George Claus Rankin, C.J.@mdashThis is a simple case. It appears from the findings of fact of the lower Appellate Court that, some five years
before the suit, the plaintiff sold certain land to the defendant No. 1. He got the purchase-money and he put the defendant No. 1 in possession of
the land. He also executed a document of transfer but represented to the defendant No. 1 that it was not necessary to have it registered and the
document was not registered. He brings this suit to eject the defendants. The lower Appellate Court has proceeded on this principle: that the 1st
defendant''s right to bring a suit for specific performance of that contract is now barred by lapse of time; and the Court has accordingly decreed the
plaintiff''s suit without putting him on any terms whatsoever either as to the refund of the purchase-money or otherwise. The question is whether
that is sound law. In my opinion, it is not. Whether or not the decision in the case of Mahomed Musa v. Aghore Kumar Ganguli 28 Ind. Cas. 930 :
19 C.W.N. 250 : 17 Bom. L.R. 420 : 21 C.L.J. 231 : 28 M.L.J. 548 : 13 A.L.J. 229 : 17 M.L.T. 143 : 2 L.W. 258 : 42 C. 801 : (1915)
M.W.N. 621 : 42 I.A. 1 (P.C.) and in subsequent cases can be reconciled with the language of Sections 17 and 49 of the Indian Registration Act
may be a question. But it seems to me that these decisions proceed as much upon the reasoning in the case of Maddison v. Alderson (1883) 8
A.C. 467 : 52 L.J.Q.B. 737 : 49 L.T. 303 : 31 W.R. 820 : 47 J.P. 821 as upon the doctrine of specific performance. The reasoning is this: That,
although title does not effectively pass without certain requirements of the law being fulfilled and although, in a case like this, the defendant gets only
an inchoate title to the property, nevertheless the actings of the parties upon the footing of title to the defendant create an equitable defence in such
a case as the present which will prevent the plaintiff from recovering a decree in ejectment. In my judgment, that is the principle which should have
been applied as the law at present stands in the present case. For these reasons, I am of opinion that this appeal should be allowed and the
plaintiff''s suit should be dismissed with costs in all Courts.
Mukerji, J.
2. I agree.