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[Cites 12, Cited by 18]

Supreme Court of India

Jyasing Dnyanu Mhoprekar & Anr vs Krishna Babaji Patil & Anr on 17 July, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 1646, 1985 SCR SUPL. (2) 308, AIR 1985 SUPREME COURT 1646, (1986) 99 MAD LW 40, 1985 (4) SCC 162, (1985) 2 CURCC 627, 1985 BOM LR 87 456

Author: E.S. Venkataramiah

Bench: E.S. Venkataramiah, R.B. Misra

           PETITIONER:
JYASING DNYANU MHOPREKAR & ANR.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
KRISHNA BABAJI PATIL & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/07/1985

BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
MISRA, R.B. (J)

CITATION:
 1985 AIR 1646		  1985 SCR  Supl. (2) 308
 1985 SCC  (4) 162	  1985 SCALE  (2)94


ACT:
     Mortgage - Redemption of mortgage - Right to redeem the
mortgage, extinguishment of - Whether by virtue of the grant
of mortgage  lands by the Prant Officer to the mortgagees in
physical possession  under section  8 of the Bombay Paragana
and Kulkarni  Watans (Abolition)  Act, 1950,  the  right  of
mortgagees and/or  their legal representatives to redeem the
mortgage had  become  extinguished  -  Bombay  Paragana	 and
Kulkarni (Abolition) Act, 1950 sections 3 (4),4-A and 8 read
with section 90 of the Indian Trust Act, 1882 scope of.



HEADNOTE:
     Krishna Babaji  Patil, respondent	No.1 herein  and his
brother Bandu  Babaji Patil were holding a half-share in the
lands bearing survey numbers 221/1,222/2,226/8 and 226/12 in
all measuring  22 Acres	 and 13	 Gunthas situated  at  Monja
Shirsi, Peta  Shirola, District	 Sangli in  Maharashtra,  as
permanent Mirasi  tenants and  were in	actual possession of
their share  in the  said Lands.  The lands in question were
Paragana Watan	Inam lands and the Watandars belonged to the
family of Kokrudkar Deshmukhs. On May 20, 1947 they executed
a mortgage  deed in  favour of	two persons  by name  Dnyanu
Krihna Mhoprekar and Ananda Santu Mhoprekar mortgaging their
share in  the above lands with possession by way of security
for a  loan  of	 Rs.1,000  which  they	borrowed  under	 the
mortgage deed.	The mortgage  deed was	for five  years. The
mortgagees were	 entitled to appropriate the income from the
mortgaged property towards interest.
     During the	 subsistence of	 the  mortgage,	 the  Bombay
Paragana and  Kulkarni Watans  (Abolition) Act,	 1950 Bombay
Act No.	 50 was	 passed under  which all  the  Paragana	 and
Kulkarni Watans	 were abolished	 and  the  State  Government
resumed the  watan lands.  Dnyanu Krishna  Mhoprekar, one of
the mortgagees died in or about the year 1955 leaving behind
him Jayasingh  Dnyanu Mhoprekar,  the appellant	 1 herein as
his heir  and the  Karta of  his joint	family. Bandu Babaji
Patil, one  of the  mortgagors also  died in  the year	1955
leaving behind	him three  sons, plaintiff  No. 2  being the
Karta of the family.
309
     After the	coming into  force of  the Watans  Abolition
Act, the  holders of  the Watan	 i.e.  the  members  of	 the
Deshmukh family	 did not pay the occupancy price as provided
in section  4(1) of  the Act  within the prescribed time and
apply for  the occupancy  right of  such lands. Thereupon in
the proceedings	 initiated to  grant the  lands in favour of
the permanent  Mirasi tenants, who were in actual possession
thereof, the  respondents, who were permanent Mirasi tenants
of the half-share in the lands covered by the survey numbers
in question deposited in the Government Treasury on July 29,
1963 a	sum of Rs.182.41 being the requisite occupancy price
equivalent to  24 times	 the assessment	 requesting that the
grant  should  be  made	 in  their  favour.  The  appellants
mortgagees and	their heirs  in possession of the half-share
and another Pandu Krishna who by virtue of the sale deed, by
the other branch of the respondent's family in his favour is
in possession  of the  other half  share in  the lands	also
deposited the occupancy price claiming the whole land.
     The Prant	Officer, by his order dated February 5,1964,
instead of  granting occupancy	right in respect of the one-
half share  of the land which belonged to the respondents in
their  favour	ordered	 that  the  entire  extent  of	Land
measuring 22  Acres and	 13 Gunthas  should  be	 granted  in
favour of  the appellants and one Pandu Krishna as they were
in physical  possession. The respondents questioned the said
proceedings before higher authorities and pending a decision
thereat, made  an abortive attempt to redeem the mortgage in
a proceeding  under section  83 of  the Transfer of Property
Act,  1882  in	Miscellaneous  Application  No.44  of  1963.
Thereafter, the	 respondent instituted a suit for redemption
in Regular Civil Suit No.67 of 1965 on the file of the Civil
Judge, Junior  Division, Islampur. In the written statement,
it was	pleaded inter alia that since after the abolition of
the watans,  the mortgaged  lands  had	been  given  to	 the
appellants by  the Government  after receiving the occupancy
price amounting	 to Rs.364.81  on February 5, 1964 the right
of the	mortgagors and/or  their  legal	 representatives  to
redeem the  mortgage had  become absolute owners of the suit
lands. After  the trial, the suit was dismissed by the Civil
Judge. Aggrieved  by the  decree of  the  Trial	 Court,	 the
respondents preferred  an appeal  before the District Court,
Sangli in  Civil Appeal	 No. 278 of 1966. In that appeal the
decree of  the trial  Court was	 reversed and  a decree	 for
redemption was	passed. Under  that decree  the	 respondents
were directed  to pay, in addition to the amount of Rs.1,000
borrowed under	the mortgage  deed a  sum of Rs.182.41 which
was equivalent	to one-half  of the amount paid by appellant
No. 1 and others in
310
order to  obtain the  grant from the Government. Accordingly
an appropriate	preliminary decree  was drawn up under order
XXXIV, Rule  7 of  the Code of Civil Procedure. Aggrieved by
the said  decree the appellants filed a second appeal before
the High  Court of  Bombay in  SA No.  37 of  1969 which was
dismissed on  March 3,	1971 and thus the decree made by the
first appellate	 court was  affirmed. Hence  the  appeal  by
special leave.
     Dismissing the appeal, the Court
^
     HELD  1.1	 It  is	 well  settled	that  the  right  of
redemption under  a mortgage deed can come to an end only in
a manner  known to law. Such extinguishment of the right can
take place by a contract between the parties, by a merger or
by a  statutory provision  which debars	 the mortgagor	from
redeeming the  mortgage. A  mortgagee who  has entered	into
possession of  the mortgaged  property under a mortgage will
have to	 give up  possession of the property when a suit for
redemption is filed unless he is able to show that the right
of redemption  has come to an end or that the suit is liable
to be  dismissed on some other valid ground. This flows from
the legal  principle which  is applicable  to all mortgages,
namely "Once a mortgage, always a mortgage. [315 D-H, 316 A]
     1.2 It  is no  doubt true	that the father of the first
appellant  and	 the  second  appellant	 have  been  granted
occupancy right	 by the	 Prant Officer	by his	order  dated
February 5,  1964 along	 with Pandu,  the uncle of appellant
No. 1. But the appellants would not have been able to secure
the said  grant in  their favour  but for the fact that they
were in actual possession of the lands. They were able to be
in possession  of the  one-half share  of the respondents in
the lands  in question	only by reason of the mortgage deed.
If the	mortgagors had	been in	 posssession of the lands on
the relevant  date, the	 lands would have automatically been
granted in  their favour,  since the right of the tenants in
the watan  lands were  allowed to  subsist  even  after	 the
coming into force of the Act and the consequent abolition of
the watans by virtue of section 8 of the Bombay Paragana and
Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act,1950. The fact that they had
mortgaged land	with possession	 on the	 relevant date would
not make their position any different.[316 A-D]
     1.3 Section  90 of	 the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 clearly
shows that  if	a  mortgagee  by  availing  himself  of	 his
position as a mortgagee gains an advantage which would be in
derogation of  the right  of a mortgagor, he has to hold the
advantage so derived
311
by him	for  the  benefit  of  the  mortgagor.	Section	 90,
therefore, casts  an obligation	 on a  mortgagee to hold the
rights required	 by him	 in the	 mortgaged property  for the
benefit of  the	 mortgagor  in	such  circumstances  as	 the
mortgagee is virtually in a fiduciary position in respect of
the rights  so acquired	 and he	 cannot be allowed to make a
profit out of the transaction. [317 C-D, F-G]
     In this  case the	mortgagees i.e.	 Dnyanu, and  Ananda
could each  get 1/4th  share in	 the total  extent  of	land
measuring  22	Acres  and   13	 Gunthas  only	by  availing
themselves of  their position  as mortgagees. The grant made
in their  favour is an advantage traceable to the possession
of the	land which they obtained under the mortgage and that
the said  grant is  certainly in  derogation of the right of
the  mortgagors	  who  were  the  permanent  Mirasi  tenants
entitled to  the grant	under  the  Government	orders.	 The
appellants could  not have asserted their right to the grant
of the	land when the plaintiffs had deposited the requisite
occupancy price	 well in  time. The  mortgagees obtained the
grant in  their favour by making an incorrect representation
to the	Government that	 they were  permanent Mirasi tenants
although they  were only  mortgagees. As such the appellants
are liable  to surrender  the advantage	 they  have  derived
under the  grant in  favour of	the respondents	 even if the
order  of   grant  has	 become	 final	before	the  Revenue
authorities, of	 course,  subject  to  the  payment  of	 the
expenses incurred by them in securing the grant.[317 D-F, G-
H]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1599(N) of 1971.

From the Judgment and Order dated 3.3.1971 of the Bombay High Court in S.A. No. 37 of 1969.

P.H. Parekh, C.S. Singh and Miss Indu Malhotra for the Appellants.

V.A. Bobde,A.G. Ratnaparkhi and Miss A. Chauhan for the Respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VENKATARAMIAH, J. This appeal by special leave arises out of a suit for redemption. Krishna Babaji Patil (Plaintiff No.1) and his brother Bandu Babaji Patil were holding a half share in the lands bearing Survey Nos. 221/1,222/2,226/8 and 226/12 in 312 all measuring 22 Acres and 13 Gunthas situated at Mouje Shirsi, Peta Shirola, District Sangli as permanent Mirasi tenants and were in actual possession of their share in the said lands. The lands in question were Paragana Watan Inam lands and the Watandars belonged to the family of Kokrudkar Deshmukhs. On May 20, 1947 Krishna Babaji Patil (Plaintiff No. 1) and Bandu Badaji Patil executed a mortgage deed in favour of two persons by name Dnyanu Krishna Mhoprekar and Ananda Santu Mhoprekar (Defendant No. 2) mortgaging their share in the above lands with possession by way of security for a loan of Rs.1000 which they borrowed under the mortgage deed. The mortgage was for five years. The mortgagees were entitled to appropriate the income from the mortgaged property towards interest. Dnyanu Krishna Mhoprekar, one of the mortgagees, died in or about the year 1953 leaving behind him Jayasingh Dnyanu Mhoprekar, (Defendant No. 1) as his heir and the 'Karta' of his joint family, Bandu Babaji Patil, one of the mortgagors, referred to above, died in the year 1955 leaving behind him his son plaintiff No. 2 and two other sons as his heirs. Plaintiff No. 2 is the 'Karta' of that branch of the family.

The remaining one-half share in the lands comprised in the above Survey Numbers belonged to Ganu Vithu and Pandu Vithu who were members of the other branch of the family of the mortgagors. They had also mortgaged their share in favour of one Pandu Krishna who was no other than the brother of Dnyanu and the father of Ananda Santu Mhoprekar (Defendant No. 2). Defendant No. 2 had, however, been given in adoption to Santu. Subsequently Ganu Vithu and Pandu Vithu sold their share in favour of the mortgage Pandu Krishna. Thus the family of the defendants was in possession of both the shares in the lands bearing Survey Nos. 221/1, 222/2, 226/8 and 226/12.

The plaintiffs instituted the suit for redemption in Regular Civil Suit No. 67 of 1965 on the file of the Civil Judge, Junior Division, Islampur out of which this appeal arises after an abortive attempt to redeem the mortgage in a proceeding under section 83 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 in Miscellaneous Application No.44 of 1963. The suit was resisted by the defendants. In the written statement filed by the Defendant No.1 it was pleaded inter alia that since after the abolition of the Watans the mortgaged lands had been granted in favour of Dnyanu (the father of defendant No. 1 Jayasingh), Ananda (Defendant No.2) and Pandu Krishna (brother of Dnyanu) by the Government after receiving the occupancy price amounting to Rs.364.81 on 313 February 5, 1964 the right of the mortgagors and/or their legal representatives to redeem the mortgage had become extinguished and that the grantees of the land had become absolute owners of the suit lands. After the trial, the suit was dismissed by the Civil Judge. Aggrieved by the decree of the Trial Court, the plaintiffs preferred an appeal before the District Court, Sangli in Civil Appeal No. 278 of 1966. In that appeal which was heard by the Assistant Judge, Sangli the decree of the Trial Court was reversed and a decree for redemption was passed. Under that decree the plaintiffs were directed to pay, in addition to the amount of Rs.1,000 borrowed under the mortgage deed a sum of Rs.182.41 which was equivalent to one-half of the amount paid by defendant No.1 and others in order to obtain the grant from the Government. Accordingly an appropriate preliminary decree was drawn up under Order XXXIV, Rule 7 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Aggrieved by the decree of the learned Assistant Judge, Sangli, the defendants filed a second appeal before the High Court of Bombay in S.A. No. 37 of 1969. The Second Appeal was dismissed on March 3, 1971 and the decree made by the first appellate court was affirmed. This appeal by special leave is filed against the judgment and decree of the High Court.

Admittedly the lands in question were comprised in a Paragana Watan. Under the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950 (Bombay Act No. 50 of 1950) (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act') all the Paragana Watans were abolished. Section 3 of the Act provided :

"3. With effect from and on the appointed day, not withstanding anything contained in any law, usage, settlement, grant, sanad or order- (1) all Paragana and Kulkarni watans shall be deemed to have been abolished;
(2) all rights to hold office and any liability to render service appertaining to the said watans are hereby extinguished;
(3) subject to the provisions of section 4, all watan land is hereby resumed and shall be deemed to be subject to the payment of land revenue under the provisions of the Code and the rules made thereunder as if it were an unalienated land:
314
Provided that such resumption shall not affect the validity of any alienation of such watan land made in accordance with the provisions of section 5 of the Watan Act or the rights of an alliance thereof or any person claiming under or through him; (4) all incidents appertaining to the said watans are hereby extinguished."

Section 4 of the Act provided that a watan land resumed under the provisions of the Act should subject to the provisions of section 4A thereof be regranted to the holder of the watan to which it appertained on payment of the occupancy price equal to twelve times of the amount of the full assessment of such land within five years from the date of the coming into force of the Act and the holder should be deemed to be an occupant within the meaning of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879 in respect of such land and would primarily be liable to pay land revenue to the State Government in accordance with the provisions of the said Code and the rules made thereunder. Under the first proviso to sub-section (1) of section 4 the occupancy price payable was fixed at six times the amount of the full assessment of such land in certain cases. The second proviso to sub- section (1) of section 4, however, provided that if the holder failed to pay the occupancy price within a period of five years, as provided therein, he should be deemed to be unauthorisedly occupying the land and would be liable to be summarily ejected in accordance with the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code. Section 8 of the Act provided that if any watan land had been lawfully leased and such lease was subsisting on the appointed day, the provisions of the Bombay tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 would apply to the said lease and the rights and liabilities of the holder of such land and the tenants would subject to the provisions of the Act be governed by the provisions of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948. After the Act came into force, the Paragana watan which comprised the mortgaged property also came to be abolished. It appears that the holders of the watan i.e. the members of the Deshmukh family did not pay the occupancy price as provided in section 4 of the Act within the prescribed time and apply for the occupancy right. Thereupon action was taken by the State Government to grant the lands in favour of the persons who were in actual possession thereof in accordance with the directions contained in the Order passed by the State Government in G.R.R.D. No. PKA-1056-IV-L dated May 3, 1957 and in G.R.R.D. No. 2760-III-48810-L dated November 23, 1960 which directed that wherever the holder or the 315 watandar had failed to pay the occupancy price as required by section 4(1) of the Act before the prescribed period the lands in question should be granted in favour of the permanent Mirasi tenants who were in actual possession of such lands. In those proceedings the plaintiffs who were permanent Mirasi tenants of the half share in the lands covered by the Survey Numbers in question deposited in the Government Treasury on July 29, 1963 as per challan Ex. 45 Rs. 182.41 being the requisite occupancy price equivalent to 24 times the assessment requesting that the grant should be made in their favour. The defendants and Pandu Krishna who were in possession of the entire extent of land covered by the Survey Numbers also deposited the occupancy price claiming the whole land, that is, both the one-half share of the plaintiffs which had been mortgaged by them and the other half share which Pandu Krishna had acquired from Ganu Vithu and Pandu Vithu the other branch of the plaintiff's family. The Prant Officer instead of granting the one-half share of the land which belonged to the plaintiffs in their favour ordered that the entire extent of land measuring 22 Acres and 13 Gunthas should be granted in favour of the defendants and Pandu Krishna as they were in possession of the whole land by his order dated February 5, 1964 in WTN/LGL/SR772. He, however, ordered that Dnyanu (father of defendant No. 1) would get 1/4 share, Ananda (Defendant No.

2) 1/4 share and Pandu Krishna the remaining 1/2 share. It may be noted that Dnyanu was dead by then. But his son defendant No.1 claimed that he should be treated as the grantee in his father's place. The plaintiffs having questioned the said proceedings before higher authorities, no final decision appears to have been given yet. It appears that, a final judgment in those civil proceedings is awaited by the revenue authorities as can be seen from the letter dated December 3, 1965 (Ex.43) and the letter dated June 6, 1966 (Ex.44) written by the Mahalkari of Shirala during the pendency of the suit which has given rise to this appeal.

The only question which arises for decision in this case is whether by reason of the grant made in favour of the defendants the right to redeem the mortgage can be treated as having become extinguished. It is well settled that the right of redemption under a mortgage deed can come to an end only in a manner known to law. Such extinguishment of the right can take place by a contract between the parties, by a merger or by a statutory provision which debars the mortgagor from redeeming the mortgage. A mortagee who has entered into possession of the mortgaged property under a mortgage will have to give up possession of the 316 property when a suit for redemption is filed unless he is able to show that the right of redemption has come to an end or that the suit is liable to be dismissed on some other valid ground. This flows from the legal principle which is applicable to all mortgages, namely "Once a mortgage, always a mortgage". It is no doubt true that the father of the first defendant and the second defendant have been granted occupancy right by the Prant Officer by his order dated February 5, 1964 along with Pandu, the uncle of defendant No.1. But it is not disputed that the defendants would not have been able to secure the said grant in their favour but for the fact that they were in actual possession of the lands. They were able to be in possession of the one-half share of the plaintiffs in the lands in question only by reason of the mortgage deed. If the mortgagors had been in possession of the lands on the relevant date, the lands would have automatically been granted in their favour, since the rights of the tenants in the watan lands were allowed to subsist even after the coming into force of the Act and the consequent abolition of the watans by virtue of section 8 of the Act. The question is whether the position would be different because they had mortgaged land with possession on the relevant date.

At this stage it is appropriate to refer to section 90 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 which reads as under :-

"90. Advantage gained by qualified owner-Where a tenant for life, co-owner, mortgagee or other qualified owner of any property, by availing himself of his position as such, gains an advantage in derogation of the rights of the other persons interested in the property, or where any such owner, as representing all persons interested in such property, gains any advantage, he must hold, for the benefit of all persons so interested, the advantage so gained but subject to repayment by such persons of their due share of the expenses properly incurred, and to an indemnity by the same persons against liabilities properly contracted, in gaining such advantage."

Illustrations (b) and (c) to section 90 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 read thus:

(b) A village belongs to a Hindu family, A, one of its members, pays nazrana to Government and thereby procures his name to be entered as the inamdar of the 317 village. A holds the village for the benefit of himself and the other members.
(c) A mortgages land to B, who enters into possession. B allows the Government revenue to fall into arrear with a view to the land being put up for sale and his becoming himself the purchaser of it. The land is accordingly sold to B. Subject to the repayment of the amount due on the mortgage and of his expenses properly incurred as mortgagee, holds the land for the benefit of A."

An analysis of section 90 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 set out above shows that if a mortgagee by availing himself of his position as a mortgagee gains an advantage which would be in derogation of the right of a mortgagor, he has to hold the advantage so derived by him for the benefit of the mortgagor. We are of the view that all the conditions mentioned in section 90 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 are satisfied in this case. The mortgagees i.e. Dnyanu, the father of defendant No. 1 and Ananda the second defendant could each get 1/4th share in the total extent of land measuring 22 Acres and 13 Gunthas only by availing themselves of their position as morgagees. The grant made in their favour is an advantage traceable to the possession of the land which they obtained under the mortgage and that the said grant is certainly in derogation of the right of the mortgagors who were the permanent Mirasi tenants entitled to the grant under the Government orders referred to above. The defendants could not have asserted their right to the grant of the land when the plaintiffs had deposited the requisite occupancy price well in time. It is seen that the mortgagees obtained the grant in their favour by making an incorrect representation to the Government that they were permanent Mirasi tenants although they were only mortgagees. Section 90 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 clearly casts an obligation on a mortgagee to hold the rights acquired by him in the mortgaged property for the benefit of the mortgagor in such circumstances as the mortgagee is virtually in a fiduciary position in respect of the rights so acquired and he cannot be allowed to make a profit out of the transaction. The defendants are, therefore, liable to surrender the advantage they have derived under the grant in favour of the plaintiffs even if the order of grant has become final before the Revenue authorities, of course, subject to the payment of the expenses incurred by them in securing the grant. The decree of 318 the Ist appellate court accordingly has directed that Rs.182.41 should be paid by the plaintiffs to the defendants alongwith the mortgage money.

It was, however, argued on behalf of the appellants before us that since Pandu Krishna, the other grantee, has not been impleaded no relief can be granted to the plaintiffs. There is no merit in this contention because the order of the Prant Officer makes the grant in specific shares. Dnyanu, the father of defendant No. 1 and Ananda (defendant No. 2) are granted 1/4 share each and only the remaining 1/2 share is given to Pandu Krishna. We are concerned in this case only with the half share granted in favour of the mortgagees. This decree relates only to that one-half share which had been mortgaged. Pandu Krishna, the other grantee, can have no interest in the one-half share which is the subject matter of these proceedings. This contention is, therefore, rejected.

The High Court was, therefore, right in affirming the judgment of the first appellate court. The appeal fails and it is dismissed with costs.

S.R.					   Appeal dismissed.
319