(1.) The ruling in Imambandi V/s. Mutsaddi (1918) I.L.R. 45 Cal. 878, 35 M.L.J. 422 (P.C.) which was relied on by this Court in its judgment of 10-2-1920 for holding that the sale Exhibt III is not binding on the plaintiff is equally in point to hold that the mortgage Exhibit I is not binding on the defendants. Both transfers being by a person not guardian of the minors, are equally void.
(2.) So that the position is this: 1 defendant was admitted into possession in 1893 under a void mortgage. The nature of his possession after that was nevertheless that of mortgagee and not absolute trespasser--see Gopala Dasu v. Rami (1921) I.L.R. 44 .M. 946 and he began then to prescribe by adverse possession for the legal status of mortgagee which, if his possession was not altered or disturbed, he would acquire, after twelve years of such possession, i. e., the plaintiff would after such a period of 12 years be barred by limitation from contending on the ground that the mortgage was a void one, that 1 defendant was not even mortgagee. But while the 1 defendant was thus prescribing for a legal mortgage title, the same mortgagor on behalf of the plaintiffs, chose to sell the property to him in 1900 under Exhibit III. This sale no doubt was equally void as the mortgage was. But it had the legal effect of altering the nature of the possession which 1 defendant had in the property. He began in 1900 to prescribe by adverse possession for a vendee's title, just as in 1893 he had begun to prescribe for a mortgagee's title, and that the manner of his possession was prescribing for full ownership was clearly known to the party who had deliberately converted the mortgage into a sale.
(3.) It seems to me, therefore, quite clear that after 12 years from 1900, 1st defendant had prescribed by adverse possession for a full vendee's title, i. e, absolute ownership, and that it is not open to plaintiff now to contend that the mortgage title emerges again when the sale is held void, and the defendants must therefore prescribe for 60 years. The plaintiff's guardian converted the possession of 1 defendant as mortgagee into that of vendee.