{"id":12403,"date":"1965-07-27T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1965-07-26T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/hazari-and-ors-vs-neki-and-ors-on-27-july-1965"},"modified":"2015-04-28T22:13:30","modified_gmt":"2015-04-28T16:43:30","slug":"hazari-and-ors-vs-neki-and-ors-on-27-july-1965","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/hazari-and-ors-vs-neki-and-ors-on-27-july-1965","title":{"rendered":"Hazari And Ors. vs Neki And Ors. on 27 July, 1965"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"docsource_main\">Punjab-Haryana High Court<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_title\">Hazari And Ors. vs Neki And Ors. on 27 July, 1965<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_citations\">Equivalent citations: AIR 1966 P H 348<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_author\">Author: M Singh<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_bench\">Bench: M Singh, R Khosla<\/div>\n<\/p>\n<pre><\/pre>\n<p>JUDGMENT<\/p>\n<p>Mehar Singh, J.<\/p>\n<p>1. Three sales of land were effected by Dhara Singh in favour of Hazari. Amar Singh and Bhan Singh, appellants-vendees. The first sale was on September 20, 1960, of 27 Kanals and 4 Marias, the second was on November 23, 1960, of 36 Kanals and 19 Marias, and the third was on March 6, 1961, of 33 Kanals and 18 Marias. Neki, deceased-plaintiff was Dhara Singh&#8217;s father&#8217;s brother. On the basis of such relationship he pre-empted the three sales under Section 15 (b), thirdly, of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913 (Punjab Act 1 of 1913) and in all the three suits he succeeded in the trial Court. The appellants-vendees failed in the first appellate Court.\n<\/p>\n<p>2. There were three second appeals in the three suits by the appellants-vendees in this Court. While those appeals were pending Neki, deceased-plaintiff, died on April, 7, 1963. After his death the appellants-vendees in each one of their three second appeals moved an application under Order 22, Rules 3 and 4 of the Code of Civil Procedure to bring on the records of the appeals the legal representatives of Neki, deceased&#8211;plaintiff Three legal representatives have been named. The first is Dhara Singh vendor, and the other two are the sons of this vendor. One of his sons named Ram Kishan had himself instituted pre-emption suits to preempt the sales and after having obtained decrees on compromise  in  those  suits, he  not having complied with the terms of the decrees, it was Neki, deceased-plaintiff, who succeeded  in his claims.    The reason for bringing Dhara Singh vendor on the records as legal representative of Neki, deceased-plaintiff, is that he is the nearest collateral   relation   entitled   to   succeed   to   the estate of the deceased-plaintiff.    In the case of one son of this vendor named Balbir Singh, in the application it is   stated   that there is a will made   by   the   deceased-plaintiff  in  his   favour. The  second  son  of  the   vendor  has  also  been impleaded  along  with his  brother and  father. So at least    Dhara    Singh    vendor    has   been impleaded because he is an heir to the estate &#8216; of Neki, deceased-plaintiff, being at No. VII in Class  II  in  the  schedule     under  Section  8  of  the Hindu Succession  Act, 1956  (Act 30 of 1956), and his son Balbir Singh has been impleaded because of his possible and likely claim under a  will  in  his  favour by  the  deceased-plaintiff. The decrees of the trial Court are of November 7,  1962. and  those of the Court of first appeal of January, 30.  1963.    In between, and while the  appeals  were  pending  in the   first appellate Court, on     December 5,   1962,  Neki  deceased-plaintiff,    transferred  the    lands, the    subject-matter  of   the  suits,   to     respondents  in  those appeals other  than  Neki. deceased-plaintiff, as represented by Dhara Singh vendor and the two sons of the last named, Ram Kishan and Balbir Singh     Those   respondents,   who   may   for  the sake   of   convenience   be     described   as   second vendees, have become parties only at the stage of the second appeals. A pre-emption decree is in the nature of things a conditional decree and it has been stated at the bar that excepting the decree concerning the sale of 33 Kanals and 18 Marias on March 6. 1961, the terms of the other two  decrees  were  complied   with  by  the  pre-emptor.     Neki     deceased-plaintiff.       In   other words, the deceased-plaintiff made payment of the  amounts  under  those  two  decrees  in   the terms of the decrees     Although the exact date is not known  but it has been said that the payments   were   made   within   the   time   given   in the decrees     In regard to the third sale of 33 Kanals and   18  Marias  which  was effected on March 6, 1961, it has been stated that there is a dispute pending between  the parties in   the executing Court  whether or not the deceased-plaintiff deposited the amount under the decree in the terms of the decree and within the time prescribed in it.    This  however, is not going to make any difference to the decision of the question, the matter of contention, in these appeals. The reason is this, if the deceased plaintiff did not comply  with the terms of the decree and make the deposit within the time stated in the decree, his particular suit must stand dismissed in the very terms of the decree.    In that case no further question can possibly arise in any appeal in this Court in so far as the appellants-vendees are concerned.    If on the other hand, the deceased-plaintiff complied with the terms of the decree and made the deposit within the time stated therein, the position is exactly the same in the case of the oilier two sales in the other two appeals.\n<\/p>\n<p>3. In the second appeals two arguments were  urged   before  the     learned  Single  Judge, which were negatived, but only one such argument   survives  at   this     stage  in   these  appeals under Clause  10 of the Letters Palenl.    The argument  is  that   the  right  of  pro -emption claimed by Neki, deceased-plaintiff, was a personal right which died with him on his death, and that the position is no different that Neki. deceased-plaintiff   died  during   the     pendency  of  the  second appeals, after  the decrees of the trial Court had been affirmed In  the Court of first appeal, than would have been the case if he had died during the pendency or the suits in the trial Court, in which case  the  trial  Court  would  have  had  no option but to proceed to dismiss each one of his three  suits       The   reason  given   in  support   of this is that it is now well settled that an appeal is a  continuation of  the suit  and  the  proceedings in  the original Court and  in consequence of the    pendency     of an    appeal  the    subject-matter of the litigation is sub judice   The learned  counsel  for   the appellants-vendees does  not accept   that   the   obtaining     of  decrees   by   the deceased plaintiff   makes   any   difference. He has pressed  that  in spite of his having obtained   decrees   from   the   trial  Court   when   second appeals were pending against  those decrees, the original  suit  of   proceedings  were  in  continuation and even it this Court proceeded to dismiss the second appeals it  would  be passing decrees at   that   stage     The  learned  counsel  has  urged that a decree for pre-emption cannot possibly     be    made     by     this    Court     in     second      appeal    when    by    the    lime    such    a decree    is     made    the    pre-emptor     has    lost his   personal   right   of   pre-emption,   as   in   this case by the death of Neki  deceased-plaintiff&#8217;, he ceased to he the vendor&#8217;s father&#8217;s brother   This argument  has not  found favour with the learned Single Judge who has by  his  judgment  and decrees  of   September    17,   1964.   dismissed   the three second appeals of the appellants vendees, however leaving the parties to their own costs. There is no other  argument  that has been urged    on    the    side    of    the    appellants vendees in   these   appeals  excepting  this  one  argument. It has no relation to the merits of the defence of the appellants vendees    to the  claims of  Neki, deceased-plaintiff,     to      pre-empt      the     three sales     What is being urged is that the appeals being continuation of the suits of the deceased-plaintiff   on his death  the right of  pre-emption having come to an end the suits must be dismissed and this Court cannot affirm in second appeal  the  decrees of  the     Court  of  the  first appeal, for to do so would be passing decrees in favour   of  persons  who  have  no  right of  preemption as Dhara  Singh  vendor and  his sons. The only other   matter   which the learned counsel for the appellants vendees has argued is that it is somewhat anomalous that a decree for preemption of the sales of Dhara Singh vendor he made in his favour    and he says that  that cannot possibly be done.\n<\/p>\n<p>4. In   regard  to  this    last  contention of the learned counsel for  the appellants-vendees, it is apparent that this is not the correct status and capacity of Dhara Singh vendor in these appeals. Neither he nor any of his sons is a party to these appeals in the capacity and status of a pre-emptor. They are parties to these appeals as legal representatives of Neki, deceased-plaintiff, representing the latter&#8217;s estate. So they are parties to these appeals in an entirely different capacity and in the event of the affirmance of the decrees obtained by Neki, deceased-plaintiff, it is not correct that those decrees will be in favour of Dhara Singh vendor and his sons as pre-emptors, or any one of them as a pre-emptor The decrees will be in favour of them as representing the estate of Neki, deceased-plaintiff So nothing turns upon this aspect of the argument on the side of the appellants-vendees.\n<\/p>\n<p>5. The learned counsel on behalf of the appellants-vendees urges that the right of preemption is a personal right and dies with the pre -emptor. It is not a heritable right. It can not he transferred. In this connection the learned counsel refers to Sheo Narain v. Hira, (1885) ILR 7 All 535 (FB), Wajid Ali v. Shaban, (1909) ILR HI All (523 (FB); Tafazzul Hussain v. Than Singh. (1910) ILR 32 All 567, and Ramsarup Das v. Rameshwar Das, AIR 1950 Pal 184 This last mentioned case concerned a personal claim to an office and obviously with the death of the claimant the claim also died. So on facts this case does, not bear on the question in the present appeals. In Tafazzul Husain&#8217;s case. (1910) ILR 32 All 567, the claim of pre-emption on the basis of co-sharership in the properly failed because during the pendency of the suit, by reason of partition between the co-sharers, the plaintiff ceased to have that qualification. This was during the pendency of the suit and before the decree in the trial Court. Obviously the plaintiff could not succeed. In Wajid Ali&#8217;s case (1909) ILR 31 All 623 (FB), Banerji J. in his dissenting opinion observed that a right of pre-emption is not exercisable on the death of a person who could have made &#8221; claim for pre emption, but this view was not shared by the other two learned Judges who were of the opinion that where a right of preemption exists by custom, the right having once accrued does not of necessity lapse by the death of the pre-emptor before making a claim, but it descends along with the property in virtue of which it subsists to the heir of the pre-emptor. So this case does not help the argument on the side of the appellants-vendees. In Sheo Narain&#8217;s case. (1885) ILR 7 All 535 (FB) of the five learned Judges only Mahmood J. expressed this view<br \/>\n &#8220;Under that (Mohammedan) law, when the ownership of the pre-emptive tenement is transferred or devolves by act of parties, or by operation of law the transfer or devolution passes pre-emption to the person in whose favour the transfer or devolution takes place; but the rule is essentially subject to the proviso that such person cannot enforce pre-emption in respect of any sale which took place before such transfer or devolution. &#8221;\n<\/p>\n<p>In so far as the observation of the learned Judge on the question of devolution by inheritance is concerned, it is obviously obiter because that was a case of an ordinary transfer in favour of a third person. So that even this case does not support the learned counsel. In Fateh Khan v. Muhammad, 98 P. R. 1898, Muhammad Yusuf Alikhan v. Dalkuar, (1898) ILR 20 All 148, Kaunsilla Kunwar v. Gopal Prasad, (1906) ILR 28 All 424, and Faqir AH Shah v. Ram Kishen, 133 Pun Re 1907 (KB) next heir was permitted to pursue a right of pre-emption and pre-empt a sale of immovable property In Silaram Bhaurao v. Sirajul Khan, ILR 41 Bom 636. (AIR 1917 Bom 276), an administrator was permit led to proceed with such a suit. In all these cases, however, the question arose either before the institution of the suit or during the pendency of the suit, but before the decree of the trial Court. So none of these cases is really of assistance in the present appeals. In the same line is Mirza Sadiq Hussain v. Mohammad Karim, AIR 1922 Oudh 289, in which a gift to continue a suit for pro emption pending at the lime of the making of the gift to the heir of the donor was upheld. The learned counsel for the opposite side has first referred to Dhani Nath v. Budhu, 136 Pun Re 1894, so as to show the nature of the right of pre-emption. In that case Plowden Section J. held that a right of pre-emption is not a right to or in immovable property and proceeded to observe :\n<\/p>\n<p> &#8220;A preferential right to acquire land, belonging to another person upon the occasion of a transfer by the latter, does not appear to me to be either a right to or a right in that land. It is jus ad rem alienam acquirendam and not jus in re aliena. The right, title and interest of the owner of land, which is subject to right of pre-emption is not qualified or affected by the circumstance that it is so subject. The right title, and interest which passes upon a transfer is precisely the same whether the transfer lie-to a pre-emptor, or non-pre-emptor, the only difference being that in the latter case the transfer is voidable at the inslance of any pre-emptor. What ,is really affected by the existence of the right of pre-emption is not the right, title or interest of the owner, which is precisely the same whether the land owned by him or is not land subject to a claim of pre-emption or transfer, but the exercise of the owner&#8217;s power of transfer. The owner of land so subject is restricted by the claim of the pre-emptor, lie is not at full liberty to transfer to whomsoever he pleases, as he would be if the land was not subject to a right of preemption, until he has given the pre-emptor the opportunity prescribed by law to exercise his preferential right of acquisition. If we regard the pre-emptor&#8217;s right between him and the owner. I think it becomes still more apparent that it is not a right to the land sold. A right to the offer of a thing about to be sold is not identical with a right to the thing itself, and that is the primary right of the pre-emptor. The secondary right is to follow the thing sold, when sold without a proper offer to the pre-emptor, and to acquire it if he thinks fit in spite of the sale made in disregard of his pre-ferential right. But even a decree in a suit brought for the purpose of enforcing this secondary right does not give the pre-emptor a right to the thing sold. He does not acquire that right until he has paid the price fixed in the decree within the prescribed period, and this he need not do unless he chooses. If he does so, the right, title and interest of the vendor which had meantime vested in the vendee is divested and vests in the pre-emptor and then, and not till then. he has a right to the land itself. In default of such payment his right of pre-emption over the land sold is not extinguished, but he loses his preferential right in respect to the particular transaction. &#8221;\n<\/p>\n<p>The second case referred to in this respect by the learned counsel is <a href=\"\/doc\/1492591\/\">Audh Behari Singh v. Gajadhar Jaipuria. AIR<\/a> 1954 SC 417 In this case, after review of the case law on the nature of the right of pre-emption, their Lordships observe :\n<\/p>\n<p>In our opinion it would not be correct to say that the right of pre-emption under Muhammadan law is a personal right on the part of the pre-emptor to gel a re transfer of the property from the vendee who has already become owner of the same * * *  X X X X X X X X X X  X X X X X X X X X X<\/p>\n<p>It is true that the right becomes enforceable only when there is a sale bill the right exists antecendently to the sale, the foundation of the right being the avoidance of the inconveniences and disturbances which would arise from the introduction of a stranger into the land. We agree with Mr. Justice Mahmood that the sale is a condition precedent not to the existence of the right but to its enforcibility.  X X X X X X X X X X  X X X X X X X X X X<\/p>\n<p>The correct legal position seems to be that the law of pre-emption imposes a limitation or disability upon the ownership of a property to the extent that it restricts the owner&#8217;s unfettered right of sale and compels him to sell the property to his co-sharer or neighbour as the case may be The person who is a co-sharer in the laud or owns lands in the vicinity consequently gels an advantage or benefit corresponding to the burden with which the owner of the properly is saddled, even though it does not amount to an actual interest in the properly sold. The crux of the whole thing is that the benefit as well as the burden of the right of pre emption run with the land and can be enforced by or against the owner of the land for the lime being although the right of the pre-emptor does not amount to an interest in the land itself. II may be staled here that if the right of pre-emption had been only a personal right enforce able against the vendee and there was no infirmity in the title -of the owner restricting his right of sale in certain manner a bona fide purchaser without notice would certainly obtain an absolute title to the properly, unhampered by any right of the pre-emptor and in such circumstances there could be no justification for enforcing the right of pre-emption against the purchaser on grounds of justice, equity and good conscience on which grounds alone the right could be enforced at the present day. In our opinion the law of pre-emption creates a right which attaches to the property and on that footing only it can be enforced against the purchaser. The question now arises as to what is the legal position when the right is claimed not under Muhammadan law but on the footing of a custom. It cannot be and is not disputed that if the right of pre-emption is set up by non-Muslims on the basis of a custom, the existence of the custom is a matter to be established by proper evidence  X X X X X X X  X X X X<\/p>\n<p>The right of pre-emption, as we have already tated, is an incident of property and attaches o the land itself  X X X X X X X  X X X X<\/p>\n<p>The correct legal position must be that when a right of pre-emption rests upon custom it becomes the &#8216; lex loci&#8217; or the law of the place and affects all lauds situated in that place irrespective of the religion or nationality or domicile of the owners of the lands except where such incidents are proved to be a part of the custom itself<\/p>\n<p>So that a right of pre-emption is not a personal right, and it attaches to land and runs with the land though it is not a right to or in land. The contention of the learned counsel for the appellants-vendees  that a right of pre-emption is thus a purely personal right and dies with the death of the pre-emptor is not supported by authority The cases so far considered concern a right of pro emption on the basis of title to property which supports such right on the ground of either co-sharership or vicinage. In all those cases the right of pre-emption was claimed on the basis of the co-sharer&#8217;s title in the joint land or the contiguity of the pre-emptor&#8217;s property to the land sold In some of the cases cited the learned Judges have held that in the case of such a right an heir cannot only continue a pending suit on the death of the pre-emptor but can also institute a suit, of course within limitation, even if the pre-emptor dies before the institution of the suit In my opinion all those cases are really not relevant so far as the consideration of the one main argument in these appeals is concerned There is only one case which is somewhat near to the facts of the present appeals The case is Partap Singh v. Daulat ILR 36 All 63 (AIR 1914 All 57 (1)). In that case the pre-emptor, instituted a suit to pre-empt a sale by reason of his nearness of relationship to the vendor, but during the pendency of the suit he died His sons were brought on the record as plain tiffs They themselves were not nearer relations to the vendor than was the vendee, but they claimed the advantage of the relationship possessed by their father The learned Judges held that they could not have maintained the suit as against the vendees had they instituted the suit themselves and they could not take advantage of the fact that their father at the time of the suit had a preferential right as against the vendees on the ground that he was a nearer relation. This case again does not advance the argument on the side of the appellants-vendees for the simple reason that the original pre-emptor died during the pendency of the suit, which is not the case in these appeals. Consequently none of the cases so far considered really bears upon the facts of the present appeals<\/p>\n<p>6. The deceased-plaintiff, Neki, complied with the decrees of the trial Court and made payment within the time given in those decrees; and Rule 14 (b) of Order 20 of the C. P. C. in express terms provides that on such payment, title to the lands in the pre-emption suits is deemed to have accrued to him from the date of such payment. This question was considered by a Full Bench of this Court in Ganga Ram v. Shiv Lal, 1964-66 Pun LR 251 : (AIR 1964 Pun j 260) (FB), &amp; it has been held in that case that the title to pre-empted property passes to the pre-emptor under a pre-emption decree on the deposit of the purchase money in the terms of the decree and is deemed to pass to him from the date of the deposit. Similar view has prevailed with a Full Bench of the Lahore High Court in Mohammad Saddiq v. Ghasi Ram AIR 1946 Lah 322, and in 136 Pun Re 1894. So before his death during the pendency of the second appeals by the appellants-vendees, Neki, deceased plaintiff, became owner of the lands in the pre-emption suits. When he died at that stage, he was not enforcing or exercising a right of pre-emption, but had already successfully done so Having complied with the terms of the decrees he gained title to the lands. At that stage the appellants-vendees could only defeat him on merits of their defence, and merely because he died during the pendency of those appeals, his estate is not divested of the title thus acquired by him. His heirs represent his estate and are not pre-emptors at this stage as has already been explained The learned counsel for the appellants-vendees reiterates that an appeal is a continuation of the suit or the proceedings, in the original Court and, in appeal, even though affirming the decrees of the Courts below, this Court is still passing decrees which it cannot do if the pre emptor has, at this stage lost his right of pre-emption. He relies upon Ram Lal v. Raja Ram, (1960-62) Punj LR 291 and <a href=\"\/doc\/823328\/\">Ram Sarup v. Munshi, AIR<\/a> 1963 SC 553 those are, however, cases under Section 31 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913 (Punjab Ad 1 of 1913) as amended by the Punjab Pre-emption (Amendment) Act, 1960 (Punjab Act 10 of 1960), which section expressly prohibits any court from passing a decree in a suit for pre-emption whether instituted before or after the commencement of Punjab Act 10 of 1960, which is inconsistent with the provisions of that Act Some of the grounds of pre-emption have been taken away by that Act. It was to give benefit of the taking away of such rights that this Section was enacted It was held in those two cases that even at the stage of an appeal pending in the High Court, although the ore emptor had succeeded in the trial Court in obtaining the decrees and, as during the pendency of the appeal, the statute too away his right of pre-emption, even though the High Court was affirming the decree, it was still passing a decree within the scope of Section 31 in favour of a person who had by the subsequent amendment of Punjab Act 1 of 1913 lost his right of pre-emption, and thus was passing a decree inconsistent with the provisions of Punjab Act 10 of 1960. The deceased-plaintiff never lost his right of pre-emption under that Act. So Section 31 has no application to the facts of the present case By his death the deceased-plaintiff has not lost his right of preemption which, before his death, he had successfully exercised and in consequence of the decrees gained title to the-lands in dispute.    On facts those two cases do not apply so far &#8216; as these appeals  are  concerned.    There  is  an  observation by the learned Chief- Justice in Ram Lal&#8217;s case   1960-62   Pun   LR   291   that in   Mohinder Singh  v.   Arun  Singh,  ILR  3   Lah  267 ;   (AIR 1922   Lah  344),  the  learned  Judges  held that where   a  right  of  pre-emption  is  taken away for a   Government  notification   during tine pendency of the appeal, the case must be decided on the basis of  the law which existed at   the time   of   the   sale.    The   learned   Chief  Justice differed   from   this   decision , of  the , Division Bench of the Lahore, High Court, but on check-sing  the  report  of  Mohinder  Singh&#8217;s ; case  ILR 3  Lah 267:   (AIR  1922  Lah 344), I find that the notification taking away the right of pre-emption had been issued by the Government not during  the  pendency  of  the  appeal,  after the pre-emptor had  successfully obtained  a decree in the trial Court, but during the pendency of the suit in the trial  Court.    At p. 269  of the report (ILR Lah): (at p. 344 of AIR) the learned Judges have expressly stated that &#8221; the suits were pending in  the  trial Court at the date of this (notification.   . . . .&#8217; The learned counsel for the appellants-vendees has relied upon this observation of the learned    Chief Justice, but on the report of the case being    seen by him he has given  up   this   approach.    So  those   two  cases do not bear on the facts Of the present appeals and do not help the argument on the side of the   appellants-vendees.  The   deceased-plaintiff by his death did not lose title to the lands which before his death became part of his estate and that estate is now being represented by Dhara Singh vendor, his heir, and the two sons of that vendor.    No doubt these appeals are continuation   of  the   suits   originally   instituted   by  the deceased plaintiff, but, if the appellants-vendees do not otherwise succeed on the merits of their defence they cannot succeed merely because of the decease of Neki, deceased-plaintiff. The title thus acquired by the deceased-plaintiff to   the lands was subject to the result of the appeals of the appellants-vendees, but that was on the merits of their defence and not that the death of   the  deceased-plaintiff  divested   him   of  the title  already vested in him.    At that stage he was no longer a pre-emptor    endeavouring to exercise   his   right   of   pre-emption.    He had become  the  owner  of  the  lands,  and  at  that i stage what he was doing was defending that title in the appeals.    There is one case which directly supports this  approach.    It is  Megha Ram  v. Makhan Lal, 67 Pun Re 912, in which, on a similar argument having been urged, a Division Bench of the Punjab Chief Court observed thus ;\n<\/p>\n<p> &#8221; It is to the effect that plaintiff based his suit on his possession of one-fourth share of a house adjoining the house in dispute, that the plaintiff on the 12th October 1911 transferred that share to his mother by deed of gift, and that therefore, the plaintiff has lost his locus standi to sue for pre-emption or to resist this appeal, and that his suit should be dismissed on this ground. In our opinion this contention cannot succeed, because plaintiff&#8217;s decree awarded to him by the Divisional Judge bears date 2nd March 1910 while his parting with the aforesaid one-fourth share of the adjoining house took place long, afterwards. No doubt, according to the authorities, a pre-emptor can only succeed if he, has a right of, pre-emption at the date of; the sale and at the dale of the institution of suit and up to the passing of a decree in his favour (Dhanna Singh v. Gurbakhsh Singh 91 Pun Re 1909 (FB)); but in the present case plaintiff had his rights intact through the whole of these periods. No doubt in a sense the case is still sub judice, until the final appeal in this Court has been decided; but it is not sub judice in the sense in which the defendants use the phrase, nor do we think it is open to the alienee, against whom a decree for pre-emption has been passed, to ask this Court to set aside the decree of the lower appellate court on the ground that, after the plaintiff had secured the decree, he had parted with the property on the strength of which he was able to sue for preemption. Plaintiff is not asking this Court for anything : defendant No. 1 cannot ask this Court to take away from plaintiff what the latter has obtained, on the ground that the latter could not get it now if he was still asking for it. &#8221;\n<\/p>\n<p>It is evident that this only argument on the side of the appellants-vendees is without substance.\n<\/p>\n<p>7 .The only other matter to which a brief reference may be made is that before his death the deceased-plaintiff transferred his right to the respondents other than Dhara Singh vendor and his two sons, and in this connection the learned counsel for the appellants-vendees refers to Mehr Khan v. Ghulam Rasul, ILR 2 Lah 282 : (AIR 1922 Lah 300), to contend that a decree for pre-emption is not transferable and the transferee cannot execute it. Somewhat different opinion was expressed by the learned Judges in Jowala Sahai v. Ram Rakha, 78 Pun Re 1896. But it is not necessary to go into this matter in these appeals for the estate of the deceased-plaintiff is being represented by Dhara Singh and his sons as his legal representatives and that is in law sufficient representation of him. The second vendees can have recourse to any proceedings, in regard to which they are advised, to enforce, the transfer in their favour. The question of a decision, in so far as the transfer in their favour is concerned, does not arise    in    these appeals.\n<\/p>\n<pre>8.   In consequence the    three appeals of the appellants-vendees are dismissed with costs.\n \n\nR.P. Khosla, J.\n \n\n9. I agree.\n \n\n<\/pre>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Punjab-Haryana High Court Hazari And Ors. vs Neki And Ors. on 27 July, 1965 Equivalent citations: AIR 1966 P H 348 Author: M Singh Bench: M Singh, R Khosla JUDGMENT Mehar Singh, J. 1. Three sales of land were effected by Dhara Singh in favour of Hazari. Amar Singh and Bhan Singh, appellants-vendees. The first [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[8,28],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-12403","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-high-court","category-punjab-haryana-high-court"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Hazari And Ors. vs Neki And Ors. on 27 July, 1965 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; High Court | Legal India<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/hazari-and-ors-vs-neki-and-ors-on-27-july-1965\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Hazari And Ors. vs Neki And Ors. on 27 July, 1965 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; 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