Nawab Sadiq Ali Khan Vs Jai Kishori

Bombay High Court 22 Mar 1928 (1928) 30 BOMLR 1346
Bench: Full Bench
Result Published

Judgement Snapshot

Hon'ble Bench

Salveson, J; Lancelot Sanderson, J; Carson, J

Final Decision

Allowed

Judgement Text

Translate:

Salveson, J.@mdashThis is an appeal from a decree of the Court of the Judicial Commissioner of Oudh, dated May 27, 1925, reversing a decree

dated April 30, 1924, of the Subordinate Judge of Lucknow.

2. The first respondent, who alone appeared in the appeal, is the mortgagee under a mortgage, dated April 18, 1908, and the appellants are the

representatives by succession or purchase of two persons named Baqar Ali Khan and AH Ahmad Khan.

3. The mortgage was executed by the two persons last mentioned in security of a sum of Rs. 7,000 loaned by the mortgagee for a term of five

years in the first instance and bearing interest at the rate of fourteen annas per cent, per mensem. It is in the ordinary form, and provision is made

for interest being accumulated at compound rates in the event of non-payment, and for the period of payment of the principal sum and interest

being extended beyond the stipulated period in the option of the mortgagee.

4. The mortgagors were two of the family of a certain Quasim Ali Khan, originally the zemindar of the village of Jamwasi and the owner of certain

other heritable properties, Quasim Ali Khan had as far back as the year 1892 executed a deed of gift in favour of his wife, Mussamat Rais-un-nisa,

of the entire village of Jamwasi, and on August 10, 1899, he executed another M2JJ deed of gift in her favour of his house property in Lucknow.

5. On June 21, 1902, she in her turn gifted the village Jamwasi Khan and the house property to her three sons and one daughter, excluding,

however, from the gift the sir lands in the village, ex-tending to some 27 acres or thereabouts. From that time onwards the four children, who were

described as minors in the deed, were registered as the proprietors of the properties in question. They remained in the peaceable occupation of the

lands until the present suit was started in 1923, in which the plaintiff (now the first respondent) sought a decree for Rs. 32,632-7-9, and in default

of payment, sale of the lands mortgaged in her favour.

6. The case has been decided on the issue whether the two mortgagors were minors at the date when they executed the mortgage in question, On

this question of fact the Courts below have differed. The Subordinate Judge held that the executants were minors on that date, but his judgment

was reversed by the Court of the Judicial Commissioner. Their judgment is summed up in the following passage.:�

We have given our careful attention to all the evidence which weighed with the Court of trial, but we are not satisfied that the two executants were

minors at the time of execution. On the contrary we think it is quite pro-bable that they were majors. This finding of fact is sufficient to dispose of

the appeal, and it becomes unnecessary to consider the questions of law which would arise if we were to find in fact that the executants were

minors.

7. It is noteworthy that the learned Judges did not consider themselves in a position to affirm that the executants of the mortgage were in fact

majors at the time of its execution, and it may be inferred from this that the judgment really proceeded on the footing that the appellants had failed

to discharge the onus of proof which the Court held rested upon them.

8. Their Lordships are in agreement with the learned Judges when they say : ""Where a deed executed by a person who alleges himself to be a

major at the time of execution, a heavy harden rests upon him or his representatives when they set up the defence of minority."" If, therefore, the

case depended upon the oral evidence alone, they would not have been disposed to hold that it was so convincing as to entitle the appellants to a

finding in their favour. But the documentary evidence which the appellants have adduced and the proceedings instituted in relation to the two

mortgagors, Baquar Ali Khan and Ali Ahmad Khan, are so weighty that, if they stood alone and were unchallenged, they would conclusively

establish the fact of minority. The first document is a deed of gift dated June 21, 1902, in favour of her four children by their mother, who is therein

has described as aged about 28 years, and the four children are described as minors. Taking the age as approximately correct, Jai Rais-un-nisa

would be born in or about the year 1874. Following on this deed, Quasim Ali Khan on February 14, 1903, presented an application for

guardianship of his minor children. In this application, as required by the Act, he set forth the dates of birth of the four children in question. Baqar

Ali Khan is stated to have been born on February 11, 1891, and Ali Ahmad Khan on December 19, 1892. The ground of the application is that

the applicant being the father is the natural guardian of the minors and has no interest adverse to them, and that he had transferred the property

mentioned to the minors subject to a prior charge which he wished to pay off by a sale of a portion of the property. It is not strictly correct that the

father had transferred the property to the minors directly, for it was transferred by his wife to them; but he had originally been the owner and had

made her the gift which she was able to pass on to her children. Their Lordships do not attach any importance to this inaccuracy. The application

was granted, and on November 9, 1903, a certificate was issued by which Qasim Ali Khan was appointed guardian to the persons and property

of his four children during the period of their minority, to wit, until February 11, 1912, in the case of Baqar Ali Khan and December 19, 1913, in

the case of Ali Ahmad Khan.

9. Qasim Ali Khan seems to have managed the property for several years without requiring to make any application to the District Judge. On

November 28, 1907, however, in consequence of the marriage of his eldest son, which had already taken place, he applied for the sanction of the

Court to pay the expenses incurred to the amount of Rs. 1,580-8, and to charge the same against the property of the minor. The age of Baqar is

stated to be approximately 16 years according to the certificate of guardianship. His next application, of date November 7, 1903, in the suit of

guardianship, was one to authorize him to resign the office of guardian. Qasim Ali Khan was permitted to resign, and on November 16 of the same

year Rais-un-nisa, his wife, applied to be appointed guardian in his place, In this application the dates of birth of her children are stated in

accordance with the certificate.

10. An order was made granting the application, and on December 10, 1908, the certificate of guardianship was issued in favour of Rais-un-nisa.

It will be observed that these last-mentioned proceedings took place after the mortgage had been executed.

11. In May, 1909, the Court of Wards assumed the charge of the persons and property of the minors under the Court of Wards Act. Notification

in the United. Provinces Gazette was duly salmon made on May 21 of this fact. The Deputy Commissioner of Bara Banki was put in charge, and

although there is no evidence on the subject, it may be assumed that this was done at the instigation of one or both of the parents of the alleged

minors. He, in fact, lodged certain objections in a suit which had been brought to charge the sir lands which had been transferred to the minors at

the same time that the mortgage in question was executed with a view to protecting these lands in their interests from being charged with a debt of

Rais-un-nisa, He failed in his objections on the ground that the alleged purchase by the minors was a simulate transaction and that the property

really belonged to the mother, who was the debtor. Incidentally it may be mentioned here that the major part of the sum borrowed from the

mortgagee was ostensibly applied in order to meet the purchase price, Rs. 4,000, of the sir lands that then stood in the name of Rais-un-nisa agent.

As these lands were subsequently disposed of by her, the mortgagors derived no benefit from the alleged purchase, and the remainder of the loan

was applied in payment of debts due by Qasim.

12. The position of matters accordingly at the date when the mortgage was granted was that Baqar Ali Khan and Ali Ahmad Khan were still, on

the face of the Court records, under the guardianship of their father as minors, the age of majority being 21 according to the law applicable where

there has been an appointment of guardian. Baqar Ali Khan, according to the certificate, would then be 17 years of age and his brother 15 1/4.

They were accordingly disqualified from acting except through their guardian, and in the mortgage no reference is made to the fact of guardianship.

The proceedings which related the registration of the mortgage indicate that it was assumed that the ordinary age of majority, 18, was the only one

with regard to which the Registrar had to satisfy himself. Had the certificate of guardianship been brought under his notice, it is reasonably certain

that the transaction would not have been completed, The proceedings which were taken after the mortgage itself was granted contained a ra-

iteration both by the appellants and by the Deputy Commissioner that all the children of Qasim Ali Khan were still in minority.

13. In their Lordships'' view this evidence is sufficient to satisfy the onus of proof which rested upon the appellants in the first instance. The first

respondent, however, contended that the proceedings of Qasim Ali Khan in getting himself appointed guardian in 1903 were part of a fraudulent

scheme on his part to secure the management of the estates which had been transferred to his children for a longer period than would fall to him as

their natural guardian. Her case is that he deliberately underestimated the ages of the children by from five to six years for this purpose, and they

have led some evidence to show that the marriage of Qasim Ali Khan and Rais-un-nisa took place as early as 1883 or 1884.. This would make

the eldest child of the marriage born when the mother was only 9 1/2 or 10 years if the statement of her age in the deed of gift and consistently

repeated thereafter was approximately correct.

14. Their Lordships are unable to discover any motive that Qasim Ali Khan had in 1903 for wilfully misrepresenting the ages of his children. If

there was a fraudulent scheme on his part to do so, his wife Rais-un-nisa must also have been a party to it. The properties in question were already

protected against Qasim''s obligations by being vested in his wife, and the only effect of her transferring the properties to his children was to make

it impossible for Qasim to exercise the same control over them as he might have done by influencing his wife. There is not a trace of evidence that

Qasim Ali Khan was embarrassed in 1902, and assuming that he acted in good faith in presenting the application for guardianship, he and his wife

would probably be the only persons who had knowledge of the dates, whether approximate or otherwise, of the birth of their children. It is not

until 1908, when the mortgage was executed, that any fraud can be attributed to Qasim Ali Khan, and even then, if the first respondent''s statement

is correct that his two sons were both young men of 21 and upwards, the only thing that can be attributed to him was that he had unfairly induced

his two elder sons to pledge their share of the properties which they had received originally by gift from him through their mother for payment of his

debts. This would not be a fraud upon the mortgagee at all The most probable explanation of the mortgage being effected was, in their Lordships

opinion, that Qasim Ali Khan thought that by concealing the guardianship proceedings from the mortgagee and passing off his sons as majors of 18

or upwards he could induce the mortgagee to furnish the money which he then required to meet his liabilities without affecting the rights of his minor

children in the family estate. That was no doubt a fraud upon the mortgagee, but it affords an intelligible motive Khan for the execution of the

mortgage, This theory, however, postulates that his two sons were still below 21 years of age, other-wise his schemes would have failed to have

the effect which he no doubt desired of protecting the estate for them while at the same time obtaining the money he urgently required for his own

purposes. It cannot reasonably be held to affect the bona fides of the statements made in 1903 when the application for guardianship was made.

15. The only part of the oral evidence which has caused their Lordships some difficulty is that of Mohammad Jafar Husan Khan, who produced

the nikahnama of the marriage of his son with the only daughter of Qasim, which took place on November 12, 1903. He states that at that time, his

daughter-in-law was 15 years old and and that after 15 years she gave birth to a daughter. After an interval of twenty years this evidence cannot

be held to be conclusive as to the age of the daughter-in-law or as to the period that elapsed before her first child was born. The Mahomedan age

of puberty is nine, and a nikahnama might well be executed some considerable time before the girl went to her husband. Evidence leading to an

exactly contrary conclusion is given by Abbas Hirssa for the appellants, who impressed the Subordinate Judge favourably. While it is impossible to

reconcile the statements of the witnesses, allowance must be made for the lubricity of testimony depending upon recollection extending back for

long periods, and such evidence is always far less reliable than contemporaneous statements such as those made by the parents of the parties in this

case without, as their Lordships think, any possible motive for misrepresenting the facts.

16. Their Lordships are the more disposed to reach the same decision as the Judge of first instance because of the delay that has taken place in

bringing this suit. For fifteen years the mortgagee appears to have made no claim for payment of interest or repayments of the capital sum

advanced. No doubt this is not an unusual feature where money is advanced on a mortgage with the ultimate object of the mortgagee acquiring the

lands hypothecated by suddenly putting forward a claim of such magnitude that it almost necessarily involves a sale. But the present case is rather

special inasmuch as the intervention of the Court of Wards involved a degree of publicity which, if it came to the knowledge of the first

respondent''s advisers, might well have suggested to them the desirability of postponing any demand. Further, the evident of the respondent''s first

witness that he Khan had told the mortgagee''s agent at the time of the execution of the mortgage that the mortgagors were in fact minors was

allowed to remain uncontradicted, although this agent or the mortgagee herself might have gone into the box. Be this as it may, the long delay has,

in fact, deprived the appellants of the direct evidence of three of the principal witnesses on whom they could have relied, viz., the father and mother

of the mortgagors and their eldest son, all of whom were dead before the suit was brought, while the other son had ceased to have any interest in

the properties hypothecated as he had sold his share for what appears to have been a full price.

17. On the whole matter, their Lordships are of opinion that the Subordinate Judge came to the right conclusion. The fact of minority being

established at the date of the execution by the mortgagors of the deed founded on is sufficient for the decision of the case; such a deed executed by

minors being admittedly a nullity according to Indian law, and incapable of founding a plea of estoppel.

18. They will therefore humbly advise His Majessy that the appeal should be sustained, and that the suit should be dismissed with costs here and

below since the date of the judgment of the Subordinate Judge.

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