Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PEDDINTI VENKATA MURALIRANGANATHA DESIKA IYENGAR & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVERNMENT OF ANDHRA PRADESH& ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/01/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
HANSARIA B.L. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 966 1996 SCC (3) 75
JT 1996 (1) 234 1996 SCALE (1)298
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
K. Ramaswamy, J.
The petitioners are challenging the constitutionality
of Explanation II to Section 2(22) and Section 76 of the
Andhra Pradesh Charitable and Hindu Religious Institution
and Endowments Act, 1987 [30 of 1987] [for short, "the Act"]
in this writ petition, apart from other provisions of the
Act challenge to which is decided in other connected
matters. In this case we confine our consideration to the
validity of the above provisions. It is contended in the
writ petition and argued by Shri R. Venugopal Reddy, their
learned senior counsel, that ryotwari pattas having been
granted under the Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Area) Inams
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act [37 of 1956]
[for short, "the Inams Abolition Act"] and the same having
attained finality, the legislature is devoid of power under
the Act to set at naught the effect of the grant of ryotwari
patta to the archakas, service holders or employees covered
under the Act by a legislative side-wind. It is their
case that by grant of ryotwari patta in favour of the
aforesaid persons, they became absolute owners of the
property. The legislature, therefore, is devoid of
competence to make the law, employing non obstante clause,
to take away their vested rights without compensation. Shri
P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel for the State, contended
that since the legislature abolished hereditary rights of
archakas, service holders or other employees and introduced
payment of salary for them, the legislature is competent to
enact Section 76 and explanation II to the definition of
’endowment’ under Section 2(22), divesting their title
and vesting the same in the endowment or institution as
the case may be.
Section 2(22) of the Act defines religious
endowment thus:
"2(22) - ’religious endowments’
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means property (including movable
property), and religious offerings
whether in cash or kind, given or
endowed for the support of a
religious institution or given or
endowed for the performance of any
service or charity of a public
nature connected therewith or of
any other religious charity; and
includes the institution concerned
and also the premises thereof.
Explanation II :- Any Inam granted
to an archaka, service holder or
other employee of a religious
institution for the performance of
any service or charity in
connection with a religious
institution shall not be deemed to
be a personal gift to the archaka,
service-holder or employee,
notwithstanding the grant or
ryotwari patta to all archaka,
service holder or employee under
the Andhra Pradesh (Andhra Area)
Inams (Abolition and Conversion
into Ryotwari) Act, 1956 but shall
be deemed to be a religious
endowment."
A reading of the section would show that religious
endowment means property including movable property
given or endowed for the support of a religious
institution or given or endowed for the performance of
any service or charity of a public nature connected
therewith or of any religious charity and includes the
institution connected and also the premises thereof,
Any inam granted to an archaka, service holders or
other employees of a religious institution for the
performance of any service or a charity in connection with
the institution shall be deemed to be a personal gift to the
archaka, service holders or employee, notwithstanding the
grant of ryotwari patta to all archakas, service holders or
employees under the Inams Abolition Act, but shall be deemed
to be a religious endowment. Section 76 of the Act reads
thus:
"76.Prohibition of transfer of
lands granted for rendering service
to a religious or charitable
institution or endowment:
(1) Where, before or after the
commencement of this Act, any
person has been granted a ryotwari
patta in respect of any inam land
given to a service holder or other
employee of a charitable or
religious institution or endowment
for the purpose of rendering
service to the institution or
endowment then, notwithstanding to
the contrary in any other law for
the time being in force or in the
deed of grant or of transfer or
other document relating to such
land it shall be and shall be
deemed never to have been granted
and the lands covered by such
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ryotwari patta shall not be
transferred and shall be deemed
never to have been transferred and
accordingly no right or title in
such land shall vest in any person
acquiring the land by such transfer
and a ryotwari patta in respect of
such land shall be deemed to have
been granted in favour of the
institution or endowment concerned
and thereafter the person in
possession of such load shall be
deemed as an encroacher and the
provisions in Sections 84 and 85
and shall apply.
(2) No ryotwari patta holder in
respect of the aforesaid land shall
transfer any such land and no
person shall acquire any such land
either by purchase, gift, lease,
mortgage, exchange or otherwise.
(3) Any transfer or acquisition
made in contravention of the
provisions in sub-Section (1) or
sub-Section (2) shall be deemed to
be null and void.
(4) The provisions of Section shall
apply to any transaction of the
nature referred to in sub-Section
(2) in execution of a decree or
order of a civil court or any order
or any other authority."
Section 76, as amplified by its marginal note indicates
prohibition of transfer of land granted for rendering
service to a religious or charitable institution or
endowment. Sub-Section (1) adumbrates that where, before or
after the commencement of the Act any person has been
granted a ryotwari patta in respect of any inam land given
to a service holder or other employee of a charitable
institution or endowment for the purpose of rendering
service to the institution or endowment, notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law for the time being
in force or in the deed of grant or of transfer or other
documents relating to such land and shall be deemed never to
have been granted and the lands covered by such ryotwari
patta shall not be transferred and shall be deemed never to
have been transferred. Accordingly, no right or title in
such land shall vest in any person acquiring the land by
such transfer and a ryotwari patta in respect of such land
shall be deemed to have been granted in favour of the
institution or endowment concerned. Thereafter, the person
in possession of such land shall be deemed as an encroacher
and the provisions of Sections 84 and 85 of the Act shall
apply. Equally, sub-Section (2) issues an injunction against
the holder of ryotwari patta to transfer such land. The
purchaser or a person acquiring such land either purchase,
gift, lease mortgage, exchange or otherwise acquires no
title such land. Such a transfer was declared null and void
by operation of sub-Section (3). Even an order or decree of
a civil court or any order of any other authority would also
meet the same fate by operation of sub-Section (4) thereof.
The competency of the legislature to make this law, its
deep impact on vested rights and its sweep would be properly
gazed and appreciated when we would look into the provisions
of the Inams Abolition Act which is a part of agrarian
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reform forming part of the scheme to abolish an estate and
conferment of ryotwari patta on the tiller of the soil and
the institution respectively and creation of direct
relationship of him with the State paying revenue assessment
thereof. The Inams Abolition Act was enacted under Entry 18
of List II of the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution,
viz., "Rights in or over the land, land tenure including the
relationship of the landlord and the tenant, transfer and
alienation of agricultural lands etc." The preamble of the
Inams Abolition Act envisages "an Act to abolish and convert
certain inam lands into ryotwari lands". The title of the
Act itself indicates abolition of the inam lands and
conversion thereof into ryotwari lands. The Act had come
into force on December 14, 1956 and it has been amended from
time to time. Similar provision is available in Telangana
area of Andhra Pradesh. Section 2(c) defines "Inam lands" to
mean any land in respect of which the grant in inam has been
made, confirmed or recognized by the government etc. Section
2(e) defines ’institution’ to mean a religious or charitable
or an educational institution. Section 3 authorises the
Tehsildar either suo motu or on an application to determine
the nature of the lands, after enquiring (i) whether a
particular land in his jurisdiction is an inam land; (ii)
whether such land is in ryotwari, zamindari or inam village;
(iii) whether such land is held by any institution. The
procedure in that behalf has been provided in sub-sections
(2) and (3) of Section 3 and the aggrieved person or
institution has been given right of appeal under sub-section
(4) against the decision of the Tehsildar to the Revenue
Court within prescribed limitation therefore. Under sub-
section (5) the decision of the Revenue Court shall be
final. The decision of the Tehsildar or Revenue Court is
required to be published in the District Gazette under sub-
section (6) and also in any other prescribed manner. The
decision of the Tehsildar and the Revenue Court shall be
binding, by operation of sub-section (7), on all persons and
institutions claiming an interest in any such lands
notwithstanding that such person or institution has not
filed any application or a statement or adduced any evidence
or appeared or participated in the proceedings before the
Tehsildar or the Revenue Court, as the case may be. After
publication, under sub-section (6) of Section 3, the
Tehsildar has been invested with power under Section 4 to
convert inam land into ryotwari land, The person or
institution or the tenant in occupation is declared entitled
to ryotwari patta in respect of that land, The institution
is entitled to 2/3 and the tenant or a person or the inamdar
is entitled to l/3rd share of ryotwari patta. Therefore, the
person, inamgar or an institution who holds the land is
entitled to 2/3 and 1/3 share of ryotwari patta
respectively. It has been held by the Andhra Pradesh High
Court that archakas in possession of land under terms of
compromise to render service cannot be regarded as inamdar
and cannot obtain patta vide Sri Janardhanaswamy Veru
Temple, Kopperapadu, Ongole Taluk, Guntur District,
represented by its Nanaging Trustee vs. The Assistant
Collector, Guntur District & Anr. [(1964) 2 An. W.R. 139].
Section 5 empowers re-induction of tenants who were in
occupation of the inam land in inam villages as on 7th
January, 1984 but were evicted from such land before the
commencement of the Inams Abolition Act and were entitled to
ryotwari patta. Section 6 deals with the determination of
1/3 share of inam land in the occupation of the tenants,
Section 7 deals with the grant of ryotwari patta and has
material bearing on the question under consideration.
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It reads thus:
7. Grant of ryotwari patta :- (1).
As soon as may be after
commencement of this Act and
subject to the provisions of sub-
Section (4), the Tehsildar may suo
motu and shall, on application by
a person or an institution, after
serving a notice in the prescribed
manner on all the persons or
institutions interested in the
grant of ryotwari pattas in respect
of the inam lands concerned and
after giving them a reasonable
opportunity of being heard and
examining all the relevant records,
determine the persons or
institutions entitled to ryotwari
pattas in accordance with the
provisions of Section 4 and grant
them ryotwari patta in the
prescribed form.
(2) Any person or institution
aggrieved by the grant of a
ryotwari patta by the Tehsildar
under sub-Section (1) may appeal to
the Revenue Court within sixty days
from the date of such grant, and
the Revenue Court may, after giving
the parties to the appeal a
reasonable opportunity of being
heard pass such orders on the
appeal as it thinks fit.
(3) The decision of the Revenue
Court under sub-Section (2), and
there no appeal is filed, the
decision of the Tehsildar under
sub-Section (1), shall be final.
(4) Where the Revenue Court
declares under sub-Section (2) that
a person or an institution
different from the person or
institution to whom a Tehsildar has
granted a ryotwari patta under sub-
Section (1) is entitled to a
ryotwari patta the Tehsildar shall
cancel the ryotwari patta granted
by him and grant a fresh ryotwari
patta in accordance with the
decision of the Revenue Court under
sub-Section (2).
(5) In the case of inam lands held
by the inamdar other than an
institution in an inam village, if
an application is filed under sub-
Section (2) of Section 5 within the
period specified in that sub
Section, no tenant or inamdar shall
be granted a ryotwari patta under
sub-Section (1) until the decision
of the Revenue Court under sub-
Section (3) of Section 5 or of the
Collector under sub-Section (5) of
that Section, as the case may be,
is given."
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Section 8 gives right of permanent occupancy to the
tenant in inam land held by the institution in inam villages
with the words "said right shall be heritable and shall be
transferable by sale, gift or otherwise." Sub-Section (2) of
Section 8 deals with eviction of permanent tenants for
failure to pay the rent and the procedure thereof. Section 9
deals with procedure for evicting the tenant having right of
permanent occupancy and re-grant of lease of lands taken
from tenant under Section 9 is governed by Section 10.
Section 10A deals with application of the Act to inam land
in ryotwari or zamindari villages. Section 10B deals with
conferment of ryotwari patta on transfers of unenfranchised
inams. Section 11 makes the provisions of the Andhra Tenancy
Act, 1956 or the Act amended thereafter, applicable to the
lands held by the permanent tenants under the Act. Section
12 prescribes the procedure and imposes liability on every
person or institution receiving ryotwari patta to pay to the
Government ryotwari assessment in the manner specified
thereunder. Section 14 bars jurisdiction of the civil
court over the matters covered as enumerated therein
and Section 13 gives power of the civil court to the
Tehsildar, Revenue Court and the Collector as indicated
therein. Section 14A provides a revisional jurisdiction to
the Board of Revenue over the orders passed by the
Tehsildar, Revenue Court or the Collector, as the case may
be. Sub-Section (2) prohibits exercise thereof except on
compliance with the principles of natural justice
adumbrating that no order prejudicial to any person shall be
passed under sub-Section (1) unless such person has been
given an opportunity of making his representation. Section
15 also has a bearing on the question in issue which reads
thus:
"Act to override other laws :-
Unless otherwise expressly provided
in this Act the provisions of this
Act and of any- orders and rules
made thereunder shall have effect
not withstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in
any other law for the time being in
force or any instrument having
effect by virtue of any such law."
Section 16 gives power to the Government to remove
difficulties and Section 17 accords rule making power.
It would thus be clear that the provisions of the Inams
Abolition Act are a complete code in itself providing
determination of the land whether held by the institution or
the individual and declaration thereof, entitlement to
ryotwari patta by the individuals or institution who hold
the land and the grant of ryotwari patta under Section 7
shall become final unless the same is revised under Section
14A of the Act. The inam ceases to have effect from the date
of grant of ryotwari patta. The conferment of ryotwari patta
creates a vested right to the property held either by the
institution or the individual to the extent of 2/3 and 1/3
respectively with absolute right, title and interest in the
land. The tenant in occupation is also entitled to heritable
occupancy rights with right to alienate, exchange, gift etc.
Thereafter, the pre-existing rights and liabilities of inam
ceased.
In Boppudi Punniah & Ors. v. Sri Lakshmi Narasimhaswamy
Varu & Ors. [(1963) 2 A.W.R. 214], the applicability of the
Act to service inams held by office holders enjoying the
inams and the right to grant of ryotwari patta had fallen
for consideration. The Division Bench, after an exhaustive
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review of the Act, held that service inams formed a
considerable proportion of inams in the Andhra area, be it
in ryotwari or zamindari area. There is no justification
for attributing ignorance to the legislature of the
existence of this class of inams. There is, therefore,
no reason to suppose that the legislature thought of
keeping out of the purview of the Inams Abolition Act
this class of inams, especially then the intendant of
the Act was to abolish and convert inam lands into
ryotwari lands. The absence of a provision enabling
the authorities concerned to insist upon performance of
service could not lead, to the conclusion that all
service inams were excluded from the purview of the
enactment. Service inams also must be held as inams
governed by this enactment. The ryotwari patta should,
therefore, be held to have been issued to the service
holders.
Another Division Bench of the High Court to which one
of us (K.Ramaswamy, J.) was a member in Sri
Bhavanaravanaswami Vari Temple v. Chintapudi Rudraiah [AIR
(1986) 1 A.L.T. 444], after exhaustive consideration of the
controversy, had held that a conjoint reading of Section 7
and Form VIII and Section 12 would posit that on and from
the date of the grant of the ryotwari patta, the inam
extinguishes. The grantee becomes absolute owner. He is
liable only to pay ryotwari assessment to the Government. No
condition has been fastened therein making the grantee
render service to the respondents. There is presumptive
evidence that the legislature is aware of the pre-existing
law and it intendant to bring about alteration in the pre-
existing liability by putting an end thereto and created new
rights under the Act. The Act intended to extinguish the
pre-existing vestige of obligation to render service running
with the land and relieved the holder of the land from the
said obligation. The vested rights, therefore, cannot be
divested except in accordance with the procedure established
by law. Section 15 gives over-riding effect over the Act
though it is inconsistent with any other law or any
instrument having force of law by virtue of any such law.
The question that arises is: Whether the legislature,
by a side-wind, without suitably amending the Inams
Abolition Act, as interpreted by the High Court, or
repealing it, could directly nullify the said law laid by
the Court and divest, under Section 76 of the Act, the
vested right and declare that the land was not covered by
said ryotwari patta or shall not be transferred or shall be
deemed never to have been transferred thereunder and would
treat such persons as encroachers? It is seen that the inam
Abolition Act is a complete code in itself and gives over-
riding effect to any law inconsistent therewith creating
vested rights over the former inam lands which ceased to
exist on the grant of ryotwari patta. Being a ryoti land
held by a tenant, an archaka, a service holder or other
employee after grant of ryothwari patta, holds the land with
absolute right to the extent of 1/3 land as an independent
and absolute owner. The pre-existing relationship, in
relation to the land stood terminated and direct
relationship with the Government was created by imposition
of ryotwari assessment. Section 12 fastens the liability to
pay ryotwari settlement to the Government. Thereby, the
whole of inam service existing prior to the grant of
ryotwari patta ceased to have any statutory effect. The
liability to render service ceased. Thereby independently,
the service holder became entitled to hold the land in his
own right as a holder of land held by him with absolute
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right, title and interest in the said land and to enjoy
the property with heritable rights or right to
alienation, gift over, bequeath etc. The Act did not
make any direct attempt to repeal the provisions of the
Inams Abolition Act. It did not directly attempt to
extinguish the right, title and interest of ryotwari
settlement created under the lnams Abolition Act nor
acquired the same under the Act.
The question, in that scenario, which emerges
is whether Section 76 is a valid piece of legislation,
indirectly repealing the Inams Abolition Act or the
judgments of that High Court referred to hereinbefore.
It is settled law that repeal of an Act divesting
vested rights is always disfavored. Presumption is
against repeal by implication and the reason is based
on the theory that the legislation, while enacting a
law, has complete knowledge of the pre-existing law on
the same subject matter. In the "Principles of Statutory
Interpretation" by Justice G.P. Singh, (5th Edition) 1992 at
pages 186-87 under the caption "Reference to other
statutes" in Chapter IV (External Aids to Construction) it
has been stated that "a legislation proceeding upon an
erroneous assumption of the existing law without directly
amending or declaring the law is ineffective to change the
law. "The beliefs or assumptions of those who frame Acts of
Parliament cannot make the law" and a mere erroneous
assumption exhibited in a statute as to the state of the
existing law is ineffective to express an "intention" to
change the law; if, by such a statute, the idea is to change
the law, it will be said that "the legislature has plainly
missed fired". The "legislation founded on a mistaken or
erroneous assumption has not the effect of making that the
law which the legislature had erroneously assumed to be so."
The court will disregard such a belief or assumption and
also the provision inserted in that belief or assumption. A
later statute, therefore, is normally not used as an
aid to construction of an earlier one."
In Sarwan Singh & Anr. v. Kasturi Lal [(1977) 2 SCR
421], the facts were that Section 19 of the Slum Area
Improvement and Clearance Act, 1956, with a non obstante
clause, provided overriding effect to any other law being
enforced in slum area. No person except with the previous
permission in writing of the competent authority could
institute any suit or proceeding for obtaining any decree or
order for eviction of a tenant from any building in slum
area. The procedure in that behalf had been provided.
Chapter IIIA of the Delhi Rent [Control] Act was enacted.
Section 14A, 25A, 25B and 25C were brought on statute.
Section 14A with non obstante clause, empowered the landlord
to require his own building for residential accommodation
when he was asked to vacate the land allotted by the
Government. The question arose: which of the two provisions
occupying the same field, would prevail? At page 433, this
Court held that speaking generally, the object and purpose
of a legislation assume greater relevance, if the language
of the law is obscure for resolving inter se conflicts.
Another test may also be applied, though the persuasive
force of such a test is one of the factors which combine to
give a similar meaning to the language of the law. The test
is that the latter enactment must prevail over the earlier
one in the case of conflict. Accordingly, it was held that
when two or more laws operate on the same field and each
contains a non obstante clause, case of conflicts has to be
decided with reference to the object and purpose of the law
under consideration. In that case, the landlord who was in
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Government house was directed to vacate the house. Special
procedure in Chapter IIIA was provided to mitigate the
hardship to the landlord and to have eviction of his tenant
from a premises situated in slum area for his personal
occupation. To give effect to the legislative object, in
view of the conflict by employing double non clause in the
respective provisions occupying the same field, this Court
had given effect to legislative intention by harmonious
interpretation of both provisions by reconciling the two
inconsistent provisions and held that the landlord was
entitled to evict his tenant under Section 14A, despite the
special protection given under the Slum Improvement Act.
The ratio has no application to the facts situation.
The provisions in the Delhi Rent Act are procedural format
for evicting a tenant from a building situated in a slum
area covered by the Rent Act. But the Inams Abolition Act
occupies an entirely different field and has given absolute
right, title and interest over the land held by an archaka,
service holder or employee etc. Section 76 of the Act by
indirect process, without directing repeal of the Inams
Abolition Act or divesting the title, which became final
after conjunction into ryotwari land, attempted to defeat
them.
In The Income-tax Officer, Kanpur & Ors. v. Mani Ram &
Ors. [AIR 1969 SC 543 at 548 para 8], this Court had held
that, generally speaking, a subsequent Act of Parliament
affords no useful guide to the meaning of another Act which
came into existence before the later one was framed. Under
special circumstances, the law does, however, admit of a
subsequent Act to be resorted to for this purpose but the
conditions under which the later Act may be resorted for the
interpretation of the earlier Act are strict; both must be
laws on the same subject, and the part of the earlier Act
which is sought to be construed must be ambiguous and
capable of different meanings. In Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. Dowdalls O’Mahoney and Co. Ltd. [1952 AC
401], Lord Radcliffe had held that the beliefs or
assumptions of those who frame Acts of Parliament cannot
make the law. In Nalinikant Ambalal Mody v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay [AIR 1967 SC 193 at 203], this Court
further had reiterated that an Act of Parliament does not
alter the law by merely betraying the erroneous opinion of
it. In Hariprasad Shivshanker Shukla & Anr. v. A.D. Divelkar
& Ors. [AIR 1957 SC 121 at 131], a Constitution Bench
construing the effect of two enactments and the meaning to
be assigned to the word ’retrenchment’ or a closure of an
establishment on the point of Parliamentary exposition had
held that the earlier enactment was preferred to the latter
enactment covered under the Industrial Disputes Act; so,
Industrial Disputes [Amendment and Miscellaneous Provisions]
Act [36 of 1956] was preferred to the Industrial Disputes
[Amendment] Act [41 of 1956].
It would thus be clear and we hold that without
amending the law under Inam Abolition Act and without
properly removing the foundation of the judgments rendered
by the High Court, the legislature sought to destroy the
effect of the law in Inam Abolition Act on erroneous belief
or assumption that it did not bind the religion or
charitable institutions or endowment or that the holder of
land did not acquire title or no patta was granted to him
and the land was still with the institution and treated the
occupant as encroacher. The legislation founded on such an
erroneous assumption does not have the effect of depriving
the holder of the land of their vested rights acquired under
the Inams Abolition Act. The legislature has plainly
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misfired. Accordingly, we hold that Section 76 and
Explanation II to Section 2(22) of the Act to that extent
are invalid and unconstitutional.
The writ petition is accordingly allowed, but, without
costs.