Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GANESHI LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JOTI PERSHAD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/11/1952
BENCH:
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
BENCH:
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 1 1953 SCR 243
CITATOR INFO :
F 1979 SC1937 (29,30)
ACT:
Mortgage-Co-mortgagors-Redemption of entire mortgage by co-
mortgagor paying less than amount really due-Right to
contribution from others- Whether limited, to their share on
amount actually paid-principles of equity.
HEADNOTE:
On principles of equity, justice and good conscience,
which apply to the Punjab (where the Transfer of Property
Act, 1882, is not in force) if one of several joint
mortgagors redeems the entire Mortgage by paying a s less
than the-full amount due under the mortgage, he is entitled
to receive from his co-mortgagors, only their proportionate
shares on the amount actually paid by him. He is not
entitled to claim their proportionate shares on the amount
which was due to the mortgagee under the terms of the
mortgage on the date of redemption.
Hodgson v. Shaw (40 E. R. 70), Digambar Das v. Harendra
Narayan Panday [(1910) 14 C.W.N. 6171 and Suryanarayana v.
Sriramulu [(1913) 25 M.L.J. 16] referred to.
Judgment of the High Court of Punjab at Simla affirmed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 166 of 1951.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated September 15,
1948, of the High Court of Judicature for the State of
Punjab at Simla (Mahajan and Teja Singh JJ.) in Regular
Second Appeal No. 1844 of 1945 from the Judgment and Decree
dated June 5, 1945, of the Court of the District Judge,
Gurgaon, in Civil Appeal No. 171 of 1943, arising out of the
Judgment and Decree dated August 27, 1943, of the Court of
the Subordinate Judge, Gurgaon, in Civil Suit No. 11 of
1943.
Tarachand Brijmohanlal for the appellant.
Gurubachan Singh (Radha Krishan Aggarwal, with him) for the
respondent.
1952, November 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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Chandrasekhara Aiyar J.
32
244
CHANDRASEKHARA AIYAR J.-The plaintiffs, Joti Prasad and Sat
Narain, sued for partition and possession of their two-
fifths share in the suit properties alleging that the first
defendant wag alone in possesSion of the same, having
redeemed a mortgage executed by the joint family of which
the plaintiffs and defendants were members, in favour of one
Raghumal in the year 1896 on paying Rs. 5,800. Defendants 2
to 5 were impleaded as co-sharers. Out of them, defendants
2 and 3 admitted the claims of the plaintiffs. Defendant 4
died pending suit, and her name was struck off. Defendant 5
supported the first defendant. On the date of the trial
court’s decree, the two plaintiffs were held entitled to
one sixth share each.
The first defendant resisted the plaintiffs’ claim. He
contended that the redemption by him in 1920 was not on
behalf of the joint family as alleged by the plaintiffs but
on his own account as there had been a disruption of the
joint family status much earlier, and that before the
plaintiffs could get arty relief, they were bound to pay him
not merely a proportionate share in the sum of Rs. 5,800
which he paid to the mortgagee for redemption but their
share in the original mortgage debt of Rs. 11,200. He also
denied that the original mortgage was executed on behalf of
the joint family.
The Subordinate Judge, and on appeal, the High Court found
that the original mortgage was a mortgage transaction of the
joint family, and that the first defendant, Ganeshi Lal,
redeemed the mortgage on his own account and for his own
benefit at a time when there was no longer any joint family
in existence. It was further held by the trial court that
the plaintiffs and other co-sharers were bound to pay their
proportionate share of the amount paid by the first
defendant to redeem the mortgage, namely, Rs. 5,800. But
from this a sum of Rs. 1,200 which he had already received
by way of redemption of certain mortgage rights had to be
deducted. The District Judge enhanced this sum of RS. 4,600
to
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Rs. 5,000, as the first defendant had paid taxes due on the
property up to 1940, but he confirmed the main findings of
the Subordinate Judge. A second appeal preferred by the
first defendant was dismissed by the High Court at Simla
(Mehr Chand Mahajan and Teja Singh JJ.). They repelled the
contention of the first defendant that a suit for partition
and possession was not maintainable without bringing a suit
for redemption. They also negatived his right to get a
proportionate share in the amount of Rs. 11,200 due on the
mortgage. Two other learned Judges gave leave to appeal
under section 109 (c) of the Civil Procedure Code, as a
substantial question of law was involved.
Three points were argued before us by learned counsel for
the appellant; firstly, there was an assignment of the
mortgage in favour of the appellant with the result that the
entire rights of the mortgagee vested in him; secondly, even
viewing the question as one of legal subrogation, he was
entitled, under the principles of justice, equity and good
conscience which governed the State of Punjab, as the
Transfer of Property Act has not been applied to the State,
to recover from the co-mortgagors not merely their shares in
the sum of Rs. 5,800 which he had paid for redemption but
their shares in the full amount of Rs. 11,200 due under the
mortgage; and thirdly, that the suit for partition without
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asking for redemption was not maintainable.
Points Nos. 1 and. 3 have no force whatever. The
registered deed of redemption does not contain any words of
assignment. To say that Ganeshi Lal shall be the owner of
the entire amount due from the mortgaged property is
something different from stating that the security has
been assigned in his favour. On the other hand, the
endorsement of receipt of payment on the back of the
mortgage deed itself and the statement of the mortgagee that
he has released the mortgaged property from his mortgage go
to show that there was no assignment.
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The non-maintainability of the suit does not seem to have
been in issue either before the trial court or before the
District Judge, and it appears to have been raised for the
first time before the High Court. It was pointed out by the
learned Judges, and quite rightly, that so long as no
question of limitation was involved, there was no objection
to a claim for redemption and one for possession and
partition being joined together in the same suit.
Only the second point remains for consideration, and this
raises an interesting question of law. It is not denied
that Ganeshi Lal who redeemed the prior mortgage is
subrogated to the mortgagee’s rights, but the controversy is
about the extent of his rights as subrogee. By virtue of
the redemption, does he get all the rights of the mortgagee
and hold the mortgage as a shield against the co-mortgagors
for the full amount due on the mortgage on the date of
redemption whatever he may have himself paid to get it
discharged, or does he stand in the mortgagee’s shoes only
to the extent of getting reimbursed from the comortgagors
for -their shares in the amount actually paid by him? The
lower courts have held that the latter is the correct
position in law, but the appellant has challenged it as
unsound.
The first two clauses of the present section 92 of the
Transfer of Property Act run in these terms:
" Any of the persons referred to in section 91 (other than
the, mortgagor) and any co-mortgagor shall, on redeeming
property subject to the mortgage, have, so far as regards
redemption, foreclosure or sale of such property, the same
rights as the mortgagee whose mortgage he redeems may have
against the mortgagor or any other mortgagee.
The right conferred by this section is called the right of
subrogation, and a person acquiring the same is said to be
subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee whose mortgage he
redeems."
It is a new section and was inserted by the amending Act
XX of 1929. The original sections 74 and
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75 conferred the right to redeem in express terms only on
second or other subsequent mortgagees, though the co-
mortgagor’s right to subrogation on redemption was
recognised even before the Act. As the Transfer of Property
Act has not been extended to the State of East Punjab, it is
unnecessary to decide whether section 92 is retrospective in
its operation, on which point there has been a conflict of
opinion between the several High Courts. Section 95 of the
Act which removed the confusion caused by the old section
which, conferring on the co-mortgagor what was called a
charge, and thus seeming to negative the application of the
doctrine of subrogation, is also inapplicable to the present
case. We therefore steer clear of sections 74 and 75 of the
old Act and sections 92 and 95 of the present Act, and we
are free to decide the question on principles of justice,
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equity and good conscience.
If we remember that the doctrine of subrogation which means
substitution of one person in place of another and giving
him the rights of the latter is essentially an equitable
doctrine in its origin and application, and if we examine
the reason behind it, the answer to the question which we
have to decide in this appeal is not difficult. Equity
insists on the ultimate payment of a debt by one who in
justice and good conscience is bound to pay it, and it is
well recognised that where there are several joint debtors,
the person making the payment is a principal debtor as
regards the part of the liability he is to discharge and a
surety in respect of the shares of the rest of the debtors.
Such being the legal position as among the co-mortgagors, if
one of them redeems a mortgage over the property which
belongs jointly to himself and the rest, equity confers on
him a right to reimburse himself for the amount spent in
excess by him in the matter of redemption; he can call upon
the co-mortgagors to contribute towards the excess which he
has paid over his own share. This proposition is postulated
in several authorities. In the early case of Hodgson v.
Shaw (1) Lord Brougham said:
(1) 3 Myl. & K. 183; 40 E. R. 70.
248
"The rule is undoubted, and it is one founded on the
plainest principles of natural reason and justice, that the
surety paying off a debt shall stand in the place of the
creditor, and have all the rights which he has, for the
purpose of obtaining his reimbursement."
I have italicised the word " reimbursement Sheldon in his
well-known treatise on Subrogation has got the following
passage in section 13 of the Second Edition:
" There is another class of cases in which he who has paid
money due upon a mortgage of land to which he had some title
which might be affected or defeated by the mortgage, and who
was thus entitled to redeem, has the right to consider the
mortgage as subsisting in himself, and to hold the land as
if it subsisted, until others interested in the redemption,
or who held also the right to redeem, have paid a
contribution."
Be it noted that what is spoken of here is a contribution.
Dealing with the subject of subrogation of a, surety by
payment of a promissory note and citing the observations of
the Alabama Court, Harris says in his work on Subrogation
(1889 Edition) at page 125:
" The rule is, that a surety paying a debt, shall stand in
the place of the creditor; and is entitled to the benefit of
all the securities which the creditor had for the payment of
the debt, from the principal debtors; in a word, he is
subrogated to all the rights of the creditor; the surety,
however, cannot avail himself of the instrument on which he
is surety, by its payment. By payment it is discharged and
ceases to exist, and the payment will not, even in equity,
be considered an assignment; the surety merely becomes the
creditor of the principal to the amount paid for him."
To compel the co-debtors or co-mortgagors to pay more than
their share of what was paid to the creditor or mortgagee
would be to perpetrate an inequity or
249
injustice, as it would mean that the debtor who is in a
position to pay and pays up can obtain an advantage for
himself over the other joint debtors. Such a result will
not be countenanced by- equity; the favouritism shown by law
to a surety, high as it is, does not extend so far. The
surety can ask to be indemnified for his loss: he can invoke
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the doctrine of subrogation as an aid to his right of
contribution. Sheldon says in section 105 of his book :
" The subrogation of a surety will not be carried
further than is necessary for his indemnity; if he buys up
the security at a discount, or makes his payment in a
depreciated currency, he can enforce it only for what it
cost him. He cannot speculate at the expense of his
principal ; his only right is to be repaid."
In section 178, Harris is still stronger.
" Since subrogation is founded on principles of equity,
the surety who would avail himself of the doctrine and
invoke equity must do equity ; and while’ he is entitled to
a reimbursement in all that he pays out properly for his
principal, debt, interest and cost, he is not entitled, in
any way to recover more than he has paid. For instance, if
he pays the debt of his principal, in depreciated currency,
the rule would seem to be that he could demand from the
principal only the value of that currency at the time he
made the payment. Nor would he upon principles of equity be
permitted to purchase the debt at a discount and then be
subrogated to collect the whole face value of the debt, and
especially if he held securities, or if the creditor held
securities which would fall into his hands, out of which to
pay the debt; because the securities are trust funds for the
purpose, and set aside for the payment of that debt and an
assignee of trustee cannot speculate in the purchase of
claims against the fund in his hands. It would not be
equality; it would not be equity."
While it can be readily conceded that the joint debtor who
pays up and discharges the mortgage
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stands in the shoes of the mortgagee, and secures to himself
the benefit of the security by such payment, the extent to
which he can enforce his right as against the other joint
debtors is a different matter altogether. In his monumental
work on Equity Jurisprudence, Pomeroy points out that he
will be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee only to
the extent necessary for his own equitable protection. (See
page 632 of Volume IV of the Fifth Edition by Symons).
Clearer still is the passage found at page 640 of the same
book:
" The mortgagor himself who has conveyed the premises to a
grantee in such manner that the latter has assumed payment
of the mortgage debt becomes an equitable assignee on
payment, and is subrogated to the mortgagee, so far as is
necessary to enforce his equity of reimbursement or
exoneration from such grantee. "
It is as regards the excess of the payment over his own
share that the right can be said to exist. Pomeroy says
this at pages 660 and 661:
"In general, whenever redemption by one of the above-
mentioned persons operates as an equitable assignment of the
mortgage to himself, he can keep the lien of it alive as
security against others who are also interested in the
premises, and who are bound to contribute their
proportionate shares of the sum advanced by him, or are
bound, it may be, to wholly exonerate him from and reimburse
him for the entire payment......... The doctrine of
contribution among all those who are interested in having
the mortgage redeemed, in order to refund the redemptor the
excess of his payment over and above his own proportionate
share, and the doctrine of equitable assignment in order to
secure such contribution, are the efficient means by which
equity completely and most beautifully works out perfect
justice and equality of burden, under these
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circumstances...................."
Whatever the difference might be between the English law
and the Indian law as regards the right
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to enforce decrees and securities for the due payment of a
debt in the case of a surety who discharges a simple money
debt and a surety who pays up a mortgage, it is still
noteworthy that Section V of the Mercantile Law Amendment
Act of 1856 (England) provided for indemnification by the
principal debtor( for the advances made and loss sustained
by the surety.
There is a distinction in this respect between a third
party who claims subrogation and a co-mortgagor who claims
the right, and this is brought out by Sir Rashbehary Ghose
in his Law of Mortgage in India, Volume I, 5th Edition. He
says at page 354, pointing-out that co-mortgagors stand in a
fiduciary relation :
" I should add that an assignee of a mortgage is
entitled, as a rule, to recover whatever may be due on the
security. But if he stands in a fiduciary relation, he can
only claim the price which he has actually paid together
with incidental expenses."
The right of the co-mortgagor who redeems the mortgage is
spoken of as the right of reimbursement at page 372 in the
following passage :
"Strictly speaking, therefore, when one of several
mortgagors redeems a mortgage, he is entitled to be treated
as an assignee of the security which be may enforce in the
usual way for the purpose of re-imbursing himself."
The redeeming co-mortgagor being only a surety for the
other co-mortgagors, his right is, strictly speaking, a
right of reimbursement or contribution, and in law, when we
have regard to the principles of equity and justice, there
should be no difference( between a case where he discharges
an unsecured debt and a case where he discharges a secured
debt. It is unnecessary for us to decide in this appeal
whether section 92 of the Transfer of Property Act was
intended to strike a departure from this position when it
states that the co-mortgagor shall have the same
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rights as the mortgagee whose mortgage he redeems, and
whether it was intended to abrogate the rule of equity as
between co-debtors, and provide for the enforcement of the
liability on the basis of the amount due under the mortgage
; and this is because, as has been already stated, we are
governed not by the statute but by general principles of
equity and justice. If it is equitable that the redeeming
co-mortgagor should be substituted in the mortgagee’s place,
it is equally equitable that the other co-mortgagors should
not be called upon to pay more than he paid in discharge of
the encumbrance.
In this connection, reference may be made with -advantage
to the decision of Sir Asutosh Mookerjoe and Teunon JJ. in
DigambarDas v. Harendra Narayan Panday (1) where the
question arose as regards the the rate of interest and the
period for which the redeeming co-mortgagor would be
entitled. There is an elaborate examination of the nature
of the right of subrogation obtained by one of several joint
comortgagors who redeems the mortgaged property, and in the
course of the discussion the following observations occur:
" In so far as the amount of money which he is entitled
to recover from his co-mortgagors is concerned, he can claim
contribution only with reference to the amount actually and
properly paid to effect redemption to which sum he can add
his legitimate expenses ........... .The substitution,
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therefore, of the new creditor in place of the original one,
does not place the former precisely in the position of the
latter for all purposes..........If therefore one of several
mortgagors satisfies the entire mortgage debt, though upon
redemption he is subrogated to the right and remedies of the
creditor, the principle has to be so administered as to
attain the ends of substantial justice regardless of form ;
in other words, the fictitious cession in favour of the
person who effects the redemption, operates only to the
extent to which it is necessary to apply it for his
indemnity and protection."
(1) (1910) 14 C.W.N. 617.
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There is a definite expression of opinion by the Madras
High Court on the point in the decision reported in
Suryanarayana v. Sriramulu(1). In that case, a purchaser of
a half share of the equity of redemption claimed to recover
half of the amount of the mortgage on the security of the
other share in the hands of the defendant, and it was held
that as his purchase of the decree on the mortgage was prior
to his purchase of the equity of redemption, he was entitled
to the full amount claimed by him. The learned Judges
distinguish the case from one where one of two mortgagors
discharges an encumbrance binding on both, and say that in
such a case the mortgagor doing so could not recover from
his comortgagors more than a proportionate share of the
amount actually paid by him.
After this rather lengthy discussion of the subject, we
consider it unnecessary to notice and comment on the several
decisions cited for the appellant. It may be said generally
that they only lay down that in cases where the Transfer of
Property Act, as it stood originally or as amended in 1929,
is not applicable, we are governed by the principles of
equity, justice and good conscience, and that sections 92
and 95 embody such principles. None of the cases deals with
the extent or degree of subrogation, and there is nothing in
them which runs counter to the view that the doctrine must
be applied along with other rules -of equity, so that the
person who discharges the mortgage is amply protected, and
at the same time there is no injustice done to the other
joint debtors. He who seeks equity must do equity, and we
shall be violating this rule if we give effect to the
appellant’s contention. The High Court, in our opinion,
reached the correct conclusion.
The parties are not agreed on the shares to which the
plaintiffs are entitled, and this is because after the date
of the final decree some of the branches have become extinct
by the deaths of their representatives. Whether under
customary law in the Punjab, uncles
(1) (1913) 25 M.L.J. 16.
254
exclude nephews or they take jointly, and whether succession
is per stirpes or per capita, was the subject of
disagreement at the Bar before us. This question must
therefore be left over for determination by the trial court,
and the case will have to go back to that court for
effecting partition and delivery of possession according to
the shares to which the plaintiffs may be found entitled.
Subject to what is contained in the foregoing paragraph, the
appeal will stand dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: Nehal Chand Jain.
Agent for the respondent: B. P. Maheshwari.
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