LAWS(PVC)-1935-1-160

MURAHARI REDDI (DECEASED) Vs. CHENRAYA GOUNDAN

Decided On January 28, 1935
MURAHARI REDDI (DECEASED) Appellant
V/S
CHENRAYA GOUNDAN Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) The ninth defendant is the appellant. The facts of the case are clearly stated in the judgment of the lower Appellate Court and need not be re-stated.

(2.) The appeal relates to that part of the decree of the Subordinate Judge which directed the Receiver to hand over possession of the property to defendants 1 to 3. The ninth defendant is the purchaser of the property in execution of the decree in O.S. No. 672 of 1921 which he obtained against the present 3 and other defendants on the foot of a mortgage. In execution of that decree he purchased the property and symbolical delivery of possession was made over to him. But before he purchased the property in execution a Receiver had been appointed in the partition suit in which the present order; which is the subject-matter of the appeal had been passed. The" Receiver had obtained possession of the property from defendants 1 to 3. The Subordinate Judge dismissed the partition suit giving a declaration that the plaintiffs will be entitled to one-sixth share of the items of property in B and C schedules as are not validly alienated as may be determined in a suit properly framed for partition. As part of the order he also said that the Receiver will hand over possession of the properties to defendants 1 to 3. It is this latter order that is now objected to by the 9 defendant. His case is that he has become the purchaser of the property in a mortgage suit as against the third and other defendants and that the lower Court was wrong in ordering that possession should be delivered to defendants 1 to 3.;

(3.) Two decisions were relied on in support of the contention, Bhagwan Das Marwari v. Manindra Chandra Nandi A.I.R. 1927 Pat. 397 and Metropolitan Amalgamated Estates, Limited, In re (1912) 2 Ch. 497 followed in the first mentioned decision. In Bhagwandas Marwari V/s. Manindra Chandra Nandi A.I.R. 1927 Pat. 397 the application for delivery of possession in a case in which the properties were in the possession of the Receiver was made by a usufructuary mortgagee entitled to remain in possession of the properties. His right as a usufructuary mortgagee being in existence before the appointment of the Receiver, he said that his properties should be exempted from the order delivering possession of the properties to the Receiver. The learned Judge followed the law as stated in Kerr on Receivers, 8 Edn., page 195, where the following principle was enunciated if persons with paramount rights who are not parties to the action are actually in possession of those rights, the appointment of a Receiver does not prejudice them in the enjoyment of those rights. But if they are not actually in possession, then after a receiver has been appointed, they must come to the Court for leave to exercise those rights, in which case their application cannot be refused . It is the latter part of the principle above stated that is relied on by the learned Counsel for the appellant. But it must be observed that the principle relates to the rights of a usufructuary mortgagee. A usufructuary mortgagee is not at all affected by the order appointing a Receiver, but, if he is not actually in possession, then the latter portion of the extract says that he can come to Court and say that the Receiver application with respect to his property should be refused. The point to be noticed is that the rights are asserted by a person whose right to be in possession of the property existed before the Receiver was appointed, the person being a usufructuary mortgagee. It may be that he was in possession at the time the order was passed or it may be that though entitled to remain in possession he was not in actual possession. Both kinds of cases are dealt with in the above extract. In the English case which was relied on the position was exactly the same. The application was made by the first mortgagee in an action by the second mortgagee, the first mortgagee being entitled to remain in possession. The two cases relied on are not applicable to the present case because, as already stated, at the time when the Receiver took possession of the properties the ninth defendant had not obtained the title to remain in possession of the properties. The sale and delivery was after possession was delivered over to the Receiver. These two cases being inapplicable, it should be held that the order of the lower Court that possession should be delivered to the defendant 1 to 3 from whom possession was taken by the Receiver cannot be interfered with.