Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 14559 of 1996
PETITIONER:
ANTONYSAMI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ARULANANDAM PILLAI (D) BY LRS & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/10/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & K.G. Balakrishnan
JUDGMENT:
D.P.Mohapatra, J.
Is the execution petition filed by the appellant barred
by limitation is the question that arises for determination in
this appeal. The High Court having answered the question
in the affirmative the decree-holder has filed this appeal
assailing the order of the High Court.
The factual backdrop of the case relevant for
appreciating the points raised may be shortly stated thus :
The predecessor in interest of the decree-holder filed
the suit against the judgment-debtor, O.S.No.35/1965, for
specific performance of the contract of sale dated 7.2.1964.
The suit property was described as 13 grounds and 491 sq.
ft. on measurement and demarcation. The suit was decreed
on 23rd July, 1966. The said decree reads as follows:
(1) The defendant do measure and
demarcate the boundaries for 13 grounds
and 491 sq. ft. in the property described
hereunder on or before 23.9.1966.
(2) That the plaintiff do deposit into court on
or before 23.9.1966 the balance of the sale
price for 13 grounds and 491 sq. ft. on
measurement and demarcation.
(3) That on such measurement and
demarcation and fixation of the price and
on deposit the defendant do execute the
sale deed in respect of the suit house-sites
in favour of the plaintiff at her costs as
agreed and in default the court do execute
the sale deed on application of the plaintiff
and the cost of the execution of such sale
deed be recovered from the defendant.
(4) That the defendant do pay to the
plaintiff the sum of Rs.1,423/- being costs of
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this suit and do bear his own costs of
Rs.507.50.
The decree-holder deposited the balance of the sale
price by 23.9.1966 but the measurement and demarcation
was not done by the judgment-debtor on or before
23.9.1966, the time fixed for the purpose. After a lapse of
more than six years the measurement and demarcation of
the land was done by the judgment-debtor in the year 1973.
Thereafter the decree-holder filed the execution petition on
19.4.1980 being E.P. No.346/1981 for executing the decree
for specific performance of the contract praying therein to
direct the judgment-debtor to execute the sale deed as per
the draft sale deed produced in the Court by the decree-
holder and in default to cause the execution of the sale deed
by the court.
The judgment-debtor in the objection filed against the
execution petition raised the question of limitation. It was the
case of the judgment-debtor that the decree became
enforceable on and from 23.9.1966 by which date the
decree-holder had deposited the balance consideration. If
the judgment-debtor had failed to measure and demarcate
the land the decree-holder should have moved the executing
court for the purpose.
It was the contention of the decree-holder that since
the condition regarding measurement and demarcation of
the land was complied by the judgment-debtor only in 1973
the period of 12 years is to be computed from that date and
on such computation the execution petition filed on
19.4.1980 was within time.
The Executing Court accepted the case of the decree-
holder and held that the decree under execution was a
conditional decree which became enforceable when the
judgment-debtor measured and demarcated the land in 1973
and therefore the execution petition was not barred by
limitation vide the order dated 16.2.1982.
On appeal by the judgment-debtor the Additional
District Judge, Tiruchirapalli, by the order passed on
6.8.1985 allowed the appeal and set aside the order passed
by the Executing Court holding, inter alia, that it was not
possible to conclude that just because the judgment-debtor
had not measured and demarcated the property the decree-
holder had not acquired any right to execute the decree.
The appellate court was of the view that if the contention of
the decree-holder is accepted it would mean that in case the
judgment-debtor intentionally did not fulfil the condition
imposed on him in the decree he could defeat the fruits of
the decree for the decree-holder and avoid the execution of
the sale deed in his favour. The appellate court took the
view that since the decree-holder after obtaining the decree
on 23.9.1966 has not executed the decree within 12 years
from that date the petition is barred by limitation.
Feeling aggrieved by the order of the appellate court
the decree-holder filed the revision petition before the High
Court at Madras assailing the said order.
The High Court on consideration of the points raised
confirmed the order passed by the appellate court. The High
Court observed that there is no condition in the decree that
the judgment-debtor can measure and demarcate the land
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as and when she pleases and the decree-holder could
approach the Execution Court only after such measurement
and demarcation. Therefore, the Execution Petition filed on
19.4.1980 was beyond the period of 12 years from
23.9.1966 and hence it was liable to be dismissed
as time barred. The revision petition filed by the decree-
holder was dismissed. The said order is under challenge in
this appeal filed by the decree-holder.
The provision of Limitation Act, 1963 which is
applicable in this case is Article 136 which reads as under:
Description
of application
Period
of
Limitati
on
Time from which
period begins to
run
136. For the
execution of
any decree
(other than a
decree
granting a
mandatory
injunction) or
order of any
civil court.
Twelve
years
(When) the decree or
order becomes
enforceable or where the
decree or any
subsequent order directs
any payment of money
or the delivery of any
property to be made at a
certain date or at
recurring periods, when
default in making the
payment or delivery in
respect of which
execution is sought,
takes place:
Provided that an
application for the
enforcement or
execution of a decree
granting a perpetual
injunction shall not be
subject to any period of
limitation.
As per the above statutory provision the period of 12
years is to be computed from the date when the decree or
order becomes enforceable. The question is when did the
decree sought to be executed in the present case become
enforceable ? Was it from 23.9.1966 when the period of two
months for measurement and demarcation of the land by the
judgment-debtor fixed under the decree expired or was it
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from the date in 1973 when according to the decree-holder
the judgment-debtor measured and demarcated the land ?
For consideration of this question it is necessary to have a
close look at the decree. On reading the decree in its
entirety it is clear to us that in paragraph 1 thereof the Court
specifically issued a direction to the judgment-debtor to
measure and demarcate the boundaries of 13 grounds and
491 sq. ft. of land on or before 23.9.1966. In para 2 the
Court directed the plaintiff to deposit in the Court on or
before 23.9.1966 the balance of the sale price for 13
grounds 491 sq. ft. of land measured and demarcated. In
paragraph 3 of the decree is incorporated the direction that
on such measurement and demarcation and on deposit of
the amount fixed in the decree, the judgment-debtor was to
execute the sale deed in respect of the suit sites in favour of
the decree-holder at her cost as agreed and in default the
Court would execute the sale deed on application of the
decree-holder and the cost of the execution of such sale
deed was to be recovered from the judgment-debtor. The
Court took care to fix the same date i.e. 23.9.1966 for both
the parties to comply with the respective directions issued to
them under the decree; the judgment-debtor to measure
and demarcate the boundaries of the property and the
decree-holder to deposit in Court the balance of the sale
price of the property so measured and demarcated. The
execution of the sale deed was to be done after the parties
carried out the directions issued to them and that is what has
been stated in paragraph 3 of the decree, with the default
clause that in case the defendant failed to execute the sale
deed, on application of the plaintiff, the executing court was
to execute the same and the cost was to be recovered from
the defendant. Such a decree cannot be said to be a
conditional one, in the sense that the plaintiff could not
enforce his rights under the decree till defendant carried out
the direction under the decree for measurement and
demarcation of the land.
The position is well settled that ordinarily a decree
becomes enforceable immediately after the judgment is
pronounced. However, there may be situations when a
decree may not be enforceable on the date it is passed.
Usually this situation arises where in the decree itself the
right of the decree-holder depends on happening of certain
event or on fulfillment of certain other conditions by the
parties in the case or by an external agency, under any
provision of law. This position has been clarified in the case
of W.B. Essential Commodities Supply Corpn. Vs. Swadesh
Agro Farming & Storage Pvt. Ltd. and Another (1999) 8 SCC
315). Therein this Court repelling the impression that a
decree becomes enforceable only when it is drawn up and
signed, observed:
From a perusal of the article extracted above, it is
clear that for execution of any decree (other than a
decree granting a mandatory injunction) or order of a
civil court, a period of 12 years is prescribed; column
3 contains two limbs indicating the time from which
the period of limitation begins to run, that is, the
starting point of limitation; they are (i) when the
decree or order becomes enforceable, and (ii) where
the decree or any subsequent order directs any
payment of money or the delivery of any property to
be made at a certain date or at recurring periods
when default in making the payment or delivery in
respect of which execution is sought, takes place.
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The proviso says that there shall be no period of
limitation for enforcement or execution of decree
granting a perpetual injunction. We are concerned
here with the first of the above-mentioned starting
points, namely, when the decree or an order
becomes enforceable. A decree or order is said to be
enforceable when it is executable. For a decree to
be executable, it must be in existence. A decree
would be deemed to come into existence
immediately on the pronouncement of the judgment.
But it is a fact of which judicial notice may be taken of
that drawing up and signing of the decree takes some
time after the pronouncement of the judgment; the
Code of Civil Procedure itself enjoins that the decree
shall be drawn up expeditiously and in any case
within 15 days from the date of the judgment. If the
decree were to bear the date when it is actually
drawn up and signed then that date will be
incompatible with the date of the judgment. This
incongruity is taken care of by Order 20 Rule 7 CPC
which, inter alia, provides that the decree shall bear
the date and the day on which the judgment was
pronounced.
Xxx xxx xxx
It follows that the decree became enforceable
the moment the judgment is delivered and merely
because there will be delay in drawing up of the
decree, it cannot be said that the decree is not
enforceable till it is prepared. This is so because an
enforceable decree in one form or the other is
available to a decree-holder from the date of the
judgment till the expiry of the period of limitation
under Article 136 of the Limitation Act.
XXX XXX XXX
Under the scheme of the Limitation Act,
execution applications, like plaints have to be
presented in the court within the time prescribed by
the Limitation Act. A decree-holder does not have the
benefit of exclusion of the time taken for obtaining the
certified copy of the decree like the appellant who
prefers an appeal, much less can he claim to deduct
time taken by the court in drawing up and signing the
decree. In this view of the matter, the High Courts of
Patna and Calcutta in Chandra Mouli Deva v. Kumar
Binoya Nand Singh (AIR 1976 Pat 208) and
Sunderlal & Sons v. Yagendra Nath Singh (AIR
1976 Cal 471) have correctly laid down the law; the
opinion to the contra expressed by the High Court of
Calcutta in Ram Krishna Tarafdar v. nemai Krishna
Tarafdar (AIR 1974 Cal 173) is wrong. Section 5 of
the Limitation Act has no application; Section 12(2)
of the Limitation Act is also inapplicable to an
execution petition. If the time is reckoned not from the
date of the decree but from the date when it is
prepared, it would amount to doing violence to the
provisions of the Limitation Act as well as of Order 20
and Order 21 Rule 11 CPC which is clearly
impermissible.
Taking note of exceptions in certain cases to the
general rule referred to above this Court observed:
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There may, however, be situations in which a
decree may not be enforceable on the date it is
passed. First, a case where a decree is not
executable until the happening of a given
contingency, for example, when a decree for
recovery of possession of immovable property
directs that it shall not be executed till the standing
crop is harvested, in such a case time will not begin
to run until harvesting of the crop and the decree
becomes enforceable from that date and not from
the date of the judgment/decree. But where no
extraneous event is to happen on the fulfilment of
which alone the decree can be executed it is not a
conditional decree and is capable of execution from
the very date it is passed (Yeshwant Deorao
Deshmukh v. Walchand Ramchand Kothari (AIR
1951 SC 16). Secondly, when there is a legislative
bar for the execution of a decree then enforceability
will commence when the bar ceases. Thirdly, in a
suit for partition of immovable properties after
passing of preliminary decree when, in final decree
proceedings, an order is passed by the court
declaring the rights of the parties in the suit
properties, it is not executable till final decree is
engrossed on non-judicial stamp paper supplied by
the parties within the time specified by the court and
the same is signed by the Judge and sealed. It is in
this context that the observations of this Court in
Shankar Balwant Lokhande v. Chandrakant
Shankar Lokhande (1995) 3 SCC 413) have to be
understood. These observations do not apply to a
money decree and, therefore, the appellant can
derive no benefit from them.
(Emphasis supplied)
The learned counsel for the appellant placed strong
reliance on a Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High Court
in the case of Abdul Rashid v. Sri Sitaramaji Maharaj
Brajman and ors. ( AIR 1974 All 275). In para 8 of the
judgment the High Court observed that the basic test is
whether there is a right available to the decree-holder to
apply for execution immediately or the fulfillment of some
condition is a condition precedent and further, whether the
terms of the decree cast any obligation on the decree-holder
to comply with that condition within a specified period; where
no such period is specified the execution of the decree must
be deemed to remain in abeyance and the limitation would
commence only from the date when the plaintiff chooses to
comply with the condition. The High Court drew support from
the language of Article 136 of the Limitation Act as giving a
legislative approval to the view that the Limitation remains in
abeyance so long as the contingent condition is not
performed. Interpreting the decree in that case the High
Court observed In the instant case there was a clear
obstacle to the immediate execution of the decree. Under
the terms of the compromise decree it was obligatory for
the decree-holder to serve two months notice on the
judgment-debtor calling upon him to remove the
constructions and delivering possession that the decree-
holder was entitled to execute the decree for possession;
immediate execution of the decree was therefore negatived
by the terms of the compromise decree.
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This decision in our view is clearly distinguishable on
facts. Even accepting the principles referred to therein it
cannot be said that in the present case the decree passed
was a conditional or contingent one.
The fixation of periods of limitation are bound to be to
some extent arbitrary and may at times result in hardship.
But in construing such provisions equitable considerations
are out of place and the strict grammatical, meaning of the
words is the only safe guide. (See AIR 1932 PC 165). The
decree was enforceable immediately after the date specified
in the decree i.e. 23.9.1966 for the decree-holder to deposit
the consideration money. If the direction given in the decree
to the judgment-debtor to measure and demarcate the land
by that date (23.9.1966) was not complied with the decree-
holder was free to execute the decree. The steps to be
taken by the decree-holder in this regard are provided in
Order 21 Rule 34(1) CPC.
In the case in hand a specified date was mentioned in
the decree for the judgment-debtor to carry out the
aforementioned direction i.e. 23.9.1966 and if he failed to
carry out the direction it was open to the decree-holder to
seek help of the executing court for measurement and
demarcation of the land, and thereafter, to get the sale deed
executed by the judgment-debtor if possible or by the Court
if necessary. The decree-holder for reasons best known to
him did not choose to execute the decree till April 1980. In
the facts and circumstances of the case and on a fair
reading of the decree in the context of the provisions of
Article 136 of the Limitation Act the conclusion is
inescapable that the execution petition was filed after expiry
of the period of limitation prescribed under the Act. The
Appellate Court was right in dismissing the execution petition
as time barred and the High Court committed no illegality in
confirming the said order.
In the result this appeal being devoid of merit is
dismissed. There will however be no order as to costs.
..J.
(D.P.Mohapatra)
..J.
(K.G.Balakrishnan)
October 30, 2001