Showing posts with label Transfer of Property Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transfer of Property Act. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Expiry of Limitation Period Does not Extinguish Usufructuary Mortgagor's Right to Recover Possession

A three-judge bench of the Supreme Court of India (“Supreme Court”) has recently, in Singh Ram (D) Thr. L.Rs. v. Sheo Ram &Ors., held that for the purpose of Article 61 of the Limitation Act, 1963 (“Limitation Act”), limitation period for ‘usufructuary mortgagor’ to recover mortgaged property starts when mortgage money is paid out of rents and profits or partly out of rents and profits and partly by payment or deposit by mortgagor.

The controversy in the present appeal (clubbed in several other appeals) involved a suit property, mortgaged by the predecessor of the Respondents to the predecessor of the Appellants in 1903. As the property was not redeemed even after a period of ‘60 years’, the Appellant-Plaintiffs filed a suit for a declaration that the Respondent-Defendants had lost rights over the property; as a consequence, the former had become ‘owners by prescription’. In other words, it was the contention that the mortgagor, as a result of the expiration of limitation period, i.e., 60 years, had lost their right to seek redemption of the property. [Under the Old Limitation Act, 1908, limitation period under Article 148 (Schedule I; right to redeem mortgaged property) was 60 years; however, under the Limitation Act (1963), it has been reduced down to 30 years under Article 61 of the Schedule]

The trial court did not accept the content(s) of the Appellants and held that in cases of ‘usufructuary mortgage’, limitation starts from the date when mortgagee demands the money and mortgagor refuses the same. The decision of the trial court was affirmed by the first appellate court and the High Court (second appellate court). While affirming the decision, the High Court made the following observations:

(i)                Mortgage  is essentially and basically a conveyance in law or an assignment  of  chattels  as  a  security  for  the payment  of  debt  or  for  discharge  of  some  other obligations for which it is given.
(ii)             The mortgagee remains in possession  of  the  mortgaged  property;  enjoys  the usufruct thereof and, therefore, not to lose anything by  returning  the  security  on  receipt  of  mortgage debt.
(iii)           § 62 of  the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 ("Property Act")  is  a  special  provision  dealing  only  with the  rights  of  usufructuary  mortgagor.
(iv)            Right of foreclosure  will  not  accrue  to  the  mortgagee  till such time the mortgagee remains in possession of the  mortgaged  security  and  is  appropriating usufruct of the mortgaged land towards the interest on  the  mortgaged  debt.
(v)              The mortgage cannot be extinguished by any unilateral act of the mortgagee.