The core issue revolves around the validity of property transfer via an irrevocable General Power of Attorney (GPA) and an unregistered agreement to sell, especially when the original owner died before the sale deed was executed by the GPA holder. The court examines whether the GPA holder had a legitimate interest in the property that would prevent the agency from terminating upon the principal’s death, contrasting this with a subsequent sale of the same property by the original owner’s legal heirs. Ultimately, the judgment upholds the High Court’s decision, emphasizing that a GPA alone does not transfer title and that proper registration is crucial for such transactions to be legally binding.
(A) Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 54 and 55 – Transfer of Property – Transfer by GPA and Agreement to Sell – Whether the agent, A. Saraswathi, by virtue of being a holder of the General Power of Attorney along with Agreement to Sell had any right, title or interest in the subject-matter of the agency, to execute the registered sale deed dated 01.04.1998 in favour of her son i.e., the appellant no. 2, after the death of the principal, on 30.01.1997? – Held that it is a settled law that a transfer of immovable property by way of sale can only be by a deed of conveyance – An agreement to sell is not a conveyance – It is not a document of title or a deed of transfer of deed of transfer of property and does not confer ownership right or title – An agreement to sell does not meet the requirements of Sections 54 and 55 of the TPA to effectuate a ‘transfer’ – From the independent reading of the POA and the agreement to sell, the submissions of the appellants fail on two grounds, first, the POA is general in nature and does not secure agent’s right in the subject-matter of the agency, and secondly, an agreement to sell simpliciter does not confer ownership in the immovable property so as to transfer a better title to anyone else.
(Para 47 and 48)
(B) Specific Relief Act, 1963, Section 38 – Injunction – Title Suit – Whether it was obligatory for the answering respondent to challenge the execution and validity of the General Power of Attorney and the Agreement to Sell dated 04.04.1986 and a further prayer to declare that the registered sale deed dated 01.04.1998 is invalid, non-est or illegal in O.S. 133/2007? – Held that where the question of title is “directly and substantially” in issue in a suit for injunction, and where a finding on an issue of title is necessary for granting the injunction, with a specific issue on title raised and framed, a specific prayer for a declaration of title is not necessary – As a result, a second suit would be barred when facts regarding title have been pleaded and decided by the Trial Court – In the present suit, the findings on possession rest solely on the findings on title – The Trial Court framed a categorical issue on the ownership of the appellants herein.
(Para 57 and 58)
(C) General Power of Attorney – Irrevocable’ in a POA – Held that evident from the tenor of POA that is not irrevocable as it was not executed to effectuate security or to secure interest of the agent – The holder of POA could not be said to have an interest in the subject-matter of the agency and mere use of the word ‘irrevocable’ in a POA would not make the POA irrevocable – High Court was right in holding that the holder did not have any interest in the POA – When the High Court observes that the power of attorney does not explicitly state the reason for its execution, it implies that its nature is general rather than special.
(Para 46)
(D) Contract Act, 1872, Chapter X – Powers-of-Attorney Act, 1882, Section 1-A and 2 – Power of Attorney – Basic Principle – Held that a power of attorney derives its basic principles from Chapter X of the Contract Act which provides for “Agency” along with Sections 1A and 2 respectively of the Act, 1882 – Agency is a fiduciary relationship between two persons, where one explicitly or implicitly agrees that the other will act on their behalf to influence their legal relations with third parties, and the other similarly agrees to act in this capacity or does so based on an agreement – The relationship between the executant of a general power of attorney and the holder of the power is one of principal and agent – A principal is bound by the acts done by an agent or the contracts made by him on behalf of the principal – Likewise, power of attorney in the nature of contract of agency authorizes the holder to do acts specified by the executant, or represent the executant in dealings with third persons.
(Para 27)
(E) Contract Act, 1872, Chapter X – Powers-of-Attorney Act, 1882, Section 1-A and 2 – Power of Attorney – Agency – Held that power of attorney is a creation of an agency by which the grantor/donor/executant authorizes the grantee/donee/holder/attorney to do the acts specified on his behalf, which will be binding on the executant as if the acts were done by him.
(Para 30)
(F) Contract Act, 1872, Section 302 – Contract – Revocation of agency – Essentials of Section 202 of the Contract Act are, first, there shall be a relationship in the capacity of ‘principal and agent’ between the parties and secondly, there shall be agent’s interest in the subject-matter of the agency – If both the conditions are fulfilled the agency becomes irrevocable and cannot be terminated unilaterally at the behest of the principal.
(Para 35)
(G) Power of Attorney – Nature of – Held that the import of the word “general” in a POA refers to the power granted concerning the subject matter – The test to determine the nature of POA is the subject matter for which it has been executed – The nomenclature of the POA does not determine its nature – Even a POA termed as a ‘general power of attorney’ may confer powers that are special in relation to the subject matter – Likewise, a ‘special power of attorney’ may confer powers that are general in nature concerning the subject matter – The essence lies in the power and not in the subject-matter.
(Para 42)
(H) Power of Attorney – ‘Irrevocable’ in a POA – Held that a mere use of the word ‘irrevocable’ in a POA does not make the POA irrevocable – If the POA is not coupled with interest, no extraneous expression can make it irrevocable. At the same time, even if there is no expression to the effect that the POA is irrevocable but the reading of the document indicates that it is a POA coupled with interest, it would be irrevocable.
(Para 45)
(I) Registration Act, 1908, Section 17 and 49 – General Power of Attorney – Agreement to sell – Unregistered documents – Appellants submitted that that since the GPA and the agreement to sell were executed by the same person in favour of the same beneficiary, it ought to have been read together – Held that from the combined reading of the POA and the agreement to sell, the submission of the appellants fails as combined reading of the two documents would mean that by executing the POA along with agreement to sell, the holder had an interest in the immovable property – If interest had been transferred by way of a written document, it had to be compulsorily registered as per Section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act – The law recognizes two modes of transfer by sale, first, through a registered instrument, and second, by delivery of property if its value is less than Rs. 100/- – High Court rightly held that even though the GPA and the agreement to sell were contemporaneous documents executed by the original owner in favour of the holder, this alone cannot be a factor to reach the conclusion that she had an interest in the POA – Thus, even though the GPA and the agreement to sell were contemporaneous documents executed by the original owner in favour of the same beneficiary, this cannot be the sole factor to conclude that she had an interest in the subject-matter – Even if such an argument were to persuade this Court, the document must have been registered as per Section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act – In the absence of such registration, it would not be open for the holder of the POA to content that she had a valid right, title and interest in the immovable property to execute the registered sale deed in favour of appellant no.2.
(Para 49, 53 and 55)
M.S. Ananthamurthy V. J. Manjula Etc.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 273: (DoJ 27-02-2025)




