Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 22
PETITIONER:
BHAVANI TEA AND PRODUCE CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA AND ORS.ANDVICE VERSA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/02/1991
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (1) 550 1991 SCC (2) 463
JT 1991 (1) 503 1991 SCALE (1)318
ACT:
Land Reforms: Kerala Private Forests (Vesting &
Assignment) Act, 1971 (Act 26 of 1971): Sections 2(f), 3,
8-Private forests-Company engaged mainly in plantations of
tea, coffee, cardamom, rubber etc.-Certain areas/plots not
under plantation-Plantation abandoned-Whether this to be
deemed ’reverted to nature’-Held no-Madras Preservation of
Private Forest Act-Kerala Reforms Act, 1963.
Section 2(f), 3, 8-Private forests-Areas on the
periphery of the Company’s estate admittedly virgin-The
same held vested in the State-Whether the provisions of the
Vesting Act have been applied correctly to the facts as
found by Courts below keeping in mind its objects and
purposes.
HEADNOTE:
Bhavani Tea and Produce Co., a Public Ltd. Company is
engaged mainly in plantations of Tea, Coffee, Cardamom,
Rubber and some other plantions in the western ghats
comprising R.S Nos 2,3, 3/1 and 5/1 in Sholyar village
Mannarghat Taluk of Palghat District, Kerala known as
Siruvani Group of Estate of four divisions namely, Siruvani,
Varddymalai, Elamali and Halton with the total area in its
possession being 3, 151.20 acres.
As the forest officials undertook survey over the
Company’s plantations under the Kerala Private Forests
(Vesting & Assignment) Act, 1971, which had come into force
on 10.5.1971, to locate and determine the forest area in the
estate that would vest in the State, the Company moved an
application under section 8 of the Act before the Tribunal
asserting that no portion of the land in the estate as shown
in the schedule to the application was liable to vest in the
state. An advocate commissioner was appointed by the state
as vested forests. The Advocate Commissioner in his final
report found an area of 1397.60 acres indentified as plots
nos. 1 to 69 claimed by the State as vested forests.
551
The Company thereupon amended its application showing these
69 plots as schedule ’B’ to the application. Out of the
total 3,151.20 acres 1,753.60 acres are admitted not to have
vested under the Act. Of the remaining 1, 397.60 acres,
609.91 acres are admitted to be private forest on the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 22
periphery of the Estate and hence vested under the Act.
This covers plots Nos. 11, 18, 25, 28, 30 and 63. Out of
the remaining plots, the Tribunal allowed 33 plots totalling
206.06 acres and declared total area of 1, 184.68 acres as
vested forests. Both parties preferred appeals to the High
Court which by its impugned judgment partly allowed the
appeal of the company as well as of the State. Both side
have again preferred appeals by special leave to this court.
The result of the High Court’s judgment is that the
dispute before this Court is now confined only to an area of
641.73 acres covered by plots nos.
12,13,14,15,16,26,27,29,33,36,37,38,39,40,41,44,46,50,51,55,
56,58,59,61,62,64, and 65. On behalf of the company it has
been argued that these disputed plots must be held to have
been principally used for cultivation of tea, coffee,
rubbers and cardamom etc. and for purposes ancillary
thereto; that if these plots are not exempted, the
plantation will be broken down in unity, economy and
contiguity and that the plantation must be taken as a whole
and not piece by piece or plot by plot.
The argument on behalf of the State was to emphasise
the objects and purposes of the vesting Act namely, to
distribute agricultural land to landlords,
agriculturists/labourers so as to reduce the scarcity of
such land, and not to allow few individuals to remain in
control. It was also contended that vesting Act did not use
the word ’plantation’ and therefore private forest has to be
determined on the basis of land where upon forest stands
irrespective of its size.
Keeping in view the detailed findings of the Tribunal
as well as the High Court this Court comes to the conclusion
that out of the plots which are in dispute now as pointed
out above, plot nos. 33,39,40,44,46,50,51,55,58,59 and 61
also have to be treated as not to have vested in the state
under the vesting Act. As regards the existing roads
falling within the vested areas these shall have such
margins on either side of the road as required under the PWD
rules of the state and shall be maintained and controlled by
the company. But no construction of new roads by the
company in or through the vested areas shall be permissible.
Thus in partly allowing the rival appeals by modifying the
judgment of the High Court to the extent indicated above,
this Court,
552
HELD: If the land was not private forest but plantation
under the Madras preservation of Private Forest Act and was
similarly not private forest but plantation on 10.5.1971, it
could not, without anything more, become private forest
thereafter even though it was not under the same efficient
or successful plantation as it was earlier. Whether the
plantation yielded any crop or not was not for the owners to
decide and not by the authority under the Vesting Act,
unless it did made specific provisions to cover such a
situation. We have not been shown any such provision or any
provision as to such land reverting to nature. Nature,
according to Collins English Dictonary, means all natural
phenomena and plant and animal life as distinct from man and
his creations; a Wild primitive State untouched by man or
Civilzation. According to Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary, natural vegitation means self-sown or planted;
land not cultivated; uncultivated or undomesticated plants
or animals. There is no finding as to prevalence of such a
condition in these plots.[570F-571A]
While, we are not inclined to agree that the entire
estate of the Company was required to be taken as one whole,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 22
we find it difficult to agree that wherever some forest was
found under the Company’s estate the Vesting Act would
apply. We find that M.P.P.F. Act, the Kerala Forest Act,
the Kerala Reforms Act, considered the plantations as Units
by providing that they would include the land used for
ancillary purposes as well. Therefore while applying the
Vesting Act to such plantations the same principle would be
applicable. It is on record that the estate of the Company
is divided into four divisions. In conformity with the idea
of plantations, it would be reasonable to take each division
as a Unit, subject, of course, to natural and geographical
factors. [573 A-C]
Balmadies Plantation Ltd. & Anr. v. State of Tamil
Nadu, [1972] 2 SCC 133; The Kannan Devan Hills Produce v.
The State of Kerala and Anr., [1972] 2 SCC 218; State of
Kerala & Anr. v. The Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd.
etc., [1974] 1 SCR 671; V. Venugopala Verma Rajaa v.
Controller of Estate Duty, Kerala, [1969] KLT 230; State of
Kerala v. Anglo American Direct Tea Trading Co. Ltd., [1980]
KLT 215; Malankara Rubber & Produce Co. & Ors. etc. v. State
of Kerala & Ors., [1973] 1 SCR 399; State of Kerala & Anr.
v. Nilgiri Tea Estate Ltd., [1988] (Supp) SCC 79; State of
Kerala & Anr. v. K.C. Moosa Haji & Ors., AIR 1984 Kerala 149
and Gwalior Rayons Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. v. The
Custodian of Vested Forests, Palghat & Anr., AIR 1990 SC
1747, referred to.
553
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 826 &
827-28 of 1991.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10.9.1986 of the
Kerala High Court in M.F.A. Nos. 48 & 291 of 1991.
K. Sudhakaran, Attorney General, T.S. Krishnamurthy
Iyer, A.S. Nambiar, T.R.G. Wariyar, P.S. Poti, P.K. Manohar,
Shanta Vasudevan, K.R. Nambiar, P.K. Pillai and V. Jai Kumar
for the appearing parties.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K.N. SAIKIA, J. Special leave granted.
Civil Appeal arising out of Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 7314 of 1987 and Civil Appeals arising out of
Special Leave petitions (Civil) Nos. 6837-38 of 1987 are
from common Judgment of the High Court of Kerala dated
10.9.1986 passed in MFA Nos. 48 and 291 of 1981. The
appellant Bhavani Tea and Produce Co. Ltd., hereinafter
referred to as ‘the company’ is a public limited company
engaged mainly in plantations of Tea, Coffee, Cardamom,
Rubber and other plantation crops over an extensive area in
the Western Ghats close to the border of the States of
Kerala and Tamil Nadu. On the basis of their title deeds,
the company claimed to have purchased an extent of 3273.72
acres of land, but it and only 3, 151.20 acres in
occupation. Bulk of the plantations were purchased by the
company in 1946 from M/s. B.B. Rubber Estates Ltd.,
hereinafter called ‘the vendors’, and the remaining estates
acquired in 1955 and 1956. The vendors were in possession
of 3151.20 acres of land situated in surveyed lands in R.S.
Nos. 2,3,3/1 and 5/1 in Sholayar village, mannarghat Taluk
of palghat district which belonged in ‘Jenmom’ to mannarghat
mooppil Sthanam and the vendors established the plantations
taking the same on Verumpattam lease in the year 1935. The
plantations are now known as Siruvani Group of Estates of
four divisions namely, Siruvani, Varddymalai, Elamali and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 22
Halton.
The Kerala Private Forests (Vesting & Assignment) Act,
1971 (Act 26 of 1971), hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Vesting Act’ an Act to provide for the vesting in the Govt.
private forests in the State of Kerala and for the
assignment thereof to agriculturists and agricultural
labourers for cultivation, extending to the whole of Kerala
State, received the assent of the President on 23.8.1971,
and as provided in its
554
Section 1(3) it was deemed to have come into force on the
10th day of May, 1971 which was also declared to be the
appointed day. The preamble to the Vesting Act indicated
that the private forests in the State of Kerala are
agricultural lands and the Government considered that such
agricultural lands should be so utilised as to increase the
agricultural production in the State and to promote the
welfare of the agricultural population of the State. The
statement of objects and reasons also said that the private
forests as defined in the Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963(1 of
1964) were exempt from the ceiling thereunder and that with
high density of population there was scarcity of land and it
was against the Directive Principles of State policy to
allow a few persons to be in ownership and control of these
agricultural lands. In other words, the object of the
Vesting Act was to distribute the private forest lands among
the agriculturists and agricultural labourers for
agriculture.
The forest officials having commenced survey over the
company’s plantations’ land from 28.6.1997, it approached
the Tribunal under Section 8 of the Vesting Act for a
declaration that no portion of the land in R.S. Nos. 2,3,3/1
and 5/1 in Sholayar Village, Nannarghat Taluk, Palghat
District shown in the schedule to the application was liable
to vest in the State under the Vesting Act.
The Company maintained that at the time of the Vesting
Act coming into force out of the company’s lands about 10
acres were covered by roads, 50 acres by buildings, 490.14
acres by tea plants, 700.00 acres by coffee plants, 798.56
acres by cardamom and 250 acres by rubber plantation.
Besides an area of 60 acres was maintained as windbelts and
an area of 189.50 was reserved for the purpose of firewood
meant for the preparation of rubber for the market. The
company claimed that the entire area was thus principally
cultivated with tea, coffee, cardamom and rubber and for the
purposes ancillary thereto and that total 2,338.70 acres
were utilised for plantations by the end of 1969. The
entire area having stated to have been principally
cultivated, the company claimed that no portion thereof was
covered by the exproprietory provisions of the Vesting Act.
The respondent State of Kerala stated before the Tribunal
that the plantation area in the schedule property had
already been exempted, and that only such areas as fell
within the definition of private forests in the Vesting Act,
mainly areas full of forest trees aged 20 to 100 years were
being surveyed and demarcated as vested forests. The state
also disputed the area under plantations and the areas
claimed to have been reserved for fuel and fire-wood etc. It
was also stated that in favour of the fourth
555
respondent which was a cooperative farming society 190.54
hectares of the area taken over as vested forests as already
assigned and the society got possession of that area from
out of uncultivated forest tracts for itself.
An Advocate Commissioner was appointed by the Tribunal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 22
to prepare a plan and report regarding the properties
claimed as vested forests out of the schedule land and he
submitted Exhibit C-1 plan, C-2 and C-3 interim reports and
C-4 final report. On the basis of Exhibit C-4 report the
company amended its application. The earlier Schedule was
retained as ‘A’ Schedule.
An area of 1397.60 acres (566.11 hectares) identified
as plot Nos. 1 to 69 were located by the Commissioner as
areas claimed by the respondent as vested forests and those
69 plots were included in the ‘B’ Schedule to the
application after the amendment. The controversy
thenceforth related only to some of the plots in ‘B’
Schedule.
The company examined PWs. 1 to 3 and produced documents
A1 to A24 in support of its claim, while the respondents
examined RW-1 and marked Exhibit B-1 only.
On the basis of the evidence available before it and
mainly depending upon the observation of the commissioner,
the Tribunal held that plot Nos.
2,9,12,13,15,16,24,25,29,35,48,49 and 56 had been brought
under cultivation prior to 14.12.1949, and therefore, did
not fall within the purview of the Madras Preservation of
Private Forests Act(hereinafter referred to as M.P.P.F.
Act), and therefore, held to be outside the purview of the
Vesting Act.plot Nos. 4, 5, 7, 10, 19, 20, 21, 27, 32, 34,
42, 43, 45, 47, 52, 53, 54, 57, 60, 66 and 67 were held to
be used principally for the cultivation of tea, coffee, and
cardamom and therefore were to be excluded from the purview
of the Vesting Act in view of the provisions contained in
Section 2(f) thereof. The remaining plots 1, 3, 6, 8, 11,
14, 17, 18, 22, 23, 25, 28, 30, 31, 33, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40,
41, 44, 46, 50, 51, 51A, 55, 58, 59, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 68,
and 69 were found to be not excludable under Section 2(f) or
to be exempted under Section 3 of the Vesting Act. The
Tribunal thus allowed the company to retain 206.06 acres out
of B Schedule lands as excluded/exempted from the provisions
of the vesting Act and declared total 1,184.68 acres as
vested forests under the Vesting Act.
From the Tribunal’s order both the company and the
State appealed to the High Court which by the impugned
common Judgment
556
dated 10.9.86 partly allowed the company’s MFA No. 48 of
1981 to the extent of modifying the order of the Tribunal
and declaring that plot Nos. 1, 3, 6, 8, 17, 22, 23, 31,
51A, 68 and 69 were to be excluded from vesting; and also
partly allowed the State’s MFA Nos. 291 of 1981 to the
extent of declaring that plots Nos. 12, 13, 15, 16, 26, 27,
&, 56 were to vest in the state. The result was that the
company would be entitled to retain plot Nos. 1 to 10, 17,
19 to 24, 31, 32, 34, 35, 42, 43, 45, 47, 48, 49, 51A, 52
to 54, 57, 60 and 66 to 69 totalling 144.13 acres in B
Schedule properties and the remaining plot Nos. 11 to 16,
18, 25, to 29, 30, 33, 36 to 41, 44, 46, 50, 51, 55, 56, 58,
59 and 61 to 65 would vest in the State. The High Court
also observed that out of the excluded areas less than 70
acres alone were planted areas, meaning thereby lands which
were principally used for the cultivation of tea, coffee and
cardamom under Section 2(f) (B) of the Act and that the
remaining area could be used for ancillary purposes. The
reservation for roads, water sources etc. which were in use
at that time were also allowed. The High Court also
directed:
"One existing road each to connect each of the
different blocks of plantations along the shortest
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 22
route lying along the vested areas will be allowed
to be used and maintained by the applicant at its
cost, but in roads passing through the vested
forests will be under the control of the
respondents. The existing roads providing access
from the Estate to the public road will also be
maintained by the applicant at its cost subject to
the above reservation. the present case of water
sources, streams and channels located within the
vested forests for supply of drinking water or as
source for irrigation and for supply for purposes
of the factories etc. will be preserved. The
respondents will not interfere with any such user
of these facilities."
Thus out of the total 3, 151.20 acres 1, 753.60 acres
are admitted not to have been vested under the Act. Out of
the remaining 1,397.60 acres 609.91 acres are admitted to be
private forest and hence vested under the Act. This covers
plot Nos. 11, 18, 25, 28, 30 and 63. Out of the remaining
plots, namely, 1-10, 12-17, 19-24, 26, 27, 29-62 and 64-69,
the Tribunal allowed 33 plot totalling 206.06 acres. The
High Court by the impugned order allowed 36 plots totalling
144.13 acres. The result is that excluding the plots
included in the peripheral area of virgin forests of 609.91
acres, the dispute is now confined only to following plots
totalling 641.73 acres.
557
Plot 12 27.50 acres
Plot 13 25.08 acres
Plot 14 3.67 acres
Plot 15 1.65 acres
Plot 16 3.82 acres
Plot 26 10.70 acres
Plot 27 10.58 acres
Plot 29 8.10 acres
Plot 33 16.20 acres
Plot 36 14.87 acres
Plot 37 9.63 acres
Plot 38 5.26 acres
Plot 39 6.37 acres
Plot 40 32.42 acres
Plot 41 26.32 acres
Plot 44 84.06 acres
Plot 46 5.31 acres
Plot 50 30.96 acres
Plot 51 44.11 acres
Plot 55 13.12 acres
Plot 56 24.84 acres
Plot 58 75.19 acres
Plot 59 73.03 acres
Plot 61 7.56 acres
Plot 62 23.45 acres
Plot 64 9.21 acres
Plot 65 48.72 acres
------------
Total : 641.73 acres
558
Both the company and the State of Kerala have filed
Special Leave Petition from the common order of the High
Court and are given special leave.
Both the company and the State having claimed these
plots under the provisions of the Vesting Act and the
Custodian and the Tribunal on the basis of the
Commissioner’s report and evidence adduced before it as also
the High Court having already found the facts as regards
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 22
these plots we are of the view that the scope of this Court
in this Appeal under Article 136 of the Constitution of
India is rather limited. Both Mr. Krishnamurthy Ayer for
the company and Mr. P.S. Poti for the State have argued this
case with dexterity presenting the meticulous details and
explaining the relevant statutory provisions. Mr.
Krishnamurthy emphasised that these disputed plots must be
held to have been principally used for cultivation of tea,
coffee, rubber, cardamom and cinnamon which are the crops
envisaged under the Vesting Act and for purposes ancillary
thereto. Counsel submits that if these plots were not
exempted from vesting the company’s plantations will be
broken down in untiy, contiguity and economy, and that for
deciding the area principally cultivated, the plantations
owned by the company must be taken as a whole and not piece
by piece or plot by plot as has been done in this case. Mr.
Poti emphasises the objects and purposes of the Vesting Act,
namely, to distribute agricultural land to the landless
agriculturists and agricultural labourers so as to reduce
the scarciy of agricultural land, and not to allow few
individuals to remain in control thereof. Counsel submits
that the Vesting Act even did not use the word ‘plantation’
and therefore private forest has to be determined on the
basis of land whereupon the private forest stands
irrespective of its size and there could arise no question
of the plantation of the company being treated as a whole,
and that, at any rate it was the Custodian and the
Commissioner who demarcated the plots and company has also
been arguing on plot by plot basis. In deciding these
appeals, therefore, this Court has to take the facts as
found by the courts and authorities below and examine
whether the provisions of the Vesting Act have been applied
correctly to those facts keeping in mind its objects and
purpose; and so we proceed.
Some acquaintance with the relevant laws of the place
may be instructive at this stage. The company’s plantations
are within erstwhile Malabar district. Baden Powell in Land
Systems of British India, Vol. 1 page 95 described Malabar
as "curious district on the west coast of India" and as
"source of puzzled remarks from reporters on land affairs".
Some of the unique facts about the district according to the
559
author were that there "private property’ in land had
existed, while it could not be found anywhere else and it
presented a unique history of land holding customs and the
development. When the Mysore Sultan conquered the country
the local military chiefs retained their rule over some
territorial estates and the families of the chiefs clung to
the land or part of it as landlords, calling themselves
‘Janmis’ and claiming to be, in facts absolute landlord. The
lower landholders acknowledged the ‘Janmis’ as their
superior. The reports compiled showed that "almost the
whole of land in Malabar, cultivated and uncltivated, was
private property and held by "Jemnum" (Janmam), right which
conveys full absolute property in the soil........" Thus
the janmis became the proprietors. We find mention of this
‘Jenmom’ right in the sale deeds of the company.
The meaning of the words ‘Janmam’ and Janmi’ and their
rights envisaged in Gudalur janmam Estates (Abolition and
Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1969 (24 of 1969) were
considered in Balmadies Plantation Ltd. & Anr. v. State of
Tamil Nadu, [1972] 2 SCC 133. The exclusive right to, and
herditary possession of the soil in Malabar is denoted by
word janmam which means birth right and the holder therof is
Known as Janmi, Janmakaran or Mutalalan. In other words
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 22
"Janmam" is a hereditary proprietorship in the freehold
property in Kerala. Janmam interest has been described as
proprietory interest of the landlords in lands and such a
right is described as ‘estate’ in the Constitution. This
was followed in the Kannan Devan Hills Produce v. The State
of Kerala and Anr., [1972]2 SCC 218.
The Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Vesting Act
and the definition of private forests under the Act were
examined in State of Kerala & Anr. v. The Gwalior Rayons
Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. etc. 1974 (1) SCR 671. It was
observed by Palekar, J. that the Vesting Act purported to
acquire forests land without payment of compensation for
implementing a scheme of agrarian reform by assigning lands
on registry or by way of lease to the poorer section of the
agricultural pouplation. This was done after reserving
certain portions of the forests as might be necessary for
purposes "directed towards the promotion of agriculture for
the welfare of the agricultural population or for purposes
ancillary thereto. " It was observed that extensive areas
of private forests were available in the Malabar district
which could be acquired and distributed and that the private
forest lands of Malabar district were contiguous and formed
one long belt of a mountainous terrain now forming part of
the State of Kerala. It was also observed that plantations
of tea, coffee, rubber, cardamom, cinnmon and the
560
like were grown on extensive scale in these forests and
industries had taken leases of vast areas of these forests
for those pruposes. This Court observed:
"In recent years industrialists have taken leases
of vast areas of these forests from their owners
and a fraction of the same has been brought under
cultivation by planting eucalyptus and other types
of trees useful for paper and other industries.
Large areas in these forests seem to be even now in
their pristine form but are capable of being
utilized by absorbing a large proportion of the
population by setting them on the land. These
forests, therefore, have attained a peculiar
character owing to their geography and climate and
the evidence available to us shows that vast areas
of these forests are still capable of supporting a
large agricultural population."
This Court quoted from paragraph 6 of the Judgment in
V. Venugopala Varma Rajaa v. Controller of Estate Duty,
Kerala, [1969] KLT 230: "It is well-known that the extensive
areas of different varieties of plantations that we have got
in this State were once forest land; and it is also equally
well-known that year after year large areas of forest lands
in this State are being cleared and converted into valuable
plantations. In the absence of exceptional circumstances
such as the land being entirely rocky or barren for other
reasons all forest land in this State are agricultural lands
in the sense that they can be prudently and profitably
exploited for agricultural purposes." The scheme of the
Vesting Act was also examined while upholding its validity.
The Madras Preservation of Private Forests Act 1949
(Madras ACt XXVII of 1949) which received the assent of the
Governor General on the 10th December, 1949, hereinafter
referred to as ‘the M.P.P.F. Act’, was an Act to prevent the
indiscriminate destruction of private forests and
interference with customary and prescriptive rights therein.
Under sub-section (2) of Section 1 thereof, that Act applied
(i) to private forests, in the districts of Malabar and
South Kanara having a contiguous area exceeding 100 acres.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 22
By an Explanation added thereto by Section 2(a) of the
Madras Preservation of Private Forests (Second Amendment)
Act, 1954 (Madras Act XVIII of 1954), it was explained that
nothing in this clause shall be deemed to apply to any land
which was brought under fugitive or other cultivation prior
to the 14th December, 1949 by an owner or any person
claiming under him. Thus the company’s plantations, if
cultivated before that date
561
would be excluded. The words ‘forest’ is defined in Section
2 clause (a) of the M.P.P.F. Act: "forest includes waste or
communal land containing trees and shrubs, pasture land and
any other class of land declared by the State Government to
be a forest by notification in the Fort St. George Gazette."
"Communal’ land meant any land of the description mentioned
in sub-clause (a) or sub-clause (b) of clause (16) of
section 3 of the Madras Estates Land Act, 1908. There is
nothing in evidence in the case to shown that the company’s
plantations area was a forest under the M.P.P.F. Act.
The Kerala Forest Act, 1961 (Act 4 of 1962) was an Act
to unify and amend the law relating to the protection and
management of forests in the State of Kerala and it extended
to the whole of the State of Kerala. This Act repealed the
Travancore-Cochin Forest Act, 1951 (Act III of 1952) and the
Madras Forest Act, 1882 (XXI of 1882) and the Madras Wild
Elephants Preservation Act, 1872 (Act I of 1873) as in force
in the Malabar district referred to in sub-section (2) of
section 5 of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956. The
M.P.P.F. Act in so far as it applied to Malabar district was
not repealed. The Kerala forest Act did not itself define
‘privat forest’.
The Kerala land Reforms Act, 1963 (Act I of 1964) was a
comprehensive legislation relating to land reforms in the
State of Kerala and it extended to the whole of the State.
Sub-section (7) of section 2 defined the word ‘cultivate’.
Clause (15) of section 2 defined ‘garden’ to mean land used
principally for growing cocoanut trees, arecanut trees or
pepper vines, or any two or more of the same. As defined in
clause (38) ‘nilam’ means land adapted for the cultivation
of paddy. Under clause (34) ‘malabar’ means the Malabar
District referred to in sub-section (2) of section 5 of the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956. Under clause (44)
plantation means any land used by a person principally for
the cultivation of tea, coffee, cocoa, rubber, cardamom or
cinnamon (hereinafter in this clause referred to as:
‘plantation crops’) and includes(a) land used by the said
person for any purpose ancillary to the cultivation of
plantation or for the preparation of the same for the
market........(C) agricultural lands interspersed within the
boundaries of the area cultivated by the said person with
plantation crops not exceeding such extent as may be
determined by the Land Board (or the Taluk Land Board) as
necessary for the protection and efficient management of
such cultivation. Under the Explanation, lands used for the
construction of the office buildings, godowns, factories,
quarters for workmen, hospitals, school and play grounds
shall be deemed to be lands used for the purposes of sub-
clause (a).
562
Thus under the Act ‘plantation’ has been defined to include
areas principally cultivated with plantation crops and the
lands used for ancillary purposes.
As defined in clause (47) of the Land Reforms Act,
‘private Forest’ means a forest which is not owned by the
Government, but does not include-(i) areas which are waste
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 22
and are not enclaves within the wooded areas; (ii) areas
which are gardens or nilams; (iii) areas which are planted
with tea, coffee, cocoa, rubber, cardamom or cinnamon; and
(iv) other areas which are cultivated with pepper, arecanut,
cocoanut, cashew or other fruit-bearing trees or are
cultivated with any other agricultural crop. Chapter III of
the Act dealt with restriction on ownership and possession
of land in excess of ceiling area and disposal of excess
lands. Section 81 dealt with exemptions and said that the
provisions of this Chapter shall not apply to, amongst
others, (d) private forests; (e) plantations. Section 82
prescribed the ceiling area and sub-section (6) thereof
provided that in computing the ceiling area, lands exempted
under section 81 shall be excluded. Thus the private
forests and plantations were excluded from ceiling area
under the Land Reforms Act.
The provisions of the Vesting Act which was enacted in
1971 have, therefore, to be interpreted keeping in mind the
relevant provisions of the above Acts in so far as
plantations and private forests are concerned.
‘Private forest’ as defined in Section 2 (f) of the
Vesting Act means:
"[1] in relation to the Malabar district referred
to in sub. section (2) of section 5 of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 (Central Act 37 of 1956)
(i) any land to which the Madras Preservation
of Private Forests Act, 1949 (Madras Act XXVII of
19.19, applied immediately before the appointed day
excluding-
(A) lands which are gardens or nilams and
defined in the Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963 (1 of
1964)
(B) lands which are used principally for the
cultivator of tea, coffee, cocooa, rubber, cardamom
or cinnamon and lands used for any purpose
ancillary to the cultivation of
563
such Crops or for the preparation of the same of
the market.
Explanation: Lands used for the construction of
office building, godowns, factories, quarters for
workmen, hospitals, schools and playgrounds shall
be deemed to be lands used for purposes ancillary
to the cultivation of such crops;
(C) lands which are principally cultivated
with cashew or other fruit baring trees or are
principally cultivated with any other agricultural
crop and
(D) sites of buildings and lands appurtenant
to and necessary for the convenient enjoyment or
use of, such buildings;
(ii) any forest not owned by the Government,
to which the Madras Preservation of Private Forests
Act, 1949 did not apply, including waste lands
which are enclaves within wooded areas.
(2) in relation to the remaining areas in the
State of Kerala, any forest not owned by the
Government, including waste lands which are
enclaves within wooded areas.
Explanation: For the purposes of this clause, a
land shall be deemed to be a waste land
notwithstanding the existence thereon of scattered
trees or shrubs;"
Section 3 of the Vesting Act whereunder private forests
were to vest in the Government said:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 22
"3. Private forests to vest in Government. -(1)
Notwithstanding any thing contained in any other
law for the time being in force, or in any contract
or other document, but subject to the provisions of
sub-section (2) and (3), with effect on and from
the appointed day, the ownership and possession of
all private forests in the State of Kerala shall by
virtue of this Act, stand transferred to and vested
in the Government free from all encumbrances, and
the right, title and interest of the owner or any
other person in any private forest shall stand
extinguished.
564
(2) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) shall
apply in respect of so much extent of land
comprised in private forests held by an owner under
his personal cultivation as is within the ceiling
limit applicable to him under the Kerala Land
Reforms Act, 1963 [1 of 1964] or any building or
structure standing thereon or appurtenant thereto.
Explanation. For the purposes of this sub-section,
‘cultivation’ includes cultivation of trees or
plants of any species.
(3) Nothing contained in sub-section 1 shall apply
in respect of so much extent of private forests
held by an owner under a valid registered document
of title executed before the appointed day and
intended for cultivation by him, which together
with other lands held by him to which Chapter III
of the Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963, is
applicable, does not exceed the extent of the
ceiling area applicable to him under section 82 of
the said Act.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in the
Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963, private forests
shall, for the purposes of sub-section (2) or sub-
section (3), be deemed to be lands to which chapter
III of the said Act is applicable and for the
purposes of calculating the ceiling limit
applicable to an owner, private forests shall be
deemed to be ‘other dry lands’ specified in
Schedule II to the said Act."
Section 4 of the Vesting Act provided that private forests
after being vesting in the State were to be deemed to be
reserved forests, and Section 5 provided for eviction of
persons in unauthorised occupation of any such private
forest. Section 6 provided for demarcation of boundaries of
the private forests vested in the Government by the
Custodian.
We may now take the areas in dispute as stated above
with their location and plantation. In the sketch map
Annexure D, the green coloured area is the planted area and
it was not claimed by the State.The blue coloured plots were
also excluded from vesting and were allowed to the company
by the High Court; and the remaining plots are disputed ones
and are coloured pink and violet. Mr. Poti points out that
the original sketch map was not shaded and that the water
tank and the dam were not shown therein. There is, however,
no dispute as to the colouring indications which are helpful
for identification.
565
The areas on the periphery, according to the
Commissioner, are forest area namely plot Nos. 11 (76.70
acres), 18 (28.36 acres), 25 (11.88 acres), 28 (90.79
acres), 30 (77.93 acres) and 63 (324.25 acres). The total
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 22
of this peripheral areas come to 609.91 acres. Admittedly,
these areas are virgin forests which as per the Vesting Act
vested in the State. We have no hesitation in confirming
this finding.
According to Mr. Poti, to the entire North of the
company’s estates, there are vested forests, namely, LGB
Estates, Kakkanampara Estates and Malikkal Estates which are
vested forest areas. In the Eastern isolated estates,
namely, upper Varadimullai Estates there is coffee
plantation on plot Nos. 66, 67, 68, and 69 which have been
rightly given to the company.
Regarding plots 12, 13, 15, 16, 26, 27, 29, and 56, Mr.
Krishnamurthy submits that the Tribunal on the basis of the
Commissioner’s report, Ext. C-4, found these plots to have
been cultivated prior to 1949. There were reminiscences of
the old plantations in these plots, of course they became
decayed. The Tribunal held that since these plots were
brought under cultivation prior to 1949 and the provisions
of the M.P.P.F. Act excluded these areas from definition of
private forests, they could not be held to be forests as on
10.5.1971 under the Vesting Act. The High Court, it is
submitted, has not been shown to have reversed the findings
of the Tribunal. Mr. Poti submits that these plots are
contiguous to forest areas and have rightly been given by
the High Court to the State, though the Tribunal gave those
to the company. From the map it appears that on the other
sides they are also contiguous to planted areas, excepting
plot No. 56 which though connected with vested forests by a
narrow strip, is almost surrounded by areas excluded from
vesting by the High Court. The company claimed these areas
as principally cultivated areas and not included in the
peripheral area. The High Court has held that plots 12, 13,
15, and 16 are not principally planted as cultivation has
been abandoned and the area "reverted to nature". The
conclusion that the area reverted to nature is presumably
based on the observation of the Commissioner that the
plantations were abandoned about 40 years ago as evidenced
by the presence of scattered old plants, of shade trees and
fruit bearing trees here and there such as silver oak trees,
orange trees, guava trees, dadap trees and albezia which
could not be of natural growth. The Commissioner also
observed that the condition of the estate was really
miserable due to lack of proper maintenance and the plants
were decayed or destroyed. The explantation that due to
continuous labour trouble in the previous 4 or 5 years, the
estate could not be maintained
566
properly was not accepted. For this reason the Commissioner
expressed that the forest department had treated these areas
as abandoned plantations and so vested forest and not as
areas principally cultivated for the purpose of the Act and
as according to the High Court "the area had reverted to
nature decades ago and such reversion was naturally as
forest." The High Court did not record any finding that
these areas were forests either in 1949 or on 10.5.1971.
Its legal implication was not considered by the High Court.
The Commissioner on the other hand found about plot Nos. 12
and 13 that these were old plantation areas and the plants
were aged 40 to 50 years and that almost all the plants were
senile due to old age and that there were 100 to 200 coffee
plants per acre and there were old silver oak trees and
dadap trees which were planted as shade trees. The
Commissioner also found that from plot No. 13 old coffee
plants were cut and removed by the cooperative society
people who cleared the under-growth of the area whereafter
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 22
new saplings were sprouted out of the old coffee plants cut
by the society people and there were good growth of young
plants which would start to yield. Similarly plot No. 15
was found to be an old coffee planted area with scattered
coffee plants aged 30 to 40 years and similar shade trees.
Plot No. 16 was also found to be coffee plantation.
Similarly Plots 26 and 27 were found to be old coffee
plantations. Plot no. 27 was found to be a pucca cardamom
area with plants aged 15 years, and was allowed by the
Tribunal as a cultivated area. The High Court, however,
held that it reverted to nature. Similarly, plot No. 29 was
excluded by the Tribunal as an area not covered by the
M.P.P.F. Act since they were cultivated prior to 1949 which
finding the High Court has not directly reversed. Plot no
56 was considered by the High Court with Plot No. 49, the
extent of the plots being 24.84 acres and 0.89 acres,
respectively, The Commissioner found 50 old rubber trees in
Plot 49 and 600 older rubber trees in Plot 56 and both
areas to have been neglected and abandoned and not used as a
rubber plantation for a long time and definitely not on
10.5.1971. The High Court concluded that 500 rubber trees
in an area of 25 acres would not make it "principally
cultivated with rubber". since the average number of trees
per acre, according to the publication of the Rubber Board,
is from 140 to 160 per acre (vide Manual of Rubber Planting
in India). The High Court exempted Plot No. 49, but held
Plot No. 56 liable to vest in the State. Some of these
plots having been planted and still containing old plants
and shade trees the High Court applied the theory that the
areas reverted to nature. This leads to the question as to
the meaning of forest and when, if at all, a particular
plantation may be said to have reverted to nature.
567
In Words and Phrases Legally Defined, Vol. 2, p. 269,
‘forest’ means:
"A certain territorie of woody grounds and fruitful
pastures, privileged for wilde beasts and foules of
forest, chase and warren, to rest and abide in, in
the safe protection of the King, for his princely
delight and pleasure, which territorie of ground,
so privileged, is meered and bounded with
unremovable marks, meeres, and boundaries, either
known by matter of record, or else by prescription,
and also replenished with wilde beasts of vererie
or chase, and with great coverts of vert (i.e.
green-leaved trees, bushes, etc.) for the succour
of the said wilde beasts, to have their abode in:
for the preservation and continuance of which said
place, together with the vert and venison, there
are certain particular laws, privileges, and
officers belonging to the same, meete for that
purpose, that are only proper unto a forest, any
not to any other place."
The earliest of the Forest Laws in England is said to
be the Charter of the forest which was issued in 1217 by
Henry, as mentioned in Pollock and maitland’s History of
English Law, Vol. 1, p. 179. The forestal rights of the
crown consisted essentially of the King’s rights to use the
land (forest) whether belonging to himself or another for
hunting game and for preserving the game and for preserving
the land in such a way as to give maximum shelter and free
room for the game. The Forest Laws were applied to royal
forests and were designed to protect these rights. The
medieval forest law in England has now been abrogated except
in so far as it relates to the appointments and functions of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 22
verderers. According to Mozley and Whiteley’s Law
Dictionary ‘forest’ as a legal right is defined as a right
of keeping, for the purpose of hunting, the wild beasts and
fowls of forest, chase, park and warren, in a territory or
precinct of woody ground or pasture set apart for the
purpose. According to Black Law Dictionary, ‘forest’ means:
a tract of land covered with trees and one usually of
considerable extent. It is said that in old English law a
certain territory of wooded ground and frutiful pastures,
privileged for wild beasts and fowls of forest, chase, and
warren, to rest and abide in the safe protection of the
prince for his princely delight and pleasure, having a
peculiar court and officers. Thus, treatment of a certain
extent of land as forest was implied. The fact that an
extent of land has not been so treated or declared would,
therefore, be relevant in determining
568
whether that land constituted a forest. This rule is found
to have been applied by the Kerala High Court. In State of
Kerala v. Anglo American Direct Tea Trading Co. Ltd., [1980]
K.L.T. 215 where the respondents were owners of tea estates,
the areas planted with tea had been excluded from the
operation of the vesting provision of the Vesting Act.
There were portions of tea estates where there were
eucalyptus plantations. It was claimed by the respondents
that those were areas which were required for ancillary
purposes of the tea plantations, ancillary in the sense that
the Eucalyptus trees grown in the Eucalyptus plantations
served as fuel for processing the tea for the market. There
was also a plea that the lands having been converted into
Eucalyptus plantations long before the appointed day under
the Vesting Act such areas could not be said to be forests
as on 10.5.1971 and, therfore, there was no scope for
vesting of such areas in the State. The latter plea having
been accepted by the Tribunal and consequently the area
where there were Eucalyptus plantations held not to have
vested in the State, the Custodian challenged the findings
in appeal before the High Court and the cases having related
to lands outside the Malabar District to which Section 2(f)
(2) of the Vesting Act was applicable, the State contended
that Eucalyptus plantation was a forest. The question
therefore arose whether the land which had been converted
into eucalyptus plantations could be said to be forest
within the meaning of the terms in Section 2(f) (2) of the
Vesting Act. Subramonian Poti, J. speaking for the Division
Bench consulted the dictionary meanings of forest as: "a
large uncultivated tract of land covered with trees: a
tract of woodland and open uncultivated ground","a large
tract of land covered with trees and underbush; extensive
wooded area." It was observed that the word ‘forest’ was
derived from latin foris meaning outside, the reference
being to village boundary or fence, and must have included
all uncultivated and uninhabited land. The World of the
Knowledge Encyclopaedia Vol. 10 defines ‘forest’ at page
2201 as "a circuit of wooded ground and pastures, known in
its bounds and piviledged for the abiding of wilde beasts
and fouls of forest, chase and carron to be under the King’s
protection for his princely delight." It was also found
that the Abridged Glossary of Technical Terms published by
Forest Research Institute and Colleges, Dehra Dun, page 52,
the term forest was understood as an area set side for the
production of timber and other forest produce, or maintained
under woody vegetation for certain indirect benefits which
it provided. For example, climatic or protective. It was
further observed that in the context in which the term
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 22
‘private forest’ had been used in the Act it was evident
that it applied to lands other than those
569
on which human skill, labour and resources had been spent
for agricultural operations.
In Malankara Rubber & Produce Co. & Ors. etc. etc. v.
State of Kerala & Ors., [1973] 1 SCR 399: (1972) 2 SCC 492,
it was held that lands under eucalyptus or teak which were
the result of agricultural operations normally would be
agricultural lands and not forests, but lands which were
covered by eucalyptus or teak growing spontaneously as in a
jungle or a forest, would be outside the purview of
acquisition under Kerala Land Reforms Act. In State of
Kerala & Anr. v. Nilgiri Tea Estates Ltd. [1988](supp) SCC
79, the view taken by the High Court that eucalyptus trees
planted in a tea estate for supply of fuel for the
manufacture of tea, were not covered by the vesting
provisions of the Vesting Act was upheld. There the
eucalyptus trees were raised not for a forest but for supply
of fuel necessary for the manufacture of tea which was the
industry carried on by the respondent company.
In State of Kerala & Anr. v. K.C. Moosa Haji & Ors. AIR
1984 Kerala 149. A Full Bench of the Kerala High Court
approved the observation of Poti, J. in State of Kerala v.
Anglo American Direct Tea Trading Co. Ltd. [supra] that
forest was not a term defined in the Act and that with
reference to lands in the malabar area to which the M.P.P.F.
Act applied on the appointed day the test for determination
whether the land was private forest was different and that
if the land was shown to be private forest on the date the
M.P.P.F. Act came into force it would continue to be a
private forest even if it had actually ceased to be a forest
unless one or other of the exclusions in clauses A to D in
the definition applied. it was contended therein that the
Vesting Act applied only to those lands which were forests
under the M.P.P.F. Act immediately before 10.5.1971,
inasmuch as the lands in question had ceased to be forest
having been clear-felled and as such had gone out of the
purview of the M.P.P.F. Act and consequently they were not
private forests for the purpose of the Vesting Act also.
Rejecting the contention the Full Bench held that if the
M.P.P.F. Act was applicable to the land in 1949 and if it
continued to apply to it up to 10.5.1971, that land would be
a private forest for the purposes of the Vesting Act. The
question was not whether there was a forest in existence in
1971; but was whether there was any land in 1971 to which
the M.P.P.F. Act was applicable in 1949 and continued to be
under its coverage till 1971. As the lands involved in that
case were all private forests as definded in the Act, clear-
felling and replanting were carried out with the permission
of the District Collector. It was held that
570
denudation could not be held to have put the land out of the
purview of the Act and that once the Act was applicable to
the area in 1949 nothing done by the owners of the area or
others was capable of putting an end to such applicability
to that area. We respectfully agree with this view.
The definition of private forest given in Section 2(f)
of the Vesting Act and Section 2(47) of the Kerala Land
Reforms Act were considered by K. Jagannatha Shetty, J. in
Gwalior Rayons Silk Mfg.(Wvg.) Co. Ltd. v. The Custodian of
Vested Forests, Palghat & Anr. AIR 1990 SC 1747: JT 1990 (2)
SC 130. The lands involved in that case were all forests as
defined in the M.P.P.F. Act, 1949 and continued to be so
when the Vesting Act came into force in 1971. It was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 22
observed that the definition of private forests as was
applicable to the Malabar district was not general in terms
but limited to the area and lands to which the M.P.P.F Act
applied and exempted therefrom land described under sub-
clause (A) to (D). This significant reference to M.P.P.F.
Act in the definition of private forests in the Vesting Act
made all the difference in the case. The M.P.P.F. Act was a
special enactment by the erstwhile Madras State to preserve
the private forests in the district of Malabar and erstwhile
South Kanara district. The scheme appeared to be that if
the land was shown to be private forest on the date on which
the M.P.P.F. Act came into force, it would continue to be a
forest even if there was subsequent replantation.
Accordingly it was held that the lands which were forests as
defined M.P.P.F. Act and continued to be so when the
Vesting Act came into force would continue as forests as
under that Act.
The reverse question is involved in this case, namely
if the land was not private forest but plantation under the
M.P.P.F. Act and was similarly not private forest but
plantation on 10.5.1971, it could not, without anything
more, become private forest thereafter even though it was
not under the same efficient or successful plantation as it
was earlier. Whether the plantation yielded any crop or not
was for the owners to decide and not by the authorities
under the Vesting Act, unless it did make specific
provisions to cover such a situation. We have not been
shown any such provision or any provision as to such land
reverting to nature. Nature, according to Collings English
Dictionary means all natural phenomena and plant and animal
life as distinct from man and his creations; a wild
primitive state untouched by man or civilization. According
to Shorter Oxford English Dictionary natural vegetation
means self-sown or planted; and not cultivated.
Uncultivated or undomesticated plants or animals. There is
571
no finding as to prevalence of such a condition in these
plots.
Mr. Krishnamurthy submits that the Ordinance which
preceded the Vesting Act promulgated on 10.5.1971 included
the private forests as defined in the M.P.P.F. Act. We have
seen that the Vesting Act gave two definitions of private
forest; the first was in relation to the Malabar district
referred to in sub-section (2) of section 5 of the States
Reorganisation Act, 1956 (Central Act 37 of 1956). In that
district private forest meant any land to which the
M.P.P.F. Act applied immediately before the appointed day
excluding the lands which were gardens or nilams as defined
in Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963 (Act 1 of 1964) and lands
which were used principally for the cultivation of tea,
coffee, cocoa, rubber, cardamom or cinnamon and lands used
for any purpose ancillary to the cultivation of such crops
or for the preparation of the same for the market. It is
accordingly argued that the company’s plantations did not
constitute private forest either under the M.P.P.F. Act or
under the Kerala Land Reforms Act and as such the entire
area of the company’s plantations could not have come within
the purview of the Vesting Act. We find force in the
submission to this extent, but in view of the objects and
purposes of the Vesting Act, it can not be said that there
could never be a case of such plantation land being
converted to a forest by natural growth or otherwise. It
must necessarily depend on facts.
Mr. Krishnamurthy then submits that even assuming, the
Vesting Act applied, the entire plantation area ought to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 22
taken as a unit for the purpose of ascertaining whether
there was private forest and not piece-by-piece or plot-by-
plot as has been done in this case. If the entire area is
taken as a whole, if major portion of the area was found to
be cultivated, the whole area ought to be taken as
principally cultivated area, small enclaves or patches meant
to give rest by rotation should also have been treated as
cultivated area. The entire method adopted by the
respondents, counsel submits, was wrong and has immensely
prejudiced the company’s case,
As regards the concept of reversion to forest, Mr. Poti
submits that this applied to a land where Section 2(i) of
the M.P.P.F. Act did not apply. According to him, it
applied to two categories, namely, areas of less than 100
acres and areas of abandoned cultivation, in both cases when
it was found to be forest on the appointed day i.e.
10.5.1971. There is no difficulty about the extent of less
than 100 acres, but the difficulty is with abandonment. Mr.
Poti submits that the Custodian judged by visual appearance
but the Tribunal did not notice
572
clause (2) at all. We are of the view that mere abandonment
would not convert an area into a forest, unless the owner
has decided to do so or the appropriate authority has
notified it to be so. Mere visual test would not be enough.
The decision of the owner could, of course, be expressed or
implies.
Mr. Poti submits that the definition of forest as given
in Section 2(a) is only an inclusive one. Forest includes
waste or communal land containing trees and shrubs, pastural
land and any other class of land declared by the State
Government to be a forest by Notification issued in the St.
George Gazette. Thus, according to counsel, forest has not
been defined in the Act exhaustively nor has it been defined
in the Kerala forests Act. Mr. Poti while admitting that the
Kerala Land Reforms Act exempted all plantations, submits
that the Vesting Act made drastic curtailments and that when
historically interpreted principally planted did not mean
with reference to the area but with reference to the crop
only inasmuch as the word plantation has not been used at
all in the Vesting Act and, therefore, the plantations can
not be treated as a unit but only as land and the vesting
Act is prospective and not retrospective. Counsel relied on
Gwalior Rayons Silk Mfg. (Wvg.) Co. Ltd. v. The Custodian of
Vested Forests, Palghat & Anr. (supra) and State of Kerala
v. K. C. Moosa Haji (supra). According to Mr. Poti if the
definition permitted, the area could be taken plot-by-plot
inasmuch as there could be a forest of even 1 acre only. The
size of the forest was not material, and the estate as a
unit of management is also not material, the concept of
plantation itself being absent. It is submitted that the
expression used principally for cultivation in sub-clause
(B) and "principally cultivated with" in sub clause (C) mean
the same thing. It is further submitted that if the land
which was not cultivated in 1949 might have already come
under the M.P.P.F. Act. Division into plots was done by the
Commissioner as he found these plots to have been different
and the demarcation was of compact areas with few isolated
areas, and such a demarcation was contemplated under the
Act. It was pointed out that the company also contested the
case on plot-by-plot basis. The Tribunal as well as the High
Court also proceeded on that basis. It is pointed out the
company objected to the principle of division before the
High Court but did not question the correctness of the
actual division made and hence the High Court could decide
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 22
only on plot-by-plot basis. We have no difficulty in holding
that the forest area is generally described or notified with
reference to land in forest laws. But that does not mean
that what stood on the land has to be ignored, particularly
in case of plantations which were exempted under the
M.P.P.F.Act.
573
While we are not inclined to agree that the entire estate of
the company was required to be taken as one whole, we find
it difficult to agree that wherever some forest was found
inside the company’s estate the Vesting Act would apply. We
find that the M.P.P.F. Act, the Kerala Forest Act, the
Kerala Land Reform Acts considered the plantations as units
by providing that they would include the land used for
ancillary purposes as well. Therefore, while applying the
Vesting Act to such plantations the same principle would be
applicable. It is on record that the estate of the company
is divided into four divisions, namely, Siruvani
Varadimulai, Elamali and Halton. In conformity with the idea
of plantations, it would be reasonable to take each
division as a unit, subject, of course, to natural and
geographical factors. Considered in light of the above
principles also we find that plots 13,15,16,26,27,29 and 56
form small portions of the respective divisions and can be
taken to have been principally cultivated. We accordingly
have no hesitation to exempt these plots from vesting.
However, considering the scarcity of land and the location
of plot No.12 and the fact that the Co-operative Society has
already been formed, for the ends of distributive justice
this plot should be taken to have vested in the State, so
that the road will form the boundary of the company’s
plantations.
Plot No. 14 of 3.67 acres though a forest area has
been claimed by the company as its wind-belt. Mr. Poti
submits that this plot is of high elevation but the experts
did not agree that it could serve as wind-belt. From the
sketch map, however, it is found to have been projecting
inside the plantations and that may be sufficient reason for
its special consideration. It should accordingly be exempted
from vesting.
After formulating the principles on the basis of the
case law, at one stage we were thinking of remanding the
case of the High Court for fresh determination in light of
the observations made above. However, there was the
consensus that in view of the detailed findings of the
Tribunal as well as the High Court this old pending case may
be decided by this Court itself instead of remanding it. We,
therefore, decided to do so on the basis of the materials on
record.
Plot No. 33 admeasuring 16.20 acres (6.56 hectares) was
claimed by the company as originally planted area. The
Tribunal found that at the relevant time there was no
evidence of any plantation but there were small forest trees
aged 20 years and also wild bushes and shrubs. The High
Court did not specifically referred to this plot. From the
574
sketch map it is seen that on all sides it is covered by
planted area and only to the north by forest. The company
claimed it as an enclave. There is some building, and a road
passing throughout it. It is a part of the Alamalai
Division. There is nothing to show that this plot was not
exempted under the MPPF Act as plantations. Considering all
these factors this plot has to be left as a part of the
plantation and exempted from vesting. Accordingly it is
exempted.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 22
Plot No. 36 admeasuring 14.87 acres (6.02 hectares) was
found by the Tribunal to be an uncultivated grassy waste
land with some scattered forest trees. As there is no
evidence of it ever having been planted, having forests
almost on three sides, this plot may be taken to have vested
in the State.
Plot Nos. 37 & 38 have been claimed by the company as
cardamom plantations. To the south of these plots there is a
strip of plantations. Plot No. 37 admeasuring 9.63 (3.90
hectares) was found to have been newly planted with cardamom
which the company claimed to have been replantation. Some
scattered old cardamom plants aged nearly 15 years here and
there were also found. Similarly Plot No. 38 admeasuring
5.26 (2.13 hectares) was claimed by the company as a
cardamom plantation but there were no plants. Both the plots
may, therefore, be treated together as cardamom planted area
and as such not vested in the State.
Plot no.64 extending over 9.21 acres (3.72 hectares)
contains, as found by the Tribunal, water channel through
which water from the forest area was flowing to the water
tank constructed at the end of the north channel and that
the entire water supply to the tea factory and other
residential areas of this building was through this
channel.On both sides of this channel there were some
scattered cardamom plants aged 10-15 years. The High Court
dealt it with plot Nos. 62 and 63 but did not mention about
the water channel and the plants. The findings of the
Tribunal would justify exemption of this plot from vesting
inasmuch as the water supply must be considered to be vital
for the plantations and their administration.
Plot Nos. 39 and 40 extending over 6.37 acres (2.58
hectares) and 32.42 acres (13.12 hectares) are contiguous
and through these plots passes a road. They are surrounded
on three sides by planted areas and only on one side by LGB
estates. The Tribunal found that plot No.39 was newly
planted with coffee the plants being 6 months to 1 year old.
The company stated this area to have been an old cardamom
planted
575
area and newly converted into coffee plantation. Plot No.
40 was claimed to have been a cardamom plantation and the
plants to have been destroyed by wild fire the Tribunal
found it to be a forest area with trees ages 30-40 years and
15 dadaps of equal age. There is nothing to show that this
was not an exempted area under the MPPF Act or not included
in the plantations when the Vesting Act came into force. The
High Court did not find otherwise. These two plots
accordingly have to be exempted from vesting.
The Tribunal found plot No. 41 extending over 26.32
acres (10.65 hectares) to be grassy land with only about 10
to 20 forest trees, wild bushes and undergrowth. The company
said that this area was used for fugitive cultivation by the
estate labourers. The High Court does not appear to have
specifically dealt with this plot. There having been no
plantation it was not shown to have been included as forests
under the MPPF Act. In view of the objects and purposes of
the Vesting Act it may be treated as to have vested in the
State.
Plot No. 44 extending over 84.06 acres (34.62 hectares)
was found by the Tribunal as mainly grassy hills with some
scattered trees in some portion and not cultivated. In the
High Court it was submitted by the company that there were
no forest trees in this area, that there were old tree
plantations which were destroyed, and that it was close to
the bungalow of the Managing Director, Exhibit A-19 which
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 22
was the preliminary Land Register showed that this plot was
tea area and the same was included in a re-planting scheme
sanctioned by the Tea Board. This was also said to be an
enclave within the plantations. The High Court observed that
re-planting scheme sanctioned by the Tea Board had not been
put in evidence and that the recital in Ext. A-19 by itself
could not entitle the applicant to claim exemption on he
basis that the plot was a tea area and that Ext. A-19 could
only be a record of representation of the company. It was
not denied that this plot was close to the bungalow of the
Managing Director and that there were no forest trees in
that area. It is seen to be extending far inside the
plantations in Siruvani division. There is no evidence to
show that this area was not exempted as plantation under the
MPPF Act or when the spontaneous growth of forest
thereafter. This plot cannot, therefore, be taken to have
vested in the State.
Plot No. 46 admeasuring 5.31 acres (2.15 hectares) was
claimed by the company to be an old coffee plantation
though the Tribunal found that there were no coffee plants
but there were dadaps aged 30
576
to 40 years which were planted as shade trees and some
scattered forest trees also. Neither the Tribunal nor the
High Court found the area not to have ever been planted. The
presence of the shade trees proved otherwise. It is also
located to the north of plot No.65 and well inside the
plantation and as such may be treated as an enclave. It has,
therefore, to be exempted.
Plot No. 50 is extending over 30.96 acres (12.53
hectares). The company claimed that it was coffee planted
area but subsequently the coffee plants were destroyed by
wild fire. The Tribunal found this to have been a planted
area as there were a good number of shade trees such as
dadaps which were aged about 40 years and there were a few
scattered forest trees aged 30 to 40 years and the area was
covered with bushes and wild growth. The High Court did not
exclude this area from vesting on the ground that there were
no existing specified crops without considering whether this
area was or was not excluded as plantation by the MPPF Act.
This plot is located almost at the centre of Siruvani
Division and hardly touched by peripheral plot No. 63. On
north-eastern side of this plot, number of houses have been
shown in the sketch map. This cannot, therefore, be taken
as vested in the State.
Plot No.51 is described by the Tribunal as a thin forest
area with scattered forest trees aged 15 to 20 years and no
sort of cultivation or plantation seen. Plot No. 55
extending over 13.12 acres (5.31 hectares) described by the
Tribunal as a forest area with trees aged 40 to 50 years and
not cultivated. The High Court dealt with these two plots
together. The company claimed that plot No. 55 was a part of
rubber plantation alongwith plot No.56 which have been
exempted and that both these areas were covered by
Registration No. 2 of 1964 under the Rubber Act. At the
relevant time the High court observed that the registration
survey had not been produced inspite of the statement that
the document was available for production or verification
and that neither in Ext. A-13 nor in Ext. B-1 the applicant
have claimed to have any area to be planted with rubber. The
Tribunal further observed that the balance sheet and profit
and loss accounts attached to Ext. A-13 also did not
disclose any income from rubber, and no other evidence was
produced that there was any rubber plantation. The High
Court did not arrive at any finding that this area was a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 22
forest area under the MPPF Act or at the time of the Vesting
Act coming into force. It is surrounded on all sides by
plantations and may be taken an enclave. From its location
and the claim of registration under the Rubber Act these two
areas cannot be taken to have been vested in the State.
577
The Tribunal treated plot No. 58 of 75.19 acres (30.43
hectares) and plot No. 59 of 73.03 acres (29.15 hectares)
together. The company claimed that the two plots were
regularly planted with cardamom but a good number of plants
were destroyed by the wild animals which were frequently
coming from the nearby Muthikulam Reserve Forest. But it
found that there were only scattered cardamom plants which
were 10 to 15 years. In some portions of the area there were
cardamom plants at the rate of 200-250 per acre and in
other portion only 100-150 plants per acre. There were
regular forest trees also aged some 50 years but number was
not stated. The Tribunal accordingly observed: "Though the
area is planted with cardamom, this portion of the estate is
not at all properly looked after or maintained."
The High Court dealt with plot 58,59 and 61 together
and observed that it contained some cardamom plants which
were found among regular forest trees aged about 50 years.
The cardamom plants few in number, 100-150 in some places
and 200-250 in other places and aged about 10-15 years as
against about 1,000-2,000 per acre which according to PW-3
would be an ordinary number, did not justify the claim that
these areas were exempted as cardamom plantation. Before the
High Court it was submitted for the State that cardamom was
only a plantation and it would not be found in forest, was
only a misapprehension, and that cardamom was a wild plant
found in profusion as natural growth in tropical forests.
Encyclopaedia Britanica state that "native to the moist
forests of Southern India, cardamoms may be collected from
wild plants but most are cultivated in India, Sri Lanka and
Guatemala." The High Court accordingly concluded that the
presence of a few scattered cardamom plants in thickly
wooded forests cannot, therefore, justify an asumption that
the aera is a cardamom plantation. There was no finding to
the effect that the area is a cardamom plantation. There was
no finding to the effect that this area was private forest
under the MPPF Act and when the vesting Act came into force.
These two area are no doubt adjacent to the peripheral plot
No. 63 but they extend far inside the plantation. They
cannot be said to have been forests and never brought under
plantation. The number of cardamom plants mentioned is
enough to show that these areas were not private forests
when the Vesting Act came into force nor they have become
so thereafter. These two areas, therefore, have to be
taken not to have been vested in the State.
The result is that plot Nos.33,39,40,44,46,50
51,55,58,59,& 61 also have to be treated as not to have
vested in the State under the Vesting Act.
578
As regards the exiting roads falling within the vested
areas those shall have such margins on either side of the
road as required under the P.W.D rules of the State and
shall be maintained and controlled by the company. No
construction of new road by the company in or through the
vested areas shall be permissible. Needless to say that
there shall be no restriction as to roads on the company’s
own non-vested areas.
The result is that the High Court’s Judgment stands
modified only to the above extent. The appeals of the
company and the State are partly allowed to the above
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 22
extent. We leave the parties to bear their own costs of
these appeals.
R.N.J.
Appeals partly allowed.