Madras High Court
Thayarammal vs Lakshimi Ammal And Anr. on 29 March, 1920
Equivalent citations: 59IND. CAS.417
JUDGMENT
1. Exhibit A. was executed by the 1st defendant to the plaintiff and he was given possession of it. It is in terms a sale-deed but it was not registered. The finding is that the plaintiff made default in the payment of the purchase-money and the document was not, therefore, registered. He now sues to enforce specific performance of an agreement which, according to him, is implied in the sale deed, Exhibit A. The question for consideration is, whether it is open to the plaintiff to regard Exhibit A; which has become inoperative by reason of non-registration, as an agreement to sell. In our opinion this remedy is not open to the plaintiff. He could have presented the document for registration under Section 32 of the Registration Act and could have enforced the attendance of the 1st defendant to admit execution under Section 36 of the same Act. If there was a refusal to register, he could have enforced his further remedies in this behalf under the Act. If he failed to take advantage of these provisions of the law, it is not open to him to ignore the plain terms of the document and to read into it an agreement to sell which was superseded by the conveyance itself. It is true that Courts of Equity would assist a plaintiff to effectuate an incomplete title, if the default is due to act of God or conduct amounting to fraud on the part of the executant. But here no default is attributable to the 1st defendant. On the other hand, it is the default of the plaintiff in not paying the consideration that led to the document remaining unregistered. This case is within the principle of Venkatasami v. Kristayya 16 M. 341 : 3 M.L.J. 169 : 5 Ind. Dec.(N.S.) 945. There it was held that, when the plaintiff did not avail himself of the remedies provided by the Registration Act, he is not entitled to ask either that the document should be registered or that a new document should be executed and registered.
2. This decision has not been dissented from in this Court hitherto. The obiter dictum in Titali Venkata Seetharamaya v. Vedula Venkataramaya 15 Ind. Case 334 : 37 M 418, that such a document can be treated as an agreement to sell was pronounced without adverting to Venkatasami v. Kristayya 16 M. 341 : 3 M.L.J. 169 : 5 Ind. Dec.(N.S.) 945. In Calcutta there are direct authorities against the Madras view. But, with all deference, we fail to find the principle on which the contrary view can be based. The learned Judges apparently misunderstood the view taken in Chinna Krishna Reddi v. Dorasami Reddi 20 M. 19 : 7 Ind. Dec. (N.S.) 13, in saying that Venkatasami v. Kristayya 16 M. 341 : 3 M.L.J. 169 : 5 Ind. Dec.(N.S.) 945, was dissented from. We are, therefore, not prepared to follow Surendra Nath Nag v. Gopal Chunder Ghosh 8 Ind. Cas. 794 : 12 C.L.J. 464, in preference to Venkatasami v. Kristayya 16 M. 341 : 3 M.L.J. 169 : 5 Ind. Dec.(N.S.) 945.; In Amar Chand v. Nathu 7 Ind. Cas. 408 : 7 A.L.J. 887 it is not shown who had the document and whether there was a suppression of it. On the whole, it seems to us that there is no ground for not acting on the principle of the decision in Venkatasami v. Kristayya 16 M. 341 : 3 M.L.J. 169 : 5 Ind. Dec.(N.S.) 945. The second appeal should be dismissed with costs.