Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 899-900 of 2004
PETITIONER:
K. Kunhambu
RESPONDENT:
Smt. Chandramma & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/02/2004
BENCH:
Doraiswamy Raju & Arijit Pasayat
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
[Arising out of S.L.P. (C) Nos.1395-1396 of 2001]
D. RAJU, J.
Leave granted.
The above appeals have been filed against the common Order dated
21.09.2000 of a learned Single Judge of the Karnataka High Court made in
L.R.R.P. No.3817 of 1990 (filed by the appellant herein before the High Court)
and L.R.R.P. No.4033 of 1990 (filed by the first respondent herein), whereunder
the learned Single Judge, while affirming that portion of the order passed by the
Appellate Authority granting partial relief to the 1st respondent to which the
challenge was made by the appellant, also allowed the claim made by the first
respondent herein challenging the order of the Land Reforms Appellate Authority
wherein that Authority granted relief in favour of the appellant, for the remaining
extent covered by the lease under consideration.
The salient and relevant factual details necessary for appreciating the
contentions of the parties in these appeals are as hereunder: -
The lands in question comprised in Survey No.70/1(2 acres 02 cents);
Survey No.70/2 (0-72 cents); Survey No.70/8 (1 acre 70 cents); Survey No.70/9
(22 cents); Survey No.70/10 (19 cents) and Survey No.70/11 (04 cents) situated
in Bolur Village within the Mangalore Municipal Limits, Dakshina Kannada,
indisputably belonged to the first respondent and that she leased out the said
lands in favour of one P.T. Shankaran Nair for a period of ten years under a
Registered Lease Deed dated 04.03.1958 for the purpose of running a Saw Mill
under the name and style of "Mysore Saw Mill". Subsequently, the appellant
appears to have purchased the said Saw Mill as a running concern under a Deed
of Transfer dated 16.11.1968 and entered into the possession of the leased out
lands as well. Since the appellant wanted to enter into direct relationship and
obtain rent receipts also in his favour, the first respondent appears to have
executed a fresh Registered Lease Deed dated 12.09.1969 in favour of the
appellant, in which it appears a specific reference is made to the Deed of
Transfer dated 16.11.1968 for a period of ten years from 01.09.1969 to
31.08.1979. In the said Lease Deed, it has been specifically stated that the
purpose of the lease of land in dispute was for running a Saw Mill in the name
and style of "Gokulam Industries and Saw Mills" and secured undisputed
possession of the above property with liberty to carry on any other Industry or
business as may deem fit within the period of lease. Apart from conspicuous
omission or any mention to permit cultivation of any portion of the land in dispute
by the lessee, one of the Clauses stipulated that the lessees are liable to keep
the Coconut Trees in the leasehold property in proper condition and use only the
usufructs of the trees with permission to remove only such of the Coconut Trees,
which obstruct the interests of their Industry. The rent fixed also was a monthly
rental, only. There is no specific permission or provision to use any portion of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
land in question for agricultural purposes. While that be the position, the
appellant and the second respondent appear to have filed Form No.7 Application
under Section 48A before the Taluk Land Tribunal, for grant of occupancy rights
under Section 45 of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act, 1961 [hereinafter referred
as the ‘Act’] in respect of the lands, which were the subject matter of lease. The
Land Tribunal, after considering the objections of the first respondent and holding
an Inquiry into the claims, appears to have granted occupancy rights in their
favour on the view that the claimants were in lawful possession and cultivation of
the said lands as on 01.03.1974. The first respondent, who is the owner of the
lands, filed W.P. Nos. 1318/1979 and 1319/1979 before the High Court
challenging the said orders. After the amendments introduced to the Act in the
year 1986 constituting Land Reforms District Appellate Forums. The Writ
Petitions seem to have been transmitted to the Appellate Authority, Mangalore,
and the said Authority, on considering the materials on record, upheld the grant
of occupancy rights in respect of the lands in question, except 25 cents of Survey
No.70 over which the Saw Mill as such stood and therefore used for non-
agricultural purpose. Aggrieved, the first respondent, as indicated earlier,
challenged before the High Court that part of the order granting occupancy rights
in favour of the appellant and the appellant challenged that part of the order
which denied such occupancy rights in respect of 25 cents of lands, noticed
above, over which the Saw Mill building was located.
The learned Single Judge, while dealing with both the revisions, by his
common order under challenge came to the conclusion, keeping in view the
nature of the lands, the specific object and purpose of the lease, the monthly
rental provided for, the absence of any specific provision or permission to raise
cultivation and positive stipulation contained to use the property only for industrial
or commercial purposes as well as the factum of actual user of the land only for
such industrial and commercial purposes, except as to a claim made of
cultivation of a portion of the land during one particular year only in 1968-69
without any authorization or permission of the owner for cultivating or raising
Paddy, came to the conclusion that the lands in question do not satisfy the
definition ’land’ contained in Section 2 (A) (18) and that the appellant cannot be
held to be a ’tenant’ to claim or be conferred with occupancy rights as defined
under the Act in Section 2(A)(34) of the Act. In coming to such conclusion, the
learned Judge in the High Court applied the principles laid down in some of the
earlier decisions of the very Court, which, in his view, squarely applied to the
case on hand. Hence, these appeals.
Shri P. Krishnamoorthy, learned Senior Counsel for the appellant,
strenuously contended, while reiterating the stand taken for the appellant before
the Authorities below and the High Court that having regard to the relevant
provisions of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act, 1961 and the rules made
thereunder, the avowed purpose of the Legislation, the original classification of
land and the alleged cultivation claimed of a portion of the demised land, the
concurrent findings arrived at by the authorities below are well merited and that
the learned Single Judge in the High Court committed a grave error in interfering
with the orders passed by the authorities in according occupancy rights. Apart
from inviting our attention to the orders of the authorities below and the relevant
provisions of the Act, strong reliance has also been placed on the decisions of
this Court reported in State of Karnataka & Ors. Vs. Shankara Textiles Mills
Ltd. [(1995) 1 SCC 295] and Om Prakash Agarwal & Ors. Vs. Batara Behera
& Ors. [(1999) 3 SCC 231] in order to substantiate the claims on behalf of the
appellant. Per contra, Shri V. R. Reddy, learned Senior Counsel appearing for
the 1st respondent, contesting respondent, with equal force urged that having
regard to the patent mistakes committed by the authorities below in the matter of
interpretation of the relevant statutory provisions and total misdirection and
misconception of vital and relevant facts, the High Court was well justified and
necessitated to interfere with the orders of the authorities below and as such no
exception could be taken to the reasons assigned therefor by the High Court and
no infirmities whatsoever could be substantiated in the ultimate conclusions as
well, to call for any interference in these appeals. Reference was made to the
relevant clauses of the Registered Lease Deed between parties as also the
Mysore Gazette Notification dated 22.12.1960 containing final notification issued
by the Commissioner of Mangalore Municipality within whose territorial limits the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
lands in question, situated in the erstwhile Village Bolur, fell declaring these
lands, along with several other items, as Industrial Area No.6. In other respects,
the reasons, which weighed with the High Court, have also been adopted and
reiterated in support of the orders passed in favour of the 1st respondent.
We have carefully considered the submissions of the learned counsel
appearing on either side, in the light of the materials on record, the relevant
statutory provisions and the decisions brought to our notice. The Karnataka
Land Reforms Act, 1961 has been enacted to be a uniform law in the State of
Karnataka relating to agrarian relations, conferment of ownership on tenants,
ceiling on land holdings and certain other incidental and allied matters as
envisaged therein. The definition of ‘land’ as contained in Section 2(A)(18) reads
as follows:
"Land" means agricultural land, that is to say, land
which is used or capable of being used for agricultural
purposes or purposes subservient thereto and
includes horticultural land, forest land, garden land,
pasture land, plantation and tope but does not include
house-site or land used exclusively for non-
agricultural purposes" (Emphasis Supplied)
Section 2(A)(34) defines ‘tenant’ as hereunder:
"Tenant" means an agriculturist who cultivates
personally the land he holds on lease from a landlord
and includes \026
(i) a person who is deemed to be a tenant under
Section 4;
(ii) a person who was protected from eviction from
any land by the Karnataka Tenants (Temporary
Protection from Eviction) Act, 1961;
(iia) a person who cultivates personally any land on
lease under a lease created contrary to the provisions
of Section 5 and before the date of commencement of
the Amendment Act;
(iii) a person who is a permanent tenant; and
(iv) a person who is a protected tenant.
Explanation: A person who takes up a contract to
cut grass or to gather the fruits or other produce of
any land shall not on that account only be deemed to
a tenant;
A perusal of the orders of the Mangalore Taluk First Land Tribunal dated
30.11.1978 and that of the Land Reforms Appellate Authority, Mangalore, dated
26.4.1990 shows that they suffer from serious infirmities of very grave nature, in
their perception and approach as well as proper understanding of the issues
raised for consideration. That apart, they proceeded upon total misdirection of
facts relevant for the purpose by going behind records and assuming certain
facts noticed by them after disputes arose between parties as reflecting the real
state of affairs. Per contra, the learned Single Judge seems to have dealt with
the factual aspect as well in their proper perspective as the case warranted and
deserved and found to have applied the correct principles of law, as well. There
are certain indisputable facts, which not only undermine efficacy of the claim of
the appellant but also expose its hollowness besides the inherent illegalities
involved in the same. The lands in question appear to have formed part of the
Municipal Limits for a long time and even in the year 1960 came to be statutorily
notified as an Industrial Area. That explains the purpose recited in the
Registered Lease Deed dated 4.3.1958 under which the lands were let only for
running a Saw Mill and the other terms and conditions also per se would indicate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
at any rate that the same was not for any purposes related to ‘Agriculture’ or for
cultivation. After the appellant purchased the Saw Mill as a going concern also,
under yet another Registered Lease Deed dated 12.9.1969 the appellant
obtained the lease once again for running the Saw Mill in that place under the
name and style of ‘Gokulam Industries and Saw Mill’. It is common knowledge
and even judicial notice to some extent can also be taken of the fact that the Saw
Mill requires vast extent as appurtenant area also besides the actual mill building
for stacking wood and timber etc. before and after sawing. The relevant clauses
in this lease deed as well, and the fact that monthly rental was alone stipulated \026
not annual or to be payable in kind or a share of the produce, go to establish that
the purpose of the lease was merely commercial and industrial and not
agricultural or even for any cultivation. Instead of usual assessment to land
revenue, the lands were also found to have been subjected only to Municipal
Property Tax. A solitary extract which appears to have been produced relating to
one year \026 1969 showing the raising of Paddy on an extent of 1-58 acres in
Survey No.70/8 and 1 acre 24 cents in Survey No.70/1 without any permission of
the owner and that too in contravention of the lease cannot by any means be
considered either relevant or reasonably sufficient to characterize or treat the
land or the lease to be for cultivation or agricultural purposes. The varying and
nebulous stand projected as to alleged cultivation through 2nd respondent also
would belie their claims to be more borne out of desperateness to grab the land
rather than to be real. The consistent and overwhelming material disclosing the
continuous use of the land at all times for running the Saw Mill notwithstanding a
baseless or alleged winding up and closure of Saw Mill business, found to be
false and incorrect and absence of any concrete material to show actual and
regular or continuous personal cultivation confirms the position that the lands in
question were all throughout being put to non-agricultural purposes only for
decades and that the claims on behalf of the appellant to the contrary have been
rightly rejected by the High Court.
That apart, it could be seen from the definition of ‘Land’ in the Act that
though it comprehends in the first part land actually cultivated or cultivable, the
later exclusionary part of the definition, "but does not include house site or land
used exclusively for non-agricultural purposes" makes it abundantly clear that the
actual and exclusive user for non-agricultural purposes, even the land otherwise
cultivable or capable of being used for any purposes related to agriculture as
enumerated therein, would stand excluded and fall outside the purview of the
said definition in Section 2(A)(18) of the Act. When the land in question is itself
not ’land’ as defined for the purposes of the Act, there is no scope or room for
falling back up on the so called object or aim of the legislation to extend the
provisions of the Act to areas specifically left outside it against the express
legislative mandate and will, policy and intention. In addition thereto, the facts
specifically disclosed and categorically found by the High Court on the basis of
the materials on record would equally belie the claim of the appellant being a
’tenant’ as defined in Section 2(A)(34) of the Act.
The decision in Shankara Textile Mills Ltd. case (supra) has been
rendered in totally different context and circumstances and cannot lend, in our
view, any assistance to support the claims of the appellant in this case. It could
be seen from the facts of that case, the company, which owned an extent of 49
acres and 38.25 guntas was able to get only an extent of 13 acres and 32.25
guntas converted into non-agricultural land under Section 95(2) of the Karnataka
Land Revenue Act, 1964, leaving the remaining 36 acres and 6.5 guntas without
any such conversion allowing it to continue as agricultural land. When
acquisition proceedings were initiated to acquire the said land for purposes of
Karnataka Improvement Boards Act, 1996, the Company sought to claim under
Section 79B (2)(a) of the Act exemption on the ground that the entire extent in its
possession was agricultural land and as such was eligible for exemption relying
upon Section 81(1)(b)(ii) the lands having been mortgaged to Mysore State
Financial Corporation. Though the initial authority countenanced the claim and
the Appellate Authority rejected it, the Company approached successfully the
High Court and obtained relief, which came to be challenged in this Court, in that
context. The relevant observations of this Court at Paragraph 9, set out
hereinafter, as to the nature and character of the land that was really the subject
matter of consideration and the reasons which weighed with this Court to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
interfere with the order of the High Court would show that, rather helping the plea
of the appellant, it would lend support to the stand of the 1st respondent in view of
the peculiar facts of this case and the specific factual finding recorded in favour
of the 1st respondent as to the long, continuous and consistent user of the land
for non-agricultural purposes of running Saw Mill Industry. Paragraph 9 of the
decision reported in Shankara Textiles Mills Ltd. (supra) reads as follows:
"Thus the High Court has proceeded on the basis that there
is no specific finding regarding the nature and usage of the
land as agricultural and hence, the Special Deputy
Commissioner could not treat it to be an agricultural land
merely on account of the fact that permission for conversion
of the land under Section 95(2) of the Revenue Act was
sought (but admittedly not given). Secondly, it has
proceeded on the footing that the land in question does not
satisfy any of the characteristics as required under the
definition of ‘land’ in Section 2(18) of the Act, i.e., Karnataka
Land Reforms Act, investing the authorities with the
jurisdiction to take proceedings under Section 79-B of the
Act. We are afraid that the High Court has misread the facts
on record. The consistent stand taken by the authorities is
that the land was never converted for non-agricultural use as
required by the provisions of Section 95(2) of the Revenue
Act. The mere fact that at the relevant time, the land was
not used for agricultural purpose or purposes subservient
thereto as mentioned in Section 2(18) of the Act or that it
was used for non-agricultural purpose, assuming it to be so,
would not convert the agricultural land into a non-agricultural
land for the purposes either of the Revenue Act or of the Act,
viz., Karnataka Land Reforms Act. To hold otherwise would
defeat the object of both the Acts and would, in particular,
render the provisions of Section 95(2) of the Revenue Act,
nugatory. Such an interpretation is not permissible by any
rule of the interpretation of statutes. What is further, the
respondent-Company had itself filed a declaration under
Section 79-B(2)(a) of the Act stating therein that the entire
disputed land was agricultural land and had claimed
exemption from the provisions of the said Section 79-B
under Section 109 of the Act on the ground that the land was
mortgaged to the Mysore State Financial Corporation. We
are, therefore, unable to agree with the view taken by the
High Court on the point".
The land that was the subject matter of consideration by this Court in above
noted case was indisputably agriculture and in such cases of land, unless actual
conversion under Section 95(2) of the Revenue Act was sought and obtained, it
will not stand excluded from the definition in Section 2(A)(18) of the Land
Reforms Act. The provision for conversion of the user of the agricultural land for
non-agricultural purposes, as envisaged under the Revenue Act, cannot be
pressed into aid to deny or deprive the benefit of the later part of the definition of
‘land’ in Section 2(A)(18) of the Land Reforms Act to a landowner on the basis of
its exclusive user for non-agricultural purposes. In substance whereas the past
exclusive and continuous use for non-agricultural purposes becomes relevant for
extending benefit of later part of Section 2(A)(18), Section 95(2) of the Revenue
Act becomes relevant only for future conversions of an agricultural land for its
non-agricultural user. But in this case on hand even long prior to the coming into
force of the Land Reforms Act on 2.10.1965 or the Revenue Act, the land was
shown to have been used for non-agricultural purposes of running Saw Mill
Industry and by virtue of the very definition of ’land’ in Land Reforms Act which
does not seem to have been either specifically noticed or considered in the
earlier case, no exception could be taken to the decision of the High Court,
according relief to the 1st respondent by sustaining her claim.
The decision reported in Om Prakash Agarwal & Ors. (supra) also has
no relevance, in that the very issue as to the character of the land and whether
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
the said land answers the description and definition of ’land’ in Section 2(14) of
the Orissa Land Reforms Act, 1960, itself has been remitted for consideration
afresh by the Competent Authority in the absence of any evidence on record to
adjudicate the same, with opportunity to lead evidence, and the appeal before
this Court was against such a remand order only. The general observations
made without any particular reference to the meaning or ambit of the definition
can be of no assistance to the appellant in this case when, under the definition of
the Karnataka Act, the exclusive user of the land for non-agricultural purposes
has the inevitable consequence of excluding such land from the purview of the
very definition engrafted in Section 2(A)(18) for the purposes of the Act.
For all the reasons stated above, we see no merit in the above appeals,
which we direct, shall stand dismissed, with no costs.