Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARAYAN VISHNU HENDRE AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BABURAO SAVALARAM KOTHAWALESINCE DECEASED BY HIS HEIRANANT B
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/10/1995
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 368 1995 SCC (6) 608
JT 1995 (7) 393 1995 SCALE (5)763
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
KIRPAL.J.
This is an appeal by special leave against the judgment
and order of the High Court of judicature at Bombay, dated
11.12.1987 in Second Appeal No. 643/81 and the main question
which arises for consideration is whether there was an
implied surrender of the tenancy by the appellants-
defendants in favour of the respondent-plaintiff at the time
when the respondent-plaintiff executed a mortgage of the
premises in favour of the appellants.
The father of the appellants-defendants, namely Vishnu
Malba Hendre (hereinafter referred to as ’Vishnu’) was a
tenant in respect of the front portion of House No. 115,
Rawiwar Path, Phaltan. The said house was owned by Baburao
Savalaram Kothawale, the original plaintiff, now represented
by his legal heir. The said house was mortgaged by the
respondent-plaintiff in favour of Vishnu by three different
deeds which were styled as conditional sale-deeds. By the
first deed dated 16.4.1952 for a consideration of Rs.
2,000/-, the front portion of the house was transferred and
by the other two deeds, possession of the rear and the
middle portions were transferred for Rs. 1,200/- and Rs.
2,000/- respectively. The documents, inter-alia, provided
that in case the respondent-plaintiff returned the amounts
within six, seven and nine years respetively, then Vishnu
was to re-convey the property and in case the said amounts
were not paid within the stipulated period, then the deeds
were to be treated as sale out and out. After the execution
of the third document, Vishnu created a tenancy in favour of
the respondent-plaintiff in respect of the middle portion of
the house and a rent note was executed on March 18, 1953.
The respondent-plaintiff failed to pay the rent and Vishnu
filed a suit for recovery of the said rent and the same was
decreed in March, 1956.
In the year 1957, Vishnu died and thereafter, the
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apellants, who were his legal heirs, filed a suit in 1958
against the respondent-plaintiff for recovery of possession
of the middle portion of the said house on the ground of
default of payment of rent. The said suit was decreed in
1959. The result of this was that the appellants-defendants
secured the possession of the entire house consisting of
three different portions.
On 23.12.1959, the respondent-plaintiff served a notice
claiming redemption in respect of front portion of the
property only, covered by the first document. The
appellants-defendants sent a reply pointing out that the
period of five years which was fixed by the document for re-
payment was over, and, therefore, the right of the
respondent-plaintiff to recover possession stood exhausted.
This was followed by notice dated 7.3.1962 sent by the
appellants -plaintiff that the time in the three sale deeds
having expired, the right to re-conveyance had come to an
end.
After a lapse of time, the respondent-plaintiff on
17.6.1974 filed a suit for redemption of the mortgage and
recovery of possession. This suit was resisted by the
appellants-defendants by raising various contentions. It was
claimed that the suit was barred by limitation as the right
to get back the property was lost due to the failure of the
respondent-plaintiff to re-pay the amount within the
stipulated period set out in the document. It was also
claimed that the appellants-defendants had become owners of
the suit property by adverse possession. Another plea which
was raised and with which we are concerned in this appeal
was that the appellants-defendants were tenants in respect
of the front portion of the house and in case it was found
that the nature of the transaction was that of mortgage,
then, on redemption, the tenancy would stand revived and the
respondent-plaintiff would not be entitled to actual
possession of the front portion of the house.
The Trial Court decreed the suit on 3.5.1979 by holding
that the suit transactions were mortgages by conditional
sale and not sales with a condition to repurchase. A
preliminary decree for redemption on the respondent-
plaintiff depositing Rs. 5,200/- within six months from the
date of decree was, accordingly passed.
The appellants-defendants challanged the decree and
contended that they had become owners of the said property
by adverse possession; there was in any event a revival of
tenancy in respect of the front portion of the house and,
lastly, they were entitled to claim the value of the
improvements which had been made in the house while they
were in possession. The lower appellate court, however,
turned down all the contentions and dismissed the appeal.
Second appeal was filed before the Bombay High Court
wherein the aforesaid contentions were reiterated. While
dismissing the appeal, the High Court held that the
transactions in question were mortgages and that the right
of the appellants-defendants as lessee of the front portion
had merged in the right of the mortgage in possession and,
therefore, the tenancy rights did not survive when the
lesseee obtained possesory mortgage from the landlord. It
was, therefore, held that on redemption of the mortgage, the
appellants-defendants could not resist delivery of
possession in respect of the front portion of the house.
As the present appeal arises on the grant of special
leave against the aforesaid judgment of the High Court, the
leave so granted was confined only to the question of front
portion of the premises in question.
It was submitted by Mr. V.M. Tarkunde, learned Senior
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Counsel for the appellants-defendants than on the facts of
the present case, the Doctrine of Merger did not apply. He
submitted that the High Court was wrong in concluding that
by virtue of ratio of decision of this Court in the case of
Shah Mathuradas Maganlal & Co. Vs. Nagappa Shankarppa Malage
& Ors., (1976) 3 S.C.R. 789, the tenancy rights could not
survive when the lessee obtained possessory mortgage from
the landlord. Proceeding on the basis that the document in
question was a mortgage-deed, as held by the courts below,
Mr. Tarkunde, learned Senior Counsel contended that no
express or implied surrender of tenancy of the front portion
of the house could be inferred from the same and, as held in
Shah Mathuradas’s case (supra), there could be no automatic
merger of the lease and mortgage in respect of the same
property. He, therefore, submitted that with the redemption
of mortgage, the tenancy rights stood revived.
Mr. Raju Ramachandran, learned Counsel for the
respondent-plaintiff, while supporting the judgment of the
High Court very fairly submitted that he could not support
the theory of automatic merger when a tenanted premises is
mortgaged in favour of the lessee. He, however, submitted
that the three documents should be read together and in the
present case, there was a implied surrender of tenancy.
The determination of lease is provided by Section 111
of the Transfer of Property Act (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’). The Trial Court, the first Appellate Court as
well as the High Court were of the opinion that the lease
stood determined by virtue of the applicability of clause
(d) of Section 111 of the Act which provides that a lease of
immovable property is determined in case the interest of the
lessee and the lessor in the whole of the property becomes
vested at the same time in one person in the same right.
This proposition has been expressly repelled by this Court
in following cases.
In the case of Shah Mathuradas’s case (supra), the
appellant was a mortgagee in possession of the property by
virtue of a deed of mortgage. No interest was to be paid but
instead, possession of the property was agreed to remain
with the mortgagee. Though, the mortgage deed was dated
21.5.1953, the period for redeeming the mortgage was fixed
for ten years from 7.11.1953. The mortgagor issued a notice
after ten years to the effect that he was ready and willing
to redeem the mortgage. But, the appellant, inter alia,
claimed that even after redemption, he was entitled to
retain the possession because his previous tenancy right
subsisted. While the Trial Court held that the tenancy of
the appellant would revive on redemption of the mortgage,
the District Judge, on appeal, came to the conclusion that
under the mortgage deed, the appellant had ceased to be
tenant with effect from 7.11.1963 and, thereafter, he was in
possession only as a possessory mortgagee and not as a
tenant. The High Court dismissed the second appeal. The
question with regard to the revival of the tenancy was again
raised in this Court. Referring to clause (d) of Section 111
of the Act, it was observed as follows:
"For a merger to arise, it is
necessary that a lesser estate and a
higher estate should merge in one person
at one and the same time and in the same
right, and no interest in the property
should remain outside. In the case of a
lease the estate that is outstanding is
the equity of redemption of the
mortgagor. Therefore, there cannot be a
merger of lease and mortgage in respect
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of the same property since neither of
them is a higher or lesser estate than
the other."
On the facts of that case, however, this Court came to
the conclusion upholding the findings of High Court and
first Appellate Court that the mortgage deed showed that the
appellant had surrendered the tenancy from 7.11.1953 and,
therefore, the mortgagor was entitled to the dilivery of
possession of the property.
IN Sambangi Applaswamy Naidu & Ors. Vs. Behara
Venkataramanayya Patro and others, 1985 (1) SCR 651, while
following the ratio of decision in Shah Mathuradas’s case
(supra) to the effect that there could be no merger of lease
and a mortgage, even where the two transactions are in
respect of the same property, it was held that the question
whether upon redemption of usufructuary mortgage, a tenant
mortgagee could be directed to deliver actual or physical
possession of the mortgaged property would depend upon
whether there was an implied surrender of the lessee’s right
when the mortgage was executed in his favour by the lessor
mortgagor. In order to find an answer to this question, this
Court observed that the intention of the parties at the time
of execution of the mortgage deed in favour of the sitting
tenant had to be gathered ’from the terms and conditions of
the mortgage transaction in the light of the surrounding
circumstances of the case". After seeing the terms of the
terms of the mortgage deed and the other circumstances of
the case, it was concluded that the effect of the mortgage
deed in that case was that the lessee’s rights were kept in
abeyance and they revived upon the redemption of the
mortgage because there was no implied surrender of the
tenancy.
On examining the mortgage deed in Nand Lal Vs. Sukhdev,
1987 (Supl.) SCC 87, where there was an merger in favour of
the lessee, this Court after perusing the mortgage deed came
to the conclusion that there was nothing to warrant an
inference of relingushment of the rights of the tenants by
obtaining the mortgage deed. Similarly, in Nemi Chand Vs.
Onkar Lal, AIR 1991 SC 2046, this Court construed the
mortgage deed and concluded that there was no implied
surrender of the lease in favour of the landlord-mortgagor.
In the present case, the mortgage deed dated 16.4.1952
recited that in order to discharge the debts for the
construction of the house, the respondent-plaintiff had
received and had executed the conditional sale deed. It was
further stated in the said deed that:
"I have sold the said property by
this conditional sale-deed and delivered
possession thereof to you (the
purchaser). The period of this sale deed
is five years and thereafter I will get
released the said property for Rs.
2,000/- according to this deed. In the
event I fail to pay the said amount
within the said period, this sale-deed
shall be presumed and treated as
perpetual property and make vahiwat
thereof without interruption. That I
will remove the objection if any in
respect of the said property if taken
without sustaining any loss to you."
It is not in dispute that the second and the third
mortgage deeds were similarly worded.
It was submitted by Mr. Ramachandran, learned Counsel
that by stating that the mortgagor had "delivered possession
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thereof to you (the purchaser)" clearly showed that there
was an implied surrender of the tenancy. We find it
difficult to accept this submission. The mortgage deed makes
no mention with regard to the delivery of the possession of
the mortgagor in the event of his redeeming the mortgage.
Secondly, the principal amount which was taken by the
mortgagor was Rs. 2,000/- and the deed did not provide for
payment of interest and the property could be and was
redeemed on the re-payment of the principal amount of Rs.
2,000/- itself. With the execution of the mortgage deed, no
rent was paid for the front portion of the house and the
mortgagee did not charge any interest on the mortgaged
amount of Rs. 2.000/-. Redemption of the mortgage for paying
at the same amount of Rs. 2,000/- showed that the parties
had agreed that during the subsistence of the mortgage,
neither any rent would be payable nor interest would be
charged. Thirdly, it is difficult to imagine that the tenant
who had a valid tenancy since the year 1942, would agree to
surrender his tenancy right on the mortgage deed having
executed while being conscious of the fact that the
mortgagor had a right to redeem the mortgage. Lease of a
property is a very valuable right and it’s implied surrender
would not be readily inferred. Had the parties wanted to
terminate their earlier relationship of landlord and tenant
on the execution of a mortgage, then one would expect a
clear statement or an indication to that effect in the
document itself. Neither the conduct of the parties nor the
said document in the present case indicates that Vishnu
intended to surrender his tenancy rights. This being so, the
redemption of the mortgage would revive the tenancy of the
appellants-defendants.
Accordingly, we are of the opinion that the only effect
of the mortgage was that the lessee’s rights were kept in
abeyance and they stood revived upon the redemption of the
mortgage. We, therefore, allow the appeal, set-aside the
impugned judgments of the High Court and the courts below
and we hold that the respondent-plaintiff is not entitled to
delivery or physical possession of the front portion of the
house in question. There will be, however, no order as to
costs.