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[Cites 14, Cited by 44]

Supreme Court of India

Jaswant Singh & Anr vs The Custodian Of Evacuee Property, New ... on 7 May, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 1096, 1985 SCR SUPL. (1) 331, AIR 1985 SUPREME COURT 1096, (1986) 1 APLJ 7.2, (1985) 28 DLT 333, 1985 (3) SCC 648, (1985) 2 CURCC 537

Author: E.S. Venkataramiah

Bench: E.S. Venkataramiah, A.P. Sen

           PETITIONER:
JASWANT SINGH & ANR.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE CUSTODIAN OF EVACUEE PROPERTY, NEW DELHI

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/05/1985

BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:
 1985 AIR 1096		  1985 SCR  Supl. (1) 331
 1985 SCC  (3) 648	  1985 SCALE  (1)1173


ACT:
     East Punjab  Evacuees' (Administration of Property) Act
1947 Sections  6 and  8 Administration	of Evacuee  Property
(Chief Commissioners  Provinces) Ordinance  1949  (Ordinance
No.  XII  of  1949  Section  15	 Administration	 of  Evacuee
Property  Ordinance  1949  (Ordinance  No.  XXVII  of  1949)
Sections 2(f), 7 and 17.
     Decree holder-Properties of judgment debtor attached by
Court on October 9 1947-Judgment debtor declared evacuee and
property  vesting   in	Custodian   Court  auction  sale  of
properties on  October 16  1948-Purchase by  decree  holder-
Setting aside  of sale	by Custodian  whether  maintainable-
Crucial dates-December	31 1947	 under Section	8(2) of 1947
Act-August 14 1947 under section 17(2) of Ordinance XXVII of
1949-Applicability of.
     Civil Procedure Code 1908 !
     Resjudicate-Principle-When is  a subsequent  proceeding
barred-Test for determination E



HEADNOTE:
     Two brothers  entered into	 an agreement  to sell their
interest in  an	 Ice  Factory  situated	 at  Rawalpindi	 and
received the advance money. As the vendee failed to complete
the transaction,  a suit  was  filed  by  the  brothers	 for
specific performance  of the  agreement and  for recovery of
the balance  consideration. The	 vendee remained exparate. A
decree was  passed by  the Sub-Judge  for the balance of the
consideration money  and the  vendee was  given	 liberty  to
apply to  the court  to get  a regular sale deed. During the
pendency Or  this suit	the interest  of one of the brothers
was assigned in favour of the appellant who was impleaded in
the suit. The vendee left India and was declared an evacuee.
A Receiver  was appointed  for the  properties of the vendee
some of	 which were  attached on  October 9, 1947 and put to
sale in	 execution, but	 at the	 instance  of  the  auction-
purchaser who became apprehensive on account of the judgment
debtor being  an evacuee, the sale was got set aside on July
10 1948.
     On	 July  17,1944	an  application	 was  filed  by	 the
Custodian  of	Evacuee	 Property   under  the	Fast  Punjab
Evacuees' (Administration  of Property)	 Act  1947  claiming
that the  attached properties  were evacuee  properties	 and
under s. 8 were exempt from attachment. This application was
dismissed on July 19, 1948 on the ground that a Receiver was
appointed  by  the  court  who	was  in	 possession  of	 the
properties, and	 no step  was taken  by the  Custodian under
s.6.
332
      The attached properties were again brought to sale and
on this	 occasion the appellant purchased the properties and
the sale  was confirmed on October 16, 1948. The East Punjab
Act having  been amended  in 1948,  another application	 was
made by	 the Custodian	under the amended s. 8(2) of the Act
on December  11, 1948.	This application was rejected on the
ground that  the said  provision was not applicable to court
sales of property attached prior to December 31, 1947.
     The   Administration   of	 Evacuee   Property   (Chief
Commissioners Provinces)  Ordinance, 1949 was promulgated on
July 10,  1949. The  Custodian made  an application under s.
15, on	August 24,  194 for  setting aside the sale but this
was dismissed  for default  on December	 10, 1949.  However,
during the  pendency of	 this application  another Ordinance
the  Administration   of  Evacuee  Property  Ordinance	1949
(Ordinance No.	XXVII of  1949) was  promulgated with effect
from October  18, 1949. The Custodian made an application on
December 12,  1949 both under order 9, rule 9 of the Code of
Civil Procedure	 1908 and  under s.17(2)  of  Ordinance	 No,
XXVII Or  1949 for  restoration of the application dismissed
for default  on December 10, 1949, and for setting aside the
sale. The sub-court restored the application on February 11,
1950 but  after hearing the application on February 28, 1950
dismissed the same on March 24, 1950.
     The Custodian  filed an  appeal before  the High  Court
against the  order of  the Sub-Judge,  dated March 24, 1950.
contending that	 the Sub-Judge	had erred in not considering
the effect  of s.  17 of  Ordinance XXVII  of 1949,  but the
appeal was  dismissed, on  the ground  that as	the  earlier
order dated  March 28,	1949 passed  by the Sub-Judge on the
basis of the East Punjab Act had IB became final, it was not
open to	 the Custodian	to reagitate  the matter again after
the promulgation of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949,
     The Custodian  filed a  Letters Patent Appeal which was
allowed by  a Division	Bench on  December 30,	1963, on the
ground that  by virtue	of s.  17 of  Ordinance No. XXVII of
1949  the   sale  in  favour  of  the  decree-holder/auction
purchaser was liable to be set aside on the application made
by the	Custodian and  the application made by the Custodian
was not	 barred by the rule of res judicata. The court sale,
under which  one of  the decree-holders	 had  purchased	 the
properties, was accordingly set aside.
     Dismissing the appeal of the auction purchaser.
^
     HELD: 1.  Ordinance No.  XXVII of	1949 was replaced by
the Central Act i.e. Administration of Evacuee Property Act,
1950 with  effect from	April 17,  1950. Section  17 of	 the
Central Act  was substituted  with retrospective  effect  by
Administration of  evacuee Property  (Amendment) Act,  1951.
The only  noticeable difference between s. 17 of the Central
Act is	that the  date August  14,  1947'  in  s.  17(2)  of
Ordinance No.  XXVII of	 1949 is  substituted by  'March  1,
1947'. In  other respects,  there is  no material difference
between the provision. [340 D; G]
333
     2. In order to decide the question whether a subsequent
proceeding is  barred by  res judicate	it is  necessary  to
examine the  question with reference to the (i) forum or the
competence  of	 the   Court,	(ii)   parties	 and   their
representatives, (iii)	matters in issue, (iv) matters which
ought to  have been made ground for defence or attack in the
former suit and (v) the final decision. [341 D]
     In the  instant case,  there is  no  dispute  that	 the
parties and  the properties  involved in  the proceedings in
which the  order dated	March 28, 1949 was passed and in the
proceedings commenced  by the  application which  has  given
rise to	 this  appeal  are  the	 same.	The  only  point  of
difference; is	that whereas  in the former proceedings, the
Custodian had  relied upon  the provisions  of s.  8 of	 the
least Punjab  Act, in  the present  proceedings, reliance is
placed on the provisions of s. 17(2) of (Ordinance No. XXVII
of 1949 and s. 17(2) of the Central Act . [341 E-F]
     3. (i)  The Sub-Judge had not referred to Ordinance No.
XXVII of  1949 at  all in  his	order.	Sub-section  (2)  of
Section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 was wider in scope
and content  than s.  8 East Punjab Act. A comparison of the
two would  show that  whereas s	 8(2) of the East Punjab Act
affected sales	of the	properties by  court which  had been
attached after	December 31,  1947 s. 17(2) of Ordinance No.
XXV11 of  ]949 affected	 any transfer  of  evacuee  property
under orders  of a  court or  any other authority made after
the 14th day of August 1947. [342 C; D-F]
     3. (ii)  In the present case the properties in question
had been  attached by the court on October 9, 1947 which was
a date	anterior to  December 31, 1S47 which was the crucial
date for  purposes of  s. 8(2)	of the	least Punjab Act but
subsequent to August 14, 1947 which was the crucial date for
purposes of s. 17(2) of Ordinance No.. XXVII of 1949. It was
not, therefore,	 open to  the Custodian	 to contend  in	 his
application which  was disposed	 of by the Order dated March
28, 1949 that the court sale was liable to be set aside. The
cause of  action for  making that  claim  arose	 only  after
Ordinance No. XXVII of 1945 was passed. [342G-H]
     4. A  cause of  action for a proceeding has no relation
whatever to  the defence  which may  be set  up, nor does it
depend upon  the character  of the  relief  prayed  for	 the
plaintiff or  the  applicant.  It  refers  entirely  to	 the
grounds set  forth in  the plaint  or the application as the
case may  be as the cause of action or in other words to the
media upon  which the  plaintiff or  the applicant  asks the
court to arrive at a conclusion in his favour. [343 A-B]
     5. In  order that a defence of res judicata may succeed
it is  necessary to  show that	not only the cause of action
was the	 same but also that the plaintiff had an opportunity
of getting  the relief which he is now seeking in the former
proceedings. The test is whether the claim in the subsequent
suit Or	 proceedings is	 in fact founded upon the same cause
of action  which was  the foundation  of the  former suit or
proceedings. [343 B.C]
334
     6. In  the instant	 case, but for the new law contained
in s.  17(2) of	 A ordinance No. XXVlI of 1949 the Custodian
would not  have been  able to  question the  court sale.  It
therefore cannot  be said  that the  present proceedings are
barred by  the rule of res judicata, even though in both the
proceedings the	 prayer made  by the  Custodian was that the
sale of the properties in question should be set aside. I343
C-D]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 648 of 1972.

From the Judgment and order dated 30.12.1963 of the Punjab Circuit Bench at New Delhi in Letter Patent Appeal No. 32-D of 1985.

S.C Malik, S.P. Mahajan and Harbans Singh for the Appellants.

Miss Halida Khatun and R.N. Poddar for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VENKATARAMIAH, J. Sardar Mela Singh and Sardar Hari Singh were brothers They jointly owned an Ice Factory at Rawalpindi which was known as 'Sat Kartar Ice Factory'. They entered into an agreement on August 6, 1947 with one Saghir Ahmed, who was a resident of Delhi, to sell in his favour one-half of their interest in the said Ice Factory for a sum of Rs. 90,000 and received Rs. 5,000 by way of advance. Saghir Ahmed agreed to pay the balance of Rs. 85,000 and to complete the sale transaction within a month but he failed to do so. Saghir Ahmed having left India became an evacuee. Sardar Mela Singh and Sardar Hari Singh anticipating that Saghir Ahmed was likely to get possession of the Factory on the basis' of the agreement to sell executed in his favour instituted a suit in forma pauperis on October 1, 1947 in Suit No. 3 of 1947 on the file of the Senior Sub-Judge at Delhi for specific performance of the agreement to sell and inter alia prayed for a decree for a sum of Rs 85,000 which was the balance of the consideration payable under the agreement to sell referred to above and for Rs. 5,000 as compensation for the loss caused by Saghir Ahmed in not completing the transaction of sale in time. They stated that on his paying the balance of consideration, a sale deed may be obtained from them by Saghir Ahmed. Saghir Ahmed remained ex parte and the suit was heard in his absence. On November 20, 1947 a decree was passed in the suit by the Sub-Judge, Ist 335 Class, Delhi against Saghir Ahmed, directing him to pay to Sardar Mela Singh and Sardar Hari Singh, the plaintiffs in the suit, a sum of Rs. 86,000 along with costs of Rs. 2967/8/. Saghir Ahmed was given liberty to apply to the court to get a regular sale deed executed by the plaintiffs. It may be stated here that during the pendency of the suit the interest of Sardar Mela Singh under the agreement had been assigned in favour of one Jaswant Singh, who was impleaded as plaintiff No. 3 in the suit. Thus Jaswant Singh became a decree holder under the decree passed, as stated above. That on October 3,1947 on an application made by the plaintiffs a Receiver was appointed by the court to take possession of some of the properties of Saghir Ahmed. That on October 9, 1947 on an application made by the plaintiffs certain immovable properties belonging to Saghir Ahmed, namely residential flats Nos. S and 7 together with some shops which were situated in Panchkuian Road, New Delhi and another immovable property situated in Ghee Mandi, Pahar Ganj, Delhi were attached before judgment. After the decree was passed by the court, the attached properties were put to sale in execution, but at the instance of the auction- purchaser, who apparently had become apprehensive on account of the status of Saghir Ahmed, who had become an evacuee, the sale was set aside on July 10, 1948. The Custodian of Evacuee Property, Delhi filed an application before the executing court on July 17, 1948 claiming that the attached properties were evacuee properties under the East Punjab Evacuees' (Administration of Property) Act, 1947 (East Punjab Act No. XIV of 1947) (hereinafter referred to as 'the East Punjab Act'), which was extended to Delhi also and that under section 8 of that Act all properties of which the Custodian had taken possession under section 6 thereof were exempt from attachment. That application was dismissed on July 19, 1948 on the ground that the Receiver appointed by the court was in possession of the properties and no steps had been taken by the Custodian under section 6 of that Act. The attached properties were again brought to sale and on this occasion the properties were purchased by Jaswant Singh, one of the decree-holders. The sale was confirmed on October 16, 1948. The East Punjab Act was amended in 1948. After such amendment sub-section (2) of section 8 of that Act, as extended to Delhi, read as follows:

"8 (2) All subsisting attachments of evacuees' property effected after 31st December, 1947 under orders of a Civil or Revenue Court or Officer or other authority shall cease to have any effect, and all sales, leases or other 336 forms of alienation by any Court, Officer or authority of A such property effected after the above mentioned date shall be liable to be set aside at the instance of the Custodian on an application filed before the Court, officer or authority which ordered the sale, lease or alienation, as the case may be, within three months of the coming into force of East Punjab Evacuees' (Administration of Property) (Second Amendment) Ordinance, 1948, or the date of the sale, lease or alienation whichever is later."

After the said amendment, the Custodian of the evacuee Property made another application on December 11, 1948 before the learned Sub-Judge claiming that the sale of the properties by the court was ineffective since the sale had taken place after December 31, 1947. That application was rejected by the learned Sub-Judge holding that the said provision did not affect the court sales of properties which had been attached prior to December 31, 1947 and that in the instant case the properties that had been sold had been attached on October 9, l 947. The said order of the learned Sub-Judge was passed on March 28, 1949 and it became final.

Thereafter on June 13, 1949 the Governor-General of India passed an ordinance called the Administration of Evacuee Property (Chief Commissioners, Provinces) Ordinance, 1949 (Ordinance No. XII of 1949). Section 15 of that Ordinance provided -

"15. Exemption from attachment, sale etc.- (1) Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Ordinance, no property which has vested in the Custodian shall be liable to attachment, distress or sale in execution of a decree or order of a Court or any other authority, and no injunction in respect of any such property shall be granted by any Court or other authority.
(2) Any attachment or injunction subsisting on the commencement of this Ordinance in respect of any evacuee property which has vested in the Custodian shall cease to have effect on such commencement, and any transfer on such property under the orders of a Court or any other authority made after such date as may be specified in this behalf with reference to any Province by the 337 Central Government by notification in the Official Gazette, shall be set aside if an application is made to such Court A or authority by or at the instance of the Custodian within three months from the commencement of this Ordinance."

On the basis of the above provision, the Custodian made an application before the Sub-Judge, Ist Class, Delhi on August 24, 1949 for setting aside the sale. That application was dismissed for default on December 10, 1949. But during the pendency of the said application the Governor-General had promulgated another ordinance called The Administration of Evacuee Property Ordinance, 1949 (Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949) hereinafter referred to as 'Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949') which came into force with effect from October 18, 1949.

Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 provided for the administration of evacuee property and for certain other matters connected there- with. Under clause (i) of section 2

(d) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 a person, who on account of the setting up of the Dominions of India and Pakistan or on account of civil disturbances or the fear of such disturbances had left any place in any part of India for any place outside India, was treated as an evacuee. Saghir Ahmed, it is not disputed, was an evacuee falling within the said definition. Section 2 (f) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 defined the expression 'evacuee property' thus:

"2. (f) "evacuee property" means any property in which an evacuee has any right or interest (whether personally or as a trustee or as a beneficiary or in any other capacity), and includes any property- (1) which has been obtained by any person from an evacuee after the 14th day of August, 1947, by any mode of transfer, unless such transfer has been confirmed by Custodian, or (2) belonging to any person who, after the commencement of this Ordinance, does any of the acts specified in clause (e) of section 2, or in which any such person has any right or interest, to the extent of such right or interest, but does not include-
338
(i) any ornament and any wearing apparel, cooking A vessels or other household effects in the immediate possession of an evacuee;
(ii) any property belonging to a joint stock company the registered office of which was situated before the 15th day of August, 1947, in any place no forming part of Pakistan and continues to be 80 situated after the said date,"

Section 7 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 empowered the Custodian appointed thereunder to pass an order declaring any property, which satisfied the definition in section 2

(f) thereof as 'evacuee property' and on such declaration being made such property vested in the Custodian by virtue of sub-section (2) of section 8 thereof. It provided that where immediately before the commencement of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 any evacuee property had vested in any person exercising the powers of a Custodian under any law repealed by Ordinance No. XXVlI of 1949, such evacuee property would on the commencement of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 be deemed to have vested in the Custodian appointed or deemed to have been appointed for the area under Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 and would continue to so vest. It is again not disputed that the properties of Saghir Ahmed which had been attached in the suit and which had been sold through court had also vested in the Custodian under Ordinance No- XXVII of 1949 by virtue of section 8(2) thereof. It is now necessary to refer to the crucial provision in Ordinance No. XXVI of 1949 insofar as this appeal is concerned. Section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 read as follows:

"17. (1) Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Ordinance, no property which has vested in the Custodian shall be liable to attachment, distress or sale in execution of an order of a Court or of any other authority, and no injunction in respect of any such property shall be granted by any Court or other authority.
(2) Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Ordinance, any attachment or injunction subsisting on the commencement of this Ordinance in respect of any evacuee property which has vested in the Custodian shall cease to have effect on such commencement, and any 339 transfer of evacuee property under orders of a Court or any other authority made after the 14th day of August, A 1947, shall be set aside, if an application is made to such Court or authority by or at the instance of the Custodian within three months from the commencement of this Ordinance R It may be noted that under sub-section (2) of section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 any transfer of evacuee property under orders of a court or any other authority made after August 14, 1947 was liable to be set aside if an application was made to such court or authority by or at the instance of the Custodian within three months from the commencement of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949.

Now reverting to the narration of events, on December 15, 1949 the Custodian made an application dated December 12, 1949 both under Order 9, rule 9 of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 and under section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 praying for restoration of the application which had been dismissed for default on December 10, 1949 and for setting aside the sale as provided by section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVlI of 1949. The application dated August 24, 1949 was restored on February 11, 1950 and that application was heard on February 28, 1950. The application was dismissed on March 24, 1950.

Against the order of the Sub-Judge, Ist Class, Delhi dated March 24, 1950 the Custodian filed and appeal No. 97 of before the High Court of Punjab and one of the grounds urged in the course of that appeal was that the learned Sub- Judge had erred in not considering the effect of section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 on the case. That appeal was dismissed by a Single Judge of the High Court of Punjab at Chandigarh on August 26, 1958.

The learned Single Judge dismissed that appeal on August 26, 1958 on the ground that as the earlier order dated March 28, 1949 passed by the Sub-Judge, Ist Class, Delhi on the basis of the East Punjab Act had become final, it was not open to the Custodian to reagitate the matter again after the promulgation of Ordinance No. XII of 1949 by the Governor-General- Surprisingly, the learned Single Judge did not also refer to Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 and the Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950 (Act XXXI of 340 1950) (hereinafter referred to as the 'Central Act') which had replaced the said ordinance.

Against the judgment of the learned Single Judge, the Custodian filed an appeal in Letters Patent Appeal No. 32-D of 1958 before the High Court of Punjab. That appeal was heard by a Division Bench and it came to be allowed on December 30, 1963. The Division Bench held that by virtue of section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 the sale in favour of the decree-holder/auction purchaser was liable to be set aside on the application made by the Custodian and the application made by the Custodian was not barred by the rule of res judicata. The Division Bench accordingly set aside the court sale, under which one of the decree-holders had purchased the properties. This appeal by certificate is filed against the said decision of the Division Bench.

Before dealing with the merits of the case, it is necessary to state that Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 was replaced by the Central Act i.e. Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950 with effect from April 17, 1950. Section 17 of the Central Act was substituted with retrospective effect by the Administration of Evacuee Property (Amendment) Act, 1951 (Act XXII of 1951). Section 17(2) of the Central Act read as follows:

"17. (2) Where, after the 1st day of March, 1947, any evacuee property which has vested in the Custodian or is deemed to have vested in the Custodian under the provisions of this Act has been sold in execution of any decree or order of any Court or other authority, the sale shall be set aside if an application in that behalf has been made by the Custodian to such Court or authority on or before the 17th day of October, 1950,"

The only noticeable difference between section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 and section 17 of the Central Act is that the date 'August 14, 1947' in section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 is substituted by 'March 1, 1947'. In other respects, there is no material difference between the provisions of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 and the Central Act insofar as the question which arises for consideration in this appeal is concerned.

The main ground urged in support of the above appeal by the appellants of whom. appellant No. 1, Jaswant Singh is the auction 341 purchaser, is that the order dated March 28, 1949 passed by the Sub-Judge, Ist Class, Delhi having become final, it would operate as A a bar to any enquiry into the application which had been made by the Custodian after the promulgation of Ordinance No. XII of 1949 and Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949. This ground is based on the principles underlying section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. That section provides that no court shall try any suit or issue in which the matter directly and substantially in issue has been directly and substantially in issue in a former suit between the same parties, or between parties under whom they or any of them claim, litigating under the same title, in a court competent to try such subsequent suit or the suit in which such issue has been subsequently raised, and has been heard and finally decided by such court. Explanation IV to that section provides that any matter which might or ought to have been made a ground of defence or attack in such former suit shall be deemed to have been directly and substantially in issue in such suit. It is well settled that in order to decide the question whether a subsequent proceeding is barred by res judicata it is necessary to examine the question with reference to the (i) forum or the competence of the Court, (ii) parties and their representatives, (iii) matters in issue, (iv) matters which ought to have been made ground for defence or attack in the former suit and (v) the final decision. In the instant case there is no dispute that the parties and the properties involved in the proceedings in which the order dated March 28, 1949 was passed and in the proceedings commenced by the application which has given rise to this appeal are the same. The only point of difference between them however is that whereas in the former proceedings, the Custodian had relied upon the provisions of section 8 of the East Punjab Act, in the present proceedings reliance is placed by him on the provisions of section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 and section 17(2) of the Central Act. Section 8 of the East Punjab Act which was relied on by the Custodian in the earlier proceedings stated that all subsisting attachments of evacuee property effected after December 31, 1947 under orders of a Civil or Revenue court or an officer or other authority would cease to have any effect, and all sales, leases or other forms of alienation by any court, officer or authority of such property effected after the above mentioned date were liable to be set aside at the instance of the Custodian on an application filed before the court, officer or authority concerned. The application made by the Custodian under that provision was dismissed by the Sub- Judge, Ist Class, Delhi as already mentioned on the 342 ground that the attachment of the properties involved in the case had A been effected prior to December 31, 1947 and, therefore, the sale of those properties was not assailable under section 8 of the East Punjab Act. The next application with which we are concerned in this appeal was filed by the Custodian on August 24, 1949 before the court. By then Ordinance No. XII of 1949 had been promulgated. Ordinance No XXVII of 1949 which came into force on October 18, 1949 during the pendency of that application had repealed and replaced Ordinance No. XII of 1949, and therefore the Sub- Judge, Ist Class, Delhi should have taken into consideration the provisions of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 on March 24, 1950 when he disposed of the said application. As mentioned earlier, the learned Sub-Judge had not referred to Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 at all in the course of his order. Sub- section (2) of section 17 of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 was wider in its scope and content than section 8 of the East Punjab Act which arose for consideration at the time when the order dated March 28, 19l9 was passed by the court. Section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 which conferred a new right on the Custodian provided that any transfer of evacuee property under orders of a court or any other authority made after the 14th day of August, 1947 was liable to be set aside if an application was made to such court or authority by or at the instance of the Custodian within three months from the commencement of the Ordinance. A comparison of section 8(2) of the East Punjab Act with section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1919 would show that whereas section 8(2) of the East Punjab Act affected sales of properties by court which had been attached after December 31, 1947, section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 affected any transfer of evacuee property under orders of a court or any other authority made after the 14th day of August, 1947. In the present case the properties in question had been attached by the court on October 9, 1947 which was a date anterior to December 31, 1947 which was the crucial date for purposes of section 8(2) of the East Punjab Act but subsequent to August 14, 1947 which was the crucial date for purposes of section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949. It was not, there fore, open to the Custodian to contend in his application which was disposed of by the order dated March 28, 1949 that the court sale was liable to be set aside The cause of action for making that claim arose only after Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 was passed. A cause of action for a proceeding has no relation whatever to the defence which may be set up, nor does it depend upon the character of the 343 relief prayed for by the plaintiff or the applicant. It refers entirely to the grounds set forth in the plaint or the application as the case may be as the cause of action or in the other words to the media upon which the plaintiff or the applicant asks the court to arrive at a conclusion in his favour. In order that a defence of res judicata may succeed it is necessary to show that not only the cause of action was the same but also that the plaintiff had an opportunity of getting the relief which he is now seeking in the former proceedings. The test is whether the claim in the subsequent suit or proceedings is in fact founded upon the same cause of action which was the foundation of the former suit or proceedings. In the instant case but for the new law contained in section 17(2) of Ordinance XXVII of 1949 the Custodian would not have been able to question the court sale in question. Since the Custodian could not, therefore, have asked for the relief which he claimed in the application which has given rise to this appeal before March 28, 1949 it cannot be said that the present proceedings are barred by the rule of res judicata, even though in both the proceedings the prayer made by the Custodian was that the sale of the properties in question should be set aside. We are, therefore, of the view that the Division Bench was right in holding that the present proceedings were not barred by the rule of res judicata.

One other submission made on behalf of the appellants in this case is that no application had been made by the Custodian relying expressly upon section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949. There is no substance in this submission because we find that there is a specific reference to the said provision in the application dated December 12, 1949, filed before the court of the Sub-Judge, Ist Class, F Delhi on December 15, 1949. This application is referred to by the Sub-Judge at the commencement of this order dated March 24, 1950 while the application dated August 24, 1949 is referred to in the third paragraph of that order. It appears from that order that the Sub-Judge had consolidated both the applications and disposed them of together by the same order though he failed to apply the provisions of section 17(2) of Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949. Hence it cannot be accepted that no fresh application had been made after Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 had come into force.

In the result, we affirm the decision of the Division Bench of the High Court of Punjab and dismiss the appeal.

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We, however, make it clear that the setting aside of the court sale does not come in the way of any other remedy open to the decree-holders in the instant case to recover the amount which may be due to them under the decree from the judgment debtor or the Custodian or any other authority. Any proceedings that may be initiated by the decree-holders for realising the amount due to them, shall be disposed of by the concerned authority in accordance with law. There will be no order as to costs.

N.V.K.					   Appeal dismissed.
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