13 August 1998
Supreme Court
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SRI BABU RAM ALIAS PRASAD Vs SRI INDRA PAL SINGH (DEAD) BY LRS.

Bench: S.B. MAJMUDAR,M. JAGANNADHA RAO
Case number: Appeal Civil 2551 of 1977


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PETITIONER: SRI BABU RAM ALIAS PRASAD

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SRI INDRA PAL SINGH (DEAD) BY LRS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       13/08/1998

BENCH: S.B. MAJMUDAR, M. JAGANNADHA RAO

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T M. JAGANNADHA RAO,  J.      The appellant  is the  plaintiff in  the original  suit bearing No.225  of 1969  on the file of the Additional Civil Judge, Aligarh.  The respondent  is the  defendant. the suit was filed by the plaintiff appellant seeking reconveyance of the  property  covered  by  the  sale-deed  dated  15.7.1964 executed by  the plaintiff  in favour  of the  defendant and requiring  the   defendant  to   perform  the  agreement  of reconveyance specifically  as  entered  into  in  the  Joint application of  the plaintiff and defendant dated 20.11.1963 filed in  the Insolvency  Court and  in default praying that the reconveyance  deed may  be executed  by the  Court.  The extent of land is 5 Bighas and 7 Bighas in village Jarothi.      The trial  court decreed  that suit  in favour  of  the plaintiff on  2.1.1970 on  condition of the plaintiff paying back Rs.  7000/- to  the  defendant.  The  said  decree  was affirmed  by   the  first  appellate  court  on  10.12.1975. However, the  Second Appeal  175 of  1976 preferred  by  the defendant  was   allowed  and  the  suit  was  dismissed  on 21.3.1977 by  the High  Court of Allahabad. Against the said judgment, the plaintiff has preferred this appeal by special leave.      The following  are the facts : The plaintiff- appellant borrowed  Rs.   5000/-  from   the  defendant-respondent  on 6.6.1961 and  another sum of Rs. 2000/- on 27.1.1962. On the ground that the plaintiff did not repay the said amount, the defendant filed  Misc. Case 27 of 1963 before the Insolvency Court, Aligarh  on 19.11.1963  (Lower Court  described it as application dated 20.11.1963) for declaring the plaintiff as an insolvent.  On the  same day  the plaintiff and defendant signed joint  application before  the Insolvency  Court  the material portion of which (in para 4 to 6) reads as follows:      "That the  creditor has  agreed  to      accept   Rs.    7000/-   in    fill      satisfaction  of  his  transferring      his Byhumichari  Property measuring      5 bighas  7 biswas  to the creditor      for the consideration of Rs. 7000/-      with the  condition of repurchasing

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    the same  within 5  years from  the      creditor  for   Rs.   7000/-.   the      creditor  has   kindly  given   his      consent to  the same settlement and      agreed to  purchase same  with  the      above  condition  and  to  get  the      position of Insolvency dismissed.      That  the   debtor  has  Bhumidhari      property  measuring   14  bighas  7      biswansis is  paying Rs. 31.94 N.P.      as revenue.  Out of  this  property      the creditor has agreed to purchase      5 bighas  for the  consideration of      his dues.  The details  of the same      are given below at the foot of this      application.      That the  parties in  view  of  the      above arrangement  settled  amongst      themselves  request   humbly   that      permission be kindly granted to the      debtor  applicant   to   sell   his      property as  noted  above  and  the      creditor to  purchase the  same  in      order  that   the   debt   may   be      satisfied and  the parties  may not      be put  to  unnecessary  litigation      and expenses." Thus, in  the  said  I  .A.,  there  was  an  agreement  for reconveyance inasmuch  as it  was agreed  that the plaintiff could seek reconveyance within 5 years of the sale-deed.      On the  said application,  the said  Court passed   the following order on 22.11.1963:      "I have  heard the counsel for both      the  sides   as  well  as  Official      Receiver. The Official Receiver has      no objection  except that he should      be paid  his legal fee. The request      appears to be quite reasonable. The      interim  receiver   is  under   the      circumstances permitted  to execute      the sale  deed  in  favour  of  the      creditor petitioner  of  course  of      receipt of  his  legal  commission.      The present application for further      order shall  be put  up  after  the      sale  deed  is  executed.  Let  the      record be  now put up on 20.12.1963      for further orders."      It will  be noticed  that the  Insolvency Court’s order was that  the sale  deed would  be executed  by the "interim receiver". It appears that for some reason the sale deed was not executed.  Though it  is the  case of the defendant that the plaintiff-appellant  did not execute the sale-deed., the defendant admitted  in his  evidence that  he neither issued any notice to the plaintiff nor complained to the Court that no sale  was executed by the plaintiff. The creditor did not take  steps   to  withdraw   the  insolvency   petition.  On 29.5.1964, the plaintiff was adjudicated as an insolvent and it was  directed that  he should  apply for discharge within one year. It may be noted that two other sundry creditors to whom the plaintiff owed Rs. 300/- and Rs. 700/- respectively , got impleaded in the insolvency proceedings on 20.11.1963. Thereafter, the  Official Receiver  executed a  sale-deed on 15.7.1964 in  favour of the respondent for the suit land and the plaintiff’s evidence that on the same day, another sale-

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deed of  some other  property was  executed by  the Official Receiver in  favour of one Shamlal for Rs. 1000/-. Plaintiff stated in his evidence that he paid off the other two sundry creditors to whom, in all, he owned Rs.1000/- as referred to above. The  Official Receiver  reported  to  the  Insolvency Court on  30.10.0964 that  the plaintiff had cleared all his debts.      The  plaintiff-appellant   moved   for   discharge   on 7.9.1964, i.e.  within 1  year of  the order of adjudication dated 29.5.1964.  Unfortunately, the  said application stood dismissed for  default. On  9.7.1968, the  plaintiff applied under Section  43(1) after  Provincial Insolvency  Act, 1920 (hereinafter called  the ’Act’)  for an  order of  annulment alleging that  all the  creditors had  been paid fully. That section permits  such an  application  in  cases  where  the debtor has not applied for discharge within the period fixed earlier.  But   the  Insolvency  Court  dismissed  the  said application on  27.7.1968 on  the ground  that the insolvent could not  invoke section  43(1) and  he  should  apply  for discharge. However,  the appeal  by  the  insolvent  to  the District Judge,  Aligarh in  Appeal  No.  62  of  1968,  was allowed on  22.10.1969 on  the ground that section 43(1) was applicable and  also on  the ground  that the  insolvent had discharged  all  his  debts  as  reported  by  the  Official Receiver in  his report  dated 30.10.1964.  The adjudication was annulled and an annulment order was passed on 22.10.1969 unconditionally. As  the debts  were all  paid, there was no occasion for  vesting  the  property  in  any  person  under section 37(1) while annulling the adjudication.      In the  meantime, and before the annulment, inasmuch as the period  of 5  years within  which the  debtor could seek reconveyance  was  expiring,  the  debtor  (i.e.  plaintiff) issued a  registered notice  on 12.7.1968  to  the  creditor (defendant) to reconvey the property on payment of Rs.7000/- by the  insolvent. That  notice was  within 5 years from the date of  sale-deed. But the creditor refused to do so by his reply notice  dated 22.7.1968.  The debtor  then  filed  the present suit  on 6.10.1969  for specific  performance of the reconveyance agreement  dated 22.11.1963  contained  in  the joint application  of  the  plaintiff  and  defendant  dated 19.11.1963. It  may be noticed that both on the day when the debtor gave  notice and on the day he filed the suit, he was an undischarged  insolvent and  whatever rights  he had  for reconveyance, they  stood vested  in the  official Receiver. Instead of the official Receiver taking the above steps, the insolvent had himself taken up these matters.      The defendant  accepted in  his written statement dated 8.1.1970 that  it was true that a joint application was made on  19.11.1963   as  stated  by  the  plaintiff  before  the insolvency Court. He, however, contended that it was further agreed therein,  that the  plaintiff should  have executed a sale-deed in favour of the defendant and that if he had done so,  plaintiff   would  not  have  been  adjudicated  as  an insolvent.  The  plaintiff  defaulted  and,  therefore,  the defendant had no option except to press for adjudication and plaintiff was  adjudicated as  insolvent  on  29.5.1964  and later  the  Official  Receiver  executed  the  sale-deed  on 15.7.1964. The  plaintiff also  joined in the sale-deed. The plaintiff could  not "rely upon the provisional talks of the parties  prior  to  adjudication  of  insolvency  petition". Plaintiff could  not take  advantage of  his default. It was also contended  that the  "previous  agreement  between  the parties fell  to the  ground owing to non fulfilment thereof by the  plaintiff himself".  It  was  contended  that  there "never was  any contract  of repurchase  with  the  Official

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Receiver" who  was the  vendor and  in  whom  title  to  the property stood  vested. After the adjudication, or after the sale, there  was no  agreement by  the defendant to reconvey the property.  The plaintiff was legally incompetent to seek reconveyance  by   notice  dated  12.7.1968  as  he  was  an undischarged  insolvent   on  that  date  and  the  property remained  wholly   vested  in  the  Official  Receiver.  The Official Receiver  never exercised  any option to repurchase within 5 years of the sale deed. Time was the essence of the contract.      The Plaintiff  was also  not competent to file the suit on 6.10.1969  as he  was, even on that date, an undischarged insolvent  and  all  rights  including  the  right  to  seek reconveyance stood vested in the Official Receiver.      On these  contentions, the  trial Court  framed various issues. On  issue 2  relating to  the alleged default on the part of the plaintiff in executing sale-deed as agreed to in the joint  application, the  Court held  that the said issue was "not  argued" by  the defendant’s  counsel. Nor  did the counsel say  how there  was any  breach on  the part  of the plaintiff. (We  have  stated  earlier  that  the  Insolvency Court, in  its order  dated 22.11.1963  asked  the  "interim receiver" to execute the sale-deed and that the defendant as PW1 admitted  he had  neither issued any notice to plaintiff nor moved  the Court  for a  sale-deed to  be executed). The trial Court  held  that  in  any  event  the  sale-deed  was executed and  as such  ’there was no default’ on the part of the  plaintiff.   On  the  question  as  to  the  effect  of annulment, the  trial  Court  referred  to  the  Full  Bench decision of  the Madras  High Court  in Subbaiah Goundan vs. Ramasami Goundan  [AIR 1954 Mad 604 (FB)] to the effect that upon annulment,  the property reverted to the insolvent with retrospective  effect  and  the  insolvency  got  wiped  out altogether except to the extent reserved under section 47 of the Act  and all  transaction or sections in the interregnum got validated.  The trial  Court also referred to Rup Narain Singh and  another vs.  Hargopal Singh  [AIR 1933  Allahabad 449] for  holding that  an  alienation  by  an  undischarged insolvent was  not void  but was voidable at the instance of the Official  Receiver. The  trial Court  also held that the plaintiff would  get the  competency to  exercise option  to repurchase -  in  view  of  the  subsequent  annulment.  The plaintiff exercised  the option  within 5  years, time being essence  of   the  contract.   The  debtor’s  actions  stood validated and even if the Official Receiver did not exercise the option to purchase within 5 years from the date of sale, it did  not matter.  The trial court also held that the suit was not  barred by  time. On  these findings,  the suit  was decreed for specific performance for reconveyance subject to plaintiff paying  Rs. 700/-  back  to  the  defendant.  This judgment was  confirmed in  first appeal  by the  Additional District Judge.      In Second  Appeal the  High Court of Allahabad reversed the judgments  of the lower Courts. It held that the earlier agreement  contained   in  the   Joint   application   dated 19.11.1963 made  to the  insolvency  Court  did  not  avail. Further, in  the order  dated 22.11.1963 passed on the joint application, the  Court permitted  the "interim receiver" to execute the  sale-deed while  the sale  deed was executed by the Official  Receiver and  there was no fresh agreement for reconveyance between the Official Receiver and the defendant at the  time the sale-deed was executed. The agreement dated 19.11.1963 contained  in the joint application was, in fact, not given  effect to  as plaintiff did not execute the sale- deed and  defendant did  not have  the  insolvency  petition

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dismissed.  The   facts  showed  that  the  sale-deed  dated 15.7.1964 executed  jointly by the Official Receiver and the plaintiff was  not in  pursuance of  the original  agreement dated 19.11.1963.  The said agreement dated 19.11.1963 was a contingent one  and  was  executed  even  before  the  Court directed sale  of the  property to  the  defendant.  As  the directions  of   the  Insolvency   Court  dated   22.11.1963 directing execution  of sale-deed  by the plaintiff and also withdrawal of insolvency petition by the defendant, were not complied with  by either  party, the "execution of the sale- deed after adjudication must be held to be in pursuance of a fresh contract  between the  parties". It  might be that the substance of  the sale-deed was the same as contained in the joint application  but this  was not  relevant. The contract was still a "new one" upon which the sale deed was executed. At the  time of  the new contract, there was no reconveyance agreement -  either oral  or written.  The suit for specific performance of  the agreement  of reconveyance  contained in the joint application could not, therefore, be enforced. The High Court  then  referred  to  the  judgments  in  Subbaiah Goundan Vs.  Ramasami Goundan  [AIR 1954  Mad. 604(FB)], Rup Narain Singh  Vs. Hargopal  Singh [AIR  1933 Allahabad 449], Arunachalam  Vs.  Narayana  Swami  (AIR  1951  Mad  63(FB)), Parvathi Amma  vs. Easo  Yohanan (AIR  1955 TC  241) and  AR Ghazani  vs.  Official  Receiver  (AIR  1958  Mad  486)  and observed that  the question  of  reverter  of  the  debtor’s rights to the debtor upon annulment would have been relevant if the  undischarged insolvent  had entered  into a contract with the  creditor without the intervention of the Court and if the  contract was  not subject  to conditions.  Here  the contract  dated   19.11.1963  was   dependent  upon  various conditions, execution  of sale-deed by the plaintiff and the withdrawal of  the insolvency  petition by the defendant and permission by  Court for  a sale-deed.  On account  of  non- fulfilment  of   the  conditions   laid  the   order   dated 22.11.1963, there  was no  enforceable contract  between the parties. On  the above reasoning, the High Court allowed the Second Appeal and dismissed the suit.      In this  appeal, it was contended by  Sri Pramod Swarup that the  High Court erred in law in thinking that the Court order dated  22.11.1963 or  the sale-deed dated 15.7.1964 by the Official Receiver did not refer to the reconveyance, and hence   the   earlier   agreement   dated   19.11.1963   for reconveyance was  not enforceable.  This plea  raised by the defendant  in  the  written  agreement  was  not  acceptable because the  order of  the Court dated 22.11.1963 permitting sale was only in pursuance of the agreement dated 19.11.1963 contained in  the joint application and having got the sale- deed executed  in his  favour, the  defendant could not blow hot  and  cold  and  repudiate  the  reconveyance  agreement contained in the same joint petition dated 19.11.1963. There was no  need to  have a fresh agreement either on 22.11.1963 or on  15.7.1964. Theres  was no  ’fresh or new’ contract on 15.7.1964 of  sale between  the defendant  and the  Official Receiver as  wrongly held  by the High Court. The High Court could not  have given  such a  finding unless  there  was  a specific plea  of novation between the Official Receiver and the defendant  in the  written statement. On the other hand, the evidence  of the  defendant as DW1 was that there was no fresh contract  before  15.7.1964  when  the  sale-deed  was executed. The  finding of  the High  Court  was,  therefore, contrary to  the defendant’s  evidence. The  trial Court and the first  appellate Court  were right  in holding  that the annulment retrospectively  validated the option exercised by the plaintiff  on 12.7.1968  in his notice and the filing of

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the suit  on 6.10.1969, though on those dates, the plaintiff was an  undischarged insolvent. In fact, even on the date of annulment dated  22.10.1969, the  suit was  in time  as  the period of  3 years  had not expired from 22.7.1968, the date of refusal to perform the contract of reconveyance.      On the  other hand,  learned counsel  for the defendant Sri P.  Anshu Misra  contended that there was a fresh or new contract at the time of the sale by the Official Receiver on 15.7.1964 and  the sale-deed was traceable to that agreement and not to the agreement contained in  the joint application dated 22.11.1963.  At the  time of  the fresh  agreement for sale on  15.7.64, there  was  no  further  agreement  for  a reconveyance. The  original agreement  of reconveyance dated 19.11.1963 was given to go bye and could not be enforced any longer. The  plaintiff did  not also  implement the terms of the  first  agreement  by  executing  a  sale-deed  and  the defendant  did  not  withdraw  the  insolvency  petition  as contemplated  by   that  agreement.   The   suit   was   not maintainable because  the plaintiff,  being an  undischarged insolvent, was  not competent  to exercise  the  option  for reconveyance  on   12.7.1968  and   the  plaintiff  was  not competent to  file the suit on 6.10.1969 since the annulment took place much later, on 22.10.1969.      On these  contentions, the  following points  arise for consideration:      (1)  Could  the  High  Court  in  Second  Appeal  under           Section 100 CPC give a finding on issue No.2 which           was not  pressed in  the trial court and hold that           the plaintiff  and defendant  committed breach  of           the   agreement   dated   19.11.1963   and   that,           therefore, the  sale deed  dated 15.7.64  must  be           held to  be traceable  to a  new contract  entered           into  between   the  Official   Receiver  and  the           defendant on 15.7.64?      (2)  Whether absence of a reference to the agreement to           reconvey in  the Court order dated 22.11.63 and in           the sale-deed  dated 15.7.1964  implied  that  the           agreement  of   reconveyance  contained   in   the           original agreement  to sell  dated 19.11.1963  was           superseded?      (3)  Would the  two steps  or actions  of the plaintiff           (i) exercising the option for renewal on 12.7.1968           and (ii) filing the suit on 6.10.1969 taken when he  was   an  undischarged   insolvent  get  retrospectively validated  on   account  of   the  subsequent  unconditional annulment of  adjudication in  view of sections 37 and 43 of the Provincial Insolvency Act, 1930 on 22.10.1969?      (4)  Is time the essence of contract in a reconveyance           agreement and was the option exercised by the           plaintiff in this case in time in the context of           section 55 Contract Act?      (5)  Was the  suit  filed  on  6.10.1969  for  specific           performance of  the contract of reconveyance dated           19.11.1963  in   time  under  Article  54  of  the           Limitation Act, 1963? Point 1:      In our  view, the  High Court  , while holding that the sale-deed dated  15.9.1964 was  traceable to a new agreement erred seriously in  making out of a new case fro which there was neither  any issue  nor evidence. In fact, the defendant specifically admitted  in his evidence as DW1 that there was no fresh  agreement between  the Official  Receiver and  the defendant at  or before the execution of the sale-deed dated 15.9.1964. The defendant, no doubt, came forward with such a statement to  negative any  fresh agreement  of reconveyance

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entered into  by and  between the  Official Receiver and the defendant. But  that evidence  equally negatives  the theory that the  sale-deed dated 15.9.1964 was executed pursuant to a fresh  or new  agreement entered into between the Official Receiver and the defendant. The recitals in the sale-deed do not support  such a  condition. Further  , the  sale by  the Official Receiver  was one  made pursuant to the Court order dated 22.11.63  and was not a sale in exercise of his normal powers to  sell the insolvent property nor was it a sale for distributing the  sale proceeds  to the creditors. No doubt, the Court’s  order permitted  the "interim receiver" to sell but in  view of the subsequent adjudication of the debtor as insolvent on  29.5.1964, the sale-deed had to be executed by the Official  Receiver. A  reading of  the  sale-deed  dated 15.7.1964 which is in Hindi and was read out in Court showed that it  was executed  in pursuance of the agreement between the creditor  and the  "insolvent, second  party". The  sale deed did  not refer  to any  agreement  with  the  "Official Receiver" who was one of the executants of the sale deed. It referred only  to the  agreement with the "insolvent, second party", which,  in our opinion could only be the one entered into on  19.11.63 between  the plaintiff  and the  defendant before adjudication.      Novation under  section 62 of the Contract Act required a clear  plea, issue and evidence. Such a question cannot be raised or  accepted under section 100 CPC for the first time in Second  Appeal. There  was no  such issue  in the  courts below and  the defendant’s  evidence was  contrary to such a theory.      The High  Court, in  our view,  also erred  in thinking that the  plaintiff committed  breach of the agreement dated 19.11.1963 covered  by the  joint application  when the said aspect covered  by issue  No.2 was not pressed in  the trial Court. Further,  the permission  for sale  dated  22.11.1963 granted by the Court was in favour of the ’interim receiver’ and, therefore,  the debtor could not have executed any sale deed. (We  are not  on the  question whether  the Insolvency Court could  have asked  the interim  receiver to  sell  the property). The defendant admitted in his evidence that after 19.11.1963, he  did not issue any notice to the plaintiff to execute a  sale-deed nor did he move the Insolvency Court to direct the debtor to execute the sale-deed.      For the  above reasons,  we hold that the High Court in Second Appeal  exceed its jurisdiction under section 100 CPC in giving a finding on an issue which was not pressed in the trial Court.  So far  as the finding as to a new contract is concerned, there  was no issue or evidence. The evidence was to the  contrary.   We accordingly set aside these findings. Point 1  is therefore  held in  favour of  the plaintiff and against the defendant. Point 2:      The agreement  contained in the joint application dated 19.11.1963  filed   in  the   Insolvency  Court   not   only contemplated that the plaintiff would execute a sale deed in favour of  the defendant but also contemplated an option for repurchase by  the plaintiff  within five years of the sale, on repayment  of the  amount of Rs. 7000/- to the defendant. Later, as  stated earlier,  the Court  permitted the sale by the "interim  receiver" by  its order dated 22.11.1963 and a sale deed  was executed jointly by the Official Receiver and the plaintiff  on 15.7.1964.  It is true that neither in the Court order  nor in  the sale-deed there is any reference to an agreement  of reconveyance.  Question is  whether on that account the  obligation to  reconvey, in  the event  of  the plaintiff  exercising,   within  5   years  his   option  to

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repurchase  contained  in  the  a  joint  application  dated 19.11.1963 could  be said  to have  been  given  up  by  the plaintiff?      We have already held under Point 1 that the Court order and the  sale-deed were  not the  result of any fresh or new agreement between the Official Receiver and the defendant at or before  the date  of sale on 15.7.1964. We have also held that there was no novation within section 62 of the Contract Act. If  that be  so, it  is clear  that the  agreement  for reconveyance  contained   in  the  original  contract  dated 19.11.1963 cannot  be said  to  have  been  superseded.  The defendant, having got the sale-deed only upon implementation of the  obligation covered  by the  agreement of  sale dated 19.11.1963 cannot  approbate and  reprobate and contend that the other  part of  the agreement dated 19.11.1963 regarding reconveyance need  not be implemented. It is true that it is customary to  include a  recital regarding  the agreement of reconveyance in  the sale-deed  itself. But  where, as here, there was  an agreement  preceding the  sale deed  and  that agreement contained  such a  clause,  and  a  sale-deed  was executed consequent  thereto, the  absence of a reference to the agreement of reconveyance in the sale-deed would not, in our opinion,  lead to  the inference that the said right was given up  by the  plaintiff. Unless there is a detailed plea and also  evidence that  before execution  of the  sale-deed there was novation and parties expressly agreed to give a go bye to  the agreement or reconveyance, no inference could be drawn that  the agreement  of reconveyance  contained in the agreement of  sale dated  19.11.63 which  preceded the sale- deed was given a go-bye.      For the  reasons given  above, it must be held that the absence of  a reference to the agreement for reconveyance in the Court  order dated  22.11.1963 or in the sale-deed dated 15.6.1964 was  not an  indication that  the  said  agreement contained in  the original  agreement of sale was given a go bye by  the parties.  Point 2 is therefore held in favour of the appellant. Point 3:      This point  relating to the effect of annulment is more important and as there is no authority of this Court earlier except Arora  Enterprises Ltd. & Ors. vs. Indu Bhushan Obhar & Ors.  [1997 (5)  SCC 366] and Tukaram Ramachandra Mane (d) by LRs  vs. Rajaram  Babu Lukule (d) by LRs. [1998 (2) Scale 719] which  deal with ’acts’ of Receiver or Insolvency Court during the insolvency, we shall go into some details.      We  have   seen  that  the  plaintiff  was  adjudicated insolvent on  29.5.1964  and  the  property  vested  in  the Official Receiver  who executed  the sale-deed  in favour of the defendant on 15.7.1964. The plaintiff also joined in the sale-deed. It  is true  that on  the date when the plaintiff exercised the  option to  repurchase on 12.7.1968 - within 5 years from  the date  of sale,  i.e. 15.7.1964  - he  was an undischarged insolvent. It is also true that on the day when the plaintiff filed the suit for specific performance of the agreement of  reconveyance, on 6.10.1969, he continued to be an undischarged  insolvent. The option to repurchase and the filing of  the suit  were acts which ought to have therefore been performed  by the Official Receiver. But when later the annulment order  was passed on 22.10.1969, could it be said, as  contended   for  the   debtor,  that   these  acts   get retrospectively  validated  on  account  of  the  subsequent annulment of adjudication?      Section 35  of the Act states if, in the opinion of the Insolvency Court,  a debtor  ought not to have been adjudged insolvent, or  where it is proved to the satisfaction of the

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Court that  the debts  of the  insolvent have  been paid  in full, the  Court shall, on the application of the debtor, or any other  person interested, by order in writing, annul the adjudication and  the Court  may, of  its own  notice or  on application made  by the receiver or any creditor, annul any adjudication made  on the  petition of  a debtor who was, by reason of  the provisions or sub-section (2) of  section 10. not entitled to present such petition.      It is obvious that, in the present case, in view of the report of  the Official  Receiver dated  30.10.1964 that all the debts  had been  cleared by the insolvent, the Court was bound to annul the adjudication. It did so on 22.10.1969. It cannot be  said that  the debtor  plaintiff could  not  have applied for annulment under section 43(1).      Now sub-clause  (1) of  section 43  states that  if the debtor does  not appear  on the  day fixed  for hearing  his application for  discharge or  on such subsequent day as the Court may  direct, or  if the  debtor does  not apply for an order of discharge within the period specified by the Court, the Court  may annul  the order of adjudication or make such other order  as it may think fit, and if the adjudication is annulled, the  provisions of  section 37 shall apply. As the case  of   the  appellant   fell  under  this  section,  the application was in order. But the Insolvency Court dismissed the same  on 27.7.1968  and on  appeal, the  District  Court allowed the  application on  22.10.1969 unconditionally.  On the facts  of  this  case,  the  debtor  had  to  apply  for discharge within  one year  of the  adjudication. He made an application within  that period  but  that  application  was dismissed for  default. It was therefore clearly permissible for him to invoke section 43(1).      Inasmuch as  sub-clause (1)  of section 43 requires the Court to apply section 37 of the Act in the event of passing an order of annulment, it is next necessary to refer to that section. Sub-clause  (1) of  section 37 states that where an adjudication is  annulled, all  sales  and  dispositions  of property and  payments made,  and all acts theretofore done, by the  Court or  receiver, shall  be valid; but, subject as aforesaid, the  property  of  the  debtor  who  is  adjudged insolvent shall  vest in  such  persons  as  the  Court  may appoint, or  , in  default of  any such  appointment,  shall revert to  the debtor to the extent of his right or interest therein on  such conditions  (if any)  as the  Court may, be order in writing, declare. The case  before us  is one where, in view of section 35 and in view  of the  fact that  the debtor  had cleared  all his debts,  he   was  entitled  to  an  order  of  annulment  of adjudication. As  there was  nothing to  administer qua  his property, the Court did not think of vesting his property in the Official  Receiver or  any other  person. In  fact, sub- clause (1)  of section 37 itself says that in default of the appointment of  any person,  the "property"  of  the  debtor shall revert  to the  debtor to  the extent  of his right or interest therein. This is, however, subject to the condition that the  sales, dispositions  of property and payments made and all  acts theretofore  done by  the Court  or  receiver, shall remain  valid.  Inasmuch  as  the  sale  of  the  suit property on  15.7.1964 was  one made  after the adjudication order on 29.5.1964, and before annulment the said sale would remain valid,  even after  annulment of adjudication, unless the sale was subject to any further conditions.      Before the  adjudication order,  the debtor had a right of reconveyance  qua the property purchased by the defendant from the receiver on 15.7.1964. That right in relation t the property continued  to burden  the sale.  After adjudication

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that limited right stood vested in the Official Receiver. On annulment that  right would,  therefore, clearly revert back to the debtor from the Official Receiver. Sub-section (1) of section 37  uses the  words, "the  property of the debtor to the extent of his rights and interests therein" shall revert to him.  For example,  if he was a full owner or a mortgagee or a  lessee of  the property  in   question on  the date of adjudication, those  rights would  revert  back  to  him  on annulment though during the pendency of the insolvency those rights stood  vested in  the Official Receiver. Likewise the right to  obtain a  reconveyance from  the vendee  which was vested in  the Official  Receiver would  in our opinion also revert  back   to  the   debtor.  Upon   annulment  of   the adjudication. In  the present case, the debtor had exercised the opinion and filed the suit even before annulment.      Therefore, the  more important question will be whether the reverter  of the  property or  rights  on  annulment  is retrospective or  prospective? In other words, assuming that the debtor being an undischarged insolvent ought not to have exercised the  option or  filed the  suit, inasmuch as these actions ought  to have  been taken by the Official Receiver, will  the   subsequent   annulment   of   the   adjudication retrospectively validate  these actions  of the undischarged insolvent?      Before we  go into  the above  aspect, we  shall  refer briefly to  the legislative history behind section 37 of the Provincial Insolvency  Act,  1920.  In  the  earlier  Indian Insolvency Act,  1848, it  was stated  in section 7 that "in case, after  the making  of  any  such  vesting  order,  the petition of  any such  petitioner shall  be dismissed by the said Court,  such vesting  order made  in  pursuance of such petition shall  from and  after such  dismissal be  null and void to  all interests  and purposes:  provided also that in the case  of any  such vesting  orders as  aforesaid,  shall become null  and void by the dismissed of such petition, all acts theretofore done by any Assignee or other person acting under his  authority according to the provisions of this Act shall be  good and  valid and  no action  or suit  shall  be commenced against the assignee, nor against any persons duly acting under  his authority,  except to recover any property of such  petitioner detained after an order made by the said Court for  delivery thereof, and demand made thereupon". The above language  was similar  to the  language in the earlier Bankruptcy Acts  of England.  By virtue of the Consolidating and Amending  Bankruptcy Act,  1869 the language was altered and instead  of the  words ’null and void’ the word ’revert’ was used.  That language  was repeated in the English Act of 1914. The  legislature adopted  the word ’revert’ in section 37  of   the  Provincial  Insolvency  Act,  1920.  The  word ’revert’, according  to Shorter  Oxford Dictionary means ’to return to  the former  position, to  go back  to the  former state’.      We shall  refer to  the leading decision of the English Court  on  the  question  as  to  whether  the  reverter  is retrospective. In  Bailey vs.  Johnson [(1872)  7  Ex.  263] decided under  section 81  of the  English  Bankruptcy  Act, 1869, it was held by Cockburn, CJ as follows:      "The  effect   of  section  81  is,      subject     to     any     bonafide      dispositions lawfully  made by  the      trustee prior  to the  annulling of      the bankruptcy,  and subject to any      condition which the Court annulling      the bankruptcy  may  by  its  order      impose, to  remit the  party  whose

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    bankruptcy  is  set  aside  to  his      original situation." Adverting  to  the  effect  of  an  unconditional  order  of annulment it was stated by the learned Chief Justice:      "Here the  Court of  Bankruptcy has      imposed no  condition; the  general      provision  of   the   section   has      therefore its full effect, and that      effect is  to remit the bankrupt at      the moment the decree annulling his      bankruptcy is  pronounced,  to  his      original  powers   and  rights   in      respect of the property." In the same case, Kelly CB observed:      "...the only sensible meaning which      can be attached t the word ’revert’      is, that  what was  apparently  the      property of  the  trustees  at  the      time of annulling of the bankruptcy      shall thereupon become the property      of the  person whose bankruptcy has      been annulled,  as if it had always      been his".      It was  pointed out  in Peraya  vs. Kondayya  [AIR 1948 Mad. 430]  that though the words ’null and void’ used in the Indian Insolvency  Act, 1848  were not used in section 37 of the Provincial  Insolvency Act, 1920, there was no reason to think that the effect of the later statute was any different from the former statute.      A Full  Bench of  the Madras  High Court in Arunachalam vs. Narayana  Swami [AIR  1951 Mad  63] consisting  of Subba Rao, J. (as he then was), Panchapakesa Ayyar and Balakrishna Ayyar, JJ reviewed the case law on the subject. In that case the question  was whether  the debtors  could be  treated as agriculturists having saleable interest in agricultural land on the  crucial decree  1.10.1937 or 22.3.1938 for obtaining scaling down of the interest under the Madras Agriculturists Debt Relief  Act, 1938.  On those  dates, being undischarged insolvents, they  had no  saleable interest  in agricultural land. Much  later, their  adjudication was  annulled  by  an unconditional order.  The debtor’s representatives contended that the  debtors should  get the benefit of the debt relief Act, and  that though  on the  above dates,  the debtors did not, as  a fact, have saleable interest in agricultural land as that  interest stood  vested in  the  Official  Receiver, still they  must be  deemed to  have acquired  such interest with  retrospective  effect  once  there  was  a  subsequent annulment of  adjudication .  This contention  was accepted. Speaking for  the Full Bench Balakrishna Ayyar. J. held that the annulment  related back  to the  date of adjudication in September 1928  and that  the benefit of the debt relief Act must be extended to the debtors with retrospective effect, - ignoring the insolvency proceedings.      We may  here also  refer to  two other  cases. In Ratna navelu Chettiyar  vs. Franciscu  Udayar (AIR  1945 Mad  388) Somayya,  J.   pointed  out  that  it  was  clear  that  the legislature wanted the annulment to be retrospective.      Otherwise, there  was no need for the clause validating acts done  by the  Court or  by the  Receiver, as they would have in  any event  been valid  because they  were done at a time when  the insolvent had been adjudicates and before the adjudication was annulled.      The question  again arose  before another Full Bench in Subbaiah Goundan  vs. Ramaswami  Goundan (AIR 1954 Mad 604). That was  a  case  where  the  undischarged  insolvent  made

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alienations during  the  pendency  of  the  insolvency.  His status as  an ’agriculturist’  during  insolvency  was  also material. It  was held  that section  7 of  the 1848 Act and section  37   of  the   1920  Act   meant  the   same  thing notwithstanding the  difference in  language.  Satyanarayana Rao, J.  after referring to the history of legislation under this section  and also  the dictionary  meaning of  the word ’reversion’ and  after referring  to the  English  cases  to which we have referred above, observed as follows:      "It has  therefore  been  uniformly      held  in   this  Court....that  the      effect of  annulment is to vest the      property  retrospectively   in  the      insolvent,  in   other  words’  the      consequence of  annulling an  order      of  adjudication  is  to  wipe  out      altogether the  insolvency and  its      effect except to the limited extent      reserved   under    section.    The      Legislature introduced  the fiction      of      vesting      the      title      retrospectively in the insolvent". On facts, it was held:      "In view  of this,  the alienations      made  of   property,  moveable  and      immovable, by  the insolvent  after      adjudication,   the   decrees   and      execution proceedings  suffered  by      him, during  such  insolvency,  the      status   of    an    agriculturist,      notwithstanding  the   property  is      taken  away  and  transferred  from      him, are all restored and validated      from  the   date   on   which   the      insolvency petition was filed".      We are  of the  view that  the law  stated in the above cases correctly  represents the legal effect of annulment of adjudication.      Summarising the  legal position,  the  position  is  as follows. In  the case of an annulment under sections 37 read with section 43 of the Act, where the property is not vested in any  other person  and no  conditions are  imposed by the Insolvency Court,  the property  and rights of the insolvent stand restored  or reverted to him with retrospective effect from the  date of  the filing of the insolvency petition and the insolvency  gets wiped  out altogether. All acts done by the  undischarged   insolvent  between   the  date   of  the insolvency  petition   and  the   date  of   annulment   get retrospectively   validated.    However,   all   sales   and dispositions of property and payments duly made and all acts theretofore done  by the  Court  or  Receiver,  will  remain valid.      Applying the above principles to the facts of the case, it must  be held  that the  acts of  the  plaintiff,  as  an undischarged  insolvent,   in  issuing   the  notice   dated 12.7.1968 thereby  exercising option  for repurchase and his filing  of  the  present  suit  on  6.10.1969  for  specific performance of  the agreement  of reconveyance  - all  stand retrospectively validated  upon the  unconditional annulment of the  adjudication on  22.10.1969 ,  with effect  from the date of filing of the insolvency petition on 19.11.1963. The condition of  the respondent  to the contrary is accordingly rejected. Point 3 is decided accordingly. Point 4      This Court  has recently  held in  Bismillah Begum  vs.

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Rahmatullah Khan (1998 (2) SCC 226) that time is the essence of contract  in a contract of reconveyance. If a vendor, who agrees to  sell his immovable property under an agreement of sale or  who executes  a sale  deed, is  given the option to repurchase the  property within  a particular  period,  then such an  option must  be exercised  strictly within the said period.  The  principle  stated  under  section  55  of  the Contract Act  that  in  regard  to  contracts  of  sales  of immovable property  time is  not the  essence of contract as stated by  the Privy  Council in  A.H. Mama vs. Flora Sasson AIR 1928  PC 208  = 55  I.A. 260  (PC)  does  not  apply  to contracts of reconveyance.      On the  facts of  the case,  it will  be seen  that the plaintiff exercised  his option  on  12.7.1968  within  five years from  the date  of sale  deed 15.7.1964  and hence the defendant -  vendee was  bound to  reconvey the  property by receiving Rs. 7000/- from the plaintiff as stipulated in the contract. This point is held in favour of the plaintiff. Point 5:      Under Articles  54 of  the Limitation  Act, 1963, it is stated in  the third  column  that  the  suit  for  specific performance has  to be  filed within  3 years  from the date stipulated in  the contract  or from  the date of refusal to perform the  contract. In  the present  case, even  though a period of  5 years  is fixed  for exercising  the option  to repurchase, it  is not  specified in  the agreement that the vendee  shall  execute  the  deed  of  repurchase  within  a particular period from the date of exercise of option. hence the first  part of  the third column of Articles 54 does not apply. The second part applies. Time therefore starts to run only from the 22.7.1968, the date when the defendant refused to execute  the deed  of reconveyance. The suit was filed on 6.10.1969 within  3 years from 22.7.1968. Suit is in time as held by  the trial  Court. Point  5 is held in favour of the plaintiff.      In  the  result,  the  Civil  Appeal  is  allowed.  The judgment and  decree passed  by the High Court are set aside and judgment  and  decree  passed  by  the  trial  Court  as affirmed by  the first  appellate Court  are restored. There will be no order as to costs.