Source: http://hba.org.my/laws/CourtCases/A/au_meng_nam.htm
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 12:34:18+00:00

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I have had the advantage of reading the judgment of my learned brother Raus Sharif in draft and agree with the conclusion he has arrived at and the orders he proposes to make in this appeal. However I wish to give my own reasons in addition to those already given by my learned brother. The first has to do with the value of Adorna Properties Sdn Bhd v. Boonsom Boonyanit  2 CLJ 133 as binding precedent. The second is this. Even if the decision in Adorna Properties is good law, does what was there held apply to the facts of this case? In order to deal with the first point, it is necessary to hearken to the statutory scheme which creates indefeasibility of title to land.
 Let me take the first point. I begin with the concept of a binding precedent. In the hierarchy of a common law system of judicature, it is a general rule that the decisions of a higher court are binding on all courts below it. So, the decisions of an apex court are binding upon all courts below it. This practice of following the decisions of a higher court is often referred to as the doctrine of binding precedent or of stare decisis. Its object is to ensure certainty in the law. But then there are precedents and there are precedents. Some decisions of the highest court lay down a principle of common law that alters the position that obtained earlier. For example, until Donoghue v. Stevenson  AC 562, the common law did not recognise that the manufacturer of a product owed a duty of care to the ultimate consumer. See, Winterbottom v. Wright  152 ER 402. But the House of Lords in Donoghue v. Stevenson altered that position. Such a decision is, of course, binding because it established a new principle of law. This is an example of a true precedent. But where you have a case which involves the interpretation of a section in an Act of Parliament the doctrine of precedent has a lesser effect. See, Carter v. Bradbeer  1 WLR 1204, per Lord Diplock.
The judicial technique involved in construing a statutory text is different from that required in applying previous decisions expounding the common law. In the latter class of case, the task is to interpret the legal concepts which find expression in the various language used in the relevant judgments. The frequently repeated caution is against construing the terms of those judgments as if they were the words of a statute. The concern is not with the ascertainment of the meaning and the application of particular words used by previous judges, so much as with gaining an understanding of the concepts to which expression was sought to be given.
Translation may be imperfect and alter the meaning of the original doctrine; nevertheless many common law doctrines have a stable meaning, though expressed in a variety of different ways. We are not afraid that we would lose the meaning, of negligence if we put it in different words from those used by Learned Hand, or William Prosser, or some other authoritative expositor of the concept.
It is now trite law that upon registration, the party in whose favour the registration has been effected will obtain an indefeasible title to or interest in the land (s. 340(1) of the National Land Code 1965). The phrase 'indefeasible title' means a title or an interest which is free of all adverse claims or encumbrances not noted in the register. It is quite obvious that the effect of registration is to defeat all prior unregistered claims.
 The other side of the same coin is this. Even if the registered proprietor acquired his title unlawfully, that is to say, in breach of written law, he may nevertheless assert it against the whole world until proceedings are brought to remove him from the register. And that is really the effect of s. 340(1) of the Code. The decision of the former Federal Court in Teh Bee v. Maruthamuthu  1 LNS 134;  2 MLJ 7 exemplifies the proposition.
Their Lordships are unable to accede to either of these propositions. In their opinion the certificate of title referred to in section 22 of the Land Registry Act is a certificate which, while it remains unaltered or unchallenged upon the register, is one which every purchaser is bound to accept. And to enable an investigation to take place as to the right of the person to appear upon the register when he holds the certificate which is the evidence of his title, would be to defeat the very purpose and object of the statute of registration.
 Let me re-emphasise that Maruthamuthu's case was decided in the way it was because there was no attack on the plaintiff's title. The defendant merely attempted to defend himself by relying on the unlawful way in which the plaintiff had acquired her title. That is insufficient. Absent direct and frontal attack upon the title of a registered proprietor s. 340(1) insulates him completely.
 I now turn to s. 340(2). This carves out three circumstances in which the title of "the person for the time being registered as proprietor" "shall not be indefeasible". In Kesarmal & Anor v. Valliappa Chettiar  1 LNS 33;  MLJ 119, the Privy Council held that the latter phrase means "that the title of a proprietor is liable to be defeated." A registered proprietor's title is - to use the words of the Judicial Committee - "liable to be defeated" only in an action brought for that purpose. In other words, there cannot be a collateral attack upon a registered title. This reinforces the point I made earlier in this judgment. It follows that s. 340(2) qualifies s. 340(1) to afford a registered proprietor interim protection of his or her title. Put differently, the title of a registered proprietor remains indefeasible until it is successfully impeached in proceedings properly brought for that purpose by a person having locus standi to bring an action. Let me illustrate. V is the registered proprietor of Blackacre and holds the issue document of title. R, pretending to be V obtains a duplicate issue document to Blackacre. R then transfers Blackacre to P for valuable consideration. P is innocent. P would acquire a title to Blackacre that is indefeasible against the whole world except V or any person claiming through or under V. So, if P brings an action for ejectment against T, a trespasser on Blackacre, T cannot resist those proceedings by alleging that P's title is defeasible because of the forgery. Neither will T succeed in an action to impeach P's title because he lacks standing. However, P's title remains defeasible as against V and V may bring an action to recover Blackacre from P.
 But what if P transfers Blackacre to X? Can V recover his land from X? The answer to this question is provided by s. 340(3). The subsection makes plain that the title remains defeasible in the hands of subsequent acquirers - X in the example given - or indeed anyone X may transfer Blackacre to. This is because it uses the expression "may subsequently be transferred". But, as a matter of policy, a line must drawn beyond which the title to Blackacre must be put beyond the reach of V. And the Code in the proviso to s. 340(3) draws that line at the door of a purchaser who acquires title from a registered proprietor in good faith and for valuable consideration. So in the example provided, if X acquired Blackacre from P or took a charge or lease of it from P in good faith and for valuable consideration, then X will obtain a title that is indefeasible even as against V. Since the proviso applies only to a subsequent purchaser it cannot and does not apply to P.
 I now turn to Adorna Properties Sdn Bhd v. Boonsom Boonyanit where the facts were these. The plaintiff, Boonsom was the owner of a valuable piece of land. The original title to her land was in her possession. A rogue, pretending to be the plaintiff, obtained a duplicate of the title. The plaintiff's land was then sold and transferred to the defendant by means of forged documents. The plaintiff brought an action to recover her land. She had been the registered proprietor. She had been deprived of her proprietorship by a forgery. And the defendant had got itself onto the register by means of a forged instrument. Its title was therefore defeasible. Yet the plaintiff failed. Because the Federal Court read the proviso to sub-section (3) as qualifying subsection (2) by equating the expressions "registered proprietor" and "purchaser" both of which appear in s. 340.
In the case where the vendor's title is good but the instrument which was used by a purchaser for registration is void or voidable, the effect on such registration will only confer on the person in whose name the land is registered, what is usually referred to as deferred indefeasibility, - see Gibbs v. Messer  AC 248. Under this principle, the registration of the insufficient or void instrument can be set aside.
Neither of these authorities were cited by the Federal Court in its judgment. Nor was any reason given why the judgment of Hashim Yeop A Sani J in Mohammad bin Buyong v. Pemungut Hasil Tanah Gombak & Ors  1 LNS 114;  2 MLJ 53, which was quoted in the judgment of this court was wrong and ought not to be followed.
The proviso to sub-s (3) of s. 340 of the NLC deals with only one class or category of registered proprietors for the time being. It excludes from the main provision of sub-s (3) this category of registered proprietors so that these proprietors are not caught by the main provision of this subsection. Who are these proprietors? The proviso says that any purchaser in good faith and for valuable consideration or any person or body claiming through or under him are excluded from the application of the substantive provision of sub-s (3). For this category of registered proprietors, they obtained immediate indefeasibility notwithstanding that they acquired their titles under a forged document.
'purchaser' means a person or body who in good faith and for valuable consideration acquires title to, or any interest in land.
Accordingly, the decision in Adorna Properties, to use the words of Sir John Salmond in the passage already quoted, "was rendered in ignorance" of a statutory provision and as such cannot be treated as binding precedent.
 There is a further point that needs to be made. The object and purpose of s. 340 is to protect registered proprietors of land by affording them certainty of title. This is a just result because it is unfair and unjust that the true owner of land should be deprived of it by the machinations of a rogue. When a court interprets a statute, particularly one which confers rights upon or grants protection to persons generally or a class, its duty is to derive a meaning that is fair, or in accordance with the purpose of the particular Act of Parliament. Put differently, an interpretation should not be placed which will produce an unsatisfactory or unfair result. Indeed, there is a presumption that Parliament does not intend an unfair or unjust result. See, Pesuruhjaya Ibu Kota Kuala Lumpur v. Public Trustee & Ors  1 LNS 104;  2 MLJ 30; 'The Boucraa'  1 All ER 20; Lim Phin Khian v. Kho Su Ming  1 CLJ 529. This is the approach that the Privy Council adopted in the very recent case of Bissonauth v. The Sugar Fund Insurance Bond  UKPC 17 (decided on 19 March 2007). In the advice of the board, delivered by Lord Neuberger of Abbotsbury, you will see several references to the criteria of fairness and justice when interpreting the statute that fell for consideration in that case. Now, as may be seen from what I have said thus far, Adorna Properties interpreted s. 340 in a manner as to produce an unfair and unjust result. This is an added reason why Adorna Properties should not be followed.
As a registered proprietor you can cling on to your issue document of title for dear life. Yet a rogue may by the use of forged documents obtain a duplicate of the issue document of title claiming the original to be lost and sell and transfer your land to a perfectly innocent purchaser. That is what happened in the Boonsom Boonyanit case. Yet, according to the judgment of the Federal Court, you cannot recover your property.
 I am therefore prepared to hold for the appellants for the reasons already advanced. However, even if Adorna Properties is binding (which I say it is not), then I turn to the second question: does it apply to the facts of the present instance to protect the first respondent?
 It is central to the doctrine of indefeasibility housed in s. 340 that the issue document of title must itself be genuine. In Adorna Properties, the instrument of transfer and other attendant documents were forged. But the title was genuine. In the present appeal I accept the submission of learned counsel for the appellant that there is cogent evidence going to show that the issue document of title used to effect the transaction here was itself a forgery. Hence Adorna Properties is clearly distinguishable from the facts of this case. In my judgment the learned judge misdirected himself in not holding for the appellants on this ground. The appellant's case must succeed because the vendors had no title to pass. You cannot give what you do not have - nemo dat quod non habet. And the only exception is in favour of a bona fide purchaser for value. See, M & J Frozen Food. As my learned brother Raus Sharif has demonstrated in his judgment, the evidence conclusively points against the respondent on this issue. The burden of proving that he is a bona fide purchaser lay on the respondent (Bhup Narain Singh v. Gokhul Chand Mahton LR 61 IA 115) and he plainly failed to discharge it.
 The plaintiffs, Au Meng Nam and Au Ming Kong, were previously the registered proprietors of the said land. On 17 September 1997, they came to know that the said land had been transferred to the 1st defendant, Ung Yak Chew vide the registration of the memorandum of transfer in Form 14A on 9 October 1996.
 The plaintiffs contended that they had never entered into any agreement or signed any document to transfer of the said land to the 1st defendant. What happened was, two rogues claimed to be the proprietors of the said land entered into a sales and purchase agreement of the said land with the 1st defendant. This took place on 9 May 1996.
 Hence, on 18 September 1997 the plaintiffs lodged a police report stating that the transfer of the said land to the 1st defendant was fraudulent. They subsequently brought this action against the 1st defendant.
 The 1st defendant in his defence contended that he was a bona fide purchaser of the said land for valuable consideration within the proviso to s. 340(3) of the National Land Code 1965 ("Code") and thus had obtained an indefeasible title to the said land. The 1st defendant, as a fall back position, filed a third party notice against Lau Kok Guan ("2nd defendant") and Chuah Chong Ying ("3rd defendant") for compensation or indemnity. He alleged that the 2nd and 3rd defendants were negligent.
 The 2nd and 3rd defendants were at the material time, the partners of Messrs Lau Kok Guan & Partners, the firm of solicitors acting for the 1st defendant for the purchase and subsequent transfer of the said land. The 2nd and 3rd defendants denied of any negligence on their part. They too, as a fall back position, brought in the Pentadbir Tanah Daerah Johor Bahru ("the 4th defendant") as the fourth party to this action, claiming for contribution or indemnity. They in turn alleged that the 4th defendant was negligent.
 On 26 August 2005, the learned trial judge after a full trial, dismissed the plaintiffs' claim. He found it as a fact that the instrument of transfer of the said land to the 1st defendant was a forged document. Nevertheless, applying the Federal Court case of Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. v. Boonsom Boonyanit  2 CLJ 133 ("Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd.") he held that the 1st defendant was a bona fide purchaser for value within the proviso to s. 340(3) of the Code and thus had acquired an indefeasible title to the said land.
 One of the main issues raised by the plaintiffs in this appeal was that the learned trial judge was wrong to rely on the case of Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. Mr. Ng Chew Hor, learned counsel for the plaintiffs submitted that Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. was decided per incuriam and should not be followed.
 It is therefore necessary to undertake a careful examination of Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. The facts of that case are these. Mrs. Boonsom Boonyanit was a Thai national. She owned two pieces of land in Tanjong Bungah, Penang. A rogue forged her signature, sold and subsequently transferred her two pieces of land to Adorna Properties. She discovered the fraud only after Adorna Properties was registered as the owner of the two pieces of land. She brought an action against Adorna Properties in order to have her name restored on the register as the owner of the property.
(1) The title or interest of any person or body for the time being registered as proprietors of any land, or in whose name any lease, charge or easement is for the time being registered, shall, subject to the following provisions of this section, be indefeasible.
(c) where the title or interest was unlawfully acquired by the person or body in the purported exercise of any power or authority conferred by any written law.
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall affect any title or interest acquired by any purchaser in good faith and for valuable consideration, or by any person or body, claiming through or under such a purchaser.
(b) the determination of any title or interest by operation of law.
 The High Court in interpreting the above provisions held that even if the instrument of transfer was forged, Adorna Properties had nevertheless acquired indefeasible title over the property by virtue of s. 340(3) of the Code, which protects any title or interest acquired by any purchaser in good faith and for valuable consideration. (See Boonsom Boonyanit v. Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd.  4 CLJ 45). Hence, the High Court ruled in favour of Adorna Properties.
... the words 'any purchaser' appearing in the proviso to s. 340 (3) do not include a registered proprietor whose immediate title is rendered defeasible by one or more of the vitiating elements specified in the second sub-s to s. 340 of the Code. Any other construction would, in our view, denude sub-s (2) of all effect. The section should be read as making defeasible the title of a proprietor who gets onto the register by means of one or more of the methods specified in the second subsection. However, if such a registered proprietor were to dispose of the land to a third party who, in good faith, pays the purchase price, then, the latter, as well as all those who come onto the register after him, take title free of any taint.
The proviso to sub-s (3) of s. 340 of the NLC deals with only class or category of registered proprietors for the time being. It excludes from the main provisions of sub-s (3) this category of registered proprietors so that these proprietors are not caught by main provision of this subsection. Who are these proprietors? The proviso says that any purchaser in good faith and for valuable consideration or any person or body claiming through or under him are excluded from the application of the substantive provisions of sub-s (3). For this category of registered proprietors, they obtained immediately indefeasibility notwithstanding that they acquired their titles under a forged document.
We therefore, agree with the High Court Judge that, on the facts of this case, even if the instrument of transfer was forged, the respondent nevertheless obtained an indefeasible title to the said land.
Having misconstrued the legislative intent as embodied in section 340, the case of Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. is clearly wrongly decided on the issue of indefeasibility involving forgery and should not be followed. Whatever may be the advantages of immediate indefeasibility, it is for Parliament, to change the law, and until that is done, it is for the Courts to interpret the law as it stands.
It is axiomatic to state that the doctrine of stare decisis has become the cornerstone of the common law system practiced in this country. It is fundamental to its existence and to the rule of law. It has attained the status of immutability.
Judicial hierarchy must be observed in the interest of finality and certainty in the law and for orderly development of legal rules as for the courts and lawyers to regulate their affairs. Failure to observe judicial precedents would create chaos and misapprehensions in the judicial system.
... judgments of the Federal Court, are binding on the Court of Appeal. Whether the Court of Appeal agrees with them or not, it is incumbent upon it to apply the test. However, if the court thinks that it has good reasons for disagreeing with the judgments, it may, while following them, point out why they should be reviewed by this court. Until it is actually done by this court, they remain binding on the Court of Appeal.
 Taking the cue from the above observation of Abdul Hamid Mohammad FCJ, it is my respectful view that the Federal Court should review its decision in Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. To me, by virtue of s. 340(2)(b) of the Code, the title of Adorna Properties was not indefeasible as the registration was obtained by forgery. Section 340(3) does not apply to s. 340(2). The proviso states "Provided that in this sub-section" and this sub-section refers to s. 340(3) and not s. 340(2). Section 340(3)(a) refers to "to whom it may subsequently be transferred" which means that the intended purchaser is the subsequent purchaser and not the immediate purchaser.
 Similarly, in the instant case, the title of the 1st defendant is defeasible as the registration was obtained by forgery. The 1st respondent was the immediate purchaser and not a subsequent purchaser. Section 340(3) has no application as it refers to subsequent purchaser and not the immediate purchaser. Thus, the plaintiffs would have succeeded in this appeal if not for the Federal Court interpretation of s. 340 of the Code in Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. But for the reasons given earlier, I am not ready to ignore or disregard the Federal Court's decision in Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd.
 Thus, what need to be decided now is whether the learned trial judge was right in holding that the 1st defendant was a bona fide purchaser of the said land for valuable consideration so as to fall within the exception to defeasibility under s. 340(3) of the Code. Mr. Ng Chew Hor submitted that the learned trial judge had misdirected himself on the law and evidence adduced at the trial in holding that the 1st defendant was a bona fide purchaser. Mr. Wong Kim Fatt, learned counsel for the 1st defendant, submitted otherwise. According to him, the findings of the learned trial judge were findings of facts and this court, as an appellate court, should be slow in interfering with such findings.
The question arises whether on the evidence presented herein the Court can safely conclude that the defendant is not a bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration so as to fall within the exception to defeasibility as provided for by the proviso to section 340(3) of the National Land Code. To do so the evidential burden falls on the defendant and upon evaluating the evidence the defendant has on a balance of probabilities successfully discharged the burden.
1. The sale and purchase agreement speaks for itself in that the defendant is the purchaser of the property in question who has given valuable consideration by payment of the full purchase price.
2. Though the consideration paid was below the Government Valuation of RM1.2 million by the plaintiffs' valuer (SP2) nevertheless to my mind that by itself cannot negative the defendant's status as bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration bearing in mind that the plaintiffs has failed to adduce evidence that the defendant was privy to the fraud and/or forgery. The standard of proof for fraud is proof beyond reasonable doubt and for forgery on a balance of probabilities - see Federal Court decision in Adorna Properties Sdn. Bhd. v. Boonsom Boonyanit  2 CLJ 133 in approving Saminathan v. Pappa  1 MLJ 121. The plaintiff's Valuers report to my mind must be approached with caution as it was prepared in 2001 - some five years after the transaction and there were glaring omissions as to the existence and effect of acquisition exercise by the relevant authorities on the said land in 1996 and the acknowledgement by SP2 that consideration need not be adequate as it could be nominal and sufficient. There is no dispute that the defendant paid the full ad valorem stamp based on the adjudicated government valuation of RM1.2 million.
3. The evidence of the defendant that he is illiterate and hence had to engage and relied heavily on the advice of his solicitors ie, the Third Party herein in the purchase of the property which he felt he had a good bargain.
4. The corroborative evidence of TPWS-1 that he was handed the original title deeds of the property at his office by the vendors as stated therein and the defendant's testimony that he received the original title deed (P2) duly registered into his name from the third party.
Even where, as in this case, the appeal turns on a question of fact, the Court of Appeal has to bear in mind that its duty is to rehear the case, and the court must reconsider the materials before the judge with such other materials as it may have decided to admit. The court must then make up its own mind, not disregarding the judgment appealed from, but carefully weighing and considering it; and not shrinking from overruling it if on full consideration the court comes to the conclusion that the judgment is wrong. When, as often happens, much turns on the relative credibility of witnesses who have been examined and cross examined before the judge, the court is sensible of the great advantage he has had in seeing and hearing them. It is often very difficult to estimate correctly the relative credibility of witnesses from written depositions: and when the question arises which witness is to be believed rather than another, and that question turns on manner and demeanour, the Court of Appeal always is, and must be, guided by the impression made on the judge who saw the witnesses. But there may obviously be other circumstances, quite apart from manner and demeanour, which may show whether a statement is credible or not; and these circumstances may warrant the court in differing from the judge, even on a question of fact turning on the credibility of witnesses whom the court has not seen.
Suffice to say that we re-affirm the proposition that an appellate court will not, generally speaking, intervene unless the trial court is shown to be plainly wrong in arriving at its decision. But appellate interference will take place in cases where there has been no or insufficient judicial appreciation of the evidence. It is, we think appropriate that we say what judicial appreciation of evidence involves.
A judge who is required to adjudicate upon a dispute must arrive at his decision on an issue of fact by assessing, weighing and, for good reasons, either accepting or rejecting the whole or any part of the evidence placed before him. He must, when deciding whether to accept or to reject the evidence of a witness, test it against relevant criteria. Thus, he must take into account the presence or absence of any motive that a witness may have in giving his evidence. If there are contemporary documents, then he must test the oral evidence of a witness against these. He must also test the evidence of a particular witness against the probabilities of the case. A trier of fact who makes findings based purely upon the demeanour of a witness without undertaking a critical analysis of that witness' evidence runs the risk of having his findings corrected on appeal. It does not matter whether the issue for decision is one that arises in a civil or criminal case: the approach to judicial appreciation of evidence is the same.
In our view, the Court of Appeal in citing these cases had clearly borne in mind the central feature of appellate intervention, ie to determine whether or not the trial court had arrived at its decision or finding correctly on the basis of the relevant law and/or the established evidence. In so doing, the Court of Appeal was perfectly entitled to examine the process of evaluation of the evidence by the trial court. Clearly, the phrase 'insufficient judicial appreciation of evidence' merely related to such a process. This is reflected in the Court of Appeal's restatement that a judge who was required to adjudicate upon a dispute must arrive at his decision on an issue of fact by assessing, weighing and, for good reasons, either accepting or rejecting the whole or any part of the evidence placed before him. The Court of Appeal further reiterated the principle central to appellate intervention, ie that a decision arrived at by a trial court without judicial appreciation of the evidence might be set aside on appeal. This is consistent with the established plainly wrong test.
In the circumstances and for the reasons stated, there is no merit in the appellants' contention that the Court of Appeal had adopted a new test for appellate intervention. In our view, what the Court of Appeal had done was merely to accentuate the established plainly wrong test consistently applied by the appellate courts in this country.
(i) The completion date of the sale and purchase agreement was nine months from the date of signing. The purchase price was RM400,000. However, 80% of the purchase price was paid on the date of signing of the agreement, and the balance was paid three months after the date of signing.
(ii) About three months after the purchase and the said land being registered under his name, the 1st defendant attempted to sell the said land for RM1,200,000. In the attempted sale, the said land was valued for stamping purposes for RM1,286,000.
(iii) Both the "vendor" possessed only temporary identity cards when the sale and purchase agreement was signed. No queries or searches were made of the relevant authorities.
(iv) Admission by the 2nd defendant, the solicitors acting for the 1st defendant, during cross examination that if given time, he would be able to write to the Jabatan Pendaftaran Negara, to find out the identity of the "vendors" who came to his office, with temporary identity cards. However, he did not do so because the 1st defendant insisted in concluding the transaction on the same day.
 Had the learned trial judge taken the above facts and circumstances into consideration, he cannot possibly conclude that the 1st defendant was a bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration, so as to be protected under s. 340(3) of the Code. To me, the 1st defendant had acted hastily. He concluded the sale without any proper investigation into the title or the persons claiming to be proprietors. No doubt he had every right to take advantage of the low price that was offered to him but he took the risk. When he embarked into such risk, it cannot be at the expense of the plaintiffs. This is because while he had a choice, the plaintiffs had none. In fact, the plaintiffs were helpless. The plaintiffs could not do anything to prevent the fraud. Even locking the title in a safe would not had help the plaintiffs. In such circumstances the court must not favour the 1st defendant, over the plaintiffs. To do so, would be doing injustice to the plaintiffs.
To allow a purchaser who acts with such gross carelessness to deprive a prior innocent mortgage of her priority would be the greatest injustice.
 So too here. The 1st defendant is under the obligation to investigate properly all matters relating to the sale of the said land and not to just blindly accept what was claimed by the 'vendors' as correct and genuine. When he failed to take the ordinary precautions which ought to be taken in such a matter he is not entitled to the protection of the court.
 Another error on the part of the learned trial judge is this. While he acknowledged the fact that the consideration paid by the 1st defendant was below the government valuation and the plaintiffs' valuer but concluded that "that by itself cannot negative the 1st defendant's status as bona fide purchase for valuable consideration bearing in mind that the plaintiffs have failed to adduce evidence of the 1st defendant to the fraud or forgery". Clearly, the learned trial judge had misdirected himself on the law. To me, since the 1st defendant was relying on the proviso of s. 340(3) of the Code, that he was a bona fide purchaser for valuable consideration, the evidential burden falls on him. The evidential burden remained with the 1st defendant. There is no duty on the plaintiffs to prove that the 1st defendant was a party or privy to the fraud or forgery.
 For the above reasons, I would allow the plaintiffs' appeal and set aside the order of the High Court in dismissing the plaintiffs' claim against the 1st defendant. The plaintiffs shall be entitled to the declaration that they are the beneficial and legal owners of the said land. There shall also be a consequential order that the endorsement of the transfer vide presentation No. 1299/96 be cancelled and the issue document of title be rectified by the 4th defendant. The plaintiffs are entitled to damages to be assessed by the Registrar of the High Court. They are also entitled to costs of this appeal as well as in the court below. The deposit paid into court shall be refunded to the plaintiffs.
 The next issue in this appeal is whether the 1st defendant could attach any liability against the 2nd and 3rd defendants. My respectful view is that, no liability could be attached against the 2nd and 3rd defendants. The 1st defendant had adduced no evidence at the trial to support the allegation that the 2nd and 3rd defendants were negligent. Moreover from the circumstances of the transaction it clearly indicated that the 1st defendant took a commercial decision to purchase the land which he admitted was a good bargain. In a single day, he visited the land, decided to purchase it and agreed to the term of the sale including an initial payment of 80% of the purchase price in cash. These were done before the 1st defendant consulted the 2nd defendant. The 2nd defendant in his evidence stated that when the 1st defendant came to see him, he informed him (1st defendant) of the risk. But according to the 2nd defendant, the 1st defendant who was a regular client and was familiar with sales and purchase of real property, wanted to proceed with the transaction and urgently too. The 2nd defendant further testified that instructions were given to him to prepare the terms as have already be agreed upon. Certainly, under such circumstances the 2nd and 3rd defendants cannot be blamed. Accordingly the 1st defendant's claim against the 2nd and 3rd defendants is dismissed with costs here and the court below.
 Since no liability could be attached against the 2nd and 3rd defendants, the 2nd and 3rd defendants claim for contribution or indemnity against the 4th defendant should also be dismissed. In fact no evidence was adduced in these proceedings that the 4th defendant had acted mala fide or had committed fraud or forgery or had conspired with anybody. The 4th defendant as the Land Administrator was merely performing his statutory function and duties in the registration of the transfer of the said law. Accordingly the 2nd and 3rd defendants claim against 4th defendant is dismissed with costs here and the court below.
 I have had the advantage of reading the judgment of my learned brother Raus Sharif JCA in draft and I am in entire agreement with it. I have nothing more to add.

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