C.s. Ramier v. B.n. Srinivasiah

C.s. Ramier v. B.n. Srinivasiah

(High Court Of Judicature At Madras)

Civil Revision Petition No. 1574 Of 1938 | 18-09-1940

Wadsworth, J.

This petition raises questions under S. 19 of Madras Act IV of 1938. The decree in question was passed on a mortgage executed in 1916 by the deceased father-in-law of the 1st defendant, who has not been proved to be an agriculturist. The applicant (petitioner here) was the second defendant in the suit, he having taken an usufructuary mortgage over the same properties on 22nd May, 1920, undertaking to discharge the prior mortgage. Third defendant (the District Board) has acquired the equity of redemption of certain items and is quite clearly not an agriculturist. On 15th January 1936, the applicant consented to the passing of a preliminary decree on the prior mortgage and on 6th March, 1937 a final decree was passed. The puisne mortgage right of the applicant has been sub-mortgaged to one Appoji Naidu, who has deposited Rs. 2,700 to the credit of the decree and it was contended in the lower Court by the plaintiff that this deposit satisfied the decree and that there was no longer any decree to be scaled down. This contention was repelled by the lower Court and it has not been contended before us that this view was wrong. The lower Court held, however, that the applicant was not entitled to the benefits of the Act because the scaling down of the decree in his favour would result in a benefit to other defendants who are not agriculturists.

We have already held in C.R.P. 653 of 1939 that the representative of a puisne mortgagee who was a judgment-debtor was entitled to be regarded as a debtor under S. 7 and to scale down the decree under S. 19 of the Act and we dissented from the decision of Newsam J. in Narayanachari v. Annamalai Chettiar (1939) 2 M.L.J. 225 = 50 L.W. 150). But that was a case in which there was not the complication of the owner of the equity of redemption being a non-agriculturist, so that the decree could be scaled down as a whole. It is argued by Mr. Ramaswami Ayyangar for the decree-holder that the right of an agriculturist judgment-debtor to scale down a decree should not be allowed to enure for the benefit of a non-agriculturist judgment-debtor, a proposition with which we are in agreement. But we find it difficult to accede to the further contention that, the mortgage being one and indivisible, it is wrong in theory and difficult in practice to scale down the decree against the agriculturist judgment-debtor, while leaving it unamended as against the non-agriculturist judgment-debtors. The theoretical argument is based on the absence from S. 19 of any words excluding the application of the general law governing mortgages. But S. 19 is only the machinery section. The substantive provisions are contained in S. 7 which says

notwithstanding any law, or decree of Court to the contrary, all debts payable by an agriculturist at the commencement of this Act, shall be scaled down

Having regard to our previous decisions, we must hold that the applicant is a judgment-debtor and that the decree debt is payable by him. It follows that this debt is to be scaled down, notwithstanding the decree and notwithstanding the provisions of the general law which prevent the person who acquires a partial interest in the hypotheca from denying the liability of his interest to satisfy the whole of the mortgage debt. We are unable to accept the contention that a debt which is payable by an agriculturist falls outside the purview of the Act merely because it is also payable by a non-agriculturist and it seems to us obvious that the mere fact that the applicant has sub-mortgaged his interest to a non-agriculturist will not deprive the applicant of any benefits to which he may be entitled under the Act as a person liable to satisfy the decree. The practical difficulties on which Mr. Ramaswami Ayyangar has laid emphasis, seem to us to be more apparent than real. It will, of course, be necessary to modify the form of decree, reciting separately the amount payable by the puisne mortgagee and declaring that on payment of this amount by him, the interest of the puisne mortgagee will not be liable to be sold or foreclosed and the hypotheca will be sold only subject to that interest; and that on failure of the puisne mortgagee to pay the amount declared to be due from him within the time allowed, the whole of the mortgaged property including the interest of the puisne mortgagee will be liable to be sold for the full amount of the decree. This procedure will give to the agriculturist judgment-debtor the full benefit of the relief to which he is entitled under the Act and will safeguard the rights of the decree-holder as against those judgment-debtors who are not entitled to the benefits of the Act.

The petition is therefore allowed with costs and the application is remitted to the lower Court for disposal in the light of this judgment.

Advocate List
Bench
  • HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE WADSWORTH
  • HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE PATANJALI SASTRI
Eq Citations
  • (1940) 2 MLJ 872
  • (1941) ILR MAD 336
  • 1940 MWN 1218
  • AIR 1941 MAD 204
  • LQ/MadHC/1940/337
Head Note

Debt, Financial and Monetary Laws — Madras Agriculturists Relief Act, 1938 (4 of 1938) — Ss. 7 and 19 — Scaling down of decree in favour of puisne mortgagee who was a judgment-debtor — Propriety of — Decree-holder's contention that scaling down of decree in favour of puisne mortgagee would result in benefit to other defendants who were not agriculturists — Held, scaling down of decree against agriculturist judgment-debtor, while leaving it unamended as against non-agriculturist judgment-debtors, is not wrong in theory and difficult in practice — S. 19 is only machinery section and substantive provisions are contained in S. 7 — Debt-equity — Scaling down of decree in favour of puisne mortgagee who was a judgment-debtor