Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
N.K. MOHAMMAD SULAIMAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
N. C. MOHAMMAD ISMAIL AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/09/1965
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
SIKRI, S.M.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 792 1966 SCR (1) 937
CITATOR INFO :
R 1967 SC 49 (3)
RF 1975 SC 733 (33)
RF 1979 SC1393 (29)
F 1989 SC1589 (5)
RF 1990 SC1480 (76)
R 1991 SC 720 (5)
ACT:
Legal representatives-Creditor instituting suit for recovery
of debt against only heirs known to him after bona-fide
inquiry-Whether such heirs represent entire estate and
decree in suit binds heirs not impleaded Personal law of
deceased-Whether relevant.
HEADNOTE:
M, K and L mortgaged certain immovable properties in favour
of R in 1933. M died in 1937 and in 1940, R commenced an
action for enforcement of the mortgage against K, L and
three widows and a daughter of M. In execution of the decree
passed in the action, the properties were bold at a court
auction in 1942 and purchased by R, who thereafter trans-
ferred them to others.
The appellant-plaintiff, claiming that he was the son of M,
instituted a suit in 1950 for a decree for partition of the
mortgaged properties "by metes and bounds" and in the
alternative for a declaration that he was entitled to redeem
the mortgage or a portion thereof equal to his share in the
mortgaged properties.
The plaintiff’s suit was resisted by R and the other
alienees of the properties, mainly on the ground that the
decree of 1940 was binding on the appellant for the estate
of M was fully represented in the suit by those who were in
possession at the time; and that R had made full and boan-
fide inquiry and had learnt that the three widows and the
daughter of M were the only surviving members of the
latter’s family. The trial court dismissed the appellants’s
suit and this decision was confirmed in appeal by the High
Court.
In appeal to this Court, the only contention pressed on
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behalf of the appellant was ’,hat when in a suit to enforce
a mortgage instituted after the death of a muslim debtor,
one or more out of the heirs of the deceased is or are not
impleaded in the suit and a decree is obtained, what passes
to the auction-purchaser at the court sale is only the
interest of the heirs who were impleaded; that this was so
because each heir is under Mohamedan law liable to satisfy
the debts of the deceased only to the extent of ’the share
of the debt proportionate to his share in the estate.
HELD : (i) The appellant was sufficiently represented in the
suit filed in 1940 and was bound by the decree passed in
that suit,
(ii) Whether a decree obtained by a creditor against the
heirs of a deceased muslim is binding upon the entire estate
or only on those who were impleaded eo nomine is not a
question to be determined on the personal law either of the
deceased or of the defendant in the suit. It is a part of
the law of procedure which regulates all matters going to
the remedy, and when the matter passes into the domain of
procedure, it must be regulated by the law governing the
action of the court; [944 D]
938
(iii) Where certain persons are impleaded after diligent and
bona fide enquiry in the genuine belief ’,hat they are the
only persons interested in the estate, the whole estate of
the deceased will be duly represented by the persons who are
brought on the record or impleaded, and the decree will be
binding on the entire estate. [948 G]
Daya Rain and others v. Shyam Sundari & others [1965] 1
S.C.R. 231. followed.
If the creditor has proceeded after such bona fide enquiry,
it would make no difference in principle between a case in
which a debtor is sued for recovery of a debt and upon his
death pendente lite there is an order of the court
recognising the persons brought on the record as
representing the estate, and a case in which in a suit
against the heirs of a deceased debtor, -the creditor has
taken upon himself the responsibility to bring certain
persons on the record as representing the estate. [948 E]
This rule will not apply to cases where there has been fraud
or collusion between the creditor and the heir impleaded or
where there are other circumstances which indicate that
there has not been a fair or real trial, or that the absent
heir had a special defence which was not and could not be
tried in the earlier proceeding. [948 H]
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 432 of
1963.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated the August 27,
1958 of Andhra Pradesh High Court in Appeal Suit No. 113 of
1954.
C. Narasimhacharyya and K. R. Chaudhury, for the appel-
lant.
P. Ram Reddy, for respondents Nos. 4 to 7.
P. Ram Reddy and A. V. V. Nair, for respondents Nos. 15,
16, 18 to 20, 22, 23 to 25.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. Khader Miran, Muhammad Abdul Kassim and Muhammad
Labhai mortgaged on August 21, 1933, certain immovable
property in favour of Narsimha Reddy to secure repayment of
Rs. 20,000/-. Khader Miran died on November 19, 1937. On
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July 12, 1940 Narsimha Reddy commenced an action for
enforcement of the mortgage against Muhammad Abdul Kasim,
Muhammad Labhai, and three widows of Khader Miran Fathima
Bi, Amina Bi and Mahaboob Bi, and a daughter Muhammad
Mariyam Bi. A preliminary mortgage decree passed in the
action on November 25, 1940 was made absolute on October 11,
1941, and in execution of the decree the properties mort-
939
gaged were sold at a court auction and were purchased by the
mortgagee Narsimha Reddy on October 16, 1942, with leave of
the Court. Narsimha Reddy thereafter transferred the
properties to P. Chinnamma Reddi and the latter in his turn
alienated portions thereof.
N. K. Mohammad Sulaiman-hereinafter referred to as ’the
plaintiff’-claiming that he was the son of Khader Miran
instituted suit No. 125 of 1950 in the Court of the
Subordinate Judge, Chittoor for a decree for partition of
the mortaged properties by metes and bounds" and in the
alternative for a declaration that he was entitled "to
redeem the mortgage or portion thereof equal to his share in
the mortgaged properties" and for an order against Narsimha
Reddy and the alienees from him to render a true and correct
account of the income of the properties, and for a further
declaration that the decree and judgment in suit No. 87 of
1940 and the execution proceedings thereon were null and
void, and "if necessary to set aside the same." To this suit
were impleaded Mahammad Ismail who, it was claimed, was also
the ;on of Khader Miran, and was not impleaded in the
earlier suit, Mahaboob Bi the mother of the plaintiff,
Mariyam Bi his step sister, narsimha Reddy and twenty-two
alienees of the property. The suit was resisted by Narsimha
Reddy and the alienees on two principal grounds-that the
plaintiff was not the son of Khader Miran, and that the
decree in suit No. 87 of 1940 was in any event binding upon
the plaintiff for the estate of Khadar Miran was fully
represented in the suit by those who were in possession of
the estate of Khader Miran. On the second plea, it was sub-
mitted that Narsimha Reddy had made "full and bona fide in-
quiry" and had come to learn that only the three widows and
daughter of Khader Miran were the surviving members of the
family of Khader Miran and that they were in possession of
his estate, and that it was not brought to the notice of
Narsimha Reddy at any time that there were, beside those
impleaded, other heirs to the estate of Khader Miran.
The Trial Court held that the plaintiff who was the son of
Khader Miran was "sufficiently represented" by the three
widows and the daughter of Khader Miran in suit No. 87 of
1940, and that the plaintiff and his brother Mohammed Ismail
were bound by the decree and the sale in execution thereof,
even though they were not impleaded as parties eo nomine.
In appeal to the High court of Andhra Pradesh, the decree
passed by the Trial Court, dismissing the plaintiff’s suit
was confirmed. With certificate
940
granted by the High Court, this appeal is preferred in forma
pauperis by the plaintiff.
The Trial Court and the High Court have held that Narsimha
Reddy had instituted the mortgage suit after making bona
fide enquiry and being satisfied that the only heirs of
Khader Miran were his three widows and his daughter, and
that the entire estate was in their possession, and that
there were no other heirs. This finding is not challenged
before us, but counsel for the plaintiff argues that when in
a suit to enforce a mortgage instituted after the death of a
Muslim debtor one or more out of the heirs of the deceased
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debtor is or are not impleaded in the suit and a decree is
obtained, what passes to the auction-purchaser at the court
sale is only the right, title and interest in the properties
of the heirs of the deceased debtor who were impleaded in
the suit. On this question, there has been a sharp conflict
of opinion amongst the High Courts in India. It is necessary
in the first instance to set out certain principles which
are accepted as well settled. The estate of a muslim dying
intestate devolves under the Islamic law upon his heirs at
the moment of his death i.e. the estate vests immediately in
each heir in proportion to the shares ordained by the
personal law and the interest of each heir is separate and
distirct. Each heir is under the personal law liable to
satisfy the debts of the deceased only to the extent of the
share of the debt proportionate to his share in the estate .
A creditor of a muslim dying intestate may sue all the heirs
of the deceased, and where the estate of the deceased has
not been distributed between the heirs, he may execute the
decree against the property as a whole without regard to the
extent of the liability of the heirs inter se. The-
creditor is however not bound to sue all the heirs: the
creditor may sue some only of the heirs and obtain a decree
against those heirs, and liability for satisfaction of the
decree may be enforced against individual heirs in the
property held by them proportionate to their share in the
estate. It is also settled that where the defendant in an
action dies after institution of the suit, he creditor after
diligent -nd bona fide enquiry impleads some but not all the
heirs as legal representatives, the heirs so impleaded
represent the estate of the deceased and a decree obtained
against them binds not only those heirs who are impleaded in
the action but the entire estate including the interest of
those not brought on the record: Dava Ram and others v.
Shyam Sundari & others(1) : This Court at p. 240 observed
(1)[1965] 1 S.C.R. 231
941
.lm15
"The almost universal consensus of opinion of all the High
Courts is that where a plaintiff or an appellant after
diligent and bona fide enquiry ascertains who the legal
representatives of a deceased defendant or respondent are
and brings them on record within the time limited by law,
there is no abatement of the suit or appeal, that the
impleaded legal representatives sufficiently represent the
estate of the deceased and that a decision obtained with
them on record will bind not merely those impleaded but the
entire estate -including those not brought on record."
This Court has therefore recognised the principle of
representation of the estate by some heirs where the
defendant dies during the pendency of a suit to enforce a
claim -against him, and not all the heirs are brought on the
record. If after bona fide enquiry, some but not all the
heirs of a deceased defendant are ’brought oil the record,
the heirs so brought on the record represent the entire
state of the deceased, and the decision of the Court in the
absence of fraud or collusion binds those who are not
brought on the record as well as those who are impleaded eo
nomine. Daya Ram’s case, it is true, did not relate to the
estate of a deceased Muslim, but the rule enunciated is of
the domain of procedural law and applies to all communities
irrespective of the religious pursuasion or personal law.
Counsel for the plaintiff says that this rule applies only
to cases where the defendant dies after institution of the
suit, and does not apply where a suit is instituted against
the heirs of a deceased debtor. The reason suggested is
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that by the combined operation of 0. 22 rr. 4 & 5 Code of
Civil Procedure there is a decision of the Court that
persons impleaded are the heirs of the deceased and are
allowed to be brought on the record as his heirs and legal
representatives. Reliance is also placed upon the
definition of "legal representative" in s. 2 (11 ) of the
Code of Civil Procedure. It is submitted that where persons
are either expressly or by implication directed or permitted
by an order of the Court to represent the estate, in the
absence oil fraud or collusion the heirs brought on the
record will represent the entire estate, and the decree
passed against them and proceedINGS taken pursuant thereto
will be binding upon the heirs not so impleaded. But where
the plaintiff institutes a suit against certain person as
legal representatives of the deceased debtor there is no
representation to the estate by some only of the heirs of
the deceased where the deceased was a muslim. On this point
there has been, as already stated, conflict of opinion and
in some High Courts from time to time different views have
been expressed To seek elucidation of principle from an
analysis
942
of the numerous decisions of the cases may turn out a futile
pursuit. That is not because we do not hold the opinions
expressed by eminent Judges on this question in great
respect, but because in our view it would conduce to greater
clarity if the grounds on which the decisions have proceeded
are examined in the light of the true principles applicable.
In seeking its solution the problem whether a decree obtain-
ed by a creditor in a suit instituted against some of the
heirs of a deceased Muslim for payment of debts due by him
is binding on the other heirs has been approached from
different angles : (i) by the analogy of Hindu law where on
devolution of property on death of a Hindu upon members of a
joint Hindu family or a widow the estate of the deceased is
represented by the manager or the widow, and the creditor in
a suit properly instituted against the manager or the widow
may obtain a decree which binds all the persons having
interest in the estate; (ii) the rule of Mahomedan law as
set out in Hamilton’s Hedaya, 2nd Edn., p. 349, Bk. XX, Ch.
4 (relating to the duties of the Kazee): "for any one of
the, heirs of a deceased person stands as litigant on behalf
of all the others, with respect to anything due to or by the
deceased, whether it be debt or substance, since the decree
of the Kazi in such case is in reality either in favour of
or against the deceased; and any of the heirs may stand as
his representative with respect to such decree.......... To
this it is objected, "If one heir be litigant on behalf of
the others, it would follow that each creditor is entitled
to have recourse to him for payment of his demand, whereas,
according to law, each is only obliged to pay his own
share." Reply : "The creditors are entitled to have recourse
to one of several heirs only in a case where all the effects
are in the hands of that heir. This is what is stated in
the Jama Kabeer; and the reason of it is that although any
one of the heirs may act as plaintiff in a cause on behalf
of the others, yet he cannot act as defendant on their
behalf, unless the whole of the effects be in his
possession"; (iii) that a creditor of the deceased may sue
one of the heirs who is in possession of the whole or any
part of the estate, without joining other heirs as
defendants, for administration of the estate and for
recovery of the entire debt, and Pet a decree against the
entire estate; and (iv) on the strict rules of Islamic law
that devolution of inheritance takes place immediately upon
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the death of the ancestor, and jus representations being
foreign to the Islamic law of inheritance, and only those
heirs who are sued by the creditor of the deceased ancestor
are liable to satisfy the debt proportionate to their
interest in the estate.
943.
The first view was enunciated by the Calcutta High Court in
Mussemut Nuzeerun v. Moulvie Amerooddin(1) and was adopted
by the Bombay High Court in Khurshetbibi v. Kesho Vinayak(2;
Davalava v. Bhimaji ( 3 ) and Virchand v. Kondu (4 ) .
The second view though pressed for acceptance before the
Courts has not met with approval. The rules of procedure
enunciated by the Muhammadan lawyers have no application
under the Indian system of jurisprudence to the trial of
actions in our courts and as observed by Mahmood, J., in
Jafri Begam v. Amir Muhammad Khan(") at p. 842:
" . and if there are any claims against
the estate, and they are litigated, the
matter passes into the region of procedure,
and must be regulated according to the law
which governs the action of the Court, The
plaintiff must go to the Court having
jurisdiction, and institute his suit within
limitation, impleading all the heirs against
whose shares he seeks to enforce his claim; "
The Calcutta High Court in Muttyjan v. Ahmed Ally(")
accepted the third view and regarded a suit filed by a
creditor to recover a debt due from the estate of a deceased
muslim debtor as an administration-action. It was further
confirmed in Amir Dulhin v. Baijnath Singh(7). On this rule
an exception was engrafted in a later judgment in Abbas
Naskar v. Chairman, District Board, 24-Parganas(8). It was
observed in Abbas Naskar’s case(") that in the case of an
estate of a muslim dying intestate if there has been no
distribution of the estate, and the suit is instituted for
recovery of a debt the creditor may sue any heir in
possession of the whole or part of the estate without
joining the other heirs as defendants, for realisation of
the entire debt passed in such a suit may be enforceable
against all the assets that are in his possession. But a
decree for administration may only be passed where the heirs
who are sued are in possession of the whole or any part of
the estate so as to be liable to account for the same to the
rest, or in other words, the suits were against some of the
heirs, who are in possession of property exceeding their
share of the inheritance: where the heirs are in possession
of the respective shares of inheritance, the principle can
have no
(1) 24 W.R. 3.
(3) I.L.R. 20 Bom. 338.
(5) I.L.R. 7 All. 822.
(7) I.L.R. 21 Cal. 31 1.
(2) I.L.R. 12 Bom. 101.
(4) I.L.R. 39 Bom. 729.
(6) I.L.R. 8 Cal. 370).
(8) I.L.R. 59 Cal. 691.
944
application. The modified rule accepted by the Calcutta
High Court is that where a heir is in possession of the
estate of a deceased muslim on behalf of the other heirs, in
a suit to recover a debt due from the estate a decree for
administration may be passed.
The last view has been uniformly expressed by the Allahabad
High Court since it was first enunciated by Mahmood J., in
Jafri Begam’s case(1). It may be observed that the Bombay
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High Court in later decisions has accepted this view :
Bhagirthibai v. Roshanbi (2 ) : Shahasaheb v. Sadashiv(3):
Lala Miya v. Manubibi (4 ) and Veerbhadrappa Shilwant v.
Shekabai(5).
We may now examine whether the grounds on which the
different views were expressed are sustainable in principle.
It must be recalled that whether a decree obtained by a
creditor against the heirs of a deceased muslim is binding
upon the entire estate or only of those who were impleaded
eo nomine is not a question to be determined on the personal
law either of the deceased or of the defendant in the suit.
It is a part of the law of procedure which regulates all
matters going to the remedy, and when the matter passes into
the domain of procedure, it must be regulated by the law
governing the action of the Court.
An administration-action may undoubtedly lie at the instance
of a creditor for and on behalf of all the creditors for an
order that the Court do enter upon administration of the
estate and do pay to the creditors claiming the amount
either the whole or such amount as may be rateably payable
to each creditor out of the estate after satisfying the
primary liabilities of the estate. A suit by a creditor may
in appropriate cases, where the procedure Prescribed in
that behalf is followed, be treated as an administration
action, but Very action instituted by a creditor of a
deceased debtor to recover a debt due out of his estate in
the hands of some or all the heirs is not an administration-
action. A person in possession of the whole or a part of
the estate which originally belonged to a debtor dying
intestate does not clothe himself with a right to represent
other persons who are interested in the estate. Such a
person may by intermeddling with the estate be regarded is
executor de sontort and may render himself liable
accordingly, but thereby he cannot represent those whose
estate he has intermeddled with. An administrator appointed
by the Court would
(1) I.L.R. 7 All.822
(2) I.L.R. 43 Bom. 412.
(3) I.L.R. 43 Bom. 575.
(4) I.L.R. 47 Bom. 712.
(5) I.L.R. (1939) Bom. 232.
945
resent the estate, and a creditor may sue him for recovery
of the debts due out of the estate. In an administration-
action properly instituted, the Court may take upon itself
the duty to administer the estate out of which the debts may
be satisfied. But a simple action for recovery of a debt
from the estate of a deceased debtor will not be regarded as
an action for administration.
Ordinarily the Court does not regard a decree binding upon a
person who was not impleaded eo nomine in the action. But
to that rule there are certain recognised exceptions. Where
by the personal law governing the absent heir the heir
impleaded represents his interest in the estate of the
deceased. There is yet another exception which is evolved
in the larger interest of administration of justice. If
there be a debt justly due and no prejudice is shown to the
absent heir, the decree in an action where the plaintiff has
after bona fide enquiry impleaded all the heirs known to him
will ordinarily be held binding upon all persons interested
in the estate. The Court will undoubtedly investigate, if
invited, whether the decree was obtained by fraud, collusion
or other means intended to overreach the Court. The Court
will also enquire whether there was a real contest in the
suit, and may for that purpose ascertain whether there was
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any special defence which the absent defendant could put
forward, but which was not put forward. Where however on
account of a bona fide error, the plaintiff seeking relief
institutes his suit against a person who is not representing
the estate of a deceased person against whom the plaintiff
has a claim either at all or even partially, in the absence
of fraud or collusion or other ground which taint the
decree, a decree passed against the persons impleaded as
heirs binds the estate, even though other persons interested
in the estate are not brought on the record. This principle
applies to all parties irrespective of their religious
persuation.
A few illustrative cases which support this principle may be
noticed. In Chaturbujadoss Kushaldoss and Sons v.
Rajamanicka Mudali(1) a debtor died leaving a will
bequeathing his estate to his nephew subject to certain
dispositions. In ignorance of the will, and bona fide
believing that the widow was the proper legal
representative, a creditor of the deceased brought a suit
against her alone and obtained a decree ex parts for
satisfaction of the debt out of the husband’s estate and
satisfied his claim by sale of certain items of the estate
in her hands. A nephew of the deceased who was a devisee
under the will sued to set aside the decree and sale in
execution thereof. It was held by the High Court of
(1) I.L.R. 54 Mad. 212.
Sup.CI/65-17
946
Madras that as the creditor bona fide believed the widow was
the proper legal representative and as she was then
interested in defending the estate and sufficiently
represented the estate and as the creditor got his decree
without any fraud or collusion with her, it was binding on
the nephew who was the residuary legatee under the will. In
dealing with this question, Madhavan Nair, J., observed at
p. 218 :
"Prima facie, a decree will bind only the
parties to it or those claiming through them;
but there are exceptions to this rule. The
Courts have held that in certain circumstances
when one who is not the true legal repre-
sentative of a deceased person is impleaded as
his legal representative, then a decree passed
against him in his character as the legal
representative of the deceased would be
binding on the true representative though he
is not a party to it. The suit may have been
instituted against the wrong legal
representative at the very commencement or the
wrong legal representative may have been
brought on record during the pendency of the
suit or after the decree and for purposes of
execution."
The principle so stated derives support from the judgment of
the Judicial Committee in Khairajmal v. Daim(1). In that
case, the material facts out of the many complicated facts
which have a bearing on the point under review are these : a
suit was instituted for redemption of two mortgages of 1874
in respect of certain immoveable properties. The plea of
the mortagee in substance, was that the equity of redemption
had been sold in execution of money decrees against the
mortgagors in earlier proceedings and was vested in other
persons, and therefore the mortgagors had no right to sue.
One of such mortgagors was Nabibaksh. It appeared that in
suit No. 372 of 1879 instituted for recovery of a debt there
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was reference to arbitration, and Nabibaksh signed the
reference. Nabibaksh died shortly thereafter and his two
widows and his son Muhammad Hassan named as legal re-
presentivs were served with the summons and were willing to
accept the award. They were also served with the notice of
sale of the property of Nabibaksh. An infant daughter of
Nabibaksh was omitted from the list of heirs impleaded, but
the entire interest of Nabibaksh was sold in execution of
the decree obtained in that suit. The Judicial Committee
held that the estate of Nabibaksh as sufficiently
represented for the purpose of the suit, although the name
of the infant daughter was omitted and
(1) L.R. 32 T.A. 23.
947
that the share of Nabibaksh in the equity of redemption in
the property sold in execution of the decree in suit No. 372
of 1879 being bound by the sale, was irredeemable. It is
true that Nabibaksh died after the suit for recovery of the
debt was instituted and his heirs were brought on the record
under a procedure similar to O. 22 r. 4 of the Code of the
Civil Procedure. But the Judicial Committee did not express
the view that the estate was represented because the heirs
were brought on record after the death of Nabibaksh in a
pending suit, but apparently on the principle on which the
Madras High Court in Chaturbujadoss Kushaldoss & Sons’
case(1) proceeded. This view was also expressed by the High
Court of Orissa in Sarat Chandra Deb and others v.
Bichitrananda Sahu and others(2), where Jagannadhadas, J.,
observed that where proceedings taken bona fide by the
creditor against the person actually in possession by virtue
of the assertions of a claim to succeed to or represent the
estate of the deceased’; debtor are binding against the real
legal heir, whether such proceedings were commenced or
continued against the wrong person, and irrespective of any
express or implied decision by the Court that the ,person so
impleaded was the proper legal representative. The Court in
that case recognised that though the title of a persons to
property cannot normally be affected by any proceeding to
which he is not a party, his interest in the property may
still be bound if he may having regard to the circumstances,
be said to, have been sufficiently represented in the
proceeding. The learned judge observed at p. 445:
"I have, therefore, no hesitation in coming to
the conclusion that where a mortgagee
institutes a suit bona fide against the person
in possession of the estate of the deceased
mortgagor, who is in such possession in
assertion of a claim to succeed to that
estate, and where a person purchases the
mortgaged property bona fide in execution of
that decree, such purchaser gets the full
title to the mortgaged property by virtue of
such sale and the real heir is bound thereby
and that his only remedy, if at all, in a
proper case is to get the sale set aside by
appropriate proceedings in time."
In a recent judgment of the Madras High Court in Shunmughom
Chettiar v. K. A. Govindasami Chettiar and others(3) it was
held that where after the death-of the mortgagor, in a suit
on the mortgage, the mortgagee bona fide and "after due care
and’
(1) I.L.R. 54 Mad. 212. (2) I.L.R. [1950] Cutt. 413.
(3) A.I.R. 1961 Mad. 428.
948
caution" impleads a person who is believed by him to be the
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legal representative of the mortgagor and who is in
possession of the mortgaged property and a decree is
obtained on that footing without the legal representative so
impleaded disclaiming any liability, the decree thus
obtained by the mortgagee will bind other legal
representatives who may be in existence.
It is true that the cases of the Madras & Orissa High Courts
did not relate to the estate of a muslim debtor. But the
rule, as already stated, is one of procedure and not of
personal law, and applies to a muslim debtor’s estate as
well as to a Hindu debtor’s estate. It is true that in the
case of a debtor who is sued for recovery of the debt, and
if he died after the institution of the suit, there is some
order of the Court-express or implied-recognising that the
person sought to be brought on record are the -heirs and
legal representatives of the deceased debtor. The Court
records a conclusion, if not expressly, by implication, that
they :represent the estate. It was held by this Court, as
already stated ,earlier, in a recent judgment in Daya Ram’s
case(1) that failure ;to bring the other heirs on record, if
there is a bona fide enquiry :as to the existence of the
heirs, does not affect the validity of the decree and the
proceedings taken thereunder. In a suit instituted against
the heirs of a deceased debtor, it is the creditor who takes
upon himself the responsibility to bring certain persons as
heirs and legal representatives of the deceased on the
record. If he has proceeded bona fide and after due enquiry
and under a belief that the persons who are brought on the
record are the only legal representatives, it would make no
difference in principle that in the former case the heirs
have been brought on the record -during the pendency of the
suit, the creditor having died since the institution of the
suit, and in the other case at the instance of the plaintiff
certain persons are impleaded as legal representatives of
the deceased person. In either case, where after due
enquiry certain persons are impleaded after diligent and
bona fide enquiry in the genuine belief that they are the
only persons interested in the estate, the whole estate of
the deceased will be duly represented by the persons who are
brought on the record or impleaded, and the decree will be
binding upon the entire estate. This rule will of course
not apply to cases where there has been fraud or collusion
between the creditor and the heir impleaded, ,or where there
are other circumstances which indicate that there has not
been a fair or real trial, or that the absent heir had a
special defence which was not and could not be tried in the
earlier proceeding.
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 231.
949
The appellant and his brother Mohammad Ismail were both
minors when the action for enforcement of the mortgage in
favour of Narsimha Reddy was instituted. The mortgaged pro-
perty was in the possession of the three widows and daughter
of Khader Miran, and the other mortgagors. It is also found
that Narsimha Reddy had made bona fide enquiry and had not
come to learn about the existence of any other heirs. It is
also not the case of the appellant that he had any special
defence to the suit which if he was impleaded as a party to
the suit he could have set up, nor is there any ground for
holding that there was no fair or real trial of the action.
This appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
The appellant was permitted to appeal in forma pauperism He
will pay the court-fee payable on the memo of appeal as if
he had not been permitted to appeal in forma pauperis
Appeal dismissed.
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