Case ID: 1546

Judgment:
Appeal No. 176 of 1960. Appeal from the judgment and decree dated June 2	 1958	 of the Mysore High Court in R. A. No. 268 of 1957. section K. Javali	 K. P. Bhat and B. R. L. Iyengar	 for the appellants. section K. Venkataranga Iyengar and R. Gopalakrishnan	 for the respondents. November 14. The judgment of the Court was delivered by AYYANGAR	 J. On March 27	 1954	 the three Kapurs who are the respondents before us filed original Suit No. 29 of 1954 before the District 48 judge Banglore	 against the 3 appellants who are brothers for the recovery of over Rs. 50	000/ and subsequent interest and costs due on a simple mortgage. Before the suit came on for trial the parties filed a memo of compromise dated September 30	 1955 and they prayed that the suit may decreed in terms there of The Court accepted the application and passed a decree as prayed for the order reading "It is ordered and decreed that the plaintiff 's suit be and the same is hereby decreed as per terms of the compromise	 the copy of which is hereunto annexed". The terms of the Razinama ran as follows "1. That the defendants herein agree to a decree being passed as prayed for. That the mortgaged properties are hereby sold for the amount of the decree in full satisfaction thereof. The defendants will execute a regular sale and within ten days from this date. That the mortgaged properties are hereby put in possession of the plaintiff (decree holder) by the 3rd	 defendant (judgment debtor) and judgment debtors 1 & 2 agreeing to pay rent at Rs. 75 each for the two shops bearing Nos. 12 and 14 respectively	 Godown Street	 Bangalore City in their actual occupation and by attornment of the other properties in the occupation of the other tenants. That on the judgment debtors or their nominees tendering the aforesaid decree amount through court or otherwise within the aforesaid one year from the date of 49 the decree	 the decrce holders bind themselves to reconvey the properties which are sold to them under this rajinama at their cost provided it is distinctly agreed that time is essence of the contract and provided also that if the judgment debtors default in paying the rents as aforesaid on or before the 15th of any month they will lose the concession hereby offered to thee of having reconveyance of 'the properties in one years ' time. Attachment on the properties belonging to the 2nd 'and 3rd defendants obtained before judgment stands hereby raised. The defendants hereby assure that the properties hereby sold are not subject to any attachment. In ; the event of any attachment subsisting on the properties	 it is hereby agreed that the mortgage security shall not be merged by the sale. " Broadly stated	 the question raised in this appeal relates to the executability of cl. 2 of this compromise decree but before examining this contention it is necessary to state a few ' facts. It would be noticed that under the second sentence of cl. 2 the appellants had to execute a regular sale deed within ten days from September 30	 1955. They	 however	 did not do so and thereupon the respondents filed	 on ;October 31	 1955	 Interlocutory application No. 6 of 1955 (later numbered as Execution Application No. 83 of 1956) for directing the appellants to 'execute the sale deed and they annexed to their application a draft sale deed in which cls. 3 to 6 of the razmama were recited. Apparently there were disputes between the parties ' each accusing the other :that it had not conformed to its undertaking under :the compromise	 but with these we are not now 50 concerned. Thereafter the appellants filed an application in the suit on March 16	 1956	 praying that a sale deed might be executed in favour of a third party to the proceedings who had agreed to purchase the property on terms of paying the full decree amount as provided for by cl. 4 of the Razinama. This application was opposed by the respondents and there were further applications of a similar type which it is not necessary to detail except to point out that they all proceeded on the basis that the compromise decree was capable of execution without any necessity for a further suit. The appellants did not succeed in these applications. It is sufficient if hereafter attention were confined to the application by the respondents E. A. 83 of 1956 by which they sought to get the appellants to execute a sale deed in their favour in accordance with the opening sentence of cl. 2 of the compromise. The appellants opposed this application on the technical ground that the relief sought could not be had in execution but only by a separate suit in as much as the same did not ""relate to the suit" within O. XXIII	 r. 3	 Code of Civil Procedure	 to whose terms we shall refer presently. This objection was upheld by the learned District judge of Bangalore and the prayer of the respondents for directing the appellants to execute a sale deed in their favour was rejected. This order has been reversed by the learned judges of the High Court on appeal by the respondents and it is the correctness 'of this judgment that is canvassed in this appeal which comes before us on a certificate of fitness granted by the High Court under article 133 (1)(a) of the Constitution. It would be seen from this narration that the point involved in the appeal is very narrow and turns on the question whether the High Court was justified in directing the appellants to execute a sale deed conveying the suit properties to the respondents in the proceedings in execution of the decree in original 51 suit No. 29 of 1954 or whether the respondents could obtain that relief only in an independent suit instituted for that purpose. It is common ground that the decree embodied the entire razinama including all its terms. The relevant statutory provision for the passing of decrees by compromise is O. XXIII	 r. 3	 Code of Civil Procedure	 which runs: "Where it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that a suit has been adjusted wholly or in part by any lawful agreement or compromise	 or where the defendant satisfies the plaintiff in respect of the whole or any part of the subject matter of the suit	 the Court shall order such agreement	 compromise or satisfaction to be recorded and shall pass a decree in accordance therewith	 so far as it relates to the suit. " We do not having regard to the facts of this case	 consider it necessary to examine the position whether	 when a decree has been passed embodying all the terms as part of the decree	 an objection as to the executability of any particular term could be raised in execution proceedings	 but shall proceed on the basis that it could be. There is no dispute that the agreement was lawful and an executable decree could be passed "so far as it related to the suit". Though in the courts below most of the argument turned on the import of the expression "so far as it relates to the suit" occurring in r. 3	 learned Counsel for the appellants did not stress that contention before us	 but rather on the construction of the several clauses of the compromise and their inter relation to which we shall advert presently. We might	 however	 point out that the learned Judges were right in the view they took that the. terms of the compromise " related" to the suit. The property which was to be conveyed consisted entirely of property included in the mortgage and which was therefore liable to be sold in execution of the mortgage decree which was 52 the relief sought in the plaint. The sale Price for the conveyance under the. Razinama was the sum for the recovery of which the suit was laid. There was therefore nothing which was outside the scope of the suit. Besides all this the conveyance was the consideration 'for the compromise. In these circumstances	 it is not a matter for surprise that learned Counsel for the appellants laid little emphasis on the point which persuaded the teamed District judge to dis miss the respondents application. Learned Counsel for the appellants however raised before us two contentions in the alternative. His first and primary contention was that on a proper construction of the compromise	 the consideration there for was not the actual execution of the conveyance by the judgment debtor to the decree holder but merely the argument to execute such a conveyance. He pointed out that under cl. 1 of the compromise the defendants had agreed to a decree being passed as 	prayed for	 which meant that a mortgage decree drawn up in the usual form had to be passed. That decree	 it was submitted	 was under the compromise agreed to be treated as satisfied and full satisfaction to be recorded immediately on the filing of the 'compromise	 and he suggested that the opening words in cl. 2 '	The mortgaged properties are hereby sold 	for the amount of the decree in full satisfaction thereof" was a reference to the agreement to execute the conveyance. There were other clauses in the compromise 'cls. 3 to 6 but these	he submitted	 related 	to the inter se rights between the parties. The contention was that these other clauses of the razinama including the second limb of cl. 2 were intended to be enforced or implemented not by way of execution of the decree in this suit but that the decree to be passed under cl. 1 was to be treated as fully satisfied on the filing into court of the memo of compromise and the same being recorded by the court with the result that thereafter no portion of the 53 decree remained alive. We find ourselves wholly unable to accept this argument. No doubt. under cl 1 there	 was to be a simple mortgage decree as prayed for in the suit	 but it would	 however	 not be a proper construction of the 1st sentence of cl. 2 to say that the mere agreement to	 convey and not an actual conveyance was intended to operate as a satisfaction of the decree passed or to be passed under cl. 1. Learned Counsel is	 no doubt	 'right in his submission that the sale of ' the property to the decree holders under cl. 2 was not to be absolute in the sense of conferring a right to an unconditional conveyance since the title to be obtained under the sale was subject to the conditions contained in cls. 3 	to 6 and particularly cl. 4 under which it was stipulated that the title to the property might		 on the happening of certain contingencies	 be divested from decree: holders to whom it had been conveyed under cl. 2. In that sense cls. 2 to 6 might constitute an integrated scheme for adjusting the rights of parties but on that account it would not be open to the construction that the mere agreement to convey contained in cl. 2 (subject to the conditions stipulated in cls. 3 to 6) by itself amounted to a satisfaction of the decree. The other submission of learned Counsel was that the learned judges should not have directed the execution of a conveyance in favour of the respondents without attaching to it the conditions laid down in cls. 3 to 6 and also without an examination of the question whether the appellants were entitled to enforce the reconveyance provided by those clauses. On this matter the learned Judges expressed themselves thus: "The decree holder is entitled to execute the decree in respect of clause 2 of the compromise. No opinion is expressed as to the executability 54 of the other clauses of the compromise as that question has not been raised before us. " The fact	 therefore	 was that this point about either the inter relation between cl. 2 on the one hand and cls. 3 to 6 on the other or the contention of the appellants that they were entitled to relief under cls. 3 to 6 was not raised before the High Court and the matter was therefore left open. The appellants can in the circumstances obviously have no cause for complaint that the High Court did not deal with it. The question as to whether the appellants are entitled to relief under cls. 3 to 6 or whether they had lost their right to do so	 is one which would have to be investigated on facts and cannot therefore be urged before us. We do not	 therefore	 propose to pronounce upon it either. It would	 of course	 be open to the appellants to agitate their rights in appropriate proceeding if they are 'so advised. No other point has been urged before us. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.

Summary:
A suit instituted by the respondents for the recovery of money due under a simple mortgage from the appellants was compromised by the parties under a memo dated September 30	 1955	 and the court passed a decree as per the terms of the compromise By cl. 1 of the memo the defendants agreed to a 47 decree being passed as prayed for in the suit	 while cl. 2 recited: "That the mortgaged properties are hereby sold for the amount of the decree in full satisfaction thereof The defendants will execute a regular sale and within ten days from this date. " The appellants did not comply with the terms of cl. 2 and on October 31	 1955	 the respondents made an application before the court praying that the appellants might be directed to excecute a sale deed as per the terms of the compromise. The appellants pleaded that the relief sought by the respondents could not be had in execution proceedings but only by a separate suit	 on the grounds	 inter alia	 that the same did not relate to the suit within O. 23	 r. 3	 of the Code of Civil Procedure	 and that	 in any case	 on a proper construction of the compromise the consideration therefore was not the actual execution of the conveyance by the judgment debtor but merely the agreement to execute such a conveyance. Held : (1) that the terms of the compromise related to the suit inasmuch as the property which was to be conveyed consisted entirely of the property included in the mortgage. (2) that on the true construction of the compromise	 though cls. 2 to 6 might constitute an integrated scheme for adjusting the rights of parties	 a mere agreement to convey contained in cl. 2 by itself did not amount to a satisfaction of the decree and that the consideration for the compromise was the execution of a conveyance.