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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

BENAMI TRANSACTION ACT IS NOT RETROSPECTIVE. UNLESS CHALLANGED, CERTIFICATE OF POSTING WAS DEEMED TO BE SERVED


REPORTABLE
 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.   846    OF 2011
ARISING OUT OF SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (C) NO. 1305 OF 2010
Samittri Devi and another.                …Appellants
             Versus
Sampuran Singh and another                                      …Respondents
J U D G M E N T
Gokhale J.
Leave Granted.
2. This Appeal by Special Leave raises the question as to whether the
suit of the first appellant for the recovery of her house property filed prior to the
Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988 coming into force could be
considered to be prohibited by Section 4 of that Act.
3. This appeal seeks to challenge the judgment and order passed by a
Learned Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court dated 10.9.2009 in Regular
Second Appeal (R.S.A) No. 1367 of 1996 (O & M), whereby the Judge hasallowed the Second Appeal filed by Respondent No. 1 herein, and set aside the
judgment and order dated 22.2.1996 passed by the Additional District Judge,
Gurdaspur in Civil Appeal No. 203 of 1991 filed by appellant No.1 herein. The
Learned Additional District Judge had allowed the Civil Appeal filed by appellant
No. 1 herein whereby he decreed Civil Suit No. 138 of 1987 filed by appellant
No.1, which suit had been dismissed by the Sub-Judge at Pathankot by his
judgment and order dated 3.10.1991.
4.  Short facts leading to this appeal are as follows:-
The appellant No.1 herein purchased a house property situated at
Pathankot from Sarvashri Romesh Chand and Chatar Chand sons of Shri Kartar
Singh, vide registered sale deed dated 26.2.1985 for a consideration of
Rs. 40,000/-. This sale deed was, however, executed in the name of her son
namely Shri Kamal Chand (the appellant No.2 herein) and his brother-in-law
Shri Jiwan Kumar (respondent No.2 herein). The appellant no.1 paid the money
by two bank drafts for purchasing the house property which was actually in the
possession of a tenant of the previous owner i.e. Home Guard Department and it
continues to be in their possession.
5. It is the case of the appellant No.1 that taking advantage of her old
age (presently 93 years), the above referred Kamal Chand and Jiwan Kumar
stealthily removed the sale deed from her possession, and this Jiwan Kumar sold
half share of the suit house to one Sampuran Singh (Respondent No. 1 herein)
2and that too without her knowledge and consent. The sale was executed by a
registered sale deed dated 13.4.1987 despite the fact that appellant No.1 had
sent, in the meanwhile, a letter dated 8.4.1987 to Respondent No. 1 herein
informing him that she was the real owner of the Suit House.
6. The appellant No. 1 therefore, filed Suit No. 138 of 1987 on
30.9.1987 for a declaration that she was the real owner in possession of the Suit
House shown in red in the site plan attached by letters A B C D part of No.
Khasra 574/1, No. Khawat 262, No. Khatauni 401, as entered in the Jamabandi
for the year 1976-77 situated in village Daulatpur HB No. 331, Pathankot. She
prayed for a permanent injunction also restraining the defendants from
alienating any part of the suit house and forcibly interfering with the possession
of the plaintiff of the suit house. By moving an amendment, she claimed an
alternative relief for a decree of Rs. 40,000/- with interest. Her son Kamal
Chand was joined as defendant No. 1, his brother-in-law the above referred
Jiwan Kumar as defendant No. 2, and the purchaser Sampuran Singh as
defendant No. 3. They are appellant No.2, respondent No.2 and respondent No.
1 respectively to this appeal.
7. Defendant No. 1 admitted the entire claim of the appellant, but the
defendant No. 2 disputed it, and contended that half of the consideration of Rs.
40,000/- had been paid by him. He denied that it was a Benami Transaction.
Defendant No. 3 filed his written statement and contended in para 5 thereof that
even if it is proved to be a Benami Transaction, due to the recent legislation of
3Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act 1988, the defendants Nos. 1 & 2 were the
owners of the Suit property, and that the alienation of his share in the property
by defendant No. 2 in his favour had been effected legally. He contended that
he had purchased the share of the defendant No. 2 by sale deed dated
13.4.1987 for a consideration of Rs. 30,000/-, and that he was a bonafide
purchaser for value, and that the Suit should be dismissed.
8. The trial court framed the necessary issues including whether the
sale deed dated 26.2.1985 was Benami, and whether the sale deed dated
13.4.1987 was illegal, and also whether defendant No. 3 was a bonafide
purchaser without notice.
9. The appellant No. 1 laid the evidence amongst others of a clerk
from a branch of State Bank of Patiala at Chaki, Pathankot, who deposed to the
fact that the appellant had made the payment for the sale consideration from her
account. Defendant No. 2 had contended that he had arranged Rs. 20,000/-
from friendly loans to purchase half the share of the Suit House, but he did not
lead any evidence for proving the availability of such funds with him. The Trial
Court therefore, held that it was obvious that the payment was not made by
defendant nos. 1 & 2, but by the plaintiff i.e. the appellant No.1 herein.
10. The appellant No.1 had produced before the trial court a copy of
the notice dated 8.4.1987 which she had sent to defendant no. 3, to point out to
him that she was the real owner of the suit house. She produced the same
4alongwith the certificate of posting. The sale deed between defendant Nos. 2 &
3 was executed on 13.4.1987. The trial court held that the delivery of the notice
was not proved, and therefore, defendant No. 3 was a bonafide purchaser for
valuable consideration without notice. That apart, at the time when the Suit was
decided on 3.10.1991, the law laid down by this Court in Mithilesh Kumari and
Anr. Vs. Prem Behari Khare [AIR 1987 SC 1247] : [1989 (2) SCC 95]
was governing the field viz. that the provisions of Benami Transactions
(Prohibition) Act 1988 were retroactive. It had been held that the prohibition
under Section 4 of the Act to recover the Benami property was applicable to
suits, claims or action pending on the date of commencement of the Act. The
appellant No.1 had filed her suit on 30.9.1987. The Benami Transactions
(Prohibition) Act 1988 came into force on 5.9.1988. Thus, this Suit was pending
on the date on which the Act came into force. The Trial Court, therefore,
followed the judgment in Mithilesh Kumari (supra), and held that the appellant
no longer retained the right to recover the property from the Benami holder.
The suit was, therefore, dismissed for being barred by virtue of the provisions of
the said Act, though without any order as to costs.
11. The appellant No.1 carried the matter in first appeal to the
Additional District Judge, Gurdaspur. As we have noted, the trial court had
already held that appellant No. 1 had purchased the suit house by making the
payment from her account. It had, however, declined to decree her suit on two
grounds, firstly due to the prohibition under Section 4 of the Benami
5Transactions (Prohibition) Act 1988 as interpreted in Mithilesh Kumari judgment
(supra), and secondly on the ground that the appellant did not prove the service
of her notice dated 8.4.1987 on respondent No. 1 herein. By the time the first
appeal was being heard, the judgment of the two Judges bench in Mithilesh
Kumari (supra) had been over-ruled by a bench of three Judges of this Court in
R.Rajagopal Reddy Vs. Padmini Chandrasekharan decided on 31.1.1995
and reported in [AIR 1996 SC 238] : [1995 (2) SCC 630]. This Court had
held that Section 4 or for that matter the Act as a whole was not a piece of
declaratory or curative legislation. It creates substantive rights in favour of
benamidars and destroys substantive rights in favour of the real owners. It
creates a new offence of entering into such benami transactions. It had
therefore, been held that when a statutory provision creates a new liability and a
new offence, it would naturally have a prospective operation, and Section 4 will
not apply to pending suits which were already filed and entertained prior to the
Act coming into force. The first appellate Court therefore, held that the suit filed
by appellant No.1 was not prohibited by the said Act. As far as the notice dated
8.4.1987 is concerned, the Court held that there was a presumption under the
law that the letter which was proved to have been posted well in advance must
have reached the addressee. The first appellate court therefore, held that the
notice will have to be presumed to have been served, and yet respondent No. 1
herein got the sale deed executed on 13.4.1987. It was therefore, held that
respondent No. 1 could not be held to be a bonafide purchaser without any
notice of the rights of appellant No.1 in the suit property. The first appellate
6court therefore, decreed the suit filed by appellant No.1 to the effect that she
was the real owner in possession of the house and the sale deed dated
13.4.1987 was null and void. It also granted an injunction against the
defendants that they shall not alienate any part of the suit house and will not
interfere in her possession of the suit house. The Court awarded cost of
Rupees 1,000/-.
12. Feeling aggrieved by this decision, the first respondent herein filed
a Regular Second Appeal bearing RSA No. 1367 of 1996. The Learned single
Judge of the High Court, who heard the matter, framed the following substantial
question of law - “Whether the Learned Additional District Judge has misread the
evidence on record while coming to the conclusion that the suit property was
benami property of the plaintiff.” The Learned Judge did not dispute the fact
that appellant No. 1 had purchased the suit house out of her money, but he
noted that the office of the Home Guard continued in that property. The
Learned Judge did not give any importance to the notice dated 8.4.1987 being
sent under postal certificate, but held that there was nothing on record to prove
that defendant No.3 had been served with that notice. The Learned Single
Judge therefore, found fault with the finding of the Additional District Judge to
the effect that defendant No. 3 (Respondent No. 1 herein) was not a bonafide
purchaser, and further held that, it amounted to misreading of evidence. The
Regular Second Appeal was therefore, allowed and the judgment and decree of
the Addl. District Judge was set aside.
713. Being aggrieved by the judgment and order passed by the High
Court this Appeal has been filed by the appellant.  This time, the son of appellant
No.1, the original defendant No.1 has joined her as appellant No. 2.
Mr. Saikrishna Rajagopal, learned counsel appearing for the appellants pointed
out that the order passed by the High Court does not deal with the law laid down
in the judgment of this Court in R. Rajagopal Reddy case (Supra). The
Judgment was binding on the Learned Judge, and in view thereof the suit filed
by the appellant No.1 was not hit by the prohibition under Section 4 of the Act.
He also pointed out that the appellants as well as the respondent No. 1 were
staying in the same area i.e. College Road, Pathankot, and therefore, the
Learned Additional District Judge was right in his inference that the notice dated
8.4.1987 must be presumed to have been duly served on respondent No. 1 prior
to 13.4.1987 when respondent No. 3 purchased half share of the suit house. He
submitted that the appellants were ready to return the amount of Rs.30,000/-
with interest to respondent No. 1 which amount he claims to have paid to
respondent No. 2 to purchase his half share in the property.
14. As against this submission of the appellant, Mr. V.K. Monga,
learned counsel appearing for respondent No. 1 repeated the same submissions
made in the courts below, namely, that he was a bonafide purchaser without
notice, and that the original defendant No. 2 had purchased half the share of the
suit house from his money, and from him the respondent No.1 had purchased
that share, and therefore, the present appeal should be dismissed.
815. We have noted the submission of the rival parties. As far as the
purchase of the suit house by the appellant No. 1 from her own money is
concerned that finding of the trial court has remained undisturbed all throughout
and cannot be re-opened in this appeal. The appellant No.1 led cogent evidence
before the trial court, and it had been held in her favour that it is out of her
funds that she had purchased the suit house. The submission of the original
defendant no. 2 that he had arranged the amount of Rs. 20,000/- through
friendly loans was negated by the trial court since there was no supporting
evidence at all. There is no reason for us to disturb that finding. Once the High
Court held that the appellant had purchased the suit house out of her funds, it
ought to have held that it follows that the defendant No. 2 had no right to deal
with it or to sell his half share merely because his name was shown as a
purchaser alongwith the appellant No. 2. Consequently the purchase of the
share of the defendant No. 2 by the respondent No. 1 herein without the consent
of the appellant No. 1 gave him no rights whatsoever. Therefore, the High Court
ought to have held that the suit of appellant No. 1 for declaration of her
ownership to be valid and maintainable.
16. The High Court has clearly erred in ignoring the binding judgment of a
Bench of three Judges of this Court in R. Rajagopal Reddy (supra). By this
decision, this Court had reversed its earlier judgment in Mithilesh Kumari (supra)
and had held in terms that suits filed prior to the application of the act would not
9be hit by the prohibition under Section 4 of that act. Section 4(1) of the Benami
Transactions (Prohibition) Act 1988 reads as follows:
“Prohibition of the right to recover property held benami.-
(1) No suit, claim or action to enforce any right in respect of any
property held benami against the person in whose name the
property is held or against any other person shall lie by or on
behalf of a person claiming to be the real owner of such property.”
While reversing the earlier decision of this Court in Mithilesh Kumari
(supra), a bench of three Judges observed in para 11 of
R. Rajagopal Reddy (supra) as follows:-
“Before we deal with these six considerations which weighed
with the Division Bench for taking the view that Section 4 will apply
retrospectively in the sense that it will get telescoped into all
pending proceedings, howsoever earlier they might have been
filed, if they were pending at different stages in the hierarchy of
the proceedings even up to this Court, when Section 4 came into
operation, it would be apposite to recapitulate the salient feature of
the Act. As seen earlier, the preamble of the Act itself states that it
is an Act to prohibit benami transactions and the right to recover
property held benami, for matters connected therewith or
incidental thereto. Thus it was enacted to efface the then existing
right of the real owners of properties held by others benami. Such
an Act was not given any retrospective effect by the legislature.
Even when we come to Section 4, it is easy to visualise that subsection (1) of Section 4 states that no suit, claim or action to
enforce any right in respect of any property held benami against
the person in whose name the property is held or against any other
shall lie by or on behalf of a person claiming to be the real owner
of such property. As per Section 4(1) no such suit shall thenceforth
lie to recover the possession of the property held benami by the
defendant. Plaintiff’s right to that effect is sought to be taken away
and any suit to enforce such a right after coming into operation of
Section 4(1) that is 19-5-1988, shall not lie. The legislature in its
wisdom has nowhere provided in Section 4(1) that no such suit,
claim or action pending on the date when Section 4 came into
force shall not be proceeded with and shall stand abated. On the
contrary, clear legislative intention is seen from the words “no such
10claim, suit or action shall lie”, meaning thereby no such suit, claim
or action shall be permitted to be filed or entertained or admitted
to the portals of any court for seeking such a relief after coming
into force of Section 4(1).” (Emphasis supplied)
17. In the impugned judgment, the High Court nowhere refers to the
judgment in R. Rajagopal Reddy’s case (supra) although the same was very
much referred to and relied upon by the appellant to counter the contrary
submission of the respondent No. 1. The High Court has therefore, committed a
serious error of law in holding that the Additional District Judge has misread the
evidence on record while coming to the conclusion that the suit property was the
Benami Property of the plaintiff-appellant No.1 herein and that her suit to
enforce the right concerning the same shall not lie. In fact there was no such
misreading of evidence on the part of the first appellate court, and hence there
was no occasion for the High Court to frame such a question of law in view of
the prevailing judgment in R. Rajagopal Reddy which had been rightly followed
by the first appellate court.
18.  The High Court has held that there is nothing on record to suggest that
respondent No.1 herein had, in fact, been served with the notice dated 8.4.1987
and thereby reversed the finding rendered by the first appellate court. It is
material to note in this behalf that it was canvassed by respondent No.1 before
the first appellate court that a certificate of posting is very easy to procure and it
does not inspire confidence. The Additional District Judge observed that there
was no dispute with this proposition of law, but there was no such averment or
even allegation against appellant No.1 herein, that she had procured the
11certificate of posting nor was there any such pleading  to that effect. It is on this
background that the first appellate court has drawn the inference that the notice
must be deemed to have been served within the period of five days thereafter
i.e. before 13.4.1987, the date on which the respondent No.1 herein entered into
an agreement to purchase the suit property. It is also material to note that the
appellant’s premises are situated on College Road, Pathankot and so also the
residence of the first respondent where the notice was sent. Therefore, there
was nothing wrong in drawing the inference which was permissible under Section
114 of the Evidence Act that such notice must have been duly served in the
normal course of business before 13.4.1987.
19. We may fruitfully refer to a few judgments laying down the
propositions relating to service of notice. To begin with, we may note two
judgments in the context of the notice to quit, sent to the tenants under Section
106 of the Transfer of Property Act 1882, though both the judgments are
concerning the notices sent by registered post. Firstly, the judgment in the case
of Harihar Banerji Vs. Ramshashi Roy [AIR 1918 PC 102], wherein the
Privy Council quoted with approval the following observations in Gresham
House Estate Co. Vs. Rossa Grande Gold Mining Co. [1870 Weekly
Notes 119] to the following effect:
“……….if a letter properly directed, containing a notice to quit, is
proved to have been put into the post office, it is presumed that
the letter reached its destination at the proper time according to
the regular course of business of the post office, and was received
by the person to whom it was addressed. That presumption would
12appear to their Lordships to apply with still greater force to letters
which the sender has taken the precaution to register, and is not
rebutted but strengthened by the fact that a receipt for the letter is
produced signed on behalf of the addressee by some person other
than the addressee himself.”
20. Secondly, we may refer to the judgment of a Full Bench of the Allahabad
High Court in the case of Ganga Ram Vs. Smt. Phulwati [AIR 1970
Allahabad 446], wherein the Court observed in paragraphs 12 and 13 as
follows:
“12. When a registered article or a registered letter is handed
over to an accepting or receiving post office, it is the official duty of
the postal authorities to make delivery of it to the addressee.
Human experience shows that except in a few exceptional cases
letters or articles received by the post office are duly, regularly and
properly taken to the addressee. Consequently as a proposition it
cannot be disputed that when a letter is delivered to an accepting
or receiving post office it is reasonably expected that in the normal
course it would be delivered to the addressee. That is the official
and the normal function of the post office.
13. Help can also be taken from Section 16 of the Indian
Evidence Act which reads as follows:-
“When there is a question whether a particular act was done, the
existence of any course of business, according to which it naturally
would have been done, is a relevant fact.
Illustrations:
(a) The question is, whether a particular letter was dispatched.
The facts that it was the ordinary course of business for all letters
put in a certain place to be carried to the post, and that that
particular letter was put in that place, are relevant.
(b) The question is, whether a particular letter reached A. The
facts that it was posted in due course, and was not returned
through the Dead Letter Office, are relevant.”
1321. As far as a notice sent under postal certificate is concerned, in Mst.
L.M.S. Ummu Saleema Vs. B.B. Gujaral & Anr. [1981 (3) SCC 317], a
bench of three judges of this Court on the facts of that case, refused to accept
that the notice sent under a postal certificate by a detenue under the
Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Smuggling Activities Act, 1974, to the
Assistant Collector of Customs, retracting his original statement had been duly
served on the concerned office. This was because the respondent rebutted the
submission by producing their file to show that such a letter had not been
received in their office in the normal course of business. However, the
proposition laid down in that case is relevant for our purpose. This Court
observed in paragraph 6 of that judgment as follows:
“6. …………The certificate of posting might lead to a presumption
that a letter addressed to the Assistant Collector of Customs was
posted on August 14, 1980 and in due course reached the
addressee. But, that is only a permissible and not an inevitable
presumption. Neither Section 16 nor Section 114 of the Evidence
Act compels the court to draw a presumption. The presumption
may or may not be drawn. On the facts and circumstances of a
case, the court may refuse to draw the presumption. On the other
hand the presumption may be drawn initially but on a
consideration of the evidence the court may hold the presumption
rebutted and may arrive at the conclusion that no letter was
received by the addressee or that no letter was ever despatched as
claimed. After all, there have been cases in the past, though rare,
where postal certificates and even postal seals have been
manufactured. In the circumstances of the present case,
circumstances to which we have already referred, we are satisfied
that no such letter of retraction was posted as claimed by the
detenu.”
22. The proposition laid down in this judgment has been followed in two
subsequent cases coming before this Court in the context of Section 53(2) of the
Companies Act 1956 providing for presumption of service of notice of the board
meeting, sent by post. In M.S. Madhusoodhanan vs. Kerala Kaumudi (P)
Ltd. and others [2004 (9) SCC 204], a bench of two Judges of this Court
14referred to the proposition in Mst. L.M.S. Ummu Saleema (supra) in para 117 of
its judgment, and held in the facts of that case, that the notice by postal
certificate could not be presumed to have been effected, since the relations
between the parties were embittered, and the certificate of posting was suspect.
As against that, in a subsequent matter under the same section, in the case of
VS Krishnan Vs. Westfort Hi-Tech Hospital Ltd. [2008 (3) SCC 363],
another bench of two Judges referred to the judgment in M.S. Madhusoodhanan
(supra), and drew the presumption in the facts of that case that the notice sent
under postal certificate had been duly served for the purposes of Section 53(2)
of the Companies Act, 1956, since the postal receipt with post office seal had
been produced to prove the service. Thus, it will all depend on the facts of each
case whether the presumption of service of a notice sent under postal certificate
should be drawn. It is true that as observed by the Privy Council in its above
referred judgment, the presumption would apply with greater force to letters
which are sent by registered post, yet, when facts so justify, such a presumption
is expected to be drawn even in the case of a letter sent under postal certificate.
23.   Having seen the factual and the legal position, we may note that in the
present case it has already been established that the appellant had purchased
the property out of her own funds. Therefore, it could certainly be expected that
when she came to know about the clandestine sale of her property to
respondent No.1, she would send him a notice, which she sent on 8.4.1987. As
noted earlier, the notice is sent from one house on the College Road to another
15house on the same road in the city of Pathankot. The agreement of purchase is
signed by the defendant No.3 five days thereafter i.e. 13.4.1987. The appellant
had produced a copy of the notice along with postal certificate in evidence.
There was no allegation that the postal certificate was procured. In the
circumstances, it could certainly be presumed that the notice was duly served on
respondent No.1 before 13.4.1987. The High Court, therefore, erred in
interfering in the finding rendered by the Additional District Judge that
respondent No.1 did receive the notice and, therefore, was not a bona fide
purchaser for value without a notice.
24. The judgment of the High Court, therefore, deserves to be set
aside. The appellants through their counsel have, however, in all fairness
offered to compensate the first respondent herein by paying him the amount of
Rs. 30,000/- with appropriate interest. The first respondent did not evince any
interest in this suggestion. Yet, the end of justice will be met, if this amount of
Rs. 30,000/- is returned by the appellants to him as offered by them with simple
interest at the rate of 10%.
25. In the circumstances this appeal is allowed. The Judgment and
order dated 10.2.2009 passed by the High court in R.S.A No. 1367 of 1996 and
that of the Sub-Judge, Pathankot in Civil Suit No. 138 of 1987 dated 3.10.1991
are set aside.  The judgment and order dated 22.2.1996 passed by Addl. District.
Judge, Gurdaspur in Civil Appeal No. 203 of 1991 is confirmed. The suit filed by
the appellant No.1 bearing Civil Suit No. 138 of 1987 is decreed and it is declared
16that the appellant No. 1 is the owner of the suit house. There shall be a
permanent injunction restraining the defendants from alienating any part of the
suit house and forcibly interfering into the possession of the plaintiff of the house
in dispute. In view of the offer given by the appellants to compensate the first
respondent, the appellants shall pay him the amount of Rs. 30,000/-(Rupees
thirty thousand only), with simple interest at the rate of 10% for the period from
13.4.1987 till the decision of the first appellate court i.e. 22.2.1996, within twelve
weeks from today, though it is up to the respondent No. 1 to receive the
amount.  The interest is restricted upto 22.2.1996 for the reason that respondent
No.1 ought to have accepted the decision of the First Appellate Court,
particularly in view of the judgment of this Court in R. Rajagopal Reddy (supra),
and should not have dragged the appellants to the High Court in Second appeal.
26. The first respondent will pay a cost of Rs. 10,000/- to the 1
st
appellant
for this appeal.
…………..……………………..J.
( Dalveer Bhandari )
…………………………………..J.
( H.L. Gokhale  )
New Delhi
Dated: January 21, 2011
17