Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NAND KISHORE MEHRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUSHILA MEHRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/07/1995
BENCH:
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALA N. (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
AHMAD SAGHIR S. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2145 1995 SCC (4) 572
JT 1995 (5) 130 1995 SCALE (4)254
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
VENKATACHALA. J.
Whether the prohibition to file a suit or to take up a
defence in respect of a benami transaction imposed by
Section 4 of the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act,
1988- ‘the Act’ applies to a benami transaction of purchase
of property by a person in the name of his wife or unmarried
daughter, is the question requiring our answer in deciding
this appeal by special leave filed by the plaintiff in a
suit against an order of the Division Bench of the High
Court of Delhi allowing an appeal filed by the defendant
against an order in the suit made by a learned single judge
of the same court, refusing to reject the plaint under Order
- Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedudre, 1908 - ‘the Code’
as that barred by Section 4 of the Act.
A three judge Bench or this Court presided over by one
of us (kuldip Singh. J.) which dealt with the prohibition to
file a suit or to take up a defence in respect of a benami
transaction imposed by Section 4 of the Act in the case of
R. Rajagopal Reddy V. F. Chandrasekharan reported in 1995
(1) SCALE 692, has expressed its view that that prohibition
imposed by sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 applies
only to suits to be filed or defences to be taken, in
respect of property held benami, i.e., benami transactions,
after the coming into force of the Act and not to those
suits filed and defences taken in respect of such benami
transactions and pending final decision at the time of
coming into force of the Act as had been held earlier by a
Division Bench of this Court in Mithilesh Kumari & Anr. V.
Prem Behari Khare, 1989 (1) S.C.R. 621.
Section 4 of the Act which imposes prohibition in the
matter of filing of suits or taking of defences in respect
of property held benami i.e., covered by benami trarsections
reads, thus :
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"4. Prohibition of the right to recover property held
benami.--(1) No suit, claim or action to enforce any
right in respect of any property held benami against
the person in whose name the property is held or
against any other person shall lie by or on behalf of a
person claiming to be the real owner of such property.
(2) No defence based on any right in respect of any
property held benami, whether against the person in
whose name the property is held or against any other
person, shall be allowed in any suit, claim or action
by or on behalf of a person claiming to be the real
owner of such property.
(3) Nothing in this section shall apply-
(a) Where the person in whose name the property is held
is a coparcener in a Hindu undivided family and the
property is held is a copancener in Hindu undivided
family and the proerty is held for the benefit of the
coparceners in the family; or
(b) Where the person in whose name the property is held
is a trustee or other person standing in a fiduciary
capacity, and the property is held for the benefit of
another person for whom he is a trustee or towards whom
he stands in such capcity."
It was undisouted that a suit could be filed or a
defence could be taken up in respect of properties held
benami, i.e., covered by benami transactions if the
properties are held by persons covered by clauses (a) and
(b) of sub-section (3) of Section 4 since that sub-section
makes the provisions by sub-sections (1) and (2) thereof
inapplicable. But, the question is, a property if held
benami by a wife for her husband or by an unmarried daughter
for her father envisaged by sub-section (2) of Section 3 of
the Act even though is not the property covered by clauses
(a) or (b) of sub-section (3) of Section 4 could it be that
respecting which no suit can be filed or no defence can be
taken under sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 of the
Act. It is true that the benami transction as defined in
clause (a) of Section 2 of the Act since means -- any
transaction in which property is transferred to one person
for a consideration paid or provided by another person, any
purchase of property made by a person in the name of his
wife of unmarried daughter envisaged in sub-section (2) of
Section 3 of the Act, would be a "benami transaction". It is
also true that the same cannot be a benami transaction
envisaged by clauses (a) and (b) of sub-section (3) of
Section 4 of the Act falling outside the purview of sub-
sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 thereof. But, what was
argued before us by Shri Harish Salve for the plaintiff-
husband was, that the benami transaction by which a property
is purchased by a person in the name of his wife or
unmarried daughter by reason of the provision in sub-section
(2) of Section 3 of the Act not being a benami transaction
into which such person could not have entered under sub-
section (1) of Section 3 it must be regarded as that
respecting which prohibition imposed by sub-sections (1) and
(2) of Section 4 in the matter of filing of a suit thereto
op taking up a defence thereto would become inapplicable. It
was also argued by him that sub-sections (1) and (2) of
Section 5, if are inapplicable to benami transaction covered
by sub-section (2) of Section 3 of the Act, there could be
no good reason to make applicable the prohibition in sub-
sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 to a transaction taken
place before the coming into force of the Act. On the other
hand, it was vehemently argued for the defendant-wife that
non-applicability of sub-section (1) to the benami
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transactions covered by sub-section (2) of Section 3 being
intended merely to save the person purchasing the property
in the name of his wife or unmarried daughter from liability
for punishment under sub-section (3) of Section 3 and
acquisition of such property under Section 5 of the Act by
prescribed authority without payment of any amount, the non-
application of the prohibition in Section 4, cannot be
implied.
Since the provisions in Sections 3 and 5 could be of
assistance in a proper appreciation of the said arguments of
learned counsel, they are excerpted:
Section-3
"3. Prohibition of benami transactions.--(1) No person
shall enter into any benami transaction.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall apply to the
purchase of property by any person in the name of his
wife or unmarried daughter and it shall be presumed,
unless the contrary is proved, that the said property
had been purchased for the benefit of the wife or the
unmarried daughter.
(3) Whoever enters into any benami transaction shall be
punishable with imprisonment for a term which may
extend to three years or with fine or with both.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974), an offence under
this section shall be non-cognizable and bailable.
Section-5
"5. Property held benami liable to acquisition.--(1)
All properties held benami shall be subject to
acquisition by such authority, in such manner and after
following such procedure, as may be prescribed.
(2) For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared
that no amount shall be payable for the acquisition of
any property under sub-section (1)."
Sub-section (1) of Section 3, as seen, prohibits a
person from entering into any benami transaction. Sub-
section (3) of Section 3, as seen, makes a person who enters
into a benami transaction liable for punishment. Section 5
makes properties held benami liable for acquisition without
payment of any amount. But, when sub-section (2) of Section
3 permits a person to enter into a benami transaction of
purchase of property in the name of his wife or unmarried
daughter by declaring that the prohibition contained against
a person in entering into a benami transaction in sub-
section (1) of Section 3, does not apply to him, question of
punishing the person concerned in the transaction under sub-
section (3) thereof or the question of acquiring the
property concerned in the transaction under Section 5, can
never arise, as otherwise the exemption granted under
Section 3(2) would become redundant. What we have said of
the person and the property concerned in sub-section (2) of
Section 3 in relation to non-applicability of the provisions
of sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 in the matter of
filing of the suit or taking up the defence for the self
same reason. Further, we find it difficult to hold that a
person permitted to purchase a property in the name of his
wife or unmarried daughter under sub-section (2) of Section
3 notwithstanding the prohibition to enter into a benami
transaction contained in sub-section (1) of Section 3 cannot
enforce his rights arising therefrom, for to hold so would
amount to holding that the Statute which allows creation of
rights by a benami transaction also prohibits the
enforcement of such rights, a contradiction which can never
be attributed to a Statute. If that be so, there can be no
valid reason to deny to a person, enforcement of his rights
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validly acquired even in the cast by purchase of property in
the name of his wife or unmarried daughter, by making
applicable the prohibition contained in respect of filing of
suits or taking up of defences imposed in respect of benami
transactions in general by sub-sections (1) and (2) of
Section 4 of the Act. But, it has to be made clear that when
a suit is filed or defence is taken in respect of such
benami transaction involving purchase of property by any
person in the name of his wife or unmarried daughter, he
cannot succeed in such suit or defence unless he proves that
the property although purchased in the name of his wife or
unmarried daughter, the same had not been purchased for the
benefit of either the wife or the unmarried daughter, as the
case may be, because of the statutory presumption contained
in sub-section (2) of Section 3 that unless a contrary is
proved that the purchase of property by the person in the
name of his wife or his unmarried daughter, as the case may
be, was for her benefit.
Therefore, our answer to the question under
consideration is that neither the filing of a suit nor
taking of a defence in respect of either the present or past
benami transaction involving the purchase of property by a
person in the name of his wife or unmarried daughter is
prohibited under sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 4 of
the Act.
Coming to the facts of the case on hand, the plaintiff
had filed the suit in the High Court seeking relief in
respect of properties alleged to have been purchased benami
in the name of the defendant-his wife. 4 learned single
Judge rejected the application filed by the defendant in
that suit seeking rejection of the plaint on the ground that
the suit was barred under Section 4 of the Act. The order of
rejection of that application was appealed against by the
defendant in a First Appeal filed in the same court. A
Division Bench of the High Court reversed the order of the
learned Single Judge and granted the application of the
defendant made in the suit seeking rejection of the plaint.
It is that order which is now questioned by the plaintiff-
husband in this appeal. Since the plaintiff is the husband
who had the right to enter into a benami transaction in the
matter of purchase of property in the name of his wife or
unmarried daughter, as we have held earlier, he is entitled
to enforce his rights in the properties concerned if he can
succeed in showing that he had purchased them benami in the
name of his wife. But in view of the statutory presumption
incorporated in sub-section (2) of section 3 of the Act, he
can get relief sought in the suit only if he can prove that
the properties concerned had not been purchased for the
benefit of the wife, even if he succeeds in showing that the
consideration for the purchases of the properties had been
paid by him.
In the result, we allow this appeal, set aside the
order of the Division Bench of the High Court. Uphold the
order of the learned Single Judge rejecting the application
of the defendant-wife for rejection of the plaint, and remit
the suit to Delhi High Court for disposal according to law
and in the light of this judgment.