Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PADANATHIL RUAMINI AMMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
P.K. ABDULLA
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/01/1996
BENCH:
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
BENCH:
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
PUNCHHI, M.M.
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1204 JT 1996 (1) 381
1996 SCALE (1)359
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
The property in dispute originally belonged to one
Padanattil Chengottu Kunnath Tarwad. One Mohammed Haji filed
a suit being suit No. 397 of 1941 for recovery of possession
of some properties held by this Tarwad on tenancy rights. On
12th of September, 1942 an ex party decree was passed in the
suit in favour of Mohammed Haji for recovery of possession
of the lease-hold property and also for arrears of rent. The
ex party decree was executed. A number of items of
properties belonging to the Tarwad including the suit
properties were attached and sold in court auction held on
18.3.45 in execution proceedings. The suit property herein
(one acre and ten cents of agricultural land) was purchased
by the decree-holder Mohammed Haji in the court auction. The
delivery of the suit property was given to the decree-holder
auction purchaser on 12.3.1946 as per order on E.A. 389 of
1946.
After purchase the suit property was given on lease by
Mohammed Haji to one Raghavan Nair on 2.5.45. Raghavan Nair
in turn sold his rights in the suit property to one Avyapoan
who, in turn, sold his rights to one Raman Menon. Raman
Menon sold his rights in the said property on 3.10.1950 in
favour of the respondent, P.K. Abdulla.
One of the members of the Tarwad challenged the ex
party decree in OS No. 397 of 1941 by filing an application
under order IX, Rule 13 of the Civil Procedure Code. The
trial court declined to get aside the ex party decree. The
order of the trial court was reversed by the appellate
Court. Ultimately the High Court by its judgment and order
dated 29.1.1958 set aside the ex party decree.
After the ex party decree was set aside, proceedings by
way of restitution were started by the first defendant and
Karnavan of the Tarwod by filing E.P. 29 of 1959. All the
properties which had been taken possession of by Mohammed
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Haji in execution of the ex party decree and of which
restitution was sought were set out in a schedule in the
proceedings for restitution. Item No. 6 in E.P. 29 of 1959
was the suit property. E.P. 29 of 1959 had originally
contained a prayer for only symbolic re-delivery of the
properties which had been taken possession of in execution
by Mohammed Haji. But the application was subsequently
amended and actual delivery was asked for.
This restitution application was allowed and the
properties were re-delivered pursuant to these restitution
proceedings. Such re-delivery of the suit property is
evidenced by Exh. 82 dated 5.4.1966. Exhibits A25 and A27
are a report and account of the Amin who re-delivered
possession of the suit property to the Tarwad.
The respondent, P.K. Abdulla, thereupon filed suit
being OS 288 of 1966 contending that he was not evicted from
the suit property pursuant to the restitution proceeding and
there was no re-delivery of the suit property to the Tarwad.
He prayed for an injunction to restrain the defendant from
interfering with his possession of the property.
The trial court dismissed his suit holding that there
was a proper re-delivery of the property and the Tarwad got
back the property. In appeal the trial court’s judgment was
confirmed. A second appeal was filed by the respondent P.K.
Abdulla before the Kerala High Court. He also filed a
petition for amending the plaint to incorporate a prayer for
a declaration of his title and for recovery of possession of
the suit property. This prayer was granted and the judgment
and decree of the courts below was set aside and the matter
was remanded to the trial court permitting the respondent to
amend the plaint as indicated in the judgment and directing
the trial court to dispose of the suit in accordance with
law and in the light of the findings and observations in the
High Court’s judgment.
After remand the trial court found that the Tarwad had
obtained possession of the property pursuant to the
restitution proceedings. It also found that the respondent
who was the plaintiff there in had Established his title to
the suit property and his right to recover possession. It
accordingly decreed the suit allowing recovery of
possession. This finding was confirmed by the district court
and by the High Court. Hence the present appeal has come
before us.
The appellant before us is the successor-in-interest of
the Tarwad and its members who were the defendants in OS No.
397 of 1941. After the ex party decree in OS No.397 of 1941
was set aside the suit has been heard on merit and the
Munsif’s court by its judgment and order dated 26th
November, 1962 has dismissed the suit of Mohammed Haji for
eviction and recovery of possession but has decreed the suit
for arrears of rent and costs. It is, therefore, not in
dispute that the appellant as the successor-in-interest of
the original defendants in OS No.397 of 1941, is entitled to
restitution in so far as it is permissible in law, in
respect of the properties which were sold in execution of
the ex party decree which was set aside.
It is, however, contended by the respondent that he is
a lessee from the decree-holder auction purchaser. The
appellant cannot seek restitution of properties leased to
him by the decree-holder auction purchaser. The lease in his
favour is protected, he being a third party to the court
proceedings and the auction sale. This contention has been
upheld by the Kerala High Court and is challenged before us.
Now, under Section 144 of the Civil Procedure Code where and
insofar as a decree or an order is varied or reversed or is
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set aside, the court which passed the decree or order,
shall, on the application of any party entitled to any
benefit by way of restitution or otherwise, cause such
restitution to be made as will, so far as may be, place the
parties in the position which they would have occupied but
for such decree or order. For this purpose the court may
make such orders including orders for the refund of costs
and for the payment of interest, damages, compensation and
mense profits, which are properly consequential on such
variation, reversal, setting aside or modification of the
decree or order.
In the present case, as the ex party decree was set
aside, the judgment-debtor was entitled to seek restitution
of the property which had been sold in court auction in
execution of the ex party decree. There is no doubt that
when the decree-holder himself is the auction purchaser in a
court auction sale held in execution of a decree which is
subsequently set aside, restitution of the property can be
ordered in favour of the judgment-debtor. The decree-holder
auction purchaser is bound to return the property. It is
equally well settled that if at a court auction sale in
execution of a decree, the properties are purchased by a
bona fide purchaser who is a stranger to the court
proceedings, the sale in his favour is protected and he can
not be asked to restitute the property to the judgment-
debtor if the decree is set aside. The ratio behind this
distinction between a sale to a decree-holder and a sale to
a stranger is that the court, as a matter of policy, will
protect honest outside purchasers at sales held in the
execution of its decrees, although the sales may be
subsequently set aside, when such purchasers are not parties
to the suit. But for such protection, the properties which
are sold in court auctions would not fetch a proper price
and the decree-holder himself would suffer. The same
consideration does not apply when the decree-holder is
himself the purchaser and the decree in his favour is set
aside. He is a party to the litigation and is very much
aware of the vicissitudes of litigation and needs no
protection.
In the case of Binayak Swain v. Ramesh Chandra
Panigrahi and Anr. (AIR 1966 SC 948) this Court considered a
case where in execution of an ex party decree the property
of the judgment-debtor was purchased by the decree-holder.
The decree was set aside in appeal and the case remanded for
fresh disposal. This Court said that the judgment-debtor was
entitled to restitution even though ultimately after fresh
disposal a decree was passed in favour of the decree-holder.
It said that the principle of the doctrine of restitution is
that on the reversal of a decree the law imposes an
obligation on the party to the suit who received the benefit
of the erroneous decree to make restitution to the other
party for what he has lost. This obligation arises
automatically on the reversal or modification of the decree
and necessarily carries with it the right to restitution of
all that has been done under the erroneous decree; and the
court in making restitution is bound to restore the parties
so far as they can be restored to the same position they
were in at the time when the court by its erroneous action
had displaced them.
As far back as in 1888, however, a distinction was made
between sales to decree-holders and Sales to outsider
purchasers. In the case of Zain-UI-Abdin Khan v. Muhammad
Asghar Ali Khan and Ors. (1888 ILR [X] Allahabad 166), the
Privy Council held that there was a great distinction
between the decree-holders who come in and purchase under
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their own decree which is afterwards reversed on appeal and
the bona fide purchasers who come in and buy at the sale in
execution of a decree to which they are not parties and at a
time when the decree is a valid decree and when this order
for sale is a valid order. It held that the sales in favour
of bona fide purchasers who were not parties to the decree
at a time when the decree was valid would be protected. In
the case before the Privy Council there were three sets of
purchasers. Some of the defendants who had purchased were
the decree-holders. Some persons had purchased from decree-
holders or came under them, while others were merely
purchasers in execution and strangers to the decree upon
which the execution had issued. The Privy Council said that
the decree-holder purchasers as well as persons who came in
under them are in the same position and they have to be
classed under the head of decree-holders as against
strangers to the decree. The Privy Council was required to
consider only the case of strangers to the decree. But from
the judgment it is quite clear that it categorized the
decree-holder auction purchaser as well as those claiming
under such decree holder purchasers in the same category of
decree-holders. This category, therefore, would be liable to
render restitution.
In the case of Satis Chandra Ghose v. Rameswari Dasi
and Ors. (AIR 1915 Calcutta 363), the Calcutta High Court
relied upon these observations of the Privy Council and held
that the decree-holders and those who claim under decree-
holders will form one class as against strangers to the
decree who purchase in a court auction sale. The title of a
purchaser from one who has bought at the sale in execution
of his own decree is liable to be defeated when the decree
is subsequently set aside. The Calcutta High Court said,
"The court as a matter of policy has a tender regard for
honest purchasers at sales held in execution of its decrees
though the sales may be subsequently set aside, where those
purchasers are not parties to the suit and the decree has
not been passed without jurisdiction. But the same measure
of protection is not extended to purchasers who are
themselves the decree-holders; nor can the purchasers from
such decree-holders claim that the court owes them any
duty......" The policy which prompts the extension of
protection to the strangers who purchase at court auctions
is based on a need to ensure that proper price is fetched at
a court auction. This policy has no application to sales
outside the court. The purchasers from a decree-holder
auction purchaser have bought from one whose title is liable
to be defeated. The title acquired by the purchaser from the
decree-holder is similarly defeasible. The Court further
observed, "The defeasibility of a decree-holder’s title
where the decree is ex party is of such common occurrence
that the plea of a purchaser for value without notice hardly
applies".
The same view has been reaffirmed by the Calcutta High
Court in the case of Abdul Rahman v. Sarat Ali and Anr. (AIR
1916 Calcutta 710) where it has held that the assignee of a
decree-holder auction purchaser stands in no better position
than his assignor. The special protection afforded to a
stranger who purchases at an execution sale is not extended
to an assignee of the decree-holder auction purchaser.
The distinction between a stranger who purchases at an
auction sale and an assignee from a decree-holder purchaser
at an auction sale is quite clear. Persons who purchase at a
court auction who are strangers to the decree are afforded
protection by the court because they are not in any way
connected with the decree. Unless they are assured of title;
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the court auction would not fetch a good price and would be
detrimental to the decree-holder. The policy, therefore, is
to protect such purchasers. This policy cannot extend to
those outsiders who do not purchase at a court auction. When
outsiders purchase from a decree-holder who is a an auction
purchaser clearly their title is dependant upon the title of
decree-holder auction purchaser. It is a defeasible title
liable to be defeated if the decree is set aside. A person
who takes an assignment of the property from such a
purchaser is expected to be aware of the defeasibility of
the title of his assignor. He has not purchased the property
through the court at all. There is, therefore, no question
of the court extending any protection to him. The doctrine
of a bona fide purchaser for value also cannot extend to
such an outsider who derives his title through a decree-
holder auction purchaser. He is aware or is expected to be
aware of the nature of the title derived by his seller who
is a decree-holder auction purchaser.
The High Courts of Patna, Madras and Kerala, however,
appear to have taken a different view. They have equated an
assignee from a decree-holder auction purchaser with a
stranger auction purchaser on the basis that an assignee
from a decree-holder auction purchaser has to be considered
as a bona fide purchaser for value who should not be allowed
to suffer on account of the mistakes or irregularities
committed in a court of law. It is difficult to see how an
assignee from a decree-holder auction purchaser can be
equated with a bona fide purchaser for value without notice.
He is aware of the nature of the title of his seller or
assignor. He is also aware that the title of his assignor or
seller is subject to the doctrine of restitution if the
decree is ultimately set aside particularly in a case where
the decree is an ex party decree and there is a greater
possibility of such a decree being set aside. The reasons
which prompt the courts to protect strangers who purchase at
court auction sales also do not apply to assignees or
purchasers from a decree-holder auction purchaser. They
purchase outside the court system and cannot expect any
protection from the court. Their title is liable to be
defeated if the title of their seller or assignor is
defeated. The view, therefore, expressed by the Patna High
Court in the case of Gopi Lal and Anr. v. Jamuna Prasad and
Ors. (AIR 1954 Patna 36), the Madras High Court in S.
Chokalingam Asari v. N.S. Krishna Iyer and Ors. (AIR 1964
Madras 404), and the cases cited therein as also by the
Kerala High Court in the case of Parameswaran Pillai Kumara
Pillai and Ors. v. Chinna Lakshmi and Anr. (1970 Ker.L.J.
458) is not the correct view. The High Court, therefore, was
not right in protecting the lease created in favour of the
respondent by Mohd. Haji who was a decree-holder auction
purchaser at the sale in execution of the ex party decree
which was subsequently set aside.
The respondent, however, contends that although he was
evicted in restitution proceedings, he can nevertheless
maintain a suit on title because as a lessee he enjoyed
certain protection under the land reform legislation in
Kerala. The Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1964 was in operation
at the time when he was evicted on 5.4.1966. Since the suit
of the appellant was based on his title on the date when he
was evicted, we need to examine the land reform legislation
which applied to the tenants in 1966. It is, however, urged
by the respondent that in 1966 when he was evicted, his
rights under Section 43 of the Malabar Tenancy Act were
protected. Section 43 provides that a cultivating tenant
shall be entitled to continue on the holding although the
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rights of his immediate landlord or of any superior landlord
have been extinguished, whether by eviction or by redemption
of a mortgage or otherwise. This section envisages the
creation of a tenancy by the owner of the land. Thereafter,
although the rights of the landlord may be extinguished, the
tenant can continue. It does not envisage a situation where
the person creating the initial tenancy had only a
defeasible right to the land of another, not only to his own
knowledge but also to the knowledge of his "tenant". Such
persons are not protected under Section 43. This is also
clearly brought out by the Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1964
which replaced the Malabar Tenancy Act and was the law in
force at the relevant time. Under Section 2(57), a tenant is
defined to mean:
"2(57) any person who has paid or agreed
to pay rent or other consideration for
his being allowed to possess and enjoy
any land by a person entitled to lease
that land, and includes......
(j) A person who is deemed to be a
tenant under..........Section 7, Section
7A........."
This definition of a tenant clearly refers only to persons
who claim from a lessor who is entitled to lease the land. A
person who has obtained a lease from somebody who does not
have any title to the land will not be a tenant. The
respondent, however, placed reliance upon Section 7. This
section provides as follows:
"7: Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in section 52 or any
provision of the Transfer of Property
Act. 1882. or any other law, or in any
contract, custom, or usage, or in any
judgment, decree or order of court, any
person in occupation at the commencement
of the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment)
Act, 1969 of the land of another situate
in Malabar shall be deemed to be a
tenant if he or his predecessor-in-
interest was continuously in occupation
of such land honestly believing himself
to be a tenant for not less than two
years within a period of twelve years
immediately preceding the 11th day of
April of 1967."
This section applies only to those who are in occupation
believing themselves to be tenants. When a person obtains a
lease from a lessor whose title is defeasible to his
knowledge, he can not claim that he believed himself to be a
tenant. He will be a tenant only so long as the lessor has
title to the land. Once the lessor’s title is defeated the
tenants’ rights also disappear. Section 7 is not intended to
confer legal immunity to trespassers. A tenant under a
person not having title can not come under the protection of
this section nor can the phrase "bona fide believing himself
to be a tenant" save a person encroaching or trespassing on
another’s land. Reliance was sought to be placed on Section
7B of the Act which was introduced by amending Act 39 of
1969 with effect from 1.1.1970 under which protection is
orated to certain persons occupying lands under leases
granted by incompetent persons. This section, however, was
not on the statute book in 1966 and the respondent cannot
avail of it assuming that it grants him any protection.
In the premises, the respondent who lost possession as
a result of an order being passed in restitution application
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and was dispossessed pursuant to the order in the
restitution application cannot maintain a suit based on his
title since he had no title to the land. The High Court,
therefore, was not right in upholding the decree of the
trial court. The trial court found that the Tarwad had
obtained possession pursuant to the restitution application.
It, however, went on to hold that the respondent had
established his title and could recover the property. These
findings cannot be sustained in view of what we have said
above. The appeal, therefore, is allowed. The decree of the
trial court is set aside and the suit of the respondent is
dismissed with costs.