Care must be taken to put only such portion of the property to sale the consideration of which is sufficient to meet the claim in the execution petition. The sale held without examining this aspect and not in conformity with this requirement would be illegal and without jurisdiction. 8. In Takkaseela Pedda Subba Reddi v. Pujari Padmavathamma [(1977) 3 SCC 337, 340] this Court after examining the scope of Rule 64 of Order XXI CPC has taken a similar view: (SCC p. 340, para 3) “Under this provision the executing court derives jurisdiction to sell properties attached only to the point at which the decree is fully satisfied. The words ‘necessary to satisfy the decree’ clearly indicate that no sale can be allowed beyond the decretal amount mentioned in the sale proclamation. In other words, where the sale fetches a price equal to or higher than the amount mentioned in the sale proclamation and is sufficient to satisfy the decree, no further sale should be held, and the court should stop at