Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAGHU NATH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMPETENT OFFICER, DELHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/08/1970
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 131 1971 SCR (1) 851
1970 SCC (2) 537
ACT:
Administration of Evacuee Act (31 of 1950),s.12 and Ad-
ministration of Evacuee Property (Central) Rules 1950, r.
14--Power of Custodian to lease and cancel leases--Evacuee
Interest (Separation) Act (64 of 1951), s. 10 and Evacuee
Interest (Separation) Rules, r. 11B--Competent Officer--When
he can direct Custodian to deliver vacant possession of
mortgagel property.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant executed a usufructuary mortgage of his house
and continued to reside in it as a tenant under a lease
obtained from the mortgagee. In 1949, the mortgagee left
for Pakistan. He was declared an evacuee and his mortgagee
interest in the mortgaged property vested in the Custodian
under s. 8 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act,
1950. Under s. 12, the Custodian evicted the appellant and
allotted it to others as tenants. In spite of demands by
the appellant and the appellant tendering the mortgage
amount, the Custodian refused to hand over vacant possession
of the house to the appellant. The appellant applied to the
Competent Officer under the Evacuee Interest (Separation)
Act, 1951. The Officer determined the mortgage debt due
from the appellant and the appellant claimed vacant
possession against tender of payment by him of the amount.
The Officer rejected the claim and ordered the sale of the
property under s.10(b)(ii) of the Separation Act, for
satisfaction of the mortgage debt. Thereafter, the
appellant paid the entire mortgage debt and the Competent
Officer accepted the amount.
On the question whether the appellant was entitled to vacant
possession and have the order of sale set aside,
HELD:(1) Section 4 of the Administration of Evacuee Property
Act gives to that Act an overriding effect in relation to
any other law for the time being in force, and hence the law
under the Transfer of Property set, is not applicable.
Though s.12 of the Act empowers the Custodian to cancel an
allotment or a tenancy, created by him, under r.14(2) of the
Administration of Evacuee Property (Central) Rules, 1950,
the Custodian can evict a person only on a ground justifying
eviction of a tenant under a law relating to rent control or
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for any violation of the conditions of the lease or
allotment. The Custodian could not, therefore, give vacant
possession of the property to the appellant on his tender of
payment of the mortgage amount. [855 H; 856 A-B, D-F]
(2) The Evacuee Interest (Separation) Act, 1951, was passed
on account of the difficulty of administering evacuee
properties in which there were both evacuee and non-evacuee
interests and to resolve the hardship felt by non-evacuees,
who by reason of such properties being in the possession
of the Possession were unable to obtain satisfaction of
their claims in view of the prohibitive provisions of that
Act. But there is no provisions by which the Custodian is
made subject to the power or control of the Competent
Officer or which enables the Competent Officer
852
to pass an order which would curtail or otherwise affect the
powers of the Custodian. Though under s.10(b)(i) of the
Separation Act, the Competent Officer can pay to the
Custodian the mortgage debt and redeem the mortgaged
property, his power is subject to the rules made under that
Act. [856 F-G; 858 B-C, G-H]
(3) Reading the relevant provisions namely, s. 12 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act and r. 14 of the
Rules made thereunder, and s. 10 of the Separation Act and
r. 11B of the rules made thereunder, together, the position
is : (i) that though the Competent’ Officer must accept the
mortgage amount when tendered by a mortgagor and the
mortgage debt is thereupon satisfied, he cannot exercise the
power to redeem the mortgaged property and order the
Custodian to deliver up its vacant possession to the
mortgagor in the absence of any agreement between the
mortgagor and the Custodian; (ii) that the Competent Officer
can order sale only for satisfaction of the mortgage debt
and for distribution of the sale proceeds between the
mortgagor and mortgagee. Since in the present case, the
mortgage amount had been paid by the appellant and accepted
by the Competent officer, the order directing sale is unten-
able and should be set aside; and (iii) that in exercising-
his jurisdiction under s. 10, the Competent Officer cannot
direct the Custodian to cancel or vary the terms of the
leases or allotments made or granted by him. Therefore the
Competent Officer can direct only symbolical possession of
the mortgaged,property to be given to the appellant,
however, harsh and unfair it may apparently be. [860 D-G;
861 B, E-H; 862 A-C]
The All India Film Corporation v. Raja Gyan Nath, [1970] 2
S.C.R. 581 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 36 of 1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 25, 1966 of the Punjab High Court, Circuit Bench at
Delhi in Letters Patent Appeal No. 36-D of 1966.
Bishan Narain, R. Mahatingier and Ganpat Rai, for the
appellant.
R. H. Dhebar and S. P. Nayar, for respondent Nos. 1 and 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J In 1933 the appellant built a bungalow situate at
27, Curzon Road, New Delhi on a plot acquired by him under a
permanent lease from the Secretary of State for India. In
1943 he mortgaged the said property with possession in
favour of one K. B. Bunyad Hussain but obtained a lease
thereof at the same time from the mortgagee and continued to
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reside therein as tenant. In November 1949, the mortgagee
left for Pakistan a whereupon the Custodian of Evacuee
Property under the Administration of Evacuee Property Act,
1950 (hereinafter referred to as the Administration Act)
declared him to be an evacuee and his interest in the said
property as the mortgagee as evacuee, property. The
appellant alleged that sometime in November 1949 the
853
Custodian forcibly dispossessed him and either allotted or
let out, or allowed the said premises to be occupied by
certain persons. In 1954, the appellant made an application
to the Competent Officer under the Evacuee Interest
(Separation) Act, 1951 (hereinafter referred to as the
Separation Act) for separating his interest as the mortgagor
and tenant in the said property. In those proceedings a sum
of Rs. 1,45,735/- was ultimately held to be due as the
mortgage debt under the said mortgage. The appellant
claimed that he was entitled to obtain vacant possession of
the said property against payment by him of the mortgage
debt. The claim was rejected on the ground that there was
no agreement between the appellant and the Custodian for
getting the vacant possession and also on the ground that
the Competent Officer, under the Separation Act, had no
power to direct the Custodian to hand over to the appellant
vacant possession. From that time onwards the appellant
made diverse applications to the Competent Officer and the
Appellate Officer under the Separation Act for obtaining
vacant possession against payment of the mortgage debt. In
one such application made in 1958 he alleged that a
compromise had been arrived at between him and the Custodian
under which he would pay the, mortgage, debt and the
Custodian thereupon would simultaneously hand over to him
vacant possession. By his order dated March 23, 1959, the
Appellate Officer, however, held that no such compromise had
been entered into by the Custodian and that the
correspondence between the appellant and that authority
merely indicated that what was agreed to was that upon the
appellant lodging certain verified claims an open portion
shown as A, B, C and D in the plan of the property would be
handed over to him. On this finding the Appellate Officer
dismissed the appellant’s application as he had neither paid
the mortgage money nor put in the verified claims as
suggested in the said correspondence and confirmed the order
of the Competent Officer under which the property had been
ordered to be sold in the absence of any agreement with the’
Custodian or the payment of the mortgage debt.
The appellant then filed a writ petition in the High Court
of Punjab (in the Circuit Bench at Delhi) for quashing the
said order of sale and for a direction to the Competent
Officer to hand over vacant possession against payment by
him of the mortgage debt. A learned Single Judge dismissed
the petition holding that the Competent Officer had no
jurisdiction to order such vacant possession against the
Custodian or against the tenants or allottees inducted on
the property by the Custodian. The Letters Patent appeal
against that judgment and order was also dismissed. The
appellant then filed the present appeal after obtaining
special leave from this Court.
854
It is not disputed that until the time when the Competent
Officer passed his order for sale of the property and the
Appellate Officer confirmed it the appellant had not paid
the mortgage amount, nor was there any agreement between him
and the Custodian where under the latter would hand over
vacant possession of the property against payment of the
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mortgage debt. However, it is conceded by counsel for
respondents 1 and 3 that the appellant has since then paid
the entire mortgage debt and the Competent Officer has under
s. 10 of the Separation Act accepted that amount. Two
questions on these facts, therefore, arise, for deter-
mination; (1) whether the order for sale passed by the
Competent Officer and confirmed by the Appellate Officer
was rightly passed although the appellant had repeatedly
offered to pay the mortgage debt on condition, however, that
he would be given vacant possession at the same time, and
(2) assuming that the Competent Officer had no power to
direct the Custodian to hand over vacant possession, what
was the effect of the repayment of the mortgage debt by the
appellant since then and the acceptance thereof by the
Competent Officer.
The rights in the property in question which vested in the
Custodian were those of the mortgagee on his being declared
an evacuee and his rights as such mortgagee in the property
in question as evacuee property. Under the Transfer of
Property Act, 1882 the interest which the Custodian could
claim was the interest in the property transferred to the
mortgagee for securing repayment of the money advanced by
him. Since the mortgage was usufructuary, the mortgagee,
and after his having been declared an evacuee, the
Custodian, could claim and retain possession till the
mortgage debt was paid and the mortgage was discharged. If
the property is let out in the meantime, the mortgagee and
those claiming his interest therein are entitled to receive
the rents and profits accruing front the property in lieu of
interest or towards part payment of the mortgage debt.
Under s. 60 of that Act, the mortgagor has a right at any
time after the principal amount has become due to require
the mortgagee on payment or tender of the mortgage debt (a)
to deliver to him the mortgage deed and all other documents
relating to the mortgaged property which are in the
mortgagee’s possession or power, (b) to deliver possession
where the mortgagee is in possession of the mortgaged
property and (c) to retransfer the mortgaged property to him
or to such third person as he may direct at his cost.
Under s. 76, the mortgagee in possession. has to manage the
property as a person of ordinary prudence would manage it if
it were his own. Under s. 83, the mortgagor, provided his
right of redemption is not barred, may deposit in the court
where he might have instituted a suit for redemption to the
account of the mortgagee the mortgage debt then due. The
court thereupon has to issue a notice to the mort-
855
gagee and on the mortgagee stating the amount due to him
and his willingness to accept the money so deposited in full
discharge of the mortgage debt, pay the amount to the
mortgagee on his depositing the mortgage deed and all other
documents relating to the mortgaged property. Where the
mortgagee is in possession of the property, the court before
paying the amount has to ask him to deliver possession
thereof to the mortgagor. When the mortgagor has tendered
or deposited in court the. mortgage debt together with
interest thereon and has done all that is to be done by him
to enable the mortgagee to take such amount out of court,
and a notice, as aforesaid, has been served on the mortgagee
under s. 83 interest ceases to run. If the mortgagee
thereafter refuse& to accept the amount so deposited or to
deliver the mortgage deed and other documents or possession
of the property where it is in his possession, the remedy of
the mortgagor is to file a suit for redemption. The
position, therefore, is that upon the mortgage being paid
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off, the mortgagor is entitled to have the property restored
to him free from the mortgagee’s security. The repayment of
the debt would be made against delivery of possession and of
the mortgage deed and other documents, and these have to be
simultaneous transactions. A tender of the mortgage deed or
a deposit thereof in court conditional upon the mortgagee
than and there delivering possession or executing
reconveyable, if required, and handing over the deeds would
be a good tender so that if it were to be refused interest
would cease running. It follows that a mortgagee is not
permitted to deal with the property in such a way that upon
discharge of the debt the property cannot be restored. [see
Fisher. & Lightwood’s Law of Mortgage (8th ed.) p. 482].
Is the position of a mortgagor any the different than under
the Transfer of Property Act by reason of the evacuee
property legislation ? In other words, could not the
appellant have tendered to the Competent Officer the
mortgage amount due by him on condition that he should be
given physical and not merely symbolical possession of the
mortgaged property.
Upon the mortgagee being declared an evacuee and his
interest as such mortgagee in the premises in question
evacuee property, his interest in the mortgaged property
vested under s. 8 of the Administration Act in the Custodian
from the date of the notice issued under s. 7 of the Act.
Under s. 8 (4) any person in possession of the mortgaged
property would be deemed thenceforth to be holding the
property on behalf of the Custodian and would be bound on
demand by him to surrender possession to him. The Act
having under s. 4 an overriding effect on any other law for
the time being in force or any instrument having effect by
virtue of any such Act, the Custodian, under the powers
conferred on him by, s. 10, could take all such measures he
might consider necessary,
856
for securing, administering, preserving and managing any
evacuee property including transferring "in any manner
whatsoever" the evacuee property "notwithstanding to the
contrary contained in any law or agreement relating
thereto". Under s.12, the Custodian is empowered,
notwithstanding anything contained-,in any other law for the
time being in force, to cancel any allotment, terminate any
lease or amend the terms of such lease or agreement under
which any evacuee property is held or occupied by a person
whether such allotment, lease or agreement was granted or
entered into before or after the commencement of the Act.
Under sub-s. 3, he is authorised to eject such person and
take possession, if such person fails to surrender
possession on demand made by him in the manner provided by
s. 9 i.e., by even using such force as would be necessary
for taking possession. It is conceded by the respondents
that under these powers the Custodian had taken over posses-
sion of the mortgaged property and the property has since
then been in possession of persons who were either allotted
portions of it or, who were inducted therein as tenants by
the Custodian. It is also conceded that the Custodian has
refused, notwithstanding demands made by the appellant, to
evict these persons from the property and hand over vacant
possession to the appellant even on the appellant tendering
the mortgage amount. This was presumably done by reason of
the fact that though s. 12 empowers him’ to cancel an
allotment or a tenancy made or created by him, r. 14(2) of
the Administration of Evacuee Property (Central) Rules, 1950
lays down that in the case of a lease or an allotment
granted by the Custodian he may evict a person on a ground
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justifying eviction of a tenant under a law relating to the
Rent Control or for any violation of the conditions of the
lease or allotment. From the provisions dealing with the
vesting of the evacuee property, the powers of the
Custodian, appeals and revisions from his order and the
overriding nature of the provisions of the Act it is clear
that the Administration Act is a self-contained code.
In 1951, Parliament passed the Evacuee Interest (Separation)
Act, LXIV of 1951 (hereinafter referred to as the Separation
Act). The statement of objects and reasons shows that it
was passed on account of the difficulty of administering
evacuee properties in which there were both evacuee and non-
evacuee interests and to solve the hardship felt by non-
evacuees, who by reason of such properties being in
possession of the Custodian, were unable to obtain
satisfaction of their claims in view of the prohibitive
provisions of the Administration Act and in particular its
s. 17. The Act, as its long title declares, was passed for
the separation of interests of evacuees from those of non-
evacuee persons in composite properties. Sections 4 and 5
of the Act provide for the appointment of Competent Officers
and their jurisdiction. Sec. 7 provides for submission of
claims by a person claiming interest in
857
a composite property. Cl. (e) of sub-s. 2 requires that
where a claim is made by a mortgagor the total amount due on
the mortgage debt and the particulars necessary to determine
the same should be set out in such a claim. Sec. 8 provides
for an inquiry to be made by the Competent Officer and
provides that the order to be made by him shall contain,
amongst other things, the amount due to the evacuee in a
case where the claim is made by a mortgagor. Sub-s. 2 of s.
8, however, provides that where the Custodian has determined
that the property in question or any interest therein is
evacuee property, such determination is binding on the
competent officer. The proviso to that sub-section lays
down that nothing contained in sub-s. 2 shall debar the
competent officer from determining the mortgage debt in
respect of, such property or any interest therein or from
separating the interest of the evacuee from that of the
claimant under s. 10. Sec. 10 provides that notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law or contract or any
decree or order of the civil court or other authority, the
competent officer may, subject to any rules that may be made
in this behalf, take all such measures as he may consider
necessary for the purpose of separating the interest of the
evacuee from those of the claimant in any composite
property and in particular may
"(b) in the case of any claim of a mortgagor
or a mortgagee,-
(i) pay to the Custodian or the claimant the
amount payable under the mortgage debt and
redeem the mortgaged property; or
(ii) sell the mortgaged property for
satisfaction of the mortgage debt and
distribute the sale proceeds thereof; or
(iii) partition the property between the
mortgagor and the mortgagee having regard to
the share to which the mortgagee would be
entitled in lieu of his claim;"
Cl. (c) empowers him to adopt a combination of all or some
of these measures. The proviso to the section provides that
in any case where the claimant is a mortgagor and tenders
the amount due, the competent officer shall accept the same
in full satisfaction of the mortgage debt. The competent
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officer, by virtue of the proviso, is thus under an
obligation, where the claimant is a mortgagor and tenders
the mortgage amount due, to accept such amount in full
satisfaction of the mortgage debt and thereupon interest on
the mortgage amount would cease to run. Under cl. (b), he
is also empowered in such a case to redeem the mortgaged
property.
The argument was that where the mortgage amount is tendered
by the mortgagor and the competent officer accepts it in
satis-
858
faction of the debt due under the mortgage, the
mortgage debt is satisfied, interest thereon ceases to run
and the mortgage is discharged. Consequently, there would
be no question of the com-, petent officer adopting any of
the measures provided in sub-cls. (ii) and (iii) of cl. (b)
of the section, that is to say, there could be no occasion
for him either to sell the property for satisfaction of the
mortgage debt or to partition the property between the
mortgagor and the mortgagee, as, on satisfaction of the
mortgage debt the mortgage is discharged and the mortgagee’s
interest in the mortgaged property ceases or comes to an
end. The only measure which in that event he can adopt
would be- that, under cl. (b) (i), i.e, to pay to the
Custodian the mortgage debt and redeem the mortgaged
property. It was said that that being the position under S.
10, the appellant was entitled to tender the mort. gage
amount in satisfaction of the debt due under the mortgage on
condition that the mortgage should be redeemed and
possession of the property given to him. The Competent
Officer in the proceedings-before him under S. 7 was bound
to accept the mortgage amount and redeem the mortgaged
property. The argument would be valid if S. 10 had been
untrammelled and the powers given therein to the Competent
Officer were not made subject to the rules which may be made
under the Act. The Legislature, it seems had a purpose in
making the powers contained in S. 10 and their exercise by
the Competent Officer subject to the rules. It must have
been aware of (i) that the Administration Act is, as
aforesaid, a self-contained code, (ii) that the Custodian
appointed thereunder is not an authority subject to the
power or control of the Competent Officer, and (iii) that
the Administration Act, by ss. 10 and 12 thereof, confers
several powers on the Custodian including the power to
transfer the property vested in him. He can therefore,
create a lease or grant allotment and thus induct on the
property tenants or allottees. Under s. 12 of that Act the
Custodian has been empowered to cancel or terminate a lease
or allotment. But no such power is conferred on the
Competent Officer either under s. 10 or under any other
section of the Separation Act, nor have the powers of the
Custodian been made subject to the powers of the Competent
Officer or his orders. On the other hand, it would appear
from a reading of the provisions of the Separation Act that
the object of enacting it was to enable non-evacuees to have
their interests separated in composite pro perties and to
grant power to the competent officer to achieve that object.
But we do not find anywhere in either of the two Acts any
provision by which the Custodian is made subject to the,
power or control of the Competent Officer or enabling the
Competent Officer to pass any order which would curtail or
otherwise affect the powers of the Custodian. It would seem
that the two Acts have different objects and schemes and the
authorities established under them are independent of each
other. The powers conferred
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859
on the Competent Officer had, therefore, to be so provided
that they could be exercised in harmony and consistently
with the pro-’ visions of the Administration Act and the
duties and functions of the Custodian thereunder. It was
for that reason that the Legislature laid down in s. 10 of
the Separation Act that the powers conferred Thereunder on
the Competent Officer were to be subject to the rules made
under that Act. Had it not been so, there would have
resulted a conflict in the exercise of the respective powers
given to the Custodian and the Competent Officer by the two.
Acts, and consequently, are in the smooth working out of the
provisions of the two Acts.
Rule II B of the Rules made under the Separation Act pro-
vides that a Competent Officer "having regard to the
provisions of the proviso to s. 10 of the Act" shall, for
the purpose of separating the evacuee interest from other
interests in a composite property, adopt any of the measures
in the order of preference set out therein. Cl. (b) of that
rule provides that in the case of a claim by a mortgagor or
a mortgagee (1) where both the Custodian and claimant agree,
the Competent Officer can exercise the powers. conferred on
him under sub-cl. (i) or sub-cl. (iii) of cl. (b) of s. 10
of the Act and (ii) where there is no such agreement, he can
sell the mortgaged property for satisfaction of the mortgage
debt and distribute the sale proceeds thereof. The effect
of this rule read in conjunction with s. 10 of the Act,
however harsh it may apparently seem to be, is that though
the Competent Officer has to accept the mortgage amount
tendered by a mortgagor and thus discharge the mortgage debt
and interest thereupon ceases to run on the principal amount
and though he can adopt any one of the measures set out in
s. 10, including redemption of the mortgage, he cannot order
such redemption and direct the Custodian to deliver vacant
possession of the property in the absence of an agreement
between the Custodian and the mortgagor claimant. It
follows that in the absence of such agreement the mortgagor
claimant cannot demand from the Competent Officer that the
latter should accept the mortgage amount tendered by him and
direct simultaneous delivery of possession of the mortgaged
property. The power to redeem the mortgaged property being
subject to rule II B (b), the only thing that the Competent
Officer can at the most do is to order symbolical
possession, but he cannot direct the Custodian to give
vacant possession. The reason is clear, for, such an order
would in effect be an order directing the Custodian to
cancel the leases or allotments granted by him and eject
the tenants or allottees from the property. Such an order
would at once be in conflict with r. 14 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property (Central) Rules, 1950.
That rule provides that while, exercising his power under s.
12 of that Act, namely, the power to cancel or vary the
terms of a lease or allotment, the Custodian,-
860
in the case of a lease or allotment granted by him, can
evict a person only on any of the grounds justifying
eviction of a tenant under any rent control law for the time
being in force in the State concerned or for any violation
of the conditions of the lease or the allotment. Cl. 4 of
that rule further lays down that before cancelling or
varying the terms of the lease or before evicting any less
the Custodian must serve a show cause notice on such lessee
and afford him a reasonable opportunity of being heard. If
the Custodian is satisfied on hearing the concerned lessee
that he is not liable to eviction under a rent control Act
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in force in the State where the property is situate or has
not contravened any of the provisions of the lease, he
cannot cancel the lease nor can he evict the lessee except
only as provided by cl. (5) of that rule on the ground that
such eviction is necessary or expedient for the preservation
or proper administration or management of such property or
for carrying out any other object of the Act. He,
therefore, cannot evict a tenant or an allottee on the
ground that it is necessary to do so for the separation of
an interest of a non-evacuee mortgagor as that would not be
one of the purposes of the Administration Act.
The result which emerges from the discussion of the relevant
provisions of the two Acts and the rules thereunder made is
(i) that though the Competent Officer must accept the
mortgage amount when tendered by a mortgagor and the
mortgage debt thereupon would be satisfied, he cannot
exercise the power to redeem the mortgaged property and
order the Custodian to deliver up its vacant possession to
the mortgagor in the absence of any’ :agreement between the
mortgagor and the Custodian, and (ii) that in exercising his
jurisdiction under s. 10 the Competent Officer cannot direct
the Custodian to cancel or vary the terms of the leases or
allotments made or granted by him, firstly because he has no
such power under s. 10 or any other provision of the
Separation Act, and secondly, because such an order would
amount to compelling the Custodian to act in a manner
contrary to the provisions of the aforesaid r. 14. The
exercise of the power to redeem being subject to the rules,
it would not be competent for the Competent Officer, by
reason of r. II B (b), to order delivery of possession by
the Custodian in the absence of an agreement between him and
the mortgagor-claimant.
In view of this position, the appellant could not have
insisted that he would tender or pay the mortgage debt only
against delivery of vacant possession of the property in the
absence of any agreement between him and the Custodian. The
only thing which, the Competent Officer could do in the
circumstances was to accept the mortgage amount whereupon
interest would cease to run. It is not in dispute that the
appellant, insisting as he was
861
all throughout upon being given vacant and not merely
symbolical possession, did not actually tender or make
payment of the mortgage debt. The mortgage debt, therefore,
remained outstanding. The mortgage also stood intact, and
therefore, the only measure which the Competent Officer
could adopt and which in fact he, adopted was to order sale
of the property and satisfy the mortgage debt from the sale
proceeds thereof. The order which he passed and which was
confirmed by the Appellate Officer was in the circumstances
then prevailing validly and competently made. The
appellant’s grievance against it, therefore, could not be
sustained. [of in this connection the position of an
auction purchaser as decided in Ek Nawas Khan v. The
Competent Officer(1)].
But it is conceded that since the passing of the said order
the appellant has,-paid up the full mortgage amount and the
Competent Officer has, as he was bound to do under s. 10,
proviso, accepted that amount. Presumably that amount has
been paid by him to the Custodian. Therefore, the mortgage
debt is no longer outstanding. Though this event has
happened after the impugned order was passed,, we must in
fairness take notice of the fact that the mortgage debt is
no longer outstanding and the mortgaged property is now free
from the mortgagee’s security, and therefore, from the
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interest vested in the Custodian. It is true that the Com-
petent Officer, as already stated, can adopt any of the
three measures set out in s. 10(b) of the Separation Act or
adopt a combination of all or some, of them, but as emerging
from the discussion, above, he cannot redeem the property
and order delivery of vacant possession in the absence of an
agreement between the Custodian and the appellant. That is
quite clear. But the order of sale passed by him
and confirmed by the Appellate Officer also cannot secondly,
because he can order sale only for satisfaction of the
mortgage debt and for distribution of the sale proceeds
thereof’ between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. There
being now no question of the satisfaction of the mortgage
debt since it now stands satisfied and the property being
now freed from the mortgagee’s security, the order for sale’
cannot stand and cannot be allowed to stand. At the same
time the Competent Officer cannot order the Custodian to
deliver vacant possession although the appellant has paid
the mortgage amount and the Competent Officer has accepted
it in satisfaction of the mortgage debt. In view of ss. 10
and 12 of the Administration Act, the powers and duties of
the Custodian thereunder and under the rules made under that
Act, the provisions of s. 10 of the Separation Act and r. II
B of the rules made thereunder, the only thing that could be
offered and given to the appellant was symbolical possession
of the property. Such a result, no doubt, would be
inconvenient, and may even
(1) A.T.R. 1960 All. 626.
862
appear to be harsh and unfair as the appellant would be
driven to file proceedings for eviction of tenants and
allottees now in possession of the property. (see The All
India Film Corporation Ltd. v. Raja Gyan Nath) (1).
In view of the payment of the mortgage amount by the
appellant and the acceptance of it by the Competent Officer,
the order directing sale has now become untenable and has,
therefore, to be set aside. The mortgage stands discharged
and the Competent Officer is bound to direct symbolical
possession of the mortgaged property to the appellant. To
this extent the appeal succeeds. The order for costs of the
appeal would ordinarily follow the result, but in view of
the fact that the Competent Officer was entitled to pass
the order of sale in the circumstances then prevailing it is
fair and equitable, though his order is set aside, that the
parties should bear their own costs.
V.P.S Appeal allowed in part.
(1) (1970] 2 S C.R. 581.
863