LawforAll

advocatemmmohan

My photo
since 1985 practicing as advocate in both civil & criminal laws

WELCOME TO LEGAL WORLD

WELCOME TO MY LEGAL WORLD - SHARE THE KNOWLEDGE

Thursday, December 15, 2011

specific performance act =in the joint family property one person can not sale the entire property with out joining the others as parties to the agreement of sale, such agreement is not enforecable, even though other sharers properties is relinquished under sec.14 =(a) whether the High Court has erred in applying the provisions of Sections 12, 14 and 20 of the Specific Relief Act 1963 (hereinafter referred as `the act’ for short), and (b) whether the agreement in question being vague in nature was incapable of being performed? = the appellant should be directed to pay the respondents an amount of Rs. 5,00,000/- which will be inclusive of the earnest money with due return thereon, and compensation.


                                                                             REPORTABLE


                         IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA


                          CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION




                         Civil Appeal No. 3249 OF 2005








Shanker Singh                                                     ...       Appellant


                                             Versus




Narinder Singh & Ors.                                             ...         Respondents










                                 J U D G  E M E N T






H.L. Gokhale J.                   






                This appeal by special leave under Article 136 of the Constitution of 




India, seeks to challenge the judgment and order dated 8.4.2003 rendered by a 




learned   Single   Judge   of   the   Punjab   and   Haryana   High   Court,   in   Civil   Regular 




Second Appeal No. 1338/1983.   The learned Single Judge has allowed the said 




second   appeal   by   the   respondent   Nos.   1   and   2   (contesting   respondents   and 




original plaintiffs), who had filed a suit for specific performance of an agreement 




entered   into   with   the   appellant   (original   defendant   No.   1).     Although   various 




questions of law are sought to be raised in this appeal, the relevant questions for 




our determination are mainly two viz. (a) whether the High Court has erred in  




applying the provisions of Sections 12, 14 and 20 of the Specific Relief Act 1963  




(hereinafter  referred  as `the act'  for short), and (b) whether the agreement in 




question being vague in nature was incapable of being performed?



        Facts leading to this present appeal are as follows:-






2.               On   12.1.1977   the   appellant   herein,   a   resident   of   Village   Dera 




Saidan entered into an agreement to sell certain  property  with the respondent 




No. 1, a resident of Dera Mainda, both villages being in Tehsil Sultanpur, Distt. 




Kapurthala of State of Punjab.   The property to be sold consisted of two parts  




viz. agricultural land, and a house property.  The Agricultural lands were bearing  




Khasra   nos.   25/21/1-1/11-19,   26//24/6-11,   10/8-0,   12/5-8,   19/6-13,   20/8-0, 




25//5/8-0, 15/8-0, 16/8-0, 17-8-0, 18/6-14, 21/2/5/7, 22/5-14, 23/8-0, 24/8-0, 




25/7-18, 26/2-0, 34//2/6-14, 25//13/3-13. 






3.       The relevant clause of the agreement stated as follows:-






        "Whereas the first party is the owner of = share in 65-13 and the total  




area  of  the first  party  is  92-K-17M and the  remaining  one  house  in  the abadi 




Dera Saidan bounded by the custodian on the east, Kartar Singh on west, Pahar-




passage  on   the   south   and   the  =   share  belongs   to   the  wife   of  the  first  party  




namely Pritam Kaur.   Now I am in need of purchasing property and therefore, 




now I am executing this writing in my full senses and dealing to sell the = share  




in   lands   measuring   92K-17M   along   with   motor,   bore,   passage,   fan   and   water 




pump   fitted   with   engine   and   without   engine   along   with   the   place   for   placing 




garbage including shamlat and including passage and all the rights which vest in  




Pritam   Kaur   and   also   execute   this   deal   for   sale   on   behalf   of   Pritam,   with   the 




party   of   the   2nd  part   for   a   total   consideration   of   Rs.   1,24,500/-   and   I   have 



received   a   sum   of   Rs.   28,000/-   in   cash   as   advance   money   in   front   of   the 




witnesses.     The   purchaser   will   get   the   registry   executed   on   25th  day   of   Magh 




2034 and the possession will be handed over at the time of registry."






                 It was also agreed that if the appellant  violated the terms of the 




agreement, then the respondents were entitled to the recovery of Rs. 28,000/- 




as earnest money and Rs. 28,000/- as damages, the total coming to Rs. 56,000/. 




It   was   further   agreed   that   if   there   was   any   addition   or   decrease   in   the   area 




agreed   to   be   sold   belonging   to   appellant,   the   price   of   the   same   was   to   be 




adjusted accordingly.






4.               It   so   transpired,   that   on   the   agreed   date   of   registration   the 




appellant   did   not   turn   up   at   the   office   of   the   Sub-Registrar,   and   hence   the  




respondent   gave   a   notice   to   the   appellant   to   execute   the   sale   deed.   The 




appellant   did   not   respond,   and   therefore   the   respondent   No.   1   filed   Suit   No.  




21/1978   in   the   Court   of   Sub   Judge   1st  Class,   Sultanpur   Lodhi   for   the   specific 




performance   of   the   agreement.     The   wife   of   Shanker   Singh,   Pritam   Kaur   was  




joined as defendant No.2.  (She is reported to have expired in 1997).  The other 




co-sharers of the land had sold their land in dispute in favour of one Joginder 




Kaur and three others who were joined as defendant Nos. 3 to 6 (Respondent  




Nos.  4 to 7 in the Civil Appeal).






5.               The   appellant   raised   various   defences.     Firstly   he   denied   having 




entered  into   the  agreement,  and   then   he  claimed  of   having   received   only   Rs. 




8,000/- and not Rs. 28,000/- as earnest money.  Thereafter, he contended that 



he did not have the authority to enter into the agreement to sell = share in the 




house   property   which   belonged   to   his   wife.     Lastly   he   contended   that   he 




alongwith his two minor sons Amrik Singh and Balbinder Singh formed a Hindu 




Undivided   Family   (HUF),   and   that   he   could   not   sell   the   coparcenery   property 




except in the case of legal necessity and for the benefit of the family.






6.              The Trial Court framed the following issues:




        1)      Whether   the   agreement   in   question   was   executed   by   Shanker  


                Singh defendant in his own behalf and on behalf of defendant No. 


                2 for consideration?






        2)      Whether Shanker Singh was competent to enter into agreement on 


                behalf of defendant No. 2? 






        3)      Whether   the   property   in   suit   is   the   co-parcenary   property   as  


                alleged in para No. 1 (on merits) of the written statement filed by 


                defendants No. 1 & 2?






        4)      Whether the plaintiffs have been ready and willing to perform their 


                part of the agreement?






        5)      Whether defendant No. 1 has committed breach of the agreement?






        6)      Whether the plaintiffs are entitled for specific performance of the  


                amount claimed?






        7)      Relief.






7.              The respondent examined himself, the writer of the agreement and 




one of the witnesses of the agreement to prove the document of sale.  The Trial  




Court held on issue No. 1 that the evidence of the writer of the agreement and 




that   of   the   attesting   witness   was   reliable,   and   that   the   earnest   money   of  



Rs. 28,000/- had in fact been paid.   The agreement in question was therefore 




proved to be a duly executed document.  This finding has been left undisturbed  




in the first appeal as well as in the second appeal.






8.              As far as the second issue with respect to the competence of the 




appellant   to   enter   into   the   agreement   on   behalf   of   his   wife   is   concerned, 




although   the   wife   of   appellant   Smt.   Pritam   Kaur   did   file   a   separate   written  




statement, she did  not  enter  into  the witness box.    The Trial Court  therefore,  




held that an adverse inference will have to be drawn that she had given such an 




authority to her husband to sell her property.  It further held that when Shanker 




Singh had agreed to sell his entire land, there was no logic on his part to retain  




the house, when he alongwith his wife had decided to shift to some other place 




after purchasing some other property as is evidenced from the agreement.  






9.              As far as issue No. 3 is concerned, the appellant contended that he  




had purchased the land in dispute from the proceeds of the sale of his ancestral  




land at village Nihaluwal, which ancestral land belonged to his father Lachhman  




Singh.     He  produced   documents  which   showed  that  he   as   well  as  his   brother 




Puran Singh and his sisters had sold their lands at village Nihaluwal.   However,  




the appellant could not prove that the land in dispute was purchased from the 




proceeds of the sale of the land which came to his share from his father.   The  




learned Single Judge noted that in any case the property in dispute was not one 




inherited by the appellant from his father.  He observed that the land in dispute  




for being proved to be an ancestral one, must be shown to have been held at  




one time by the ancestor, and that it has come to the appellant by survivorship.  



The learned Trial Judge therefore held that the disputed land could not be held 




to be a co-parcenery property wherein the minors had any share.   The burden  




that the disputed land, was a co-parcenery property was on the appellant, and 




he had failed to discharge the same.






10.             The   Trial   Judge   held   that   the   respondents   were   of   course   ready  




and willing to perform their part of agreement, and it is the appellant who had 




failed to discharge his obligation.  The learned Judge therefore decreed the suit 




for specific performance by his judgment and order dated 20.2.1980.






11.             The appellant herein challenged this judgment in Civil Appeal No. 




62 of 1980 (which appears to have been numbered subsequently as Civil Appeal 




No. 92 of 1981).   The learned  Additional District  Judge who heard the appeal  




held   that   as   far   as   the   agreement   is   concerned,   the   same   had   been   duly  




executed,   and   that   the   appellant   had   received   the   amount   of   Rs.   28,000/-   as 




earnest money.  As far as the issue with respect to the interest of the minors is 




concerned, he held that for proving the property to be ancestral, the appellant 




had to show that the land in Village Nihaluwal was originally held by his father 




Lachhman Singh,  and it was the same land which was sold by him and those 




proceeds had led to the purchase of the land at Dera Saidan.  The learned Judge  




however,   noted   that   no   documentary   evidence   of   holding   of   Lachhman   Singh  




with   respect   to   the   land   at   Nihaluwal   had   been   produced,   nor   was   there   any  




revenue   entry   of   the   name   of   Lachhman   Singh   in   the   disputed   land   at   Dera 




Saidan.  Hence the disputed land could not be held to be co-parcenery property.



12.              The First Appellate Court however found fault with the respondents' 




claim on two counts.  Firstly, it noted in para 6 of its judgment that `although it  




has  not  been  made  clear  in  the  agreement,  it  appears  that Puran  Singh,  (the  




brother of the appellant) was the owner of the other = share in the house as 




Puran Singh and Shanker Singh had purchased their land jointly in equal shares 




in Village Dera Saidan.'   There was no dispute that = share of the house was  




owned by Pritam Kaur, wife of the appellant.  She had filed a written statement 




opposing the decree.  Therefore, in the same paragraph the court subsequently 




observed `it has already been held that even in respect of half the share in the 




house, Shanker Singh, defendant No. 1 had no authority to sell the same and the  




plaintiffs have no right to claim a decree for the same.'  The Court therefore held  




by its judgment and order dated 23.2.1983 that the appellant could not sell, or 




agree to sell the property of his wife without her written consent, and therefore 




the agreement was incapable of being performed in respect of the house.  






13.              The   second   count   on   which   the   First   Appellate   Court   found   the 




claim   of   the   respondents   to   be   incapable   of   acceptance   was   that   though   the  




agreement   provided   for   the   sale   of   92   Kanals   and   17   Marlas   of   land,   it   was 




actually   found   to   be   94   Kanals   and   16   Marlas   (i.e.   1   Kanal   and   19   Marlas   in  




excess).     After   examining   the   evidence   on   record,   the   Court   observed   as 




follows:-




                 "......Now in the agreement Ex. P.1 the consideration of the  
        whole   property   has   been   fixed   at   Rs.   1,24,500/-   and   the  
        consideration   for the house has  not  been   determined  separately.  
        Again, the agreement provides for the sale of 92 Kanals 17 Marlas  
        of   land   and   at   the   end   it   has   been   added   that   if   any   land   was  
        found to be in excess or deficient, then the consideration would be  



        increased or decreased correspondingly.  Now, in actual fact it has  
        been   found   that   the   holding   of   Shanker   Singh   is   94   Kanals   16  
        Marlas.   However, in the agreement no separate consideration for  
        the land has been given nor is the rate of the sale given and it is  
        not   possible   to   determine   as   to   what   should   be   the   cost   of   the  
        excess land of 1 Kanals 10 Marlas. Had the price of the land been  
        mentioned separately, it could have been possible to work out the  
        price   of   the   excess   area   by   mathematical   calculation   but   as   the  
        agreement stands this is not possible....."






                It   was   obvious   that   such   an   excess   share   of   land   could   not   be 




segregated.     The   court   therefore,   held   that   the   whole   of   the   agreement   was  




incapable   of   specific   performance.     Hence   it   set   aside   the   decree   of   specific  




performance.  The Court found fault with the appellant also for entering into the 




agreement for sale of = share in the house belonging to his wife without any 




authority.  It, therefore, directed refund of the earnest money of Rs. 28,000/-.






14.             The   respondents   challenged   the   judgment   of   the   First   Appellate 




Court  by  filing  a  Regular   Second  Appeal   No.  1338 of   1983  in  the  High   Court.  




However, having noted the finding of the First Appellate Court that Smt. Pritam 




Kaur   had   =   share   in   the   house   property,   and   it   could   not   be   sold   by   the 




appellant herein, and also since the land was found to be in excess by 1 Kanal  




and   19   Marlas,   the   respondents   submitted   in   the   High   Court   that   they   were 




ready to give up the claim for = the share of Smt. Pritam Kaur in the house, and  




were also ready to restrict themselves to the purchase of land of 92 Kanals and 




17 Marlas as per the agreement, and nothing more.   The order passed at the  




time of admission of the second appeal reads as follows:-



           "                                  Dt. The 19th October, 1983.
                                        Present
                            The Hon'ble Mr. Justice J.M. Tandon
           For the appellant  :-  Mr. Anand Swaroop, Sr. Advocate 
                            with Mr. Sanjiv Pabbi, Adv.    




           For the respondents:- Mr. H.S. Kathuria, Adv. For Res. No. 1 and 2




                                                   Order




           Mr. Sanjiv Pabbi, learned counsel for the appellants, states that the  
       appellants   are  prepared   to  pay  full   consideration  of  Rs.  1,24,000/-  as  
       stipulated in the agreement for the purchase of the land and the share  
       of   Shanker   Singh   respondent   in   the   house.     Says   further   that   the  
       appellants   will   not   press   for   the   transfer   of   half   share   of   the   house  
       which is owned by Pritam Kaur, wife of Shanker Singh.




           Admitted.
                                                                                          Sd/-
                                                                                        J.M.   Tandon


                                                                                                  Judge"




15.                 The High Court therefore, framed the substantial questions of law 




as follows:- 




                    "Whether the plaintiffs  are entitled  to specific  performance  
           of   the   agreement   in   respect   of   valid   part   of   the   agreement   on  
           payment of the entire sale consideration in terms of Section 12 of  
           Specific Relief Act, 1963."




                    It   was   submitted   on   behalf   of   the   respondents   herein   that   they 




were entitled to relinquish the part of the agreement which was not enforceable,  




and the same was permissible under Section 12 (3) of the Act.  They relied upon 




the   dicta   of   this   Court   in  Kalyanpur   Lime   Works   Ltd.   Vs.   State   of   Bihar 




reported in AIR 1954 SC 165 to the effect that such an relinquishment can be 




made   at   any   stage   of   the   proceedings.     This   proposition   of   a   Bench   of   three 




Judges   in   Kalyanpur   Lime   Works   (supra)   has   been   reiterated   by   this   Court   in 




Rachakonda Narayana Vs. Ponthala Parvathamma  reported in  2001 (8) 



SCC   173.    The   learned   Judge   hearing   the   second   appeal   accepted   this 




submission,   and   by   his   impugned   judgment   and   order   allowed   the   second  




appeal, and decreed the suit filed  by the respondents for specific performance 




for   agriculture   land   admeasuring   92   Kanals   and   17   Marlas   after   recording   the 




statement of the counsel for the respondents that they were relinquishing that 




part of the agreement which was not capable of being performed.






16.             Mr.   Venkataramani,   learned   senior   counsel   appearing   for   the 




appellant assailed the impugned judgment on various grounds, as against which 




Mr.   Vishwanathan,   learned   senior   counsel   appearing   for   the   respondents  




defended the judgment as a proper one in the facts of the case.  Amongst other 




submissions, it was contented on behalf of the appellant that minors' share could 




not have been sold without the permission of the Court in view of the provision 




of Section 8 (2) of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956.  However in  




view of the concurrent findings as recorded all throughout in the present case, 




one   cannot   say   that   the   minor   sons   of   the   appellant   had   any   share   in   the  




concerned property which required the permission of the Court for its sale.  It is, 




therefore, not possible to accept this submission.






17.             It was then submitted that the agreement was incapable of being  




implemented as rightly held by the Additional District Judge, and that the High 




Court had erred in its application of the provisions of Section 12, 14 and 20 of 




the act. Firstly, this was on the ground that there was no specific reference to  




the price  of the  land  per  Kanal or per  Marla  as held  by the Additional  District  




Judge.     Secondly,   it   was   submitted   that   the   relinquishment   was   not 



unambiguous.     The   respondents   had   offered   to   give   up   their   claim   for   such 




excess land, but it was not possible to state that the claim was being given up  




with respect to a particular parcel of land bearing a specific Khasra number.  The  




agreement was vague in nature and since the proposed relinquishment was also 




ambiguous, the agreement was incapable of being performed.  






        Consideration of the rival submissions






18.             In this connection, we may refer to the relevant provisions of the 




Act.   Section 12(3) of the Act permits a party to an agreement to relinquish a 




part of the agreement which is not enforceable.  However, it should be possible 




to   identify   and   demarcate   that   part   of   the   agreement   which   is   not   to   be  




enforced.     We   must  also  keep  in   mind   the   provision  of   Section  14  of   the  Act  




which   deals   with   contracts   which   are   not   specifically   enforceable,   and   Sub-




Section   1   (b)   thereof   includes   therein   a   contract   which   runs   into   minute   and 




numerous details, as is seen in the present case.  In this connection, we must as 




well refer to Section 20 (1) of the Act which reads as follows:-




                "Section   20.   Discretion   as   to   decreeing   specific  
        performance - (1) The jurisdiction to decree specific performance  
        is   discretionary,   and   the   court   is   not   bound   to   grant   such   relief  
        merely because it is lawful to do so; but the discretion of the court  
        is   not   arbitrary   but   sound   and   reasonable,   guided   by   judicial  
        principles and capable of correction by a court of appeal."




19.             Damages   and   specific   performance   are   both   remedies   available 




upon breach of obligations by a party to the contract.  The former is considered 




to be a substantial remedy, whereas the latter is of course a specific remedy.  It 




is true that explanation (i) to Section 10 of the Act provides that unless and until  



the   contrary   is   proved,   the   Court   shall   presume   that   breach   of   contract   to 




transfer immovable property cannot be adequately relieved by compensation in 




money.  However, this presumption is not an irrebuttable one.  That apart, for a  




specific performance of a contract of sale of immovable property, there must be 




certainty with respect to the property to be sold.   As held by this Court in para  




18 of Mayawanti Vs. Kaushalya Devi reported in 1990 (3) SCC 1 :-






                  "18.  The   specific   performance   of   a   contract   is   the   actual  
         execution  of the contract according  to its stipulations  and terms,  
         and the courts direct the party in default to do the very thing which  
         he  contracted   to do.    The stipulations  and terms  of  the  contract  
         have,   therefore,   to   be   certain   and   the   parties   must   have   been  
         consensus   ad   idem.   The   burden   of   showing   the   stipulations   and  
         terms   of   the   contract   and   that   the   minds   were   ad   idem   is,   of  
         course, on the plaintiff.  If the stipulations and terms are uncertain,  
         and   the   parties   are   not   ad   idem,   there   can   be   no   specific  
         performance, for there was no contract at all............."




20.               Mr.   Vishwanathan,   learned   senior   counsel   for   the   respondents 




submitted that the relinquishment of a part of the agreement was permissible. 




As far as the propositions of law concerning relinquishment as canvassed by the 




respondents   are   concerned,   there   is   no   difficulty   in   accepting   the   same.  




However, the relinquishment has to be unambiguous.   As held by this Court in 




Surjit   Kaur   Vs.   Naurata   Singh  reported   in  2000   (7)   SCC   379,  the   party 




seeking   part   performance   must   unambiguously   relinquish   all   claims   to 




performance of remaining part of the contract.  In the present case the offer of  




relinquishment by the respondents cannot be said to be an unambiguous one, 




and   it   will   be   difficult   to   decide   as   to   which   portion   of   the   land   is   to   be  




segregated  to be retained  with the appellant,  and which portion  is to be sold. 



Firstly,   this   is   because   as   rightly   noted   by   the   Additional   District   Judge,   the 




agreement   does   not   specifically   mention   the   price   of   the   land,   and   in   the 




proposed relinquishment, the respondents have not stated as to which portion of 




land (admeasuring 1 Kanal and 19 Marlas) they were  agreeable  to retain with  




the appellant.   Secondly, in the agreement there is also a mention of `a motor,  




bore, passage, fan and water pump fitted with engine and without engine along 




with   the   place   for   placing   garbage   including   shamlat'   amongst   the   properties 




which were being sold.  It is not on record as to which parcel of land is having all  




these features.  A question will therefore arise as to with whom such a parcel of  




land is to be retained.   Obviously, a segregation of the land in dispute into two 




portions will be difficult. 






21.              In the present case there is one more difficulty viz. with respect to 




the   relinquishment   concerning   the   house.   The   First   Appellate   Court   had 




categorically   observed   in   para   6   of   its   judgment   as   quoted   above,   that   the  




brother of the appellant, Puran Singh appeared to be the owner of the other = 




share of the house, and the remaining = share was in the name of Pritam Kaur, 




and that Shanker Singh did not have any authority to sell it.   The judgment of  




the   High   Court   does   not   show   that   this   finding   had   been   challenged   in   the 




Second Appeal.   Nor was any submission made in this behalf before this Court. 




What the respondents offered was to give up the claim for the share of Pritam  




Kaur, and also the claim for the excess land of 1 Kanal and 19 Marlas which was  




accepted   by   the   High   Court   in   its   impugned   judgment.     The   respondents,  



however,   claimed   to   retain   the   alleged   =   share   of   Shanker   Singh,   as   can   be 




seen from the order dated 19.10.1983 which is passed at the time of admission.










22.              Thus,   the  respondents  made   a  statement   at  the  admission  stage 




that they were ready to pay the full consideration for the land as stipulated in  




the  agreement,  and  for  the  share  of  Shanker Singh  in  the  house.    This  order  




dated 19.10.1983 records that the respondents were ready to give up their claim 




for = the share of the house owned by Pritam Kaur, but maintained the claim  




for the share of Shanker Singh in the house.  As against that it appears from the 




judgment of the First Appellate Court, that Shanker Singh did not have any such  




share in the house.  His wife had = share, and his brother Puran Singh had =  




share.   In the teeth of this finding of the First Appellate Court, which is neither  




challenged nor reversed by the High Court, the proposed relinquishment cannot  




be said to be a correct and unambiguous one.  It does not alter the scenario and 




the agreement continues to remain incapable of performance.  In any case it is 




not clear as to how such an agreement could be acted upon.






23.              Therefore,   for   the   reasons   stated   above,   we   have   to   hold   in   the 




peculiar   facts   and   circumstances   of   this   case   that   inspite   of   the   offer   of 




relinquishment made by the respondents herein, the specific performance of the 




agreement cannot be granted, solely on the ground that it is incapable of being 




performed.     We   have   also   to   hold   that   the   High   Court   erred   in   applying   the  




provisions of Sections 12, 14 and 20 of the Act to the facts of the present case 




and   in   exercising   its   discretion,   since   this   was   not   a   case   for   specific 



performance.    We have therefore  to allow  this appeal and  set-aside  the order 




passed by the High Court in Regular Second Appeal No. 1338 of 1983.  The suit 




filed by the respondents will have to be dismissed.  






24.             We   have   however   to   note   that   the   respondents   had   paid   the 




earnest money of Rs. 28,000/- at the time of entering into the agreement way 




back on 12.1.1977 i.e. nearly 35 years ago. The respondents will therefore have 




to   be   compensated   adequately.     On   the   question   of   the   appropriate  




compensation, it was submitted by Mr. Venktaramani, the learned senior counsel 




for the appellant that the agreement was made at a difficult time in the social life  




of Punjab for a throw away price. However, no evidence is placed on record to  




that effect.  He then pointed out that the appellant had contended in the lower 




courts that respondents were influential people.   Even so, it cannot be ignored  




that   inspite   of   the   agreement,   the   land   has   remained   with   the   appellant   all 




through out in view of the orders passed by the courts from time to time, due to 




which   he   has   benefited.     The   specific   performance   of   the   agreement   is   being  




denied   basically   because   of   the   finding   that   the   agreement   was   incapable   of 




being   performed   inspite   of   the   offer   of   relinquishment.     It   is   an   adage   that 




money doubles itself in ten years, and on that basis the amount of Rs. 28,000/- 




with an appropriate interest will come to atleast Rs. 3,50,000/-.   If the land was  




with  the  respondents,  they  would  have earned  much  more.    Having  seen  this 




position, Mr. Venktaramani has fairly left it to the Court to decide an adequate 




amount to  be  paid  to the  respondents  by way of  compensation  and  in  lieu  of  




specific   performance   of   the   concerned   agreement.   Accordingly,   having 



considered all the relevant aspects, we are of the view that to meet the ends of 




justice, the appellant should be directed to pay the respondents an amount of 




Rs.   5,00,000/-   which   will   be   inclusive   of   the   earnest   money   with   due   return 




thereon, and compensation. 






25.             We,  therefore,  allow   this  appeal  and   set-aside  the  judgment  and 




order dated 8.4.2003 passed by the High Court in Civil Regular Second Appeal 




No.1338/1983, as well as the one dated 20.2.1980 rendered by the Sub Judge at 




Sultanpur Lodhi in Suit No.21/1978.   The suit shall stand dismissed.   There will 




be no order  as to costs.   However, the appellant is hereby directed to pay an 




amount of Rs. 5,00,000/- to the respondents which amount shall be paid in any 




case by the end of March, 2012.










                                                         ........................................J. 


                                                         ( P. Sathasivam  )








                                                                           


                                                         .........................................J. 


                                                         ( H.L. Gokhale  )




New Delhi 




Dated: December 15, 2011