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Manohar Lal And Anr. vs Ram Babu

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|07 February, 1912

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT
1. This appeal arises out of a suit in which the plaintiff sought to realise the amount of mortgage, dated the 4th of June 1877, by sale of the mortgaged property. The plaintiff alleged that the mortgage was in renewal of another mortgage of the 12th of June 1875, and he claimed priority for his mortgage as of that date. He further set forth in his plaint that the ancestor of the defendants first party had made a mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, in favour of the ancestor of the defendants Nos. 9--11, that a suit had been instituted on foot of this mortgage of the 8th of November 1873, and the property sold, but he submitted that this mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, must, under the circumstances, be deemed to be puisne to his mortgage, but that if any part of the defendant's mortgage should be held to have priority over his mortgage, then he asked that the property might be sold subject to the debt that had priority.
2. The defendants Nos. 9--11 pleaded, amongst other things, that the mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, was a renewal of a still earlier mortgage-bond of the 5th of December 1869, and that consequently they had priority, and that the plaintiff could not have a sale of the mortgaged property without redeeming them.
3. It appears from the evidence that the defendants Nos. 9--11 brought a suit on foot of the mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, in the year 1887. A decree was obtained upon foot of that mortgage, the property was sold and purchased by the defendants, 3rd party, and they have been in possession ever since 1892 or thereabouts. It appears, however, that the mortgagors of the mortgage of the 4th of June 1877, were not parties to the suit. The present suit was instituted in the year .1909. The original amount secured was Rs. 350, the interest being 13 annas per cent. per mensem compound interest. The amount due on this bond at the date of the institution of this suit was Rs. 7,000, but the plaintiff only claimed Rs. 6,000, because the property was not valued, for the full amount. The learned Subordinate Judge gave the plaintiff a decree for so much of the mortgage-debt and interest as was due under the mortgage of the 12th of June 1875. He disallowed the rest of the claim as being puisne to the defendant's mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, and the plaintiff waived his claim thereto. The learned Subordinate Judge also disallowed the defendants' pleas wherein they sought to take advantage of the earlier mortgage of the 5th of December 1839, on the ground that this bond of the 5th of December 1889, was not produeed and that secondary evidence to prove it was not admissible.
4. In our opinion, secondary evidence was admissible, and we have allowel au application of the appellant to admit a copy. Under ordinary circumstances, the bond of the 5th of December 1869 might have been given back. It was fully recited in the latter mortgage of the 8th of November 1875.
5. The position, therefore, necessary for the disposal of the appeal may be shortly stated as fallows: The answering defendants are and have been in possession of the property since about year 1892. They must be, deemed to have had a mortgage in their favour, which is prior to the mortgage of the plaintiff. On the other hand, the plaintiff has a puisne incumbrance, and his rights under that incumbrance have never been foreclosed by the prior incumbrancers. The answering defendants counted that having a prior incumbrance and being in possession of the mortgaged property, their possession cannot be disburbad unless the plaintiff pays the amount due upon their prior incumbrance. On the other hand, the plaintiff contends that he has the right to release his security and that he is accordingly entitled to have the property sold subject to the mortgage of the 5th of December 1869, and that the decree in the suit brought on foot of the mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, is an absolute nullity against hirn, because he was not made a party thereto. We think that the plaintiff ought to be ordered to redeem the mortgage of the 5th of December 1869. The present suit is brought on foot of a mortgage of the 4th of June 1877, which is, on the face of it, puisne to the mortgage of the 8th of November 1875, and the plaintiff has to ask us as a Court of Equity to allow him priority as of the 12th of June 1875. He comes to this Court seeking equity. Had the answering defendants made the plaintiff or his predecessor-in-title a party to the suit on foot of the mortgage of the 8th November 1875, the sole right of the latter would have been to redeem the mortgage of the 5th of December 1869. By allowing the plaintiff to redeem the mortgage of 1869, we are able now to place the plaintiff in exactly the same position as he would have been in, if he had been made a party to that suit. If, in the present case we were to direct that the property should be sold subject to the mortgage of 1869, the result would probably be that the appellants, who have been in undisputed possession ever since about the year 1892, would be put out of possession, and it is doubtful if they could ever bring a fresh suit against the plaintiff having regard to the law of limitation. There is HO doubt that where a puisne incumbrancer is in a position to ignore the prior incumbrancer and does not make him a party to his suit, the puisne incumbrancer is entitled to realise his security, or. in other words, to have the property sold subject to the prior incumbrance. It was held in the case of Mata Din Kasodhan v. Kazim Husain 13 A. 432 that the expression "property" in the Transfer of Property Act meant the actual property itself and did not include rights and interests in such property, and that accordingly a puisne incumbrancer could never bring the property to sale without redeeming all prior incumbrances. This view was dissented from in the Full Bench case of Ram Shanker Lal v. Ganesh Prasad 29 A. 385 : 4 A.L.J. 273 : A.W.N.. (1907) 97 : 2 M.L.T. 248 and the question has been finally settled by Order XXXIV, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which expressly provides that a puisne incumbrancer is not a necessary party to the suit. It is true that in the present case the plaintiff only claims to sell subject to the prior incumbrance, but he has made the prior mortgagees parties. He had to do so, because they were in possession. In England it would seem to be the rule that where the prior mortgagee is made a party, the plaintiff (that is the mortgagor or the puisne incumbrancer), must be ready to redeem him. See Daniell's Chancery Practice, 7th Edition, page 217.
6. This would seem to have been the practice in this Court even before the case of Mata Din Kasodhan v. Kazim Husain 13 A. 432 was decided. See also Har Prasad v. Bhagwan Das 4 A. 196. In the case of Kanti Ram v. Kutubuddin Mahomed 22 C. 33 a Bench of the Calcutta High Court held that the puisne incumbrancer was entitled to have the property sold subject to the prior incumbrance even where the prior incumbrancer was a party. The attention of the Court was called to the case of Har Prasad v. Bhagwan Das 4 A. 196 and other rulings of the various High Courts. The learned Judges say at page 45: It will he found upon examination of the facts of those cases that the first mortgagee had, subsequent to the second mortgage, purchased the equity of redemption of the mortgagor, and it was held that the second mortgagee was bound to redeem the earlier mortgage. In that state of facts, we should be disposed to say that the second mortgagee is not entitled to bring to sale the mortgagor's interest, because it no longer exists in the mortgagor; it has already passed into the hands of the first mortgagee."
7. In the present case, the prior incumbrancers have acquired the equity of redemption by virtue of the proceedings in 1878 just as effectually as they would have done if they had purchased it by private treaty. See also Baldeo Prasad v. Umanshanker 32 A. 1 : 6 A.L.J. 987 : 4 Ind. Cas. 810; Matiullah Khan v. Banswari Lal 32 A. 138 : 7 A.L.J. 60 : 5 Ind. Cas. 132 and Kanhai Lal v. Hulas Singh 9 A.L.T. 29 : 13 Ind. Cas. 939. The very question which arises in this case was decided in favour of the prior incumbrancer in the case of Cangayam Venkataramana Iyer v. Henry James Colley Gompertz 31 M. 425 : 3 M.L.T. 397 : 18 M.L.J. 298.
8. The respondent contends that he has an absolute right to bring the property to sale subject to the priorincumbrancer and that the decree and sale, to which he was no party, cannot take away that right. His learned Advocate relies on the case of Ramshanhar Lal v. Ganesah Prasad 29 A. 385 : 4 A.L.J. 273 : A.W.N.. (1907) 97 : 2 M.L.T. 248. We do not think that this case applies to the facts of the present case. There the question was whether having regard to decision in Mata Din Kasodhan v. Kazim Husain 13 A. 432 a sub-mortgage (a mortgage of mortgagee rights) was valid. It was held in the affirmative, and the decision is no longer of much importance having regard to the Order XXXIV, Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure to which we have already referred. It was not necessary to decide, nor did the Court decide, that in a suit brought by a puisne incumbrancer, to which a prior mortgagee who was also in possession of the property after acquiring the equity of redemption was a party, the Court-was bound to make a decree for sale of the mortgaged properly subject to the prior mortgage and could not direct the puisne incumbrancer to redeem the earlier mortgage.
8. The judgment in the case of Debindra Narain Roy v. Ramtaran Bannerji 30 C. 599 no doubt, supports the contention of respondent. With all respect, we cannot agree with the learned Judges if, in that case, they intended to decide that in all cases, irrespective of whether the prior incumbrancer is or is not a party and irrespective of whether the prior incumbrancer has or has not obtained possession of the mortgaged property by acquiring the equity of redemption, the Court is bound to grant a decree at the suit of the puisne incumbrancer for the sale of the property subject to the prior incumbrance.
9. A somewhat contrary view seems to have been taken by two learned Judges of the same Court in Ear Pershad v. Dalmardon Singh 32 C 891 : 9 C.W.N. 728 : 1 C.L.J. 871.
10. It is unnecessary to decide in the present appeal that in all suits by a puisne incumbrancer to which the prior incumbrancer is a party, the Court is bound to direct redemption of the prior incumbrance, but we think that, as a general rule, if the prior incumbrancer is a party and so desires, it will be convenient to direct redemption.
11. Such a course will avoid multiplicity of suits and will give the puisne incumbrancer what ho is equitably entitled to. In a mortgage-suit, the Court ought to have the fullest power to direct what is right and equitable having regard to the circumstances of the case and the interesls of all the parties to the suit in the property. In the present cage, the appellants have a strong claim to defend a possession extending over a period of nearly 20 years by insisting that the plaintiff should be directed to redeem them by payment of the amount due on foot of the mortgage of 1869.
12. Before passing a final decree, it will be necessary to refer issues to the lower Appellate Court. We accordingly refer the following issues: (1) At what date did the appellants or their predecessors-in-title obtain possession of the property? (2) What is the amount due on foot of the mortgage of the 6th of December 1869, up to the date of obtaining such possession?
13. The Court will take such additional evidence as the parties may tender. On receipt of the findings, the usual ten days will be allowed for filing objections.
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Title

Manohar Lal And Anr. vs Ram Babu

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
07 February, 1912
Judges
  • H Richards
  • Banerji