Judgment :- 1. In this appeal arising out of a suit for specific performance of an agreement to sell entered into by the first defendant, the only question which arises for decision, is whether the plaintiff is entitled to a charge for the sum of Rs. 3,504-15-0 which he had paid from time to time towards the sale consideration. Ext. Al the agreement, recited the total sale consideration to be Rs. 6,000/- of which Rs. 500/- was a cash receipt. The plaintiff made payments subsequently, but the sale was not completed. The suit comprised other reliefs with which the appeal is not concerned. The second defendant is the transferee of the properties from the first defendant, and his contention that he had no notice of Ext. Al, has been accepted by the Subordinate Judge. The plaintiff was given a decree for the sum of Rs. 3,504-15-0 charged on the properties, and for a further sum of Rs. 1000 by way of damages against the first defendant personally. The second defendant has preferred this appeal and the plaintiff has filed a memorandum of cross-objections against the findings and the decree, in so far as they are against him. 2. The contention of the learned-counsel for the second defendant was, that S.55(6) clause (b) of the Transfer of Property Act, under which the judge gave a charge, has to be read subject to S.100 of the Transfer of Property Act, and that in any event, Ext. Al being unregistered, the plaintiff is not entitled to any relief as against the properties transferred to the second defendant. S.55(6)(b) provides, that on the fulfilment of certain conditions, which it is not necessary to set forth, where the sale has not been completed, the buyer is entitled to a charge on the property, as against the seller and all persons claiming under him, to the extent of the seller's interest in the property, for the amount of any purchase money properly paid by him. Prior to the Amending Act of 1929, the words "with notice of the payment" occurred after the words "all persons claiming under him" and therefore the buyer's charge was not available against a transferee without notice. It is plain that under the section in its present form, the charge is enforceable also against all persons claiming under the seller, whether they have notice of the charge or not.
It is plain that under the section in its present form, the charge is enforceable also against all persons claiming under the seller, whether they have notice of the charge or not. S.55(6) is, in my opinion, a special provision while S.100 is a general provision which must therefore yield to the former. This was held by the Bombay High Court in Hari Bapuji v. Bhagu Sadhu (AIR. 1937 Bom.142) and in Abdul Hamid Khan v. Mohamed Ali (AIR. 1952 Bom. 67). 3. The contention based on S.17 (2) of Indian Registration Act is wholly unsustainable. Differing from a series of decisions of the Indian High Courts, the Privy Council held in Dayal Singh v. Indar Singh (AIR. 1926 P.C. 94), that where an agreement for sale acknowledged the receipt of the sale consideration, a charge arises under S.55 (6) (b) of the Transfer of Property Act, in the event of the sale not being completed, and that therefore such an agreement must be registered. Soon after this decision was rendered, an explanation was inserted in S.17 of the Indian Registration Act, which reads: "A document purporting or operating to effect a contract for the sale of immovable property shall not be deemed to require or ever to have required registration by reason only of the fact that such document contains a recital of the payment of any earnest money or of the whole or any part of the purchase money." the effect of which is to supersede the decision of the Privy Council in the case cited. Under the explanation, Ext. Al does not require to be registered. The argument, that the explanation has no application in a case where the charge is sought to be enforced against a transferee without notice of the charge has no substance and deserves no consideration. 4. No other point arises in the appeal which has therefore to be dismissed with costs. 5. On the memorandum of cross-objections the first point pressed was that not merely the proportionate costs, but the entire costs of the suit ought to have been decreed to be realised from the property. The prayer in the plaint was for a decree against all the defendants but it was disallowed and was not pressed before me. I do not see my way to interfere with the discretion exercised by the judge in decreeing only part of the costs.
The prayer in the plaint was for a decree against all the defendants but it was disallowed and was not pressed before me. I do not see my way to interfere with the discretion exercised by the judge in decreeing only part of the costs. The second point in the memorandum of cross-objection relates to the claim for damages for thousand rupees, which was decreed against the first defendant personally. The claim was sustained by the judge on the sole ground that item 1 of the properties in B schedule of the plaint became lost to the first defendant and was not available for the plaintiff in any case. But before me, counsel for the plaintiff put his case, as for loss of interest on the amount of the purchase money paid by the plaintiff. The point is, that if the claim is related to interest, a charge can be given under S.55 (6) (b) of the Transfer of Property Act. Para.8 of the plaint in which the claim for Rs. 1,000/- is formulated, covers several heads, of which the loss of interest is but one, and the loss of item 1 is another. In seeking a charge for Rs. 1000/- as for interest, the plaintiff has not paid the requisite court fee in the objection memorandum. I therefore decline to go into this question. The third point in the cross-objection relates to the amount of costs decreed in respect of the above sum of Rs. 1,000/-, for which also the plaintiff wants a charge on the property. The sum of Rs. 1,000/- as decreed is entirely unrelated to any claim which may properly arise within the scope of S.55 (6) (b); no charge can be given for the costs thereon. No other point was pressed on the cross-objection which fails and is dismissed with costs; the appeal also is dismissed with costs. Dismissed.