Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C. F. ANGADI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
Y. S. MRANNAYYA
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/11/1971
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BENCH:
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 239 1972 SCR (2) 515
1972 SCC (1) 191
ACT:
Compromise decree-Party to decree given time to do an act
within a specified period or by a specified day-Party
failing to do it on the ground of impossibility of
performance on the last day specified-Principles to be
applied-Compromise decree, construction of according to law-
Does not amount to varying of decree-Decree though in the
nature of contract, different consideration apply when
embodied in Judge’s order.
HEADNOTE:
Under a compromise decree the respondent plaintiff agreed to
deposit in court the sale amount by January 1, 1960.
December 31, 1959 and January 1, 1960 were holidays. The
respondent made the deposit on January 2, 1960 and sought to
enforce his right under the decree compelling the appellant
defendant to execute the conveyance. The appellant filed
execution for cost on the basis that the suit stood
dismissed as per the provision in the compromise decree on
the failure of the respondent lo deposit the amount by
January 1, 1960., The Court held that the respondent had
made the deposit in substantial compliance with the decree.
appeals against this order were also dismissed. In appeals
to this Court it was contended (i) where a party had to
perform an act within a certain of by a certain date, the
law would not take notice of the circumstance that the act
became incapable of performance by reason of circumstances
beyond his control on the last day of the period; (ii) the
executing court had no right to alter or modify the terms of
the decree and hold that the deposit made on January 2, 1960
had to be deemed to be a deposit made on January 1, 1960 and
(iii) a compromise decree was a contract notwithstanding the
fact that an order of court was superadded to it and a
provision in a contract that an act had to be done within a
certain period or by a particular day by a party was
absolute dismissing the appeal.
HELD : (i) The respondent had the right or the liberty to
deposit the amount in court till and including January 1,
1960. That being so, the fact that be did not choose to
make the deposit earlier would not affect his right or
liberty to deposit the amount in court on January 1, 1960.
[518 F-G]
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Halsbury vol. 37 3rd Edn. p. 96; Fateh Khan v. Chhajju &
Ors., A.I.R. 1931 Lah. 386, referred to.
It is a generally recognised principle of law that parties
who are prevented from doing a thing in court on particular
day, not by an act of their own, but by the court itself,
are entitled to do it at the first subsequent opportunity.
[520 G]
Halsbury Vol. 37, 3rd Ed. p. 97, para 172, Muhammad Jan v.
Shiam Lal; I.L.R. XLVI All. 328 (1924); Shooshee Bushan
Rtidro v. Gobind Chander Roy, I.L.R. Cal. Vol. XVIII
(1891) 231, Sambasiva Chari v. Ramasaini Reddi, I.L.R. 22
Mad. (1899) 179 and Mayor v. Harding, [1867] 2 Q.B. 410,
referred to.
The present case is concerned with a decree which
specifically provided that the respondent should deposit the
amount in court. He had, therefore, no option to pay the
same to the appellant [520 C-D]
Kunj Bihari v. Bitndeshri Prasad, I.L.R. vol. 51, 1929, All.
527, Roshan Lal v. Ganpat Lal. A.I.R. 1938 All., Indal v.
Chaudhary
516
Ram Nidh, A.I.R. 33 [1946] oudh. 156 and Rain Kinkar Singh
V. Smt. Kamal Basini Devi, A.I.R. 1938 Pat. 451,
distinguished.
Chatlapali Suryaprakasa Rao v. Polisetti Venkataratnam,
A.I.R. 1938 Mad. 523, referred to.
(ii)The executing court has the right to construe the
decree in the light of the applicable provisions of law, If
in this case, on such a construction. the court found that
the deposit made by the respondent on January 2, 1960, was
according to law a deposit in compliance with the terms of
the decree, then, the executing court was not varying the
terms of the decree but executing the decree as it stood.
[522 E]
(iii)Although a contract is not the less a contract
because it is embodied in a Judge’s order, it is something
more than a contract. Different considerations would apply
when a contract is embodied in a Judge’-.; order [523 C]
Wentworth v. Bullen, E.L.R. 141 769, Charles Hubert Kinch v.
Fdward Keith Walcott, A.I.R. 1929 Journal & P.C. 289, Govind
waman v.. Murlidhar Shrinivas, A.I.R. 1953 Bom, 412 and
Morris v. Barret, E.I.R. 141, 768, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 174
and 175 of 1967.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
June 16, 1966 of the Mysore High Court in Ex. Regular
Appeals Nos. 33-34 of 1961.
V.S. Desai, Naunit Lal and Swaranjit Sodhi, for the
appellant (in both the appeals).
D.V. Patel, O. P. Malhotra, P. C. Bhartari, for the
respondent (in both the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Mathew, J. These two appeals, by special leave, are from the
common judgment passed by High Court of Mysore on 16-6-1966
confirming the order of the District Court, Bangalore,
allowing an application for execution of the compromise
decree passed on 24-6-1959 in appeal from the decree in O.S.
85 of 1949-50 of that court.
The appellant was the defendant in the suit and the respon-
dent the plaintiff. As matter in controversy between the
parties in the appeal turns upon the construction of the
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compromise decree, it is necessary to set out its terms :
(i) The defendant agrees to receive from the
plaintiff a lakh of rupees paid as
consideration for the sale of the property No.
44, Mahatma Gandhi Road, Bangalore, together
with stamp charges of Rs. 3,300/- (rupees
three thousand
517
and three hundred only) with interest at six
per cent per annum of the above two sums from
16-3-1947 up-to-date together with Rs. 7,000/-
(rupees seven thousand only) deducted by the
Corporation minus the rent received viz., Rs.
22,500/- (rupees twenty two thousand and five
hundred only) and give up all rights to the
said property. The plaintiff will be entitled
to the materials lying on the premises.
(ii)The period of time fixed for the payment
by the plaintiff to the defendant of this
amount stated above is till 1-1-1960.
(iii)The plaintiff agrees to deposit the
amount in court for payment to the defendant.
(iv)On failure of the plaintiff to deposit
the amount in court by 1-1-1960 his suit now
in appeal will be dismissed with costs
throughout.
(v) It is agreed by the parties that time is
the essence of the contract and no further
extension of time would be allowed and the
dismissal of the suit with costs would be
automatic.
The respondent applied for challan on 22-12-1959 to deposit
the amount and a challan was issued to him on 24-12-1959,
the last working day before the court closed for Christmas
holidays. December 31, 1959 and January 1, 1960, were
holidays. Neither the lower courts nor the banks were open
on these days. The respondent made the deposit on 2-1-1960
and sought to enforce his right under the decree by
compelling the appellant to execute the conveyance in terms
of the compromise decree by filing execution case
No.25/1960. The appellant also filed execution case No. 45
of 1960 for cost on the basis that the suit stood dismissed
as per the provision in the decree on the failure of the
respondent to deposit the amount by 1-1-1960, These two
petitions were heard together, and the court passed an order
holding that the respondent had made the deposit in
substantial compliance with the decree and allowing
execution case No. 25 of 1960 and dismissing execution case
No. 45 of 1960. Against this order, the appellant filed
appeals 33 and 34 of 1960 before the High Court of Mysore.
A Division Bench of the High Court, by its judgment dated
16-6-1966, dismissed the appeals with costs.
The short question for consideration in these appeals is
whether the deposit made by the respondent on 2-1-1960 was
within the time specified in the compromise decree and would
518
enable him to compel the appellant to execute the sale deed
in accordance with the provisions of the compromise decree.
It was argued on behalf of the appellant that the respondent
had practically six month’s time to deposit the amount, that
he should not have waited for the last day of the period
allowed to him by the decree to deposit the amount and if he
was not diligent to deposit the amount earlier, he must
suffer the consequences if the court happened to be closed
on the last. day on which he should have made the deposit.
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Counsel said that there is a distinction between a case
where under a decree an act has to be performed by a party
on a day certain and a ease where the party has the liberty
to perform the act within a certain time a certain day-.
that in the former case, if the act cannot be pet-formed by
reason of circumstances beyond his control, he will be
relieved against the consequences of his default by reason
of the maxim Lexnon cogit ad impossibility (the law does not
cornpel a man to do that which he cannot possibly perform)
if he performs the act at the next available opportunity,
but where he has to per-form an act within a certain period
or by a certain date, as in this case, the law will not take
notice of the circumstance that the act became incapable of
performance by reason of circumstances beyond his control on
the last day of the period. Whether there is any logical or
reasonable basis for making the distinction, we clear that
in this case the respondent had the right or, perhaps, more
accurately, the liberty to deposit the amount in court till
and including 1-1-196O. In Halsbury’s Laws of England vol.
37, 3rd Edition, page 96, :it is observed
"Subject to certain exceptions, the general
rule is that, when an ,let may be done or a
benefit enjoyed benefit enjoyed upto the last
moment of the last of that period."
if the respondent had the right or liberty to deposit the
amount III court on 1-1-1960 under the compromise decree the
fact that he did not choose ’Lo make the deposit earlier
would not affect his right or liberty to deposit the amount
in court on 1-1-1960. In Fateh Khan and another v. Chhajju
and others(1), an argument similar to the one addressed by
counsel for the appellant was advanced but was not
countenanced by the court. That was a case where a pre-
emptor was unable to deposit the purchase money in court on
the last day of the period allowed by the decree; the period
expired when the court was closed for the vacation and he
deposited the amount on the reopening day. It was argued
that the decree allowed the preemptor a period of time
within which to deposit the amount, that he could have
deposited
(1) A.I.R. 1931 Lahore 386.
519
the amount earlier, that he should not have waited till the
last day of the period and that if the last day happened to
be a holiday, he can take no advantage of that circumstance.
The court repelled the argument by saying that if the
argument is accepted it will have the effect of curtailing
the days allowed to him by the decree without any reason.
It was next contended for the appellant that it was open to
the respondent to pay the amount to the appellant either on
December 31, 1959, or January 1, 1960, and that he should
not have waited till the 2nd to deposit the amount in court.
Counsel submitted that under Order XXI Rule 1, the
respondent could have paid the amount to the appellant on
January 1, 1960, or earlier, that he should not have waited
till the 2nd to deposit the amount in court and if the last
day of the period happened to be a day on which the court
was closed, that is not a circumstance which would relieve
the respondent from his obligation to pay the amount within
the time specified. In support of this argument counsel
referred to Kunj Bihari and others v. Bindeshri Prasad and
others(1), Roshan Lal v. Ganpat Lal (2), Indal v. Chaudhary
Ram Nidh(3), and Ram Kinkar Singh and another v. Smt. Kamal
Basini Devi(4), Kunj Behari and others v. Bindeshri Prasad
and others(1) was a case where an installment decree
provided that the first installment was payable on a certain
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date; the date specified expired during the vacation of the
court and the amount was deposited in court on the re-
opening day. It was held that the judgment debtors had the
power to make the payment direct to the decree holder, that
depositing in court was not the only course open to them and
so they could not take advantage of the fact that the court
was closed on the specified date and the payment made by
them was not made in time. The other cases cited are to
the, same effect. The Principle underlying these decisions
is that when the judgment debtor has the option to pay the
decree amount to the decree holder or to deposit it in
court, he cannot choose one of them and act in a manner so
as to prejudice the rights of the other party. Although
under Order XXI, Rule 1. it is open to a judgment debtor to
pay the amount direct to the decree holder or to deposit in
court, he cannot choose the alternative when that will
prejudice the decree holder.
Even here there is a conflict of opinion among the High
Courts. In Chatlapali Suryaprakasa Rao v. Polisetti
Venkataratnam and others(5), the compromise decree there in
question provided that the decretal amount should be paid in
certain yearly
(1) I.L.R. Vol. 51, 1929 Allahabad 527.
(2) A.I,R, 1938 Allahabad 199
(3) A.I.R. (33) 1946 Oudh 156.
(4) A.I.R. 1938 Patna 451.
(5) A.I.R. 1938 Madras 523.
520
instalment on certain fixed date in each year. The decree
further provided that in case of default of two successive
instalments the whole amount would be recovered. The decree
however did not provide to whom the money was to be paid.
The judgment debtor failed to pay the first instalment. On
a day previous to that on which the second instalment was
due he obtained a challan. The day on which the instalment
was due being a holiday, he paid the instalment next day in
the Bank. It was held by the Madras High Court that the
judgment debtor did not commit default in payment of the
second instalment and consequently there was no default of
two successive instalments. This is also the view that was
taken in Premchand Bhikabhai v. Ramdeo Sukdeo Marwadi(1).
It is not necessary to resolve the conflict of opinion on
this aspect; as we are concerned with a decree which
specifically provided that the respondent should deposit the
amount in court. He had, therefore, no option to pay the
same to the appellant and the appellant, perhaps, would have
been within his right if he refused a tender of the amount
to him. Ile parties, for obvious reasons, agreed that the
amount should be deposited in court and that was made a rule
of the court and, therefore, the principle of the decision
in Kunj Behari and others v. Bindeshri Prasad and others and
the other cases cannot be applied here.
The question then arises as to what is the principle which
should be applied in a case where a party to a consent
decree is given time to do an act within a specified day or
by a specified (lay and fails to do it on the ground of
impossibility of performance on the last day specified but
does it on the next practicable day. This question arose
for consideration in Muhammad Jan v. Chiam Lal(2). There a
decree in a pre-emption suit gave the plaintiff a period of
one month within which to deposit the purchase money in
order to obtain the benefit of the decree in his favour, and
the period expired on a date on which the court Was closed
for the vacation and the plaintiff made the deposit on the
day on which the court re-opened. Piggott, Lindsay and
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Sulaiman, JJ. held that the deposit was in time under the
terms of the decree. They said that there is a generally
recognised principle of law under which parties who are
prevented from doing a thing in court on a particular day,
not by an act of their own but by the court itself, are
entitled to do it at the first subsequent opportunity. The
court quoted with approval the decision in Shooshee Bhusan
Rudro and another v. Gobind Chunder Roy(3) where it was
observed that the broad principle is that although the
parties themselves cannot extend the time for doing an act
in court, yet
(1) A.I.R. (36) 1949 Nagpur 141.
(2) I.L.R. Allahabad Series, Vol. XLVI, 1924, p. 328.
(3) I.L.R. Calcutta, Vol. XVIII (1891) p. 231.
521
If the delay is caused not by any act of their own, but by
some act of the court itself-such as the fact of the court
being closed-they are entitled to do the act on the first
opening day. In Satnbasiva Chari v. Ramasami Reddi(1), the
Madras High Court held that there is a generally recognised
principle of law under which parties who are prevented from
doing a thing in court on a particular day, not by any act
of their own, but by the court itself, are entitled to do it
at the first subsequent opportunity. We have already
referred to Fateh Khan and another v. Chhajju and others
where the Lahore High Court applied this principle to a pre-
emption decree. Mayor v. Harding(2) is a case in point. In
that case the appellant had applied to justices to state a
case under the Summary Jurisdiction Act, 1857. He received
the case from them on Good Friday, and transmitted it to the
proper court on the following Wednesday. It was held that
he had complied sufficiently with the requirement of the Act
directing him to transmit the case within three days after
receiving it, as it was impossible for him to transmit the
case earlier than he did because of the closure of the
offices of the court from Friday till Wednesday. Mellor,
J., dealt with the matter as follows :
"Here it was impossible for the appellant to
lodge his case within three days after he
received it. As regards the conduct of the
parties themselves, it is a condition
precedent. But this term is sometimes used
rather loosely. I think it cannot be
considered strictly a condition precedent
where it is impossible of performance in
consequence of the offices of the court being
closed, and there being no one to receive the
case. The appellant lodge the
case on
Wednesday, that is, he did all that it was
practicable for him to do."
In Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol. 37, 3rd
Edition, page 97, para 172, it is observed :
"172. The fact that the last day of a
prescribed period is a Sunday or other non-
juridical day does not as a general rule give
the person who is called upon to Act an extra
day; it is no excuse for his omission to do
the act on some prior day.
This general rule does not hold good where the
effect of it would be +Lo render performance
of the act impossible. This would be the case
if the whole of the prescribed period
consisted of holidays, in Which case the act
may lawfully be done on the next possible day.
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(1) I.L.R. 22 Madras (1899) p. 179
(2) [1867] 2 Q.B. 410.
522
Again the general rule does not hold good
where the last day is a Sunday and the act be
done is one the performance of which on a
Sunday is prohibited by the Sunday Observance
Act, 1677, or where the act has to be done,
not by the party only, but by the court or by
the party in conjunction with the court. In
such cases the act may, when the last day
limited for the performance of it happens to
be a day when the court or its office is
closed, be done on the next practicable day."
We think that the second exception to the general rule
stated in the passage and in effect followed in the rulings
cited above must apply to the facts here.
But counsel for the appellant argued that the compromise
decree provided that on default of the respondent to deposit
the amount in court on 1-1-1960, there was to be an
automatic dismissal of the suit by virtue of clause (v)
thereof and the execution court had no right to alter or
modify the terms of the decree and hold that the deposit
made on 2-1-1960 shall be deemed to be a deposit made on
1-1-1960, and order the execution of the decree on that
basis.
A court executing the decree shall execute it as it stands.
It cannot modify or vary the terms of the decree. No
exception can be taken to that general principle. But the
execution court has the right to construe a decree in the
light of the applicable provisions of law and if in this
case on a construction of the decree in the light of the
applicable provision of law, it found that the deposit made
by the respondent on 2-1-1960 was according to law a deposit
in compliance with the terms of the decree, then the
execution court was not varying the terms of the decree but
executing the decree as it stood after considering the
effect of the deposit in the light of the relevant law.
Counsel then contended that a compromise decree is none the
less a contract, notwithstanding the fact that an order of
court is super-added to it and, a provision in a contract
that an act shall be done within a certain period or by a
particular day by a party is absolute. In other words
counsel said that duties are either imposed by law or
undertaken by contract and the ordinary rule of law is that
when the law creates a duty and a party is disabled from
performing it without any default of his own, the law
excuses him, but when a party by his own contract imposes a
duty upon himself, he is bound to make it good not-
withstanding any accident by inevitable necessity . Counsel
in this connection referred to the passage in Halsbury’s
Law,-, of England Volume XIV, page 622, para 151, which
reads as under
523
" 1151. Where under a contract, conveyance,
or will a beneficial right is to arise upon
the performance by the beneficiary of some act
in a stated manner, or a stated time, the act
must be performed accordingly in order to
obtain the enjoyment of the right, and in the
absence of fraud, accident or surprise, equity
will not ,relieve against a breach of the
terms".
Although a contract is not the less a contract because it is
embodied in a judge’s order, or, as said by Parke J. in Went
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worth v. Bullen(1) B. & C. 840, 850 "the contract of the
parties is not the less a contract, and subject to the
incidents of a contract. because there is super-added the
command of a judge". still we think it is something more
than a contract.
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Charles
Hubert Kinch v. Edward Keith Walcott and others (2) observed
"’An order by consent, not discharged by
mutual agreement and remaining unreduced is as
effective as an order of the court made
otherwise than by consent and not discharged
on appeal. A party bound by a consent order
must when once it has been completed, obey it,
unless and until he can get it set aside in
proceedings duly constituted for the purpose.
The only difference in this respect between an
order made by consent and one not so made is
that the first stands unless and until it is
discharged by mutual agreement or is s
et aside
by another order of the court : the second
stands unless and until it is discharged on
appeal."
In Govind Waman v. Murlidhar Shrinivas and others(3), the
Bombay High Court held that a consent decree passed by a
court of competent jurisdiction cannot be treated on the
same footing as a contract between the parties, that
although it is true that before a court passes a consent
decree, it can and should examine the lawfulness and
validity of the terms of the proposed compromise, but when
once that stage is passed and a decree follows, different
considerations arise and therefore, where I compromise
decree contains a term against alienating certain property
and gives the other party right to its possession on such
alienation, the decree is not a nullity in spite of the fact
that the term is opposed to S. 10, T.P. Act. And the fact
that it is contrary to law would not affect its binding
character, unless it is set aside by taking proper
proceedings. That different conside-
(1) English Law Reports, 141, P. 769.
(2) A.I.R. 1929 journal & Privy Council, P. 289.
(3) A.I.R. 1953 Bombay 412.
524
ration would apply when a contract is embodied in a judge’s
order is also clear from Morris v. Barret(1). In that case
by a consent order it was provided that, upon payment of
341., the debt and costs as agreed, in installments on the
28th of May, on the 25th of June and on the 25th of every
succeeding month until the whole is paid, all further
proceedings in the cause be stayed. The order further
provided that, in case default be made in any payment as
aforesaid, the plaintiff be at liberty to sign final
judgment for the said sum of 341., and issue execution for
the amount unpaid. The first and two following installments
were duly paid. The 25th of October, the day on which the
fourth installment became payable, being a Sunday, the
defendant called at the office of the planitiff’s attorney
on Monday the 26th, and offered to pay it, but was told he
was too late, and that judgment had been signed. No
judgment, however, was signed until the following morning.
The defendant took out a summons to set aside the judgment,
on the round that under the circumstances he had the whole
of Monday to pay the money, and that the judgment signed
after the money was offered was irregular. The court held
that the defendant had the whole of Monday to pay the money.
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One of the arguments advanced in that case was that as the
judge’s order was a consent order, the principle governing
contract must regulate the rights of parties and therefore
the defendant was not excused from performing the contract
by the accident of the day being a Sunday. In repelling
this contention Erle, C.J. said :-
"I desire not to be understood as giving any
decision as to the rights of parties under a
contract : but, in arriving at the conclusion
I come to, I seek only to give effect to the
duty which the law imposes upon a party who is
directed by a judge’s order to pay money......
The defendant was ready and offered to pay it
on Monday; but the plaintiff, conceiving that
the offer came too late. declined to receive
it, and on the following day signed the
judgment for the balance due. Confining
myself to the judge’s order and the remedy and
duty thereon and to what ought to be the fair
meaning and understanding of the instrument, I
find no authority for saying that the
defendant was bound to search for his creditor
and pay him the money on the Sunday."
Crowder, J. said :
"This is not like the case of an ordinary
contract; and I de-sire not to be understood
as at all interfering
(1) English Law Reports 141, p. 768.
525
with any of the cases which have been referred
to with reference to contracts. The cases
upon the construction of statutes are also
founded upon an entirely different
consideration."
We may also state that there is no evidence in this case
that at the time when the compromise was entered into,
either of the parties knew that the 31st of December, 1959
and the 1st of January, 1960, would be holidays.
In these circumstances we think that the deposit made by the
respondent on 2-1-1960 was in substance and in effect a
deposit made in terms of the compromise decree and that the
High Court was right in its conclusion. We dismiss the
appeals but in the circumstances without any order as to
costs.
K.B.N. Appeals dismissed.
3- L643SupCI/72
526