Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM AWADH (DEAD) BY LRS. & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ACHBALBAR DUBEY & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/02/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharuchan, N.S.Hegde, Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
BHARUCHA. J:
This appeal stands referred to a Bench of three Judges
because the two learned Judges who heard It earlier found
difficulty in following the judgment of a Bench of two
learned Judges in Jupra.^SInah & Anr. vs. LabbSInah & Ors.
[(1995) 2 SCC 31].
It 1s not necessary to go into any great detail
insofar as the facts are concerned. The appellants before
us are the legal representatives of a subsequent purchaser
of certain property. They were defendants to a suit by one
Bachna for specific performance of an earlier agreement to
sell that property to her. She had not pleaded i’n her
plaint that she was ready and willing to perform her part of
the agreement, but that plea was Tater introduced by way of
an amendment. The question now is in regard to whether she
or her legal representatives were, in fact, at all material
times ready and willing to perform their part of
that agreement. The first appellate court declined to
permit the present appellants to plead and contend that
Bachna and her Tegal representatives were never prepared to
perform their part of the agreement and, for this purpose,
it relied upon the judgment of this Court in the case of
Jugraj Singh. The High Court, insecond appeal, affirmed
that view.
In Jugraj Singh’s case, upon substantially similar
facts, this Court noted Section 16(c) of the Specific Relief
Act and the dictum of the Privy Council in Ardeshir H.Mama
vs. Flora Sasson (55 Ind App 360) that in a suit for
specific performance the averment of readiness and
willingness on the plaintiff’s part, upto the date of the
decree, was necessary. It also noted that this Court in
Somathinayagam Pillai vs. Palaniswami Nadar [(1967) 1 SCR
227] had held that it was for the plaintiff in a suit for
specific performance "to establish that he was, since the
date of the contract, continuously ready and willing to
perform his part of the contract. If he falls to do so, his
claim for specific performance must fall." Jugraj Singh’s
case, however, held:
"That plea 1s specificaTly available to the
vendor/defendant. It 1s personal to him. The subsequent
purchasers have got only the right to defend their purchase
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on the premise that they have no prior knowledge of the
agreement of sale with the plaintiff. They are bona tide
purchasers for valuable consideration. Though they are
necessary parties to the suit, since .any decree obtained by
the plaintiff would be binding on the subsequent purchasers,
the
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plea that the plaintiff must always be ready and -
willing to perform his part of the contract must be
available only to the vendor or his legal representatives,
but not to the subsequent purchasers."
The decision in Jugraj Singh’s case was noted by a
Bench of. two learned Judges in Lakhi Ram vs. Trikha Ram
[(1&98) 2 SCC 720] and doubted, but the appeal there was
decided on another point. - Section 16 of the Specific
Performance Act read’s:
"16. ’Personal bars to relief.--- Specific
performance of a contract cannot be enforced in favour of a
person--
(a) xxxxx
-(b)xxxxx
(c) who falls to aver and prove that he has
performed or has always been ready and willing to perform
the essential terms of the contract which are to be
performed by him, other than terms the performance of which
has been prevented or waived by the defendant."
The obligation imposed by Section 16 is upon the court
not to grant specific performance to a plaintiff who has not
met the requirements of clauses (a), (b) and (c) thereof. A
court may not, therefore, grant to a plaintiff who has
failed to aver and to prove that he has performed or has
always been ready and willing to perform his part of the
agreement the specific performance whereof he seeks. There
is, therefore, no question of the plea being avalTable to
one defendant and not to another. It is open
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to any defendant to contend and establish that the
mandatory requirement of Section 16(c) has not been complied
with and it 1s for the court to determine whether it has or
has not been complied with and, depending upon its
conclusion, decree or decline to decree the suit. We are of
the view that the decision in Jugraj Singh’s case 1s
erroneous.
In the circumstances, it becomes necessary to remand
the suit to the trial court, namely, the Court of the
Munsif,Gyanpur, Varanasi, to consider whether or not it has
been established that the original plaintiff Bachna and her
legal representatives- had proved that they had performed or
were always ready and willing, to perform the terms of the
agreement for sale in Bachna’s favour.
The appeal is avowed. The judgments and order under
appeal and the orders and decrees of the courts below are
set aside and the suit 1s remanded to the trial court for
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decision of the question stated above. The suit shall be
decided as expeditlously as possible, and within a period of
six months from today. - : No order as- to costs. ; i