Transfer of Property Act Unit 1 (S. 3-18) : by Pawanpreet Singh Asst. Prof., RSOLS
Transfer of Property Act Unit 1 (S. 3-18) : by Pawanpreet Singh Asst. Prof., RSOLS
Transfer of Property Act Unit 1 (S. 3-18) : by Pawanpreet Singh Asst. Prof., RSOLS
By Pawanpreet Singh
Asst. Prof., RSOLS
What is Transfer?
• A transfer refers to a conversion of a thing from
one person to another person. Property may be
defined as anything physical or a virtual entity
owned by an individual or a group of people.
• (b) A mere right of re-entry for breach of a condition subsequent cannot be transferred.
• Eg. This right pertains to the owner of the property who has transferred limited interest
in the property to another. e.g. A house given on lease. When the lease is subject to a
condition that the owner shall have a right of re-entry to the property in case of breach
of a condition committed by the tenant. The re-entry cannot be called as a transfer
within the meaning of section 5 of the T.P Act as the possession of the property reverts
back to the original owner.
Non Transferable Properties (Section 6)
• (b) Right of Easement: An easement cannot be transferred apart from the dominant
heritage. Eg. A, an owner of a house (Dominant Heritage), has a right to way over the
land of B (Servient Heritage). Here Servient Heritage cannot be transferred.
• (e) A mere right to sue cannot be transferred. A has right to recover damages from B
for a tortious liability e.g. Assault; this right cannot be transferred as it is a mere right
to sue.
Non Transferable Properties (Section 6)
• (f) A public office cannot be transferred, nor can the salary
of a public officer, whether before or after it has become
payable.
• The transferee can now no longer transfer his interest in the property to
another person and he has no freedom to do what he wants with the
property in his capacity as the owner of the property.
• In other words it can be said that the interest of the unborn person must in all cases
be preceded by a prior interest.
Section 13: Essentials
• 1. No Direct Transfer: A transfer cannot be directly made to an
unborn person. Such a transfer can only be brought into existence
by the mechanism of trusts.
• Only if human beings had their way they shall wish to live
perpetually. However, laws of nature prevail over mankind
and all living beings are destined to perish. So, the next
best Homo sapiens’ desire is to preserve and pass his real
assets from generation to generation or vernacularly ‘pust
dar pust’, ‘naslan bad naslan’, ‘pidhi dar pidhi’.
Contd.
• Imagine an asset that shall forever continue to remain
within a family till eternity, and deprive all others from
enjoying its benefits.
• This impedes free and active circulation of property both
for purposes of trade and commerce, as well as betterment
of the property itself.
• Even the owner himself is denied the right to dispose it for
higher value or to tide away difficult times.
• Similarly, the state is divested from earning revenue, which
is only possible if property can change hands frequently.
How Perpetuity May Arise?
• Perpetuity may arise in two ways –
1. By taking away from transferee his power of
alienation (such a condition has been made
void under S.10 of the Act)
2. By creating future remote interest (which
has been prohibited under S.14 of the TP
Act).
Two principles/ concepts associated with S.
14
• Rule against Perpetuity. (No interest of such a
nature restricted/ devolving upon generations
only).
• Starting from the date that the transferor transfers the property
+ lifetime of the last prior interest holder’s + gestation period
of the unborn beneficiary + 18 years, ( ‘Age of majority of
persons domiciled in India’ under section 3 of The Majority Act,
1875).