Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
RAJ NARAIN PANDEY & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SANT PRASAD TEWARI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/10/1972
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 291 1973 SCR (2) 835
1973 SCC (2) 35
CITATOR INFO :
F 1975 SC1069 (38)
F 1987 SC1986 (26)
R 1987 SC1996 (13)
RF 1991 SC1654 (33)
ACT:
U.P. Tenancy Act (17 of 1939) ss. 33, 44, 45, 82 and 180-
Scope of
Stare Decisis-Application by Supreme Court with respect to
decisions of High Court interpreting local Statutes.
In interpreting ss. 33, 44, 45, 82 and 180 of the U.P.
Tenancy Act, 1939, the High Court, in two Full Bench
decisions, namely Chassu v. Babu Ram [A.I.R. (31) 1944,
Allahabad 25] Mahabal Singh v. Ram Rai (A.I.R. (37) 1950
Allahabad 604), held :
HEADNOTE:
(1) That the usufructuary mortgage of an occupancy holding
by a tenant is void and not voidable; (2) that a mortgagor
after giving possession to the mortgagee cannot recover
possession of the-holding without paying the money which he
had taken from the mortgagee; (3) that a mortgagee of an
occupancy holding by remaining in possession for over 12
year does not extinguish the rights of the mortgagor to
redeem him and by such possession the mortgagee only
prescribes for mortgagee rights; (4) that it is open to the
mortgagor to seek possession of the holding by tendering the
consideration which. he had received and he may do so by a
redemption suit; (5) that the relationship which comes into
existence as a result of the mortgage of an occupancy
holding and its possession being transferred to the
mortgagee, is analogous to that of a mortgagor and mortgagee
and the action to recover possession is analogous to
redemption and (6) such a suit is maintainable suit in a
civil court.
In the present case, the occupancy tenant of the land in
dispute executed a mortgage deed in respect of the land in
favour of the appellants and put them in possession.
Respondents 1 to 6 were subsequently accepted as the
occupancy tenants by the landlords in place of the previous
occupancy tenant and have also been declared to be the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
Bhumidars of the land. Respondents 1 to 6 filed a suit for
possession of the land, after depositing the mortgage money
in court.
The suit was decreed in appeal, by the High Court, following
the earlier Full Bench decisions.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) in the matter of the interpretation of a local
statute, the view taken by the High Court over a number of
years should normally be adhered to and not disturbed. A
different view would not only introduce an element of
uncertainty and confusion, it would also have the effect of
unsettling transactions which might have been entered into
on the faith of those decisions. The doctrine of stare
decisis can be aptly invoked in such a situation by a
superior court riot strictly bound by the decision. [840 B-
E]
Brownsaa Haven Properties v. Poole Corpn. [1958] Ch. 574
(C.A.) referred to.
(2) The status of the appellants was analogous to that of
the mortgagees and the successor of the original mortgagor
would be entitled to
836
recover possession of the land on payment of the mortgage
money. As respondents 1 to 6 were the occupancy tenants of
the land and as they were declared to be the Bhumidars, they
had sufficient interest in the land, to institute the suit
under s.91 (a) of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. [841
A-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1308 of
1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
December 7, 1966 of the Allahabad High Court in Appeal No.
5252 of 1960.
C. B. Agarwal and K. P. Gupta, for the appellant.
G. N. Dikshit and S. K. Bisaria, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHANNA, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of Allahabad High Court whereby that Court re-
versed the decisions of the trial Court and the first
appellate court and awarded a decree for the possession of
the land in dispute in favour of the plaintiff-respondents
against the defendant-appellants. The appellants were
further held to be entitled to withdraw the mortgage amount
which had been deposited by the respondents.
On January 16, 1923 Ganga Prasad Rai, father of Lachhman
Singh plaintiff-respondent No. 7, executed a mortgage deed
in respect of land in dispute for Rs. 600 in favour of Ram
Cheej Pandey and put him in possession thereof as a
mortgagee. Ram Cheej Pandey, who was impleaded as defendant
No. 1 in the suit, is now dead and the appellants, who too
were impleaded as defendants, are his legal representatives.
Ganga Prasad Rai at the time of the mortgage was the
occupancy tenant of the land in dispute. On January 6, 1955
plaintiff-respondents No. 1 to 6 along with Lachhman Singh
plaintiff No. 7 filed the present suit for possession of the
land in dispute against Rain Cheej Pandey and others on the
allegation that Lachhman Singh had transferred all his
rights in the land with the consent and permission of the
Zamindar (the land-lord) in favour of plaintiffs to . It
was stated that, as a result of the said transfer,
plaintiffs 1 to 6 had become the occupancy tenants of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
land in dispute. The plaintiffs 1 to 6 also claimed to have
acquired Bhumidari rights of the land by depositing ten
times the- amount of the land revenue. According to the
plaintiffs, they had a right to redeem the land from the
mortgagee, but as the mortgagee was not prepared to give
back the land on receipt of the mortgage money, the plain-
tiffs were depositing the amount in court. It was also
added that plaintiff No. 7 had been joined as a co-plaintiff
with plaintiffs 1 to 6 to avoid any dispute. Rai Narain
Pandey, son of Ram Cheej
837
Pandey, as well as two minor sons of Raj Narain were
impleaded as defendants on the ground that the four
defendants were members of the joint Hindu family and, as
such, were in possession of the land in suit.
The suit was contested by Raj Narain Pandey. Raj Narain
Pandey admitted the mortgage alleged by the plaintiffs. It
was, however, averred that plaintiffs 1 to 6 had no right to
redeem the land. The plaintiffs suit was further stated to
be barred by limitation as, according to the written
statement, the defendants were in adverse possession of the
land for more than 12 years.
The trial court found that the plaintiffs suit was not
barred by time. The plaintiffs were, however, held to have
no right to sue. In the result, the suit was dismissed. On
appeal, learned Additional Civil Judge Ballia held that
plaintiffs 1 to 6 were not the successors of plaintiff No.
7. It was further observed that the defendants, after the
mortgage, had become trespassers in the land and the suit
against them was barred by time. When the matter was taken
up in second appeal before the High Court, the learned Judge
held that in 1946 plaintiffs 1 to 6 had acquired, as a
result of agreement with the Zamindar, the same rights which
had vested in plaintiff No. 7 before he surrendered those
rights. The learned Judge further referred to two Full
Bench decisions of Allahabad High Court, namely, Ghassu and
Anr. v. Babu Ram and Anr.(1) and Mahabal Singh and Anr. v.
Ram Raj and Ors. (2) and in the light of those decisions,
held that mortgagee of an occupancy holding by remaining in
possession for over 12 years did not extinguish the right of
the mortgagor to redeem him and by such possession the
mortgagee only prescribed for mortgagee rights. It was fur-
ther held that the plaintiffs were entitled to redeem the
mortgage and recover possession of the land and that the
suit of the plaintiffs was not barred by time. In the
result, the plantiffs appeal was accepted, the decisions of
the courts below were set aside, and a decree for possession
of the land in dispute was awarded in the plaintiffs favour.
The defendants were held entitled to withdraw the mortgage
amount already deposited by the plaintiffs.
Mr. Agarwal in appeal before us has submitted on behalf of
the defendant-appellants that plantiff-respondents 1 to 6
were not entitled to sue for possession of land on payment
of the mortgage’ money and that their suit was barred by
limitation. The above submissions have been controverted by
Mr. Dikshit on behalf of the plaintiff-respondents, and he
has canvassed for the correctness of the view taken by the
High Court.
Before dealing further with the matter, we may refer to some
of the statutory provisions which have been referred to by
Mr. Agarwal. Sub-section (1) of section 33 of the U.P.
Tenancy Act,
(1) A.I.R. (31) 1944 Allahabad 25.
(2) A.I.R. (37) 1950 Allahabad 604.
838
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
1939 (U.P. Act No. 17 of 1939) (hereinafter-referred to as
the Act of 1939) provides, inter alia, that the interest of
an occupancy tenant is not transferable, otherwise than in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. According to
sub-section (1) of section 44 of that Act, every transfer,
other than a sub-lease, made by a tenant in contravention of
the provisions of this Act, shall be void. Section 45 of
the above mentioned Act deals with the extinction of
tenancy, and according to clause (c) of the section, the
interest of a tenant shall be extinguished subject to the
provisions of sections 82 to 88 by surrender. Surrender by
a tenant is dealt with in section 62 of the Act. It is
provided in the section that a tenant not bound by lease or
other agreement for a fixed term to continue to occupy the
land,- may at the end of any agricultural year surrender his
holding, by sending a registered notice to his landholder
intimating his intention to do so and by giving up
possession thereof whether such holding is or is not sub-let
or mortgaged. Further conditions are also prescribed in
that section, but we are not concerned with them. Section
180 of the above mentioned Act provides for ejectment of
person occupying land without consent. According to this
section, a person taking or retaining possession of a plot
of land without the consent of the person en titled to admit
him to occupy such plot and otherwise than in accordance
with the provisions of the law for the time being in force,
shall be liable to ejectment under this section on the suit
of the person so entitled and also to pay damages which may
extend to four times the annual rental value calculated in
accordance with the sanctioned rates applicable to
hereditary tenants. The Fourth Schedule to the Act deals
with suits triable by Revenue Courts and prescribes the
period of limitation for such suits. Subclause (b) of
clause 2 of item No. 18 of Group B of the said Schedule
prescribes a period of two years for filing the suit under
section 180 of the Act "from the 1st July following the date
of the commencement of this Act, whichever is later".
Reference has also been made by Mr. Agarwal to the following
passage in the judgment of the High Court:
"At the same time, it is equally clear that
the rights acquired by plaintiffs No. 1 to 6
as a result of the contract of tenancy entered
into by the Zamindar in their favour in 1946
were the same rights which vested in the 7th
plaintiff before surrender and which had
passed on to the Zamindar by act of surrender
by the 7th plaintiff. At the time of the
settlement in 1946 the defendants were in
possession under a void usufructuary mortgage.
The surrender by the 7th plaintiff preceding
the aforesaid settlement could only be a
surrender of such Tights as the 7th plaintiff
still had at that time and, similarly, the
settlement in favour of plaintiffs Nos. 1 to
839
6 by the Zamindar could only be settlement of
those very rights. What, therefore, has to be
considered is what was the nature of the
rights which the 7th plaintiff Lachhman Singh
retained after executing the void mortgage in
1923 and putting the first defendant in pos-
session."
It is urged by Mr. Agarwal that though plaintiff No. 7
surrendered his occupancy rights in favour of the landlord,
the effect of that was not only the extinction of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
occupancy rights but also the extinction of the mortgage in
favour of the defendant-appellants. The possession of the
land in dispute by the defendant-appellants thereafter was
as trespassers. A suit against them, according to Mr.
Agarwal, should have been brought in the Revenue Court by
the plaintiff-respondents, in whose favour fresh occupancy
rights had been created by the land-lord, within two years
under section 180 read with item 18 of Fourth Schedule of
Act of 1939. As no suit was brought within the prescribed
time against defendant appellants and as they remained in
adverse possession of the land for a period of more than 12
years, the present suit brought by the plaintiff-
respondents, it is submitted, was barred by time.
We are unable to accede to the, above contention, because we
find that the matter is covered by two Full Bench decisions
of the Allahabad High Court. In a five-judge decision of
the Allahabad High Court in the case of Mahabal Singh and
Anr. v. Ram Rai and Ors. (supra), the court referred to the
decision of a three-judge bench of that court in the case of
Ghassu and Anr. v. Babu Ram and Anr. (supra) and found that
the following five propositions had been laid down in the
earlier case :
"(1) That the usufructuary mortgage of an
occupancy holding by a tenant is void and not
voidable.
(2) That a mortgagor after giving possession
to the mortgagee cannot recover possession of
the holding without paying the money which he
had taken from the mortgagee.
(3) That a mortgagee of an occupancy holding
by remaining in possession for over 12 years
does not extinguish the rights of the
mortgagor to redeem him and by such possession
the mortgagee only prescribes for mortgagee
rights.
(4) That it is open to the mortgagor to seek
possession of the holding by tendering the
consideration which he had received and he may
do so by a redemption suit.
840
(5) The relationship which comes into
existence as a result of the mortgage of an
occupancy holding and its possession being
transferred to the mortgagee, though not
strictly speaking that of a mortgagor and a
mortgagee, is analogous to that relationship,
and the action which is raised by the
mortgagor to recover possession of the holding
on payment of the money due to the mortgagee,
though not strictly in the nature of a
redemption, is analogous to a redemption
suit."
It was also observed that to take a contrary view from the
law laid down in those five propositions would have the
effect of unsettling the law established for a number of
years. Mr. Agarwal has not questioned the correctness of
the above mentioned five propositions and, in our opinion,
rightly so. In the matter of the interpretation of a local
statute, the view taken by the High Court over a number of
years should normally be adhered to and not disturb-Id. A
different view would not only introduce an element of
uncertainty and confusion, it would also have the effect of
unsettling transactions which might have been entered into
on the faith of those decisions. The doctrine of stare
decisis can be aptly invoked in such a situation. As
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
observed by Lord Evershed M.R. in the case of Brownsea Haven
Properties v. Poole Corpn.(1), there is well-established
authority for the view that a decision of long standing on
the basis of which many persons will in the course of time
have arranged their affairs should not lightly be disturbed
by a superior court not strictly bound itself by the
decision.
In the light of the above mentioned Full Bench decisions, it
cannot, be disputed that the status of the defendant-
appellants was analogous to that of mortgagees. It also
cannot be disputed that the successor of the original
mortgagor would be entitled to recover possession of the
mortgaged land from the defendant-appellants on payment of
the mortgage money. Mr. Agarwal, however, submits that
plaintiff-respondents 1 to 6 are not the successors of
Laclihman Singh plaintiff No. 7. It is urged that after the
surrender of the occupancy rights by Lachhman Singh, the
plaintiff-respondents cannot ask for redemption of the
mortgage created by Lachhman Singh. This contention, in our
opinion, is not well founded. The copy of the compromise
decree dated January 4, 1946/February 2, 1945 has been
placed on record, and it would appear therefrom that in a
suit brought: by the plaintiff-respondents 1 to 6 against
the landlords and Lachhman Singh (who was described in that
suit as Lachhman Rai), the plaintiffs 1 to 6 were accepted
to be occupancy tenants of the land in dispute. The
(1) [1958] Ch. 574 (C.A.)
841
effect of that decree was that while the occupancy, rights
of Lachhman Singh came to an end, those of plaintiff-
respondents 1 to 6 came into existence at the same time. As
plaintiff-respondents 1 to 6 became the occupancy tenants of
the land in dispute, they were, in our opinion, entitled to
redeem the land from the mortgagees. The material on record
also indicates that plaintiff-respondents 1 to 6 have been
declared to be the Bhumidars of the land in dispute. Sanad
dated October 5, 1949 declaring them to be Bhumidars of the
land was issued on October 5, 1949. As plaintiff
respondents 1 to 6 were the occupancy tenants of the land in
dispute and as they were declared to be Bhumidars, they had,
in our opinion, sufficient interest in the land as clothed
them with the right to redeem it from the mortgagees.
Clause (a) of section 91 of the Transfer of Property Act
provides, inter alia, that any person (other than the
mortgagee of the interest sought to be redeemed) who has any
interest in, or charge upon the property mortgaged or in or
upon the right to redeem the same, may institute a suit for
redemption of the mortgaged property. The case of the
plaintiffs, who were the occupancy tenants and Bhumidars of
the land in dispute, is clearly covered by clause (a) of
section 91 of the Transfer of Property Act. The fact that
the present suit has been filed not by the occupancy tenant
who mortgaged the property but by others in whom the
occupancy rights were subsequently vested would, in our
opinion, make no difference and would be no bar to the
maintainability of the suit. It is significant in this
context to observe that plaintiffs 1 to 6 became the
occupancy tenants of the same land of which Lachhman Singh’s
father was the occupancy tenant at the time of the mortgage.
It has also been argued by Mr. Agarwal that the suit for
possession brought by the plaintiff-respondents was not
maintainable in a civil court and could only be tried by a
revenue court. Apart from the fact that no such plea was
taken in the written statement or in the trial court or the
first appellate court, we find that the five-judge bench of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
the Allahabad High Court in the case of Mahabal Singh and
Anr. (supra) has held that such a suit is maintainable in a
civil court. We see no cogent ground to disturb that view.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
842