REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                                         CIVIL APPEAL NO. 5147 OF 2016
                DECCAN PAPER MILLS CO. LTD.                            …APPELLANT
                                                    VERSUS
                REGENCY MAHAVIR PROPERTIES & ORS.                      …RESPONDENTS
                                                  JUDGMENT
         R.F. Nariman, J.
         1.              The hearing in this appeal followed in the wake of the hearing in
                         Civil Appeal Nos. 5145 of 2016, 5158 of 2016, and 9820 of 2016.
                         The brief facts necessary to appreciate the controversy in this
                         appeal are as follows:
          i.             By an agreement dated 22.07.2004 between the Appellant,
                         Deccan Paper Mills Co. Ltd. [hereinafter referred to as “Deccan”]
                         and the Respondent No. 2 company, M/s Ashray Premises Pvt.
                         Ltd. [hereinafter referred to as “Ashray”], Deccan, being the
                         owner of approximately 80,200 sq. meters of land bearing Survey
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
INDU MARWAH
                         Nos. 96B, 96C, and 96D at village Mundhwa, District Pune,
Date: 2020.08.19
16:25:07 IST
Reason:
                         decided to develop a portion of the said land, i.e., 32,659 sq.
                                                                                           1
      meters. It is not necessary to enter into the nitty-gritty of the said
      agreement. However, it is enough to note that this agreement
      contained clause 7(m), in which it is stated :
          “7. The Owner and the Developer hereto covenant that
          upon the execution of these presents:
          xxx xxx xxx
          m. The Owner shall have no objection if at any stage
          during the continuance of this agreement the
          Developer assigns, delegates the rights, under this
          agreement or the Power of Attorney/writings executed
          in furtherance hereof to any other person, firm or party
          without violating or disturbing any of the terms and
          conditions of this agreement.”
ii.   This agreement did not contain any arbitration clause. Pursuant to
      clause 7(m), on 20.05.2006, an agreement was entered into
      between Respondent No. 2 – Ashray, and Respondent No.1 –
      Regency Mahavir Properties, a partnership firm [hereinafter
      referred to as “Regency”], by which Ashray assigned the
      execution of the agreement dated 22.07.2004 to Regency. The
      aforesaid agreement contained an arbitration clause, which is set
      out as follows:
          “14. If during the continuance of the said
          Agreement/these presents or at any time afterwards
          any difference shall arise between the parties herein
          and the heirs, executors or administrators of the other
          of them or between their respective heirs, executors or
          administrators in regard to the construction of any of
          the articles herein contained or to any division
          (..illegible) thing to be made or done in pursuance
          hereto or to any other matter or thing relating to the
                                                                               2
           said Agreement/these presents the same shall be
           forthwith referred to one arbitrator if the parties agree
           or otherwise to two arbitrators, one to be appointed by
           each party to the reference or to an Umpire to be
           chosen by the Arbiters before entering upon the
           reference and every such reference shall be deemed
           to be an Arbitration in accordance with and subject to
           the provisions of The Arbitration & Conciliation Act,
           1996 or any statutory modification or re-enactment
           thereof for the time being in force.”
iii.   A deed of confirmation dated 13.07.2006 followed, by which it was
       stated that this deed was to be treated as part of the 20.05.2006
       agreement, in which the assignment by Ashray to Regency was
       reaffirmed. According to Deccan, a fraud had been played by one
       Mr. Atul Chordia, Respondent No.3 herein (Defendant No. 3 in the
       suit filed by Deccan), which is pleaded in Special Civil Suit No.
       1400 of 2010, which was filed on 13.07.2010, as follows:
           “6. In the year 2006 or thereabout, the Defendant No.3
           approached directors of the Plaintiff Company and
           represented to them that for diverse reasons, he
           intends to develop the said property through a
           partnership firm by name Regency Mahavir Properties.
           The Defendant No.3 further assured Plaintiff Company
           that he will be one of the leading partners of the said
           M/s Regency Mahavir Properties i.e. the Defendant
           No.1 and the development of the said property and the
           same shall be carried out as quickly as possible. The
           directors of Plaintiff Company, relying on the strength
           of assurance given by Mr. Atul Chordia agreed to be
           joined a Consenting Party to a formal agreement of
           assignment to be executed between Defendant No.1
           and Defendant No.2. It is pertinent to note that
           Defendant No.3 holding out to be an authorized
           partner of Defendant No.1 has signed the said
                                                                           3
agreement. The directors of Plaintiff Company under a
bonafide belief that the said agreement of assignment
was formal and Defendant No.3 will be responsible for
development of the said property. Now directors of
Plaintiff Company realize that Defendant No. 3 had
different intentions.”
xxx xxx xxx
“8. Recently, the director of Plaintiff Company
approached Mr. Dilip R. Jain, one of the partners of
Defendant No. 1. Directors of Plaintiff Company
inquired with Mr. Jain about the delay in progress of
construction and informed Mr. Jain that they will hold
Defendant No.3 responsible for the deal. Mr. Jain, to
the shock and surprise of directors of Plaintiff
Company informed them that Mr. Chordia was no more
responsible for development of the said property, since
he has assigned development rights in respect thereof,
way back in the year 2006 itself. Directors of Plaintiff
Company took the said shock and approached
Defendant No.3 and inquired with him about the
aforesaid state of affairs. The Defendant No.3 avoided
giving any explanation. The Directors of Plaintiff
Company, took a search in the office of Registrar of
Firms and for the first time came to know that the
Defendant No.3 had opted to retire from business of
Defendant No.1 with effect from 30.05.2006. It is
pertinent to note that the Defendant No. 3 representing
himself to be authorized partner of Defendant No.1 has
signed deed of Confirmation dated 13.07.2006,
confirming the terms and conditions of agreement
dated 20.05.2006, executed between Defendant No.1
and 2 in respect of development of the suit property.
9. As stated earlier, Directors of Plaintiff Company
have granted development rights in respect of the said
property to Defendant No.2, only because Defendant
No.3 was its leading Director. The Plaintiff Company
has joined the agreement of assignment dated
20.05.2006 and Deed of Confirmation dated
13.07.2006 executed by Defendant No.2 in favour of
Defendant No.1 with understanding that Defendant
No.3 was its partner. Directors of Plaintiff Company
therefore say that Defendant No.1 in collusion with
                                                           4
    Defendant No.2 and in active concealment of material
    fact, by misrepresenting Plaintiff Company and by
    practicing fraud upon the Plaintiff Company have
    obtained consent of Plaintiff Company on the
    agreement of assignment and Deed of Confirmation.
    Directors of Plaintiff Company therefore say that said
    agreement of assignment and Deed of Confirmation
    being tainted with fraud are ab initio null and void and
    not binding on Plaintiff Company. Since the Plaintiff
    Company has recently come to know the aforesaid
    fraud, they have decided to inform the Defendant that
    the agreement dated 20.05.2006 and the Deed of
    Confirmation dated 13.07.2006 in respect of the said
    property are not binding upon the Plaintiff Company
    and hence Defendant No.1 has no legal right to
    continue with further development of the said property.
    10. Directors of Plaintiff Company, from reliable
    sources, have come to know that Defendant No.1 has
    no intention to develop the said property, further and
    hence Defendant No.1, again in collusion with
    Defendant No.3 is negotiating to transfer/assign
    development rights in respect of the said property to
    third person. Since the agreement of assignment dated
    20.05.2006 and Deed of Confirmation dated
    13.07.2006 are illegal and void, Defendant No.1 has
    no right to deal with the suit property. Inspite of such
    position, if Defendant No.1 attempts to transfer such
    rights, the same shall be illegal and in any case shall
    not be binding upon Plaintiff Company.”
As a result of the fraud played, it was then stated:
    “12. The cause of action for this suit first arose on or
    about 22.07.2004 when the Defendant No.1 obtained
    agreement for development of the suit property, it
    further arose when the Defendant No.1 and 2 obtained
    agreement of assignment dated 20.05.2006 and Deed
    of Confirmation dated 17.07.2006. It further arose, in
    the month of April/May 2010, when the Plaintiff for the
    first time came to know that the Defendant No.3 is no
    more partner of the Defendant No.1 and that the
    Defendants have committed fraud upon the Plaintiff.
    The cause of action also arose, when the Defendants
                                                               5
failed to comply with the demands made in notice
dated 10.07.2010.
13. The present suit, being suit for declaration and
cancellation, is properly valued as per the provisions of
Section 6(4)(h-a) of Bombay Court Fee Act, 1959 and
maximum court fee of Rs.3,00,000/- is paid.
14. The suit property is situated at Pune. The cause of
action for the present suit has arisen at Pune and
therefore this Honourable Court has got jurisdiction to
entertain, try and decide this suit.
15. It is therefore prayed that:
     A. It be declared that the Agreement dated
     22.07.2004 and Agreement dated 20.05.2006
     and Deed of Confirmation dated 13.07.2006
     are obtained by fraud and hence they are ab
     initio null, void and not binding upon the
     Plaintiff.
     В. It be declared that the Agreement dated
     22.07.2004 and Agreement dated 20.05.2006
     and Deed of Confirmation dated 13.07.2006
     are illegal.
     C. The Defendants, by order of mandatory
     injunction directed to execute and register
     Deed of Cancellation of Agreement dated
     22.07.2004 and Agreement dated 20.05.2006
     and Deed of Confirmation dated 13.07.2006.
     D. The Defendants may be restrained by an
     order of perpetual injunction from carrying out
     any further development activity in the said
     property or to enter the same or remain
     therein, either by themselves or through any
     person claiming through it, or to create any
     third party interests therein or to deal with the
     same in any manner whatsoever.
     E. Interim orders in terms of Clause C above
     may be passed.
     F. Costs of the suit may be awarded to the
     Plaintiff from the Defendants.
                                                            6
               G. Any other just and other equitable orders in
               the interest of justice may be pleased to be
               passed.”
      It is important to note that Defendant No. 3 did not file any written
      statement in the said suit.
iv.   Almost immediately thereafter, by an application dated 19.07.2010
      under section 8 of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
      [hereinafter referred to as the “1996 Act”] on behalf of Regency,
      the arbitration clause in the agreement dated 20.05.2006 was set
      out and the Civil Judge (Senior Division), Pune was asked to refer
      the parties to arbitration. The reply to the said application on
      behalf of the plaintiff, Deccan, stated:
          “2. The averments in para 1 of the application to the
          extent of reproduction of clause No.14 of agreement
          dated 20.05.2006, being matter of record are not
          disputed for the purpose of this reply. The plaintiff shall
          rely upon and explain the true effect and interpretation
          of the said clause at the proper time. It is pertinent to
          note Defendant Nos.1 and 2 have avoided to make
          any comment with regard to merits of their defense.
          3. It is submitted that while considering the application
          u/s 8 of Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996, the court
          has to consider an issue that whether there exists any
          Arbitration Agreement between the parties. Such right
          is certainly vested in Civil Court. The Plaintiff is
          challenging the legality of agreement dated 20.05.2006
          on the ground that the same is obtained by fraud and
          is therefore seeking further declaration that the said
          agreement is null and ab initio void. As such, the very
          Arbitration clause as contained in the said agreement
          is not enforceable. In spite of the fact that Section 16
                                                                              7
         of the said Act empowers the Arbitral Tribunal to
         decide its own jurisdiction in view of particular
         circumstances narrated in the plaint, the present
         application deserves to be rejected.”
v.   By a judgment dated 19.07.2011, the Additional Judge, Small
     Causes Court, Pune, after hearing both sides, held as follows:
         “11. After perusing the above mentioned cited cases, it
         shows that when there is a clause of arbitration it is
         mandated on the Civil Court to refer the dispute and
         parties for arbitration as per agreement. In present
         case the plaintiffs have materially contention about
         playing fraud by Defendant No.3 but there is no any
         contents in agreement as alleged by plaintiff in plaint
         about keeping faith on Defendant No.3. It shows about
         signing by Defendant No.3 for agreement dated
         20.05.2006 and he was also party to said agreement.
         The plaintiff alleged about playing fraud after resigning
         by Defendant No.3 from partnership firm of Defendant
         No.1 and signing the confirmation deed dated
         13.07.2006 but as per Partnership Act remedy is
         provided. Moreover, from the documents, it shows that
         the confirmation deed dated 13.07.2007 was executed
         by Defendant No.3 as Authorized Partner of M/s
         Regency Mahavir Properties and another partner Dilip
         Jain. The fraud alleged by the plaintiff is in respect of
         the documents for which the remedy is also provided.
         After considering the arbitration clause I find that the
         application is to be allowed and the disputes have to
         be referred for arbitration. Hence, I pass the following
         order:
         1) Application is allowed.
         2) The plaintiff is directed to get the alleged dispute
            resolved through the process of arbitration by
            referring the plaintiff to invoke the process of
            arbitration as per the arbitration clause 14
            mentioned in the agreement dated 20.05.2006.”
     Finding thus, the learned Judge referred the parties to arbitration.
                                                                            8
vi.   A writ petition filed by Deccan in the Bombay High Court was then
      disposed of by the impugned judgment dated 18.03.2015, in
      which it was held, following the judgment of the Single Judge in
      Swiss Timing Ltd. v. Commonwealth Games 2010 Organising
      Committee, (2014) 6 SCC 677 [hereinafter referred to as “Swiss
      Timing”] that the decision in N. Radhakrishnan v. Maestro
      Engineers, (2010) 1 SCC 72 [hereinafter referred to as “N.
      Radhakrishnan”] being per incuriam, it would not be possible to
      follow the same, as a result of which the “fraud exception” was
      rejected. It was then held that there is no conflict between the
      Division Bench judgment in Avitel Post Studioz Limited & Ors.
      v. HSBC PI Holding (Mauritius) Ltd., Appeal No. 196 of 2014
      in Arbitration Petition No. 1062 of 2012 (which is the judgment
      under appeal in Civil Appeal Nos. 5145 and 5158 of 2016) and
      another judgment in Satish Sood v. Gujarat Tele Links Pvt. Ltd.,
      2014 (1) AIR Bom R 27 [hereinafter referred to as “Satish
      Sood”]. The Court felt that it would not be possible to follow the
      decision of the Division Bench in the case of Satish Sood (supra)
      as it was rendered prior to the judgment of the learned Single
      Judge of the Supreme Court in Swiss Timing (supra). This being
                                                                           9
     so, the writ petition was then dismissed, with the result that the
     parties stood referred to arbitration.
2.   Smt. Meena Doshi, learned advocate appearing on behalf of the
     Appellant, has taken us through the record and argued on the basis
     of N. Radhakrishnan (supra) that when it comes to serious
     allegations of fraud, an arbitrator’s jurisdiction gets ousted and
     reading the pleadings in the Special Civil Suit, it is obvious that
     serious allegations of fraud being raised in the present case, the
     dispute is thus rendered non-arbitrable. She then referred to
     section 8 of the 1996 Act, as amended by the Arbitration and
     Conciliation (Amendment) Act, 2015 [hereinafter referred to as the
     “2015 Amendment Act”] to further argue that both the District
     Judge as well as the High Court did not look into the requirements
     of the amended section 8, and that the aforesaid judgments are
     infirm on this count alone. She also argued, basing herself on the
     seven-Judge Bench judgment in S.B.P. & Co. v. Patel Engg. Ltd.,
     (2005) 8 SCC 618 that the correct application of section 8 is not a
     mere mechanical incantation of the section, the Court having to
     apply its mind as to whether there exists an arbitration agreement
     at all, which would include whether the subject matter of the
     proceeding is at all arbitrable. She also argued that the original
                                                                      10
     agreement between Deccan and Ashray did not contain an
     arbitration clause, and since the suit was to set aside that
     agreement as well, the dispute could not be decided piecemeal,
     and on this ground also, ought not to have been referred to
     arbitration. She then relied heavily upon section 31 of the Specific
     Relief Act, 1963 and stated that a reading of the plaint and the
     prayers in the suit would show that the suit is one for cancellation
     of three “written instruments”. This being so, and the proceeding
     under section 31 being a proceeding in rem, would fall within one of
     the exceptions made out in Booz Allen & Hamilton Inc. v. SBI
     Home Finance Ltd., (2011) 5 SCC 532 [hereinafter referred to as
     “Booz Allen”]. For this purpose, she relied heavily upon a judgment
     of the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for Telangana and
     Andhra Pradesh in Aliens Developers Pvt. Ltd. v. M. Janardhan
     Reddy, (2016) 1 ALT 194 (DB) [hereinafter referred to as “Aliens
     Developers”].     On all these grounds, therefore, the cryptic
     judgment of the Bombay High Court ought to be set aside and the
     suit should be set down for hearing, to be disposed of within a short
     timeframe.
3.   Shri Vinay Navre, learned Senior Advocate appearing on behalf of
     Respondent No.1, referred us to the case law on the “fraud
                                                                       11
exception” and stated that after the judgment in Rashid Raza v.
Sadaf Akhtar, (2019) 8 SCC 710 (see paragraph 4), this exception
would only apply if it can be stated that the agreement itself was
never executed, in which case the arbitration clause itself would
fall, but not otherwise. Also, since there are no public ramifications
in the present proceeding, and in particular, no ramifications of a
criminal nature, neither of the conditions precedent for the
application of the “fraud exception” being present in this case, it is
clear that the judgments of the Courts below were correct in law.
When it came to section 31 of the Specific Relief Act, Shri Navre
stated that a correct reading of the section would show that the
Court’s jurisdiction, being discretionary and for the benefit of the
party interested in setting aside a written instrument, the
proceeding would have to be considered to be one in personam.
According to him, the judgment in Aliens Developers (supra) does
not lay down the law correctly and should be overruled by us. In
answer to the argument that the agreement dated 22.07.2004,
which did not contain an arbitration clause, was also sought to be
cancelled in the suit, he argued that this was inserted only in the
prayer clause in order to camouflage the suit so as to get out of
arbitration. If the body of the suit were to be seen, it is clear that
what was sought to be impugned was only the latter two
                                                                   12
     agreements, the first being of historical significance only. This being
     the case, it is clear that the dispute is arbitrable. Further, all that is
     to be seen under section 8 of the 1996 Act after its amendment is
     that prima facie, a valid arbitration agreement exists. Here, as a
     matter of fact, it was admitted, according to Shri Navre, in the
     affidavit filed in reply to the section 8 application that the agreement
     between the parties did exist, but was vitiated on account of fraud,
     which only made it voidable.
4.   We have, in our judgment in Avitel Post Studioz Limited & Ors. v.
     HSBC PI Holding (Mauritius) Ltd., Civil Appeal No. 5145 of
     2016, laid down the law on invocation of the “fraud exception” in
     some detail, which reasoning we adopt and follow. The said
     judgment     indicates   that   given    the    case    law   since    N.
     Radhakrishnan (supra), it is clear that N. Radhakrishnan (supra),
     as a precedent, has no legs to stand on. If the subject matter of an
     agreement between parties falls within section 17 of the Indian
     Contract Act, 1872, or involves fraud in the performance of the
     contract, as has been held in the aforesaid judgment, which would
     amount to deceit, being a civil wrong, the subject matter of such
     agreement would certainly be arbitrable. Further, we have also held
     that merely because a particular transaction may have criminal
                                                                            13
     overtones as well, does not mean that its subject matter becomes
     non-arbitrable. We have no doubt that Shri Navre is right in his
     submission that there is no averment that the agreement dated
     20.05.2006 and the deed of confirmation dated 13.07.2006 were
     not entered into at all, as a result of which the arbitration clause
     would be non-existent. Further, it is equally clear that the suit is one
     that is inter parties with no “public overtones”, as has been
     understood in paragraph 14 of Avitel (supra), as a result of which
     this exception would clearly not apply to the facts of this case.
5.   Smt. Doshi then cited State of A.P. & Anr. v. T. Suryachandra
     Rao, (2005) 6 SCC 149 and read paragraphs 8 to 16 of the
     judgment to impress upon us that fraud vitiates every solemn act
     and that a conspiracy with a view to deprive the rights of others in
     relation to a property would render the transaction void ab initio.
     This case arose out of an order of the Land Reforms Tribunal which
     held against the respondent, stating that they had fraudulently
     taken advantage of the ceiling limit under the Andhra Pradesh Land
     Reforms    (Ceiling   on   Agricultural   Holdings)   Act,   1973    by
     suppression of facts. In this case, the Tribunal reopened the matter
     when it found that the land which was surrendered had already
     been acquired in proceedings under the Land Acquisition Act,
                                                                          14
     1898. The question was whether the Tribunal was justified in
     modifying the earlier order and leaving out such land. It was held,
     by a concurrent finding of fact, that the Tribunal was capable of so
     varying the order. It was in this backdrop that the general
     observations on fraud were made. This case has no relevance to
     the exact issue before this Court.
6.   We are also inclined to accept Shri Navre’s argument on section 8
     of the 1996 Act, in view of some of the recent judgments on section
     8 after the 2015 Amendment Act. (See Ameet Lalchand Shah v.
     Rishabh Enterprises, (2018) 15 SCC 678 at pp. 698-700,
     Mayavati Trading Pvt. Ltd. v. Pradyut Deb Burman, (2019) 8
     SCC 714 at pp. 724-725, and Emaar MGF Land Ltd. v. Aftab
     Singh, (2019) 12 SCC 751 at pp. 779-783). It is enough to state
     that there is a sea change between section 8 of the 1996 Act and
     section 20 of the Arbitration Act, 1940, as has been held in
     paragraph 9 of Avitel Post Studioz Limited & Ors. v. HSBC PI
     Holding (Mauritius) Ltd., Civil Appeal No. 5145 of 2016. Post
     amendment, it is clear that the judicial authority before which an
     action is brought shall, if the other conditions of section 8 are met,
     refer the parties to arbitration unless it finds that prima facie, no
     valid arbitration agreement exists. As has been held hereinabove,
                                                                        15
     in the present case, the finding that is returned is correct – a valid
     arbitration agreement certainly exists as the agreements that are
     sought to be cancelled are not stated not to have ever been
     entered into.
7.   This brings us to the interesting argument on behalf of Smt. Doshi
     as to the applicability of section 31 of the Specific Relief Act and
     the High Court’s judgment in Aliens Developers (supra) relied
     upon by her. section 31 of the Specific Relief Act states as follows:
         “31. When cancellation may be ordered.
         (1) Any person against whom a written instrument is
         void or voidable, and who has reasonable
         apprehension that such instrument, if left outstanding
         may cause him serious injury, may sue to have it
         adjudged void or voidable; and the court may, in its
         discretion, so adjudge it and order it to be delivered up
         and cancelled.
         (2) If the instrument has been registered under the
         Indian Registration Act, 1908 (16 of 1908), the court
         shall also send a copy of its decree to the officer in
         whose office the instrument has been so registered;
         and such officer shall note on the copy of the
         instrument contained in his books the fact of its
         cancellation.”
     Referring to section 31, a Division Bench of the High Court in
     Aliens Developers (supra) held:
         “14. ... Under Section 31(2) of the Specific Relief Act,
         Legislature conferred the power on Courts to send a
         copy of the cancellation decree to the officer in whose
         office the instrument has been so registered and such
         officer shall note on the copy of the instrument
                                                                         16
         contained in his books, the fact of its cancellation. It is
         evident from the provision under Section 31(2) that the
         power of nullifying the effect of registration is conferred
         only on the Court. In the judgment in Booz Allens
         case (supra), the Hon'ble Supreme Court has held that
         a right in rem is a right exercisable against the world at
         large, as contrasted from a right in personam which is
         an interest protected solely against specific individuals
         and actions in personam refer to actions determining
         the rights and interests of the parties themselves in the
         subject matter of the case, whereas, actions in rem
         refer to actions determining the title to property and the
         rights of the parties, not merely among themselves but
         also against all persons at any time claiming an
         interest in that property. In the said judgment, it is
         clearly held that if the adjudicatory effect of the Court is
         a judgment in rem, only public fora i.e. Courts and
         Tribunals have to adjudicate such disputes, but not the
         Arbitral Tribunals as agreed by the parties. As much as
         the Development Agreement-cum-Irrevocable Power
         of Attorney is a registered one and is relating to title of
         the property, any cancellation will affect the removal of
         rights accrued to the parties, such cancellation is to be
         communicated to the officer who has registered the
         document, in view of the provision under Section 31(2)
         of the Specific Relief Act. Therefore, we are of the
         considered view that such adjudicatory function in
         cases like this will operate in rem. In any event, having
         regard to the power conferred on Courts by virtue of
         the provision under Section 31(2) of the Specific Relief
         Act, only a competent Court is empowered to send the
         cancellation decree, to the officer concerned, to effect
         such cancellation and note in his books to that effect.
         When such Statutory power is conferred on Courts,
         such power cannot be exercised by the Arbitrator, in
         spite of the fact that there is an arbitration clause in the
         agreement entered between the parties…”
8.   It is now for us to examine whether a further exception can be
     carved out based upon Booz Allen (supra) on the footing of the
                                                                        17
High Court’s judgment in Aliens Developers (supra). In order to
examine the correctness of Aliens Developers (supra), it is
necessary to set out certain sections of the Specific Relief Act. The
relevant sections are set out hereinbelow:
    “4. Specific relief to be granted only for enforcing
    individual civil rights and not for enforcing penal
    laws.—Specific relief can be granted only for the
    purpose of enforcing individual civil rights and not for
    the mere purpose of enforcing a penal law.”
    xxx xxx xxx
    “26. When instrument may be rectified.—(1) When,
    through fraud or a mutual mistake of the parties, a
    contract or other instrument in writing [not being the
    articles of association of a company to which the
    Companies Act, 1956 (1 of 1956), applies] does not
    express their real intention, then
         (a) either party or his representative in interest
         may institute a suit to have the instrument
         rectified; or
         (b) the plaintiff may, in any suit in which any
         right arising under the instrument is in issue,
         claim in his pleading that the instrument be
         rectified; or
         (c) a defendant in any such suit as is referred
         to in clause (b), may, in addition to any other
         defence open to him, ask for rectification of
         the instrument.
    (2) If, in any suit in which a contract or other instrument
    is sought to be rectified under sub-section (1), the
    court finds that the instrument, through fraud or
    mistake, does not express the real intention of the
    parties, the court may, in its discretion, direct
    rectification of the instrument so as to express that
    intention, so far as this can be done without prejudice
    to rights acquired by third persons in good faith and for
    value.
                                                                   18
(3) A contract in writing may first be rectified, and then
if the party claiming rectification has so prayed in his
pleading and the court thinks fit, may be specifically
enforced.
(4) No relief for the rectification of an instrument shall
be granted to any party under this section unless it has
been specifically claimed: Provided that where a party
has not claimed any such relief in his pleading, the
court shall, at any stage of the proceeding, allow him
to amend the pleading on such terms as may be just
for including such claim.
27. When rescission may be adjudged or refused.
—(1) Any person interested in a contract may sue to
have it rescinded, and such rescission may be
adjudged by the court in any of the following cases,
namely:
    (a) where the contract is voidable or
    terminable by the plaintiff;
    (b) where the contract is unlawful for causes
    not apparent on its face and the defendant is
    more to blame than the plaintiff.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1), the court may refuse to rescind the
contract
    (a) where the plaintiff has expressly or
    impliedly ratified the contract; or
    (b) where, owing to the change of
    circumstances which has taken place since
    the making of the contract (not being due to
    any act of the defendant himself), the parties
    cannot be substantially restored to the
    position in which they stood when the contract
    was made; or
    (c) where third parties have, during the
    subsistence of the contract, acquired rights in
    good faith without notice and for value; or
    (d) where only a part of the contract is sought
    to be rescinded and such part is not severable
    from the rest of the contract.
                                                             19
Explanation.—In this section “contract” in relation to
the territories to which the Transfer of Property Act,
1882 (4 of 1882), does not extend, means a contract in
writing.”
xxx xxx xxx
“29. Alternative prayer for rescission in suit for
specific performance.—A plaintiff instituting a suit for
the specific performance of a contract in writing may
pray in the alternative that, if the contract cannot be
specifically enforced, it may be rescinded and
delivered up to be cancelled; and the court, if it refuses
to enforce the contract specifically, may direct it to be
rescinded and delivered up accordingly.
30. Court may require parties rescinding to do
equity.—On adjudging the rescission of a contract, the
court may require the party to whom such relief is
granted to restore, so far as may be, any benefit which
he may have received from the other party and to
make any compensation to him which justice may
require.”
xxx xxx xxx
“32. What instruments may be partially cancelled.
—Where an instrument is evidence of different rights
or different obligations, the court may, in a proper case,
cancel it in part and allow it to stand for the residue.
33. Power to require benefit to be restored or
compensation to be made when instrument is
cancelled or is successfully resisted as being void
or voidable.—
(1) On adjudging the cancellation of an instrument, the
court may require the party to whom such relief is
granted, to restore, so far as may be any benefit which
he may have received from the other party and to
make any compensation to him which justice may
require.
(2) Where a defendant successfully resists any suit on
the ground—
    (a) that the instrument sought to be enforced
    against him in the suit is voidable, the court
                                                             20
    may if the defendant has received any benefit
    under the instrument from the other party,
    require him to restore, so far as may be, such
    benefit to that party or to make compensation
    for it;
    (b) that the agreement sought to be enforced
    against him in the suit is void by reason of his
    not having been competent to contract under
    section 11 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (9
    of 1872), the court may, if the defendant has
    received any benefit under the agreement
    from the other party, require him to restore, so
    far as may be, such benefit to that party, to the
    extent to which he or his estate has benefited
    thereby.
34. Discretion of court as to declaration of status
or right.—Any person entitled to any legal character,
or to any right as to any property, may institute a suit
against any person denying, or interested to deny, his
title to such character or right, and the court may in its
discretion make therein a declaration that he is so
entitled, and the plaintiff need not in such suit ask for
any further relief:
  Provided that no court shall make any such
declaration where the plaintiff, being able to seek
further relief than a mere declaration of title, omits to
do so.
Explanation.—A trustee of property is a “person
interested to deny” a title adverse to the title of
someone who is not inexistence, and for whom, if in
existence, he would be a trustee.
35. Effect of declaration.—A declaration made under
this Chapter is binding only on the parties to the suit,
persons claiming through them respectively, and,
where any of the parties are trustees, on the persons
for whom, if in existence at the date of the declaration,
such parties would be trustees.”
                                                             21
     The very sheet anchor of Smt. Doshi’s case, namely, the judgment
     in Booz Allen (supra), refers to the judgment of this Court in
     Olympus Superstructures v. Meena Vijay Khetan, (1999) 5 SCC
     651 [hereinafter referred to as “Olympus”], in which it was held
     that an arbitrator has the power and jurisdiction to grant specific
     performance of contracts relating to immovable property (see
     paragraphs 43 and 44).
9.   A perusal of the judgment in Olympus (supra) would show that this
     Court was faced with differing views taken by the High Courts as to
     whether specific performance of a contract relating to immovable
     property is at all arbitrable. The Delhi High Court in Sulochana
     Uppal v. Surinder Sheel Bhakri, AIR 1991 Del 138 [hereinafter
     referred to as “Sulochana Uppal”] had held that specific
     performance of an agreement could not be granted by an arbitrator
     for the reason that:
         “15. An agreement to refer a dispute to arbitration, the
         effect of which would be to have an award directing
         specific performance of an agreement to sell, would
         have for its object to defeat the provisions of the
         Specific Relief Act, especially sections 10 and 20
         thereof. It is clearly intended by the aforesaid
         provisions that it is only courts, and courts alone who
         would have jurisdiction to grant or refuse specific
         performance.”
                                                                      22
      The learned Single Judge thus disagreed with the contrary view of
      the Bombay High Court and the Punjab High Court. 1
10.   It is important to note that this Court referred to all the aforesaid
      three judgments, including a judgment of the Calcutta High Court.
      In arriving at the conclusion that the Punjab, Bombay, and Calcutta
      High Courts’ view is the correct one and that the Delhi High Court’s
      view, being incorrect, is overruled, this Court referred to an
      important passage in Halsbury’s Laws of England as follows :
           “35. It is stated in Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th
           Edn., (Arbitration, Vol. 2, para 503) as follows:
               “503. Nature of the dispute or difference.—
               The dispute or difference which the parties to
               an arbitration agreement agree to refer must
               consist of a justiciable issue triable civilly. A
               fair test of this is whether the difference can
               be compromised lawfully by way of accord
               and satisfaction (Cf. Bac Abr Arbitrament and
               Award A).”
           36. Further, as pointed out in the Calcutta case [ Apo
           498 of 1997 & Apo 449 of (401) dated 27-1-1998 (Cal)]
           merely because there is need for exercise of discretion
           in case of specific performance, it cannot be said that
           only the civil court can exercise such a discretion. In
           the above case, Ms Ruma Pal, J. observed:
               “… merely because the sections of the
               Specific Relief Act confer discretion on courts
               to grant specific performance of a contract
               does not mean that parties cannot agree that
               the discretion will be exercised by a forum of
               their choice. If the converse were true, then
1 This Court in Olympus Superstructures v. Meena Vijay Khetan, (1999) 5 SCC
651 wrongly refers to the Delhi High Court’s judgment as being the judgment in
“P.N.B. Finance Ltd. v. Shital Prasad Jain, AIR 1991 Del 13” (see paragraph 33).
                                                                              23
              whenever a relief is dependent upon the
              exercise of discretion of a court by statute e.g.
              the grant of interest or costs, parties could be
              precluded from referring the dispute to
              arbitration.”
          We agree with this reasoning. We hold on Point 3 that
          disputes relating to specific performance of a contract
          can be referred to arbitration and Section 34(2)(b)(i) is
          not attracted. We overrule the view of the Delhi High
          Court. Point 3 is decided in favour of the respondents.”
11.   A perusal of section 26(1) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 would
      show that when, through fraud or mutual mistake of parties, a
      contract or other instrument in writing does not express the real
      intent of the parties, then either party or his representative in
      interest may either institute a suit to have the instrument rectified or
      as defendant, may, in addition to any defence open to him, ask for
      rectification of the instrument. Importantly, under section 26(3), a
      party may pray in a rectification suit for specific performance – and
      if the Court thinks fit, may after rectifying the contract, grant
      specific performance of the contract. Thus, what is made clear by
      this section is that the rectification of a contract can be the subject
      matter of a suit for specific performance, which, as we have
      already seen, can be the subject matter of an arbitral proceeding.
12.   Under section 27(1) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, “any party
      interested” in a contract may sue to have it rescinded and such
                                                                            24
rescission may be adjudged by the Court in the cases mentioned in
clauses (a) and (b) of sub-section (1). Sub-section (2) of section 27
refers to four exceptions to this rule. In Shravan Goba Mahajan v.
Kashiram Devji, ILR (1927) 51 Bom 133, a Division Bench of the
Bombay High Court, with regard to section 35 of the Specific Relief
Act, 1877 (which is the pari materia provision to section 27 of the
1963 Act) held that an heir is a person interested in the contract
which is sought to be set aside, thus, making it clear that the
expression “any person interested” would include not just a party to
the contract, but persons who may be heirs of one of the parties to
the contract. A reading of this section would also show that all such
actions in which a contract or instrument may be rectified or
rescinded, no judgment in rem follows, as what is sought to be
rectified or rescinded is by the parties to the contract or persons
who may be their heirs or legal representatives. Third parties to the
contract are not persons who can be said to be “any person
interested”, particularly when section 27(2)(c), which refers to third
parties, is seen and contrasted with the expression “any person
interested” in section 27(1) – under section 27(2)(c), third parties
come in as an exception to the rule only when they have acquired
rights in good faith, without notice and for value, during the
subsistence of the contract between the parties to that contract.
                                                                    25
13.   Sections 29 and 30 are also important, in that a plaintiff instituting a
      suit for specific performance may pray in the alternative that if the
      contract cannot be specifically enforced, it may be rescinded and
      be delivered up to be cancelled. In addition, on adjudging the
      rescission of the contract, the Court may require the party to whom
      such relief is granted to restore, so far as may be, any benefit
      which he may have received from the other party and to make any
      compensation to him which justice may require. These two
      sections would also show that following rescission of a contract, it
      has to be delivered up to the plaintiff to be cancelled – and all of
      this can be done in a suit for specific performance. Thus far,
      therefore, it is clear that an action for rescission of a contract and
      delivering up of that contract to be cancelled is an action in
      personam which can be the subject matter of a suit for specific
      performance, making such rescission and delivering up the
      contract to be cancelled, the subject matter of arbitration.
14.   When it comes to section 31(1), the important expression used by
      the legislature is “any person against whom a written instrument is
      void or voidable…”. An instructive judgment of the Full Bench of
      the Madras High Court reported as Muppudathi Pillai v.
      Krishnaswami Pillai, AIR 1960 Mad 1 involved the determination
                                                                            26
      of the scope of section 41 of the Specific Relief Act, 1877 (section
      33(1) of the 1963 Act is the pari materia provision). This judgment,
      after referring to section 41, then referred to section 39 of the
      Specific Relief Act, 1877 (which is the pari materia provision to
      section 31 of the 1963 Act). The Court then went on to notice the
      distinction between section 35 (which is the pari materia provision
      to section 27 of the 1963 Act) and section 39 of the Specific Relief
      Act, 1877 as follows:
          “11. ... It may be noticed that the above section applies
          not merely to the case of an instrument which is
          voidable but also one that is void. S. 35 provides for
          the case of rescission of voidable contracts. It is
          evident that S. 39 covers not only a case contemplated
          under S. 35, but also a wider field, that is, a case of a
          void document, which under the law need not be set
          aside.”
15.   In an extremely important paragraph, the Full Bench then set out
      the principle behind section 39(1) of the Specific Relief Act, 1877
      as follows:
          “12. The principle is that such document though not
          necessary to be set aside may, if left outstanding, be a
          source of potential mischief. The jurisdiction under S.
          39 is, therefore, a protective or a preventive one. It is
          not confined to a case of fraud, mistake, undue
          influence etc. and as it has been stated it was to
          prevent a document to remain as a menace and
          danger to the party against whom under different
          circumstances it might have operated. A party against
          whom a claim under a document might be made is not
          bound to wait till the document is used against him. If
                                                                        27
    that were so he might be in a disadvantageous
    position if the impugned document is sought to be
    used after the evidence attending its execution has
    disappeared. Section 39 embodies the principle by
    which he is allowed to anticipate the danger and
    institute a suit to cancel the document and to deliver it
    up to him. The principle of the relief is the same as in
    quia timet actions.”
                                           (emphasis added)
The Court then continued its discussion as follows:
    “13. ... The provisions of Section 39 make it clear that
    three conditions are requisite for the exercise of the
    jurisdiction to cancel an instrument : (1) the instrument
    is void or voidable against the plaintiff; (2) plaintiff may
    reasonably apprehend serious injury by the instrument
    being left outstanding; (3) in the circumstances of the
    case the court considers it proper to grant this relief of
    preventive justice. On the third aspect of the question
    the English and American authorities hold that where
    the document is void on its face the court would not
    exercise its jurisdiction while it would if it were not so
    apparent. In India it is a matter entirely for the
    discretion of the court.
    14. The question that has to be considered depends
    on the first and second conditions set out above. As
    the principle is one of potential mischief, by the
    document remaining outstanding, it stands to reason
    the executant of the document should be either the
    plaintiff or a person who can in certain circumstances
    bind him. It is only then it could be said that the
    instrument is voidable by or void against him. The
    second aspect of the matter emphasises that principle.
    For there can be no apprehension if a mere third party
    asserting a hostile title creates a document. Thus relief
    under S. 39 would be granted only in respect of an
    instrument likely to affect the title of the plaintiff and not
    of an instrument executed by a stranger to that title.
    15. Let us take an example of a trespasser purporting
    to convey the property in his own right and not in the
    right of the owner. In such a case a mere cancellation
                                                                     28
of the document would not remove the cloud
occasioned by the assertion of a hostile title, as such a
document even if cancelled would not remove the
assertion of the hostile title. In that case it would be the
title that has got to be judicially adjudicated and
declared, and a mere cancellation of an instrument
would not achieve the object. S. 42 of the Specific
Relief Act would apply to such a case. The remedy
under S. 39 is to remove a cloud upon the title, by
removing a potential danger but it does not envisage
an adjudication between competing titles.
That can relate only to instruments executed or
purported to be executed by a party or by any person
who can bind him in certain circumstances. It is only in
such cases that it can be said there is a cloud on his
title and an apprehension that if the instrument is left
outstanding it may be a source of danger. Such cases
may arise in the following circumstances: A party
executing the document, or a principal in respect of a
document executed by his agent, or a minor in respect
of a document executed by his guardian de jure or de
facto, a reversioner in respect of a document executed
by the holder of the anterior limited estate, a real
owner in respect of a document executed by the
benamidar, etc. This right has also been recognised in
respect of forged instruments which could be cancelled
by a party on whose behalf it is purported to be
executed. In all these cases there is no question of a
document by a stranger to the title. The title is the
same. But in the case of a person asserting hostile
title, the source or claim of title is different. It cannot be
said to be void against the plaintiff as the term void or
voidable implies that but for the vitiating factor it would
be binding on him, that is, he was a party to the
contract.
16. There is one other reason for this conclusion.
Section 39 empowers the court after adjudicating the
instrument to be void to order the instrument to be
delivered up and cancelled. If the sale deed is or
purported to have been executed by a party, the
instrument on cancellation could be directed to be
delivered over to the plaintiff. If on the other hand such
                                                                 29
           an instrument is executed by a trespasser or a person
           claiming adversely to the plaintiff it is not possible to
           conceive the instrument being delivered over not to the
           executant but his rival, the plaintiff.”
      The Court then concluded:
           “18. In our opinion, Sec. 39 will not apply to a case like
           the present where the sale was executed by a person
           claiming title adverse to that of Vinayagam Pillai, and
           therefore, the court would have no jurisdiction under S.
           41 to direct payment of compensation by the plaintiff to
           the appellant before obtaining relief as to possession.
           To hold otherwise would mean that a mere volunteer
           who paid the debt of the plaintiff would be able to
           recover the same.”2
16.   A reading of the aforesaid judgment of the Full Bench would make
      the position in law crystal clear. The expression “any person” does
      not include a third party, but is restricted to a party to the written
      instrument or any person who can bind such party. Importantly,
      relief under section 39 of the Specific Relief Act, 1877 would be
      granted only in respect of an instrument likely to affect the title of
2  A Full Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Yanala Malleshwari v.
Ananthula Sayamma, AIR 2007 AP 57 followed this judgment and then stated the
law thus:
       “33. The law, therefore, may be taken as well settled that in all cases of
       void or voidable transactions, a suit for cancellation of a deed is not
       maintainable. In a case where immovable property is transferred by a
       person without authority to a third person, it is no answer to say that
       the true owner who has authority and entitlement to transfer can file a
       suit under Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act for the simple reason
       that such a suit is not maintainable. Further, in case of an instrument,
       which is void or voidable against executant, a suit would be
       maintainable for cancellation of such instrument and can be decreed
       only when it is adjudicated by the competent Court that such
       instrument is void or voidable and that if such instrument is left to exist,
       it would cause serious injury to the true owner.”
                                                                                 30
      the plaintiff, and not of an instrument executed by a stranger to that
      title. The expression “any person” in this section has been held by
      this Court to include a person seeking derivative title from his seller
      (see Mohd. Noorul Hoda v. Bibi Raifunnisa (1996) 7 SCC 767,
      at p. 771). The principle behind the section is to protect a party or a
      person having a derivative title to property from such party from a
      prospective misuse of an instrument against him. A reading of
      section 31(1) then shows that when a written instrument is
      adjudged void or voidable, the Court may then order it to be
      delivered up to the plaintiff and cancelled – in exactly the same
      way as a suit for rescission of a contract under section 29. Thus
      far, it is clear that the action under section 31(1) is strictly an action
      inter parties or by persons who obtained derivative title from the
      parties, and is thus in personam.
17.   Let us see whether section 31(2) makes any difference to this
      position in law. According to the judgment in Aliens Developers
      (supra), the moment a registered instrument is cancelled, the effect
      being to remove it from a public register, the adjudicatory effect of
      the Court would make it a judgment in rem. Further, only a
      competent court is empowered to send the cancellation decree to
      the officer concerned, to effect such cancellation and “note on the
                                                                              31
copy of the instrument contained in his books the fact of its
cancellation”. Both reasons are incorrect. An action that is started
under section 31(1) cannot be said to be in personam when an
unregistered instrument is cancelled and in rem when a registered
instrument is cancelled. The suit that is filed for cancellation cannot
be in personam only for unregistered instruments by virtue of the
fact that the decree for cancellation does not involve its being sent
to the registration office – a ministerial action which is subsequent
to the decree being passed. In fact, in Gopal Das v. Sri Thakurji,
AIR 1943 PC 83, a certified copy of a registered instrument, being
a receipt dated 29.03.1881 signed by the owner, was held not to be
a public record of a private document under section 74(2) of the
Indian Evidence Act, 1872 for the reason that the original has to be
returned to the party under section 61(2) of the Registration Act,
1908 (see p. 87). This judgment has been followed in Rekha v.
Ratnashree, (2006) 1 MP LJ 103 by a Division Bench of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court, in which it was held:
    “8. A deed of sale is a conveyance. A deed of
    conveyance or other document executed by any person
    is not an act nor record of an act of any sovereign
    authority or of any official body or tribunal, or of any
    public officer, legislative, judicial and executive. Nor is it
    a public record kept in a State of any private
    documents. A sale-deed (or any other deed of
    conveyance) when presented for registration under the
    Registration Act, is not retained or kept in any public
                                                                     32
office of a State after registration, but is returned to the
person who presented such document for registration,
on completion of the process of registration. An original
registered document is not therefore a public record
kept by a State of a private document. Consequently, a
deed of sale or other registered document will not fall
under either of the two classes of documents described
in section 74, as ‘public documents’. Any document
which is not a public document is a private document.
We therefore have no hesitation in holding that a
registered sale-deed (or any other registered
document) is not a public document but a private
document.
9. This position is made abundantly clear in Gopal Das
v. Shri Thakurji, AIR 1943 Privy Council 83, wherein the
Privy Council considering the question whether a
registered receipt is a public document observed thus:
     “It was contended by Sir Thomas Strangman
     for the respondents that the receipt comes
     within para 2 of section 74, Evidence Act, and
     was a “public document”; hence under section
     65(e) no such foundation is required as in
     cases coming within clauses (a), (b) and (c) of
     that section. Their Lordships cannot accept
     this argument since the original receipt of
     1881 is not “a public record of a private
     document”. The original has to be returned to
     the party. A similar argument would appear at
     one time to have had some acceptance in
     India but it involves a misconstruction of the
     Evidence Act and Registration Act and later
     decisions have abandoned it.” (emphasis
     supplied)
We may also refer to the following passage from
Ratanlal’s Law of Evidence (19th Edition-Page 237):
     “Public document [Clause (e)] — This clause
     is intended to protect the originals of public
     records from the danger to which they would
     be exposed by constant production in
     evidence. Secondary evidence is admissible
     in the case of public documents mentioned in
     section 74. What section 74 provides is that
                                                               33
               public records kept in any state of private
               documents are public documents, but private
               documents of which public records are kept
               are not in themselves public documents. A
               registered document, therefore, does not fall
               under either clause (e) or (f). The entry in the
               register book is a public document, but the
               original is a private document.”
                                         (emphasis in original)
      Thus, the factum of registration of what is otherwise a private
      document inter parties does not clothe the document with any
      higher legal status by virtue of its registration.
18.   Also, it must be remembered that the Delhi High Court’s reasoning
      in Sulochana Uppal (supra) that it is the Court alone that can,
      under the Specific Relief Act, enforce specific performance of an
      agreement, is contra to the reasoning in Olympus (supra) which
      overruled it, stating that “the dispute or difference which parties to
      an arbitration agreement agree to refer must consist of justiciable
      issues triable civilly”. Since specific performance is a justiciable
      issue triable civilly, obviously, the expression “court” occurring
      throughout the Specific Relief Act will have to be substituted by
      “arbitrator” or “arbitral tribunal”. This part of the reasoning in Aliens
      Developers (supra), in following the same reasoning as an
      overruled Delhi High Court judgment, would fly in the face of
                                                                             34
      Olympus (supra) and would, therefore, not be good law. We,
      therefore, overrule the same.
19.   P. Ramanatha Aiyar’s Advanced Law Lexicon (3rd Edn., Wadhwa
      Nagpur) describes an in rem proceeding as follows:
          “In rem. adj. [Latin “against a thing”] Involving or
          determining the status of a thing, and therefore the
          rights of persons generally with respect to that thing.-
          Also termed (archaically) impersonal. (Black 7th Edn.,
          1999)
               “An action in rem is one in which the judgment of
          the Court determines the title to property and the rights
          of the parties, not merely as between themselves, but
          also as against all persons at any time dealing with
          them or with the property upon which the Court had
          adjudicated.” R.H. GRAVESON, Conflict of Laws 98
          (7th ed. 1974).
              Against the king; against the property, not against
          a person.
               This term is derived from the Roman law, but is
          not used in English law in precisely the same sense as
          in that law. Indeed, Bracton, limits proceedings in rem
          to actions to obtain possession of res by which he
          understood real actions; (Bigelow on Estoppel 42, 43.)
              A proceeding in rem is a proceeding instituted
          against a thing, and not against a person.
              A proceeding in rem, in a strict sense, is one taken
          directly against property, and has for its object the
          disposition of the property, without reference to the title
          of individual claimants but in a larger and more
          general sense the term 'proceeding in rem' is applied
          to actions between parties where the direct object is to
                                                                        35
reach and dispose of property owned by them, or of
some interest therein.
      A judgement in rem is generally said to be a
judgment declaratory of the status of some subject
matter, whether this be a person, or a thing. Thus the
probate of a will fixes the status of the document as a
will; so a decree establishing or dissolving a marriage
is a judgment in rem, because it fixes the status of the
person. A judgment or forfeiture against specified
articles of goods for violation of the revenue laws is a
judgment in rem. In such case the judgment is
conclusive against all the world, and, if the expression
‘strictly in rem’ may be applied to any class of cases, it
should be confined to such as these. Chief Justice
Marshall says: ‘I have always understood that where a
process is to be served on the thing itself, and where
the mere possession of the thing itself, by the service
of a process and making proclamation, authorizes the
Court to decide upon it without notice to any individual
whatever, it is a proceeding in rem, to which all the
world are parties. The claimant if a party, whether he
speaks or is silent, whether he asserts his claim or
abandons it. But usage has distinguished as
proceedings in rem a class of cases in which, while
the seizure of the thing will be in aid of jurisdiction, yet
it is essential that some form of notice be given to the
particular person or persons. The proceeding thus
assumes a phase of actions in personam, and a
judgment will not be binding upon any one who was
not before the Court.
    An act or proceeding is in rem when it is done or
directed with reference to no specific person and
consequently against or with reference to all whom it
might concern, or ‘all the world’.
    Lawsuits brought against property as compared
with those against a person; the Court's jurisdiction
does not depend on notice to the property owner.”
                                                               36
20.   In R. Viswanathan v. Rukn-ul-Mulk Syed Abdul Wajid, (1963) 3
      SCR 22, this Court set out the Roman law concept of jus in rem as
      follows:
          “Roman lawyers recognised a right either as a jus in
          rem or a jus in personam. According to its literal
          meaning “jus in rem” is a right in respect of a thing, a
          “jus in personam” is a right against or in respect of a
          person. In modern legal terminology a right in rem,
          postulates a duty to recognise the right imposed upon
          all persons generally, a right in personam postulates a
          duty imposed upon a determinate person or class of
          persons. A right in rem is therefore protected against
          the world at large; a right in personam against
          determinate individuals or persons. An action to
          enforce a jus in personam was originally regarded as
          an action in personam and an action to enforce a jus
          in rem was regarded as an action in rem. But in course
          of time, actions in rem and actions in personam
          acquired different content. When in an action the rights
          and interest of the parties themselves in the subject-
          matter are sought to be determined, the action is in
          personam. The effect of such an action is therefore
          merely to bind the parties thereto. Where the
          intervention of the Court is sought for the adjudication
          of a right or title to property, not merely as between the
          parties but against all persons generally, the action is
          in rem. Such an action is one brought in the Admiralty
          Division of the High Court possessing Admiralty
          jurisdiction by service of process against a ship or
          cargo within jurisdiction. There is another sense in
          which an action in rem is understood. A proceeding in
          relation to personal status is also treated as a
          proceeding in rem, for the judgment of the proper court
          within the jurisdiction of which the parties are
                                                                       37
    domiciled is by comity of nations admitted to
    recognition by other courts. As observed by Cheshire
    in his “Private International Law”, Sixth Edition at page
    109, “In Roman law an action in rem was one brought
    in order to vindicate a jus in rem, i.e., a right such as
    ownership available against all persons, but the only
    action in rem known to English law is that which lies in
    an Admiralty court against a particular res, namely, a
    ship or some other res, such as cargo, associated with
    the ship.” Dealing with judgments in rem and
    judgments in personam. Cheshire observed at page
    653, “It (judgment in rem) has been defined as a
    judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction
    determining the status of a person or thing (as distinct
    from the particular interest in it of a party to the
    litigation); and such a judgment is conclusive evidence
    for and against all persons whether parties, privies or
    strangers of the matter actually decided. …… A
    judgment in rem settles the destiny of the res itself
    ‘and binds all persons claiming an interest in the
    property inconsistent with the judgment even though
    pronounced in their absence’; a judgment in
    personam, although it may concern a res, merely
    determines the rights of the litigants inter se to the
    res.”
                                                (at pp. 43-44)
Also, a judgment in rem has been described in Satrucharla Vijaya
Rama Raju v. Nimmaka Jaya Raju, (2006) 1 SCC 212 as follows:
    “10. ... A judgment in rem is defined in English law as
    “an adjudication pronounced (as its name indeed
    denotes) by the status, some particular subject-matter
    by a tribunal having competent authority for that
    purpose”. Spencer Bower on Res Judicata defines the
    term as one which “declares, defines or otherwise
    determines the status of a person or of a thing, that is
                                                                 38
          to say, the jural relation of the person or thing to the
          world generally”...”
      Judged by these authorities, it is clear that the proceeding under
      section 31 is with reference to specific persons and not with
      reference to all who may be concerned with the property
      underlying the instrument, or “all the world”. Clearly, the
      cancellation of the instrument under section 31 is as between the
      parties to the action and their privies and not against all persons
      generally, as the instrument that is cancelled is to be delivered to
      the plaintiff in the cancellation suit. A judgment delivered under
      section 31 does not bind all persons claiming an interest in the
      property inconsistent with the judgment, even though pronounced
      in their absence.
21.   A reading of sections 32 and 33 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963
      would also show that the reasoning of the High Court in Aliens
      Developers (supra) is flawed. Where, for example, under section
      32, an instrument is cancelled in part, the instrument which is
      otherwise only an instrument inter parties, cannot be said to be an
      instrument which remains inter parties, the cancelled portion being
      a cancellation to the world at large, i.e., in rem. Equally, under
      section 33, when compensation is required to be paid or
                                                                        39
      restoration of benefit which has been received from the other party
      is required to be made, it is exactly the same as that which is
      required to be done under a contract which is rescinded and
      cancelled (see section 30): and it is clear that both sections 30 and
      33 would apply only to contracts or instruments which are
      rescinded/cancelled in personam.
22.   When sections 34 and 35 are seen, the position becomes even
      clearer. Unlike section 31, under section 34, any person entitled to
      any legal character may institute a suit for a declaration that he is
      so entitled. Considering that it is possible to argue on a reading of
      this provision that the legal character so declared may be against
      the entire world, section 35 follows, making it clear that such
      declaration is binding only on the parties to the suit and persons
      claiming through them, respectively. This is for the reason that
      under section 4 of the Specific Relief Act, specific relief is granted
      only for the purpose of enforcing individual civil rights. The principle
      contained in section 4 permeates the entire Act, and it would be
      most incongruous to say that every other provision of the Specific
      Relief Act refers to in personam actions, section 31 alone being out
      of step, i.e., referring to in rem actions.
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23.   As a matter of fact, this Court in Razia Begum v. Sahebzadi
      Anwar Begum, 1959 SCR 1111 clarified that the predecessor to
      section 35 of the 1963 Act, namely, section 43 of the Specific Relief
      Act, 1877, made it clear that both sections 42 and 43 of the
      Specific Relief Act, 1877 go together and refer only to an action
      that is in personam. This was felicitously stated by this Court as
      follows:
          “ ... Sections 42 and 43, as indicated above, go
          together, and are meant to be coextensive in their
          operation. That being so, a declaratory judgment in
          respect of a disputed status, will be binding not only
          upon the parties actually before the court, but also
          upon persons claiming through them respectively. The
          use of the word “only” in Section 43, as rightly
          contended on behalf of the appellant, was meant to
          emphasize that a declaration in Chapter VI of the
          Specific Relief Act, is not a judgment in rem. But even
          though such a declaration operates only in personam,
          the section proceeds further to provide that it binds not
          only the parties to the suit, but also persons claiming
          through them, respectively. The word “respectively”
          has been used with a view to showing that the parties
          arrayed on either side, are really claiming adversely to
          one another, so far as the declaration is concerned.
          This is another indication of the sound rule that the
          court, in a particular case where it has reasons to
          believe that there is no real conflict, may, in exercise of
          a judicial discretion, refuse to grant the declaration
          asked for oblique reasons.”
                                                         (at p. 1131)
                                                                         41
24.   Also, in an instructive judgment of this Court in Suhrid Singh v.
      Randhir Singh, (2010) 12 SCC 112, in the context of the Court
      Fees Act, 1870 this Court held:
          “7. Where the executant of a deed wants it to be
          annulled, he has to seek cancellation of the deed. But
          if a non-executant seeks annulment of a deed, he has
          to seek a declaration that the deed is invalid, or non
          est, or illegal or that it is not binding on him. The
          difference between a prayer for cancellation and
          declaration in regard to a deed of transfer/conveyance,
          can be brought out by the following illustration relating
          to A and B, two brothers. A executes a sale deed in
          favour of C. Subsequently A wants to avoid the sale. A
          has to sue for cancellation of the deed. On the other
          hand, if B, who is not the executant of the deed, wants
          to avoid it, he has to sue for a declaration that the
          deed executed by A is invalid/void and non est/illegal
          and he is not bound by it. In essence both may be
          suing to have the deed set aside or declared as non-
          binding. But the form is different and court fee is also
          different. If A, the executant of the deed, seeks
          cancellation of the deed, he has to pay ad valorem
          court fee on the consideration stated in the sale deed.
          If B, who is a non-executant, is in possession and sues
          for a declaration that the deed is null or void and does
          not bind him or his share, he has to merely pay a fixed
          court fee of Rs. 19.50 under Article 17(iii) of the
          Second Schedule of the Act. But if B, a non-executant,
          is not in possession, and he seeks not only a
          declaration that the sale deed is invalid, but also the
          consequential relief of possession, he has to pay an ad
          valorem court fee as provided under Section 7(iv)(c) of
          the Act.”
25.   The reasoning in the aforesaid judgment would again expose the
      incongruous result of section 31 of the Specific Relief Act being
      held to be an in rem provision. When it comes to cancellation of a
                                                                      42
      deed by an executant to the document, such person can approach
      the Court under section 31, but when it comes to cancellation of a
      deed by a non-executant, the non-executant must approach the
      Court under section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963.
      Cancellation of the very same deed, therefore, by a non-executant
      would be an action in personam since a suit has to be filed under
      section 34. However, cancellation of the same deed by an
      executant of the deed, being under section 31, would somehow
      convert the suit into a suit being in rem. All these anomalies only
      highlight the impossibility of holding that an action instituted under
      section 31 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 is an action in rem.
26.   Given this finding of law, it is clear that the judgments of the District
      Court and the High Court in this case need no interference. This
      appeal, therefore, stands dismissed.
                                                ……………..………………J.
                                                (R. F. Nariman)
                                                ………..……………………J.
                                                (Navin Sinha)
                                                ………..……………………J.
                                                (Indira Banerjee)
New Delhi
August 19, 2020.
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