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February 2020

ALLIED LAWS

By DR.K. Shivaram
Senior Advocate| Rahul K. Hakani |Shashi Bekal
Advocates
Reading Time 8 mins

19. Auction sale of secured assets – Bank
obliged to disclose any dues on secured assets in notice of sale – Failure of
disclosure – Auction purchaser cannot be fastened with the liability to pay the
same [SARFAESI Act, 2002, S. 13, 38]

 

Corporation Bank and Ors. vs. Jayesh Kumar
Jha; AIR 2019 Cal 328

 

The auction purchaser successfully
participated in the e-auction for the sale of an immovable property undertaken
by the bank through its officers under the provisions of the SARFAESI Act,
2002. On receipt of the consideration price fixed by the auction, the appellant
bank issued sale certificate in favour of the respondent in respect of the
property in question. The sale was free from all encumbrances.

 

Subsequent to this, the purchaser was
charged for payment of property tax and maintenance tax in respect of the
property for the period prior to the auction payable to the Kolkata Municipal
Corporation. Contending that he was not liable to pay any such tax or charge
levied for the period prior to the sale, the purchaser moved Court with a
prayer for issuance of a writ of mandamus directing the bank authorities
to set aside the letter under which it communicated to him that the bank was
not liable to any outstanding dues with a further writ of mandamus
directing the bank authorities to reimburse the amount paid by the purchaser
towards the outstanding property tax to the Kolkata Municipal Corporation with
interest.

 

The Court held that Rules 8 and 9 of the
Security Interest (Enforcement) Rules, 2002 deal with the stage anterior to the
issuance of sale certificate and delivery of possession. Rule 9(8) casts a duty
upon the authorised officer to deliver the property to the purchaser free from
encumbrances (or) requiring the purchaser to deposit money for discharging the
encumbrances. The ignorance of the second creditor regarding the encumbrance on
the property is no longer a good and acceptable defence in view of the
statutory provisions and various precedents by the Hon’ble Supreme Court and
different High Courts on the subject… The SARFAESI Act and the Rules have
replaced the rule of caveat emptor by caveat venditor. When a
property is put to sale, the bank is under statutory obligation to sell the
secured asset with a clear title free from any encumbrance. As the bank did not
disclose the pre-sale property tax dues which are a charge on the land or
building in respect of the secured asset, therefore, the bank has failed to discharge
its statutory obligation.

 

After completion of the sale and delivery of
possession, the auction purchaser-respondent cannot be fastened with the
liability to discharge such encumbrances.

 

20. Hindu law – Right in coparcenary
property – No document to show that property was purchased with the money of
the HUF – Partition taken place – Devolution of coparcenary property takes
place only when succession opens and not before that – Father of the plaintiff
(daughter) is still alive – Suit claiming right in coparcenary property was not maintainable [Hindu
Succession Act, 1956, S. 6]

 

Chandribai and Ors. vs. Tulsiram and Ors;
AIR 2019 MP 206

 

The plaintiff (daughter) filed a suit for
declaration as well as for setting aside the sale deed which had been executed
in favour of the defendant. It was alleged that the disputed property is
ancestral undivided property of the plaintiffs and the plaintiffs have right,
title and interest in the property since their birth. It was also alleged that
the property has been purchased by transfer of ancestral property and that it
continued to remain so.

 

The trial Court, after framing the issues
and recording the evidence, held that the plaintiffs have 1/6th
share each in the disputed property and they are entitled for partition and
possession. The trial Court further held that the property is not a
self-acquired one. The 1st Appellate Court reversed the judgment
passed by the trial Court.

The Hon’ble High
Court upheld the order of the 1st  Appellate
Court that there is no presumption of a property being joint family property
only on account of the existence of a joint Hindu family. The one who asserts
this has to prove that the property is a joint family property and the onus
would shift on the person who claims it to be self-acquired property to prove
that he purchased the property with his own funds and not out of the joint
family nucleus (corpus) that was available.

 

Further, it is significant to note that the
phrase ‘devolution of coparcenary property’ only takes place when succession
opens and not before that. It is well settled that succession opens on the
death of the karta. As a necessary corollary, the karta being
alive, the suit in issue was not maintainable.

 

21. Tenancy rights – Inheritance of tenancy
right is not applicable to a joint family [Bombay Rent Act, 1947, S. 5, 13, 15]

 

Vasant
Sadashiv Joshi. & Ors vs. Yeshwant Shankar Barve through Lrs & Ors.; WP
2371 of 1977; Date of order: 2nd January, 2020 (Bom)(HC)(UR)

 

The petition was filed by a tenant who was
being evicted from the suit premises. The original tenant was his father and
upon his death the rent receipt came to be transferred in the name of the
petitioner. The premises was occupied by his cousin as the petitioner had moved
to an alternate accommodation. The petitioner argued that tenancy rights can be
inherited by any and every member of the joint family.

 

The Court held
that the provisions of the Bombay Rent Act, which pertain to tenancy rights
would not be applicable to a joint family unit. After the death of the original
tenant, tenancy rights cannot be inherited by any member of the family of the
deceased by claiming to be in a joint family set-up.

 

22. Will – Attestation – Signature of the
testator on the Will is undisputed where the attesting witnesses deposed that the testator came to them individually with his own
signed will and read it out to them after
which they attested it [Succession Act, 1925, S. 63]

 

Ganesan (D) through Lrs. vs. Kalanjiam and
Ors.; AIR 2019 SC 5682

 

The appellant filed a suit claiming share in
the suit properties asserting them to be joint family properties. The trial
Court held that the suit property was the self-acquired property of the
deceased who died intestate and the genuineness of the Will had not been
established in accordance with the law, entitling the appellant to 1/5th
share. The appeal was allowed holding that the signature of the testator was
not in dispute and the testator was of sound mind. The second appeal by the
appellant was dismissed.

 

The Hon’ble Supreme Court held that where
the signature of the testator on the Will is undisputed and the Succession Act
requires an acknowledgement of execution by the testator followed by the
attestation of the Will in his presence, and where a testator asks a person to
attest his Will, it is a reasonable inference that he was admitting that the
Will had been executed by him.

 

There is no express prescription in the
statute that the testator must necessarily sign the Will in the presence of the
attesting witnesses only, or that the two attesting witnesses must put their
signatures on the Will simultaneously at the same time in the presence of each
other and the testator.

 

Both the attesting witnesses deposed that
the testator came to them individually with his own signed Will and read it out
to them, after which they attested the Will. Therefore, the appeal was
dismissed.

 

23. Power of attorney holder – Cannot depose
for principal by entering in his shoes – His testimony cannot be treated as
that of principal [Civil Procedure Code, 1908, O. 3, Rr 1,2]

 

Narmada Prasad vs. Bedilal Burman; AIR 2019
MP 660

 

In the instant
civil suit, the petitioner filed a power of attorney in favour of his son and
apprised the Court below specifically that his son will enter the witness box
on his behalf. In turn, the son, Jitendra Burman, entered the witness box,
deposed his statement and was cross-examined. The petitioner introduced his son
as power of attorney holder on the ground that he is suffering from an aliment
of forgetfulness because of which his memory was not in order and, therefore,
his son will depose on his behalf.

 

The Court held
that the son cannot be permitted to depose on behalf of the principal for the
acts done by him. As a necessary corollary, the son cannot be cross-examined on
those aspects in respect of the principal. Thus, the right to adduce evidence
by the power of attorney holder is available to a limited extent. By no stretch
of the imagination can the son be treated to be a representative of the
principal in all aspects and, therefore, it cannot be said that the stand of
the petitioner will deprive him from entering the witness box. In other words,
it is trite that no estoppel operates against the law.

 

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