Mahadeo Prasad Singh & ANR Vs. Ram
Lochan & Ors [1980] INSC 181 (16 September 1980)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION: 1981 AIR 416 1981 SCR (1) 732 1980
SCC (4) 354
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure-Section 42 as amended
by U. P. Civil Laws. (Reform and Amendment) Act, 1954-For executing a decree
transferee court "shall have the same powers as the court which passed
it"-Decree passed by Court of Small Causes transferred to Munsif for
execution after the amendment Act came into force-Decree-holder, if could be
said to have had a substantive right to get the decree transferred to the
Munsif's court for execution.
HEADNOTE:
A decree, according to section 38 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, may be executed either by the Court who passed it or by the
Court to which it is sent for execution.
Section 39(1)(d) provides that the Court
which passed a decree may, on the application of the decree-holder, send it for
execution to another Court of competent jurisdiction, if the Court, which
passed the decree, considers for any other reason, which it shall record in
writing, that the decree should be executed by such other Court. Section 42 of
the Code, which indicates the powers of the transferee Court for executing the
transferred decree, before its amendment in 1954, provided that the Court
executing the decree sent to it, shall have the same powers in executing such
decree "as if it had been passed by itself." After the amendment the
words "as the Court which has passed it" were substituted for the
words "as if it has been passed by itself". Section 3 of the U.P.
Civil Laws (Reform and Amendment) Act saved certain rights already acquired or
accrued.
In February, 1953 the brother of appellant
No. 1 obtained a decree from the Court of Small Causes which on his application
under section 39 of the Code, was transferred to the Court of Munsif in
January, 1955 and put into execution after the U.P. (Amendment) Act XXIV of
1954 had come into force. In the sale the decree-holder himself purchased the
land in July, 1956 and took possession of the property. He later sold the
property to defendant nos. 2 to 5.
The suit of respondent no. 1 for a
declaration that the sale in favour of appellant no. 1 was without jurisdiction
and therefore a nullity was dismissed by the trial Court. On appeal the
Additional Commissioner held that the executing court had no jurisdiction to
sell the suit land under section 42 of the C.P.C. as amended by the U. P. Civil
Laws (Amendment) Act, 1954 Dismissing the appeal, the Board of Revenue held
that the auction sale in pursuance of the decree of the Judge, Small Causes
Court was void and did not invest the decree-holder-purchaser with any title.
733 On the appellant's writ petition a single
Judge of the High Court quashed the judgment of the Revenue Board as well as of
the Additional Commissioner holding that the execution sale of the land was
proper under section 42 of the Code, that prior to its amendment by the U. P.
Civil Laws (Amendment) Act, 1954, the executing court had the same powers in
relation to execution as it would have had if the decree had been passed by
itself and the decree having been passed prior to the amendment of section 42
this section did not apply and the decree should have been executed in accordance
with the provisions of section 42 prior to its amendment.
On appeal a Full Bench of the High Court (by
majority) held that since the Small Causes Court had no power to execute the
decree by attachment and sale of immovable property, the Munsif's Court to
which the decree was transferred for execution, possessing the same powers as
the Small Causes Court, had no jurisdiction to execute the decree by attachment
and sale of the immovable property.
It was contended before this Court on behalf
of the decree-holder that he had acquired a substantive right to get the decree
of the Court of Small Causes transferred to the Court of Munsif for execution
and thereafter to have it executed by the transferee court in any of the modes
provided in section 51 C.P.C. and this two-fold substantive right having
accrued to him before the coming into force of the 1954 Amendment, it was saved
by section 3 of this Amendment Act.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1 (a) Under section 39(1)(d) a decree
holder has no indefeasible substantive right to get his application for
transfer of a decree to another Court ipso facto accepted by the Court which
passed it, particularly in a case which is not covered by clauses (a), (b)
& (c) of that sub-section.
The effect of substitution of the words
"as the court which passed it" for the words "as if it had been
passed by itself" was that powers of the transferee Court in executing the
transferred decree became co-terminus with the powers of the Court, which
passed it. Therefore, if the power of the transferor Court to execute its own
decree were in any respect restricted, the same restriction would attach to the
powers of the transferee Court in executing the transferred decree
notwithstanding the position that the powers of the transferee Court in
executing its own decree were not so restricted. [739E; 740C-D] (b) The opening
words of section 51 (subject to such conditions and limitations as may be
prescribed) put it beyond doubt that there is no wide or unrestricted
jurisdiction to order execution or to claim execution in every case in all the
modes indicated therein. The High Court (per majority) was right in construing
it to mean that the powers of the executing court under this section are not
subject to the other conditions and limitations enacted in the other sections
of the Code. Although ordinarily a decree-holder has an option to choose any
particular mode for execution of his money decree it may not be correct to say
that the Court has absolutely no discretion to place any limitation as to the
mode in which the decree is to be executed. [742G, 743A-B] In the instant case,
the decree-holder's right to make an application for transfer of his decree
under section 39(1)(d) is a mere procedural right. The Court of Small Causes
could, in its discretion for reasons to be recorded, 734 refuse to transfer it
to the Court of Munsif. In other words the decree-holder had no vested or
substantive right to get the decree transferred to the Court of the Munsif for
execution. [743F-G] (c) The well settled principle in regard to the
retrospective operation of statutes is that as a general rule, a statute which
takes away or impairs substantive rights acquired under the existing law is
construed to have a prospective operation unless the language of that statute
expressly or by inevitable intendment compels a contrary construction. But this
presumption as to prospective operation of a statute does not apply to an
enactment affecting procedure or practice such as the Code of Civil Procedure
because no person has a vested right in any course of procedure. [741 B-C]
2.(a) The High Court was right in holding that the provisions of section 51 are
merely procedural in character.
A decree-holder gets a right to execute the
decree only in accordance with the procedure provided by the law in force at
the time when execution is sought. If a mode of procedure different from the
one which obtained at the date of passing of the decree has been provided by
law, the decree-holder is bound to proceed in execution according to the
altered procedure. [744A-B] (b) The Amendment Act XXIV of 1954 had taken away
the power of transferee Court to execute the transferred decree by attachment
and sale of the immovable property by making it co-terminus with that of the
transferor Court (the Small Cause Court) and in view of the prohibition
contained in Order 21 Rule 82 C.P.C. it had no power to execute its decree by
sale of immovable property. That being the position, the Court of the Munsif to
which the decree had been transferred for execution had no jurisdiction to
order sale of the immovable property of the judgment-debtor. The sale ordered
by the Munsif in execution of the decree of the Court of Small Causes
transferred to him was, therefore, wholly without jurisdiction and a nullity.
[744 B-D] Kiran Singh v. Chaman Paswan, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 340 referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 1831 of 1973.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and
Order dated 4-5-1970 of the Allahabad High Court in Spl. Appeal No. 453/69.
B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi for the
Appellants.
Ex-Parte for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-This appeal is directed against a judgment, dated May 4, 1970, of
the High Court of Allahabad.
It arises in these circumstances:
One Matadin, father of Ram Lochan, respondent
6 herein, was a fixed rate tenant of the plots in dispute measuring 2.11 acres.
One Ram Naresh Singh (deceased), brother of appellant 1 herein, 735 namely
Mahadeo Prasad Singh, obtained a money decree against Matadin on February 18,
1953 from the Judge, Small Causes Court, Varanasi suit No. 847 of 1953. Ram
Naresh Singh sought to execute the decree. As a consequence, the decree was
transferred from the Court of the Judge of Small Causes to the Court of Munsif,
Varanasi, for execution. The plots in dispute were put to auction by the
executing court, and were purchased by the decree-holder on July 20, 1956. The
sale was confirmed on August 29, 1956 and the sale certificate was issued on September
8, 1956. The decreeholder-purchaser, Ram Naresh Singh, took delivery of
possession over these plots on March 14, 1957. Thereafter, he further sold the
plots to appellant 2 and respondents 6 to 10.
Matadin, however, died sometime in 1960.
Thereafter his son Ram Lochan respondent 1, herein, instituted a suit on June
14, 1961 i.e. more than three years after the delivery of possession to the
decree-holder-purchaser, Ram Naresh Singh, under section 229B read with Section
209 of the U. P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act in the Revenue court
against the present appellants, for a declaration that he is in possession of
the suit land as Bhoomidar. In the alternative, he claimed the relief of
possession on the same basis. He pleaded that his father, Ram Naresh Singh was
the original Bhoomidar and remained in possession of the suit land till his
death and thereafter, the plaintiff as the heir of the deceased continue in
possession as Bhoomidar. He further alleged that the sale in favour of Ram Naresh
Singh was without jurisdiction and a nullity; as it had been made without the
knowledge of or notice to his father.
The suit was resisted by the appellant, who
is original defendant 1, and respondents 7 to 10, who are original defendants 2
to 5, inter alia on the ground that the suit was barred as res judicata and
also under section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and Article 181 of the
Limitation Act. Defendants 2 to 5 further pleaded that they were bona fide
purchasers for value and, therefore, their rights in the suit land were
protected under Section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act. They also, alleged
that they had made improvements on the suit land and were entitled to the
benefit of Section 51 of the Transfer of Property Act.
The trial court, by its judgment, dated
August 30, 1965. dismissed the suit, holding, inter alia, that It was barred by
the principle of constructive res judicata as also under Section 47 of the Code
of Civil- Procedure; that the Revenue Court had no jurisdiction to entertain
and try the suit; that the appellants 6 to 736 10 were bona fide purchasers for
value and, as such, were entitled to the benefit of Sections 41 and 51 of the
Transfer of Property Act; that the suit was barred by Article 181 of the
Limitation Act, 1908 as well as by Section 34(5) of the U.P. Land Reforms Act;
and that Ram Naresh Singh had been in possession since March 14, 1967, i.e.,
the date on which he obtained delivery of possession in execution of his decree
as auction-purchaser.
Aggrieved, the plaintiff (respondent 1)
preferred an appeal to the Court of the Additional Commissioner, Varanasi, who
by his judgment dated December 28, 1965, allowed the appeal and held that the
executing court had no jurisdiction to sell the suit land under Section 42 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by the U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act.
1954 and that the suit was not barred as res judicata or under Section 47 of
the Code of Civil Procedure. The Additional Commissioner further held that the
possession of Ram Naresh Singh was unlawful as it was on the basis of the void
sale, dated March 4, 1960, which could not confer any title on him; that the
judgment-debtor had no knowledge about the execution proceedings; that the suit
property worth Rs. 6,000 was for a very meagre amount and the sale was vitiated
by fraud in publishing and conducting the sale.
Ram Lochan and Ram Naresh Singh carried a
second appeal against the decision to the Board of Revenue. During the pendency
of that second appeal, Ram Naresh Singh died and Mahadeo Prasad Singh,
appellant 1, was substituted in his place. The Board dismissed the appeal on
the ground that the auction sale with regard to the suit land in pursuance of
the decree of the Judge, Small Causes Court, was void and, as such, did not
invest the decree-holder-purchaser with any title and consequently, the
possession of the appellant was without any title. The Board further held that
the auction sale did not affect the suit under Section 209 of the U.P. Zamindari
Abolition and the Land Reforms Act.
To impugn the judgment of the Board, Mahadeo
Prasad Singh, appellant herein, as well as respondents 6 to 10 filed a writ
petition under Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Allahabad.
A learned Single Judge, who heard the writ petition, allowed it by his
judgment, dated April 23, 1969, and quashed the judgments of the Board of
Revenue as well as of the Additional Commissioner, who are respondents 2 and 3
herein. Following an earlier judgment of a Division Bench of the same Court in
Suraj Bux Singh v. Badri Prasad & Anr. the learned Judge held 737 that the
execution sale of the suit land was proper as per the provisions of Section 42
of the Code of Civil Procedure;
that prior to its amendment in U.P. by the
U.P. Civil Laws (Amendment) Act 1954, the executing court had the same powers
in relation to execution as it would have had if the decree had been passed by
itself; that the decree in the present suit was passed on February 18, 1953,
i.e. prior to the coming into force of the Amendment Act of 1954 and, as such,
the amended Section 42 did not apply to it; and that the decree having been
passed prior to the date of the amendment, should be executed in accordance
with the provisions of Section 42 as it stood prior to its amendment;
and that as a result, the suit for
declaration as well as for possession would have to fail. The learned Single
Judge did not go into the question as to whether the suit was barred by Section
47 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Against the judgment of the learned Single
Judge, respondent 1, herein, preferred a Special Appeal which was referred to a
Full Bench of the High Court consisting of three learned Judges. The two
Judges, in majority, held that the Small Cause Court had no power to execute
the decree by attachment and sale of immovable property; that the transferee
court, namely, the court of the Munsif had the same powers as that of the Small
Cause Court and, therefore, that court also had no jurisdiction to execute the
decree by attachment and sale of the immovable property; that the right to
execute a decree by attachment and sale of immovable property is a matter of
procedure, while the right to realise the decretal amount by attachment and
sale is a substantive right of the decree-holder, that the date on which the
decree was put into execution, the amendment of Section 42 had already come
into force and the power of the transferee court had become co-terminus with
that of the transferor court; and that the amendment did not save the right of the
appellant to execute the decree of the Small Causes Court by attachment and
sale of immovable property.
Sinha, J. however, dissented. He took the
view that the Amendment Act did not apply to the present suit and that a
substantive right had accrued to Ram Naresh Singh on the passing of the decree
to execute it by attachment and sale of the immovable property and that right
was clearly saved to him by virtue of Section 3 of the Amendment Act. In
accordance with the view of the majority, the appeal of respondent 1 was
allowed and the Order of the learned Single Judge was set aside.
Hence this appeal by special leave by the
appellants.
738 Thus, the principal question that falls
to be considered in this appeal is whether the High Court was right in holding
that the execution sale of the land in dispute was totally without jurisdiction
and null and void.
Some relevant dates may be noted. Ram Naresh
obtained the decree from the Court of Small Causes on February 18, 1953. On the
decree-holder's application under Section 39 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
the decree was transferred to the Court of the Munsif on January 24, 1955 and
was put into execution after the U.P. (Amendment) Act XXIV of 1954 had come
into force. This sale in favour of the decree-holder himself took place on July
20, 1956. It was confirmed on August 29, 1956 and the sale certificate was
issued to the purchaser on September 8, 1956. The auction-purchaser took
delivery of possession as per Dakhalnama on March 24, 1957.
The decree-holder-purchaser further sold the
plots in dispute to defendants 2 to 5.
Next, at this stage, the relevant provisions
of the Code of Civil Procedure and the U.P. Civil Laws (Reforms and Amendment)
Act (Act No. XXIV of 1954) may be noticed.
Section 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure
provides that "a decree may be executed either by the Court which passed
it or by the Court to which it is sent for execution". In the instant
case, as already seen, the decree was passed by the Small Cause Court which was
competent to execute it, but (in view of Order 21, Rule 82 of the Code) not by
attachment and sale of the immovable property of the judgment-debtor.
That is to say, that Court could execute it
by attachment and sale of the movable property of the judgment-debtor, if it
was, of course, not exempt under Section 60 of the Code of Civil Procedure or
under any other law.
Section 39 of the Code deals with transfer of
decree.
Its material part reads thus:
"39(1).The Court which passed a decree
may, on the application of the decree-holder, send it for execution to another
Court of competent jurisdiction- (a) if the person against whom the decree is
passed actually and voluntarily resides or carries on business, or personally
works for gain, within the local limits of the jurisdiction of such other
Court, or (b)if such person has not property within the local limits of the
jurisdiction of the Court which passed the decree sufficient to satisfy such
decree and has property 739 within the local limits of the jurisdiction of such
other Court, or (c)if the decree directs the sale or delivery of immovable
property situate outside the local limits of the jurisdiction of the Court
which passed it, or (d)if the court which passed the decree considers for any
other reason, which it shall record in writing, that the decree should be
executed by such other Court.
(2)The Court which passed a decree may of its
own motion send it for execution to any subordinate Court of competent
jurisdiction.
(3) .............................." In
the instant case, the decree was transferred under clause (d) of sub-section
(1) of Section 39. Unlike the other clauses (a) to (c) of the sub-section, it
seems that under clause (d), the Court has a rational discretion to transfer or
not to transfer the decree passed by it. This is apparent from the word
"may" used in the opening part of sub-section (1), and the
requirement of recording reasons for the transfer under clause (d). It follows
therefore, that under Section 39 (1) a decree-holder has no indefeasible right
to get his application for transfer of decree to another Court ipso facto
accepted by the Court which passed it, particularly in a case which is not
covered by clauses (a), (b) and (c) of that sub-section.
Section 42 of the Code indicates the powers of
the transferee court for executing a transferred decree. The material part of
this section, prior to its amendment by the U.P. Act (No. XXIV) of 1954, reads
as under:
"The Court executing a decree sent to it
shall have the same powers in executing such decree as if it had been passed by
itself. All persons disobeying or obstructing the execution of the decree shall
be punishable by such Court in the same manner as if it had passed the decree.
And its order in executing such decree shall be subject to the same rules in
respect of appeal as if the decree had been passed by itself.".
(emphasis added) The provisions in
sub-sections (2), (3) and (4) of the Section are not relevant for our purpose.
The U.P. Act (No. XXIV of 1954) amended with
effect from November 30, 1954, Section 42 of the Code, and after that amendment
sub-section (1) of the Section read as under:
740 "The Court executing the decree sent
to it shall have the same power in executing such decree as if it had been
passed by itself. All persons disobeying or obstructing the execution of decree
shall be punished by such Court in the same manner as if it had passed the
decree and its order in executing such decree shall be subject to the same
rules in respect of appeal as if the decree had been passed by itself."
(emphasis added) Thus, for the words "as if it had been passed by
itself" occurring in the first sentence of sub-section (1) of Section 42,
the Amending Act 24 of 1954 substituted the words "as the Court which
passed it". The effect of such substitution was that the powers of the
transferee Court in executing the transferred decree became coterminous with
the powers of the Court which had passed it. The result was that if the power
of the transferor Court to execute its own decree were in any respect
restricted, the same restriction would attach to the powers of the transferee
Court in executing the transferred decree, notwithstanding the position that
the powers of the transferee Court in executing its own decree were not so
restricted.
Section 3 of the U.P. Civil Laws (Reforms and
Amendment) Act, saves certain rights already acquired or accrued. It is in
these terms:
"3(1)Any amendment made by this Act
shall not affect the validity, invalidity, effect or consequence of anything
already done or suffered, or any right, title, obligation or liability already
acquired, accrued or incurred or any release or discharge of or from any debt,
decree, liability, or any jurisdiction already exercised, and any proceeding
instituted or commenced in any Court prior to the commencement of this Act
shall, notwithstanding any amendment herein made, continue to be heard and
decided by such Court.
(2)Where by reason of any amendment herein
made in the Indian Limitation Act, 1908, or any other enactment mentioned in
column 2 of the schedule, the period of limitation prescribed for any suit or
appeal has been modified or a different period of limitation will hereafter
govern any such suit or appeal, then, notwithstanding any amendment so made or
the fact that the suit or appeal would now lie in a different Court, the period
of limitation applicable to a suit or appeal, as aforesaid, in which time has
begun to run before the commencement of this Act, shall continue to be the
period 741 which but for the amendment so made would have been available.
Before dealing with the contentions
canvassed, we may remind ourselves of some well-known principles of
interpretation in regard to the retrospective operation of statutes. As a
general rule, a statute which takes away or impairs substantive rights acquired
under the existing law is construed to have a prospective operation unless the
language of that statute expressly or by inevitable intendment compels a
contrary construction. But this presumption as to prospective operation of a
statute does not apply to an enactment affecting procedure or practice such as
the Code of Civil Procedure. The reason is that no person has a vested right in
any course of procedure. "The general principle indeed seems to be that
alterations in the procedure are always retrospective, unless there be some
good reason against it". (See Mulla's Code of Civil Procedure, 13th Edn.
Vol. I, page 6, and 1958 S.C.R. 919).
In the light of the above principles, the
question posed for our decision, resolves itself into the two-fold issue :
whether the decree-holder had acquired a substantive right (a) to get the
decree passed by the Court of Small Causes, transferred to the Court of the
Munsif and (b) thereafter to have is executed by the transferee Court in any of
the modes provided in Section 51 of the Code of Civil Procedure, including the
mode by attachment and sale of the immovable property of the judgment-debtor.
As before the High Court, here also, it is
contended on behalf of the decree-holder that he had acquired this two- fold
substantive right before the coming into force of the U.P. (Amendment Act XXIV)
of 1954, and, as such, it was saved by Section 3(1) of this Amendment Act.
It is maintained that the two-fold right
aforesaid is a substantive right and not merely a matter of procedure.
Support for this argument has been sought
from a decision of this Court in Garikapati v. Subbiah Choudhry. Reference has
also been made to a Division Bench judgment of the Allahabad High Court in
Suraj Bux Singh v. Badri Prasad.
In the alternative, it is submitted that
assuming the sale was without jurisdiction, then also, that question would
relate to the execution, discharge or satisfaction of the decree and, as such,
the remedy of the judgment-debtor was to proceed by an application 742 under
Section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure and not by a suit as has been done by
the plaintiff in the instant case.
In short, the argument is that in any event,
the present suit was barred by Section 47 of the Code.
It appears to us that none of these
contentions stands a close examination.
It may be noted that the fasciculus of
Sections 51 to 54 of the Code of Civil Procedure appear under the heading
"PROCEDURE IN EXECUTION". Section 51 is captioned-"Powers of
Court to enforce execution". It reads thus :
"Subject to such conditions and
limitations as may be prescribed, the Court may, on the application of the
decree-holder, order execution of the decree- (a) by delivery of any property
specifically decreed;
(b) by attachment and sale or by sales
without attachment of any property;
(c) .........................................
(d) by appointing a receiver; or (e) in such
other manner as the nature of the relief granted may require :
Provided that, where the decree is for the
payment of money, execution by detention in prison shall not be ordered unless,
after giving the judgment-debtor an opportunity of showing cause why he should
not be committed to prison, the Court, for reasons recorded in writing, is
satisfied................." This Section "merely enumerates the
different modes of execution in general terms while the conditions and
limitations under which alone the respective modes can be availed of are
prescribed further on by different provisions". (See.... I.R. Commentaries
Vol. I, 9th Edn. p.
863). The opening words of the Section
"Subject to such conditions and limitations as may be prescribed" put
it beyond doubt that there is no wide or unrestricted jurisdiction to order
execution or to claim execution in every case in all the modes indicated
therein. 'Prescribed' has been defined in Section 2(16) of the Code to mean
"prescribed by rules", and "rules", under Section 2(18)
means "rules and forms" contained in the First Schedule of the Code
or framed by the respective superior Courts in different States under Section
122 or Section 125.
743 We are one with the High Court (majority)
that this phrase cannot be construed to mean that the powers of the executing
Court under this Section are not subject to the other conditions and
limitations enacted in the other sections of the Code. For instance, the mode,
(b), by attachment and sale of the property of the judgment-debtor, may not be
available in respect of property which falls within the exemption of section 60
of the Code. Although ordinarily the decree-holder has an option to choose any
particular mode for execution of his money-decree, it will not be correct to
say that the Court has absolutely no discretion to place any limitation as to
the mode in which the decree is to be executed. The option of the judgment-
debtor, for instance, to apply under Order 21. Rule 30, C.P.C. for execution of
a decree simultaneously against both the person and the property of the
judgment-debtor is subject to exercise by the Court of a judicial discretion
vested in it under Order 21, Rule 21, C.P.C.
We have already noticed, that under Section
39(1) (d), the decree holder has no indefeasible, substantive right to get a
decree of a Court of Small Causes passed in his favour transferred to another
Court. Cases are conceivable where the decree is of such a petty amount that
the Court of Small Causes thinks that it can easily be executed by it by
attachment and sale of the movable property of the judgment- debtor. In the
instant case, also the decree was for a small amount of Rs. 300 and odd and we
understand that the application for transfer was made under clause (d) of
Section 39(1). Thus, the decree-holder's right to make an application for
transfer of his decree under section 39(1) (d) is a mere procedural right. The
Court of Small Causes could in its discretion, for reasons to be recorded,
refuse to transfer it to the Court of the Munsif. In other words, the
decree-holder had no vested or substantive right to get the decree transferred
to the Court of the Munsif for execution. The first limb of the issue is
therefore answered against the appellant.
As regards the second limb of the issue, we
find ourselves entirely in agreement with the High Court that the provisions of
Section 51 are merely procedural in character.
A decree-holder gets a right to execute the
decree only in accordance with the 744 procedure provided by law in force at
the time when the execution is sought. If a mode of procedure different from
the one which obtained at the date of the passing of the decree, has been
provided by law, the decree-holder is bound to proceed in execution according
to the altered procedure.
The Amendment Act XXIV of 1954 had taken away
the power of the transferee court to execute the transferred decree by
attachment and sale of the immovable property by making it coterminous with
that of the transferor Court which, in the instant case, was the Small Cause
Court and in view of the prohibition contained in Order 21, Rule 82, Code of
Civil Procedure, had no power to execute its decree by sale of immovable
property. That being the position, the Court of the Munsif to whom the decree
had also been transferred for execution, had also no jurisdiction to order sale
of the immovable property of the judgment-debtor. Thus considered, the sale of
the immovable property ordered by the Munsif in execution of the decree of the
Court of Small Causes transferred to him, was wholly without jurisdiction and a
nullity.
Once we come to the conclusion that the sale
in question was totally null and void, the alternative contention of the
appellants with regard to the suit being barred by Section 47 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, does not survive.
This is not a case of an irregular or
voidable sale which continues to subsist so long as it is not set aside, but of
a sale which was entirely without jurisdiction. It was non est in the eye of
law. Such a nullity does not from its very nature, need setting aside.
As pointed out by this Court in Kiran Singh
v. Chaman Paswan, "...it is a fundamental principle, well established that
a decree passed by a Court without jurisdiction, is a nullity; and that its
invalidity could be set up whenever it is sought to be enforced or relied upon,
even at the stage of execution, and even in collateral proceedings".
Most of the rulings which have been cited in
support of their alternative contention by the appellants, were also cited
before 745 the High Court and have been rightly distinguished. We need not go
into the same.
Before we part with the judgment, we may,
however, note that the amendment made by the U.P. (Act XXIV) of 1954 was
deleted by another U.P. (Amendment) Act XIV of 1970, and the un-amended
sub-section (1) of Section 42, as it existed before the amendment of 1954, was
revived. But, this Amendment Act (XIV of 1970) was not given retrospective
operation. It did not affect the previous operation of the Amendment Act XXIV
of 1954 or anything suffered or done there under.
For the foregoing reasons, we uphold the
impugned judgment and dismiss this appeal. In view of the law point involved,
we leave the parties to pay and bear their own costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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