has been held by this Court in a recent decision of Shivshankara and Another v. H.P. Vedavyasa Char (Supra), which has similar facts in the context of an injunction order. 21. Once it has been held that the transactions executed by the respondents are illegal due to the doctrine of lis pendens the defence of the respondents 1-2 that they are bonafide purchasers for valuable consideration and thus, entitled to protection under Section 41 of the Act of 1882 is liable to be rejected. 22. We are presently not getting into the deposition of PW-7 though it is unusual and also whether respondents 1-2 had knowledge of the injunction, even though we find no substantial reasons for the High Court to base its entire decision on the deposition of this witness (PW-7). We are going by the settled position that subsequent purchasers will be bound by lis pendens and cannot claim they are bonafide purchasers because they were not aware of the16 injunction order, looking at the peculiar facts of the