25 February 1979
Supreme Court
Download

ZILA SINGH & ORS. Vs HAZARI & ORS.


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8  

PETITIONER: ZILA SINGH & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: HAZARI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/02/1979

BENCH: DESAI, D.A. BENCH: DESAI, D.A. SHINGAL, P.N.

CITATION:  1979 AIR 1066            1979 SCR  (3) 222  1979 SCC  (3) 265  CITATOR INFO :  R          1991 SC 373  (5)

ACT:      Code of Civil Procedure 1908-S. 47, Or. XX r. 14(1)(b), Or. XXI  r. 16  and S.  146-Whether purchaser of land from a pre-emptor who  has secured  a decree  for  pre-emption  and possession, could execute the decree to obtain possession of the land.

HEADNOTE:      The original  vendor of  the lands in dispute sold them to the  first vendee. In the meantime three decrees for pre- emption were  passed in favour of the pre-emptor and against the vendor  and his vendees. After satisfying the conditions imposed in  the decrees regarding deposit of certain sums of money the pre-emptor sold the lands to the appellants.      In the  execution petition  filed by the appellants the original vendor  as well  as the  first vendees  filed their objections  challenging  the  right  of  the  appellants  to execute the  decrees on  the ground  that the  right of pre- emption being  a  personal  right  of  the  pre-emptor,  the decrees  could   not  be   assigned  and  that  the  present appellants being subsequent vendees from the pre-emptor were not entitled to execute the decrees granted in his favour.      Rejecting the  objections  of  the  first  vendees  the executing court  held that  the appellants  were entitled to execute the decrees.      On appeal  the Additional  District Judge held that the pre-emptor having  complied with the directions contained in the decree his title to the lands was perfected and that the appellants were entitled to recover possession under s. 146, CPC.      In execution  second appeals  of the  first vendees the High Court  held that  the  right  of  pre-emption  being  a personal right,  the  decree  for  pre-emption  would  be  a personal decree  and was not assignable and even if the pre- emptor had complied with the provisions of Or. XX r. 14 CPC, the appellants  would not  be entitled to execute the decree for possession  because the  decree was  not assigned and s. 146 would not help the present appellants.      Allowing the appeals, ^

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8  

    HELD: 1(i)  The question  whether  the  right  of  pre- emption was  a personal  right or  it created an interest in property was concluded by the decision of this Court between the same  parties in  an earlier  round of  litigation.  The earlier  litigation   being  inter  partes  and,  therefore, binding on  the respondents,  it cannot  be reopened  or re- examined at the instance of the respondents. [226 H-227 B]      (ii) The  contention that  decree in  a suit  for  pre- emption is a personal decree and creates no interest in land must fail. [228 B]      (iii) The  distinction between  a voluntary inter vivos transfer and  an involuntary  transfer such  as  by  way  of inheritance is  immaterial as  for as  the present  case  is concerned because the question in terms disposed of by 223 this Court in the earlier case is that the pre-emptor having complied with O. XX, r. 14 had become the owner of the lands and his  legal representatives  on his  death  were  rightly substituted in the proceedings. [227 H-228 A]      Hazari &  Ors. v.  Neki  &  Ors.,  [1968]  2  SCR  833; referred to.      Section 146  CPC provides  that where  some proceedings could be  taken or  application could  be made  by a  person under the  Code of Civil Procedure any other person claiming under  him   is  entitled  to  make  and  maintain  such  an application. The  only limitation  on the  exercise of  this right is  in the  expression, ’save as otherwise provided by this Code,’ occurring in the section. [229 E]      3. If the assignee of a decree can avail himself of the provisions contained  under Or.  XXI R.  16 by  establishing that he  is such  an assignee  he must only avail himself of that provision.  But if he fails to establish his title as a transferee by  assignment in  writing or by operation of law within the  meaning of  Or. XXI  r. 16,  there is nothing in that provision  which prohibits him from availing himself of s. 146 if the provision of that section can be availed of by him. [230 E]      Jugal Kishore  Saraf v. Raw Cotton Co. Ltd., [1955] SCR 1369; referred to.      In the  instant case though the sale deed in respect of land would show that the decree itself was not assigned, the lands having been sold by the decree-holder after perfecting his title  and purchased  by the  present  appellants,  they would be  persons claiming  under  the  original  pre-emptor decree-holder and  if he  could have made an application for execution of  the decree  as decree-holder, the applications for  execution   by  the   present   appellants   would   be maintainable under  s. 146,  and they are therefore entitled to execute the decrees for possession. [231 C-D]      Smt. Saila  Bala Dassi  v. Smt. Nirmala Sundari Dassi & Anr., [1958] SCR 1287; referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil  Appeal Nos. 1806- 1808 of 1969.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  30-5-1969  of  the Punjab and  Haryana High  Court in  Executive Second Appeals Nos. 1131-1133 of 1968.      H.K. Puri and V.K. Bahl for the Appellant.      Janardhan Sharma and Jitendra Sharma for the Respondent      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      DESAI, J.  These appeals  by certificate  under Article 133(1) (c)  of the Constitution granted by the High Court of

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8  

Punjab &  Haryana arise from three Execution Petitions filed by  the  present  appellants  for  executing  three  decrees obtained by one Neki (since deceased) in three 224 suits bearing Nos. 313, 360 and 369 of 1961 filed by him for pre-emption, to  recover physical  possession of  the  lands involved in  the suits.  The decrees  in favour of Neki were confirmed finally  by this Court in Civil Appeals Nos. 1148, 1656 and  2341 of  1966 decided  on 25th  January 1968.  The Judgment of  this Court is reported in Hazari & Ors. v. Neki & Ors.(1) The facts which ultimately resulted in decrees for pre-emption in  favour of  Neki are  fully set  out at pages 834-835 of  the reported  judgment and  repeating  the  same would merely  add to the length of this judgment. Suffice to state that  there is no dispute that decrees for pre-emption were passed  in favour  of Neki  against the original vendor Dhara Singh  and his  vendees  Hazari  and  others  and  the satisfaction of  the condition in the decrees of pre-emption for payment  or deposit  of the  amounts as  directed by the Court within  the stipulated  time is  not questioned in the present proceedings.      It appears  that the  trial court decreed the suits for pre-emption  in   favour  of   Neki  on  7th  November  1962 simultaneously imposing  the condition  to  deposit  certain amounts in  the three  suits by or before 3rd December 1962. The various amounts were duly deposited in the three decrees by Neki,  the decree  holder, on  3rd  December  1962.  Soon thereafter, on  5th December  1962 Neki  sold the  lands  in respect of  which he  got the  decrees  to  Zila  Singh  and others, the  present appellants.  The present appellants are subsequent vendees  but they  will be  referred  to  as  the appellants in  this judgment.  The former  vendees would  be referred to  as ’first  vendees’, the  sale in  whose favour gave rise  to the  cause of action for pre-emption in favour of Neki against the original vendor Dhara Singh.      After the  sale in  favour of  the present  appellants, they  applied  to  be  joined  as  parties  to  the  appeals preferred by  the first vendees against the decrees for pre- emption which  were then  pending in  the High Court and the Court directed  by its  order dated 13th July, 1963 that the present appellants  be joined  as  parties  to  the  appeals subject to  just legal exceptions. The appellants then filed Execution Applications  Nos. 295,  296,  297/64  seeking  to execute the  decrees to  recover actual  possession  of  the lands purchased  by them  from Neki.  Original Vendor  Dhara Singh  and   the  first   vendees  filed   their  objections challenging the  right of the present vendees to execute the decrees. Principal  contention raised was that the sale deed of lands  in favour  of  the  appellants  did  not  envisage assignment of  the decrees and that the right of pre-emption being a  personal right,  the decrees  could not be assigned and, therefore,  the present  appellants who were subsequent vendees from  pre-emptor Neki,  were not entitled and had no locus standi to execute 225 the decrees  granted in  favour of Neki. The executing court after examining the relevant provisions contained in section 47 and  Order XXI,  Rule 16,  of the Code of Civil Procedure rejected the objections raised by the first vendees and held that the  present appellants  were entitled  to execute  the decrees and  directed warrant  for possession  to be issued. The first  vendees preferred three appeals being Nos. 25/14, 26/14 and 27/14 of 1968 to the District Court at Rohtak. The learned Additional  District Judge  who heard these appeals, by a  common order  rejected the  appeals and  confirmed the

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8  

order of  the trial  Court  observing  that  the  pre-emptor having deposited  the purchase  price  as  directed  by  the Court, in  accordance with  the terms  of the  decrees,  his title to the lands was perfected from the date of deposit as provided in Order XX, Rule 14 (1)(b), C.P.C., the appellants as purchasers  of lands  from the pre-emptor in whose favour the decrees for pre-emption including the one for possession had become  final, were entitled to recover possession under section 146 C.P.C.      Hazari, Amar  Singh and  Bhan Singh  the first  vendees preferred three  Execution Second Appeals Nos. 1131,1132 and 1133/68 to  the High  Court of  Punjab & Haryana. When these appeals came  up before  a learned  single Judge of the High Court it  was contended  that in view of the decision in Ram Singh &  Ors. v.  Gainda Ram & Ors, The assignee of a holder of a  decree for  pre-emption cannot  seek the assistance of the Court  for executing  the decree for pre-emption because the decree is a personal one and, therefore, non-assignable. On behalf  of the  present appellants  who were  respondents before the  High Court,  reliance was placed on the decision in Satyanarayana  v. Arun  Naik and Ravi Parkash and Anr. v. Chunilal &  Ors..  The  learned  single  Judge  had  certain reservations about  the correctness  of the  decision in Ram Singh’s case  and, therefore,  he considered  it prudent  to refer the  matter to a Division Bench. The matter ultimately had to be referred to a Full Bench because there was another decision in  Mehrkhan and  Shah Din  v. Ghulam  Rasul, which also required  reconsideration. That  is how the matter came before a Full Bench.      The  Full   Bench  formulated   the  question  for  its consideration as under:-           "Whether the  purchaser of  land from a pre-emptor      of  which  the  pre-emptor  has  become  the  owner  in      pursuance of  a pre-emption decree after complying with      the 226      provisions of  Order XX,  Rule 14  Civil Procedure Code      could execute  the decree in order to obtain possession      of the land purchased by him."      All the  three Judges  of the Full Bench wrote separate opinions. D. K. Mahajan, J. was of the opinion that assuming that a  decree of  pre-emption is  a  personal  decree,  the transferees of  the land from the pre-emptor whose title was perfected by  deposit as envisaged in O. XX, Rule 14 (1) (b) were entitled  to execute the decree granted by the Court in favour of  the pre-emptor  and can  seek assistance  of  the Court  for  recovering  actual  possession  from  the  first vendees who  had no  right to  continue in possession, apart from O.  XX, Rule  16 under section 146 C.P.C. P. C. Pandit, J. and  H. R.  Sodhi, J.,  the other two members of the Full Bench were  of the  opinion that  the right  of  pre-emption being a  personal right,  a decree for pre-emption will be a personal decree  and is  not assignable and even if title to the land  passed to  the vendees who purchased the land from the  pre-emptor  after  the  pre-emptor  complied  with  the provisions contained in Order XX, Rule 14 yet they would not be entitled  to execute  the decree  for possession  because decree is  not assigned  and section  146 would not help the present  appellants.   In  accordance   with  this  majority opinion, the  appeals preferred  by the  first vendees  were allowed and  the applications  for execution  filed  by  the present appellants were dismissed.      The High  Court granted a certificate under Article 133 (1) (c)  of the  Constitution because  in  its  opinion  the question  involved   in  the  appeals  was  of  considerable

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8  

importance and  was likely  to arise  frequently and that it deserved to be decided finally by the Supreme Court.      Mr.  Janardan   Sharma,   learned   counsel   for   the respondents urged that looking to the scheme of ss. 4, 6 and 15  of   the   Punjab   Pre-emption   Act,   1930,   it   is incontrovertible that foundation of the right of pre-emption being close  personal relationship,  it is  a personal right and can  be exercised  only by  the person  in whom it vests under the  law and  if in  exercise of  such  right  such  a qualified person  seeks to pre-empt a sale by instituting an action in  a Court  of law,  the resultant decree would be a personal decree. Urged Mr. Sharma further that if the decree is a  personal one,  obviously it cannot be assigned and the assignee gets no interest in a decree so as to enable him to execute the  decree. The  question whether the right of pre- emption conferred  by the  provisions of  Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913,  is a personal right or it creates an interest in the property is 227 no more  res integra  and is concluded by a decision of this Court between  the very  parties  who  are  parties  to  the present appeals,  in an  earlier round of litigation wherein the first  vendees, the  present respondents  had challenged the right of Neki deceased pre-emptor to obtain a decree for pre-emption. Apart from the fact that the point is concluded by a decision of a Bench of three Judges of the Court, it is inter-partes and, therefore, binding on the respondents whom Mr. Janardan  Sharma represents  and at  the instance of the respondents it  cannot be  re-opened or  re-examined. As the matter calls for no examination at the hands of the Court it would suffice  to quote  what has been held in Hazari & Ors. v. Neki  &  Ors.  Ramaswami,  J.  speaking  for  the  Court, observed as under:           "In support  of these appeals, learned counsel put      forward the  argument that  the  right  of  pre-emption      claimed by Neki deceased plaintiff was a personal right      which died  with him  upon  his  death  and  the  legal      representatives of Neki were not entitled to be granted      a decree  for pre-emption.  The argument  was that  the      statutory right of pre-emption under the Punjab Act was      not a  heritable right  and no  decree for  pre-emption      should have been passed by the lower court in favour of      the legal representatives as representing the estate of      Neki. We  are unable to accept the argument put forward      by the  appellants. It  is not  correct to say that the      right of pre-emption is a personal right on the part of      the pre-emptor  to get  the re-transfer of the property      from the vendee who has already become the owner of the      same. It  is true that the right of pre-emption becomes      enforceable only  when there  is a  sale but  the right      exists antecedently  to the sale, the foundation of the      right being  the avoidance  of the  inconveniences  and      disturbances which would arise from the introduction of      a stranger into the land. The correct legal position is      that  the   statutory  law  of  pre-emption  imposes  a      limitation  or  disability  upon  the  ownership  of  a      property to  the extent  that it  restricts the owner’s      right of  sale and  compels him to sell the property to      the person  entitled to  pre-emption under the statute.      In other  words, the  statutory  right  of  pre-emption      though not  amounting to  an interest  in the land is a      right which  attaches to  the land  and  which  can  be      enforced against  a purchaser by the person entitled to      pre-empt."      Mr. Janardan Sharma, however, sought to distinguish the

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8  

position under  a voluntary  inter  vivos  transfer  and  an involuntary 228 transfer such  as by  way of  inheritance and  urged that in this  case  Neki  having  sold  the  lands  to  the  present appellants by  sale inter vivos they cannot enjoy the fruits of the  decree. This distinction is immaterial as far as the present case  is concerned  because the  question  in  terms disposed of  by the  Court is that Neki having complied with Order XX, Rule 14, had become the owner of the lands and his legal representatives  on his death were rightly substituted in the  proceedings. The  contention, therefore, that decree in a  suit for  pre-emption is a personal decree and creates no interest in land, the subject matter of pre-emption, must accordingly fail.      The next  contention is  that the  deed evidencing  the sale of  lands Ext.  D-1 dated  15th February,  1963  merely transferred the  lands but  does not  purport to  assign the decree, then  in the  absence  of  such  an  assignment  the purported assignee  cannot execute the decree in view of the provision contained  in Order  XXI, Rule  16, and therefore, the execution  applications at  the instance  of the present appellants are  not maintainable.  The  Additional  District Judge did  not decide  the contention  whether the Execution Applications at  the instance  of  the  present  appellants, namely, subsequent  transferees were  maintainable under  O. XXI, Rule  16, because in his opinion the present appellants were entitled to execute the decree under section 146 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The majority view of the High Court is that  the subsequent transferees, the present appellants, were not  entitled to  execute the decree under O. XXI, Rule 16 because  the decree  for pre-emption being a personal one cannot  be   assigned  and  alternatively  if  it  could  be assigned, as  a matter of fact, it has not been assigned and therefore the  applications for  execution at their instance are not  maintainable. They  were further  of the  view that section 146  would not  assist the  appellants as provisions contained in  O. XXI,  Rule 16  being  a  specific  contrary provisions, section 146 cannot be invoked.      Order XXI,  Rule 16 permits an execution of a decree at the instance  of an  assignee by  transfer of  a decree, the assignment may  be in  writing or by operation of law and if such  an   application  is  made,  the  court  to  which  an application is  made shall  issue a notice to the transferor of the  decree and the judgment debtor and the decree cannot be executed  until the Court heard their objections, if any, to its  execution.  Section  47  C.P.C.  provides  that  all questions arising  between the  parties to the suit in which the decree was passed, or their representatives, relating to the execution, discharge or satisfaction of the decree shall be determined by the court executing the decree and not by a separate suit. Explanation appended to 229 section 47  provides that  for the  purposes of that section amongst others  a purchaser  at a  sale in  execution of the decree is  deemed to  be a  party to the suit. It would have been  interesting   to  examine  the  question  whether  the purchaser of land from a pre-emptor in whose favour a decree for pre-emption  has been  passed and  who subsequent to the decree complied  with the  requirement of  Order XX, Rule 14 and thereby  perfected his title would be, on the analogy of a purchaser  at a  sale in execution of a decree, a party to the suit  or at  any rate  the representative of the decree- holder or  a successor in interest of the decree-holder, but as we are of the opinion that the applications for execution

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8  

filed by  the  present  appellants  are  maintainable  under section 146  C.P.C. the  larger question need not be decided in these appeals.      Section 146 reads as under:           "Save as otherwise provided by this Code or by any      law for  the time  being in force, where any proceeding      may be  taken or  application made  by or  against  any      person,  then  the  proceeding  may  be  taken  or  the      application may  be  made  by  or  against  any  person      claiming under him."      Shorn of  unessentials the  section provides that where some proceeding  could be taken or application could be made by a  person under  the Code  of Civil  Procedure any  other person claiming  under him  is entitled to make and maintain such an  application. The limitation on the exercise of this right is  to be  found in the expression, ’save as otherwise provided by  this Code’.  It would  mean that  if  the  Code permits a  proceeding to  be taken  or an  application to be made by  a party,  then in the absence of a provision to the contrary, section  146 would  enable any  one claiming under such person as well to make the same application. The object behind the  section appears to be to facilitate the exercise of right  by a  person claiming under the person whose right to maintain an application is beyond dispute.      Section 146  came in for consideration in Jugal kishore Saraf v.  Raw Cotton  Co. Ltd.  In that  case the facts were that the  plaintiffs in  a pending suit for recovery of debt transferred to  another person  all book and other debts due to them  including  the  debt  involved  in  the  suit.  The transferees did  not apply  to be  joined as  parties in the pending suit  and the  suit continued  in the  name  of  the original plaintiffs and ended in a decree. Subsequently the 230 transferees as  decree-holders applied  for execution of the decree against  the judgment-debtor  and upon a notice being issued, a contention was raised that the application was not maintainable under  Order XXI,  Rule 16.  One submission was that  even   if  the   application  for  execution  was  not maintainable under  O. XXI,  Rule 16,  it would certainly be maintainable at  the instance  of  the  transferees  of  the original debt  under section  146. Accepting this contention Das, J.  observed  that  a  person  may  conceivably  become entitled to  the  benefits  of  a  decree  without  being  a transferee of  the decree  by assignment  in writing  or  by operation of  law. In  that situation the person so becoming the owner  of the  decree may  well be  regarded as a person claiming under  the decree-holder.  It was  further held  in that case  that the  transferees of  the debt  derived their title to  the debt by transfer from the transferors and when the decree  was passed  in relation to decree they must also be regarded  as persons  claiming under  the transferors and accordingly they  would be  entitled to  make an application for execution  under  section  146  of  the  Code  of  Civil Procedure.  Bhagwati,   J.  in  a  separate  and  concurring judgment on  this point  observed that the only meaning that can  be  assigned  to  the  expression  ’save  as  otherwise provided by  this Code’  in sec. 146 is that if a transferee of the  decree can  avail himself of the provision contained under Order  XXI, Rule  16 by establishing that he is such a transferee he must only avail himself of that provision. But if he  fails to  establish his  title  as  a  transferee  by assignment in  writing or  by operation  of law  within  the meaning of  O.  XXI,  Rule  16  there  is  nothing  in  that provision which  prohibits  him  from  availing  himself  of section 146  if the provision of that section can be availed

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8  

of by  him. It  would thus  appear that  if the sale-deed in respect of  land on  its proper construction would show that the decree itself was assigned obviously the application for execution would  be maintainable  under O. XXI, Rule 16. But if the  appellants do not fall within the four corners of O. XXI, Rule  16 and  they appear  not to  fall within the four corners of  it, because  though the land, the subject matter of the  decree is  sold to  appellants, the decree itself is not assigned,  they would  nonetheless be  able to  maintain application for  execution  under  section  146  as  persons claiming under  the decree-holder.  The  respondents  cannot have both the ways. If the deed evidenced transfer of decree by assignment  then O.  XXI, Rule  16 would be attracted but if, as  it appears,  there  is  no  transfer  of  decree  by assignment, the  lands having been sold by the decree-holder after perfecting  his title  and purchased  by  the  present appellants they would be persons claiming under the original pre-emptor decree holder Neki and if Neki could have made an application for 231 execution  of  the  decree  as  decree-holder,  the  present appellants, as  purchasers of land from Neki would certainly be claiming under Neki and, therefore, their application for execution would certainly be maintainable under section 146. In this connection it would be advantageous to refer to Smt. Saila  Bala   Dassi  v.   Smt.  Nirmala  Sundari  Dassi  and Another(1) wherein  it has  been in  terms held that section 146 was  introduced for  the first  time in  Civil Procedure Code 1908  with the  object of  facilitating the exercise of rights by  persons  in  whom  they  came  to  be  vested  by devolution or  assignment and  being a  beneficent provision should be  construed liberally  so as to advance justice and not in  a restricted  or technical  sense. Viewed  from this angle the  present  appellants  must  succeed  because  they purchased land from pre-emptor Neki and the validity of sale being now  beyond dispute,  they are  persons claiming under Neki whose  right to  execute the  decree was never disputed and, therefore,  appellants claiming  under the  vendor Neki would be able to maintain an application for execution under section 146  of the  Code of Civil Procedure. Appellants are thus entitled to execute the decree for possession.      Accordingly these  three appeals  are allowed  and  the decision of the High Court dated 30th May, 1969 in Execution Appeals Nos.  1131, 1132  and 1133  of 1968 is set aside and the decision  of the  Additional District  Judge dated  15th July, 1968 is restored, but in the circumstances of the case there would be no order as to costs. N.V.K                                       Appeals allowed. 232