Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRITUNJOY PANI AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NARMANDA BALA SASMAL AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/03/1961
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1353 1962 SCR (1) 290
ACT:
Mortgage--Right of redemption--Suit, when maintainable-
--Mortgagor and Mortgagee--Legal position--Indian Trusts
Act, 1882 (II of 1882), S. 90.
HEADNOTE:
Usufructuary mortgage bond was executed in favour of the
father of the appellant who was put in possession of the
mortgaged property. One of the terms of the usufructuary
mortgage was that in case of failure of payment of rent by
the mortgagor, the mortgagee was to pay off the arrears of
rent to the landlord, which obligation the mortgagee did not
honour as a result of which the property was brought to sale
and ultimately purchased by the mortgagee.
The mortgagor filed a suit against the mortgagee, the appel-
lant’s father, for redemption of the mortgage and !or
possession., The defence inter alia was that the mortgagee
had purchased equity of redemption in execution of the rent
decree and that the mortgagor had no longer any right to sue
him for redemption and their remedy, if any, was to sue for
setting aside the sale on the ground of fraud or otherwise.
Held, that s. go of the Trusts Act read with the
illustration (c) lays down the principle that no one can
be allowed to benefit for his own wrongful act.
Held, further, that the legal position with regard to mort-
gagor and mortgagee was that:-
(1) the governing principle is that "once mortgagee
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always a mortgagee" till the mortgage is terminated by the
act of the parties themselves, by merger or by order of the
Court;
(2)where a mortgagee purchases the equity of redemption in
execution of his mortgage decree with the leave of court or
in execution of a mortgage or money decree obtained by a
third party, the equity of redemption may be extinguished;
and, in that event, the mortgagor cannot sue for redemption
without getting the sale set aside; and
(3)where a mortgagee purchases the mortgaged property by
reason of a default committed by him the mortgage is not
extinguished and the relationship of Mortgagor and mortgagee
continues to subsist even thereafter, for his purchase of
the equity of redemption is only in trust for the mortgagor.
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In the instant case the right to redeem the mortgage was not
extinguished and in the eyes of law, the purchase in the
rent sale was deemed to have been made in trust for the
mortgagor and the suit for redemption was maintainable.
Sidhakamal Nayan v. Bira Naik, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 336, relied
on. Malkarjun Bin Shidramappa Pasare v. Narhari Bin
Shivappa, (1900) L.R. 27 I.A. 216, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 119 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 3, 1955, of the Orissa High Court in Appeal No. 593 of
1950.
B. Patnaik, for the appellants.
D. N. Mukherjee, for the respondents.
1961. March 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the High Court of Judicature for Orissa dated
March 3, 1955, setting aside the judgment of the Court of
the District Judge, Mayurbhanj, and restoring that of the
Subordinate Judge, Baladore.
The facts leading up to this appeal may be briefly stated.
The land in dispute originally belonged to one Bhagaban
Parida. On July 16, 1924, he executed a registered
kabala’for a’ consideration of Rs. 2,000 in favour of one
Priyanath Sasmal. On June 2, 1928, Priyanath Sasmal
executed a usufructuary mortgage bond (Ex. B) for Rs. 1,500
in favour of
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Lakshminarayan Pani, the father of the appellants herein.
Under the terms of the said usufructuary mortgage, the
mortgaged property was put in possession of the mortgagee.
One of the terms of the mortgage deed was that the initial
responsibility for the payment of rent was that of the
mortgagor and that, if for any reason he did not pay the
arrears of rent, the mortgagee was under an obligation to
pay off the arrears to the landlord and to obtain a receipt
acknowledging the payment. The mortgagee did not pay the
arrears of rent, with the result that for arrears of rent
the said property was brought to sale and ultimately
purchased by the mortgagee for a sum of Rs. 300 on September
22, 1936. The sale was confirmed on November 4, 1936, and
the mortgagee took possession through Court on December 21,
1938. The mortgagor filed a suit against the mortgagee in
the Court of the Subordinate Judge, Balasore, for redemption
of the mortgage and for possession. As the mortgagor died
after the filing of the suit, his widow and son were brought
on record as his legal representatives. The defence of the
appellants to that suit was that possession was not
delivered to their father, the mortgagee, under the terms of
the mortgage deed, that the debt was discharged, that their
father had purchased the equity of redemption in execution
of the rent decree, and that the mortgagor had no longer any
right to sue him for redemption. The learned Subordinate
Judge and, on appeal, the District Judge concurrently found
that in fact possession was delivered to the mortgagee on
the basis of the mortgage deed and that the plea of
discharge was not true; but, while the trial court held that
after the purchase of the property by the mortgagee in
execution of the decree for rent he was holding the,
property only on behalf of the mortgagor, the appellate
court came to the conclusion that after the said purchase
the relationship of mortgagor and mortgagee came to an end;
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with the result the trial court decreed the suit and the
appellate court, setting aside that decree, dismissed the
suit. The legal representatives of the mortgagor preferred
a second appeal to the High Court against the judgment and
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decree of the District Judge. A division bench of the High
Court agreed with the conclusion of the trial court, set
aside the decree of the District Court and restored that of
the trial court. Hence the present appeal.
Learned counsel for the appellants i.e., the legal
representatives of the mortgagee, contended that in
execution of the rent decree the mortgagee became the
purchaser of the equity of redemption, with the result that
the relationship of mortagor and mortgagee ceased to exist
and, therefore, the respondents could not sue for redemption
and their remedy, if any, was to sue for setting aside the
sale on the ground of fraud or otherwise.
On the other hand, learned counsel for the respondents
contended that, as the sale was the result of manifest
dereliction of duty imposed upon the mortgagee by the terms
of the transaction, the purchase by the mortgagee would only
be in trust for the mortgagor and, therefore, the suit for
redemption was maintainable.
To appreciate the rival contentions it is necessary to
notice briefly the law on the subject. The relevant section
governing the facts of the case is s. 90 of the Indian
Trusts Act, 1882 (2 of 1882). The material portion of the
section reads,
"Where a mortgagee by availing him,self of his
position as such, gains an advantage in
derogation of the rights of the other persons
interested in the property he must hold, for
the benefit of all persons so interested, the
advantage so gained, but subject to the
repayment by such persons of their due share
of the expenses properly incurred, and to an
indemnity by the same persons against
liabilities properly contracted, in gaining
such advantage."
Illustration (c) to that section says,
"A mortgages land to B, who enters into
possession. B allows the Government revenue
to fall into arrears with a View to the land
being put up for sale and his becoming himself
the purchaser of it. The land is accordingly
sold to B. Subject to the
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repayment of the amount due on the mortgage
and of his expenses properly incurred as
mortgagee, B holds the land for the benefit of
A."
The following three conditions shall be satisfied before s.
90 of the Indian Trusts Act can be applied to a case: (1)
the mortgagee shall avail himself of his position as
mortgagee; (2) he shall gain an advantage; and (3) the
gaining should be in derogation of the right of the other
persons interested in the property. The section, read with
illustration (c), clearly lays down that where an obligation
is cast on the mortgagee and in breach of the said
obligation he purchases the property for himself, he stands
in a fiduciary relations ship in respect of the property so
purchased for the benefit of the owner of the property.
This is only another illustration of the well settled
principle that a trustee ought not to be permitted to make a
profit out of the trust. The same principle is comprised in
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the latin maxim commodum ex injuria sua nemo habere debet,
that is,,convenience cannot accrue to a party from his own
wrong. To put it in other words, no one can be allowed to
benefit from his own wrongful act. This Court had occasion
to deal with a similar problem in Sidhakamal Nayan v. Bira
Naik (1). There, as here, a mortgagee in possession of a
tenant’s interest purchased the said interest in execution
of a decree for arrears of rent obtained by the landlord.
It was contended there, as it is contended here, that the
defendant, being a mortgagee in possession, was bound to pay
the rent and so cannot take advantage of his own default and
deprive the mortgagors of their interest. Bose, J.,
speaking for the Court, observed at p. 337 thus:
"The position, in our opinion, is very clear
and in the absence of any special statutory
provision to the contrary is governed by s.
90, Trusts Act. The defendant is a mortgagee
and, apart from special statutes, the only way
in which a mortgage can be terminated as
between the parties to it is by the act of the
parties themselves, by merger or by an order
of the Court. The maxim "once a mortgage
always
(1) A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 336.
295
a mortgage" applies. Therefore, when the
defendant entered upon possession he was there
as a mortgagee and being a mortgagee the
plaintiffs have a right to redeem unless there
is either a contract between the parties or a
merger or a special statute to debar them."
These observations must have been made on the assumption
that it was the duty of the mortgagee to pay the rent and
that he made a default in doing so and brought about the
auction sale of the holding which ended in the purchase by
him. The reference to s. 90 of the Indian Trusts Act
supports this assumption.
Learned counsel for the appellants relied upon the decision
of the Judicial Committee in Malkarjun Bin Shidramappa
Padare v. Narhari Bin Shivappa (1) in support of his
contention that a mortgagor cannot seek the relief of
redemption without first getting the sale set aside. There,
a mortgaged property was sold in execution of a decree
against the mortgagor and the plaintiff neglected or refused
to pray that it might be set aside. The Judicial Committee
held that an execution sale could not be treated as a
nullity if the court which sold it had jurisdiction to do
so; and it could not be set aside as irregular without an
issue raised for that purpose and investigation made with
the judgment creditor as a party thereto. That was not a
case where the mortgagee who had an obligation to discharge
under the mortgage deed made a default with the result the.
property was sold and purchased by the mortgagee himself.
The proposition enunciated by the Judicial Committee would
apply to a case where the equity of redemption was extingui-
shed by the court sale. This may apply to a case, where the
mortgagee, after obtaining leave to bid., purchases at a
sale in execution of his decree or a decree obtained by a
third party. In such a case there may be scope for the
argument that the equity of redemption is extinguished and,
therefore, the mortgagor cannot get relief till the sale is
set aside in the manner known to law. But when the sale is
(1) (1900) L.R. 27 I.A. 216.
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brought about by the default of the mortgagee, the
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mortgage is not extinguished and the relationship of
mortgagor and mortgagee continues to exist and, therefore,
there will not be any necessity for setting aside the sale.
The legal position may be stated thus: (1) The governing
principle is "once a mortgage always a mortgage" till the
mortgage is terminated by the act of the parties themselves,
by merger or by order of the court. (2) Where a mortgagee
purchases the equity of redemption in execution of his
mortgage decree with the leave of court or in execution of a
mortgage or money decree obtained by a third party, the
equity of redemption may be extinguished; and, in that
event, the mortgagor cannot sue for redemption without
getting the sale set aside. (3) Where a mortgagee purchases
the mortgaged property by reason of a default committed by
him the mortgage is not extinguished and the relationship of
mortgagor and mortgagee continues to subsist even
thereafter, for his purchase of the equity of redemption is
only in trust for the mortgagor.
Let us now apply the aforesaid principles to the concurrent
findings arrived at by the courts below. All the courts
concurrently found that in fact possession was delivered to
the mortgagee on the basis of the mortgage deed, Ex. B.
They have also found that the plea of discharge taken by the
appellants was not true. The High Court found that under
the mortgage deed the mortgagee had a duty to pay the
arrears of rent to the landlord, but he made a default in
paying the said arrears. The High Court farther held that
the sale was the result of manifest dereliction of the duty
imposed upon the mortgagee by the very terms of the
transaction. The said findings clearly attract the
provisions of s. 90 of the Indian Trusts Act. In view of
the aforesaid principles, the right to redeem the mortgage
is not extinguished and in the eye of law the purchase in
the rent sale must be deemed to have been made in trust for
the mortgagor. In the promises, the High Court was right in
holding that the suit for redemption was maintainable.
297
No other point was raised before us. The appeal fails and
is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.