Monday 24 August 2015

Whether Subsequent written agreement between mortgagor and mortgagee reducing rate of interest requires registration?

Equivalent Citation: AIR1952SC153, 1952(54)BOMLR543, [1952]1SCR491
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Decided On: 22.02.1952
Appellants:Kashinath Bhaskar Datar
Vs.
Respondent:Bhaskar Vishweshwar Karve
Hon'ble Judges/Coram:
S. Murtaza Fazal Ali and Vivian Bose, JJ.

Indian Registration Act 1908 - s. 17(1)(b)—Subsequent document varying terms of the previous document—“Interest” in Immovable property being limited and extinguished
Indian Registration Act (XVI of 1908), Section 17(1)(b), 17(2)(v)(xi)-Indian Evidence Act (I of 1872), Section 92, prov. 4-Mortgage-Mortgagee entitled to certain rate of interest under mortgage bend- Subsequent written agreement between mortgagor and mortgagee reducing rate of interest-Whether agreement requires registration.
One part of the "interest" which a mortgagee has in mortgaged property within the meaning of Section 17(1)(b) of the Indian Registration Act, 1908, is the right to receive interest at a certain rate when the document provides for interest. If that rate is varied, whether to his advantage or otherwise, then his "interest" in the property is affected. If the subsequent agreement substitutes a higher rate, then to the extent of the difference it "creates" a fresh "interest" which was not there before. If the rate is lowered, then his original "interest" is limited.
U Po Thin v. The Official Assignee (1938) R.L.R. 293 : s.c. [1938] A.I.R. Ran. 285, approved.
Tika Ram v. Deputy Commissioner of Bara Banki (1899) L.R. 26 I.A. 97 100 : s.c. 1 Bom. L.R. 692 referred to.
There is a difference between a receipt acknowledging payment of the mortgage debt and a remission or a release by the mortgagee. A receipt is not the payment, nor does the document in such a case serve to extinguish the mortgage or limit the liability. It is the payment of the money which does that and the receipt does no more than evidence the fact. Not so a release. The extinguishment or diminution of liability is in that event effected by the agreement itself and not by something external to it. If the agreement is oral, it is hit by proviso 4 to Section 92 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, for it "rescinds" or "modifies" the contract of mortgage. If it is in writing, it is hit by Section 17(1)(b) of the Indian Registration Act, 1908, for in that case the writing itself "limits" or "extinguishes" the liability under the mortgage.
If the mortgagee cannot, in the face of the subsequent agreement, enforce the terms of his bend, then the subsequent undertaking has effected a modification, and if that has the effect of limiting or extinguishing the mortgagee's interest, it is hit either by Section 17(7)(b) of the Indian Registration Act, 1908, or a. 92, prov. 4, of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. But when there is a mere payment of money, that is done under the terms of the bend, for the contract of mortgage postulates that the mortgagor should repay the money borrowed, and (that when he does so, the mortgagee's interest in the property shall be "limited" to the extent pf the repayment or, when all is repaid, be wholly extinguished ; nor does a payment have to be made by a written or registered instrument, or oven evidenced by one. Clause (xi) to Section 17(2) of the Indian Registration Act is based on this principle. It draws a distinction between a document which, by force of its terms, effects the extinguishment, or purports to do so, and one which merely evidences an external fact which brings about that result.
If a document itself creates an interest in Immovable property, the fact that it contemplates the execution of another document will not exempt it from registration under Section 17(2)(v) of the Indian Registration Act, 1908.
Vivian Bose, J.

1. This is a defendant's appeal in a suit on two mortgages. The first was executed on the 7th of April, 1931, by the defendant and his father. The second was dated the 17th of December, 1935. and was executed by the defendant alone. The first was for a sum of Rs. 9,500 the second for Rs. 3,500. The same property was mortgaged each time. The claim on the two deeds together was for Rs. 20,774-3-0.
2. These mortgages were in favour of one Narayan Gopal Sathe. On the 28th March, 1940. The mortgagee assigned them both to the plaintiff who now sues on them.
3. The defence was that both mortgages were satisfied. The main evidence on which the defendant relied to prove satisfaction was an agreement dated the 17th of the October, 1937, executed by the mortgagee Narayan Gopal Sathe in favour of the defendant. The document has been excluded from the evidence by the trial Court as well as by the High Court. On appeal on the ground that it required registration. If this document is excluded, then there is a concurrent finding of fact by both the Courts that the rest of the evidence is not good enough to prove satisfaction. They have disbelieved it and decreed the plaintiff's claim in full. The only questions before us are (1) whether this document required registration and (2) whether, if it did, it cannot still be used for what the defendant claims is a collateral purpose. Namely providing full payment of the, mortgage amount.
4. The agreement came about in this fashion. The mortgagee, Narayan Sathe, was appointed Receiver of the two Cinemas in Poona. The Court appointing him required him to produce a surety in the sum of the Rs. 10,000. The defendant agreed to undertake this responsibility and as a consideration for that the mortgagee executed the agreement in question. The portions of the documents relevant for the present purpose are as follows. The mortgages are there described as the "transactions of give and take."
' (3) It is extremely necessary to explain before hand the transaction of give and take outstanding between both of us....
(4) Whereas two transactions have been done between you and me...... Therefore you have agreed to stand surely...... And only for that reason I am executing this agreement and giving it to you in writing and thereunder I am setting and formulating some new terms and I am confirming some very terms which were declared before.
(5) Although in the matter of the transaction relating to the aforesaid mortgage deeds the rate of the interest mentioned in the documents purporting to be the mortgage deeds is 14 annas per mensem per centum still the actual interest is to be received only at the rate of 8 annas per mensem per centum; So it is settled between you and me and I have also agreed to the same. And even at that rate I have also been receiving the interest and I shall also receive hereafter........
(6) As regards the transaction of the second mortgage deed if as agreed at that the time between you and me you pay me Rs. 1,800 in the lump then it will be understood that the transaction of give and take subsisting between you and me has been wholly completed and fully paid up. As you have no sufficiency of funds to make up and pay in full the above sum at once it is settled that you are to pay to me Rs. 80 per months and thus and you are to make payment in full..... In accordance with the agreement arrived at between the us both subsequent to the document purporting to be the second mortgage deed the said document and papers.... and the written receipts in receipts of interest given to you by the me relating to the payment in full made by you in respect of interest and principal on account of the first transaction dated 7-431 have been kept with me....
* * * * *
(8) As mentioned above (vide paras 5 and 6) no interest of any nature what ever has remained claimable by me from you in accordance and the agreement arrived at between us both from the date of your suretyship onward and prior to it and in like manner I understand that the whole of the principal has been fully paid.
* * * * *
(10) If you so wish or if necessity may arise then at any time you may ask for it and I shall give you this agreement on being written out on stamped paper and on being registered,."
5. In our opinion, this is a document which limits and extinguishes interest in immovable property in the present within the meaning of section 17(1)(b) of the Indian Registration Act. Clause (4) of the agreement expressly says so. Referring to the two mortgages it says -
" I am settling and formulating some new terms."
6. This speaks from the present. It does not say that the this was some past agreement and that fact is underlined in the next sentence with reads -
" and I am confirming some very terms which were declared before."
7. Among the new terms is the following. The rate of the interest agreed upon in the two mortgage deeds was 14 annas per cent per month. Clause (5) reduces this to 8 annas. It is true that according to clause (5) only 8 annas had actually been paid all along but that hardly matters because the question is not what was paid but what was due and what the mortgagee could have enforced under his bond. It is evident from clause (4) that it was the agreement embodied in the document which effected the change and therefore it was the document itself which brought the altered terms into being.
8. The next question is whether this limits an interest in Immovable property. We are of the opinion it does. We agree with the learned Rangoon Judges in U. P. O Thin v. Official Assignee (1938) R.L.R. 293 : A.I.R. 1938 R. 285 that the one part of the "interest" which a mortgagee has in mortgaged property is the right to receive interest at a certain rate when the document provides for interest. If that rate is varies whether to his advantage or otherwise, then in our judgment, his "interest" in the property is affected. If the subsequent agreement substitutes a higher rate, then to the extent of the difference it "creates" a fresh "interest" which was not there before. If the rate lowered, then his original "interest" is limited.
9. The question of a higher rate was considered by their Lordship of the privy Council in Tika Ram v. Deputy Commissioner of Bara Banki (1899) 26 I.A. 97 . There, the mortgagors an unregistered rukka or written promise simultaneously with the registered mortgage stipulating that they would play an extra 6 per cent per annum, over and above the 15 percent entered in the mortgages. Their Lordships held that the these rukkas could not be used to fetter the equity of redemption. They did not decide whether the personal covenant in the rukkas could be enforced because that point had not been raised in the plaint and pleadings, nor did they refer to the Registration Act, but we think the words.
"an unregistered instrument which the statute declares : not to affect the mortgaged property"
can only have reference to that Act.
10. It was argued, on the strength of Mahim Chandra Dey v. Ram Dayal Dutta A.I.R. 1926 Cal. 170, Ram Ranjan v. Jayanti LalA.I.R. 1926 Cal. 906 and Collector of Etah v. Kishori Lal MANU/UP/0153/1930 : AIR1930All721 , that it is always open to a mortgagee to release or remit a part of the debt, and when he does so he does not limit or extinguish an interest in immovable property any more than when he passes a receipt acknowledging payment of the whole or part of the money. The effect of the payment, or of the release, may be to extinguish the mortgage but in themselves they do not limit the interest. Extending this, the learned counsel for the defendant contended that when a mortgagee agrees to accept a lower rate of interest he does no more than release that part of the debt which would be covered by the difference in rate.
11. We do not agree. There is a difference between a receipt and a remission or a release. A receipt is not the payment, nor does the document in such a case serve to extinguish the mortgage or limit the liability. It is the payment of the money which does that and the receipt does no more than evidence the fact. Not so a release. The extinguishment or diminution of liability is in that event effected by the agreement itself and not by something external to it. If the agreement is oral, it is hit by proviso 4 to section 92 of the Evidence Act, for it" rescinds" or "modifies" the contract of mortgage. If it is in writing, it is hit by section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act, for in that case the writing itself "limits" or "extinguishes" the liability under the mortgage.
12. It is to observed that when the mortgagor pays money due on the mortgage, in whole or in part, he is carrying out the terms of the bond and is not making any alteration in it, and even though the fact of payment may limit or extinguish the mortgagee's interest that is only because the bond is working itself out by the force of its own terms and not by reason of some new agreement which seeks to modify it or limit or extinguish the interest which it creates. A simple test is this : see whether the mortgagee can, in the face of the subsequent agreement, enforce the terms of his bond. If he cannot, then it is plain that the subsequent undertaking has effected a modification, and if that has the effect of limiting or extinguishing the mortgagee's interest, it is at once hit either by section 17(1)(b) or section 92 proviso 4. But when there is a mere payment of money, that is done under the terms of the bond, for the contract of mortgage postulates that the mortgagor should repay the money borrowed and that when he does so the mortgagee's interest in the property shall be "limited" to the extent of the repayment or, when all is repaid, be wholly extinguished; nor, of course, does a payment have to be made by a written or registered instrument, or even evidenced by one. Clause (xi) to section 17(1) of the Registration Act is based on this principle. It draws a distinction between a document which, by the force of its terms, effects the extinguishment, or purports to do so, and one which merely evidences an external fact which brigs about that result.
13. Now apply the test just given to the present case. Under the mortgages the mortgagee is entitled to interest at 14 annas per cent. per month but the mortgagor says he cannot claim that. Why ? Because, according to him, the subsequent agreement altered the terms of the bond and reduced his liability to only 8 annas. It hardly matters what the agreement is called, whether a release or a remission, nor is it germane to the question that the mortgagee is entitled to remit or release the whole or a part of the debt; the fact remains that his agreement to do so effects an alteration in the original contract and by the force of its terms or extinguishes his interest. Assume that the mortgagor repaid the whole of the interest at the altered rate and the whole of the principal, would those repayments by themselves effect an extinguishment of the mortgage? Clearly not, because unless the subsequent agreement is called in aid, more would be due under the terms of the bond on account of the higher rate of interest. It is evident then that it is the agreement which limits the mortgagee's interest and serves to extinguish the mortgage and not mere payment at the reduced rate.
14. Similar observations apply to clause (6) of the agreement. It begins by reciting a past agreement in which the mortgagor had promised to pay Rs. 1,800 in a lump sum. We are left to infer that this was to extinguish the mortgage. If it was, then it would be hit by either section 92, proviso 4, of the Evidence Act or section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act, but that does not matter because the present document varies even that agreement and substitutes a third agreement in its place, namely that payment of Rs. 1,800 by installments at the rate of Rs. 80 a month will effect "payment in full", that is to say, will extinguish the mortgage. This speaks from the date of the document, for it says, referring to this agreement, that 'it is settled" etc.
15. Next we come to clause (8). That refers us back to clauses (5) and (6) and says that
"as mentioned there no interest of any nature whatever has remained claimable by me"
and speaking of the principal says
"and in like manner I understand the whole of the principal has been fully paid".
We have already dealt with clauses (5) and (6). Clause (8) carries us no further and merely states that because of clauses (5) and (6) neither interest nor principal is now claimable; and of course if neither interest nor principal is claimable that extinguishes the mortgage, and in this case the extinguishment is brought about, not by mere payment in accordance with the terms of the bond, but because of the fresh agreement.
Clause (10) remains for consideration. It was argued that this brings the matter within section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act because it gives the defendant the right to obtain another document which will effect the extinguishment. We do not agree because clause (v) of sub- section (2) of section 17(1) of the Act postulates that the document shall not of itself create, declare, assign, limit, extinguish any right etc., and that it shall merely create a right to obtain another document etc. (The stress is on the words "itself" and "merely".)
We agree with Sir Dinsha Mulla at page 86 of the 5th edition of his Indian Registration Act that
"If the document itself creates an interest in Immovable property, the fact that it contemplates the execution of another document will not exempt it from registration under this clause."
16. As we have seen, this document of itself limits or extinguishes certain interests in the mortgaged property. The operative words are reasonably clear. Consequently, the document is not one which merely confers a right to obtain another document. It confers the right only in certain contingencies, namely, "if your so wish" or "if necessity may arise." Its purport is to effect an immediate alteration in the terms of the two bonds and because of that alteration to effect an immediate extinguishment and limitation. Clause (10) merely confers an additional right, namely the right to obtain another document "if you so wish" or "if necessity may arise" Therefore, the document in question is not one which merely creates a right to obtain another.
17. An agreement to sell, or an agreement to transfer at some future date, is to be distinguished because that sort of document does not of itself purport to effect the transfer. It merely embodies a present agreement to execute another document in the future which will, when executed, have that effect. The document in hand is not of that type. It does not postpone the effect of extinguishment or limitation of the mortgages to a future date. It does not say that the agreement it embodies shall take effect in the future. It purports to limit and extinguish the liabilities on the two mortgages at once by virtue of the document itself and merely adds that "if it is necessary or should you want another document, I will repeat the present agreement in a registered agreement." By implication it means that if it is not necessary, or if the mortgagor does not want a registered instrument, the document itself will have effect. Incidentally, one effect of holding that this document does not limit or extinguish the mortgagor's liability would be that there is no agreement to that effect yet in force. This may or may not give the mortgagor a right to obtain specific performance of his right to obtain such an agreement but until he does that there would be no bar to the mortgagee's claim in this suit. However, it is not necessary to go as far as that because we are of opinion that this document is not exempt from registration under section 17(1)(b), and we so hold.
18. The next question is whether the document can be used in evidence under the proviso to section 49 of the Registration Act. We are clear it cannot. This is not a suit for specific performance nor does any question of part performance under section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act arise. It remains then to be seen whether the use now sought to be made of the document is to evidence a collateral transaction not required to be evidenced by a registered instrument. But what is the transaction sought to be proved but the very agreement which the document not merely evidences but, by reason of its own force, creates? That is not a collateral transaction and even if it were a transaction of that type, it would require a registered instrument for the reasons we have already given.
19. Section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act was referred to but it has no application, for the agreement we are concerned with is not a transfer. There are no words of conveyance in it; also the mortgagor is not continuing in possession in part performance of the contract. Both mortgages were simple and the right to possession never resided in the mortgagee. He might in due course have acquired it by process of law if he obtained a decree and purchased at the sale; on the other hand, a stranger might have purchased and the right to possession would in that event have passed elsewhere. But he had no right to possession at the date of the agreement and having none he cold not have transferred it. The mortgagor's possession was consequently not referable to the agreement.
20. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.

21. Appeal dismissed.
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