Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2126-2127 of 2000
PETITIONER:
KHARAITI LAL
RESPONDENT:
RAMINDER KAUR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/03/2000
BENCH:
S. SAGHIR AHMAD & D.P. WADHWA
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2000 (2) SCR 445
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by S. SAGHIR AHMAD, J. Leave
granted.
The appellant, who was the owner of a plot of land measuring one and a half
kanal, situated in Industrial Area, Chandigarh, had mortgaged the said land
with one Col. Joginder Singh for a sum of Rs. 20,000 after raising certain
constructions thereon.
Col. Joginder Singh subsequently filed a suit for foreclosure in order to
recover the mortgage money by sale of Industrial Plot No. 255-P and the
building constructed thereon. A preliminary decree was passed in that suit
on January 23, 1976, directing the appellant to deposit a sum of Rs.
28,187.50 along with future interest at the rate of 9 per cent per annum on
or before March 23, 1976. The amount was not deposited and, therefore, Col.
Joginder Singh filed an application for final decree which was passed by
the Sub-ordinate Court, Chandigarh, on April 8, 1976. The decree was put to
execution and in execution proceedings, the property was auctioned on
August 25, 1976. Nazar Singh, who is now represented by the present
respondents, purchased the property at the auction for a sum of Rs. 45,000.
The auction-sale was challenged by the appellant by filing an application
under Order 21 Rule 90 C.P.C. on August 28, 1976. The objections were
rejected on November 28, 1977 and on the next day, namely, on November 29,
1977, the Court confirmed the auction-sale.
The appellant, thereafter, filed two appeals (Appeal Nos. 373 and 374 of
1977) in the High Court. During the pendency of those appeals, he also
deposited a sum of Rs. 47,250 on May 3, 1985 and another amount of Rs. 525
was deposited by him on August 19, 1985. When the appeals came up for
hearing before the Single Judge, it was noticed that the appellant had
already deposited the requisite amount under Order 34 Rule 5 of the Code of
Civil Procedure and, therefore, the appeals were allowed on August 30, 1985
and the auction-sale as also its confirmation were set aside with the
direction that the amount, deposited by the appellant, would be paid to the
heirs of Nazar Singh who had, in the meantime, died and was substituted in
the appeals by the present respondents. The judgment passed by the Single
Judge was challenged by the respondents in the Letters Patent Appeals filed
before the Division Bench, which allowed both the appeals by the impugned
judgment dated July 2, 1998 and set aside the judgment passed by the Single
Judge. It is in these circumstances that the present appeals have come up
before us.
Learned counsel for the appellant has contended that the Division Bench of
the High Court was in error in interfering with the judgment passed by the
Learned Single Judge on the ground that the deposits, made by the appellant
during the pendency of the appeals in the High Court, would not enure to
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his benefits and could not be treated to have been made under Order 34 Rule
5 C.P.C. as the auction-sale had already been confirmed. It is further
contended that Order 34 Rule 5 C.P.C. contemplates deposit before
"confirmation of sale" and if the order by which the sale was confirmed had
been challenged in appeal, the sale would not be treated as confirmed
unless the appeal was disposed of. It is further contended that since the
appellant, in the instant case, had made the deposits during the pendency
of the appeals in the High Court, which were directed against the auction-
sale as also its confirmation, the deposits so made were valid and could
not have been treated to have been made "after confirmation."
Learned counsel for the respondents, on the contrary, contended that when a
preliminary decree was passed by the trial court, the appellant was allowed
time to deposit the whole of the decretal amount by a specific date,
namely, by March 23, 1976 but the appellant did not do so and, conse-
quently, the property was auction-sold. The sale was challenged by the
appellant through objections under Order 21 Rule 90 C.P.C., which were
rejected and the sale was thereafter confirmed. It is contended that after
rejection of the objections under Order 21 Rule 90 C.P.C., the Executing
Court was bound to confirm the sale and since the sale was confirmed on the
next day of the rejection of the objections under Order 21 Rule 90 C.P.C.,
the sale, for all practical purposes, shall be deemed to have been
confirmed on that day. Any deposit, made by the appellant thereafter, would
be of no avail and on the basis of that deposit, the sale could not be set
aside. It is contended that the Division Bench of the High Court was
justified in setting aside the judgment passed by the Single Judge.
A perusal of the judgment passed by the Division Bench would show that
after setting out the facts, it formulated a question as under :-
"The question that arises for consideration is - when can a sale of the
mortgaged property be said to have been confirmed? The ancillary question
would be - Can a deposit be made under Order 34 Rule 5 even when an appeal
is pending?"
Thereafter, the Division Bench proceeded to answer the question by holding
ultimately that the deposit of money, during the pendency of appeals in the
High Court, could not be treated as a valid deposit under Order 34 Rule 5
C.P.C. For this purpose, it placed reliance upon a decision of this Court
in Hukamchand v. Bansilal & Ors., [1967] 3 SCR 695=AIR (1968) SC 86. The
decision in Hukamchand’s case (supra) was given on the particular facts of
that case. It was noticed by the Court, in that case, as under :- "Though
O.XXXIV r.5(l) recognises the right of the judgment-debtor to pay the
decretal amount in an execution relating to a mortgage decree for sale at
any time before the confirmation of sale, the rule does not give any power
to the court to grant time to deposit the money after the final decree has
been passed. It is not open to the court to go on fixing date after date
and postponing confirmation of sale merely to accommodate a judgment-
debtor."
The Court did not hold in that case that a deposit under Order 34 Rule 5
C.P.C. could not be made during the pendency of an appeal against the order
by which the sale was confirmed.
The entire case law was reviewed by this Court in a recent decision in U.
Nilan v. Kannayyan (Dead) through Lrs., [1999] 8 SCC 511=(1999) 6 Scale
358=JT (1999) 7 SC 621, in which also the Court had formulated the
following question :-
"What is the meaning of the phrase "before the confirmation of sale "may
now be considered in the light of other relevant provisions of the Code of
Civil Procedure."
The above question is identical to the question framed by the Division
Bench of the High Court in this case. This Court, on a consideration of a
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number of decisions, including the decision of this Court in Hukamchand’s
case (supra) laid down that if an appeal was pending against an order
refusing to set aside the sale, the confirmation of sale as also the
issuance of Sale Certificate would be in a nebulous state and,
consequently, it would be open to the judgment-debtor to invoke the
provisions of Order 34 Rule 5 C.P.C. and make the necessary deposits to
save his property from being transferred to a third person or, may be, to
the decree-holder, in execution of the decree passed in the mortgage suit.
It may be mentioned that in U. Nilan’s case (supra), reliance was also
placed upon the decision of this Court in Maganlal & Anr. v. Jaiswal
Industries, Neemach & Ors., [1989] 4 SCC 344=[1989] 3 SCR 696=AIR (1989) SC
2113, in which it was held that the sale does not become absolute or
irrevocable merely on passing an order confirming the sale under Order 21
Rule 92, but it would attain finality on the disposal of the appeal, if
any, filed against an order refusing to set aside the sale. This decision,
though rendered by this Court in 1989, was not noticed by the Division
Bench of the High Court.
For the reasons stated above, we allow the appeals, set aside the judgment
dated July 2, 1998, passed by the Division Bench and restore the judgment
dated 30.8.1985, passed by the Single Judge. There shall be no order as to
costs.