LAWS(PVC)-1897-12-2

PRINCE SULEMAN KADAR BAHADUR Vs. NAWAB MEHNDI

Decided On December 08, 1897
Prince Suleman Kadar Bahadur Appellant
V/S
Nawab Mehndi Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) THE appellant is a son of the late King of Oudh. The respondent is his wife. They were living together in the year 1875, but in the year 1886 they separated, and they have since lived apart. By a mortgage bond dated May 10, 1870, two ladies mortgaged certain houses and lands to the appellant to secure Rs. 8500 with interest at the rate of 8 annas per cent, per mensem for a stipulated period of five years. Nothing was paid by the mortgagors on account of either principal or interest, and on May 14,1875, a sale deed of the mortgaged property was executed by the mortgagors whereby, after reciting the mortgage and that the mortgagors had not been able to pay anything up to date, and that according to accounts it appeared that they had then to pay to the appellant the sum of Rs. 11,000 on account of principal and interest, it was witnessed that the mortgagors sold the mortgaged property in lieu of Rs. 11,000 to the respondent, and that the mortgagors having received the purchase-money in full from the said vendee had paid it to the appellant in liquidation of the debt due to him under the deed of May 10, 1870. It appears from the indorsement on the sale deed that a further sum of Rs. 250 was paid in cash to the mortgagors, and this sum seems to have found its way back into the hands of the appellant's then agent.

(2.) THE question on this appeal is what the transaction recorded in this sale deed really was. The appellant contends that the sale deed was executed ism farzi (fictitiously) in the name of the respondent, and that he was the real purchaser and assumed proprietary possession of the property comprised in the deed. The respondent, on the other hand, alleges that she purchased the property in suit with her own money, and has ever since been in adverse proprietary possession thereof.

(3.) IT is apparent from this evidence, and indeed it is not denied, that no money in fact passed from the nominal purchaser to the vendors, and from the latter to the mortgagee, and that the narrative of the deed is not therefore in accordance with the facts. The effect, and doubtless the object, of the deed is to make it appear that the consideration to the vendors for the sale proceeded to them from the respondent, so as to give her an apparent title for value, whereas the real consideration to the vendors being the extinction of the mortgage debt, which was the property of the appellant, proceeded from him. Their Lordships think that this circumstance, and the other evidence of the appellant and his witnesses, are sufficient to call upon the respondent for an answer, and to shift the burden of proof upon her. This burden, she may discharge by shewing that the purchase-money, though not paid by her to the vendors, was paid to the appellant out of her moneys, or by evidence of continuous possession in accordance with the deed. The respondent was called as a witness by the appellant. In her evidence she states as follows: My husband told me that there was no use in keeping money; that he had a house in mortgage which I should buy; that it was very cheap; that I will get rents; and that it will be sold for Rs. 11,000. I told him that he should speak to my aunt (Ammi Jan); if she accepts I will accept. The plaintiff then spoke to her, and she consented. Thereupon I also consented. Then the plaintiff told my aunt that the Rani's mokhtar had come, and if she (my aunt) gives the money, the plaintiff will make arrangements for the purchase. Thereupon my aunt sent Rs. 10,000 in cash with the plaintiff, and asked Achche Sahib to send for the remaining Rs. 1000 thereafter. This Rs. 10,000 belonged to me, and was kept in deposit with my aunt. Then I sent Agha Nawab, my mokhtar, who got the deed executed. The plaintiff got the remaining Rs. 1000 from Achche Sahib. The latter paid the money on my behalf, as my mother had told him to pay. Then Agha Nawab got the deed of sale duly executed and registered, and then gave over to me the said deed of sale as well as the mortgage deed. Agha Nawab took Rs. 250 more from me, which he said the plaintiff had told him to pay to Kirpa Ram, mokhtar of the Ranis. Since purchase, the house in dispute has been all along in my possession.... The above facts were known to Agha Nawab, Mirza Muhammad Daroga, Achche Sahib, Saiyid Mustafa, and others whose names I cannot recollect.... When my aunt paid the money to the plaintiff I was sleeping; when I got up my aunt told me that she had paid the money, and Taijan Mahaldar told me that she had carried the money with the plaintiff." Achche Sahib states he was told that Rs. 1000 was short, and was asked to pay it, and paid it to Taijan Mahaldar; and so far he confirms the respondent's evidence. He further states that he did not see the price, Rs. 11,000, paid. Achche Sahib, however, was a dismissed servant of the appellant. He says he resigned the appellant's service because the appellant gave him orders to oppress the respondent; and he is now the agent of the respondent, and was made a defendant in the appellant's suit for restitution of conjugal rights. The District Judge described him as "a most shifty and unsatisfactory witness." On the other hand, the respondent did not call as witnesses her aunt, her mother, Taijan, Agha Nawab, or Saiyid Mustafa, and there is no explanation of their absence. Nor were any questions addressed to the appellant in cross-examination with a view to shewing that money was paid to him by the respondent's direction or on her behalf. There is therefore no real corroboration of the respondent's evidence, and their Lordships cannot accept her evidence as reliable proof that any money was paid by her either to the vendors or the mortgagee on their account.