Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRAHM PARKASH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANBIR SINGH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/03/1963
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1607 1964 SCR (2) 324
ACT:
Mortgage-Marshalling-Purchaser also mortgagee of other
property of mortgagor-If disentitled to marshalling-Transfer
of Property Act, 1882 (4 of 1882) 8. 56.
HEADNOTE:
MS the owner of properties A, 13 and C created several
mortgages over them. The appellant was one of the mort-
gagees of properties A and B and MG was one of the
mortgagees of property C. Subsequently, the mortgagor sold
property B to MG. One of the mortgagees of properties A and
B filed a suit for recovery of the money due on the
mortgage. MG claimed that the mortgage debt should first be
satisfied out of property A not sold to him. This claim to
marshalling was allowed. The appellant contended that under
s. 56 of the Transfer of Property Act a purchaser who was
also a mortgagee marshalling and that marshalling should not
have been allowed in the present case as it was bound to
prejudice the appellant.
Held, that MG was entitled to marshalling. When s. 56
refers to a subsequent purchaser it does not exclude a pur-
chaser who has a mortgage over some other property of the
mortgagor not connected with the proceedings. Further, it
could not follow as a matter of law that marshalling must
necessarily prejudice a subsequent mortgagee. The question
of prejudice is purely one of fact and is intimately
connected with the value of the property against which the
mortgagee is directed to proceed in the first instance. The
appellant was not entitled to the benefit of the last
portion of s. 56 as he had not raised any plea as to the
value of the property showing that marshalling would
prejudice him.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil
Appeals Nos. 76 and 77 of 1961.
Appeals from the judgment and decree dated May 19, 1955, of
the Punjab High Court in Regular
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First Appeals Nos. 28, 12 and 13 of 1948 respectively.
Gopal Singh for R. S. Narula, for the appellant (in C. A.
No. 76 of 1961).
Achhru Ram and Naunit.Lal, for appellant No. I (in C. A.
Nos. 77 and 78 of 1961).
Bishan Narain and B. P. Maheshwari, for respondents Nos. 9
and 18 to 20 (in C. A. No, 77 of 1961).
1963. March 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AYYANGAR J.-These three appeals, which are before us on
certificates of fitness granted by the High Court of Punjab,
arise out of two suits for the recovery of amounts due on
mortgages executed by one Mohinder Singh who was a
contractor in Delhi. Mohinder Singh is now deceased and is
now represented in these proceedings by his widow and son.
Mohinder Singh owned as many as eight properties in Delhi
and over one or other of these he created successively 24
mortgages between September 1943 and July 1944 and also
executed a sale in respect of one item of these properties.
The contentions urged in these appeals arise out of
conflicts between the rights of some of these mortgagees
inter se, between some of them and the purchaser of one of
the properties. It is however unnecessary for the purpose
of deciding these points to set out the details of every one
of these several mortgages or their history.
Appeals 77 and 78 may first be considered, The facts
necessary to appreciate the sole point raised by Mr. Achhru
Ram, learned Counsel for the appellant-- Jagdish Chand are
these : The property con-
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cerned in the two appeals is plot No. 1, Pusa Road in Block
34 with a bungalow thereon. A mortgage for Rs. 10,000/- was
created over this and certain other properties (we are,
however not concerned with these other properties) in favour
of one Lajwanti by Mohinder Singh by a deed dated October
19,1943. A few days later-on November 7, 1943-another
mortgage was executed in her favour for Rs. 16,000/under
which the property No. 1, Pusa Road was given as security.
Passing over certain intermediate transactions not material
for the purposes of the present appeals, a mortgage was
created in favour of one Daulatram Narula inter alia on this
property on January 21, 1944 to secure a sum of Rs.
60,000/-. Two days later - on January 23, 1944-the
appellant, jagdish Chand, lent a sum of Rs. 10,000/- to
Mohinder Singh and had a mortgage executed on No. 1, Pusa
Road. Daultram Narula, the mortgagee under the deed dated
January 21, 1944 obtained two further mortgages over the
same. property and others on February 25, 1944 and March 14,
1944, the first for Rs. 9,500/- and the second for Rs.
10,000/-. It ought to be mentioned that the consideration
for several of the mortgages referred to earlier was in part
a payment in cash to the mortgagor and in part repayment in
part satisfaction of previous mortgages but this
circumstance not being of any relevance we are not setting
out the details of the consideration for the several
mortgages. Lastly, and this is the mortgage which is of
importance for the point raised in this appeal, on July 13,
1944, Mohinder Singh created in favour of Pandit Sham Sunder
an usufructuary mortgage for Rs. 1,25,000/- out of which Rs.
84,000/-was reserved with the mortgagee for payment to
Daulatram Narula the sum representing the principal and
interest due on his three mortgages. It is common ground
that on the date when the mortgage was registered Sham
Sunder carried out his obligation and discharged the
mortgages of Daulatram by paying him Rs. 84,000/-.
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The amount due to Lajwanti was not paid and she accordingly
brought a suit on June 14, 1945, in the Court of the Se
nior-Sub-judge, Delhi for the recovery of her mortgage money
which, after giving credit for the sums paid to her already
by several subsequent mortgagees, came to Rs. 11,657/5/4.
She impleaded as party defendants to the suit the several
subsequent mortgagees. including the appellant -jagdish
Chand as well as Daulatram and Sham Sunder’s legal
representatives as he himself was dead by that date. Just
like Lajwanti another mortgagee one Mukhamal--in whose
favour two mortgages, one dated February 1, 1944 and another
dated May 12, 1944 for Rs. 10,000/-and Rs. 9,000/-- res-
pectively, also filed a suit for the recovery of Rs.
15,302/- and odd. As in Lajwanti’s suit, the several
subsequent mortgagees including jagdish Chand, Daulatram and
the legal representatives of Pt. Sham Sunder were also
impleaded as defendants in this suit also.
In these two suits the genuineness of the several mortgages
was not seriouly disputed and the only point on which
contest was centred was as regards the respective rights of
the several mortgagees inter se. We are concerned in these
two appeals with the claim made by the legal representatives
of Sham Sunder that they were entitled by reason of their
discharging the mortgage-debt of Daultram to whom they had
paid Rs. 84,000/- out of the mortgage amount of Rs.
1,25,000/-to be subrogated to the rights and priorities of
Daulatram under the mortgage dated January 21, 1944 for Rs.
60,000/- as against the later mortgage of January 23, of
Jagdish Chand even though there was no agreement in writing
under which he stipulated for such a right. This contention
was raised both in the suit by Lajwanti as well as in
Mukhamal’s suit. It was contended on their behalf that
though the Transfer of Property Act did not in terms apply,
yet the equitable principle underlying its s. 92 viz., the
right
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of a secured creditor who had discharged a prior
encumbrancer to be subrogated to the rights and priorities
of the mortgagee who he had redeemd, could nevertheless be
invoked under s. 6 of the Punjab Laws Act. The learned
trial judge, however, while acceding to this in principle,
held on the basis of certain authorities to which he
referred that in the absence of a specific agreement
stipulating for subrogation the subsequent mortgagee was not
entitled to such an equity. On this ground the right of the
subrogation claimed by the legal representatives of Sham
Sunder was rejected. From the rejection of this claim in
the two suits Sham Sunder’s representatives preferred two
appeals to the High Court and the learned judges allowed the
appeal holding that it was not an essential condition for
claiming the right of subrogation that the creditor
redeeming the mortgage should have entered into an express
agreement to that effect. It is from this decision of the
High Court that these two appeals have been preferred.
Mr. Achhru Ram, learned Counsel for the appellant did not
dispute before us the correctness of the view expressed by
the learned judges of the High Court that in order to
entitle a creditor to claim a right of subrogation it was
not necessary that he should have entered into a written
agreement stipulating for such a right His submission,
however, was on the following lines : Accepting the Law, as
expounded by Sir Richard Couch in Gokuldass Gopaldass v. Ram
Bux Scochand (1), in the following terms :
"In India the art of conveyancing has been and
is of a very simple character. Their Lord-
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ships cannot find that a formal transfer of a
mortgage is ever made, or an intention to keep
it alive ever formally expressed............
The obvious question to ask in the interests
of
(1) (1884) L. R. 11 1. A. 126,133-134.
329
justice, equity, and good conscience, is, what
was the intention of the party paying off the
charge? He had a right to extinguish it and a
right to keep it alive. What was his
intention? If there is no express evidence of
it, what intention should be ascribed to him?
The ordinary rule is that a man having a right
to act in either of two ways;. shall be
assumed to have acted according to his
interest. In the familiar instance of a
tenant for life paying off a charge upon the
inheritance, he is assumed, in the absence of
evidence to the contrary, to have intended to
keep the charge alive. It cannot signify
whether the division of interests in the
property is by way of life estate and
remainder, or by way of successive charges.
In each case it may be for the advantage of
the owner of a partial interest to keep on
foot a charge upon the corpus which he has
paid."
as laying down the correct test for determining whether the
right of subrogation could be claimed or not, Mr. Achhru Ram
submitted that the law was that even where there was no
express agreement stipulating for subrogation, the law would
presume such a right on the ground that the payer intended
to act in a manner most advantageous to him, but that this
was only a rebuttable presumption which would be negatived
on positive proof from the conduct or statements of such a
creditor pointing to a contrary intention. In other words,
that there was nothing to prevent its being shown that the
creditor paying off the charge did not intend to preserve
the mortgage which he discharged so as to obtain the
priority which the discharged encumbrance enjoyed. He urged
that in the present case, on the terms of the documents to
which Sham Sunder was a party,, such an intention not to
keep alive the discharged encumbrance of Daulatram was
clearly made out. In this connection he drew to our
attention
330
first the terms of the mortgage executed in favour of Sham
Sunder on July 13, 1944, in which this Rs. 84,000/- left
with the mortgagee is referred to as being held by the
latter in trust for the payment of the previous en-
cumbrancer--Daulatram. Next, he referred us to the
endorsements of discharge on the mortgages of Daultram which
read as if the amount due had been paid by Sham Sunder on
behalf of the mortgagor--Mohinder. On this basis the
contention was urged that any intention to obtain the
benefit of suborgation was clearly negatived.
We do not propose to discuss the merits of this contention,
and it is not as if it is not capable of cogent refutation,
because we are satisfied that the appellant should not be
permitted to raise such an argument at this stage. In both
the suits the legal representatives of Sham Sunder filed
written statements in which they specifically stated that
the discharge of the encumbrances of Daulatram was under
circumstances in which they were entitled to claim the
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relief of subrogation. The question regarding the intention
with which a prior encumbrance is discharged, whether it is
with a view to obtain the priority of the mortgage paid off
or not, in circumstances like the present would be a
question of fact and would have to be answered on a
conspectus of the entire circumstances of the case. If the
appellant was disputing the plea of Sham Sauder’s re-
presentatives that the intention of Sham Sunder in
discharging Daulatram’s mortgages was to retain the benefit
of suborgation, it was for him to have raised it by proper
pleading when an issue would have been struck and evidence
led for and against such a contention. At the stage of the
trial the only objection raised to the claim for subrogation
was based on the absence of a written agreement which the
appellant contended was a requirement of the law which had
not been complied with. In one
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sense such plea would appear to assume that the intention of
the party paying off the mortgage was to obtain the benefit
of subrogation but that he had failed to comply with a
requirement of the law in having that intention embodied in
a document. This plea was accepted by the learned trial
judge and the claim for subrogation was disallowed but Sham
Sunder’s representatives filed an appeal to the High Court.
Again, at the stage of the appeal the only contention urged
before the learned judge was as regards this supposed
requirement of the law that there should be a written
agreement. When this plea was rejected it is obvious that
on the pleadings the right to subrogation should be held to
be established. The matter, however, does not stop here,
because even at the stage of appeal to this Court no point
was made that in the instant case the presumption in favour
of a person having acted to his interest and so entitled to
claim subrogation was displaced by clear evidence of the
party’s statements or conduct. Nor can even a trace of such
plea be found in the statement of case filed in these
appeals. We do not therefore consider it proper to permit
learned Counsel to urge any such ground before us.
This was the only point urged in these appeals which fail
and are dismissed with costs-one set payable to the
executors of the will of Pt. Sham Sunder.
Civil Appeal 76 of 1961.
This appeal arises out of the suit by Lajwanti already
referred to. The appellant is one Brahm Parkash in whose
favour Mohinder Singh executed a mortgage for Rs. 15,000/-
on May 2, 1944. The property mortgaged was plot No. 44 in
Block 17 A with the superstructure on it and plot No. 19 in
Block No. 5. Brahm Parkash was the twentieth defendant in
Lajwanti’s suit. Plot No. 14 of Block No. 13 was sold by
Mohinder to one Mukhamal Gokul Chand by deed dated April 28,
1944. It is
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the claim of this Mukhamal to marshalling that is the main
subject of controversy in this appeal. As we have stated
earlier Lajwanti’s mortgage dated October 19, 1943, for Rs.
10,000/- comprised of several properties including plot No.
14 which on April 28, 1944, had been sold to Mukhamal. Now
Mukhamal who had been impleaded as a subsequent transferee
in Lajwanti’s suit claimed that he was entitled to
marshalling on the principle to be found in s. 56 of the
Transfer of Property Act which runs as follows :
"56. If the owner of two or more properties
mortgages them to one person and then sells
one or more of the properties to another
person., the buyer is, in the absence of a
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contract to the contrary, entitled to have the
mortgage-debt satisfied out of the property or
properties not sold to him, so far as the same
will extend,
but not so as to prejudice the rights of the
mortgagee or persons claiming under him or of
any other person who has for consideration
acquired an interest in any of the
properties."
This claim was however disallowed by the trial Judge for
reasons to which it is not necessary to advert. Mukhamal
Gokul Chand filed an appeal to the High Court in which he
made the same prayer, The learned judges of the High Court
upheld Mukhamal’s contention that he was entitled to
marshalling and directed that Lajwanti should proceed first
against plot 44 and only for the deficiency, if any against
plot 14 which Mukhamal had purchased. ’It is the
correctness of this decision that is challenged by Brahm
Parkash in this appeal. Mukhamal Gokul Chand has not
entered appearance and the appeal has been heard ex parte.
Before dealing with the correctness of this direction as
regards marshalling it is necessary to mention one further
fact. Mukhamal’s appeal to the
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High Court-Appeal 28 of 1948 was filed out of time with a
petition for condonation of delay under s. 5 of the Indian
Limitation Act and the learned judges condoned the delay and
entertained the appeal. The legality and propriety of this
order condoning the delay is convassed before us by learned
Counsel for the appellant. The facts relevant for the
consideration of this point are briefly as follows : The
prelliminary decree of the trial judge from which the appeal
No. 28 of 1948 was filed was dated April 28,1947. An
application for the grant of certified copies was made
on October 16, 1947 and the copies were ready for delivery
on October 28, 1947. The appeal, however, was actually
filed only on March, 10, 1948-admittedly after the period of
limitation had expired. The application to the High Court
for condoning this delay was supported by an affidavit by
one Amar Nath. Before setting out the contents of this
affidavit it must be mentioned that the disturbed state of
the Punjab at the time of the partition was taken into
account by the legislature and by East Punjab Act 16 of 1947
the period from September 19, 1947, to November 15, 1947,
was directed to be excluded in computing limitation for any
purpose of the Limitation Act including S. 5, In the
affidavit in support of the application for the condonation
of the delay it was stated that the firm of Gokul Chand had
handed over the papers to their Munim on or about November
1, 1947, for filing an appeal but the Munim who was a Muslim
went away to Pakistan without handing over the certified
copies of the judgment to the parties and that the copies
were received from Pakistan on March 4, 1948, a few days
before the affidavit was sworn and that immediately after
the receipt of the papers the appeal was filed at Simla on
March 10, 1948. The learned Judges in dealing with this
application observed :
"In 1947-48 unprecedented events occurred in
Delhi with the result that in some cases the
334
whereabouts of close relations were not known
for months. In the present case not a
syllable is to be found on the record to show
that the affidavit of Amar Nath was untrue in
any particular. That being so, I have no
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doubt that there was sufficient cause for not
filing the appeal in time. In these circum-
stances I condone the delay in filing the
appeal-Regular 1st Appeal No. 28 of 1948."
Learned Counsel for the appellant submitted that the learned
judges had not required the petitioner for condonation to
explain each day’s delay, thus departing from the accepted
tests for condonation under s. 5 of the Limitation Act. We
are not, however, persuaded that the learned Judges were
either unmindful of the principles on which delay should be
excused or went wrong in the exercise of the discretion
which they undoubtedly possessed and that, in any event, we
do not consider that this is a fit case in which we should
interfere in appeal.
Coming now to the merits of the appeal, learned Counsel
strenuously urged that the learned judges of the High Court
had misapplied the principles underlying s. 56 of the
Transfer of Property Act in directing Lajwanti to proceed
first against the property not sold to Gokul Chand. In this
connection learned Counsel urged two points : (1) that on a
proper construction of s. 56 and the principle underlying it
the benefit of marshalling could not be claimed by a
purchaser who happened to be a mortgagee in respect of any
property belonging to the mortgagor. Learned Counsel
pointed out that Mukhamal Gokul Chand had a mortgage under a
deed dated February 9, 1944, over certain properties with
which the appellant is not concerned. We consider this
submission wholly without substance. When s. 56 refers to a
subsequent purchaser it does not obviously exclude ;a
purchaser who has
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some mortgage over property with which these proceedings are
not concerned. His mortgage rights over some other property
of the mortgagor is wholly irrelevant for considering his
rights gua purchaser of one of the properties to which
opening words of s. 56 apply. The construction contended
for, in our opinion, has only to be stated to be rejected.
(2) The other submission of learned Counsel was that the
learned judges failed to give effect to the last portion of
s. 56 under which marshalling is not to be permitted so as
to prejudice the rights inter alia of the mortgagees or
other persons claiming under him, i.e., under the original
mortgagor. Learned Counsel pointed out that the appellant
having proved his mortgage and the fact that it was
subsisting, the learned judges of the High Court ought to
have held that any direction as to marshalling must
necessarily prejudice him. We are unable to agree that this
follows as any matter of law. The question of prejudice is
purely one of facts which has to be pleaded and the
necessary facts and circumstances established. It is
obvious that the question of prejudice would be intimately
connected with the value of the property against which the-
mortgagee is directed to proceed in the first instance. If
even after paying off such a mortgage there is enough left
for payment over to the subsequent encumbrancer referred to
in the last portion of s. 56 it would be manifest that there
would be no question of prejudice. If therefore the
appellant desired to invoke the benefit of the last portion
of s. 56 he should have made some plea as to the value of
the property and shown how it would prejudice his rights as
a subsequent encumbrancer. He however made no such plea and
no evidence was led as to the value of the property. Even
at the stage of the appeal in the High Court the contention
that to allow marshalling in favour of the subsequent
purchaser-Mukhamal-would result in prejudice to him was
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admittedly
336
never put forward before the learned judges. As the point
is one not of pure law but springs from the factual
inadequacy of the property mortgaged to him to discharge his
debt it is too late for the appellant to raise such a plea
in this Court.
The appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
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