Bijai Saran Sahi and others v. Rudra Bageshwari Prasad Bahadur Sahi and others
1929-07-29
body1929
DigiLaw.ai
Lord Carson:- The present suit was brought in the Court of the Subordinate Judge of Gorakhpur by the plaintiffs (first three respondents) to recover possession from the defendants (appellants) of certain villages known as Kanchanpur and Patkoli with mesne profits and costs. The Subordinate Judge made a decree for possession and on appeal the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad by a decree dated 28th May 1926, affirmed the decree of the Subordinate Judge. At the hearings before the Courts respectively the defendants (appellants) relied upon their possession under a certain purchase deed dated 19th November 1908, of the equity of redemption of one Mahant Karya Bharthi in the said villages, whilst the plaintiffs (respondents) claimed a superior title through certain sale certificates in respect of each of the villages eventuating out of suits filed by the predecessor of the plaintiffs (respondents). It is unnecessary to go into any detail as to this branch of the controversy between the parties, as the decisions upon this matter in the Courts below have not been challenged in argument before this Board when the only question was whether the plaintiffs (respondents) were entitled to oust the possession of the defendants (appellants) without redeeming certain mortgages dated respectively 22nd March 1904 and 26th April 1904, and which the trial Court had held were valid and subsisting mortgages. Now admittedly these mortgages were not usufructuary mortgages, and as the plaintiffs (respondents) have been held to be and are the owners of the equity of redemption it is impossible to see under what title the defendants (appellants) can claim to resist the decree for possession. As stated in the judgment of the High Court, "They" i. e., the defendants (appellants) : "got possession by virtue of the sale of 19th November 1908 ... If the sale is invalid they must surrender possession of the same because their mortgages did not give them any right to possession." Whatever rights (if any) they have under their mortgages they can no doubt enforce in proper proceedings taken for the purpose, but there is no principle or authority which enables the defendants (appellants), as contended by them : " to set up their mortgages as shields against the plaintiff-respondents'claim for possession." Their Lordships will therefore humbly advise His Majesty that this appeal should be dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.