PETITIONER: CHERUVU NAGESWARASWAMI Vs. RESPONDENT: RAJAH VADREVU VISWASUNDARA RAOAND OTHERS DATE OF JUDGMENT: 18/05/1953 BENCH: MUKHERJEA, B.K. BENCH: MUKHERJEA, B.K. MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND HASAN, GHULAM BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H. CITATION: 1953 AIR 370 1953 SCR 894 ACT: Hindu law-Debts-Father's power to alienate sons' interest for antecedent debts-Whether 'property' and passes to Receiver on insolvency of father-Sale by Receiver, whether vests sons' interest in purchaser-Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920, as amended in 1948, s. 28A--Retrospective operation--Madras Agriculturists' Relief Act, 1938, ss. 7, 8-Purchaser of equity of redemption--Right to claim relief. HEADNOTE: Under the provisions of s. 28A of the Provincial Insolvency Act, 1920, as amended by the Provincial Insolvency (Amendment) Act of 1948, which has been expressly made retrospective, when a Hindu father governed by the Mitakshara law is adjudged a bankrupt, his power to alienate the interest of his sons in the joint family properties for the satisfaction of his antecedent debts not contracted for illegal or immoral purposes, passes to the Receiver as his "property" within the meaning of the Act. Consequently, where a Hindu father who has mortgaged the joint family property for an antecedent debt which is not illegal or immoral becomes insolvent and the receiver sells the property, the interest of his sons in the property also vests in the purchaser, even in the case of a sale held before the Amendment Act of 1948 came into force, and the sons cannot redeem the property. Sat Narain v. Sri Kishen (63 I.A. 384), Rama Sastrulu v. Balakrishna Rao (I. L. R. 1943 --Mad. 83) and Viswanath v. Official Receiver (I.L.R. 16 Pat. 60) referred to. Though the liability of a person who has purchased an equity of redemption after 22nd March, 1938, to pay the mortgage debt arises only on the date of his purchase, if the debt itself existed on the 22nd March, 1938, and if it was payable by an agriculturist on that date, the purchaser can claim the benefits conferred by s. 7 of the Madras Agricultural Relief Act, 1938, if he himself was an agriculturist on the date of his application. Periannia v. Sellappa (I.L.R. 1939 218) referred to. JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 76 of 1950.
Appeal	from the Judgment and Decree of the High Court of
Madras dated 18th April 1945, in
895
Appeals Nos. 56 and 192 of 1941 reversing in part the decree
of the	Court of the Subordinate Judge of Masulipatani in
Original Suit No. 29 of 1937.
B.Somayya (C.	Mallikarjuna	Row, with him) for	the
appellant.
K.Rajah	Aiyar	(R. Ganapathy Aiyar-, with	him)	for
Respondent No. 1.
Respondent No. 10 appeared in person.
1953. May 18.	The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUKHERJEA J.-The appellant before us is the sixth defendant
in a suit, commenced by the plaintiff-respondent in	the
court of the	Subordinate Judge at	Masulipatam (being
Original Suit No. 29 of 1937) for recovery of a sum of	Rs.
99,653	annas odd by enforcement of a simple mortgage bond.
The mortgage bond is dated 28th September, 1930, and it	was
executed by defendant No. 1 for himself and as guardian of
his two minor sons–defendants 2 and 3-all of whom consti-
tuted together	a joint Hindu family at that	time.	The
plaintiff mortgagee happens	to be	the son-in-law	of
defendant No.	1 and at the time of the execution of	the
mortgage the first defendant was indebted to a large number
of persons including the mortgagee himself, and being	hard
pressed by his creditors requested the plaintiff to lend him
a sum of Rs. 1,25,000 on the hypothecation of the properties
in suit, to enable him to tide over his difficulties	and
discharge his	debts.	The total consideration of	Rs.
1,25,000 as stated in the deed is made up of the following
items :-
(1)Rs. 13,065, which was the amount due on a promissory note
executed in favour of the plaintiff by the first defendant
on the 17th January, 1928.
(2)Rs.	13,285 due under another promissory note dated	18th
August,	1930 executed by defendant No.1 in favour of	the
wife of the plaintiff and later on transferred by her to the
plaintiff on 28th September, 30.
(3)Rs.	25,000 paid by the plaintiff by endorsing in favour
of defendant No. 1 a cheque for that amount
896
drawn in his	name by the Co-operative Central Bank,
Ramchandrapuram on the Central Urban Bank, Madras.
(4) Rs. 937-8-0, the amount paid in cash by plain-
tiff to	defendant No.1 for purchasing stamps for the
mortgage document.
(5) Rs. 72,712-8-0, the amount of future advances which the
plaintiff promised to make from time to time to defendant
No.1 according to his convenience.
The money lent was to carry interest at 7 1/2 % simple	per
annum and the due date of payment of the principal money was
30th September, 1933. The interest would, however, have to
be paid annually on the 30th of September every year, in
default of which the whole of the principal and interest in
arrears would become repayable immediately with interest at
9% compound per annum with yearly rests. It was expressly
stated in the mortgage deed that if the mortgagee was unable
to advance the entire amount of Rs. 1,25,000, the terms	set
out above would apply to the amount actually advanced.	It
appears that after the execution of the mortgage bond a	sum
of Rs.	3,000 only was paid by the mortgagee to defendant
No.1 on 5th of November, 1930. In the plaint, which	was
filed by the plaintiff on the 15th September, 1937,	the
total claim was laid at Rs. 99,653 annas odd, out of which
Rs. 55,287 annas odd constituted the	principal money as
stated above and the rest was claimed as interest calculated
at the rate of 9% per annum compound with yearly rests.
Besides the original mortgagors, who were defendants Nos. 1
to 3 in the suit, there were three other persons impleaded
as parties defendants.	Defendant No. 4 was the Receiver in
insolvency in whom the entire estate of the defendant No. 1
vested	by reason of his being adjudged a bankrupt by an
order of the	District Judge of Kistna dated the	18th
January, 1932	in Insolvency Proceeding No. 20 of 1931,
started	at the instance of another creditor of the first
defendant. Defendant No. 5 was a lessee in respect of	the
mortgaged properties under defendant No. 4, while the sixth
defendant was the purchaser of all the mortgaged
897
properties from the Receiver in insolvency. The Receiver,
it seems, had put up all the suit properties to sale subject
to the mortgage on 19th April, 1937, and they were knocked
down to defendant No. 6 for the price of Rs. 1,340. A
registered deed I of sale was executed by the	Receiver in
favour of the purchaser on 20th January, 1939.
The defendants	1 to 3 did neither appear nor	contest	the
suit. Defendant No. 4 appeared in person but disclaimed any
interest in the suit properties. The defendant No. 5
contended that he was a lessee under defendant No. 4 for one
year only and was not a necessary party to the suit at	all.
The suit was	really contested by defendant	No. 6,	the
purchaser at the Receiver’s sale. The defence taken by
defendant No. 6 in his written statement was substantially
of a two-fold character. It was pleaded in the first place
that the bond in suit was a collusive document not supported
by any consideration and was executed by defendant No. 1 in
favour	of his own son-in-law, with a view to	shield	his
properties from the reach of his creditors.	The other
contention put	forward was that the interest	claimed	was
penal and usurious.	After the passing of	the Madras
Agriculturists’	Relief Act in March, 1938, this defendant
filed an additional written statement, with the permission
of the	court,	in which he raised the plea	that as an
agriculturist he was entitled to the reliefs	provided in
that Act and that the mortgage debt should be scaled down in
accordance with the provisions of the same.
The trial Judge by his judgment dated the 29th July, 1940,
decreed	the suit in part. It was held that the mortgage
bond was not	a collusive document	executed with	the
intention of defrauding the creditors of the mortgagor; it
was a	genuine transaction	and	was supported	by
consideration.	On the other point, the court held	that
defendant No.	6 was an agriculturist and was	entitled to
claim the reliefs under Madras Act IV of 1938. After
deducting all outstanding interest which stood discharged
under section 8(1) of the
898
Agriculturists	Relief Act, the principal money due to	the
creditor on that date was found by the trial court to be Rs.
42,870 annas odd. This figure was arrived at by taking only
the original amounts actually advanced on the two promissory
notes mentioned above and further, deducting from them,	the
payments made by the debtor towards the satisfaction of	the
principals in each. Thus a preliminary decree was made in
favour	of the plaintiff entitling him to recover a sum of
Rs. 42,870-4-0	together with interest at 6 1/4 per annum
from 1st October, 1937, to 1st November, 1940, the	date
fixed for payment under the preliminary decree.	In default,
the whole amount was to carry interest at 6% per annum.	It
may be mentioned here that the Subordinate Judge in deciding
issue No. 3 held expressly that the provision	relating to
payment of compound interest at an enhanced rate in default
of payment of the stipulated interest on the due dates	was
in the nature of a penalty and should be relieved against;
but as the court scaled down the interest under Madras	Act
IV of 1938, it became unnecessary to consider in what manner
this relief should be granted under section 74 of the Indian
Contract Act.
Against	this decision, two appeals were taken to the	High
Court of Madras, one by the plaintiff and the other by
defendant No. 6. The plaintiff in his appeal (being Appeal
No. 56 of 1941) assailed that part of the judgment of	the
Subordinate Judge which gave the defendant No. 6 relief
under the Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act; while	the
appeal of the sixth defendant (being Appeal No. 192 of 1941)
attacked the very foundation of the mortgage decree on	the
ground	that the mortgage being a collusive and fraudulent
transaction, the plaintiffs suit should have been dismissed
in toto. The defendants 2 and 3, although they remained ex
parts during the trial in the first court, filed, in forma
pauperig, a memorandum of cross-objection challenging	the
decree of the Subordinate Judge on the ground that as their
interest in the mortgaged properties did not pass to	the
defendant No,	6 by virtue of the Receiver’s	sale, their
right of
899
redemption remained intact and ought to have been declared
by the trial Judge.
Both these appeals as well as the cross-objection were heard
together by a Division Bench of the High Court and they were
disposed of by one and the same judgment dated the 18th of
April, 1945.
The High Court affirmed the finding of the trial Judge	that
the bond in suit was supported by consideration to	the
extent	of Rs. 55,287-8-0 as alleged in the plaint and	that
it was	a valid and bona fide	transaction.	The learned
Judges	held, differing from the trial court, that	the
defendant No. 6 was not entitled to claim any relief under
the provisions of the Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act, and
that in any event the court below was not right in reducing
the amount of the principal money from Rs. 55,287-8-0 to Rs.
42,870,	there	being no renewal of a prior debt so far as
defendant No. 6 was concerned.	The court agreed in holding
that the provision relating to payment of enhanced interest
in case of default amounted to a penalty and	reduced	the
rate of interest from 9% compound to 71 % compound	with
yearly	rests.	Lastly, the High Court allowed	the cross-
objection of defendants 2 and 3, being of opinion that their
interest in the mortgaged properties could not vest in	the
Receiver on the insolvency of their father and that	the
defendant No. 6 could not acquire the same by virtue of	his
purchase from	the Receiver. The defendants Nos. 2 and 3
were, therefore, allowed the right to redeem the mortgaged
properties along with defendant No. 6. The result was	that
the plaintiff was given a decree for a sum of Rs. 55,287-8-0
with interest at 7 1/2 compound with yearly rests up to	the
date of redemption and subsequent interest was	allowed at
the rate of 6% per annum. Interest was to be calculated
from 28th September, 1930, on Rs. 52,287-8-0 and. from	5th
November, 1930, on the amount of Rs. 3,000. Against	this
decree, the defendant No. 6 obtained leave to appeal to	the
Privy	Council	and because of the	abolition of	the
jurisdiction of the Privy Council, the appeal has	come
before us.
900
Mr. Somayya, who appeared in support of the appeal, did	not
press before us the contention raised on behalf Of	his
client	in the	courts	below	that the mortgage was a
fraudulent transaction	or was void for want of consi-
deration. He assailed the propriety of the judgment of	the
High Court substantially on	three points.	His first
contention is, that the decision of the High Court allowing
a right of redemption to defendants 2 and 3 cannot stand in
view of the	amendment introduced by the	Provincial
Insolvency Amendment Act, 1948, which has been expressly
made retrospective. The second point taken by the learned
counsel	is that the defendant No. 6 should have been given
relief	under the Madras Agriculturists’ Relief Act and	the
debt should have been scaled down in accordance with	the
provisions thereof. It is said that the defendant No. 6 was
an agriculturist himself and even if he was not, the relief
under Madras Act IV of 1938 was still available to him by
reason of the original mortgagors being agriculturists.	The
third and the last point urged is that in any event having
regard to the finding arrived at by the High Court that	the
stipulation to pay compound interest at an enhanced rate was
a penalty, adequate relief should have been granted against
it and no compound interest should have been allowed at all.
The first point raised by the learned counsel, in	our
opinion, is well-founded and must succeed. There was	some
difference of judicial opinion as to whether the powers of a
father under the Mitakshara law to alienate the joint family
property including the interest of his sons in the same	for
discharge of an antecedent debt not contracted for illegal
or immoral purposes	vests	in the	Receiver on	the
adjudication of the father as an insolvent.	Under	the
Presidency Towns Insolvency Act, this power was held to vest
in the Official Assignee under section 52(2) of the Act(1).
As regards cases governed by Provincial Insolvency Act, it
was held by a Full Bench of the Madras High Court that	the
father’s power to dispose of his son’s interest in the joint
family property for satisfaction of his untainted
(1) Sat Narain v. Sri Kishen, (1936) 63 I.A. 384.
901
debts was not “property” within the meaning of	section 28
(2) (d) of the Provincial Insolvency	Act(1)	; while a
contrary view was taken by a Full Bench of the	Patna	High
Court (2) . The conflict has now been set at rest by	the
enactment of section	28A in	the Provincial Insolvency
Amendment Act	of 1948 which came into force on the	12th
April, 1948. The new Section reads as follows :-
” The	property of the insolvent shall comprise and shall
always	be deemed to have comprised also the	capacity to
exercise and to take proceedings for exercising all	such
powers	in or over or in respect of property as	might	have
been exercised by the insolvent for his own benefit at	the
commencement of his insolvency or before his discharge.”
The language of the section indicates that its operation has
been expressly made retrospective. The result, therefore,
is that the power of the defendant No. 1 to alienate	the
interest of his sons, the defendants 2 and	3, in	the
mortgaged properties for satisfaction	of his antecedent
debts,	did pass to the Receiver as “Property”	within	the
meaning of the Provincial Insolvency Act and consequently OD
a sale by the Receiver the interest of defendants 2 and 3
did vest in the sixth defendant, and he alone must be	held
competent to exercise the right of redemption.
The second point urged by Mr. Soinayya raises the question
as to	whether the appellant could claim relief under	the
Madras	Agriculturists’ Relief Act. The High Court decided
this point against the appellant firstly on the ground	that
the appellant	was not a debtor at	the date of	the
commencement of the Act, he having acquired no interest in
the equity of redemption at that time. The other reason
given is that the defendant No. 6 was not an agriculturist
within	the meaning of the Agriculturists’ Relief Act	and
although he was possessed of agricultural lands and hence
prima facie came within the definition of an ” agriculturist
” as given in section 2 (ii) of
(1) Ramasastralu v. Balakrishna Rao I.L.R. [1943] Mad. 83.
(2) Viswanath	v. Official Receiver, I.L.R. (1936) 16	Pat,
60 (F.B.).
902
the Act, he was excluded from the	definition by	the
operation of proviso (D) attached to the sub-section.
So far as the first ground is concerned, section 7 of	the
Agriculturists’	Relief Act expressly lays down that ”	all
debts payable	by an agriculturist at the commencement of
this Act, shall be scaled down in accordance with	the
provisions of this chapter”. The essential pre-requisite to
the application of the provisions of the chapter, therefore
is the existence of a debt payable by an agriculturist on
the date when the Act commenced, that is to say, on the 22nd
March,	1938.	The learned Judges of the High	Court	were
certainly right in saying that the sixth defendant was not a
debtor	on that date, as he did not become the owner of	the
equity of redemptin till the 20th of January, 1939, when the
deed of sale was executed in his favour by the Receiver in
insolvency. But this	by itself is	not sufficient to
disentitle the appellant to the privileges of	the
Agriculturists’	Relief Act. It is not necessary that	the
applicant for relief himself should be liable for the	debt
on the	date that the Act came into-force. The right to
claim relief as is well settled by decisions(1) of	the
Madras	High Court is	not confined	to the	person	who
originally contracted	the debt, but is available to	his
legal representatives	and assigns as well;	nor is it
necessary that the applicant should be personally liable for
the debt. The liability of a purchaser of the equity of
redemption to pay the mortgage debt undoubtedly arises on
the date of his purchase; but the debt itself which has	its
origin	in the	mortgage bond did exist from	before	his
purchase, and if it was payable by an agriculturist at	the
relevant date,	the purchaser could certainly claim	the
privileges of the Act if he himself was an agriculturist at
the date of his application. The	material question,
therefore, is whether the mortgage debt was payable by an
agriculturist on 22nd March, 1938 ? The appellant argues
that it was payable	by the	mortgagors and they	were
certainly agriculturists. We do not think that there is
warrant for any such assumption on
(1) Vide Periannia v. Sellappa, I.L.R. [1939] Mad. 218.
903
the materials as they exist on the record. The only issue
before	the trial Judge was, as to whether defendant No. 6
was an agriculturist. There was neither any question raised
nor any evidence adduced as to whether defendants Nos.	I to
3 were agriculturists as well.	In fact, this aspect of	the
case was not adverted to by the trial Judge at all. Before
the High Court it was argued on behalf of defendant No. 6
that even if he was not an agriculturist himself, yet if the
defendants 2 and 3 were given relief as agriculturists, that
would enure for his benefit as well	and accordingly he
invited the court to go into the question and hold that	the
original mortgagors were agriculturists. This the learned
Judges refused to do and dismissed this part of the claim of
defendant No. 6 with these remarks:
“In the present case, the mortgagors have not claimed such a
benefit, nor have they adduced any evidence to show	that
they are agriculturists. We therefore cannot accede to	the
request	of the sixth	defendant that	the right of	the
mortgagors to relief should be investigated merely with	the
object	of giving an	accidental relief to	the	non-
agriculturist purchaser.”
As the point was not investigated at all, it is not possible
for us to hold that the debt was payable by an agriculturist
on the	relevant date. It may be	that the mortgaged
properties were agricultural	lands but it is not known
whether the mortgagors did possess other estates which might
bring them within the purview of any of the provisos
attached to the definition. In these	circumstances,	the
appellant must be deemed to have failed to show that there
was in existence a debt payable by an agriculturist on	22nd
March, 1938.
The High Court has held further that the defendant No. 6 was
not an agriculturist because he was the purchaser of certain
villages at a	court sale in respect	of which Peishkush
exceeding Rs. 500 was payable.	Consequently, he became ”
land-holder of an estate ” under the Madras Estates Land Act
and could not claim to be an agriculturist as laid down in
the proviso (D) to section 2 (ii) of the Act. Mr. Somayya
904
lays stress upon the fact that this purchase on the part of
his client was merely as a benamidar for defendant No. 5 as
has been held by both the courts below and consequently	the
proviso	did not affect him at all. This is	a debatable
point upon which the judicial opinion of the	Madras	High
Court itself does not seem	to be	quite uniform.	A
distinction can certainly be drawn between the rights of a
person in his own individual or personal capacity and those
which he exercises on behalf of another. On the other hand,
if we look to the definition of ” land-holder ” as given in
section	3 (5) of the Madras Estates Land Act,	it may be
argued	that a benamidar of an estate, who is	entitled to
collect	rents	and is at least the titular owner of	the
estate could come within the description. Having regard to
the view taken by us that section 7 of the Agriculturists’
Relief	Act is not applicable on the facts of	the present
case, this question does not really become material and it
is not necessary for us to express any final opinion	upon
it. For the	identical reason section 8 (1)	of the	Act
cannot	also be invoked in favour of the appellant. It	may
further	be mentioned	that Mr. Somayya in course of	his
arguments made it plain that he would not press for relief
under the Agriculturists’ Relief Act if the high rate of in-
terest allowed by the High Court was substantially reduced.
This takes us	to the third point and we think that	the
stipulation as to payment of compound interest in case of
default, being	held to be a penalty by both	the courts
below,	the High Court should not have allowed	interest at
the rate of 71 % compound with yearly rests, The High Court
seems to have been misled by a statement occurring in	the
judgment of the trial Judge that the original rate of
interest was 7 1/2% compound with yearly rests.	This is not
true and as a matter of fact, the original agreement was to
pay interest at 7 1/2 % simple.	We consider it proper	that
the mortgage money payable to the plaintiff should carry
interest at the rate of 7 1/2% simple up to the expiry of
the period of redemption which we fix at six	months	from
this date,
905
The result, therefore, is that we allow the appeal in	part
and modify the judgment of the High Court. A	preliminary
decree should be drawn up in favour of the plaintiff against
defendant No.	6 alone for a sum of Rs. 55,287 annas	odd
which will carry interest at 7 1/2 %	simple	per annum..
Interest will be calculated on Rs. 52,287 on and from	the
date of the mortgage, while on the balance of Rs. 3,000
interest will run from 5th November, 1930. We make no order
as to	costs of this court or of the High	Court.	The
plaintiff will have his costs of the trial court.
Appeal allowed in part.
Agent for the appellant: M. S. K. Aiyangar.
Agent for respondent No. 1 : Ganpat Rai.