(1.) The plaintiff sued to recover possession of the land described in the plaint free from any rights or charges thereon, alleging that defendant No. 1 held the land in suit under a mulgeni lease, dated June 17, 1882; that under it the lessee was liable to pay the stipulated rent at a fixed time of the year; that the lease also stipulated that the lessee should enjoy the land without transferring it to anybody; that if he broke any of these conditions the lessee was, under its terms liable to forfeit his lease hold rights; that defendant No. 1 did not give the stipulated rent at the stipulated time; that defendant No. 1 mortgaged this land to defendant No. 2 on November 11 , 1922; that he thus broke both the conditions and that, therefore, the plaintiff had. got a right to recover possession of the land.
(2.) The 1 defendant contended that the stipulation against alienation was illegal. But that is obviously a point which cannot be relied upon by the 1 defendant.
(3.) We must take it, considering the terms of the lease, although it is not very clear whether the District Judge considered that the terms transfer or alienation include a simple mortgage, that the 1 defendant has transferred by mortgage his interest in the land to the 2nd defendant, which would involve a forfeiture if the owner wished to exercise his rights under the lease.