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Note: Rule 48 may be of special interest
ORDER
XXI Civil Procedure Code 1908
Order 21 - Payment under decree
1[1].
Modes of paying money under decree
(1) All money, payable under a decree shall be paid as follows,
namely:--
(a) by deposit into the Court whose duty it is to execute the decree,
or sent to that Court by postal money order or through a bank; or
(b) out of Court, to the decree-holder by postal money order or through
a bank or by any other mode wherein payment is evidenced in writing; or
(c) otherwise, as the Court which made the decree, directs.
(2) Where any payment is made under clause (a) or clause (c) of sub-rule
(1), the judgment-debtor shall give notice thereof to the decree-holder either
through the Court or directly to him by registered post, acknowledgement due.
(3) Where money is paid by postal money order or through a bank under
clause (a) or clause (b) of sub-rule (1), the money order or payment through
bank, as the case may be, shall accurately state the following particulars,
namely:--
(a) the number of the original suit;
(b) the names of the parties or where there are more than two
plaintiffs or more than two defendants, as the case may be, the names of the
first two plaintiffs and the first two defendants;
(c) how the money remitted is to be adjusted, that is to say, whether
it is towards the principal, interest or costs;
(d) the number of the execution case of the Court, where such case is
pending; and
(e) the name and address of the payer.
(4) On any amount paid under clause (a) or clause (c) of sub-rule (1),
Interest, if any, shall cease to run from the date of service of the notice
referred to in sub-rule (2).
(5)[2] On
any amount paid under clause (b) of sub-rule (1), interest, if any, shall cease
to run from the date of such payment:
Provided that, where the decree-holder refuses to accept the postal
money order or payment through a bank, interest shall cease to run from the
date on which the money was tendered to him, or where he avoids acceptance of
the postal money order or payment through bank, interest shall cease to run
from the date on which the money would have been tendered to him in the
ordinary course of business of the postal authorities or the bank, as the case
may be.]
2. Payment out of Court to decree-holder
(1) Where any money payable under a decree of any kind is paid out of
Court, 1 [or a decree of any kind is otherwise adjusted] in whole or in part to
the satisfaction of the decree-holder, the decree-holder shall certify such
payment of adjustment to the Court whose duty it is to execute the decree, and
the Court shall record the same accordingly.
(2) The judgment-debtor 2 [or any person who has become surety for the
judgment-debtor] also may inform the Court of such payment or adjustment, and
apply to the Court to issue a notice to the decree-holder to show cause, on a
day to be fixed by the Court, why such payment or adjustment should not be
recorded as certified ; and if, after service of such notice, the decree-holder
fails to show cause why the payment or adjustment should not be recorded as
certified, the Court shall record the same accordingly,
(2A)[3] No
payment or adjustment shall be recorded at the instance of the judgment-debtor
unless--
(a) the payment is made in the manner provided in rule 1; or
(b) the payment or adjustment is proved by documentary evidence; or
(c) the payment or adjustment is admitted by, or on behalf of, the
decree-holder in his reply to the notice given under sub-rule (2) of rule 1, or
before the Court.]
(3)[4] A
payment or adjustment, which has not been certified or recorded as aforesaid,
shall not be recognised by any Court executing the decree.
Order
21 - Courts executing decrees
3. Lands situate in more than one jurisdiction
Where immovable property forms one estate or tenure situate within the
local limits of the jurisdiction of two or more Courts, any one of such Courts
may attach and sell the entire estate or tenure.
4. Transfer to Court of Small Causes
Where a decree has been passed in a suit of which the value as set
forth in the plaint did not exceed two thousand rupees and which, as regards
its subject-matter, is not excepted by the law for the time being in force from
the cognizance of either a Presidency or a Provincial Court of Small Causes,
and the Court which passed it wishes it to be executed in Calcutta, Madras [or
Bombay][5],
such Court may send to the Court of Small Causes in Calcutta, Madras [or
Bombay], as the case may be, the copies and certificates mentioned in rule 6 ;
and such Court of Small Causes shall thereupon execute the decree as if it had
been passed by itself.
5. Mode of transfer
Where a decree is to be sent for execution to another Court, the Court
which passed such decree shall send the decree directly to such other Court
whether or not such Court is situated in the same State, but the Court to which
the decree is sent for execution shall, if it has no jurisdiction to execute
the decree, send it to the Court having such jurisdiction.[6]
6. Procedure where Court desires that its own decree shall be executed by
another Court
The Court sending a decree for execution shall send-
(a) a copy of the decree;
(b) a certificate setting forth that satisfaction of the decree has not
been obtained by execution within the jurisdiction of the Court by which it was
passed, or, where the decree has been executed in part, the extent to which
satisfaction has been obtained and what part of the decree remains unsatisfied;
and
(c) a copy of any order for the execution of the decree, or, if no such
order has been made, a certificate in that effect.
7. Court receiving copies of decree, etc., to file same without proof
The Court to which a decree is so sent shall cause such copies and
certificates to be filed, without any further proof of the decree or order for
execution, or of the copies thereof, unless the Court, for any special reasons
to be recorded under the hand of the Judge, requires such proof.
8. Execution of decree or order by Court to which it is sent
Where such copies are so filed, the decree or order may, if the Court
to which it is sent is the District Court, be executed by such Court or be
transferred for execution to any subordinate Court of competent jurisdiction.
9. Execution by High Court of decree transferred by other Court
Where the Court to which the decree is sent for execution is a High
Court, the decree shall be executed by such Court in the same manner as if it
had been passed by such Court in the exercise of its ordinary original civil
jurisdiction.
Order
21 - Application for execution
10. Application for execution
Where the holder of a decree desires to execute it, he shall apply to
the Court which passed the decree or to the officer (if any) appointed in this
behalf, or if the decree has been sent under the provisions hereinbefore
contained to another Court then to such Court or to the proper officer thereof.
11. Oral application
(1) Where a decree is for the payment of money the Court may, on the
oral application of the decree-holder at the time of the passing of the decree,
order immediate execution thereof by the arrest of the judgment-debtor, prior
to the preparation of a warrant if he is within the precincts of the Court.
(2) Written application--Save as otherwise provided by sub-rule (1),
every application for the execution of a decree shall be in writing, signed and
verified by the applicant or by some other person proved to the satisfaction of
the Court to be acquainted with the facts of the case, and shall contain in a
tabular form the following particulars, namely :--
(a) the number of the suit;
(b) the names of the parties;
(c) the date of the decree;
(d) whether any, appeal has been preferred from the decree ;
(e) whether any, and (if any) what, payment or other adjustment of the
matter in controversy has been made between the parties subsequently to the
decree;
(f) whether any, and (if any) what, previous applications have been
made for the execution of the decree, the dates of such applications and their
results ;
(g) the amount with interest (if any) due upon the decree, or other
relief granted thereby, together with particulars of any cross-decree, whether
passed before or after the date of the decree sought to be executed;
(h) the amount of the costs (if any) awarded ;
(i) the name of the person against whom execution of the decree is
sought; and
(j) the mode in which the assistance of the Court is required whether-
(i) by the delivery of any property specifically decreed;
1 [(ii) by the attachment, or by the attachment and sale, or by the
sale without attachment, of any property;]
(iii) by the arrest and detention in prison of any person;
(iv) by the appointment of a receiver;
(v) otherwise, as the nature of the relief granted may require.
(3) The Court to which an application is made under sub-rule (2) may,
require the applicant to produce a certified copy of the decree.
2 [11A. Application for arrest to state grounds
Where an application is made for the arrest and detention in prison of
the judgment-debtor, it shall state, or be accompanied by an affidavit stating,
the grounds on which arrest is applied for.]
12. Application for attachment of movable property not in
judgment-debtor's possession
Where an application is made for the attachment of any movable property
belonging to a judgment-debtor but not in his possession, the decree-holder
shall annex to the application an inventory of the property to be attached,
containing a reasonably accurate description of the same.
13. Application for attachment of immovable property to contain certain
particulars
Where an application is made for the attachment of any immovable
property belonging to a judgment-debtor, it shall contain at the foot--
(a) a description of such properly sufficient to identify the same and,
in case such property can be identified by boundaries or numbers in a record of
settlement or survey, a specification of such boundaries or numbers ; and
(b) a specification of the judgment-debtor's share or interest in such
property to the best of the belief of the applicant, and so far as he has been
able to ascertain the same.
14. Power to require certified extract from Collector's register in
certain cases
Where an application is made for the attachment of any land which is
registered in the office of the Collector, the Court may require the applicant
to produce a certified extract from the register of such office, specifying the
persons registered as proprietors of, or as possessing any transferable
interest in, the land of its revenue, or as liable to pay revenue for the land,
and the shares of the registered proprietors.
15. Application for execution by joint decree-holder
(1) Where a decree has been passed jointly in favour of more persons
than one, any one or more of such persons may, unless the decree imposes any
condition to the contrary, apply for the execution of the whole decree for the
benefit of them all, or, where any of them has died, for the benefit of the
survivors and the legal representatives of the deceased.
(2) Where the Court sees sufficient cause for allowing the decree to be
executed on an application made under this rule, it shall make such order as it
deems necessary for protecting the interests of the persons who have not joined
in the application.
16. Application for execution by transferee of decree
Where a decree or, if a decree has been passed jointly in favour of two
or more persons, the interest of any decree-holder in the decree is transferred
by assignment in writing or by operation of law, the transferee may apply for
execution of the decree to the Court which passed it; and the decree may be
executed in the same manner and subject to the same conditions as if the
application were made by such decree-holder :
Provided that, where the decree, or such interest as aforesaid, has
been transferred by assignment, notice of such application shall be given to the
transferor and the judgment-debtor, and the decree shall not be executed until
the Court has heard their objections (if any) to its execution:
Provided also that, where a decree for the payment of money against two
or more persons 'has been transferred to one of them, it shall not be executed
against the others.
2i[Explanation.--Nothing in this rule shall affect the provisions of
section 146, and a transferee of rights in the property, which is the
subject-matter of the suit, may apply for execution of the decree without a
separate assignment of the decree as required by this rule.]
17. Procedure on receiving application for execution of decree
(1) On receiving an application for the execution of a decree as
provided by rule 11, sub-rule (2), the Court shall ascertain whether such of
the requirements of rules 11 to 14 as may be applicable to the case have been
complied with ; and, if they have not been complied with, 3 [the Court shall
allow] the defect to be remedied then and there or within a time to be fixed by
it.
3i[(1A) If the defect is not so remedied, the Court shall reject the
application:
Provided that where, in the opinion of the Court, there is some
inaccuracy as to the amount referred to in clauses (g) and (h) of sub-rule (2)
of rule 11, the Court shall, instead of rejecting the application, decide
provisionally (without prejudice to the right of the parties to have the amount
finally decided in the course of the proceedings) the amount and make an order
for the execution of the decree for the amount so provisionally decided.]
(2) Where an application is amended under the provisions of sub-rule
(1), it shall be deemed to have been an application in accordance with law and
presented on the date when it was first presented.
(3) Every amendment made under this rule shall be signed or initialled
by the Judge.
(4) When the application is admitted, the Court shall enter in the
proper register a note of the application and the date on which it was made,
and shall, subject to the provisions hereinafter contained, order execution of
the decree according to the nature of the application:
Provided that, in the case of a decree for the payment of money, the
value of the property attached shall, as nearly as may be, correspond with the
amount due under the decree.
18. Execution in case of cross-decrees
(1) Where applications are made to a Court for the execution
of-cross-decrees in separate suits for the payment of two sums of money passed
between the same parties and capable of execution at the same time by such
Court, then--
(a) if the two sums are equal, satisfaction shall be entered upon both
decrees; and
(b) if the two sums are unequal execution may be taken out only by the
holder of the decree for the larger sum and for so much only as remains after
deducting the smaller sum, and satisfaction for the smaller sum shall be
entered on the decree for the larger sum as well as satisfaction on the decree
for the smaller sum.
(2) This rule shall be deemed to apply where either party is an
assignee of one of the decrees and as well in respect of judgment-debts due by
the original assignor as in respect of judgment-debts due by the assignee
himself.
(3) This rule shall not be deemed to apply unless--
(a) the decree-holder in one of the suits in which the decrees have
been made is the judgment-debtor in the other and each party fills the same
character in both suits ; and
(b) the sums due under the decrees are definite.
(4) The holder of a decree passed against several persons jointly and
severally may treat it as a cross-decree in relation to a decree passed against
him singly in favour of one or more of such persons.
Illustrations
(a) A holds a decree against B for Rs. 1,000. B holds a decree against
A for the payment of Its. 1,000 in case A fails to deliver certain goods at a
future day. B cannot treat his decree as a cross-decree under this rule.
(b) A and B, co-plaintiffs, obtain a decree for Rs. 1,000 against C,
and C obtains a decree for Rs. 1,000 against B. C cannot treat this decree as a
cross-decree under this rule.
(c) A obtains a decree against B for Rs. 1,000 C, who is a trustee for
B, obtains a decree on behalf of B against A for Rs. 1,000. B cannot treat C's
decree as a cross-decree under this rule.
(d) A, B, C, D and E are jointly and severally liable for Rs. 1,000
under a decree obtained by F.A obtains a decree for Rs. 1,000 against F singly
and applies for execution to the Court in which the joint decree is being
executed. F may treat his joint-decree as across-decree under this rule.
19. Execution in case of cross-claims under same decree
Where application is made to a Court for the execution of a decree
under which two parties are entitled to recover sums of money from each other,
then--
(a) if the two sums are equal, satisfaction for both shall be entered
upon the decree; and
(b) if the two sums are unequal, execution may be taken out only by the
party entitled to the larger sum and for so much only as remains after
deducting the smaller sum, and satisfaction for the smaller sum shall be
entered upon the decree.
20. Cross-decrees and cross-claims in mortgage-suits
The provisions contained in rules 18 and 19 shall apply to decrees for
sale in enforcement of a mortgage or charge.
21. Simultaneous execution
The Court may, in its discretion, refuse execution at the same time
against the person and property of the judgment-debtor.
22. Notice to show cause against execution in certain cases
(1) Where an application for execution is made.--
(a) more than 4 [two years] after the date of the decree, or
(b) against the legal representative of a party to the decree 5 [or
where an application is made for execution of a decree filed under the
provisions of section 44A], 3i[or]
3ii[(c) against the assignee or receiver in insolvency, where the party
to the decree has been adjudged to be an insolvent,]
the Court executing the decree shall issue a notice to the person
against whom execution is applied for requiring him to show cause, on a date to
be fixed, why the decree should not be executed against him:
Provided that no such notice shall be necessary in consequence of more
than 4 [two years] having elapsed between the date of the decree and the
application for execution if the application is made within 4 [two years] from
the date of the last order against the party against whom execution is applied
for, made on any previous application for execution, or in consequence of the
application being made against the legal representative of the judgment-debtor
if upon a previous application for execution against the same person the Court
has ordered execution to issue against him.
(2) Nothing in the foregoing sub-rule shall be deemed to preclude the
Court from issuing any process in execution of a decree without issuing the
notice thereby prescribed, if for reasons to be recorded, it considers that the
issue of such notice would cause unreasonable delay or would defeat the ends of
justice.
3iv[22A. Sale not to be set aside on the death of the judgment-debtor
before the sale but after the service of the proclamation of sale
Where any property is sold in execution of a decree, the sale shall not
be set aside merely by reason of the death of the judgment-debtor between the
date of issue of the proclamation of sale and the date of the sale
notwithstanding the failure of the decree-holder to substitute the legal
representative of such deceased judgment-debtor, but, in case of such failure,
the Court may set aside the sale if it is satisfied that the legal
representative of the deceased judgment-debtor has been prejudiced by the
sale.]
23. Procedure after issue of notice
(1) Where the person to whom notice is issued under 6 [rule 22] does
not appear or does not show cause to the satisfaction of the Court why the
decree should not be executed, the Court shall order the decree to be executed.
(2) Where such person offers any objection to the execution of the
decree, the Court shall consider such objection and make such order as it
thinks fit.
___________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(iv), for sub-clause (ii)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(v), (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2i. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(vi) (w.e.f. 01.02.1977).
3. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(vii)(a), for "the
Court may reject the application, or may allow" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3i. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(vii)(b) (w.e.f.
01.02.1977).
3ii. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(viii)(v) (w.e.f.
01.02.1977).
3iv. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, Section 72(ix) (w.e.f. 01.02.1977).
4. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(viii)(a), for "one
year" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
5. Inserted by Act 8 of 1937, section 3.
6. Substituted by Act 38 of 1978, section 3 and Schedule II, for
"the last preceding rule" (w.e.f. 26-11-1978).
Order 21 - Process for execution
24. Process for execution
(1) When the preliminary measures (if any) required by the foregoing
rules have been taken, the Court shall, unless it sees cause to the contrary,
issue its process for the execution of the decree.
(2) Every such process shall bear date the day on which it is issued,
and shall be signed by the Judge or such officer as the Court may appoint in
this behalf, and shall be sealed with the seal of the Court and delivered to
the proper officer to be executed.
1[(3) In every such process, a day shall be specified on or before
which it shall be executed and a day shall also be specified on or before which
it shall be returned to the Court, but no process shall be deemed to be void if
no day for its return is specified therein.]
25. Endorsement on process
(1) The officer entrusted with the execution of the process shall
endorse thereon the day on, and the manner in, which it was executed, and, if
the latest day specified in the process for the return thereof has been
exceeded, the reason of the delay, or, if it was not executed, the reason why
it was not executed, and shall return the process with such endorsement to the
Court.
(2) Where the endorsement is to the effect that such officer is unable
to execute the process, the Court shall examine him touching his alleged
inability, and may, if it thinks fit, summon and examine witnesses as to such
inability, and shall record the result.
______________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(x), for sub-rule (3)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Stay of execution
26. When Court may stay execution
(1) The Court to which a decree has been sent for execution shall, upon
sufficient cause being shown, stay the execution of such decree for a
reasonable time, to enable the judgment-debtor to apply to the Court by which
the decree was passed, or to any Court having appellate jurisdiction in respect
of the decree or the execution thereof, for an order to stay execution, or any
other order relating to the decree or execution which might have been made by
such Court of first instance or Appellate Court if execution had been issued
thereby, or if application for execution had been made thereto.
(2) Where the property or person of the judgment-debtor has been seized
under, an execution, the Court which issued the execution may order the
restitution of such properly or the discharge of such person pending the result
of the application.
(3) Power to require security from, or impose conditions upon,
judgment-debtor.-- B efore making an order to stay execution or for the
restitution of property or the discharge of the judgment-debtor,1[the Court
shall require] such security from, or impose such conditions upon, the
judgment-debtor as it thinks fit.
27. Liability of judgment-debtor discharged
No order of restitution or discharge under rule 26 shall prevent the
property or person of a judgment-debtor from being retaken in execution of the
decree sent for execution.
28. Order of Court which passed decree or of Appellate Court to be binding
upon Court applied to
Any order of the Court by which the decree was passed, or of such Court
of appeal as aforesaid, in relation to the execution of such decree, shall be
binding upon the Court to which the decree was sent for execution.
29. Stay of execution pending suit between decree-holder and
judgment-debtor
Where a suit is pending in any court against the holder of a decree of
such Court 2[or of a decree which is being executed by such Court], on the part
of the person against whom the decree was passed, the Court may, on such terms
as to security or otherwise, as it thinks fit, stay execution of the decree
until the pending suit has been decided :
3[Provided that if the decree is one for payment of money, the Court
shall, if it grants stay without requiring security, record its reasons for so
doing.]
___________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976 section 72(xi), for "the Court
may require" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xii)(a), (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Inserted by the Act 104 of 1976, sec. 72(xii)(b) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Mode of execution
30. Decree for payment of money
Every decree for the payment of money, including a decree for the
payment of money as the alternative to some other relief, may be executed by
the detention in the civil prison of the judgment-debtor, or by the attachment
and sale of his property, or by both.
31. Decree for specific movable property
(1) Where the decree is for any specific movable, or for any share in a
specific movable, it may be executed by the seizure, if practicable, of the
movable or share, and by the delivery thereof to the party to whom it has been
adjudged, or to such person as he appoints to receive delivery on his behalf,
or by the detention in the civil prison of the judgment-debtor, or by the
attachment, of his property, or by both.
(2) Where any attachment under sub-rule (1) has remained in force for
1[three months], if the judgment-debtor has not obeyed the decree and the
decree-holder has applied to have the attached property sold, such property may
be sold, and out of the proceeds the Court may award to the decree-holder, in
cases where any amount has been fixed by the decree to be paid as an
alternative to delivery of movable property, such amount, and, in other cases,
such compensation as it thinks fit, and shall pay the balance (if any) to the
judgment-debtor on his application.
(3) Where the judgment-debtor has obeyed the decree and paid all costs
of executing the same which he is bound to pay, or where, at the end of 1[three
months] from the date of the attachment, no application to have the property
sold has been made, or, if made, has been refused, the attachment, shall cease.
32. Decree for specific performance for restitution of conjugal rights, or
for an injunction
(1) Where the party against whom a decree for the specific performance
of a contract, or for restitution of conjugal rights, or for an injunction, has
been passed, has had an opportunity of obeying the decree and has wilfully
failed to obey it, the decree may be enforced 2 [in the case of a decree for
restitution of conjugal rights by the attachment of his property or, in the
case of a decree for the specific performance of a contract or for an
injunction] by his detention in the civil prison, or by the attachment of his
property, or by both.
(2) Where the party against whom a decree for specific performance or
for an injunction has been passed is a corporation, the decree may be enforced
by the attachment of the property of the corporation or, with the leave of the
Court, by the detention in the civil prison of the directors or other principal
officers thereof, or by both attachment and detention.
(3) Where any attachment under sub-rule (1) or sub-rule (2) has
remained in force for 3 [six months] if the judgment-debtor has not obeyed the
decree and the decree-holder has applied to have the attached property sold,
such property may be sold ; and out of the proceeds the Court may award to the
decree-holder such compensation as it thinks fit, and shall pay the balance (if
any) to the judgment-debtor on his application.
(4) Where the judgment-debtor has obeyed the decree and paid all costs
of executing the same which he is bound to pay, or where, at the end of 1a[six
months] from the date of the attachment, no application to have the property
sold has been made, or if made has been refused, the attachment shall cease.
(5) Where a decree for the specific performance of a contract or for an
injunction has not been obeyed, the Court may, in lieu of or in addition to all
or any of the processes aforesaid, direct that the act required to be done may
be done so far as practicable by the decree-holder or some other person
appointed by the Court, at the cost of the judgment-debtor, and upon the act
being done the expenses incurred may be ascertained in such manner as the Court
may direct and may be recovered as if they were included in the decree.
4[Explanation.-- For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that
the expression "the act required to be done" covers prohibitory as
well as mandatory injunctions.]
Illustration
A, a person of little substance, erects a building which renders
uninhabitable a family mansion belonging to B.A, in spite of his detention in
prison and the attachment of his property, declines to obey a decree obtained
against him by B and directing him to remove the building. The Court is of
opinion that no sum realizable by the sale of A's property would adequately
compensate B for the depreciation in the value of his mansion. B may apply to
the Court to remove the building and may recover the cost of such removal from
A in the execution-proceedings.
33. Discretion of Court in executing decree for restitution of conjugal
rights
(1) Notwithstanding anything in rule 32, the Court, either at the time
of passing a decree 5 [against a husband] for the restitution of conjugal
rights or at any time afterwards, may order that the decree 6 [shall be
executed in the manner provided in this rule].
(2) Where the Court has made an order under sub-rule (1) 7 [***], it
may order that, in the event of the decree not being obeyed within such period
as may be fixed in this behalf, the judgment-debtor shall make to the
decree-holder such periodical payments as may be just, and, if it thinks fit,
require that the judgment-debtor shall, to its satisfaction, secure to the
decree-holder such periodical payments.
(3) The Court may from time to time vary or modify any order made under
sub-rule (2) for the periodical payment of money, either by altering the times
of payment or by increasing or diminishing the amount, or may temporarily
suspend the same as to the whole or any part of the money so ordered to be
paid, and again review the same, either wholly or in part as it may think just.
(4) Any money ordered to be paid under this rule may be recovered as
though it were payable under a decree for the payment of money.
34. Decree for execution of document, or endorsement of negotiable
instrument
(1) Where a decree is for the execution of a document or for the
endorsement of a negotiable instrument and the judgment-debtor neglects or
refuses to obey the decree, the decree-holder may prepare a draft of the
document or endorsement in accordance with the terms of the decree and deliver
the same to the Court.
(2) The Court shall thereupon cause the draft to be served on the
judgment-debtor together with a notice requiring his objections (if any) to be
made within such time as the Court fixes in this behalf.
(3) Where the judgment-debtor objects to the draft, his objections
shall be stated in writing within such time, and the Court shall make such
order approving or altering the draft, as it thinks fit.
(4) The decree-holder shall deliver to the Court a copy of the draft
with such alterations (if any) as the Court may have directed upon the proper
stamp-paper if a stamp is required by the law for the time being in force ; and
the Judge or such officer as may be appointed in this behalf shall execute the
document so delivered,
(5) The execution of a document or the endorsement of a negotiable
instrument under this rule may be in the following form, namely:--
"C.D., Judge of the Court of (or as the case may be), for A.B., in
a suit by E.F. against A.B.",
and shall have the same effect as the execution of the document or the
endorsement of the negotiable instrument by the party ordered to execute or
endorse the same.
8[(6)(a) Where the registration of the document is required under any
law for the time being in force, the Court, or such officer of the Court as may
be authorised in this behalf by the Court, shall cause the document to be
registered in accordance with such law.
(b) Where the registration of the document is not so required, but the
decree-holder desires it to be registered, the Court may make such order as it
thinks fit.
(c) Where the Court makes any order for the registration of any
document, it may make such order as it thinks fit as to the expenses of
registration.]
35. Decree for immovable property
(1) Where a decree is for the delivery of any immovable property,
possession thereof shall be delivered to the party to whom it has been
adjudged, or to such person as he may appoint to receive delivery on his
behalf, and, if necessary, by removing any person bound by the decree who
refuses to vacate the property.
(2) Where a decree is for the joint possession of immovable property,
such possession shall be delivered by affixing a copy of the warrant in some
conspicuous place on the property and proclaiming by beat of drum, or other
customary mode, at some convenient place, the substance of the decree.
(3) Where possession of any building or enclosure is to be delivered
and the person in possession, being bound by the decree, docs not afford free
access, the Court, through its officers, may, after giving reasonable warning
and facility to any woman not appearing in public according to the customs of
the country to withdraw, remove or open any lock or bolt or break open any door
or do any other act necessary for putting the decree-holder in possession.
36. Decree for delivery of immovable property when in occupancy of tenant
Where a decree is for the delivery of any immovable property in the
occupancy of a tenant or other person entitled to occupy the same and not bound
by the decree to relinquish such occupancy, the Court shall order delivery to
be made by affixing a copy of the warrant in some conspicuous place on the
property, and proclaiming to the occupant by beat of drum or other customary
mode, at some convenient place, the substance of the decree in regard to the
property
__________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xiii), for "six
months" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
1A. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, sec. 72(xiv), for "one
year" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Inserted by Act 29 of 1923, section 2.
3. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72, for "one year"
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
4. Inserted by Act 22 of 2002, section 14(a) (w.e.f. 1-7-2002).
5. Inserted by Act 29 of 1923, section 3.
6. Substituted by Act 29 of 1923, section 3, for "shall not be
executed by detention in prison".
7. The words "and the decree-holder is the wife" omitted by
Act 29 of 1923 section 3.
8. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xv), for sub-rule (6)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Arrest and detention in
the civil prison
37. Discretionary power to permit judgment-debtor to show
cause against detention in prison
(1) Notwithstanding anything in these rules, where an
application is for the execution of a decree for the payment of money by the
arrest and detention in the civil prison of a judgment-debtor who is liable to
be arrested in pursuance of the application, the Court 1[shal]l, instead of
issuing a warrant for his arrest, issue a notice calling upon him to appear
before the Court on a day to be specified in the notice and show cause why he
should not be committed to the civil prison :
2[Provided that such notice shall not be necessary if
the Court is satisfied, by affidavit, or otherwise, that, with the object or
effect of delaying the execution of the decree, the judgment-debtor is likely
to abscond or leave the local limits of the jurisdiction of the Court.]
(2) Where appearance is not made in obedience to the
notice, the Court shall, if the decree-holder so requires, issue a warrant for
the arrest of the judgment-debtor.
38. Warrant for arrest to direct judgment-debtor to be
brought up
Every warrant for the arrest of a judgment-debtor
shall direct the officer entrusted with its execution to bring him before the
Court with all convenient speed, unless the amount which he has been ordered to
pay, together with the interest thereon and the costs (if any) to which he is
liable, be sooner paid.
39. Subsistence allowance
(1) No judgment-debtor shall be arrested in execution
of a decree unless and until the decree-holder pays into Court such sums as the
Judge thinks sufficient for the subsistence of the judgment-debtor from the
time of his arrest until he can be brought before the Court.
(2) Where a judgment-debtor is committed to the civil
prison in execution of a decree, the Court shall fix for his subsistence such
monthly allowance as he may be entitled to according to the scales fixed under
section 57, or, where no such scales have been fixed, as it considers
sufficient with reference to the class to which he belongs.
(3) The monthly allowance fixed by the Court shall be
supplied by the party on whose application the judgment-debtor has been
arrested by monthly payments in advance before the first day of each month.
(4) The first payment shall be made to the proper
officer of the Court for such portion of the current month as remains unexpired
before the judgment-debtor is committed to the civil prison, and the subsequent
payments (if any) shall be made to the officer in charge of the civil prison.
(5) Sums disbursed by the decree-holder for the
subsistence of the judgment-debtor in the civil prison shall be deemed to be
costs in the suit :
Provided that the judgment-debtor shall not be
detained in the civil prison or arrested on account of any sum so disbursed.
3[40. Proceedings on appearance of judgment-debtor in
obedience to notice or after arrest
(1) When a judgment-debtor appears before the Court in
obedience to a notice issued under rule 37, or is brought before the Court
after being arrested in execution of a decree for the payment of money, the
Court shall proceed to hear the decree-holder and take all such evidence as may
be produced by him in support of his application for execution, and shall then
give the judgment-debtor an opportunity to showing cause why he should not be
committed to the civil prison.
(2) Pending the conclusion of the inquiry under
sub-rule (1) the Court may, in its discretion, order the judgment-debtor to be
detained in the custody of an officer of the Court or release him on his
furnishing security to the satisfaction of the Court for his appearance when
required.
(3) Upon the conclusion of the inquiry under sub-rule
(1) the Court may, subject to the provisions of section 51 and to the other
provisions of this Code, make an order for the detention of the judgment-debtor
in the civil prison and shall in that event cause him to be arrested if he is
not already under arrest :
Provided that in order to give the judgment-debtor an
opportunity of satisfying the decree, the Court may, before making the order of
detention, leave the judgment-debtor in the custody of an officer of the Court
for a specified period not exceeding fifteen days or release him on his
furnishing security to the satisfaction of the Court for his appearance at the
expiration of the specified period if the decree be not sooner satisfied.
(4) A judgment-debtor released under this rule may be
re-arrested.
(5) When the Court does not make an order of detention
under sub-rule (3), it shall disallow the application and, if the
judgment-debtor is under arrest, direct his release.]
____________________
1. Substituted by Act 21 of 1936, section 3, for
"may".
2. Inserted by Act 21 of 1936, section 3.
3. Substituted by Act 21 of 1936, section 4, for rule
40.
Order 21 - Attachment of property
41. Examination of judgment-debtor as to his property
1[(1)] Where a decree is for the payment of money the decree-holder may
apply to the Court for an order that--
(a) the judgment-debtor, or
(b) 2[where the judgment-debtor is a corporation], an officer thereof,
or
(c) any other person,
be orally examined as to whether any or what debts are owing to the
judgment-debtor and whether the judgment-debtor has any and what other property
or means of satisfying the decree ; and the Court may make an order for the
attendance and examination of such judgment-debtor, or officer or other person,
and for the production of any books or documents.
3[(2) Where a decree for the payment of money has remained unsatisfied
for a period of thirty days, the Court may, on the application of the
decree-holder and without prejudice to its power under sub-rule (1), by order
require the judgment-debtor or where the judgment-debtor is a corporation, any
officer thereof, to make an affidavit stating the particulars of the assets of
the judgment-debtor.
(3) In case of disobedience of any order made under sub-rule (2), the
Court making the order, or any Court to which the proceeding is transferred,
may direct that the person disobeying the order be detained in the civil prison
for a term not exceeding three months unless before the expiry of such term the
Court directs his release.]
42. Attachment in case of decree for rent or mesne profits or other
matter, amount of which to be subsequently determined
Where a decree directs an inquiry as to rent or mesne profits or any
other matter, the property of the judgment-debtor may, before the amount due
from him has been ascertained, be attached, as in the case of an ordinary
decree for the payment of money.
43. Attachment of movable property other than agricultural produce in
possession of judgment-debtor
Where the property to be attached is movable property, other than
agricultural produce, in the possession of the judgment-debtor, the attachment
shall be made by actual seizure, and the attaching officer shall keep the
property in his own custody or in the custody of one of his subordinates, and
shall be responsible for the due custody thereof:
Provided that, when the property seized is subject to speedy and
natural decay, or when the expense of keeping it in custody is likely to exceed
its value, the attaching officer may sell it at once.
3a[43A. Custody of movable property
(1) Where the property atlached consists of live-stock, agricultural
implements or other articles which cannot conveniently be removed and the
attaching officer does not act under the proviso to rule 43, he may, at the
instance of the judgment-debtor or of the decree-holder or of any other person
claiming to be interested in such property, leave it in the village or place
where it has been attached, in the custody of any respectable person
(hereinafter referred to as the "custodian").
(2) If the custodian fails, after due notice, to produce such property
at the place named by the Court before the officer deputed for the purpose or
to restore it to the person in whose favour restoration is ordered by the
Court, or if the property, though so produced or restored, is not in the same
condition as it was when it was entrusted to him,--
(a) the custodian shall be liable to pay compensation to the
decree-holder, judgment-debtor or any other person who is found to be entitled
to the restoration thereof, for any toss or damage caused by his default; and
(b) such liability may be enforced--
(i) at the instance of the decree-holder, as if the custodian were a
surety under section 145;
(ii) at the instance of the judgment-debtor or such other person, on an
application in execution; and
(c) any order determining such liability shall be appealable as a
decree.]
44. Attachment of agricultural produce
Where the property to be attached is agricultural produce, the
attachment shall be made by affixing a copy of the warrant of attachment,--
(a) where such produce is a growing crop, on the land on which such
crop has grown, or
(b) where such produce has been cut or gathered, on the threshing floor
or place for treading out grain or the like or fodder-stack on or in which it
is deposited,
and another copy on the outer door or on some other conspicuous part of
the house in which the judgment-debtor ordinarily resides or, with the leave of
the Court, on the outer door or on some other conspicuous part of the house in
which he carries on business or personally works for gain or in which he is
known to have last resided or carried on business or personally worked for
gain; and the produce shall thereupon be deemed to have passed into the
possession of the Court.
45. Provisions as to agricultural produce under attachment
(1) Where agricultural produce is attached, the Court shall make such
arrangement for the custody thereof as it may deem sufficient and, for the
purpose of enabling the Court to make such arrangements, every application for
the attachment of a growing crop shall specify the time at which it is likely
to be fit to be cut or gathered.
(2) Subject to such conditions as may be imposed by the Court in this
behalf either in the order of attachment or in any subsequent order, the
judgment-debtor may tend, cut, gather and store the produce and do any other
act necessary for maturing or preserving it; and if the judgment-debtor fails
to do all or any of such acts, the decree-holder may, with the permission of
the Court and subject to the like conditions, do all or any of them cither by
himself or by any person appointed by him in this behalf and the costs incurred
by the decree-holder shall be recoverable from the judgment-debtor as if they
were included in, or formed part of, the decree.
(3) Agricultural produce attached as a growing crop shall not be deemed
to have ceased to be under attachment or to require re-attachment merely
because it has been severed from the soil.
(4) Where an order for the attachment of a growing crop has been made
at a considerable time before the crop is likely to be fit to be cut or
gathered, the Court may suspend the execution of the order for such time as it
thinks fit, and may, in its discretion, make a further order prohibiting the
removal of the crop pending the execution of the order of attachment.
(5) A growing crop which from its nature does not admit of being stored
shall not be attached under this rule at any time less than twenty days before
the time at which it is likely to be fit to be cut or gathered
46. Attachment of debt, share and other property not in possession of
judgment-debtor
(1) In the case of--
(a) a debt not secured by a negotiable instrument,
(b) a share in the capital of a corporation,
(c) other movable property not in the possession of the
judgment-debtor, except property deposited in, or in the custody of, any Court,
the attachment shall be made by a written order prohibiting,--
(i) in the case of the debt, the credit or from recovering the debt and
the debtor from making payment thereof until the further order of the Court;
(ii) in the case of the share, the person in whose name the share may
be standing from transferring the same or receiving any dividend thereon;
(iii) in the case of the other movable property except as aforesaid,
the person in possession of the same from giving it over to the
judgment-debtor.
(2) A copy of such order shall be affixed on some conspicuous part of
the court-house, and another copy shall be sent in the case of the debt, to the
debtor, in the case of the share, to the proper officer of the corporation,
and, in the case of the other movable property (except as aforesaid), to the
person in possession of the same.
(3) A debtor prohibited under clause (i) of sub-rule (1) may pay the
amount of his debt into Court, and such payment shall discharge him as
effectually as payment to the party entitled to receive the same.
3a[46A. Notice to garnishee
(1) The Court may in the case of a debt (other than a debt secured by a
mortgage or a charge) which has been attached under rule 46, upon the
application of the attaching creditor, issue notice to the garnishee liable to
pay such debt, calling upon him either to pay into Court the debt due from him
to the judgment-debtor or so much thereof as may be sufficient to satisfy the
decree and costs of execution, or to appear and show cause why he should not do
so.
(2) An application under sub-rule (1) shall be made on affidavit
verifying the facts alleged and stating that in the belief of the deponent, the
garnishee is indebted to the judgment-debtor.
(3) Where the garnishee pays in the Court the amount due from him to
the judgment-debtor or so much thereof as is sufficient to satisfy the decree
and the costs of the execution, the Court may direct that the amount may be
paid to the decree-holder towards satisfaction of the decree and costs of the
execution.]
3a[46B. Order against garnishee
Where the garnishee does not forthwith pay into Court the amount due from
him to the judgment-debtor or so much thereof as is sufficient to satisfy the
decree and the costs of execution, and does not appear and show cause in answer
to the notice, the Court may order the garnishee to comply with the terms of
such notice, and on such order, execution may issue as though such order were a
decree against him.]
3a[46C. Trial of disputed questions
Where the garnishee disputes liability, the Court may order that any
issue or question necessary for the determination of liability shall be tried
as if it were an issue in a suit, and upon the determination of such issue
shall make such order or orders as it deems fit:
Provided that if the debt in respect of which the application under
rule 46A is made is in respect of a sum of money beyond the pecuniary
jurisdiction of the Court, the Court shall send the execution case to the Court
of the District Judge to which the said Court is subordinate, and thereupon the
Court of the District Judge or any other competent Court to which it may be transferred
by the District Judge shall deal with it in the same manner as if the case had
been originally instituted in that Court.]
3a[46D. Procedure where debt belongs to third person
Where it is suggested or appears to be probable that the debt belongs
to some third person, or that any third person has a lien or charge on, or
other interest in, such debt, the Court may order such third person to appear
and state the nature and particulars of his claim, if any, to such debt and
prove the same.]
3a[46E. Order as regards third person
After hearing such third person and any person or persons who may
subsequently be ordered to appear; or where such third or other person or
persons do not appear when so ordered, the Court may make such order as is
hereinbefore provided, or such other order or orders upon such terms, if any
with respect to the lien, charge or interest, as the case may be, of such third
or other person or persons as it may deem fit and proper.]
3a[46F. Payment by garnishee to be valid discharge
Payment made by the garnishee on notice under rule 46A or under any
such order as aforesaid shall be a valid discharge to him as against the
judgment-debtor and any other person ordered to appear as aforesaid for the
amount paid or levied, although the decree in execution of which the
application under rule 46A was made, or the order passed in the proceedings on
such application may be set aside or reversed.]
3a[46G. Costs
The costs of any application made under rule 46-A and of any proceeding
arising therefrom or incidental thereto shall be in the discretion of the
Court.]
3a[46H. Appeals
An order made under rule 46B, rule 46-C or rule 46-E shall be
appealable as a decree.]
3a[46I. Application to negotiable instruments
The provisions of rules 46A to 46H (both inclusive) shall, so far as
may be, apply in relation to negotiable instruments attached under rule 51 as
they apply in relation to debts.]
47. Attachment of share in movables
Where the property to be attached consists of the share or interest of
the judgment-debtor in movable property belonging to him and another as
co-owners, the attachment shall be made by a notice to the judgment-debtor
prohibiting him from transferring the share or interest or charging it in any
way.
48. Attachment of salary or
allowances of servant of the Government or railway company or local authority
(1) Where the property to be attached is the salary or allowances of a
4[servant of the Government] or of a servant of a railway company or local
authority 4[or of a servant of a corporation engaged in any trade or industry
which is established by a Central, Provincial or State Act, or a Government
company as defined in section 617 of the Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956)], the
Court, whether the judgment-debtor or the disbursing officer is or is not
within the local limits of the Court's jurisdiction, may order that the amount
shall, subject to the provisions of section 60, be withheld from such salary or
allowances either in one payment or by monthly installments as the Court may
direct; and, upon notice of the order to such officer as 5[the appropriate
Government may by notification in the Official Gazette] appoint 6 [in this
behalf--
(a) where such salary or allowances arc to be disbursed within the
local limits to which this Code for the time being extends, the officer or
other person whose duty it is to disburse the same shall withhold and remit to
the Court the amount due under the order, or the monthly instalments, as the
case may be;
(b) where such salary or allowances are to be disbursed beyond the said
limits, the officer or other person within those limits whose duty it is to
instruct the disbursing authority regarding the amount of the salary or
allowances to be disbursed shall remit to the Court the amount due under the
order, or the monthly instalments, as the case may be, and shall direct the
disbursing authority to reduce the aggregate of the amounts from lime to time,
to be disbursed by the aggregate of the amounts from time to time remitted to
the Court].
(2) Where the attachable proportion of such salary or allowances is
already being withheld and remitted to a Court in pursuance of a previous and
unsatisfied order of attachment, the officer appointed by 5[the appropriate
Government] in this behalf shall forthwith return the subsequent order to the
Court issuing it with a full statement of all the particulars of the existing
attachment.
7[(3) Every order made under this rule, unless it is returned in
accordance with the provisions of sub-rule (2) shall, without further notice or
other process, bind the appropriate Government or the railway company or local
authority or corporation or Government company, as the case may be, while the
judgment-debtor is within the local limits to which this Code for the time
being extends and while he is beyond those limits, if he is in receipt of any
salary or allowances payable out of the Consolidated Fund of India or the
Consolidated Fund of the State or the funds of a railway company or local
authority or corporation or Government company in India; and the appropriate
Government or the railway company or local authority or corporation or
Government company, as the case may be, shall be liable for any sum paid in
contravention of this rule.]
8[Explanation.--In this rule, "appropriate Government" means,--
(i) as respects any person in the service of the Central Government, or
any servant of a railway administration or of a cantonment authority or of the
port authority of a major port, or any servant of a corporation engaged in any
trade or industry which is established by a Central Act, or any servant of a
Government company in which any part of the share capital is held by the
Central Government or by more than one State Governments or partly by the
Central Government and partly by the one or more State Governments, the Central
Government;
(ii) as respects any other servant of the Government, or a servant of
any other or local authority, or any servant of a corporation engaged in any
trade or industry which is established by a Provincial or State Act, or a
servant of any other Government company, the State Government.]
13[48A. Attachment of salary or allowances of private employees
(1) Where the property to be attached is the salary or allowances of an
employee other than an employee to whom rule 48 applies, the Court, where the
disbursing officer of the employee is within the local limits of the Court's
jurisdiction, may order that the amount shall, subject to the provisions of
section 60, be withheld from such salary or allowances either in one payment or
by monthly instalments as the Court may direct; and upon notice of the order to
such disbursing officer, such disbursing officer shall remit to the Court the
amount due under the order, or the monthly instalments, as the case may be.
(2) Where the attachable portion of such salary or allowances is
already being withheld or remitted to the Court in pursuance of a previous and
unsatisfied order of attachment, the disbursing officer shall forthwith return
the subsequent order to the Court issuing it with a full statement of all the
particulars of the existing attachment.
(3) Every order made under this rule, unless it is returned in
accordance with the provisions of sub-rule (2), shall, without further notice
or other process, bind the employer while the judgment-debtor is within the
local limits to which this Code for the time being extends and while he is
beyond those limits, if he is in receipt of salary or allowances payable out of
the funds of an employer in any part of India; and the employer shall be liable
for any sum paid in contravention of this rule.]
49. Attachment of partnership property
(1) Save as otherwise provided by this rule, property belonging to a
partnership shall not be attached or sold in execution of a decree other than a
decree passed against the firm or against the partners in the firm as such.
(2) The Court may, on the application of the holder of a decree against
a partner, make an order charging the interest of such partner in the
partnership property and profits with payment of the amount due under the
decree, and may, by the same or a subsequent order, appoint a receiver of the
share of such partner in the profits (whether already declared or accruing) and
of any other money which may be coming to him in respect of the partnership and
direct accounts and inquiries and make an order for the sale of such interest
or other orders as might have been directed or made if a charge had been made
in favour of the decree-holder by such partner, or as the circumstances of the
case may require.
(3) The other partner or partners shall be at liberty at any time to
redeem the interest charged or, in the case of a sale being directed, to
purchase the same.
(4) Every application for an order under sub-rule (2) shall be served
on the judgment-debtor and on his partners or such of them as are within
3[India].
(5) Every application made by any partner of the judgment-debtor under
sub-rule (3) shall be served on the decree-holder and on the judgment-debtor,
and on such of the other partners as do not join in the application and as are
within 3[India].
(6) Service under sub-rule (4) or sub-rule (5) shall be deemed to be
service on all the partners, and all orders made on such applications shall be
similarly served.
50. Execution of decree against firm
(1) Where a decree has been passed against a firm, execution may be
granted--
(a) against any property of the partnership;
(b) against any person who has appeared in his own name under rule 6 or
rule 7 of Order XXX or who has admitted on the pleadings that he is, or who has
been adjudged to be, a partner;
(c) against any person who has been individually served as a partner
with a summons and has failed to appear :
Provided that nothing in this sub-rule shall be deemed to limit or
otherwise affect the provisions of 10 [section 30 of the Indian Partnership
Act, 1932 (9 of 1932)].
(2) Where the decree-holder claims to be entitled to cause the decree
to be executed against any person other than such a person as is referred to in
sub-rule (1), clauses (b) and (c), as being a partner in the firm, he may apply
to the Court which passed the decree for leave, and where the liability is not
disputed, such court may grant such leave, or, where such liability is
disputed, may order that the liability of such person be tried and determined
in any manner in which any issue in a suit may be tried and determined.
(3) Where the liability of any person has been tried and determined
under sub-rule (2) the order made thereon shall have the same force and be
subject to the same conditions as to appeal or otherwise as if it were a
decree.
(4) Save as against any property of the partnership, a decree against a
firm shall not release, render liable or otherwise affect any partner therein
unless he has been served with a summons to appear and answer.
14[(5) Nothing in this rule shall apply to a decree passed against a
Hindu Undivided Family by virtue of the provisions of rule 10 of Order XXX.]
51. Attachment of negotiable instruments
Where the property is a negotiable instrument not deposited in a Court,
nor in the custody of a public officer, the attachment shall be made by actual
seizure, and the instrument shall be brought into Court and held subject to
further orders of the Court.
52. Attachment of property in custody of Court or public officer
Where the property to be attached is in the custody of any Court or
public officer, the attachment shall be made by a notice to such Court or
officer, requesting that such property, and any interest or dividend becoming
payable thereon, may be held subject to the further orders of the Court from
which the notice is issued:
Provided that, where such property is in the custody of a Court, any
question of title or priority arising between the decree-holder and any other
person, not being the judgment-debtor, claiming to be interested in such
property by virtue of any assignment, attachment or otherwise, shall be
determined by such Court.
53. Attachment of decrees
(1) Where the property to be attached is a decree, either for the
payment of money or for sale in enforcement of a mortgage or charge, the
attachment shall be made,--
(a) if the decrees were passed by the same Court, then by order of such
Court, and
(b) if the decree sought to be attached was passed by another Court,
then by the issue to such other Court of a notice by the Court which passed the
decree sought to be executed, requesting such other Court to stay the execution
of its decree unless and until--
(i) the Court which passed the decree sought to be executed cancels the
notice, or
11[(ii) (a) the holder of the decree sought to be executed, or
(b) his judgment-debtor with the previous consent in writing of such
decree-holder, or with the permission of the attaching Court,
applies to the Court receiving such notice to execute the attached
decree.]
(2) Where a Court makes an order under clause (a) of sub-rule (1), or
receives an application under sub-head (ii) of clause (6) of the said sub-rule,
it shall, on the application of the creditor who has attached the decree or his
judgment-debtor, proceeds to execute the attached decree and apply the net
proceeds in satisfaction of the decree sought to be executed.
(3) The holder of a decree sought to be executed by the attachment of
another decree of the nature specified in sub-rule (1) shall be deemed to be
the representative of the holder of the attached decree and to be entitled to
execute such attached decree in any manner lawful for the holder thereof.
(4) Where the property to be attached in the execution of a decree is a
decree other than a decree of the nature referred to in sub-rule (1), the
attachment shall be made by a notice by the Court which passed the decree
sought to be executed, to the holder of the decree sought to be attached,
prohibiting him from transferring or charging the same in any way; and, where
such decree has been passed by any other Court, also by sending to such other
Court a notice to abstain from executing the decree sought to be attached until
such notice is cancelled by the Court from which it was sent.
(5) The holder of a decree attached under this rule shall give the
Court executing the decree such information and aid as may reasonably be
required.
(6) On the application of holder of a decree sought to be executed by
the attachment of another decree, the Court making an order of attachment under
this rule shall give notice of such order to the judgment-debtor bound by the
decree attached; and no payment or adjustment of the attached decree made by
the judgment-debtor in contravention of such order 15[with knowledge thereof
or] after receipt of notice thereof, either through the Court or otherwise,
shall be recognized by any Court so tong as the attachment remains in force.
54. Attachment of immovable property
(1) Where the property is immovable, the attachment shall be made by an
order prohibiting the judgment-debtor from transferring or charging the
property in any way, and all persons from taking any benefit from such transfer
or charge.
15[(1A) The order shall also require the judgment-debtor to attend
Court on a specified date to take notice of the date to be fixed for settling
the terms of the proclamation of sale.]
(2) The order shall be proclaimed at some place on or adjacent to such
property by beat of drum or other customary mode, and a copy of the order shall
be affixed on a conspicuous part of the property and then upon a conspicuous
part of the Court-house, and also, where the property is land paying revenue to
the Government, in the office of the Collector of the district in which the
land is situate 16[and, where the property is land situate in a village, also
in the office of the Gram Panchayat, if any, having jurisdiction over that
village.]
55. Removal of attachment after satisfaction of decree
Where-
(a) the amount decreed with costs and all charges and expenses
resulting from the attachment of any property are paid into Court, or
(b) satisfaction of the decree is otherwise made through the Court or
certified to the Court, or
(c) the decree is set aside or reversed,
the attachment shall be deemed to be withdrawn, and, in the case of
immovable property; the withdrawal shall, if the judgment-debtor so desires, be
proclaimed at his expense, and a copy of the proclamation shall be affixed in
the manner prescribed by the last preceding rule.
56. Order for payment of coin or currency notes to party entitled under
decree
Where the property attached is current coin or currency notes, the
Court may, at any time during the continuance of the attachment, direct that
such coin or notes, or a part thereof sufficient to satisfy the decree, be paid
over to the party entitled under the decree to receive the same.
12[57. Determination of attachment
(1) Where any property has been attached in execution of a decree and
the Court, for any reason, passes an order dismissing the application for the
execution of the decree, the Court shall direct whether the attachment shall
continue or cease and shall also indicate the period up to which such
attachment shall continue or the date on which such attachment shall cease.
(2) If the Court omits to give such direction, the attachment shall be
deemed to have ceased.]
_______________________
1. Rule 41 renumbered as sub-rule (1) of that rule by
Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xvi) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xvi)(a),
for "in the case of a corporation" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xvii),
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3A. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xviii)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
4. Substituted by Act 5 of 1943, section 3, for
"public officer"
5. Substituted by Act 25 of 1942, section 3 and
Schedule II for certain words.
6. Substituted by Act 26 of 1939, section 2, for
certain words.
7. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xix)(b),
for sub-rule (3) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
8. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xix)(c),
for Explanation (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
9. Substituted by Act 2 of 1951, section 3, for
"the States."
10. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section
72(xxi)(a), for section 247 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (9 of 1872)"
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
11. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section
72(xxii)(a), for sub-clause (ii) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
12. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72, for
rule 57 (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
13. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xx)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
14. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxi) (b)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
15. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxiii)(a)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
16. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxiii)(b)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Adjudication of claims
and objections
1 [Adjudication of claims and objections]
2 [58. Adjudication of claims to, or objections to attachment of property
(1) Where any claim is preferred to, or any objection is made to the
attachment of, any property attached in execution of a decree on the ground
that such property is not liable to such attachment, the Court shall proceed to
adjudicate upon the claim or objection in accordance with the provisions herein
contained :
Provided that no such claim or objection shall be entertained--
(a) where, before the claim is preferred or objection is made, the
property attached has already been sold ; or
(b) where the Court considers that the claim or objection was
designedly or unnecessarily delayed.
(2) All questions (including questions relating to right, title or
interest in the property attached) arising between the parties to a proceeding
or their representatives under this rule and relevant to the adjudication of
the claim or objection, shall be determined by the Court dealing with the claim
or objection and not by a separate suit.
(3) Upon the determination of the questions referred to in sub-rule
(2), the Court shall, in accordance with such determination,-
(a) allow the claim or objection and release the property from
attachment either wholly or to such extent as it thinks fit ; or
(b) disallow the claim or objection ; or
(c) continue the attachment subject to any mortgage, charge of other
interest in favour of any person ; or
(d) pass such order as in the circumstances of the case it deems fit.
(4) Where any claim or objection has been adjudicated upon under this
rule, the order made thereon shall have the same force and be subject to the
same conditions as to appeal or otherwise as if it were a decree.
(5) Where a claim or an objection is preferred and the Court, under the
proviso to sub-rule (1), refuses to entertain it, the party against whom such
order is made may institute a suit to establish the right which he claims to
the property in dispute ; but, subject to the result of such suit, if any, an
order so refusing to entertain the claim or objection shall be conclusive.]
2 [59. Stay of sale
Where before the claim was preferred or the objection was made, the
property attached had already been advertised for sale, the Court may--
(a) if the property is movable, make an order postponing the sale
pending the adjudication of the claim or objection, or
(b) if the property is immovable, make an order that, pending the
adjudication of the claim or objection, the property shall not be sold, or,
that pending such adjudication, the property may be sold but the sale shall not
be confirmed,
and any such order may be made subject to such terms and conditions as
to security or otherwise as the Court thinks fit.]
60-63. [Omitted]
3 [***]
__________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72, for "Investigation
of claims and objections" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72, for sections 58 to 63
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Omitted by Act 104 of 1976.
Order 21 - Sale generally
64. Power to order property attached to be sold and
proceeds to be paid to person entitled
Any Court executing a decree may order that any
property attached by it and liable to sale, or such portion thereof as may seem
necessary to satisfy the decree, shall be sold, and that the proceeds of such
sale, or a sufficient portion thereof, shall be paid to the party emitted under
the decree to receive the same.
65. Sales by whom conducted and how made
Save as otherwise prescribed, every sale in execution
of a decree shall be conducted by an officer of the Court or by such other
person as the Court may appoint in this behalf, and shall be made by public
auction in manner prescribed.
66. Proclamation of sales by public auction
(1) Where any property is ordered to be sold by public
auction in execution of a decree, the Court shall cause proclamation of the
intended sale to be made in the language of such Court.
(2) Such proclamation shall be drawn up after notice
to the decree-holder and the judgment-debtor and shall state the time and place
of sale, and specify as fairly and accurately as possible--
(a) the property to be sold 1[or, where a part of the
property would be sufficient to satisfy the decree, such part];
(b) the revenue assessed upon the estate or part of
the state, where the property to be sold is an interest in an estate or in part
of an estate paying revenue to the Government ;
(c) any incumbrance to which the property is liable;
(d) the amount for the recovery of which the sale is
ordered; and
(e) every other thing which the Court considers
material for a purchaser to know in order to judge of the nature and value of
the property:
1[Provided that where notice of the date for settling
the terms of the proclamation has been given to the judgment-debtor by means of
an order under rule 54, it shall not be necessary to give notice under this
rule to the judgment-debtor unless the Court otherwise directs :
Provided further that nothing in this rule shall be
construed as requiring the Court to enter in the proclamation of sale its own
estimate of the value of the property, but the proclamation shall include the
estimate, if any, given, by either or both of the parties.]
(3) Every application for an order for sale under this
rule shall be accompanied by a statement signed and verified in the manner
hereinbefore prescribed for the signing and verification of pleadings and
containing, so far as they are known to or can be ascertained by the person
making the verification, the matters required by sub-rule (2) to be specified
in the proclamation.
(4) For the purpose of ascertaining the matters to be
specified in the proclamation, the Court may summon any person whom it thinks
necessary to summon and may examine him in respect to any such matters and
require him to produce any document in his possession or power relating
thereto.
67. Mode of making proclamation
(1) Every proclamation shall be made and published, as
nearly as may be, in the manner prescribed by rule 54, sub-rule (2).
(2) Where the Court so directs, such proclamation
shall also be published in the Official Gazette or in a local newspaper, or in
both, and the costs of such publication shall be deemed to be costs of the
sale.
(3) Where property is divided into lots for the
purpose of being sold separately, it shall not be necessary to make a separate
proclamation for each lot, unless proper notice of the sale cannot, in the
opinion of the Court, otherwise be given.
68. Time of sale
Save in the case of property of the kind described in
the proviso to rule 43, no sale hereunder shall, without the consent in writing
of the judgment-debtor, take place until after the expiration of at least
2[fifteen days] in the case of immovable property, and of at least 3[seven
days] in the case of movable property, calculated from the date on which the
copy of the proclamation has been affixed on the Court-house of the Judge
ordering the sale.
69. Adjournment or stoppage of sale
(1) The Court may, in its discretion adjourn any sale
hereunder to a specified day and hour, and the officer conducting any such sale
may in his discretion adjourn the sale, recording his reasons for such
adjournment :
Provided that, where the sale is made in, or within
the precincts of, the Court-house, no such adjournment shall be made without the
leave of the Court.
(2) Where a sale is adjourned under sub-rule (1) for a
longer period than 4[thirty days] a fresh proclamation under rule 67 shall be
made, unless the judgment-debtor consents to waive it.
(3) Every sale shall be stopped if, before the lot is
knocked down, the debt and costs (including the costs of the sale) are tendered
to the officer conducting the sale, or proof is given to his satisfaction that
the amount of such debt and costs has been paid into the Court which ordered
the sale.
70. Saving of certain sales
[Rep. by the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act,
1956 (66 of 1956), section 14].
71. Defaulting purchaser answerable for loss on re-sale
Any deficiency of price which may happen on a re-sale
by reason of the purchaser's default, and all expenses attending such re-sale,
shall be certified to the Court 5[***] by the officer or other person holding
the sale, and shall, at the instance of either the decree-holder or the
judgment-debtor, be recoverable from the defaulting purchaser under the
provisions relating to the execution of a decree for the payment of money.
72. Decree-holder not to bid for or buy property without
permission
(1) No holder of a decree in execution of which
property is sold shall, without the express permission of the Court, bid for or
purchase the property.
(2) Where decree-holder purchases, amount of decree
may be taken as payment.--Where a decree-holder purchases with such permission,
the purchase-money and the amount due on the decree may, subject to the provisions
of section 73, be set off against one another, and the Court executing the
decree shall enter up satisfaction of the decree in whole or in part
accordingly.
(3) Where a decree-holder purchases, by himself or
through another person, without such permission, the Court may, if it thinks
fit, on the application of the judgment-debtor or any other person whose
interests are affected by the sale, by order set aside the sale ; and the costs
of such application and order, and any deficiency of price which may happen on
the re-sale and all expenses attending it, shall be paid by the decree-holder.
6[72A. Mortgagee not to bid at sale without the leave of
the Court
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in rule 72, a
mortgagee of immovable property shall not bid for or purchase property sold in
execution of a decree on the mortgage unless the Court grants him leave to bid
for or purchase the property.
(2) If leave to bid is granted to such mortgagee, then
the Court shall fix a reserve price as regards the mortgagee, and unless the
Court otherwise directs, the reserve price shall be,--
(a) not less than the amount then due for principal,
interest and costs in respect of the mortgage if the property is sold in one
lot; and
(b) in the case of any property sold in lots, not less
than such sum as shall appear to the Court to be property attributable to each
lot in relation to the amount then due for principal, interest and costs on the
mortgage.
(3) In other respects, the provisions of sub-rules (2)
and (3) of rule 72 shall apply in relation to purchase by the decree-holder
under that rule.]
73. Restriction on bidding or purchase by officers
No officer or other person having any duty to perform
in connection with any sale shall, either directly or indirectly, bid for, acquire
or attempt to acquire any interest in the property sold.
__________________________
1. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxvi)(b)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section
72(xxvii)(a) for "thirty days" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section
72(xxvii)(b) for "fifteen days" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
4. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976 section 72(xxviii)
for "seven" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
5. The words "or to the Collector or subordinate
of the Collector, as the case may be," omitted by Act 66 of 1956, section
14 (w.e.f. 1-1-1977).
6. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxix)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Sale of movable property
74. Sale of agricultural produce
(1) Where the property to be sold is agricultural produce, the sale
shall be held,--
(a) if such produce is a growing crop, on or near the land on which
such crop has grown, or
(b) if such produce has been cut or gathered, at or near the threshing
floor or place for treading out grain or the like or fodder-slack on or in
which it is deposited :
Provided that the Court may direct the sale to be held at the nearest
place of public resort, if it is of opinion that the produce is thereby likely
to sell to greater advantage.
(2) Where, on the produce being put up for sale,--
(a) a fair price, in the estimation of the person holding the sale, is
not offered for it, and
(b) the owner of the produce or a person authorized to act in his
behalf applies to have the sale postponed till the next day or, if a market is
held at the place of sale, the next market-day,
the sale shall be postponed accordingly and shall be then completed,
whatever price may be offered for the produce.
75. Special provisions relating to growing crops
(1) Where the property to be sold is a growing crop and the crop from
its nature admits of being stored but has not yet been stored, the day of the
sale shall be so fixed as to admit of its being made ready for strong before
the arrival of such day, and the sale shall not be held until the crop has been
cut or gathered and is ready for storing.
(2) Where the crop from its nature does not admit of being stored, it
may be sold before it is cut and gathered and the purchaser shall be entitled
to enter on the land, and to do all that is necessary for the purpose of
tending and cutting or gathering it.
76. Negotiable instruments and shares in corporations
Where the property to be sold is a negotiable instrument or a share in
a corporation, the Court may, instead of directing the sale to be made by
public auction, authorize the sale of such instrument of share through a
broker.
77. Sale by public auction
(1) Where movable property is sold by public auction the price of each
lot shall be paid at the time of sale or as soon after as the officer or other
person holding the sale directs, and in default of payment the property shall
forthwith be re-sold.
(2) On payment of the purchase-money, the officer or other person
holding the sale shall grant a receipt for the same, and the sale shall become
absolute.
(3) Where the movable property to be sold is a share in goods belonging
to the judgment-debtor and a co-owner, and two or more persons, of whom one is
such co-owner, respectively bid the same sum for such property or for any tot,
the bidding shall be deemed to be the bidding of the co-owner.
78. Irregularity not to vitiate sale, but any person injured may sue
No irregularity in publishing or conducting the sale of movable
property, shall vitiate the sale ; but any person sustaining any injury by
reason of such irregularity at the hand of any other person may institute a
suit against him for compensation or (if such other person is the purchaser)
for the recovery of the specific property and for compensation in default of
such recovery.
79. Delivery of movable property, debts and shares
(1) Where the property sold is movable property of which actual seizure
has been made, it shall be delivered to the purchaser.
(2) Where the property sold is movable property in the possession of
some person other than the judgment-debtor, the delivery thereof to the
purchaser shall be made by giving notice to the person in possession
prohibiting him from delivering possession of the property to any person except
the purchaser.
(3) Where the property sold is a debt not secured by a negotiable
instrument, or is a share in a corporation, the delivery thereof shall be made
by a written order of the Court prohibiting the creditor from receiving the
debt or any interest thereon, and the debtor from making payment thereof to any
person except the purchaser, or prohibiting the person in whose name the share
may be standing from making any transfer of the share to any person except the
purchaser, or receiving payment of any dividend or interest thereon, and the
manager, secretary or other proper officer of the corporation from permitting
any such transfer or making any such payment to any person except the
purchaser.
80. Transfer of negotiable instruments and shares
(1) Where the execution of a document or the endorsement of the party
in whose name a negotiable instrument or a share in a corporation is standing
is required to transfer such negotiable instrument or share, the Judge or such
officer as he may appoint in this behalf may execute such document or make such
endorsement as may be necessary, and such execution or endorsement shall have
the same effect as an execution or endorsement by the party.
(2) Such execution or endorsement may be in the following form, namely
:--
A.B. by C.D. Judge of the Court of (or as the case may be), in a suit
by E.F. against A.B.
(3) Until the transfer of such negotiable instrument or share, the
Court may, by order, appoint some person to receive any interest or dividend
due thereon and to sign a receipt for the same ; and any receipt so signed
shall be as valid and effectual for all purposes as if the same had been signed
by the party himself.
81. Vesting order in case of other property
In the case of any movable property not hereinbefore provided for, the
Court may make an order vesting such property in the purchaser or as he may
direct; and such property shall vest accordingly.
Order 21 - Sale of immovable
property
82. What Courts may order sales
Sales of immovable property in execution of decrees
may be ordered by any Court other than a Court of Small Causes.
83. Postponement of sale to enable judgment-debtor to
raise amount of decree
(1) Where an order for the sale of immovable property
has been made, if the judgment-debtor can satisfy the Court that there is
reason to believe that the amount of the decree may be raised by the mortgage
or lease or private sale of such property, or some part thereof, or of any
other immovable property of the judgment-debtor, the Court may, on his
application, postpone the sale of the property comprised in the order for sale
on such terms and for such period as it thinks proper, to enable him to raise
the amount.
(2) In such case the Court shall grant a certificate
to the judgment-debtor authorizing him within a period to be mentioned therein,
and notwithstanding anything contained in section 64, to make the proposed
mortgage, lease or sale :
Provided that all moneys payable under such mortgage,
lease or sale shall be paid, not to the judgment-debtor, but, save in so far as
a decree-holder is entitled to set-off such money under the provisions of rule
72, into Court :
Provided also that no mortgage, lease or sale under
this rule shall become absolute until it has been confirmed by the Court.
(3) Nothing in this rule shall be deemed to apply to a
sale of property directed to be sold in execution of a decree for sale in
enforcement of a mortgage of, or charge on, such property.
84. Deposit by purchaser and re-sale on default
(1) On every sale of immovable property the person
declared to be the purchaser shall pay immediately after such declaration a
deposit of twenty-five per cent on the amount of his purchase-money to the
officer or other person conducting the sale, and in default of such deposit,
the property shall forthwith be re-sold.
(2) Where the decree-holder is the purchaser and is
entitled to set-off the purchase-money under rule 72, the Court may dispense
with the requirements of this rule.
85. Time for payment in full of purchase money
The full amount of purchase-money payable shall be
paid by the purchaser into Court before the Court closes on the fifteenth day
from the sale of the property :
Provided that, in calculating the amount to be so paid
into Court, the purchaser shall have the advantage of any set-off to which he
may be entitled under rule 72.
86. Procedure in default of payment
In default of payment within the period mentioned in
the last preceding rule, the deposit may, if the Court thinks fit, after
defraying the expenses of the sale, be forfeited to the Government, and the
property shall be re-sold, and the defaulting purchaser shall forfeit all claim
to the property or to any part of the sum for which it may subsequently be
sold.
87. Notification on re-sale
Every re-sale of immovable property, in default of
payment of the purchase-money within the period allowed for such payment, shall
be made after the issue of fresh proclamation in the manner and for the period
hereinbefore prescribed for the sale.
88. Bid of co-sharer to have preference
Where the property sold is a share of undivided
immovable property and two or more persons, of whom one is a co-sharer,
respectively bid the same sum for such property or for any tot, the bid shall
be deemed to be the bid of the co-sharer.
89. Application to set aside sale on deposit
(1) Where immovable property has been sold in execution
of a decree, 1[any person claiming an interest in the property sold at the time
of the sale or at the time of making the application, or acting for or in the
interest of such person,] may apply to have the sale set aside on his
depositing in Court,--
(a) for payment to the purchaser, a sum equal to five
per cent of the purchase-money, and
(b) for payment to the decree-holder, the amount
specified in the proclamation of sale as that for the recovery of which the
sale was ordered, less any amount which may, since the date of such
proclamation of sale, have been received by the decree-holder.
(2) Where a person applies under rule 90 to set aside
the sale of his immovable property, he shall not, unless he withdraws his
application, be entitled to make or prosecute an application under this rule.
(3) Nothing in this rule shall relieve the
judgment-debtor from any liability he may be under in respect of costs and
interest not covered by the proclamation of sale.
2[90. Application to set aside sale on ground of
irregularity or fraud
(1) Where any immovable property has been sold in
execution of a decree, the decree-holder, or the purchaser, or any other person
entitled to share in a rateable distribution of assets, or whose interests are
affected by the sale, may apply to the Court to set aside the sale on the
ground of a material irregularity or fraud in publishing or conducting it.
(2) No sale shall be set aside on the ground of
irregularity or fraud in publishing or conducting it unless, upon the facts
proved, the Court is satisfied that the applicant has sustained substantial
injury by reason of such irregularity or fraud.
(3) No application to set aside a sale under this rule
shall be entertained upon any ground which the applicant could have taken on or
before the date on which the proclamation of sale was drawn up.
Explanation.--The mere absence of, or defect in,
attachment of the property sold shall not, by itself, be a ground for setting
aside a sale under this rule.]
91. Application by purchaser to set aside sale on ground
of judgment-debtor having no saleable interest
The purchaser at any such sale in execution of a
decree may apply to the Court to set aside the sale, on the ground that the
judgment-debtor had no saleable interest in the property sold.
92. Sale when to become absolute or be set aside
(1) Where no application is made under rule 89, rule
90 or rule 91, or where such application is made and disallowed, the Court
shall make an order confirming the sale, and thereupon the sale shall become absolute
:
3[Provided that, where any property is sold in
execution of a decree pending the final disposal of any claim to, or any
objection to the attachment of, such property, the Court shall not confirm such
sale until the final disposal of such claim or objection.]
(2) Where such application is made and allowed, and
where, in the case of an application under rule 89, the deposit required by
that rule is made within 4[sixty days] from the date of sale, 5[or in cases
where the amount deposited under rule 89 is found to be deficient owing to any
clerical or arithmetical mistake on the part of the depositor and such
deficiency has been made good within such time as may be fixed by the Court,
the Court shall make an order setting aside the sale]:
Provided that no order shall be made unless notice of
the application has been given to all persons affected thereby.
6[Provided further that the deposit under this
sub-rule may be made within sixty days in all such cases where the period of
thirty days, within which the deposit had to be made, has not expired before
the commencement of the Code of Civil Procedure (Amendment) Act, 2002.]
(3) No suit to set aside an order made under this rule
shall be brought by any person against whom such order is made.
7[(4) Where a third party challenges the
judgment-debtor's title by filing a suit against the auction-purchaser, the
decree-holder and the judgment-debtor shall be necessary parties to the suit.
7(5) If the suit referred to in sub-rule (4) is
decreed, the Court shall direct the decree-holder to refund the money to the
auction-purchaser, and where such an order is passed the execution proceeding
in which the sale had been held shall, unless the Court otherwise directs, be
revived at the stage at which the sale was ordered].
93. Return of purchase-money in certain cases
Where a sale of immovable property is set aside under
rule 92, the purchaser shall be entitled to an order for repayment of his
purchase-money, with or without interest as the Court may direct, against any
person to whom it has been paid.
94. Certificate to purchaser
Where a sale of immovable property has become
absolute, the Court shall grant a certificate specifying the property sold and
the name of the person who at the time of sale is declared to be the purchaser.
Such certificate shall bear date the day on which the sale became absolute.
95. Delivery of property in occupancy of judgment-debtor
Where the immovable property sold is in the occupancy
of the judgment-debtor or of some person on his behalf or of some person
claiming under a title created by the judgment-debtor subsequently to the
attachment of such property and a certificate in respect thereof has been
granted under rule 94, the Court shall, on the application of the purchaser,
order to delivery to be made by putting such purchaser or any person whom he
may appoint to receive delivery on his behalf in possession of the property,
and, if need be, by removing any person who refuses to vacate the same.
96. Delivery of property in occupancy of tenant
Where the property sold is in the occupancy of a
tenant or other person entitled to occupy the same and a certificate in
respect thereof has been granted under rule 94, the court shall, on the application
of the purchaser, order delivery to be made by affixing a copy of the
certificate of sale in some conspicuous place on the property, and proclaiming
to the occupant by beat of drum or other customary mode, at some convenient
place, that the interest of the judgment-debtor has been transferred to the purchaser.
______________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxx), for certain words
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxi), for rule 90
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Added by Act 104 of 1976, section 72() (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
4. Substituted by Act 22 of 2002, section 14(b)(i), for "thirty
days" (w.e.f. 1-7-2002).
5. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxii)(b), for "the
Court shall make an order setting aside the sale" (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
6. Inserted by Act 22 of 2002, section 14(b)(ii) (w.e.f. 1-7-2002).
7. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxii)(c) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
Order 21 - Resistance of delivery
of Possession to decree-holder or purchaser
97. Resistance or obstruction to possession of immovable
property
(1) Where the holder of a decree for the possession of
immovable property or the purchaser of any such property sold in execution of a
decree is resisted or obstructed by any person obtaining possession of the
property, he may make an application to the court complaining of such
resistance or obstruction.
1[(2) Where any application is made under sub-rule
(1), the court shall proceed to adjudicate upon the application in accordance
with the provisions herein contained.]
2[98. Orders after adjudication
(1) Upon the determination of the questions referred
to in rule 101, the court shall, in accordance with such determination and
subject to the provisions of sub-rule (2),--
(a) make an order allowing the application and
directing that the applicant be put into the possession of the property or
dismissing the application; or
(b) pass such other order as, in the
circumstances of the case, it may deem fit,
(2) Where, upon such determination, the Court is
satisfied that the resistance or obstruction was occasioned without any just
cause by the judgment-debtor or by some other person at his instigation or on
his behalf, or by any transferee, where such transfer was made during the
pendency of the suit or execution proceeding, it shall direct that the applicant
be put into possession of the property, and where the applicant is still
resisted or obstructed in obtaining possession, the Court may also, at the
instance of the applicant, order the judgment-debtor, or any person acting at
his instigation or on his behalf, to be detained in the civil prison for a term
which may extend to thirty days.]
2[99. Dispossession by decree-holder or purchaser
(1) Where any person other than the judgment-debtor is
dispossessed of immovable property by the holder of a decree for the possession
of such property or, where such property has been sold in execution of a
decree, by the purchaser thereof, he may make an application to the Court
complaining of such dispossession.
(2) Where any such application is made, the Court
shall proceed to adjudicate upon the application in accordance with the
provisions herein contained.
2[100. Order to be passed upon application complaining of
dispossession
Upon the determination of the questions referred to in
rule 101, the Court shall, in accordance with such determination,--
(a) make an order allowing the application and
directing that the applicant be put into the possession of the property or
dismissing the application ; or
(b) pass such other order as, in the circumstances of
the case, it may deem fit.
2[101. Question to be determined
All questions (including questions relating to right,
title or interest in the property) arising between the parties to a proceeding
on an application under rule 97 or rule 99 or their representatives, and
relevant to the adjudication of the application, shall be determined by the
Court dealing with the application, and not by a separate suit and for this
purpose, the Court shall, notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
any other law for the time being in force, be deemed to have jurisdiction to
decide such questions.]
2[102. Rules not applicable to transferee pendente lite
Nothing in rules 98 and 100 shall apply to resistance
or obstruction in execution of a decree for the possession of immovable property
by a person to whom the judgment-debtor has transferred the property after the
institution of the suit in which the decree was passed or to the dispossession
of any such person.
Explanation.--In this rule, "transfer"
includes a transfer by operation of law.]
2[103. Orders to be treated as decrees
Where any application has been adjudicated upon under
rule 98 or rule 100, the order made thereon shall have the same force and be
subject to the same conditions as to an appeal or otherwise as if it were a
decree.]
3[104. Order under rule 101 or rule 103 to be subject to
the result or pending suit
Every order made under rule 101 or rule 103 shall be
subject to the result of any suit that may be pending on the date of
commencement of the proceeding in which such order is made, if in such suit the
party against whom the order under rule 101 or rule 103 is made has sought to
establish a right which he claims to the present possession of the property.]
3[105. Hearing of application
(1) The Court, before which an application under any
of the foregoing rules of this Order is pending, may fix a day for the hearing
of the application.
(2) Where on the day fixed or on any other day to
which the hearing may be adjourned the applicant does not appear when the case
is called on for hearing, the Court may make an order that the application be
dismissed.
(3) Where the applicant appears and the opposite party
to whom the notice has been issued by the Court does not appear, the Court may
hear the application ex parte and pass such order as it thinks fit.
Explanation.--An application referred to in sub-rule
(1) includes a claim or objection made under rule 58.]
3[106. Setting aside orders passed ex parte, etc.
(1) The applicant, against whom an order is made under
sub-rule (2) rule 105 or the opposite party against whom an order is passed ex
parte under sub-rule (3) of that rule or under sub-rule (1) of rule 23, may
apply to the Court to set aside the order, and if he satisfies the Court that
there was sufficient cause for his non-appearance whom the application was
called on for hearing, the Court shall set aside the order or such terms as to
costs, or otherwise as it thinks fit, and shall appoint a day for the further
hearing of the application.
(2) No order shall be made on an application under
sub-rule (1) unless notice of the application has been served on the other
party.
(3) An application under sub-rule (1) shall be made
within thirty days from the date of the order, or where, in the case of an ex
parte order, the notice was not duly served, within thirty days from the date
when applicant had knowledge of the order.]
__________________________
1. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxiii), for sub-rule (2)
(w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
2. Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxiv), for sub-rule 98
to 103 (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
3. Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(xxxv) (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
[1] 1.
Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(ii)(a), for "or the decree is
otherwise adjusted " (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
[2] 2.
Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(ii)(b), for (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
[3]
Inserted by Act 104 of 1976, section 72(ii)(c), (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
[4] In
the application of the Act, to the Punjab, sub-rule (3) has been repealed by
the Punjab Relief of Indebtedness Act, 1934 (Punjab 7 of 1934), section 36.
[5] 1
. Substituted by the A.O 1937, for "Bombay or Rangoon.”
[6] 2.
Substituted by Act 104 of 1976, section. 72(iii), for rule 5 (w.e.f. 1-2-1977).
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