28 August 1969
Supreme Court
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MULA AND OTHERS Vs GODHU AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1156 of 1967


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PETITIONER: MULA AND OTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: GODHU AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/08/1969

BENCH: DUA, I.D. BENCH: DUA, I.D. SHELAT, J.M. VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.

CITATION:  1971 AIR   89            1970 SCR  (2) 129  1969 SCC  (2) 653  CITATOR INFO :  F          1985 SC 111  (9)

ACT: Punjab  Pre-emption Act, 1931 s. 31-Amendment by Punjab  Act 10  of  1960-Amendment  retrospective   in    operation-Pre- emptors’  rights determined by trial court decree-Thereafter amendment  taking  away property rights on which  rights  of pre-emption  were  based-If  pre-emptors’  right  of  appeal affected.

HEADNOTE: After  the  land  in suit was sold in  June,  1957,  for  an ostensible  sum  of  Rs.  1,35:000/-,  the  appellants   and respondents  1 to 3 instituted two separate suits  for  pre- emptions  in which the sale price inserted in the sale  deed was  also questioned.  The two suits were  consolidated  and the plaintiffs in each suit were joined as defendants in the other suit under section 38 of Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913. The vendees thereafter admitted the rights of preemptors  in both  the  suits conceding that a decree may  be  passed  in their  favour.  The appellants accepted the sale   price  of Rs,  1,35,000  on  or before 30th  July  1958  and  although respondents  1 to 3 wanted this issue to be decided  on  the merits,  the trial court passed a decree in both the  ,suits granting  respondents 1 to 3 the right to preemption in  the first  instance  on payment of Rs. 1,35,000  and,  on  their failure  to  so  pay, holding  the  appellants  entitled  to exercise  the  right to pre-emption on payment of  the  said amount on or before 30th October 1958.     In  an  appeal  to the High Court, respondents  1  to  3 challenged  the correctness of the amount of the deposit  to be  made.  Allowing the appeal, the High Court  reduced  the amount of deposit to Rs. 1,05,800/-and directed  respondents 1 to 3 to deposit the amount within three months.     In an appeal by the appellants to this Court against the decision  of  the High Court, a  preliminary  objection  was taken  challenging  the appelants  right to appeal   it  was contended that the appellants had based their right to  pre- emption  in  their  suit  on  the  ground  of  their   being proprietors  of  the village where the  land  was  situated.

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They were deprived of that right by the amendment of section 31  of the Punjab Pre-emption Act by Punjab Act 10  of  1969 which  amendment  was  retrospective in  its  operation  and prohibited  the Courts from passing any decree  inconsistent with the amended Act.     On the other hand it was contended  inter alia  for  the appellants that they had  already secured a decree  in their favour    by   the trial court which had become  final  ’and with  the  terms of which the had complied: in  the  present appeal  they were merely seeking modification of the  decree of the High Court in favour of respondents 1 to 3 by getting the  amount of pre-emption money enhanced t0 Rs.  1,35,000/- without  claiming  any rights of pre-emption  in  their  own favour furthermore, the only appeal preferred by respondents 1  to 3 to the High Court was from the decree in  ’heir  own suit  and for this reason also the decree in favour  of  the appellants  by  the trial court had  become  conclusive  and unassailable. 130 HELD: Upholding the preliminary objection,     It  was not open to this Court to pass a decree of  pre- emption in favour of the appellants who were deprived by the Amendment  Act  of  1960 of their right  to  secure  such  a decree. [133 C---D]     The  contention that the decree in the appellants’  suit had  become  final and the High Court’s order  was  only  in relation  to  the  suit of respondents 1 to  3  ignored  the scheme  of  s. 28 of the Act read with O.20, r.  14,  C.P.C. which does not postulate decrees of pre-emption in favour of rival preemptors on payment of different amounts of purchase money  in respect of the same sale.  Such a course may  lead to  conflicting  decisions on the question of value  of  the property sought to be pre-empted for the purposes of a  pre- emption suit.  Besides., the appellants’ right to pre-empted the sale under the unamended law was admittedly inferior  to that of respondents 1 to 3 and the appellants could only  be held  entitled to exercise their right after the failure  of those respondents to comply with the terms of the decree  in their favour. [133 E---G] Ram  Swarup  v.  Munshi and Others,  [1963]  3  S.C.R.  858; referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1156 of 1967.     Appeal  from  the judgment and decree dated  January  6, 1967 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil   Regular First Appeal No. 152 of 1958.     Brij Bans Kishore, Mahabir Prasad Jain and J.P.  Gupta’, for the appellants.     V.C.  Mahajan and M.S. Gupta, for  respondent   Nos.   1 and 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Dua,  J.  This appeal on certificate has been  preferred by  one  set of pre-emptors (plaintiffs in suit No.  556  of 1958)  against the judgment and decree of the High Court  of Punjab  and  Haryana  allowing  the  rival   plaintiffs-pre- emptors’  appeal  by  reducing  the  pre-emption  money  and passing a decree of pre-emption on payment of Rs. 1,05,800/- instead of Rs. 1,35,000/- as directed by the trial Court.     On  behalf of the rival pre-emptors (plaintiffs in  suit No.  558 of 1958) who are arrayed as respondents 1 to  3  in this  Court,  a  preliminary  objection  was  taken  to  the competency of the present appeal.  The appellants’ right  to

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appeal  was challenged on the ground that the  amendment  of the  Punjab Pre-emption Act (hereinafter called the Act)  by the Punjab Act X of 1960 had deprived them of their right of pre-emption  with retrospective effect.  The appellants  had based their right of pre-emption in their suit on the ground of  their  being  proprietors of  the  village.   They  were deprived of this right by the Amending Act of 1960 and s. 31 of 131 the  Act as amended made the amendment retrospective in  its operation  by  prohibiting the Courts from  passing  decrees inconsistent with the Amended Act. The right of  respondents 1  to  3  who  had sued as  sons  of  the  vendors  remained undisturbed by the amendment.  It was on this basis that the preliminary objection was pressed before us.     The  facts  relevant  for the  present  appeal  may  now briefly  be  stated.   The  land  in  suit  was  sold  by  a registered sale deed on June 18, 1957 by Kashi, Harchand and Bhagoo  (respondents 4 to 6 in this Court) to respondents  7 to  18  for an ostensible consideration of  Rs.  1,35,000/-. The  appellants  and  respondents  1  to  3  instituted  two separate suits for pre-emption in respect of this sale.   In both  the suits the sale price as inserted in the sale  deed was  questioned.   The two suits were consolidated  and  the plaintiffs  in  each suit were joined as defendants  in  the other  suit as contemplated by s. 28 of the Act. It  appears that  on April 28, 1958, a statement was made on  behalf  of the  vendees admitting the right of the pre-emptors in  both the suits and conceding that a decree be passed in favour of respondents  1  to  3 in the first  instance  and  on  their failure  to pay the amount, the appellants be held  entitled to  a decree on payment of Rs. 1,35,000/-.   Apparently  all other  objections raised by the vendees to the right of  the pre-emptors  were dropped.  Counsel for the appellants  also made  a statement expressing  his willingness to pay a   sum of  Rs.  1,35,000/-.   Counsel for the respondents  1  to  3 however  did  not  accept the  amount  of  consideration  as entered  in the sale deed and wanted the issue in regard  to the  pre-emption  money to be decided on  the  merits.   The trial  Court by its judgment and decree dated June 30,  1958 granted to the plaintiffs in both the suits a decree in  the following terms:                   "It is ordered that a decree is granted to               the plaintiffs for possession of land in  suit               by pre-emption on payment of Rs. 1,35,000/- on               the condition that the plaintiffs deposit this               amount  in  the  court  for  payment  to   the               vendees-defendants  within  one  month  on  or               before  30th July,  1958, otherwise this  suit               shall  stand dismissed. In case of default  by               the  plaintiffs  Godhu etc.  Moola  and  other               rival pre-emptors, who are plaintiffs in  suit               No.  556 of 1958 shall be entitled to  deposit               the  above amount as pre-emption money  on  or               before   30th  October,  1958,  and  get   the               possession of the land in suit." This  decree  was  apparently framed in  the  light  of  the provisions of s. 28 of the Act and Order 20’, r. 14,  C.P.C. Section  28 which provides for concurrent hearing of two  or more suits for pre-empting the same sale lays down that each decree  shall  state  the order in which  each  claimant  is entitled  to exercise his right of pre-emption. Order 20  r. 14( 1 )(a) lays down that the decree 132 in  a  pre-emption suit shall, when purchase money  has  not

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been paid in the Court, specify a day on or before which the same  shall be paid and Order 20 r. 14(2)(b) provides  inter alia  that in so far as the claims decreed are different  in degree, the claim of the inferior pre-emptor shall not  take effect  unless   and   until  the  superior  pre-emptor  has failed to comply with the provisions of sub-rule 1.     Respondents  1  to  3,  feeling  dissatisfied  with  the decision  on the amount of deposit to be made, preferred  an appeal  to  the Punjab High Court.  On January 6,  1967  the High  Court  allowed the appeal and reduced  the  amount  of deposit to Rs. 1,05,800/-. While framing the decree the High Court  allowed the plaintiffs pre-emptors a period of  three months  from  January 6, 1967, for depositing in  Court  the amount  of  Rs.  1,05,800/- failing  which  their  suit  was directed  to  stand dismissed.  Nothing was  stated  in  the decree as regards the claim of the appellants.  Attention of the  High Court apparently does not seem to have been  drawn to the provisions either of s. 28 of the Act or of Order 20, r. 14, Civil P.C. or of para 3 of Chapter 1-M(c) at page  59 of Volume 1 of the Punjab High Court Rules and Orders.  Para 3  aforesaid  emphasises  the  importance  of  specifying  a definite date for the deposit of money in Court.     It may at this stage appropriately be observed that  the omission  to state in the decree the order in which the  two rival  claimants  were entitled to exercise their  right  of pre-emption might have been due either to the fact that  the appellants  (who were impleaded as respondents in  the  High Court)  in  view of s. 31 as interpreted in  Ram  Swarup  v. Munshi  and Others(1) did not press their claim and did  not ask  for the inclusion of a direction regarding their  right in the High Court decree, or to the fact that they may  have felt  that having expressed .their willingness in the  trial Court  to  deposit Rs. 1,35,000/- it was no longer  open  to them  to question this valuation.  It is also  not  unlikely that  in view of the decision in Ram Swarup’s  case(1)   the High   Court   thought that the only  right  of  pre-emption subsisting  on January 6, 1967 was that of respondents 1  to ’3 and that there was, therefore, no occasion for making any consequential order in fax,our of the appellants under Order 41,  r. 33 Civil P.C.  The judgment of the High  Court  does not  contain  any  discussion  on the point  as  to  why  no reference  was  made to the appellants’  claims.   It  would certainly  have  been  more helpful if the  High  Court  had stated  something  in its judgment on this aspect.   In  the circumstances  of  this case, however, we need  say  nothing more on this point.     It is against the decree of the High Court reducing  the amount of deposit to be made by respondents 1 to 3 that  the appellants- (1) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 858.  ? 133 pre-emptors  have  come to this Court on  appeal  and  their right  to  appeal  is  challenged on  the  ground  that  the existing law of preemption has retrospectively deprived them of  their  right to preempt by prohibiting the  courts  from passing  a decree for pre-emption inconsistent with the  Act as amended.  The challenge seems to be well founded.     This Court had  in  Ram  Swarup’s  case(1)  occasion  to construe the effect of s. 31 of the Act.  According to  that decision, s. 31 is plain and comprehensive enough to require an  appellate  court  to  give  effect  to  the  substantive provisions of the Amending Act whether the appeal before  it is one against a decree granting pre-emption or one refusing that  relief.  Following the ratio of this decision it  must be  held that it is not open to this Court to pass a  decree

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of pre-emption in favour of the appellants who were deprived in  1960  of  their right to secure such  a  decree  in  the present suit. Indeed it was not open even to the High  Court to pass a decree of pre-emption in favour of the  appellants on  January  6,  1967  and  the  decree  of  that  court  is unexceptionable  in  this  respect. The  argument  that  the appellants.  had already cured a decree in their  favour  by the  trial  Court, which decree has become final,  and  that they have fully complied with its terms and further that  in the present appeal, they are merely seeking modification  of the decree of the High Court in favour of respondents 1 to 3 by  getting the amount of pre-emption money enhanced to  Rs. 1,35,000/-,  without  claiming any right of  pre-emption  in their  own favour, is unsustainable.  This argument  ignores that  the scheme of s. 28 of the Act read with Order 20,  r. 14, Civil P.C. does not postulate decrees of pre-emption  in favour of rival pre-emptors on payment of different  amounts of  purchase  money  in respect of the same  sale.   Such  a course may lead to conflicting decisions on the question  of value  of  the  property sought to  be  pre-empted  for  the purposes of pre-emption suit.  Besides the appellants’ right to pre-empt the sale under the unamended law was  admittedly inferior  to that of respondents 1 to 3 and  the  appellants could  only be held entitled to exercise their  right  after the failure of the said respondents to comply with the terms of  the decree in their favour.  The right of respondents  1 to 3 was determined by the High Court and it was claimed  on their behalf at’ the Bar of this Court that they had already deposited the preemption money as required by the High Court decree. Indeed this assertion was not disputed on behalf  of the appellants.  We are accordingly unable to hold that  the appellants  have  successfully executed the decree  of  pre- emption in their favour.     The  appellants  further  developed  their  argument  by submitting  that  the decree passed by the  trial  Court  in their favour was (1) [1968] 3 SC.R. 858. 134 never  appealed against and that the same has  become  final and  binding on all parties.  The only appeal  preferred  by respondents  1 to 3, according to this submission  was  from the  decree  in  their own suit, with the  result  that  the decree in favour of the appellants passed by the trial Court in their suit has by now become conclusive and unassailable. We  cannot accept this submission. There is nothing  on  the record  to show that the appeal presented in the High  Court by respondents 1 to 3 was directed against the decree passed in their suit.  Apparently, the appeal was filed against the decree  passed  in the consolidated suits dealing  with  the rights  of both the rival pre-emptors, and all  the  parties interested in the right of pre-emption were impleaded in the appeal.  Besides,  this contention seems to us  to  be  only another way of putting the same argument, namely, that there can be two or more different determinations of the amount of pre-emption  money  in the two consolidated suits  for  pre- empting the sale in question.  It also postulates a claim by an  inferior pre-emptor to pre-empt the sale by  making  the deposit  of the pre-emption money before the  superior  pre- emptor has failed to comply with the terms of the decree  in his  favour.   This argument, as  the  foregoing  discussion shows,  is  without merit.  In the present case,  a  further question  arises  as to whether or not it was  open  to  the appellants   to  ask  the  High  Court  not  to   vary   the determination  of pre-emption money in the appeal  preferred by respondents 1 to 3 without formally preferring a separate

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appeal from the other decree considered to have been  passed in  the other suit because passing of such  an  inconsistent decree  on appeal on the question of valuation would not  be permissible in law. No argument on these lines was addressed in the High Court.  The effect of this omission has not been canvassed  in  this  Court  either.   We  would,  therefore, express  no  opinion  on  this  aspect.   The  final  decree relating  to the rival claims of pre-emption in  respect  of the sale in question, however, seems to be that of the  High Court which may well be considered to be binding on all  the parties to it.  And then, if the appellants’ claim that  the decree  passed in their favour by the trial Court  in  their suit has already become final and their right is  unaffected by  the  decree  of  the High Court,  then  they  cannot  be considered  to  be aggrieved by the  impugned  decree,  and, therefore,  they  cannot claim any locus  standi  to  appeal against it.     From whichever point of view one looks at the  position, the  appellants  cannot  claim a right of  appeal  from  the decree  of the High Court determining the pre-emption  money to be Rs. 1 05,800, The right to appeal against that  decree can only be exercised by a person whose claim of pre-emption in respect of the sale in question can be considered to have been  adversely affected by it. The appellants on their  own argument possess no such right. 135     The  preliminary  objection,  therefore,  succeeds   and allowing  the  same  we  dismiss  the  appeal  with   costs. Respondents 1 t0 3 claim to have deposited the amount within the  time specified by the High Court and as the  appellants do not as indeed cannot claim a decree in their favour  from this  Court,  it becomes unnecessary for us to  specify  any date for the payment of such deposit. R.K.P.S.                                  Appeal dismissed. 136