Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SONI LALJI JETHA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SONI KALIDAS DEVCHAND & ORS,
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/10/1966
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
BACHAWAT, R.S.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 978 1967 SCR (1) 873
ACT:
Adverse possession-Agreement to sell mortgaged properties-
Subsequent sale to mortgagee in possession-Possession of
mortgagee, if adverse-Trusts Act (2 of 1882), s. 91-Transfer
of Property Act (4 of 1882), s. 40, para 2.
HEADNOTE:
The karta of a joint Hindu family executed in 1907 a deed of
mortgage with possession in respect of certain family
properties. After the death of the karta, the coparceners,
by an agreement of sale in 1930 agreed to sell, subject to
the mortgage, the properties to respondents 1 and 2. Later,
the coparceners, by a registered sale deed, sold the
properties to L and K, sons of the original mortgagee.
Respondents 1 and 2 filed a suit for specific performance of
the earlier agreement. The suit was decreed. In the sale
deed obtained from the Court, in pursuance of the decree, K
was not made one of the conveying parties, but was made an
attesting witness. In 1947, respondents 1 and 2 filed a
suit for redemption and possession against L and K. L
contended, inter alia, that as a result of the later sale
deed, he and K became absolute owners and the right of
redemption by the mortgagors and those claiming through them
became extinguished; that his possession, being to the
knowledge of respondents 1 and 2, was adverse against them
and therefore the suit was barred by limitation; and that
the decree for specific performance could not affect the
adverse nature of the possession of K and L as K was not one
of the conveying parties but only an attesting witness. In
appeal by L, this Court,
HELD : In spite of the existence of a previous contract of
sale, a sale to a subsequent purchaser even with notice is
not void, but voidable at the instance of the party agreeing
to purchase under a previous contract and except for the
obligation arising from s. 91 of the Trust Act and paragraph
2 of s. 40 of the Transfer of Property Act, the title to the
property would pass from the vendor to the subsequent
transferee. [879 G-H]
The sale in favour of K and L was nor void but voidable at
the instance of respondents 1 and 2 by reason of their
earlier contract and though as between the mortgagors and K
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and L the sale was valid and binding, it was subject to the
right of specific performance which respondents 1 and 2 had
acquired and K and L being in a fiduciary position, their
possession was not adverse as against respondents 1 and 2.
Therefore the suit for redemption was not barred even though
the statutory period bad expired. [880 E-F]
Further, being an attesting witness, K, both for himself and
on behalf of L, was made fully aware that the sale deed
conveying the title of the property was being passed in
favour of respondents 1 and 2 and that the only right in
them was to receive the mortgage amount and no more. [881 B-
C]
Lala Durga Prasad v. Lala Deep Chand, [1954] S.C.R. 360,
relied on.
Gafur v. Bhukajir Govind, I.L.R. 26 Bom. 159, Sathiraju v.
Venkenna A.I.R. 1935 Mad. 333 and Appa Rao v. Keerana,
A.I.R. 1953 Mad. 409, approved.
7Sup. court/66 -11
874
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 727 of1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
December 9, 1957, of the Bombay High Court in Civil Appeal
No. 2 of 1956.
Sarjoo Prasad and D. N. Mukherjee, for the appellants.
J. A. Baxi, A. Rehman and K. L. Hathi, for respondents
Nos. 1 and 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. One Soni Virji Sundarji for himself and on behalf
of the Hindu joint family of which he was the Karta executed
a deed of mortgage dated December 11, 1907 in respect of two
shops in Jamnagar in favour of Jetha Roopchand, to secure
repayment of Rs. 800 advanced to the said family. The said
mortgage was with possession and was redeemable in 8 years.
On August 25, 1930 the coparceners of Virji, who had died in
the meantime, by an agreement of sale agreed to sell and
respondents 1 and 2 agreed to purchase the said two shops
together with certain other properties for Rs. 3,200,
subject of course to the said mortgage. In spite of the
said agreement of sale the coparceners of Virji by a
registered deed of sale dated September 10, 1930 sold the
said shops and the said properties to Lalji Jetha and Kanji
Jetha, the sons of said Jetha Roopchand, for Rs. 3,400. The
said Lalji and Kanji both died and the appellants and
respondents 3(1) to 3(9) are the heirs and legal
representatives of the said Lalji and Kanji respectively.
On October. 1, 1930, respondents 1 and 2 filed a suit being
suit No. 263 of Samwat Year 1987 (1931 A.D.) for specific
performance of the said agreement dated August 25, 1930
against the said mortgagors and the said Kanji, being
defendant No. 5 therein. Lalji, however, was not made a
party defendant. Respondents 1 and 2 alleged in the suit
inter alia that as Kanji was anxious to purchase the said
shops, he, in collusion with the said mortgagors and with
mala fide intention, sought to purchase the said properties
for a sum higher than the one agreed to by them and got the
mortgagors to commit breach of the said agreement in order
to deprive them of the benefit of the said agreement. The
plaint contained a prayer for specific performance against
the mortgagees being defendants 1 to 4 and for a decree
against Kanji to hand over possession of the said shops on
respondents 1 and 2 paying off the amount due under the said
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mortgage. The basis of the suit thus was that Kanji had not
acquired any ownership in the said shops and only possessed
the mortgagees’ rights therein. The Trial Court declined to
grant specific performance and awarded damages. On appeal
by respondents 1 and 2 the Joint Civil Judge by his
875
judgment and decree dated August 16, 1943 reversed the
judgment and decree of the Trial Court dismissing the suit
and allowing the appeal passed a decree for specific
performance against the said mortgagors. The defence of
Kanji that he was a bona fide purchaser without notice was
rejected. The Joint Civil Judge observed in his judgment as
follows:-
"All the equities in the case are in favour of
the plaintiffs and I therefore pass a decree
for specific performance of the contract as
prayed for by them in their plaint subject of
course to the modification mentioned above re,
their deferred right to secure possession of
the shops later on after redeeming the same
from the 5th defendant."
He directed Kanji on payment of Rs. 2,065 to him by
respondents 1 and 2 to hand over possession of the said
shops and also directed that : "all the defendants
respondents should execute the necessary registered formal
sale deeds about all the five properties in favour of the
plaintiffs subject of course to Kanji Jetha’s right to
continue in possession of the two shops till the plaintiffs
redeem the mortgage of 1907 Ex. 21." Neither Kanji nor the
mortgagors filed any appeal against the said judgment and
decree and therefore that decree became final and binding as
between the parties.
On October 8, 1947 respondents 1 and 2 filed Suit No. 283 of
1949 for redemption and possession against Kanji and Lalji.
In his written statement Lalji alleged that since he was not
-a party to the earlier suit the said decree was not binding
upon him, that as a result of the said deed of sale dated
September 10, 1930 he and Kanji became absolute owners and
the right of redemption by the mortgagors and those claiming
through them became extinguished, that Kanji had by an oral
sale transferred his right, title and interest to him and
therefore he was the absolute owner, and lastly that as a
result of the sale deed he acquired ownership, that his
possession was to the knowledge of the plaintiffs and was
adverse against them and therefore the suit was barred by
limitation. Kanji also filed a written statement supporting
Lalji in regard to his having transferred to him his right,
title and interest in the said shops.
The Trial Court held that as Lalji was not a party to the
former suit the said decree was not binding on him, that on
the passing of the said sale deed Kanji and Lalji claimed
their possession as owners, that their possession was
adverse, that the said decree did not affect Lalji’s title,
ripened as a result of adverse possession, that the present
suit ought to have been filed before 1942 and there. fore a
preliminary decree for redemption could only be passed
against Kanji. On this footing, the Trial Court dismissed
the
876
suit against Lalji. This decree meant that the Trial Court
did not accept the contention of Kanji and Lalji that the
former had parted with his right, title and interest in
favour of Lalji as alleged by them. Respondents 1 and 2
filed Appeal No. 104 of 1951 in the District Court,
Jamnagar. Lalji also filed cross-objections on the ground
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that he had purchased Kanji’s right, title and interest in
the said. properties before the decree was passed in the
former suit and therefore the decree being only against
Kanji it was not binding upon him. By his judgment and
decree dated November 18, 1952 the District Judge allowed
the appeal of respondents 1 and 2 holding that Kanji being
the elder brother, became the Karta and manager of the said
joint family on the death of the said Jetha, that Kanji
represented the joint family and therefore it was not
necessary to join Lalji as a party in the said suit and the
decree was valid and binding on both the brothers.- The
District Judge also rejected Lalji’s plea of his having
acquired Kanji’s interest in the said shops and dismissed
his cross-objections. The District Judge held that the sale
deed in favour of Lalji and Kanji conferred no right on them
as against respondents 1 and 2 and since their agreement was
in point of time earlier than the said sale deed they were
entitled to a decree for specific performance. He also held
that though 12 years had passed since the execution of the
said deed Lalji could not become the owner of those
properties by adverse possession as a mortgagee-in-
possession cannot by merely asserting possession as an owner
under an invalid sale convert his possession into adverse
possession.
Lalji filed, a second appeal, being Second Appeal No. 20 of
1953. By that time various States in Saurashtra had formed
themselves into the United States of Saurashtra. The appeal
was filed in the then High Court of Saurashtra and was heard
and disposed of by a single Judge of that High Court. By
his judgment and decree dated September 3, 1955 the learned
Single Judge allowed the appeal and dismissed the suit
holding that though Lalji and Kanji as mortgagees in
possession could not convert their possession during the
subsistence of the said mortgage into adverse possession by
assertion of ownership in the property or otherwise by an
unilateral act, if by common consent the mortgagors and the
mortgagees agree to put an end to the mortgagees’ estate by
the mortgagors executing a deed of sale and the mortgagees
assert their right by ownership under such a sale, even if
such sale were to be declared to be invalid their possession
becomes adverse and such adverse possession ripens into a
title if it continues for the statutory period. He also
held that the said decree for specific performance declaring
the said sale as invalid had not the effect of disturbing
the adverse quality of such possession and that its effect
on the contrary was to accentuate the adverse character of
such possession.
877
Aggrieved by the said judgment and decree respondents 1 and
2 filed a Letters Patent Appeal. By the time the said
appeal came up for hearing the State of Saurashtra had
merged in the State of Bombay under the States
Reorganization Act and the appeal was heard by a Division
Bench of the High Court of Bombay at Rajkot. The Division
Bench allowed the appeal, reversed the judgment and decree
passed by the learned Single Judge and restored the judgment
and decree passed by the District Judge. The Division Bench
took into account the fact of a deed of conveyance dated
April 29, 1947 having been executed through the court in
pursuance of the said decree for specific performance by the
mortgagors. and signed by Kanji as an attesting witness. On
the strength of this deed the Division Bench held that Kanji
and Lalji held the said shops in their capacity as
mortgagees only, as the said shops were now conveyed to
respondents 1 and 2. But the Division Bench also held that
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even before the execution of the said deed dated April 29,
1947 Kanji and Lalji were not in adverse possession since
their possession could never amount to adverse possession in
law and therefore Kanji and Lalji were at no point of time
in adverse possession of the said shops.
The appellants then applied for a certificate in the High
Court and on its refusal obtained special leave from this
Court and that is how this appeal has come up before us for
hearing and final disposal.
Mr. Sarjooprasad for the appellants criticised the judgment
of the Division Bench as erroneous and in our view his
criticism has some justification. For, while observing that
possession of Kanji and Lalji could at no point of time be
adverse the Division Bench slipped into an error in failing
to take into account the legal effect of the sale dated
September 10, 1930. It is true that as mortgagees-in-
possession Kanji and Lalji derived their title to possession
through the mortgagors and by virtue of their rights under
the said mortgage. They were entitled therefore to continue
to be in possession under the said mortgage and so long as
it subsisted. By merely asserting rights of ownership in
the said shops they could not convert their possession as
mortgagees and unilaterally alter their lawful possession as
mortgagees into possession hostile to the mortgagors. But
it is a well settled proposition that a mortgagor can sell
the mortgaged property to his mortgagee and thus put the
mortgagee’s estate to an end and thereafter all the right,
title and interest in the property would vest in the
mortgagee. Such a sale would be valid and binding as
between them and henceforth the character of possession as a
mortgagee would be converted into possession as an absolute
owner. Even if such a sale is held -to be voidable and not
binding on a subsequent purchaser the character of
possession based on assertion of absolute ownership
878
by the mortgagee does not alter, and if that possession
continues throughout the statutory period it ripens into a
title to the property. In Subbaiya Pandaram v. Mohamad
Mustapha Maracayar(1) a suit was brought by the appellant in
1913 against the respondents for possession of immovable
property which had been dedicated to the endowment of a
chattaram by deeds of trust executed in 1890 by the
appellant’s grandfather. In 1898 the first respondent
purchased part of the property at a sale in execution of a
decree against the appellant’s father and the purchaser and
the other respondents who claimed under him had since been
in possession. In 1904, in a suit to which the first
respondent had been joined as a party at his own request, a
decree was passed declaring the validity of the said trust
but no steps had been taken in consequence of that decree
prior to the instant suit. The Privy Council observed that
though the real argument in favour of the appellant was that
in the presence of the purchaser it was declared that the
said trust was valid and that the said property was trust
property the contention that the said declaration operated
as res judicata against the respondents and prevented them
from asserting that the property was theirs was not tenable:
"At the moment when it was passed the
possession of the purchaser was adverse, and
the declaration that the property had been
made subject to a trust disposition, and
therefore ought not to have been seized, did
not disturb or affect the quality of his
possession, it merely emphasised the fact that
it was adverse. No further step was taken in
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consequence of that declaration until the
present proceedings were instituted, when it
was too late."
This decision was followed in Dagadabhai v. Sakharam(2)
where the High Court of Bombay held that if a decree for
possession in plaintiff’s favour does not in fact result in
the defendant giving up possession of the property or having
possession of the property taken from him, it cannot be said
that it had interrupted possession; nor can it in law affect
the nature of the possession, unless it does so in fact. On
this basis the High Court held that the possession of the
defendant must be deemed to have been adverse throughout and
could not be said to have been interrupted by the mortgage
decree. (See also Bogilal v. Ratanlal).(3) The observation
made by the High Court that possession of Kanji and Lalji
was at no point of time adverse is clearly contrary to the
decision of the Privy Council and the two decisions of the
High Court of Bombay which were binding on them. The fact
that a decree for specific performance was passed in Suit
No. 263 of S.Y. 1987 would not affect the character of
possession of Kanji and Lalji nor would the declaration
therein made that the sale deed in their favour was not
(1) 50 I.A. 295 at 299. (2) A.I.R. 1948 Bom. 149.
(3) A.I.R. 1939 Bom. 261.
879
valid ’and binding on respondents 1 and 2 have the effect of
altering the character of their possession. Therefore,
except for the rights and equities in favour of respondents
1 and 2 by virtue of the agreement of sale of August 1930,
the sale in favour of Kanji and Lalji by the mortgagors was
a valid sale and conveyed title in the shops in their
favour. So far there would be no difficulty in the way of
Mr. Sarjooprasad.
But paragraph 2 of s. 40 of the Transfer of Property Act,
1882 in clear terms lays down that where a third. person is
entitled to the benefit of an obligation arising out of
contract and annexed to the ownership of immovable property,
but not amounting to an interest therein, such right or
obligation may be enforced against a transferee of the
property affected thereby, but not against a transferee for
consideration and without notice of the right or obligation
nor against such property in his hands. It is a right no
doubt arising from contract and the person agreeing to
purchase the property thereunder does not acquire any
interest in the property. Section 54 of the Transfer of
Property Act in terms provides that such a contract of sale
does not create as in English law any equitable estate in
the immovable property which is the subject matter of the
contract. But as aforesaid, the contract creates an
obligation which is recognised by section 3 of the Specific
Relief Act, 1877 and section 91 of the Indian Trusts Act,
1882. Section 3 of the Specific Relief Act defines an
"obligation" as including every duty enforceable by law and
a "trustee" as including every person holding expressly, by
implication or constructively a fiduciary character.
Illustration (g) to that section reads as follows :
"A buys certain land from B, with notice that
B has already contracted to buy it. A is a
trustee, within the meaning of this Act for B,
of the land so bought."
This principle is embodied in section 91 of the Indian
Trusts Act which lays down that where a person acquires
property with notice that another person has entered into an
existing contract affecting that property, of which specific
performance could be enforced, the former must hold the
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property for the benefit of the latter to the extent
necessary to give effect to the contract.
In Lala Durga Prasad & Anr., v. Lala Deep Chand & Ors.(1)-
this Court after considering these provisions observed that
in spite of the existence of a previous contract of sale, a
sale to a subsequent purchaser even with notice is not void
but voidable at the instance of the party agreeing to
purchase under a previous contract and except for the
obligation arising from section 91 of the Trusts Act and
paragraph 2 of section 40 of the Transfer of Property Act
the title to the property would pass from the vendor to the
subsequent transferee. In Gafur v. Bhikaji Govind & Ors.(2)
the facts were almost
(1) [1954] S. C.R. 360.
(2) 26 I.L.R. Boni. 159.
880
similar to the facts in the present case. The first
defendant there had entered into an agreement dated June 25,
1895 to sell certain land to the plaintiff. On December 19,
1895 he sold the land to the second defendant by a
registered deed. The plaintiff then sued the first
defendant for specific performance and got a decree dated
March 8, 1897 in execution of which conveyance of the land
was executed to him by the court. On his failing to obtain
possession from the second defendant he filed a suit. It
was found as a fact that the second defendant had purchased
the said land in December 1895 with notice of the earlier
agreement of June 1895 with the plaintiff. The High Court
held that the plaintiff was entitled to possession and as
the second defendant had purchased with notice of the
plaintiffs contract he held the property for the benefit of
the plaintiff to the extent necessary to give effect to that
contract. In Sathiraju v. Venkanna(1) the High Court of
Madras similarly observed that as a result of s. 91 of the
Trusts Act the natural result of a person purchasing a
property with notice of a prior contract in another person’s
favour is that the purchaser holds the property for the
benefit of the latter to the extent necessary to give effect
to the contract. But for all other purposes and as between
the purchaser and the vendor, the purchaser is the owner and
that is the reason why in such circumstances the decree in a
suit for specific performance must direct the purchaser to
join in execution of the conveyance. (See also Appa Rao v.
Veeranna).(2)
It is thus clear that though the sale dated September 10,
1930 in favour of Kanji and Lalji was not void but voidable
at the instance of respondents 1 and 2 by reason of their
earlier contract and though as between the mortgagors and
Kanji and Lalji the sale was valid and binding it was
subject to the right of specific performance which
respondents 1 and 2 had acquired and Kanji and Lalji being
in a fiduciary position, their possession was not adverse as
against respondents 1 and 2. Therefore their suit for
redemption cannot be said to be barred even though the
statutory period had expired. We thus arrive at the same
result which the High Court reached though on different
reasons.
The contention of Mr. Sarjooprasad, however, was that the
said decree for specific performance cannot effect the
adverse nature of possession of Kanji and Lalji as even when
respondents 1 and 2 obtained the deed of sale from the court
in April 1947 Kanji was not made one of the conveying
parties but was made an attesting witness. As pointed out
in Lala Durga Prasad’s(3) case the logical course is to
provide in such a decree that both the vendors and the
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subsequent purchaser should join in the deed of conveyance.
The decree for specific performance did in fact provide that
all the defendants in that suit that is, including Kanji
should
(1) A.I.R. 1935 Mad. 333.
(2) A.I.R. 1953 Mad. 409.
(3) [1944] S.C.R. 360.
881
sign the deed of conveyance. But it appears that through
some misconception Kanji was not made to join in that
conveyance and was only made to attest that document. But
that would not, in our view, make any difference in the
conclusion that as between Kanji and Lalji on the one hand
and respondents 1 and 2 on the other the possession of the
former could not be adverse and therefore there was no
question of the suit of respondents 1 and 2 for redemption
being barred by limitation. Further, being an attesting
witness, Kanji both for himself and on behalf of Lalji was
made fully aware that the sale deed conveying the title of
the property was being passed in favour of respondents 1 and
2 and that the only right henceforth in them was to receive
the mortgage amount and no more.
For the reasons aforesaid, the appeal fails and is dismissed
with costs.
Y.P.
Appeal dismissed.
882