Research › Browse › Judgment

Supreme Court of India · body

1954 DIGILAW 82 (SC)

Ashalata Debi v. Jadu Nath Roy

1954-04-26

B.K.MUKHERJEE, M.C.MAHAJAN, N.H.BHAGWATI, T.L.VENKATARAMA AYYAR, VIVIAN BOSE

body1954
Judgement BHAGWATI, J. : This is an appeal against the judgment and decree of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta reversing the order of the Third Subordinate Judge, Alipore dismissing the Respondents applications for re-restoration of certain immovable properties. 2. One Romesh Chandra Acharji Choudhury (deceased) predecessor-in-interest of the Appellants borrowed on the 16th August 1918, Rs. 1,60,000 and Rs. 73,000 from the predecessors-in-interest of Respondents under two deeds of mortgage. There being default in payment of the mortgage amounts a suit to realise the mortgage securities was filed on the 10th March 1926 in the Third Subordinate Judge s Court Alipore. A preliminary mortgage decree for Rs. 4,21,851-1-6 was passed on the 4th April 1929 and a decree absolute for sale was prossed on the 13th September 1929. The mortgaged properties were put up for sale in execution proceedings in 1930 and the decreeholders purchased the properties at auction sales on the 29th February 1932 and the 23 rd April 1935 for an aggregate amount of Rs. 2,35,200. These sales were duly confirmed and the auction purchasers took delivery of possession of different times of property on different dates between the 25th June 1933 and the 9th March 1936. The decree-holders obtained on the 13th December 1937 a personal decree under Order 34, Rule 6 of the Civil Procedure Code for the balance due to them, viz. Rs. 3,30,903. This personal decree was also executed and some properties of the mortgagors were purchased by the decree-holders on the 8th August 1939 for Rs. 3,899 and delivery of posseasion of these properties was duly given to them on the 6th July 1940. 3. Kahitish Chandra Acharji Choudhury, since deceased, the predecessor-in-interest of the Appellants Nos. 1 to 3 and Jyotish Chandra Acharya Choudhury, the Appellant No. 4 sons of the mortgagor filed on the 9th December 1940 a petition under Section 36 of the Bengal Money Lenders Act (Act 10 of 1940) for reopening the mortgage decree and the personal decree. By an order dated the 25th August 1941 the learned subordinate Judge reopened the decrees and on the 10th May 1943 passed a new decree for a sum of Rs. 3,76,324-12-6. The said sum- was directed to be paid by the judgment-debtors to the decree-holders in fifteen equal annual instalments. He also directed the restoration of the properties purchased by the decree-holders. 4. 3,76,324-12-6. The said sum- was directed to be paid by the judgment-debtors to the decree-holders in fifteen equal annual instalments. He also directed the restoration of the properties purchased by the decree-holders. 4. The present Respondents preferred, on the 19th June 1943, an appeal to the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta and cross-objections were filed by the said Kshitish Chandra Acharji Choudhury and Appellant No. 4. By their judgment and decree dated the 29th June 1944 the High Court affirmed the decree of the Court below with some substaintial variations and passed a new decree in favour of the mortgagors. The mortgagees were ordered to put the mortgagors in possession of all the properties they had purchased in execution of the reopened decrees and render to them an account of the mesne profits of those properties from the 15th September 1941 till they restored or reliquished possession to the mortgagors of the collection papers of those properties. The sum of Rs. 3,76,374-12-6 was declared to be due by the mortgagors to the mortgagees and the mortgagors were to pay the same in twenty equal annual instalments the first of such instalments to be paid on or before the first anniversary of the date on which the mortgagees restored or relinquished possession of all the properties purchased by them in execution to the mortgagors or of the date on which they delivered to the mortgagors the collection papers as therein mentioned, whichever date was later. The mortgagors were to pay to the mortgagees the successive annual instalments on or before the same date of the succeeding years on which the first instalment became payable and they were also to pay the annual revenue of the aforesaid properties that would become payable after they were restored to possession kist by kist, as they fell due, at least three days before the kist dates and file the challans in the Court below in proof of payment within ten days of the payments. The road, public works and education cesses and rent due to the superior landlords were also to be paid similarly by the mortgagors and in default of payment of any one instalment or cesses or rent with in the time prescribed the mortgages were entitled to get back posession of the said properties from the mortgagors and in that event the sum, of Rs. 2,39,099 at which the mortgagees had purchased those properties would be balanced against the amount then due to them under the decree. If thereafter any amount still remained due to the mortgagees under the decree they were entitled to apply in the Court below for a decree for the balance under Order 34, Rule 6 of the Civil Procedure Code. An enquiry was ordered into the mesne profits for the period between the 15th September 1941 till the restoration of possession to the mortgagors and the mortgagors were at liberty to set off the amount that might be decreed in their favour for mesne profits towards the instalment that fell due in the year in which the amount was declared by the Court below and the next succeeding years till the said amount was wiped off. 5. Possession was delivered to the mortgagors on the 5th October 1944. The delivery of the collection papers was however given on the 28th March 1945. The mortgagors were alleged to have committed default in the payment of the second instalment which was due in any event on the 28th March 1947 and also in the payment of the revenue kist and the casses which were due on or about that date. The mortgagees therefore made applications in the Court of the Third Subordinate Judge at Alipore on the 6th September 1946 and the 18th April 1947 asking for re-restoration of the properties. Several defaults were alleged but only two defaults were pressed, one in regard to the payment of the second instalment which was due on the 28th March 1947 and the other in regard to the payment of the revenue and the cesses of the Noakhali properties due also on the same date. The learned Subordinate Judge rejected these applications by his order dated the 27th September 1947 holding that there was no default in the payment of revenue and cess and that the default in payment of the second instalment though it had accrued was due to the wrongful acts of the decree-holders themselves and that the decree-holders were not entitled to take advantage of their own wrong. An appeal was preferred to the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta. The appeal was allowed on the 27th April 1950. The High Court held that a default had been committed by the mortgagors and ordered re-restoration of the properties. An appeal was preferred to the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta. The appeal was allowed on the 27th April 1950. The High Court held that a default had been committed by the mortgagors and ordered re-restoration of the properties. This appeal has been filed against that order of the High Court with certificate under Article 133(1)(a) of the Constitution. 6. Shri S. Ghosh appearing for the Appellants before us urged that the bulk of the properties which were the subject matter of the new decree had gone to Pakistan after the 26th January 1950 being situated in East Pakistan and the High Court at Calcutta had after the 26th January 1950 no jurisdiction and power to determine the appeal and to pass an order relating to the immovable properties situated in foreign territories. He further urged that the order of re-restoration of the properties was not appealable and that in any event no default had been committed by the mortgagors. 7. In support of his first contention reliance was placed on para 4(2) of the Indian Independence (Legal Proceedings) Order, 1947 which ran as under : "4. Notwithstanding the creation of certain new Provinces and the transfer on certain territories from the Province of Assam to the Province to East Bengal by the Indian Independence Act, 1947...... (2) Any appeal or application for revision in respect of any proceedings so pending in any such court shall lie in the court which would have appellate, or as the case may be revisional jurisdiction over that court if the proceedings were instituted in that court after the appointed day......." The applications for re-restoration of the properties were pending before the Third Subordinate Judge at Alipore on the 15th August 1947 and they were saved by the provision of Para. 4(1) which provided for the continuance in the same Court of these proceedings as if the said Act that is, Indian Independence Act, 1947 had not been passed. But he contended that Para 4(2) did not save the appeal which had been filed by the mortgagees after the 15th August 1947. We cannot accept this contention of the Appellant. 4(1) which provided for the continuance in the same Court of these proceedings as if the said Act that is, Indian Independence Act, 1947 had not been passed. But he contended that Para 4(2) did not save the appeal which had been filed by the mortgagees after the 15th August 1947. We cannot accept this contention of the Appellant. Paragraph 4(2) provided for appeals or applications for revision in respect of proceedings which were pending in the Courts after the 15th August 1947 and laid down that these proceedings by way of appeal or applications for revision could lie in the Court which would have appellate or revisional jurisdiction over that Court if the proceedings were instituted in that Court after the 15th August 1947. It was contended that for the purpose of this provision the words "if the proceedings were instituted in that Court should be read as meaning "if the proceedings could have been instituted in that Court". This certainly could not be the meaning, because by reason of the transfer of the territories no proceedings in respect of the properties which had gone to Pakistan could ever have been maintained after the 15th August 1947 in the Courts concerned. The only construction which could be put upon this provision was that the Court having appellate or revisional jurisdiction over that Court would have such juriscidtion as if the proceedings had been instituted in that Court after the 15th August 1947. For the purpose of the appellate or the revisional jurisdiction that Court had to be treated as the court in which the proceedings could and should have been instituted and it goes without saying that if the proceedings could be treated as having been properly instituted in that Court the only Court to which we appeal or the application for revision could lie was the Court which then had appellate or revisional jurisdiction over that Court. In the case before us no proceedings could have been instituted in the Third Subordinate Judge s Court at Alipore in respect of the properties which had gone to East Pakistan after the 15th August 1947. In the case before us no proceedings could have been instituted in the Third Subordinate Judge s Court at Alipore in respect of the properties which had gone to East Pakistan after the 15th August 1947. But by reason of the fact that these proceedings were pending in that Court on the 15th August 1947 the High Court of Calcutta which had appellate or revisional jurisdiction over that Court was prescribed to be the court in which the appeal or the applicationn for revision in respect of such proceedings would lie, because that Court that is the Third Subordinate Judge s Court at Alipore was treated as the Court in which such proceeding could and should have been instituted after the 15th August 1947. 8. Learned counsel for the Respondents drew our attention to the Case of - Tirlok Nath v. Moti Ram , AIR 1950 EP 149 (A). In that case a suit for possession of land at place A was filed in Court at B in 1943. On the 15th August 1947 the suit was pending before the Court at B which dismissed the suit in 1948. An appeal from the decision was filed in the East Punjab High Court as the place B was included in the East Punjab. On objection regarding jurisdiction of the High Court being taken on the ground that the land in suit was at A, now included in Pakistan, the High Court held that the suit being pending at place B on 15th August 1947, appeal from the decision of that Court lay to the East Punjab High Court and not to Lahore High Court under Para 4(2) of the Indian Independence (Legal Proceedings), Order, 1947. This decision is on all fours with the case before us and we are of the opinion that the contention urged on behalf of the Appellants in untenable. 9. the next contention of the Appellants is equally untenable. The Calcutta High Court Considered these applications as applications in the suit for a special remedy given under a special law and held that the rules of the Code of Civil Procedure applied and an appeal lay against the orders because they were decrees within the definition of S. 2(2) of the Civil Procedure Code. We cannot accept this reasoning. The Calcutta High Court Considered these applications as applications in the suit for a special remedy given under a special law and held that the rules of the Code of Civil Procedure applied and an appeal lay against the orders because they were decrees within the definition of S. 2(2) of the Civil Procedure Code. We cannot accept this reasoning. These applications were in truth and in substance applications for execution of the new decree which had been passed in favour of the mortgagors by the High Court on the 29th June 1944. The only thing competent to the mortgagees under the terms of the new decree was to apply for executions of the decree on default committed by the mortgagors and the applications made by mortgagees in the Court of the Third Subordinate Judge at Alipore were really applications for execution of the decree though not couched in the proper form and could be treated as such. If they were treated as such it is clear that the orders passed on such applications for execution were appealable and no objections could be sustained on the ground that no appeals lay against these orders. Treating these applications therefore as applications for execution we see no substance in this contention of the Appellants. 10. If the matter is approached in this way no objection could be urged by the Appellants against the decision of the High Court. The executing Court could not go behind the decree and it is clear on the facts that default was committed by the mortgagors both in regard to the payment of the revenue and the cess as also the second instalment under the new decree. 11. The contention which was therefore urged on behalf of the Appellants that there was no default committed by the mortgagors also could not be sustained. 12. The High Court of Judicature at Calcutta was therefore rightly seized of the appeal and it had jurisdiction go decide whether the mortgagors had committed default in carrying out the terms of the new decree. The appeal being a mere rehearing the appellate Court was entitled to review the judgment of the trial Judge and declare that it was wrong and that the decree-holder was entitled to re-restoration. The question whether he would be able to obtain possession of the immovable properties in fact was foreign to such an enquiry. The appeal being a mere rehearing the appellate Court was entitled to review the judgment of the trial Judge and declare that it was wrong and that the decree-holder was entitled to re-restoration. The question whether he would be able to obtain possession of the immovable properties in fact was foreign to such an enquiry. By appropriate proceedings in another jurisdiction be may be able to do so: but this difficulty could not be a deterrent to the High Court passing the necessary orders for re-restoration of the properties. 13. The appeal therefore fails and must stand dismissed. There will be no order as to costs. Appeal dismissed. For Citation : AIR 1954 SC 409