Section 19(b) Specific Relief Act Cannot Override Doctrine Of Lis Pendens Once Suit for Specific Performance Is Filed: Supreme Court

Introduction

In a significant ruling that clarifies the interplay between contractual protections and procedural doctrines in property law, the Supreme Court of India has held that the protective shield offered by Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 becomes unavailable once a suit for specific performance is instituted. The judgment in Alka Shrirang Chavan & Anr. v. Hemchandra Rajaram Bhonsale & Ors. [1], delivered by Justice Manoj Misra and Justice Ujjal Bhuyan on January 13, 2026, settles a crucial question regarding the supremacy of the doctrine of lis pendens in specific performance suits, enshrined in Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, over the bona fide purchaser exception under the Specific Relief Act

This decision has far-reaching implications for property transactions in India, particularly affecting parties who purchase immovable property during the pendency of litigation without proper due diligence. The ruling reinforces the principle that pendente lite transfers, regardless of the purchaser’s good faith, remain subservient to decrees passed in specific performance suits.

Factual Background and Procedural History

The factual matrix of this case traces back to 1973 when the respondent-plaintiff entered into an agreement for sale of immovable property with the original defendant. Following the defendant’s failure to honour the contractual obligations, the plaintiff instituted a Regular Civil Suit in 1986 seeking specific performance of the agreement. Shortly thereafter, a notice of lis pendens was duly registered to put third parties on notice of the ongoing litigation.

During the pendency of the suit between 1987 and 1996, the judgment debtor executed eight separate sale deeds transferring various portions of the suit property to different persons. The appellants, who were subsequent purchasers, acquired their respective portions through these transferees pendente lite. Notably, in 1989, one of the transferees even constructed a bungalow on part of the disputed land, demonstrating physical possession and development of the property.

The trial court decreed the suit in favour of the plaintiff on November 30, 1990, directing execution of the sale deed and delivery of possession. When the judgment debtor failed to comply with the decree, the Court Commissioner executed the sale deed in favour of the decree holder in 1993. This decree attained finality after repeated challenges by the judgment debtor before appellate courts and the Bombay High Court were unsuccessful.

When the decree holder eventually sought possession through execution proceedings, the appellants obstructed the process and claimed independent title to the property. Their objections were rejected by the Executing Court under Order XXI Rules 97 to 101 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, which held that they were transferees pendente lite bound by the decree. The High Court upheld this decision, noting that the appellants had purchased with constructive knowledge of the subsisting contract and the pending suit.

The Legislative Framework: Understanding Lis Pendens and Section 19(b)

Doctrine of Lis Pendens under Section 52 of Transfer of Property Act

The doctrine of lis pendens, embodied in Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, represents a fundamental principle of procedural fairness in property litigation. Section 52 states: “During the pendency in any Court having authority within the limits of India excluding the State of Jammu and Kashmir or established beyond such limits by the Central Government, of any suit or proceeding which is not collusive and in which any right to immoveable property is directly and specifically in question, the property cannot be transferred or otherwise dealt with by any party to the suit or proceeding so as to affect the rights of any other party thereto under any decree or order which may be made therein, except under the authority of the Court and on such terms as it may impose.”

The Explanation to Section 52 further clarifies that “for the purposes of this section, the pendency of a suit or proceeding shall be deemed to commence from the date of the presentation of the plaint or the institution of the proceeding in a Court of competent jurisdiction, and to continue until the suit or proceeding has been disposed of by a final decree or order and complete satisfaction or discharge of such decree or order, has been obtained, or has become unobtainable by reason of the expiration of any period of limitation prescribed for the execution thereof by any law for the time being in force.”

This doctrine, rooted in the Latin maxim pendente lite nihil innovetur (nothing new should be introduced during the pendency of litigation), serves to preserve the subject matter of litigation from being altered through private transactions that could frustrate the court’s decree. The principle operates on the basis of public policy, ensuring that parties cannot defeat judicial proceedings through strategic property transfers [2].

Protection Under Section 19(b) of Specific Relief Act

Section 19 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 deals with the enforcement of specific performance against parties and persons claiming under them. Section 19(b) specifically provides that specific performance of a contract may be enforced against “any other person claiming under him by a title arising subsequently to the contract, except a transferee for value who has paid his money in good faith and without notice of the original contract.”

This provision protects bona fide purchasers who acquire property without knowledge of a prior contract. For a transferee to claim protection under Section 19(b), three essential conditions must be satisfied: first, the transferee must have purchased the property for valuable consideration; second, the payment must have been made in good faith; and third, the transferee must have had no notice, actual or constructive, of the original contract at the time of purchase.

The concept of ‘notice’ under this provision encompasses not merely actual knowledge but also constructive and imputed knowledge. As the Supreme Court emphasized in the present case, a purchaser is deemed to have constructive notice of registered documents and of the title of any person in actual possession of the property. This interpretation aligns with the broader principle that a prudent purchaser must conduct reasonable enquiries before acquiring immovable property [3].

The Supreme Court’s Legal Analysis and Reasoning

Two Distinct Scenarios: Pre-Suit and Post-Suit Transfers

The Supreme Court meticulously distinguished between two separate scenarios that govern property transfers in the context of specific performance suits. Justice Bhuyan, authoring the judgment, explained that Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act applies exclusively to transfers made before the institution of a suit. In such cases, the transferee can claim protection if they demonstrate good faith purchase without notice of the prior contract.

However, once a suit for specific performance is formally instituted, the legal landscape transforms fundamentally. Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act becomes operative from the moment of filing, rendering any subsequent transfer subject to the doctrine of lis pendens. The Court emphasized that in post-suit scenarios, “the question of whether the transferee is a bona fide purchaser without notice becomes redundant” because the transfer itself is caught by the overriding provisions of Section 52.

This bifurcation reflects the legislative intent to maintain different standards for pre-litigation and post-litigation transactions. While the law protects innocent purchasers in the former category, it prioritizes the integrity of judicial proceedings in the latter, ensuring that parties cannot circumvent court orders through private dealings during litigation [4].

The Supremacy of Section 52 Over Section 19(b)

The Court categorically held that Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act must yield to Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act once a suit or proceeding is instituted. This hierarchical relationship between the two provisions stems from their distinct operational fields and legislative purposes. The judgment observed: “As pointed out above, Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act would be available to a party to a contract who suffers a subsequent transfer of property. However, the moment a suit for specific performance is instituted by a party to the contract, after which there is a transfer of the suit property, Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act must give way to Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, and the doctrine of lis pendens comes into force.”

This principle ensures that the commencement of litigation creates a legal boundary that cannot be crossed through subsequent property transactions. The rationale behind this approach lies in protecting the efficacy of judicial decrees and preventing parties from rendering court orders nugatory through strategic transfers during the pendency of suits.

Rejection of Thomson Press Reliance

The appellants had relied heavily on Thomson Press (India) Ltd. to argue that pendente lite transfers are neither illegal nor void ab initio. While the Supreme Court acknowledged this proposition as correct in principle, it clarified that such transfers, though not void, remain subservient to the decree that may be passed by the court. The judgment stated: “There is no dispute to the proposition that transfer pendente lite is neither illegal nor void ab initio. But it remains subservient to the decree that may be passed by the court. Now that the decree and conveyance in favour of respondent No. 1 have attained finality, the transferee pendente lite i.e. the appellants have to give way and hand over actual physical possession of the suit property to respondent No. 1.”

This distinction is crucial because it recognizes that while pendente lite transfers have legal existence, they carry an inherent subordination to the ultimate judgment in the original suit. The transferees acquire only such rights as are subject to the final determination of the court [5].

Doctrine of Lis Pendens: Scope and Application

Commencement from Date of Filing

The Supreme Court has consistently held that the doctrine of lis pendens commences from the date of presentation of the plaint or institution of proceedings, not from the date when notice is issued or when the suit becomes defect-free. In M/s. Siddamsetty Infra Projects Pvt. Ltd. v. Katta Sujatha Reddy, a three-judge bench clarified that the doctrine kicks in at the stage of institution itself, irrespective of whether such institution or filing is defective or notice is yet to be issued by the court [6].

This interpretation finds support in the Explanation to Section 52, which explicitly states that pendency commences from the date of presentation of the plaint. The rationale is to prevent unscrupulous parties from exploiting the time gap between filing and service of notice to execute prejudicial transfers. Any other interpretation would defeat the very purpose of the lis pendens doctrine.

Knowledge or Notice: Irrelevant in Post-Filing Scenario

A significant aspect of the present judgment is the Court’s holding that once Section 52 becomes applicable, actual or constructive knowledge of the pending suit becomes immaterial. The Court observed that all courts below had recorded clear findings that the appellants were fully aware of the pendency of the suit, but emphasized that “even that is not necessary.” This represents a departure from the notice requirement under Section 19(b), underscoring the automatic operation of the lis pendens doctrine upon filing of a suit for specific performance.

However, this does not absolve purchasers from conducting due diligence. The requirement of notice becomes relevant in determining whether a transferee can claim protection under Section 19(b) for pre-suit transactions or whether the transfer attracts penal consequences under other provisions of law [7].

Applicability of Doctrine of Lis Pendens to Specific Performance Suits

The doctrine of lis pendens applies with full force to suits for specific performance of contracts relating to immovable property. In such suits, the right to the property is directly and specifically in question, satisfying the primary requirement of Section 52. Recent judgments in Danesh Singh v. Har Pyari and other cases have reiterated that pendente lite transfers in specific performance suits cannot defeat the plaintiff’s rights under a decree [8].

This application extends to all forms of property dealings during litigation, including sales, mortgages, leases, and any other transactions that purport to create or extinguish rights in the suit property. The only exception is transfers made under the authority of the court itself, which are expressly permitted by Section 52.

Rights and Remedies of Transferees Pendente Lite

Limited Rights Under Order XXI CPC

While transferees pendente lite cannot resist execution of a decree on the ground that they are bona fide purchasers, they have certain procedural rights under the Code of Civil Procedure. Order XXI Rules 97 to 101 provide mechanisms for persons claiming rights in the property to raise objections during execution proceedings. However, the scope of adjudication in such proceedings is limited to determining whether the objector is a transferee pendente lite, and if so, they have no right to resist execution.

The Supreme Court in the present case clarified: “it is clear as day light that the rights of the appellants who are subsequent purchasers are subservient to the rights of the decree holder. After the judgment and decree of the trial court and following execution of the sale deed by the Court Commissioner, a valid title qua the suit property passed on to respondent No. 1 (decree holder).” This statement eliminates any ambiguity regarding the hierarchical relationship between decree holders and pendente lite transferees [1].

Impleadment in Suits: Optional but Advisable

Although transferees pendente lite are bound by the decree under the doctrine of lis pendens even without being made parties to the original suit, recent judicial trends suggest that plaintiffs in specific performance suits should seek impleadment of such transferees. In Ramakant Ambalal Choksi v. Harish Ambala Choksi & Ors., the Supreme Court observed that while Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act takes care of pendente lite transfers, it may not always fully protect the plaintiff’s interests [9].

The Court recommended that plaintiffs should also seek injunctions restraining defendants from transferring suit property during pendency. This multi-layered approach provides better protection against complications arising from subsequent transfers and ensures that all interested parties are bound by the decree.

Due Diligence Requirements for Property Purchasers

Search of Court Records

The present judgment reinforces the critical importance of conducting thorough searches of court records before purchasing immovable property. Prudent purchasers must verify whether any litigation is pending regarding the property in question. This includes searching records at the trial court level, as well as in appellate and revisional jurisdictions where the property is situated.

Failure to conduct such searches may result in the purchaser being deemed to have constructive notice of pending litigation, thereby defeating any claim of being a bona fide purchaser without notice. The law expects purchasers to exercise reasonable care and conduct appropriate enquiries commensurate with the value and nature of the transaction.

Registration of Lis Pendens Notice

In Maharashtra and other states that have adopted the Bombay Amendment to Section 52, registration of a lis pendens notice becomes mandatory for the doctrine to apply. However, even in the absence of such amendments, courts have held that pendente lite transfers remain subject to the doctrine. The registration of lis pendens serves as constructive notice to all potential purchasers and creates a public record of the ongoing litigation.

Purchasers must search not only the property registration records but also specifically check for any lis pendens notices that may have been registered concerning the property. The existence of such a notice conclusively establishes knowledge of the pending litigation, preventing any claim of bona fide purchase without notice.

Comparative Analysis with Related Doctrines

Doctrine of Lis Pendens vs. Bona Fide Purchaser Protection

The tension between the doctrine of lis pendens and the protection afforded to bona fide purchasers represents a fundamental conflict in property law. While the latter seeks to protect innocent purchasers who acquire property without knowledge of defects in title, the former prioritizes the integrity of judicial proceedings and the enforceability of court decrees.

Indian law resolves this conflict by creating a temporal division: before the institution of suit, bona fide purchaser protection under Section 19(b) and Section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act applies; after suit filing, the doctrine of lis pendens under Section 52 prevails absolutely. This approach balances the competing interests of encouraging property transactions while ensuring that litigation is not rendered futile through strategic transfers.

Relationship with Section 41 of Transfer of Property Act

Section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act protects transferees who purchase property from an ostensible owner with consent of the real owner. However, as clarified in Chander Bhan v. Mukhtiar Singh, once a subsequent transfer during litigation is held illegal under Section 52, the defense under Section 41 becomes unavailable. The Supreme Court held that the protection of bona fide purchasers for valuable consideration cannot be taken as a defense when the alienation itself violates the doctrine of lis pendens.

This interpretation prevents parties from circumventing the lis pendens doctrine by creating ostensible ownership arrangements during the pendency of litigation. The law treats such attempts as efforts to defeat the judicial process, which cannot be countenanced regardless of the purchaser’s good faith.

Practical Implications and Future Considerations

Impact on Property Market and Transactions

This judgment has significant implications for the Indian property market. It places substantial responsibility on purchasers to conduct thorough due diligence before acquiring immovable property. The ruling serves as a warning that purchasing property without proper investigation of pending litigation carries the risk of losing both the property and the investment.

Real estate professionals, lawyers, and financial institutions involved in property transactions must now emphasize comprehensive title searches that include verification of pending litigation. This may lead to increased transaction costs but will ultimately result in more secure and transparent property dealings.

Recommendations for Buyers and Sellers

Prospective purchasers should insist on obtaining litigation certificates from sellers, conduct independent searches of court records, and verify the absence of any lis pendens notices registered against the property. Sellers, on their part, should disclose all pending or threatened litigation concerning the property to avoid allegations of fraud or misrepresentation.

Legal practitioners drafting sale agreements should incorporate specific representations and warranties regarding the absence of pending litigation and should conduct thorough due diligence before advising clients to proceed with transactions. Title insurance products may become increasingly relevant in the Indian market as a means of mitigating risks arising from undisclosed litigation.

Conclusion

The Supreme Court’s decision in Alka Shrirang Chavan v. Hemchandra Rajaram Bhonsale settles a critical question regarding the interplay between Section 19(b) of the Specific Relief Act and Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act. By holding that the doctrine of lis pendens prevails over bona fide purchaser protection once a suit is filed, the Court has reinforced the sanctity of judicial proceedings and the enforceability of decrees in specific performance suits.

This judgment serves multiple purposes: it deters unscrupulous defendants from frustrating court decrees through strategic property transfers during litigation; it emphasizes the importance of due diligence for property purchasers; and it provides clarity to lower courts on the applicable legal principles. The ruling represents a balanced approach that protects legitimate expectations while ensuring that the judicial process is not rendered ineffective through private dealings.

As the law continues to evolve in this area, stakeholders in property transactions must remain vigilant about pending litigation and conduct appropriate searches before committing to purchases. The judgment underscores that in the hierarchy of legal protections, the integrity of judicial proceedings through the doctrine of lis pendens stands paramount once litigation commences, and all subsequent property dealings must yield to this overriding principle.

References

[1] Supreme Court: Section 19(b) Specific Relief Act Have To Give Way To Doctrine Of Lis Pendens U/S 52 Transfer Of Property Act. (2026, January 13). Verdictum. https://www.verdictum.in/court-updates/supreme-court/alka-shrirang-chavan-v-hemchandra-rajaram-bhonsale-2026-insc-52-specific-relief-act-1604351

[2] Law Commission of India. (n.d.). Section 52 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 and its Amendment. Report No. 157. Advocate Khoj. https://www.advocatekhoj.com/library/lawreports/transferofproperty/1.php

[3] Section 19(b) Specific Relief Act Cannot Override Doctrine Of Lis Pendens Once Suit Is Filed: Supreme Court. (2026, January 15). Live Law. https://www.livelaw.in/supreme-court/section-19b-specific-relief-act-cannot-override-doctrine-of-lis-pendens-once-suit-is-filed-supreme-court-519196

[4] Doctrine Of Lis Pendens Takes Effect From Date Of Filing Suit For Injunction: Supreme Court. (2024, May 3). Verdictum. https://www.verdictum.in/court-updates/supreme-court/chander-bhan-d-v-mukhtiar-singh-2024-insc-377-doctrine-of-lis-pendens-from-date-of-filing-suit-for-injunction-not-grant-1533703

[5] Balancing Contract Enforcement and Bona Fide Protections Under Section 19(b). (2025, January 3). A.K. Legal & Associates. https://aklegal.in/balancing-contract-enforcement-and-bona-fide-protections-under-section-19b/

[6] Doctrine of lis pendens commences at the stage of “institution” of suit and not at the stage when notice is issued: Supreme Court. (2024, November 14). SCC Times. https://www.scconline.com/blog/post/2024/11/12/doctrine-of-lis-pendens-commencement-justice-dy-chandrachud-sc-legal-news/

[7] Order XXI Rule 102 CPC | Transferee Pendente Lite Has No Right To Obstruct Execution Of Decree: Supreme Court. (2026, January 13). Live Law. https://www.livelaw.in/supreme-court/order-xxi-rule-102-cpc-transferee-pendente-lite-has-no-right-to-obstruct-execution-of-decree-supreme-court-518750

[8] Pandit, D. (2025, April 25). Doctrine of Lis Pendens vis-à-vis Specific Performance. The Blog of Daksh Pandit. https://dakshpandit.com/doctrine-of-lis-pendens-vis-a-vis-specific-performance/

[9] The Transfer of Property Act, 1882. (1882). Act No. 4 of 1882. India Code. https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/2338/1/A1882-04.pdf