Sale of Immovable Property by Persons other than Owners

There are various modes of transferring the immovable property but most frequently used mode is sale. Any sale or purchase has to conform to certain legal requirements. The Indian Contract Act, 1862, and Transfer of Property Act, 1882, are two important Acts which govern the transfer of immovable property. The words seller, vendor, purchaser and vendee is used to describe the parties. In general, the word transferor is used to refer to the owner of the property or his authorized representatives. The word transferee means the purchaser.

ESSENTIALS OF A VALID CONTRACT :

The agreement for sale is a contract. It has to comply with the stipulations of Indian Contract Act. The Act stipulates that any contract has to be made between the parties competent to contract. The competent parties are the persons who have attained the age of majority i.e. the persons who have completed the age of eighteen years. Apart from attaining majority, the parties should be of sound mind and not disqualified by provisions of any law in force for time being, like insolvency Act etc. Though the parties are majors and of sound mind yet if they are disqualified under provisions of any law in force, they are not competent to contract.

The parties to contract should agree to the terms of contract out of free consent. Consent means agreement of the parties upon the same thing in the same sense. Consent is said to be free when it is not caused by compulsion, force, misrepresentation or mistake. If the consent is not free it is not void but voidable. There is subtle difference between void and voidable. The contract is said to be voidable, if the parties to the contract have an option to cancel the contract or to abide by it. Contract is void, if it is not enforceable by the parties as per the provisions of law. In case of void contract, the parties have no option as the law treats such contracts as void. If the sale of the immovable property is not out of free consent, the seller has an option to treat the sale as valid or invalid, and the title of the purchaser is subject to the option exercised by the seller. Other important ingredients of valid contracts are the lawful consideration and lawful object. In case the transfer of immovable property is made for illegal consideration and for illegal object, the transfer is void i.e. law treats such transfers illegal and parties have no option for it. The transferee does not get any legally valid title to the property. The Sections 10 & 11 of Indian Contract Act deals with the above points.

ESSENTIALS OF VALID TRANSFER :

The Transfer of Property Act, 1882, has prescribed certain conditions for legally valid transfers under Section 5. The conditions are that both the parties must be living and the transfer may be either in present or future. The word living persons means legal persons, which includes a company, association, and body of Individuals. We may add here that a minor cannot transfer any property but he can be transferee, he can purchase and receive the property.

TRANSFER BY PERSONS OTHER THAN OWNER :

Apart from the discussed requirements of a valid contract and valid transfer, the most important is that the title of the transferor should have legal marketable title to the property. A person having a defective or no title to the property cannot pass on a better title to purchaser than what he has and the purchaser will acquire defective or no title.
There are certain exceptions to this which are dealt in Transfer of Property Act. They are transfer by:

  • Ostensible owner
  • Unauthorised person who subsequently acquires valid title
  • The person authorized under certain circumstances only

We have discussed each of the above in detail in the next part of the Article.

OSTENSIBLE OWNER:

The section 41 of the Act deals with the transfer of immovable property by ostensible owner. The word ostensible is described in the dictionary as apparent, stated or claimed but not necessarily true. In simple words ostensible owners appear to be an owner but they are not the true owner but the Act differentiates between a person who poses to be an owner to defraud the purchaser and a person who acts as an owner of some immovable property with the consent of the real owners of any transfer by such ostensible owner is valid. The consent by the real owner may be expressed in the form of writing or may be implied, where the action of real owner makes the purchaser to believe that the ostensible owner has consent. Other requirements are that the transfer is for consideration and the purchaser has exercised reasonable care to ascertain that the ostensible owner has power to transfer that property and has acted in good faith. Reasonable care means the care that a man of average intelligence takes without negligence.

In some cases if the ostensible owner is in possession of the property and he also produces the title deeds the transferee cannot be expected to make any searching enquiry in the absence of any ground for suspicion that the transferor may not be the real owner. The standard and nature of the necessary enquiry by the transferee must therefore vary according to the different circumstances of each case.

To understand the extent of care required to be taken by the transferee it will be useful to refer to the case of Khwaja Muhammad Khan v/s Muhammad Ibrahim ILR 26ALL, 490 where it was held “It is manifest that the transferee need not make a very detailed enquiry in order that he may be said to have taken reasonable care unless there are some circumstances or clue which should lead him as an ordinary man of business to make full enquiry so as to satisfy himself with a reasonable amount of certainty that his transferor is entitled to make the transfer”.

The transferee must act in good faith. The general clauses Act defines good faith as ‘A thing shall be deemed to be done in good faith where it is in fact done honestly whether it is done negligently or not. The limitation Act prescribes higher standard as it defines good faith as “nothing is seemed to be done in good faith, which is not done with due care and attention.

Transfer by unauthorized person, who subsequently acquires interest in property transferred. This is slightly a different situation from a transfer by ostensible owner. Here the transferor is not ostensible owner, does not have consent of the owners to act as owner and the transferor fraudulently or erroneously represents that he is authorized to transfer the property. But subsequent to such transfer, the transferor (seller) gets valid title. Such transfer is also valid.

The relevant section 43 of the Transfer of Property Act 1882 stipulates certain conditions as,

  1. The transferor erroneously/fraudulently represents that he is authorized to transfer the immovable property.
  2. The transfer for consideration.
  3. The transferee has not rescinded that contract, opts for transfer.
  4. There are no other transferees for consideration, who have acted in good faith and not aware of existence of such option/transfer.
  5. The transferor subsequently acquires title in the immovable property transferred, during the subsistence of contract.

The use of word “option” in the Act has given various remedies to the purchaser that he may cancel the contract and elect to ask for damages or get the property transferred to him. The important thing is that the transferor, who was unauthorized to transfer the property, acquires the title in same property transferred subsequently. If the transferor does not get any title during the subsistence of contract, the section does not apply.

Example:- ‘A’ transfers property to ‘B’ by falsely representing that he is owner of property. Later ‘A’ acquires that property then ‘B’ has right to take the property as transferee without further act on the part of the transferor.

Transfer by persons having limited powers
Various laws have prescribed limited rights to certain individuals to transfer that property, though they are not owners. Such transfers have to be done only under special circumstances enunciated in respective laws. Section 38 deals with this situation. Some of such persons are

  • The Kartha of a Mithakshara family
  • Executor
  • A mortgagee
  • A guardian of minor’s property.

These persons have power of sale only for compelling and legal necessities. If these persons as transferor allege the existence of such circumstances and the transferee has made an inquiry and after using reasonable cares has acted in good faith then transferee will get a good title to the property.
In case of sale of minor’s property by his natural or legal guardian there should be a legal necessity for the transfer itself and court permission is necessary for any sale. The burden in all such cases is laid on the transferee to justify the transfer in his favour. The reason for this rule is that no transferee of immovable property can safely take a transfer of such property without enquiring into the title of the person who is his proposed transferor. If the latter’s title is perfect, then the question of enquiry becomes immaterial. But if it was dependent upon variable circumstances, then the transferee must justify his transfer.
In case of wife and children of transferor have right to maintenance over the transferred property then such wife and children are entitled to enforce right to maintenance against such transferee on that transferred property, u/s 39 or Transfer of Property Act. But this right is not exercisable against transferee for consideration and in cases where transferee does not have notice of such right.
Sec 39 of Transfer of Property Act, provides that a person shall not transfer the immovable property without the concurrence of wife and children who have a right to receive maintenance or a provision for advancement or marriage for the profits of immovable property. In case such property is transferred without concurrence it is not that transferee will not get a title, he will get a title but he is liable to give maintenance from the profits of immovable property which he acquired, and settle any other claims if he has notice of such rights or claims. In case if such transfer is gratuitous such rights or claims can be enforced against transferee.