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[Cites 1, Cited by 6]

Supreme Court of India

Kabidi Venku Sah vs Syed Abdul Hai And Others on 28 September, 1983

Equivalent citations: 1984 AIR 117, 1984 SCR (1) 112, AIR 1984 SUPREME COURT 117, 1983 (4) SCC 570, (1984) 1 CIVLJ 97, (1984) GUJ LH 22, 1983 BBCJ 148, 1983 UJ(SC) 1005, 1984 LAWYER 16 2

Author: A. Varadarajan

Bench: A. Varadarajan, D.A. Desai, O. Chinnappa Reddy

           PETITIONER:
KABIDI VENKU SAH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SYED ABDUL HAI AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT28/09/1983

BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
BENCH:
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
DESAI, D.A.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)

CITATION:
 1984 AIR  117		  1984 SCR  (1) 112
 1983 SCC  (4) 570	  1983 SCALE  (2)1054


ACT:
     Code  of  Civil  Procedure,  1908-O.  21,	r.  58-Claim
Petition  for  getting	an  attachment	raised-By  a  simple
mortgagee having no interest in equity of redemption and not
enjoying possession of property-Whether competent ?



HEADNOTE:
     On the  basis of  a simple	 mortgage  executed  in	 his
favour in  the year 1948, the appellant obtained a decree on
4-9-1967, brought  the mortgaged property to sale, purchased
it himself  on 24-7-1968 and got the sale confirmed by court
on 28-8-1968.  The first  respondent who  held a  promissory
note executed  in his  favour  by  the	owner  of  the	said
property in  1961, instituted a suit for recovery of the sum
on 24-9-1964  and got  the property attached before judgment
on the	same day  and thereafter  obtained a money decree on
30-3-1967, and filed an execution petition for realising the
money due under the decree by bringing the property to sale.
Thereupon the  appellant filed	a claim petition under O.21,
r. 58  C.P.C., for  getting the attachment raised. The claim
petition was  resisted by the first respondent inter alia on
the ground  that it  was incompetent  as the  appellant	 had
neither any  interest in the equity of redemption nor was he
in possession  of the  property. The trail court allowed the
claim petition	holding inter alia that what was attached on
24-9-1964 was  the entire  property and	 not the  equity  of
redemption alone.  The Civil  Revision Petition filed by the
first respondent  against the  order of	 the trial court was
allowed by  the High  Court which  held that  the  appellant
having failed  to prove	 that he  had  an  interest  in	 the
property on the date of the attachment and was in possession
of the property, either actual or constructive, on that date
he was not entitled to have the attachment raised.
     Dismissing the appeal,
     HELD: The	trial court erred in observing that what was
attached before	 judgment on 24-9-1964 was not the equity of
redemption but	the entire property. There could be no doubt
that on	 24-9-1964 when	 the property  was  attached  before
judgment long  after the  mortgage dated  31-7-1948 and	 two
years before the suit was filed on the mortgage in 1966, the
mortgagor had  the equity  of redemption and that what could
have been  attached in	law on	24-9-1964 was  the equity of
redemption  alone   and	 not  the  entire  interest  in	 the
property. The  property.  The  appellant  had  no  doubt  an
interest in the property as mortgagee, but he could not have
been in possession of the property as he was only a
113
simple mortgagee.  He was  a secured  creditor as  he had  a
mortgage in  his favour,  and any  attachment effected after
the date  of the  mortgage and	during its subsistence could
only be	 subject to  that mortgage. Since he had no interest
in the	equity of  redemption on  the date of attachment, he
could not  have had  any objection  to	that  right  of	 the
mortgagor being attached by the first respondent. Therefore,
he was	not a  person who  could, in  law,  file  any  claim
petition under	O. 21;	r. 58 objecting to the attachment of
the equity of redemption. [116 A; C-D; F-H]
     The attaching  creditor can  bring the property to sale
only subject  to the  mortgage as  long as it is subsisting.
That is	 to say,  he could bring only the mortgagor's equity
of  redemption	 to  sale   if	it   had  not  already	been
extinguished by	 it sale in execution of any decree obtained
on that	 mortgage. But	if  the	 equity	 of  redemption	 has
already been  sold after  the date  of the  attachment,	 the
attaching decree  holder  could	 proceed  only	against	 the
balance, if any, of the sale price left after satisfying the
mortgagee  decree-holder's   claim  under  the	decree.	 The
mortgagee's right is thus not affected all. [117 B-C]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1833 of 1970.

Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order dated the 17.4.1970 of the Mysore High Court in Civil Revision Petition No. 1255 of 1969.

A.S. Nambiar, Ashok Kumar Sharma and M. Veerappa for the Appellant.

R.B. Datar, Divender Singh, Ms. Madhu Moolchandani and Ms. Meenu Verma for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VARADARAJAN, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against the Order dated 17.4.1970 of a learned single Judge of the erstwhile Mysore High Court (now Karnataka High Court) in CRP 1255 of 1969 which was filed against an Order dated 3.3.1969 of the Principal Civil Judge, Bangalore in Misc. Case 6 of 1969, filed by Kabidi Venku Sah who was the first respondent in the Civil Revision Petition and is the appellant in this Civil Appeal. The Principal Civil Judge allowed the Misc. Case which was filed under Order 21 Rule 58 of the Code of Civil Procedure for raising an attachment over the house property effected at the instance of Syed Abdul Hai who was the petitioner before the High Court in the Civil Revision Petition and is the first respondent in this Civil Appeal. The house property belonged originally to one Vittal Sah who was the husband of the second respondent Sharada Bai. Vittal Sah had executed a 114 simple mortgage over the property in favour of the appellant on 31.7.1948. The appellant obtained a decree on the mortgage on 4.9.1967 in O.S. 217 of 1966 on the file of the Principal Civil Judge and brought the property to sale in execution of that decree and purchased it himself on 24.7.1968 after obtaining the necessary leave of the Court to bid and set-off. The sale was confirmed on 28.8.1968 and the appellant took delivery of the property on 28.11.1969 in Misc. Case 95 of 1968 as the court auction purchaser.

The first respondent Syed Abdul Hai obtained a money decree against Vittal Sah on 30.3.1967 in O.S. 386 of 1964 on the foot of a promissory note executed in 1961 for a sum of Rs. 20,000. He obtained attachment before judgment over the same house property on 24.9.1964 on the same day on which filed that suit in the Court of the Principal Civil Judge, Bangalore. He filed E.P. 31 of 1968 for realising the money due under the decree by bringing the house property to sale pursuant to the attachment before judgment effected on 24.9.1964. Thereupon the appellant Venku Sah filed Misc. Case 6 of 1969 under Order 21 Rule 58 of the Code of Civil Procedure for getting the attachment raised, alleging that the second respondent Sharada Bai had no saleable interest in the property on the date of the attachment and that the first respondent's simple money decree cannot prevail over his mortgage decree and the sale of the property obtained in his favour in execution of that decree.

The first respondent Syed Abdul Hai opposed the claim petition, contending that the court proceedings referred to in the claim petition are collusive and fraudulent and that the delivery alleged by the appellant is only a paper delivery possession continued to be with the second respondent.

The Principal Civil Judge found that the mortgage decree, execution sale and delivery of the property to the appellant cannot be questioned in the first respondent's claim petition as being collusive and could be questioned only in a separate suit. He also found that there was no material on record to show that the second respondent continued to be in possession of the property after its delivery to the appellant pursuant to the court auction sale in his favour. He rejected the contention that the appellant was not entitled to file any claim petition under Order 21 Rule 58 of the Code of Civil Procedure for raising the attachment before judgment effected under Order 38 Rule 5 and held that there is nothing on 115 record to show that the appellant was aware of the attachment and therefore there was no delay in filing the claim petition and that the claim petition could be filed under Order 21 Rule 58 even in the case of attachment before judgment in view of the provisions of Order 38 of Rule 8 which says that when any claim is preferred to property which has been attached before judgment, such claim shall be adjudicated upon in the manner provided for the adjudication of claims to property attached in execution of a decree for payment of money. The Principal Civil Judge rejected the first respondent's contention that the appellant had no interest in the equity of redemption even if the mortgage in his favour is true and that only the equity of redemption was attached on 24.9.1964 and held that what was attached the entire property and not the equity of redemption alone. In this view, he allowed the claim petition.

Before the High Court it was contended for the first respondent that the appellant should show not only that he had an interest in the property attached on the date of the attachment but also possession thereof on that date before he could get the attachment before he could get the attachment before Judgment raised and that the property belonged to the second respondent's husband and was in his possession on the date of the attachment and therefore the Principal Civil Judge could not have allowed the claim petition. The appellant refuted that contention by peculiarly contending that he, a simple mortgagee, was in constructive possession of the property through the mortgagor.

The learned Judge of the High Court rightly rejected the contention that a simple mortgagee could be in possession of the mortgaged property constructively through the mortgagor and held that the appellant (claimant) should show that he had some interest in the property attached on 24.9.1964 and was in actual or constructive possession thereof. He observed that the Principal Civil Judge has not recorded any finding on the question of the appellant's possession of the property on the date of the attachment and that he has thereby wrongly exercised jurisdiction and acted with material irregularity in allowing the claim petition. He found that the appellant had failed to prove that he had an interest in the property on the date of the attachment and was in possession of the property, either actual or constructive, on that date and held that he was therefore not entitled to have the attachment raised.

The matter is quite simple but has unfortunately dragged on for nearly 15 years on account of a wrong and ill advised step taken 116 by the appellant. The learned Principal Civil Judge erred in observing that what was attached before judgment on 24.9.1964 is not the equity of redemption alone but the entire property. He has rightly held that in the claim petition the question of the mortgage of 1948, the mortgage decree, the court auction sale and delivery of possession of the property to the appellant pursuant to that sale cannot be contended to be collusive and observed that the first respondent could, if at all, challenge them only in a separate suit. That being so, undoubtedly the mortgage of 1948 in favour of the appellant was there and what remained with the mortgagor was only the equity of redemption until it was brought to an end by the sale in execution of the mortgage decree confirmed by the court on 28.8.1968. Therefore, there could be no doubt whatsoever that on 24.9.1964 when the property was attached before judgment long after the mortgage dated 31.7.1948 and two years before the suit on the mortgage was filed in 1966, the mortgagor had the equity of redemption and that what could have been attached in law on 24.9.1964 was the equity of redemption alone and not the entire interest in the property. There should have been no difficulty for the learned Judge of the High Court holding that the appellant could not have been in possession of the property, actual or constructive, for he was only a simple mortgagee who had nothing to do with possession until he got delivery of the property through the court as a decree holder-court auction purchaser on 28.4.1968 as noticed by the learned Judge in his judgment. The appellant had no doubt an interest in the property as mortgagee, but he could not have been in possession of the property as he was only a simple mortgagee. The appellant was a secured creditor as he had a mortgage in his favour, and any attachment effected after the date of the mortgage and during its subsistence can be only subject to that mortgage. He had no interest in the equity of redemption on the date of the attachment and could not therefore have had any objection to that right of the mortgagor being attached by the first respondent. Therefore he was not a person who could in law file any claim petition under Order 21 Rule 58 objecting to the attachment of the equity of redemption. We may notice here what Order 21 Rule 58(1) says and it is this:

"Where any claim is preferred to, or any objection is made to the attachment of, any property attached in execution of a decree on the ground that such property is 117 not liable to such attachment, the Court shall proceed to adjudicate upon the claim or objection in accordance with the provisions herein contained."

The attaching creditor can bring the property to sale only subject to the mortgage as long as it is subsisting. That is to say he could bring only the mortgagor's equity of redemption to sale if it had not already been extinguished by its sale in execution of any decree obtained on that mortgage. But if the equity of redemption has already been sold after the date of the attachment the attaching decree holder could proceed only against the balance, if any, of the sale price left after satisfying the mortgagee decree- holder's claim under the decree. The mortgagee's right is thus not affected at all. Therefore it is we had observed carrier that the appellant had taken a wrong and all advised step in coming forward with the claim petition which has resulted in the matter dragging on for over 14 years from 15.1.1969. The appellant could not object to the attachment of the equity of redemption. The appeal fails and is dismissed, but under the circumstances of the case without costs.

H.L.C.					  Appeal dismissed.
118