JUDGMENT Richardson, J. - The Appellant us are the present representatives of a mortgagee who took a mortgage from two out of five brothers--members of a Hindu family governed by the Dayabhaga law. The mortgagee brought a suit on the mortgage and obtained a decree for the sum of Rs. 7,195. The mortgaged property put up to sale in execution and was purchased by the mortgagee himself on the 19th November 1917 for Rs. 6,000. The mortgagors then applied under r. 90 of Or. XXI of the CPC to have the sale set aside. The proceeding was terminated on the 14th May 1918 by a compromise under which the sale was set aside conditionally on the mortgagors executing in favour of the mortgagee within a time limited a conveyance of 39 bighas of chur land. If the mortgagors failed satisfy the condition, the sale was to stand. Well, the condition was not fulfilled and. at the instance of the mortgagee, the sale was confirmed on the 1st October 1918. The sale price, Re. 6,000, was then set off against the mortgage debt. Thereafter, however, the mortgagee having taken possession, the brothers of the mortgagors preferred claims under r. 100 of Or. XXI, C. P. C., to certain portions of the property. Those claims were, to some extent, successful. The decisions were of a summary character; but the mortgagee took no steps, as he might have done, to contest them by regular suit. The course which he adopted was to present an application under sec. 47, C. P. C., to the Court of Execution to the effect that compensation should be allowed to him in consideration of the fact that he had been deprived of part of the property as the result of the claim cases. His prayer was that instead of Rs. 6,000 only a sum of Rs. 2,940 should be set off against the debt. 2. At that stage of these protracted proceedings, the mortgagee died. The Appellants came on the record in his place and went on with his application. The appeal is from the judgment of the Court below, dated the 21st August 19l9, deciding against them. 3. The learned Subordinate Judge has rejected the application on the grounds in effect that there is no warranty of title m Court sales and that the CPC makes no provision for compensating in cases of this kind. 4. Dr.
The appeal is from the judgment of the Court below, dated the 21st August 19l9, deciding against them. 3. The learned Subordinate Judge has rejected the application on the grounds in effect that there is no warranty of title m Court sales and that the CPC makes no provision for compensating in cases of this kind. 4. Dr. Mitter, for the Appellants, contends that the decision is erroneous and that his clients are entitled, if not under the Code at any rate in equity, to compensation or an adjustment of the account as between mortgagors and mortgagee. 5. In my opinion this contention cannot be supported. 6. Dr. Mitter relied on the decision of Mr. Justice Sale on the Original Side of this Court in Kissori Mohun Roy v. Kali Charan Ghose 1 C. W. N. 106 (1896), where compensation was allowed to the purchase] as against the decree-holder out of the sale proceeds in the hands of" the Court. The sale there, however, was a Registrar's sale. In another case on the Original Side, Ram Narain v. Dwarkanath Khettri I. L. R. 27 Cal. 264 (1899) where the sale was by the Sheriff in the execution of a decree. Mr. Justice Sale himself distinguished a Registrar's sale from a sale in execution of a decree under the CPC by the Sheriff in Calcutta or by a Court of Execution in the mofussil. "Sales in execution of decrees," he said, "are governed exclusively by the Civil Procedure Code; whereas sales by the Registrar not being provided for by the Code are regulated by Rules framed by this Court which were passed to supplement the procedure introduced by Act VIII of 1859." He pointed out that under the Rules so framed one of the usual conditions of a Registrar's sale provided for compensation being allowed for errors and mis-statements, while no such condition governed sales under the Code. Then the same learned Judge was a party to the decision in Sonaram Das v. Mohiram Das I. L. R. 28 Cal. 235 (1900) a case which came from the mofussil. It was held there, adopting the reasoning of the learned Judges of the Madras High Court in Sundaram Gopalam v. Venkata Vasudev Ayyangar I. L. R. 17 Mad.
Then the same learned Judge was a party to the decision in Sonaram Das v. Mohiram Das I. L. R. 28 Cal. 235 (1900) a case which came from the mofussil. It was held there, adopting the reasoning of the learned Judges of the Madras High Court in Sundaram Gopalam v. Venkata Vasudev Ayyangar I. L. R. 17 Mad. 228 (1893), that when the judgment-debtor had a saleable interest, however small, in the property sold, the purchaser at the execution sale purchased at his own risk and that there was no warranty that the property would answer to the description given of it in the sale notification. 7. That decision turned on sec. 313 of the Code of 1882 now replaced by r. 91 of Or. XXI, which says that the purchaser at a sale in execution of a decree may apply to the Court to set aside the sale oh the ground that the judgment-debtor had no saleable interest in the property sold. It is well settled that the Rule only applies where the judgment-debtor has no saleable interest at all. The remedy given in such case is to have the sale set aside. Dr. Mitter concedes that in the present case his clients would not be entitled to come in under the Rule. Nor does it appear that they desire to have the sale rescinded. What they want is to uphold the sale with compensation. 8. It was also conceded that the cases cited contained nothing of direct authority in the Appellant's favour, because in each of them relief was sought by a third party auction-purchaser, not against the judgment-debtor but against the decree-holder. It was argued, however, that they afforded some basis for a general principle of equitable compensation and that even if a third party auction-purchaser had no claim to relief either against the decree-holder or against the judgment-debtor, different considerations would apply in such circumstances as those of the present case where the question arises between a mortgagee and his mortgagors. 9. The argument is not easy to follow. As I apprehend, when a decree-holder has obtained leave to bid and has purchased the property, of the judgment-debtor, he is, generally speaking, in the same position as any other auction-purchaser [Mahabir Pershad v. Macnaghten L. R. 16 I. A. 107 : s. c. I. L. R. 16 Cal.
9. The argument is not easy to follow. As I apprehend, when a decree-holder has obtained leave to bid and has purchased the property, of the judgment-debtor, he is, generally speaking, in the same position as any other auction-purchaser [Mahabir Pershad v. Macnaghten L. R. 16 I. A. 107 : s. c. I. L. R. 16 Cal. 682 (1889)] and for the present purpose his position seems to me not more favourable but less favourable than that of a third party because the sale was held at his instance and presumably it was he who supplied to the Court the particulars of the property published in the sale proclamation. The principle, as I understand, is that, apart from the case provided for by r. 91 and apart, of course, from fraud, a purchaser at an auction-sale must abide by his bargain. "What is sold and bought is the right, title and interest of the judgment-debtor in the property. The Court which sells the property does not guarantee the title and the maxim caveat emptor applies. 10. So far as the judgment-debtor is concerned, the sale is in invitum and he can come under no contractual liability to the purchaser. I can find no authority in any of the cases cited to us for holding that a mortgagee purchasing under his decree is in any better or worse position than any other purchaser. It is a matter of indifference whether a mortgagee or a third party purchases. A third party would no doubt stand in the shoes of the mortgagee and the fact that no case can be found where a claim to compensation from the judgment-debtor was even advanced goes strongly against the Appellants. 11. I have still to notice the ease of Dayal Krishna Naskar v. Amrita Lal Das I. L. R. 29 Cal. 370 (1901) to which Dr. Mitter also referred. That again was a case (not more relevant than the other cases cited) in which a third party auction-purchaser, in a suit brought against the decree-holder, sought a refund of part of the purchase money on. account of a deficiency in the actual area of the land purchased as compared with the area stated in the sale proclamation, Sir Francis Maclean, C. J., and Banerjee, J., concurred in rejecting the claim for compensation and the observations on which the learned Vakil relies were entirely hypothetical and obiter.
account of a deficiency in the actual area of the land purchased as compared with the area stated in the sale proclamation, Sir Francis Maclean, C. J., and Banerjee, J., concurred in rejecting the claim for compensation and the observations on which the learned Vakil relies were entirely hypothetical and obiter. I will only read a passage from the judgment of Banerjee, J., at p. 377. The passage runs : " After considering the arguments on both sides, I am of opinion that the Plaintiff has failed to make out his claim for compensation in this case. The considerations upon which the right of a purchaser at a private sale rests to recover from the vendor compensation for deficiency in the area of the property sold are evidently very different from those upon which a purchaser at a sale in execution of the decree can claim such compensation. Conceding that a purchaser at, an execution sale is entitled to claim compensation from the decree-holder for any innocent misdescription, it is clear that he must prove that he has sustained loss by reason of such misdescription. It is not enough for him to say, as a purchaser at a private sale can say, that he paid the price for an area stated and as that is found to be loss, he is entitled to proportionate compensation, for the price paid by him is determined not by contract bur by competition the object of which is to secure fair price and, notwithstanding the over-statement of the area, the highest bid may not go beyond the fair value of the property. 12. For reasons already given the case is not, in my view, of any assistance to the Appellants. On the contrary, the observations of Banerjee, J., suggest an additional argument against the claim. The learned Judge touches upon a point to which the Subordinate Judge also adverts in the judgment appealed from. At a Court sale the price obtained may not represent the true value of the property. If the Appellants' title to equitable relief were well founded the question of price could not be left out of account. The sale would have to be re-opened in a manner contrary to the scheme and policy of the Code. 13.
At a Court sale the price obtained may not represent the true value of the property. If the Appellants' title to equitable relief were well founded the question of price could not be left out of account. The sale would have to be re-opened in a manner contrary to the scheme and policy of the Code. 13. As regards the decision of their Lordships of the Privy Conned in Mahomed Kala Meah v. Harperink L. R. 36 I. A. 32 : s. c. 13 C. W. N. 249 (1908), that was a case of a very different nature. There the sale in execution was being conducted by officers of the Court one of whom went entirely out of his way to misrepresent or mis-state to the public present on the occasion the nature of the title which was being sold, He stated, contrary to the clear terms of the sale proclamation which being in English was not understood by all the intruding bidders and were therefore explained by the officer in the vernacular, that the land was being sold at the instance of the mortgagee whereas, in fact, all that was being sold was the equity of redemption of the mortgagor. Their Lordships say : "The Appellant was then led to believe that the invitation was an invitation to bid for a substantial property freed and discharged from all incumbrances. In the result, he found himself the purchaser of a shadowy equity of redemption not worth one farthing." Their Lordships declared, applying a well-known principle, that a purchaser misled by a misrepresentation of that character on the part of the Court or its ministers could not be held to his bargain and was entitled not to compensation but to have the sale set aside. The case did not turn on any contractual relation between the parties and nothing occurred in the present ease remotely resembling what occurred in that case. It is not suggested here that anything occurred for which the Court or its officers could be held responsible. And even if anything of the kind had occurred, how could it support a claim for compensation against the mortgagors as judgment-debtors? 14. Similarly, as to the cases of Rustomji Ardesher Irani v. Vinayek Gangadhar Bhat I. L. R. 35 Bom.
It is not suggested here that anything occurred for which the Court or its officers could be held responsible. And even if anything of the kind had occurred, how could it support a claim for compensation against the mortgagors as judgment-debtors? 14. Similarly, as to the cases of Rustomji Ardesher Irani v. Vinayek Gangadhar Bhat I. L. R. 35 Bom. 29 (1910) and Juranu Mahomed v. Jathi Mahomed 22 C. W. N. 760 (1917), the question which was debated in those cases has no bearing on the question which arises in the present case. 15. In my opinion the authorities cited do not in any way countenance the Appellants' claim to compensation. The judgment of the Court below was right and should be confirmed. 16. There is one other point. The learned Subordinate Judge refused to make a personal decree against the mortgagors in respect of the balance of the mortgage-debt after deducting the sum of Rs. 0,000. His ground for so refusing was that the Appellants had not produced a succession certificate in respect, of the mortgage-debt. We do not propose to interfere with the order--as we understand its terms, it does not preclude the Appellants from repeating the application when the required certificate has been obtained. The result is that the appeal is dismissed. The Respondents are entitled to their costs; hearing-fee, five gold mohurs. Cuming, J. I agree.