LAWS(PVC)-1918-6-83

GAURISHANKAR BALMUKUND Vs. CHINNUMIYA

Decided On June 13, 1918
GAURISHANKAR BALMUKUND Appellant
V/S
CHINNUMIYA Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) By Section 325A of the Code of Civil Procedure (Act XIV of 1882) it is provided that:- So long as the Collector can exercise or perform in respect of the judgment-debtor s immovable property, or any part thereof, any of the powers or duties conferred or imposed on him by Sections 322 to 325 (both inclusive), the judgment-debtor or his representative in interest shall be incompetent to mortgage, charge, lease, or alienate such property or part except with the written permission of the Collector, nor shall any Civil Court issue any process against such property or part in execution of a decree for money.

(2.) In the present case the two salient facts are simply these : That in 1891 the Collector of the district came under the Act into possession of the property in question; and that secondly, while he was still in possession of that property, a mortgage upon it was granted on the 22nd July, 1892, by the judgment-debtor. It is now sought to make that mortgage operative in the appellant s favour by reason of this ; that the construction, it is alleged, of Section 325A is not to ha read in the complete and operative sense natural to the words, that is to say, of incompetency to mortgage such property, but must be read with an implied limitation. The limitation suggested is that there still remained in the judgment-debtor a power to mortgage the property so as to become operative over any residue that might arise to the latter after the Collector s regime had ended. It is the fact that the Collector s regime has now ended, but it is also the fact that, pending his regime, namely, on the 22nd July, 1892, the mortgage which is now founded upon was granted.

(3.) Their Lordships have been referred to authority upon this question. That which is founded on by the appellant particularly is the case of Magniram Vithuram v. Bakubai (1912) I.L.R. 36 Bom. 510. Their Lordships are of opinion that that case was erroneously decided. Upon the contrary, the case of Murray v. Muratsingh (1907)3 N.L.R. 171, referred to in the judgment under appeal, and the case which has been decided recently by the Full Bench of the Central Provinces in 13 Nagpur Law Reports, p. 130, are, in the opinion of the Board, proper decisions and sound in law.