Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HIRALAL AGRAWAL, ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMPADARATH SINGH & ORS., ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/07/1968
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 244 1969 SCR (1) 328
ACT:
Bihar Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition
of Surplus Land) Act (12 of 1962), s. 16, Bihar Land Reforms
(Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition of Surplus Land)
Rules, 1963, r. 19, and Indian Registration Act (16 of
1908), s. 47-Transfer of property, when Complete-
Entertaining application’ meaning of R. 19, whether
mandatory or directory.
HEADNOTE:
The owner of a certain land executed a sale deed on 9th
October, 1964 conveying the land to the first respondent and
the sale deed was tendered for registration. On 14th
November, 1964, the appellant obtained from the registering
authority a certified copy of the sale deed, tendered. On
26th November, he filed an application under s. 16(3) of the
Bihar Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition
of Surplus Land) Act, 1962, in the office of the Collector,
claiming to be entitled, as a co-sharer, to a right of
reconveyance of the land. He annexed to his application the
certified copy of the sale deed, a copy of the challan
evidencing his having deposited the sale price and the
additional sum of 10% thereof in compliance with the proviso
to s. 16(3) (i) and r. 19 of the Bihar Land Reforms
(Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition of Surplus Land)
Rules, 1963. On 30th November, the sale deed was re-
gistered. On the same day, the Collector, on being
satisfied that the application was proper, ordered
possession to be given to the appellant under s. 16(3) (ii),
pending disposal of the application. Thereafter, the
Collector passed his order holding that the appellant was
the cosharer of the vendor, that he was entitled to the
right of reconveyance, and directed the transferee (the
first respondent) to reconvey the land in appellant’s
favour. The Commissioner upheld the order, but the Board of
Revenue set it aside. The appellant’s writ petition for
quashing the Board’s order was dismissed by the High Court.
In appeal to this Court, on the question : )"ether the
Collector had no jurisdiction to entertain the application,
because, (1) registration of the sale deed was not,
completed on the date of filing the application and
therefore, the transfer not having taken place on that date,
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the application was premature; and (2) the application was
not maintainable as it was accompanied only by a certified
copy of the sale deed tendered for registration and not by a
copy of the registered sale deed as required by r. 19.
HELD : (1) The right of reconveyance had not accrued to the
appellant on 26th November, 1964, the date of presentation
of his application. because, the sale was, completed only
when ’registration of the sale deed was completed as
contemplated by s. 61 of the Registration Act, that is, on
30th November. Merely because under s. 47 of the
Registration Act the transferee’s title related back to 9th
October, 1964, the date of execution of the sale deed, it
could not be said that the transfer itself must. be deemed
to have been completed on 9th October. [336 C-E]
Ram Saran Lal v. Mst. Dominikuer, [1962] S.C.R. 474, Radha-
kishan L. Toshniwal v. Shridhar, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 248 and
Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh, [1959] S.C.R. 878,
followed.
329
But a mere presentation of the -application in the sense of
the appellant having handed it over to some subordinate in
the collector’s office could not mean that it was
entertained by the Collector on that date. It could not
therefore be contended by the respondent that the Collector
had entertained the application either on the 26th when it
was taken by the appellant to the collector’s office or on
the 28th when some subordinate in the office made an
endorsement on it that it should be placed before the
Collector. The Collector took cognizance of it only on 30th
November when it was placed before him. Since registration
of the sale deed and therefore the transfer had both become,
complete on that date, the Collector had jurisdiction to
entertain the application on that date and pass appropriate
orders. [337 B-E]
(2) Rule 19 provides that the application under s. 16(3)
should be made in a particular form, that the applicant has
to deposit the purchase money together with 10% thereof in
the appropriate treasury and that a copy of the challan
showing the deposit together with a copy of the registered
deed, shall be filed along with the application. But the
rule does not lay down the consequence of non-compliance
with the provisions. The deposit in the relevant treasury,
the applicant’s readiness and willingness to have the land
reconveyed to him on the same terms and conditions as in the
sale deed, and the, completed transfer are conditions pre-
cedent to the applicant acquiring the right of reconveyance
and to the Collector’s jurisdiction to try the application.
But the prescription as to annexing a copy of the registered
deed is not mandatory but only directory. [340 E-H]
In a case where there is no express mention of the
consequence of non-compliance with a statutory declaration,
no rule can be laid down for determining whether the
requirement is a mere direction involving no invalid
consequence, or is an imperative mandate with an implied
nullification for disobedience, except, that it depends on
the scope and object of the enactment. The object of s.
16(3) is to secure consolidation by giving a right of
reconveyance to a co-sharer or a raiyat of an adjoining area
so that the land can be used in the most advantageous manner
and to prevent fragmentation; and that of r. 19 is to enable
the Collector to ascertain the purchase price., the terms
and conditions of the sale, the readiness and willingness of
the applicant to have the land reconveyed to him on the same
terms and conditions as in the, sale deed and that the
requisite deposit had been made in the treasury. The
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purpose of pressing that a copy of the registered deed
should accompany the application is that if such a copy is
before the Collector there would be no scope for any
controversy about the transfer, the sale price and the terms
and conditions. But if this information is before the
Collector otherwise, and the Collector is satisfied, failure
to annex the copy of the registered deed cannot be fatal to
the application. Further, s. 16 of the Act fixes three
months from the date of registration as the period of
limitation for making the application, but, if the
registering authority does not furnish the copy of the
registered deed within that period and if the requirement of
annexing the copy is held to be mandatory, the applicant
would be deprived of his statutory right of reconveyance.
[337 -H; 338 A-B; 339’ F-H]
In the present case, the fact that a copy of the registered
deed was not annexed to- the application was not fatal to
the application, nor did such omission deprive the Collector
of his jurisdiction to entertain it, because, annexing a
certified copy of the sale deed when a copy of the
registered deed was not available on account of the process
of registration not having been completed was sufficient
compliance with the directory prescription
330
as it furnished the information necessary for the Collector
to proceed with the application.
Buland Sugar Co. v. Municipal Board, [1965] 1 S.C.R. 970,
followed.
Bellamy v. Saull. [1863] 32 L.J.Q.B. 336 and King v.
Lincolnshir Appeal Tribunal; Ex-Parte, Stubbins, [1917] 1
K.B. 1, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1244 to
1246 of 1968.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order, dated
March 20, 1968 of the Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. Nos. 115
to 117 of 1967.
S. T. Desai and R. C. Prasad, for the appellant (in all
the appeals).
M. K. Nambiar, D. P. Singh and Naginder Singh, for respon-
dent No. 1 (In C.As. Nos. 1244 and 1246 of 1968) and respon-
dents Nos. 1 and 2 (in C.A. No. 1245 of 1968).
K. M. K. Nair, for respondents Nos. 3 (in C. A. No. 1244
of 1968).
E. C. Agarwala, for respondents Nos. 5 and 6 (in C. A. No.
1245 of 1968).
M. Veerappa, for respondent No. 3 (in C. A. No. 1246 of
1968).
U. P. Singh, for respondent No. 5 (in C. A. No. 1244 of
1968) and respondent No. 4 (in C.As. Nos. 1245 and 1246 of
1968).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. These three appeals, by special leave, raise
common questions and are, therefore, disposed of by a common
judgment. The facts in Civil Appeal No. 1244 of 1968 being
typical, we need set out them only so that the rival
contentions of the parties on those questions may be
properly appreciated.
By a deed of sale dated October 9, 1964, one Prembati Devi
sold 2.62 acres of land to respondent 1 for Rs. 2,000. The
said deed was thereafter presented to the Sub-Registrar for
registration. On October 14, 1964, the appellant applied
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for a certified copy of the said sale deed and on its
being furnished to him he filed an application dated
November 26, 1964 under S. 16(3) of the Bihar Land Reforms
(Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition of Surplus Land)
Act, XII of 1962 before the Collector. He annexed to his
application the said copy of the sale deed and a copy of the
challan evidencing his having deposited the sale price of
Rs. 2,000 and an additional sum of 10 per cent thereof
331
as required by the proviso to s. 16(3) (i) and r. 19 of the
Bihar Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling Area and Acquisition
of Surplus Land) Rules, 1963. On November 30, 1964, the
Registrar completed registration by endorsing his
certificate on the said sale deed under s. 60(1) and copying
out the endorsement and the certificate in the relevant
register under s. 61 ( 1 ) of the Registration Act, 1908.
The appellant had in his said application claimed to be
entitled as a co-sharer to the right of re-conveyance of the
said land under s. 16(3) of the Act. On November 30, 1964,
the Collector, on being satisfied that the application was
proper, ordered possession to be given to the appellant
under s. 16(3) (ii) pending its disposal.
It is not in dispute that registration was completed on
November 30, 1964, i.e., four days after the appellant had
handed over his application and that though the certified
copy furnished by him was not that of the registered deed,
it was a correct copy of the sale deed presented for
registration. In April, 1966, the Collector passed his
order holding that the appellant was the co-sharer of the
vendor and was entitled to the right of reconveyance. He,
therefore, directed the transferee, respondent 1 to reconvey
the said land in appellant’s favour. No objection was taken
before the Collector that the said application was not
maintainable as registration was not completed when the
appellant filed it or on the ground that only a certified
copy of the sale deed and not of the registered deed had
been annexed to it. This contention was raised for the
first time in appeal before the Commissioner who rejected it
holding that in view of the admitted fact that registration
was completed on November 30, 1964 the said proceedings
before the Collector and was said order were not
invalidated. The Commissioner consequently upheld the said,
order. In appeal before the Board of Revenue, the Board
held that when the appellant presented his application on
November 26, 1964, the transfer as contemplated by s. 16 was
not completed and, therefore, its presentation by the
appellant was not valid inasmuch as it was not in accordance
with r. 19 (2) of the said Rules. The reason given by the
Board was that the rule required a copy of the registered
deed and not a mere copy of the sale deed. On this ground
the Board set aside the Collector’s order and dismissed the
appellant’s application.
The appellant thereupon filed a writ petition in the High
Court for a writ of certiorari for quashing the Board’s said
order. The High Court, relying on its previous decision in
Raikishore Singh v. Bhubneshwari Singh(1), held that s.
16(3) was a piece of beneficent legislation intended to
prevent fragmentation of holdings and to facilitate
consolidation with a view to utilisation of land in the most
advantageous manner, and that to attain these
(1) 1968 B.L.J.R. 33.
332
objects when a transfer of land was made, a co-sharer of the
transferee or a raiyat of the adjacent land was given the
right to have the land reconveyed to him by the transferee
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through the Collector. The High Court, however, held that
the said right depended on two conditions, viz., (a) the
transferee was entitled to the full purchase price and an
additional 10 per cent thereof. as solatium and (b) the
applicant made an application in the prescribed manner. The
prescribed manner means the manner laid down by r. 19 under
which an application is to be made in form L. C. 13 which
requires the applicant to annex to his application a challan
evidencing the deposit of the requisite amount in the
relevant treasury, a copy of the registered sale deed, and a
statement to that effect in the application. The High Court
observed that S. 16(3) (ii) confers on the Collector the
extraordinary power, without having to hold a preliminary
enquiry, to dispossess the transferee and deliver to the
applicant possession of the land in question pending the
disposal of the application. It further observed that the
exercise of this power was dependent on the condition that
deposit has been made and that there has been a completed
transfer, that is, a transfer evidenced by a copy of the
registered deed of sale. Section 16 (2) (iii) provides that
a transfer can only be made by a registered sale deed. The
object of this clause and r. 19 is that the Collector who is
required to direct possession from the transferee to the
applicant ,can satisfy himself that the land is transferred
and that the deposit made is full and this he can do only if
the application is accompanied by a copy of the registered
deed. The High Court agreed that S. 16 was unlike the law
of preemption under the Mahomedan law in that it gets rid of
the procedural matters thereunder and provides not the right
of substitution of the applicant in place of the transferee
but a right of reconveyance of land in question. But it
held that the, right of reconveyance arises only on the
transfer of the land to the transferee, that such transfer
is completed only when the deed is registered and that
though by reason of s. 47 of that Act the transfer takes
effect from the date of execution once registration is
completed, the transfer was not complete on November 28,
1964 when the Collector accepted the said application.
Therefore, the right of reconveyance had not accrued to the
appellant on that day, the transfer not having been yet
completed and the Collector consequently had no jurisdiction
to ,entertain the application. The High Court further held
that the provisions of r. 19 were mandatory and agreed with
the Board that the appellant not having annexed a copy of
the registered deed, his application was not only premature
but was also not maintainable. Those conclusions are
challenged in these appeals.
Before we proceed further, it is necessary first to consider
some of the relevant provisions of the Act and the Rules.
The long title of the Act shows that its object is inter
alia to provide
333
for fixation of ceiling area and acquisition of surplus land
by the State Government. Chapter 2 deals with fixation of
ceiling of land and ss. 4 and 5 therein lay down ceiling
areas for different types of land and the rule that it shall
not be lawful for any person to hold, except as provided
under the Act, land in excess of the ceiling area. Chapter
3 contains provisions connected with resumption of land by a
raiyat from Ms sub-raiyat and Chapter 4 deals with
acquisition of surplus land by the State Government.
Chapter 5, which contains s. 16, deals with restrictions on
future acquisition of land. Section 16(1) lays down that no
person shall acquire land which together with the land held
by him exceeds in the aggregate the ceiling area. Clause
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(1) of sub-s. (2) provide that no document of acquisition or
possession of any land shall be registered unless the
transferee, declares before the registering authority the
total area held by him. Clause (ii) prohibits registration
of the document, if from the said declaration it appears
that the transaction is in contravention of sub-s. (1), that
is to say, the acquisition would make the total area held by
the transferee in excess of the ceiling area. Clause (iii)
provides that no transfer, exchange, lease, mortgage,
bequest or gift can be made without the document therefore
duly registered. Sub-section (3) (1) provides that if any
transfer is made to a person other than a co-sharer or a
raiyat of an adjoining land, such a co-sharer or a raiyat
shall be entitled within three months from the date of the
registration to apply before the Collector in the prescribed
manner for transfer of the land to him on terms and
conditions in the said deed provided that no such
application shall be entertained by the Collector unless the
purchase money together with 10 per cent thereof is
deposited in the prescribed manner within the said period.
Clause (ii) provides that on such deposit being made the co-
sharer or the raiyat shall be entitled to be put in
possession of the land even though his application is
pending. Under cl. (iii) of sub-s. (3), if the application
is allowed, the Collector has to direct the transferee to
convey the land in favour of the applicant by executing and
registering a document of transfer.
The object of s. 16 is two-fold : (i) to ensure that no one
holds land in excess of the ceiling area and (ii) to confer
on a co-sharer or a raiyat of the adjoining area the right
of reconveyance from the transferee. To sub-serve this
object, sub-s. ( 2) lays down certain restrictions : (a)
that there can be no registration of a deed of transfer
without a declaration by the transferee that the total area
which would be held by him including the area under transfer
does not exceed the ceiling area; (b) prohibition against
registering a document if such a declaration shows that the
transfer would have the effect of exceeding the ceiling
area; and (c) that no such transfer would be complete
without L12Sup.C.I./68-7
334
the deed of transfer being registered. The object of sub-s.
(3) is to secure consolidation by giving the right of
reconveyance to a co-sharer or a raiyat of an adjoining area
so that the land in question can be used in the most
advantageous manner and also to prevent fragmentation of the
land.
Rule 18 of the said Rules provides that the declaration to
be made by a transferee under s. 16 (2) (i) before the
registering authority shall be in Form L. C. 12. That form
inter alia requires the transferee to declare that the land
held by him and the land acquired by him under the document
to be registered would not exceed the ceiling area. Rule 19
deals with the application by a co-sharer or a raiyat of the
adjoining land under S. 16(3). It provides that such an
application is to be made in Lorm L. C. 13, and the
applicant has to deposit the purchase money together with 10
per cent thereof in the treasury or sub-treasury of the
district within which the land is situate. Clause (2) of
the rules provides that a copy of the challan showing the
deposit to-ether with a copy of the registered deed shall be
filed with the application in which a statement to this
effect shall also be made. Clause (3) of the rule provides
that a copy of the said application shall also be sent by
the applicant to the transferor and the transferee by
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registered post with acknowledgement due. Clause (4)
provides that the Collector shall issue a notice to the
transferor, the transferee and the applicant to appear
before him at a date to be specified in the notice and after
giving the parties a reasonable opportunity of showing cause
and of being heard shall either allow the application or
reject it. Form L.C. 13 requires the applicant (a) to state
that the transfer of the land has been made through a
document registered on the date to be specified therein, (b)
to enclose a copy of the challan in token of the deposit of
the purchase money plus 10 per cent solatium, and (c) to
enclose a copy of the registered deed by which the land has
been transferred.
From the contents of rr. 18 and 19 and Forms L. C. 12 and
13, it is clear that the object of these rules, firstly, is
to enable the registering authority to see that the
transferee does not by the transfer acquire land in excess
of the ceiling area and, secondly, to enable the Collector
to know that a transfer of the land has been made and that
such transfer is completed by registration, the price paid
for it and that the deposit made by the applicant is of a
sum equivalent to the purchase price and 10 per cent
thereof. It is manifest that the purpose for requiring the
applicant to file a copy of the challan and of the
registered deed is to enable the Collector to ascertain
therefrom the aforesaid facts and to proceed further on
being satisfied about them.
It is necessary at this stage to be clear about certain
dates. The sale deed was executed by the transferor and the
transferee
335
on October 9, 1964. On November 14, 1964, the appellant
obtained from the registering authority a certified copy of
the sale deed tendered for registration. The appellant
filed his application in the Collector’s office on November
26, 1964. It is true that the Board of Revenue has stated
at one place that the Collector "admitted" the application
on November 28, 1964 and at another place that he "took
cognizance of" it on that date. If by the words "admitted"
and "took cognizance of" the Board meant that the Collector
took cognizance of the application it, its technical sense,
the Board would appear to be factually incorrect. The
record of the case shows that some one in the Collector’s
office received the application on November 28, 1964 and
made an endorsement thereon that it should be put up before
the Collector on November 30, 1964. As already stated, on
the said application having been placed before him on
November 30, 1964, the Collector passed his interim order
under s. 16(3)(ii) directing the transferee to deliver
possession of the land in question to the appellant.
Admittedly, registration was also completed on that date.
Two contentions were urged by counsel for the respondents.
Proceeding on the basis that the appellant presented the
application on November 26, 1964, Mr. Nambiar contended (1)
that the application was premature as registration of the
sale deed was not then completed and, therefore there was
not yet a completed transfer and (2) that, therefore, the
Collector had no jurisdiction to entertain such an
application, his jurisdiction being dependent on a transfer
having taken place. The argument was that under s. 16(1)
there can be no transfer to a person who together with the
land already held by him acquires land by transfer which in
the aggregate makes the area in excess of the ceiling area;
that under s. 16(2) no registering authority can register
such a deed of sale and there can be no valid transfer
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unless the sale deed is registered. Therefore, as the sale
deed was not registered until November 30, 1964, there was
no transfer till then, that no right of reconveyance accrued
to the appellant and the Collector, therefore, could not
entertain an application without such a right having already
accrued to the applicant. The second contention was that
the right conferred under s. 16(3) being a statutory right
and it being inconsistent with the right of a citizen to
hold and dispose of his property it must be exercised in
strict conformity with the terms and conditions laid down in
the Act and the Rules, that the language of r. 19 is
mandatory, that the power of the Collector under s. 16(3)
(ii) is extraordinary in the sense that without holding any
preliminary enquiry he can direct the transferee to hand
over possession of the land to the applicant. Therefore, he
argued, the requirements of r. 19 must be held to be
mandatory and that if they are not strictly corn-
336
plied with, the Collector would have no jurisdiction to
entertain an application. Therefore, the appellant having
failed to annex a copy of the registered deed of sale as
required by r. 19 and Form L. C. 13 and having annexed only
the certified copy of the unregistered deed of sale, his
application was not in conformity with r. 19 and the
Collector could not entertain it, much less act on it.
When the appellant lodged his application in the
Collector’s office he had already deposited the requisite
amount in the treasury and had annexed thereto the copy of
the challan. So that the condition under S. 16 was complied
with. The application was also filed within the time
prescribed by the section. Under s. 16(2) and (3), however,
no transfer takes place unless the sale deed is registered.
Registration is complete only when the certificate under s.
60 is given and the endorsement and copying out the said
certificate under S. 61 of the Registration Act are made.
But Mr. Desai argued that under s. 47 of that Act ,once
registration is effected, the title under the sale deed
relates back to the date of its execution and therefore
though registration was completed on November 30, 1964, the
transferee’s title under the sale deed related back to the
date of its execution, i.e., October 9, 1964. Assuming,
therefore, that the application was presented on November
26, 1964, the transferee’s title having related back to the
date of the execution of the sale deed, the transfer must be
deemed to be complete on that date and, therefore, it was
not correct that the right of reconveyance had not accrued
to the appellant on November 26, 1964 or that the Collector
had no jurisdiction on that date to accept the said
application. This contention, however, cannot be accepted
in view of the decision in Ram Saran Lal v. Mst. Domini
Kuer(1) where this Court rejected an identical contention.
Mr. Desai tried to distinguish that case on the ground that
it was based on Mahomedan law which by custom applied to the
parties there’ But the decision is based not on any
principle of Mahomedan law but on the effect of S. 47 of the
Registration Act. The majority decision clearly laid down
that the sale there was completed only when registration of
the sale deed was completed as contemplated by s. 61 of the
Registration Act and, therefore, the talab-i-mowasibat made
before the date of completion of registration was premature
and a suit based on such a demand of the right of preemption
was premature and must, therefore, fail. Similarly, in
Radhakishan L. Toshniwal v. Shridhar (2) this Court laid
down that where a statute providing for the right of
preemption lays down that it accrues only when transfer of
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the property takes place and such transfer is’ not complete
except through a registered deed, a suit filed before the
sale deed is executed is premature as the right of
preemption under the statute did not accrue
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R.474.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C. R. 8
337
till the transfer became effective through a registered
deed. In Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh(1) this Court laid
down that in a suit for preemption the plaintiff must show
that the right had acquired to him at the time when he
exercised it.
But the question whether the right of reconveyance had
accrued to the appellant or not on November 26, 1964 appears
to be academic. As already stated, his application was
placed for the first time before the Collector on November
30, 1964 when admittedly registration was completed and
thereupon the transfer also had become complete. A mere
presentation of the application in the sense of the
appellant having handed it over to some subordinate in the
Collector’s office cannot mean its having been entertained
by the Collector on that date. There is, therefore, no
merit in the contention that the Collector had entertained
the application either on the 26th when it was taken by the
appellant to the Collector’s office or on the 28th when some
subordinate in the office made an endorsement on it that it
should be placed before the Collector. The endorsement on
the contrary shows that the Collector had not even seen it
on that day, much less accepted it. The Collector took
cognizance of it on November 30, 1964 only when it was
placed before him and when on being satisfied that the
conditions of s. 16 were satisfied he passed his order under
sub-s. (3) (ii) for handing over possession from the
transferee to the appellant. On these facts, Mr. Nambiar’s
first contention must fail.
The contention next was that the right of preemption being a
weak right as held in Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh(1) and
the outcome thereof being to disturb a valid transaction by
virtue of such a right having been created by statute, there
are no equities in favour of a premplor as held in
Radhakishan L. Toshniwal v. Shridhar(2) and, therefore, the
person coming to the court for exercise of such right must
show that he has duly complied with all the conditions laid
down by the law giving him that right. Mr. Nambiar
submitted that being the position, the condition laid down
in r. 19 must be held to be mandatory and unless they are
complied with an application for enforcing such a right must
fail. The question is whether non-satisfaction of the
condition that the application must be accompanied by a copy
of the registered deed is fatal to the exercise of the right
conferred under the Act.
Rule 19 does not lay down the consequence of non-compliance
of its provisions. when a statute requires that something
shall be done or done in a particular manner or form without
expressly declaring what shall be the consequence of
non-com-
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 878.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R.248
338
pliance, the question often arises what intention is to be
attributed by inference to the legislature. (see Maxwell on
Interpretation of Statutes 11th ed. p. 362). It has been
said that no rule can be laid down for determining whether
the requirement is to be considered as a mere direction or
instruction involving no in-valid consequence for its
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disregard or as imperative with an implied nullification for
disobedience beyond the rule that it depends on the scope
and object of the enactment. A case nearest to the one
before us is to be found in Bellamy v. Saull(1). Section 34
of the Revenue No. 2) Act, 1861 enacted that no copy of a
bill of sale should be filed in any Court unless the
original was produced before the officer duly stamped. It
was held that this pro-vision did not invalidate the
registration if the bill was not duly stamped when so
produced for the object of the enactment was to protect the
revenue and this was thought sufficiently attained if the
deed was afterwards duly stamped without going to the
extreme of holding the registration void. Similarly in King
v. Linconshire Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Stubbins(2) Regula-
tion 19, Part 1, Section II of the Schedule to the Military
Service (Regulations) Order, 1916 was held to be directory.
The Military Service Act, 1916 provided that any person
aggrieved by the decision of a local tribunal and a person
generally or specially authorised by the army council to
appeal from the decision of that tribunal may appeal against
the decision of a local tribunal to the appeal tribunal of
the area. The regulation provided that any such person may
appeal against the decision of the local tribunal by
delivering to that tribunal, in the prescribed form in
duplicate, notice of appeal not later than three clear days
after its decision, and the local tribunal shall thereupon
send ’Lo the other party to the application the duplicate
notice of appeal. The local tribunal granted the applicant
exemption from military service. The military
representative immediately announced in the presence and
hearing of the applicant that he would appeal stating also
his grounds of appeal. The copies in the prescribed form of
the notice of appeal not being available, the military
representative handed over to the clerk of the local
tribunal a list of the names of persons in respect of whom
he intended to appeal including the applicant’s name and
some weeks before appeal was heard the clerk discussed the
matter with the applicant. The applicant raised an
objection before the appeal tribunal that it had no
jurisdiction to hear the appeal as the prescribed notice had
not been given. The Appeal Court held that inasmuch as the
applicant knew within the prescribed time that the appeal
was pending, strict compliance by the military
representative with the letter of Regulation 19 by
delivering to the local tribunal notice of appeal in the
prescribed form in duplicate was not a condition
(1) [1863] 32L.J.Q.B.366.
(2) [1917] 1 K. B. 1.
339
precedent to the appeal tribunal having jurisdiction to hear
and determine the appeal, that the provisions of regulation
19 as to procedure were directory only and not imperative
and, therefore, non-compliance with them did not deprive the
military representative of his right of appeal. The same
rule of construction has also been laid down in Buland Sugar
Co. v. Municipal Board(1). The appellant company there
challenged the validity of water tax levied by the municipal
board on the ground that the tax had not been imposed
according to law inasmuch as the proposals and the draft
rules had been published by the Board in an urdu paper
whereas according to s. 131(3) read with s. 94(3) of the
U.P. Municipalities Act, 1916 they should have been
published in a Hindi paper. The Court held that s. 131(3)
fell into two parts, the first providing that the proposal
and draft rules for an intended tax should be, published for
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inviting objections of the public and the second, laying
down that such publication must be in the manner laid down
in s. 94(3). It held that considering the object of the
provisions for publication, the first part was mandatory
while the second was merely directory. What that part
required was that the publication should be in Hindi in a
local paper and if that was done there was sufficient
compliance of s. 94(3). The publication was made in Hindi
in a local paper which had good circulation in Rampur; there
was no regularly published local Hindi newspaper. There was
in the circumstances substantial compliance with the
provisions of s. 94(3). At p. 975 this Court observed that
the question whether a particular provision of a statute
which on the face of it appears mandatory inasmuch as it
used the word ’shall’ is merely directory cannot be resolved
by laying down any general rule and depends upon the facts
of each case and for that purpose the object of the statute
in making the Provision is the determining factor.
The object of r. 19 in prescribing that the application
under s. 16(3) must be accompanied by a copy of the
registered deed is clearly to enable the Collector before he
exercises his power thereunder to ascertain the purchase
prices, the terms and conditions of the sale, the readiness
of the applicant to have the land in question reconveyed to
him on the same terms and conditions as in the sale deed and
the fact of the applicant having deposited the relevant
amount in the treasury. The purpose of prescribing that a
copy of the registered deed should accompany the application
is that if such a copy is before the Collector there would
be no scope for any controversy that the land is transferred
to the purchaser, about its area and location, and the terms
and conditions of the sale including the sale price. If
this information is before the Collector and he is satisfied
about it, does it still mean that it would be fatal to the
application if the formality of annexing a
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 970
340
copy of the registered deed is not complied with. Section
16 lays down that such an application must be made within
three months from the date of the registration and if it is
not done within that period, it would be time barred.
Suppose for a while that an applicant does not know when
registration under s. 60 and 61 of the Registration Act is
completed and annexes to his application. a certified copy
of the sale deed furnished at his, instance by the regis-
tering authority or where the registering authority is not
able to furnish a copy of the registered deed of sale within
time. Does it mean that an applicant is to be deprived of
the right of reconvey and conferred by the statute ? To hold
that if the formality prescribed by r. 19 is not satisfied
the application would be bad would be to nullify the object
of the statute. That surely cannot be the intention of the
draftsmen who framed r. 19 and Form L. C. 13.
Rule 19(3) requires that a copy of the application shall be
sent to the transferee and the transferor by registered post
with acknowledgement due. Form L. C. 13 requires the
applicant to state that the transfer is made by a registered
deed on the date specified therein. If a copy of the
application is delivered to the transferor or the transferee
by hand delivery or by registered post but without
acknowledgement due or if the applicant is not able to state
the date of registration because he does not know it, does
it mean that merely because cl. (3) of r. 19 and the form
use the word "shall" the omission to comply with the
aforesaid requirements is fatal to the application. Surely
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these are directory instructions and if there is sufficient
compliance thereof the application can be validly
entertained by the Collector.
In our view, whereas the deposit in the relevant treasury,
the applicant being either a co-sharer or a raiyat of the
adjoining land, his readiness and willingness to have the
land in question reconveyed to him on the same, terms and
conditions as in the sale deed and the transfer of the land
to the transferee are conditions precedent to his acquiring
the right of reconveyance and to the Collector’s
jurisdiction to try such an application, the prescription as
to annexing a copy of the registered deed is only directory
and is laid down to furnish necessary information to the
Collector to enable him to proceed with it. Annexing a
certified copy of the sale deed where a copy of the
registered dead s not yet available, on account of the
process of registration not having been completed would, in
our view, be sufficient compliance of the directory
prescription so long as it furnishes information necessary
for the Collector to proceed with the application. The fact
that a copy of the registered deed was not furnished along
with the application was, therefore, not fatal to the
application nor did such omission deprive the Collector of
his jurisdiction to entertain.. it nor did it vitiate the
proceedings before him or the order thereon made by him.
The Board of Revenue and the High Court were
341
not right in dismissing the appellant’s application. In the
circumstances we allow the appeals, set aside the judgment
and order of the High Court as also of the Board and restore
the order passed by the Collector and confirmed by the
Commissioner. The respondents will pay to the appellants
the costs of these appeals as also their costs in the High
Court. There will be only one hearing fee.
V.P.S. Appeals
allowed.
342