasmuch as the construction of the documents under
which the claim to property is made is a substantial
question of law. That construction of documents would be a
substantial question of law is now a well settled
proposition. This proposition has been settled as far back
as the Judgment of the Privy Council in the case of Guran
Ditta v. T. Ram Ditta reported in AIR 1928 P.C. 172. It
has since been re-affirmed by this Court in the case of
Kochukaskkada Aboobacker v. Attam Kasim reported in (1996)
7 S.C.C. 389 and the case of Neelu Narayani v. Lakshmanan
reported in (1999) 9 S.C.C. 237. Thus we see no substance
in the contention that no question of law had been
formulated. Let us then see whether the interpretation
placed by the trial Court and the High Court on Exts A-5,
A-6 and A-7 is correct. The facts leading to the execution
of these documents, the manner in which these documents are
executed are all very relevant. As stated above, the
property had been sold in execution of a decree. Krishnan
Nair was, however, given an opportunity to get back the
property provided he deposited the decretal amount,
interest and the commission. Krishnan Nair being heavily
debted did not have the money. It is clear that he,
therefore, devised a method of executing a Sale Deed in
favour of Kesavan Channar, i.e. Ext. A-5 with a condition
that the property be resold after 10 years. It is to be
remembered that at that time the Transfer of Property Act
did not operate in the State of Travancore and only the
general principles of that Act, based on justice, equity
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and good conscience, were applicable. It is clear that
even though the Sale Deed was executed Krishnan Nair had no
intention to permanently dispose of the property. It is
clear from the fact that simultaneously with the execution
of Ext. A-5 the purchaser, i.e. Kesavan Channar, executed
a second Agreement Ext. A-6. Unless there was no
intention to re-convey there would be no question of a
purchaser simultaneously executing the Agreement to Sell
the property after 10 years. The two documents were
executed immediately one after the other and were also
registered simultaneously one after the other. There would
not be two such documents executed simultaneously unless
the intention was that the property was to be reconveyed to
the vendor i.e. Krishnan Nair. It is significant that the
proposed purchaser, in Ext. A-6, was a close relative of
Krishnan Nair. It is also relevant that Kochu Kunja Nair
at the time of execution of Ext. A-6 was already 72 years
of age. This makes it clear that Ext. A-6 was for and on
behalf of Krishnan Nair. This Deed of assignment in favour
of the predecessor in title of the Appellant, i.e. Ext.
A-7, by Kochu Kunja Nair shows that Ext. A-6 had been
executed at the instance of the predecessor of the
Appellant. This further indicates that the predecessor of
the Appellant was aware of the fact that the property was
being sold to Kesavan Channar under Ext. A-5 with a
condition that the same would be sold back after a period
of 10 years to Kochu Kunja Nair who was acting on behalf of
Krishnan Nair. The predecessor of the Appellant was aware
that the property had been taken on behalf of Krishnan Nair
and he himself took the property on behalf of Krishnan Nair
probably due to the old age of Kochu Kunja Nair. In our
view, it cannot be said that the findings of the trial
Court and the second Appellate Court that the documents
Exts. A-5, A-6 and A-7 are not what they purport to be and
that they had been executed with the intention that the
property would be re-conveyed to Krishnan Nair is perverse
and/or illogical. In our view it cannot be said that such
an interpretation, of these documents, could never have
been arrived at. The second Appellate Court was confirming
the findings of the trial Court. Therefore it cannot be
said that the second Appellate Court has reversed
concurrent findings of fact. The second Appellate Court by
stating that this is a mortgage by conditional sale has
merely put a form to the transaction. Taken as a whole the
transaction appears to be a mortgage by conditional sale.
The second Appellate Court is not making out any new case
but is merely interpreting the documents and putting a form
to the nature of the transactions. We, therefore, find no
reason to interfere. The Appeal stands dismissed. There
will be no order as to costs.