(1.) This is an appeal on behalf of defendant 1 in a suit for declaration of the plaintiff's right over the suit lands and for g confirmation or, in the alternative, for recovery of possession of the said lands. The facts of the case are well summarised by the lower appellate Court. One Madan Mohan had a money decree against one Amritlal Bohidar. In the execution of that decree, A annas gounti share of Amritlal with appurtenant bhogra lands in village Ainthapali had been attached and sold, but before the confirmation of the sale one Labariidhar Meher purchased 8 annas share out of the said annas with bhogra lands mentioned in schedule A of the plaint by a registered kebala, dated 19 June 1924, which was subsequently corrected and substituted by another deed dated 15 July 1924. Labanidhar got possession through Court and got his name entered in respect of the said share in the Collectorate, and was also recorded in the Hamid Settlement. The plaintiff, thereafter, purchased the said share with the lands mentioned in schedule A from Labanidhar by a registered sale deed, dated 10 January 1930, and got possession over the lands and also got his name entered in the Collectorate in respect of the purchased share. The plaintiff's case was that out of the lands mentioned in Schedule. A to the plaint, defendant 1 began to interfere with his possession by encroaching upon seventeen Hamid plots, described in Schedule B to the plaint, comprising an area of 3.09 acres. The plaintiff alleged that the defendants had no manner of right over the suit lands and they were trespassers thereon, and he, therefore, filed the suit as aforesaid.
(2.) In order to understand the defence, it is best to give a brief genealogy of the family of the defendants. One Gobind Bahidar had four sons, Jagannath, Lokanath, Eamprasad and Bhagwat Prasad (defendant 1 and D.W. 7 in the suit); Jagannath had a son Madhusudan (who is now dead) who got two sons Nandlal (now dead) and Amritlal; Lokanath's son Biseshwar D. w. 4 in the suit, had another son named Maithili; Ramprasad had no issue; and Bhagwat Prasad's son is Shibcharan, who is defendant 2. The case for the defence was that they were not aware of any attachment or sale of the property of Amritlal or of any such sale to Labanidhar, or any purchase by the plaintiff from Labanidhar; that the bhogra lands bearing Hamid's Plot Nos. 138, 388, 413, 414 and 512 out of Schedule B lands are of the joint property which belong to defendant 1 and his three brothers; that on 22 May, 1916, Loknath Bahidar himself and on behalf of his twominor sons, Bisheshwar and Maithili, and Madhusudan on behalf of himself and his two minor sons executed a mortgage bond in favour of one Mt. Parbati Bui for a consideration of Rs. 310. These lands are mentioned in Schedule C of the written statement and include twelve of the Hamid plots mentioned in Schedule B. One Bankatswami was also one of the mortgagees with Parbati Bui, but the money really belonged to Mt. Parbati, and after Bankatswami died Loknath Bahidar and his sons redeemed the mortgage and were thus relegated to the position of the original mortgagee, and afterwards they gave lands in usufructuary mortgage to the defendants for a consideration of Rs. 410 by a registered bond dated 8th January 1925, the bond having been executed in the name of defendant 2 only. The defendants allege that the plaintiff cannot get possession over twelve out of the seventeen plots in Schedule B without redeeming the defendant's mortgage of 1925 and paying them Rs. 410 the full consideration of the said bond. They also allege that the plaintiff was not entitled to get possession of the remaining five plots for the reason that they are joint family property.
(3.) The Munsif found that so far as the five plots were concerned, those mentioned above they did not form part of the joint property of defendant 1 and his brothers and therefore the plaintiffs were entitled to get possession of the same unconditionally, but about the other twelve plots the plaintiff was put to terms and was held entitled to recover possession on payment of Rs. 310 to the defendants. The plaintiff appealed, and there was a cross-objection also to the effect that the five plots were the joint property of defendant 1 and his brothers and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover possession of the remaining twelve plots without paying the full consideration of Rs. 410. The lower appellate Court formulated two points, for consideration, namely (1) whether the five plots mentioned above are the joint property of the brothers as alleged by the defence; and (2) whether the plaintiff is to be put to any terms before he can be entitled to recover possession of the remaining twelve plots out of Schedule B. So far as the first point is concerned, there was not much controversy before the lower appellate Court, nor was there any controversy before us, and the Court below rightly decided that these five plots were not the joint property of defendant 1 and his brothers and therefore the plaintiff had his right, title and interest in these plots. The whole controversy ranges round the twelve plots in the suit. The lower appellate Court has come to the conclusion that the first mortgage bond being without legal necessity, although Amrit Lal was born subsequently, yet he could challenge, it, and the bond being void, the position of subrogation would not arise and therefore the plaintiff could not be put to any terms. The lower appellate Court decreed the suit of the plaintiff in full and dismissed the cross-objection, Defendant 1 has now come up in second appeal. Mr. S.N. Sen Gupta, on behalf of the appellant, has raised the point that as Madhusudan's son, Nandlal, died without filing any suit, Amritlal, his younger brother, has no right to challenge the mortgage, by Madhusudan. It may be noted that Amritlal was born in 1917, Nandlal died after 1922 soon after Madhusudan's death in 1922, and as the purchaser claims his title through the vendee of Amritlal he could not have any greater right than Amritlal himself. Moreover as this was a suit for recovery of possession the suit was barred by limitation, counting the period of limitation from the date of the mortgage dated 22 May, 1916. So far as the first point is concerned, the case is covered by the decision in Bhup Kuar V/s. Balbi Sahai ( 22) 9 A.I.R. 1922 All. 342 where it was laid down that a son cannot object to alienations validly made by his father before he was born or begotten, because he could only by birth obtain an interest in property which was then existing in his ancestor. Hence if at the time of the alienation there had been no one in existence whose assent was necessary or if those who were then in existence had consented, he could not afterwards object on the ground, that there was no necessity for the transaction. If, however, an alienation was made by a father without necessity and without the consent of sons then living, it would not only be invalid against them but, also against any son born before they had ratified the transaction, and no consent given by them after his birth would be binding upon him. Here it may be noted that Nandlal died when Amritlal was about five or six years of age, and Amritlal was seven years of age when the kebala Ex. 2-A was executed on 19th June 1924, in favour of Labanidhar, Nandlal had died without having ratified the mortgage alienation, and, therefore, on the authority in Bhup Kuar V/s. Balbir Sahai ( 22) 9 A.I.R. 1922 All. 342, it appears to me that it was open to Amritlal to raise the question of legal necessity, and, therefore it appears that the interest of Amritlal in the joint family property which he got when Madhusudan and Nandlal were alive and which passed on to him after the death of Madhusudan and Nandlal by survivorship was not affected by the said mortgage.